Our Lady of Mercy - September 24th

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As we continue in our Novena to St. Michael, let us not forget Our Lady of Mercy, who is connected with St. Michael as Queen of Angels and depicted in the section on Christ’s Birth and in the section about the Flight into Egypt.

As usual with Our Lady, She has appeared over time in different places and to different individuals in Her Role as Our Lady of Mercy.

As early as 1280, She appears in artwork.  She characteristically has a large mantle extended out over people of various types and states in life.  Angels often help her sustain the mantle over the people, which makes concrete in images the Church teaching so encouraging to us in the Church Militant:  Our Mother and the Angels stand ready to help us and shield us from evil because of the Mercy of God that Mary, our Mediatrix, pours out upon us when we turn to Her.

 

So let us turn to Her, seeing here that She protects the professed nuns, those with covered heads and those seeking to be a part of the community, the novices, shown with bare heads.  This image dates from the 1440s, and there are many like it made in earlier times.  

Our Lady of Mercy appeared to St. Peter Nolasco in Spain and is a Patroness of the City of Barcelona.  The order of the Mercedarians originated there with the mission to ransom Christians who were enslaved.  This referred to a worldly enslavement and a worldly ransom but certainly could be seen as an allegory for what happens in our spiritual lives as we turn to Her and ask for Her to dispense the graces Our Lord authorized Her to dispense and Co-Redemptrix who suffered with Him for us so intimately as His Mother, and Our Mother.

Again, in the 1800s an order of Sisters was founded called the Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy in Poland.  This order became the home to Saint Faustina Kowalska who brought to the world’s attention the image of Divine Mercy and followed His instructions so carefully during her short life with help from Our Lady that we now have a feast of Divine Mercy the first Sunday after Easter Sunday.  So in Mercy, we shall be purified, for this is not a work we can do, but a work of God.

Let us be encouraged to seek Mercy from Our Lady not only for the many years this devotion has been celebrated, and for the various places it has manifested itself in more prominent ways, but also because it is His Desire that we seek the protection of His Mercy and that as many souls come home to Heaven as possible.

Feature image, Ravensburger Schutzmantelmadonna, c. 1480​ Sculpture attributed to Michael Erhart, in public domain; Article image, Sano di Pietro, public domain.

 

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