Showing posts with label Fatima. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fatima. Show all posts

Thursday, 6 December 2018

#137 Basilica of Sacre Coeur will be Used by the Impious - Church of Our Lady of Victories will be Spared – Our Lady of Victories – Marie-Julie Jahenny and the Link to Fatima

Ecstasy date January 27, 1882 (“The Breton Stigmatist”, Book, p.32)


Message to Marie-Julie:  "But woe to the pastors who abandon the flock."




Same Day


January 27, 1882, (“The Breton Stigmatist”, p. 50)


Our Lord: "My Montmartre Sanctuary (i.e. the Sacre Coeur basilica) is already destined to serve as a theatre for the impious and all those involved with human laws." Also, "It would not be long before the place of prayer of Saint Geneviéve would become a theatre for dances and the most infernal crimes..."





Our Lady of Victories further told Marie-Julie: "The sanctuary of Our Lady of Victories would resist the cannon-balls, the gun fire of the instruments of the world and that the miraculous protection of Heaven would preserve it in the midst of the debris."





(Our Lady of Victories, Paris.)





(Interior, altar dedicated to Our Lady, the Refuge of Sinners).












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I believe it would be apropos to include here the history of Our Lady as Our Lady of Victories, and why this shrine will be protected as a sign of Her maternal care.



The History of Our Lady of Victories



Victory will come from Devotion to the Rosary

and the Immaculate Heart of Mary




The first chapel ever dedicated to Our Lady of Victories was built by Simon de Montfort, 5th Earl of Leicester after the Battle of Muret, September 12, 1213. Simon de Montfort, a Christian Crusader, defeated King Peter II of Aragon (now in Spain), thus uniting the Languedoc region to France, (the county of Toulouse). Obviously, Our Lady was forming the Kingdom of France at an early date.


However, the title of Our Lady of Victories was not instituted until centuries later. During the 16th century, the Muslim Ottoman invaders marched as far as Vienna, had taken over lands as far as the Danube, and were threatening to invade the rest of Europe. They had the most fearsome fleet on the Mediterranean; after the fall of Cyprus, it was feared they would next invade Italy and France.


Pope St. Pius V promoted the Holy League to fight against the Turks, a coalition of the major European maritime forces. Led by John of Austria, they engaged in battle off the coast of Western Greece on October 7, 1571 and defeated the Ottoman fleet, they had not been defeated at sea in over a century.


On that day as the battle took place, St. Pius the V held a rosary procession at St. Peters, and the Holy League attributed the victory to Our Lady.






(Image: St. Pius V and his vision of the Battle of Lepanto)


In thanksgiving, St. Pius V instituted in the Feast of Our Lady of Victories. In 1573, Pope Gregory XIII changed the title of this feast-day to "Feast of the Holy Rosary". This feast was extended by Pope Clement XII to the whole of the Latin Rite, inserting it into the Roman Catholic calendar of saints in 1716, and assigning it to the first Sunday in October. Pope St. Pius X changed the date to October 7 in 1913, as part of his effort to restore celebration of the liturgy of the Sundays.



Hence, the celebration of Our Lady of Victories is on the Feast of the Rosary, and the Feast of the Rosary honours Our Lady of Victories. Our Lady seemed to strengthen this association with regards to Fatima … .






Fatima and Our Lady of Victories






      Not many Catholics are aware that centuries before Our Lady appeared as Queen of the Rosary in Fatima, an unusual event happened at the Cova da Iria. 


In 1383, when King Fernando I of Portugal died, he left no male legitimate heir to the throne, only his daughter Princess Beatrice, who was married to King John I of Castille. Hence, Portugal was on the point of losing its sovereignty to Spain. The Portuguese nobles decided it was better to defend the sovereignty of their country and elected Fernando's illegitimate brother to the throne, John, Master of Aviz. St. Nuno, a valiant knight, supported this decision, and was made Commander of the King's Army and the Third Count of Ourém. The Spanish began to press their rights and war ensued.



On their way to the decisive Battle of Aljubarrota (August 1385) they passed through the Cova da Iria. St. Nuno suddenly stopped the King and the army, declaring that something marvellous would happen there in the future. Of course, we now know it was the apparitions of Fatima. The King and St. Nuno knelt at the spot and promised Our Lady that if she would grant them victory and save the kingdom, they would each build a monastery in her honour. They won the battle, and King John began the Dominican monastery in the town of Batalha (Battle) in 1386 and dedicated it to our Lady of Victories, (about a fifteen minute drive from Fatima), while St. Nuno built a Carmalite monastery in Lisbon, which he entered after giving up all his wealth, lands and titles. Sadly, Nuno's monastery was destroyed during the great earthquake in Lisbon, 1755.






Our Lady of Victories Monestary, Batalha 

St. Nuno's statue is to the right











The Battle of Aljubarotta (August 14, 1385)




St. Nuno is not widely known outside of Portugal. He is often called the “Precursor to Fatima” because of his great devotion to Our Lady, the Rosary, and the Brown Scapular. We recall Our Lady also appeared in Fatima as Our Lady of Mount Carmel with the Brown Scapular. Of interest, St. Nuno is the founder of the House of Braganca, the Royal House of Portugal, he is the father of Kings! The House of Braganca survives to this day.







(Image: St. Nuno after entering Carmel)





 
 








 (Image: Our Lady of Victories statue at Batalha).










Our Lady of Victories, Queen of the Rosary, therefore shows her powerful protection over nations and especially monarchies.



Not satisfied with showing the association between victories and her Rosary, Our Lady also wanted devotion to her Immaculate Heart to be made known and charged Sr. Lucia of Fatima to spread devotion to her Immaculate Heart and the practise of the Five First Saturdays. Compare this with the history of Our Lady of Victories Shrine in Paris:





Our Lady of Victories Shrine in Paris (Notre Dame des Victoires) 




In 1619 the Discalced Augustinians (colloquially referred to as the "Petits Pères") established their convent, Notre-Dame-des-Victoires, on three hectares of land they had purchased, the Bourse (Market) located at the intersection of the Place des Petits-Pères and Rue de la Banque.

On December 8, 1629 the foundations were blessed by Archbishop Jean-François Gondi. The next day, King Louis XIII himself laid the cornerstone in the presence of the Court's 'seigneurs' and the city officials. Remembering the Battle of Lepanto, King Louis XIII promised to fund the construction on the condition that it be dedicated to his victory over the heretical Protestants at La Rochelle, which he attributed to the intercession of the Blessed Mother.


The first church being too small, reconstruction commenced in 1656 according to the plans of Pierre Le Muet. Libéral Bruant, Robert Boudin, and Gabriel Leduc oversaw this work. The new church, not yet completed, was consecrated in 1666. Work was finalized in 1737 under the supervision of Sylvain Cartaud. He oversaw the expansion of the nave, the construction of the façade as well as the construction of the transept's striking spherical roof. The sanctuary is graced by several paintings by the French painter Louis-Michel van Loo (1707–1771).

However, it was seized during the various political Masonic upheavals in France, the church was converted into the home of the national lottery and a stock exchange during the Directory. A large garden and a double-cloister existed at the site until the Revolution. At that time, they were confiscated and fell into disuse. Although the church had been returned to a place of worship in 1809, the remnants of the monastery were destroyed in 1858 and a police station as well as an office for the mayor of the arrondissement were constructed in their place.


In the 1830s, the task of re-establishing parish life in the church fell to Fr. Charles Eléonore Dufriche Desgenettes. However, due to its location in a business district, it attracted few parishioners which resulted in, among other things, financial difficulties. Having very few parishioners attending Mass, Fr. Charles thought he had failed in his ministry and wanted to resign his functions in Our Lady of Victories when on December 3, 1836, he heard a voice as he was about to begin Mass: "Consecrate your parish to the Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary." At the time, this devotion was only just beginning, and he was sceptical. However, he heard the voice again after Mass, and decided he had better pay heed to the message.

He received approval from the Archbishop of Paris and publicised the consecration Mass for eight days later, December 11, 1836. Not expecting more than the usual 40 attendees, he was surprised to see 500 people arrive!

Encouraged by the response, that same day he constituted the Association of the Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary for the conversion of sinners, an association which became an archconfraternity in 1838 by the decision of Pope Gregory XVI.

The numbers of parishioners and pilgrims continued to increase, the Shrine became the powerhouse of prayer during the 19th century as evidenced by the thousands of ex-voto offerings.   Many of the famous French Catholics of the period maintained a connection to the Church. These included Marie-Alphonse Ratisbonne, Ven. Francis Libermann and the refounders of the Holy Ghost Fathers and a whole host of Foreign Missions seminarians and priests, including St. Theophane Venard. Saint John Henry Newman went there to give thanks for his conversion, which had been the subject of prayer there. Later, the young Therese Martin (St. Therese of the Little Flower) prayed before the same statue for Our Lady's help in realising her vocation. As we have seen above, Marie-Julie was told this shrine would be spared during the destruction of Paris.


Our Lady had promised that the Rosary was the weapon that would drive back enemies, root out heresies, and protect the faithful. It is inextricably linked to her Immaculate Heart and to her title as Our Lady of Victories. In union with the Sacred Heart of Jesus, she is Protector of Catholic nations and absolute monarchies, we have heard through Marie-Julie, Our Lady will help restore Catholic France and the monarchy under the Great Monarch.


It is interesting that Our Lord revealed to Marie-Julie that His IMMACULATE Mother will decide the time for the appearance of the Great King, and, that Our Lady revealed to Marie-Julie Jahenny in 1904 one of the blasphemies against Her Immaculate Heart a little over 20 years before the revelation of the Five First Saturday devotions to Sr. Lucia of Fatima in 1925.  Sr. Lucia was later told the precise blasphemies by Our Lord in 1930.

   Marie-Julie Jahenny learned what would be known later as the Fourth Blasphemy - the blasphemy of little children not taught to love the Immaculate Heart of their Mother.



On February 9, 1904 Our Lady to Marie-Julie Jahenny:


 " My beloved children, all is engaged in an irreparable loss, I mean the salvation of souls of children. The nourishment of these poor little souls should be for them the bread of love of their Immaculate Queen, the Queen of Heaven. (That is, children are no longer given this 'bread of love', they are not taught to love her.) I suffer to see these souls as pastures delivered to the enemy of the salvation of souls; it is the goodness of my Divine on that Satan takes to himself and to appropriate it, (i.e. Satan takes advantage of God's mercy to the earth) he has his supporters in every corner on the Earth. I despair, yes, I despair of saving those souls without immense peril and multiplied souls and bodies.


Marie-Julie intercedes and the Blessed Virgin answered:

“After the delivery of young adolescent souls to Satan, the enemy of souls, I mean to say that most of these children have entered the path of corruption and these souls have not received a drop of this perfume of my virtues of purity; it is in very immense pain, because if you saw the number, you would be frightened and even struck as if by a mortal blow.


The frightening part is Marie-Julie was told that during these evil days children will be set on the path to perdition before they reach the age of reason because parents have failed to raise their children in the faith and to love Our Lord and His Mother.


 
Marie-Julie Jahenny was also told that the devotion to Immaculate Mary would be one of the 'Three Shelters' that would protect faithful souls during the times of the chastisements, and that during the Three Days of Darkness, being close to an image of Her would also help lessen the terror we will experience in those days, no doubt a sign of our devotion to her Holy images will be in reparation for the Fifth Blasphemy as well. (See more about the Three Days here.)

As we know, Our Lady told Sr. Lucia of Fatima that the Age of Peace and the Triumph of Her Immaculate Heart will not occur until devotion to her Heart spreads and reparation made for the blasphemies committed against Her Immaculate Heart via the Five First Saturdays. The prophecies of Marie-Julie Jahenny and the visions of Fatima are therefore interlinked – as Our Lady said to Sr. Lucia,  the Age of Peace would come AS SOON AS A SUFFICIENT NUMBER of people were DOING WHAT SHE ASKED.




We will not have the Age of Peace and Victory of the Cross via the Great Monarch until we pray for it, pray and help spread devotion to the Rosary, as well as spreading devotion to the Immaculate the Heart of Mary, and make reparation for the five blasphemies committed against Her Immaculate Heart, especially through the Five First Saturday Devotion. Learn more about the Five First Saturdays Devotion, click here.


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