Guadalupe: the Miracle and the Message
Guadalupe: the Miracle and the Message
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In Revelation 12, Scripture presents a woman “clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars” (Rev 12:1). As Fr. Chris explains, this image points unmistakably to the Blessed Virgin Mary. Her heavenly glory reveals the one chosen by God to bear Christ, the King who “is to rule all the nations” (Rev 12:5). Yet confusion arises when the passage speaks of her crying out in pain. These are not physical labor pains from the birth of Jesus.
In Revelation 12, Scripture presents a woman “clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars” (Rev 12:1). As Fr. Chris explains, this image points unmistakably to the Blessed Virgin Mary. Her heavenly glory reveals the one chosen by God to bear Christ, the King who “is to rule all the nations” (Rev 12:5). Yet confusion arises when the passage speaks of her crying out in pain. These are not physical labor pains from the birth of Jesus.
Few apparitions in the history of the Catholic Church are more well-known and significant than Our Lady of Guadalupe, when Mary appeared to the natives in Mexico in the 16th century and changed the world. Today, she is the patroness of the Americas and the unborn.As we prepare for her feast day on Dec. 12, Fr. Daniel Klimek shares how Our Lady’s message continues to guide us toward Divine Mercy today.
