Musings, Insights & Briefings

The Immaculate Heart of Mary

     The Immaculate Heart of Mary holds a special place in Catholic devotion and theology, representing the profound love, purity and compassion of the Virgin Mary, the Mother of Jesus. The concept of the Immaculate Heart centers on Mary’s interior life, her virtues and her unique role in salvation history. Here are 6 things to know about her Immaculate Heart:

1. Symbols of the Heart of Mary

                         > Her Heart symbolizes her maternal love

                         > The Sword symbolizes the Sorrows of Mary

  > The Fire - her heart burns with love for Jesus and us, her children

                          > The Roses represents her purity

2. The devotion of the Immaculate Heart of Mary is rooted in scripture and tradition.

3. When we honor her Immaculate Heart, we give ultimate honor to Jesus.

4. “If you put all the love of all the mothers into one heart, it still would not equal the love of the heart of Mary for her children” - St. Louis de Montfort

5. St. John Eudes, a 17th century French Priest, popularized this devotion with his great love of the Blessed Mother.

6. Pope St. John Paul II consecrated the world to the Immaculate Heart on March 25, 1984, saying: 
“… before you, Mother of Christ, before your Immaculate Heart, I today, together with the whole Church, unite myself with our Redeemer in this His consecration for the world and for people, which only in his Divine Heart has the power to obtain pardon and to secure reparation.”


A Prayer to the Immaculate Heart of Mary

                             Immaculate Heart of Mary, my Mother, I come to you in childlike prayer. I earnestly desire that all the 
people of the world may be brought back to the humble knowledge and love of the Sacred Heart of your dear Son. I pray, dear Mother of my God, that the wonderful beauty and purity of your own Immaculate Heart may so win our souls that we may detest all sin and dedicate our lives to the honor and glory of the God who created us.
                             You revealed the secrets of your own sad heart at Fatima and begged for penance, prayer, and 
conversion of the world to God. What more can I do than unite my heart to yours in this great yearning? What can I add but the fervent prayer that all the world may listen to your pleading?
                          I give my heart to you, my heavenly Queen, and in confidence I leave to you what is best for me in 
answer to my prayer for love and reparation. Immaculate Heart of the Mother of my God, I implore through your powerful intercession, the conversion of the hearts of men, complete victory over sin, and the return of the peace which you have promised. Amen. 

 

 

Musings, Insights & Briefings

By Terrie Legein March 12, 2025
St. John of God People thought this saint was going mad … Turns out, it was just the Holy Spirit. Meet John Ciudad. A man who would one day be a saint. However, on this day, he wasn’t a saint yet—not even close. The day we’re meeting him, St. Sebastian’s Day, January 20th, 1537. At this time, he was a Spanish soldier turned bookseller, running a shop in Granada, and living a fairly ordinary life. But late in the afternoon on that January day, something happened. On this feast day, a famous preacher, St. John of Ávila was giving a sermon. John Ciudad listened in when suddenly, something about it struck him so deeply that he publicly broke down in tears. John ran through the streets confessing his sins loudly and began to immediately give away all his belongings. People thought he had lost his mind. Authorities took action. They sent John to the Royal Hospital of Granada and locked in a ward for the insane. It wasn’t a pleasant place. Patients were restrained, beaten, and neglected under the belief that this would drive out their madness. Rather than despairing, John was relieved at this sudden change of events. The conversion that the Holy Spirit had given him on St. Sebastian’s Day left him longing to serve God and to give to others. Looking around at the harsh conditions of this psych ward he was unwillingly placed in, John was pleased. He saw the suffering around him and realized that these were the people Christ was calling him to serve. Rather than resenting his captors, he began to comfort the other patients, helping them however he could. Eventually, St. John of Ávila visited and advised him to temper his zeal with wisdom. John took this to heart, left the hospital, and dedicated the rest of his life to serving the sick and poor. John later founded a hospital where he cared for the very same kinds of patients—including those considered mentally ill—giving them dignity, attention, and medical care long before such treatment was common. So, meet John Ciudad, although he was not a saint when we first met him a few paragraphs ago, he is now, and he more commonly is known as St. John of God. So, meet St. John of God! We’re not often like St. John of God. When we are in uncomfortable or unimpressive places, we don’t often look around with pleasure. More often than not, we sigh and ask, “God, what am I supposed to do with this?!” But you can be like St. John of God! In fact, you are called to!
By Terrie Legein September 19, 2024
Holy Spirit Confirmation September 14, 2024
By Terrie Legein September 18, 2024
St Michael the Archangel Novena
By Terrie Legein September 5, 2024
Mother Teresa's Final Letter
By Terrie Legein July 31, 2024
Lake Wales Care Center Campers' Dinner at Holy Spirit Parish Hall - July 22, 2024
June 3, 2024
Holy Spirit High School Graduates 2024
June 3, 2024
Holy Spirit Parishioners Process on the Feast of Corpus Christi
May 23, 2024
BLESSED CARLO ACUTIS IS ONE STEP CLOSER TO SAINTHOOD
By Terrie Legein May 23, 2024
First Communion Photos May 18, 2024
By Terrie Legein May 23, 2024
Fellowship with Friends
More Posts