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Danielle Bean

Danielle Bean
Danielle Bean, a mother of eight, is Editorial Director of Faith & Family. She is author of My Cup of Tea, Mom to Mom, Day to Day, and most recently Small Steps for Catholic Moms. Though she once struggled to separate her life and her work, the two …
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Rachel Balducci

Rachel Balducci
Rachel Balducci is married to Paul and they are the parents of five lively boys and one precious baby girl. She is the author of How Do You Tuck In A Superhero?, and is a newspaper columnist for the Diocese of Savannah, Georgia. For the past four years, she has …
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Lisa Hendey

Lisa Hendey
Lisa Hendey is the founder and editor of CatholicMom.com and the author of A Book of Saints for Catholic Moms and The Handbook for Catholic Moms. Lisa is also enjoys speaking around the country, is employed as webmaster for her parish web sites and spends time on various …
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Arwen Mosher

Arwen Mosher
Arwen Mosher lives in southeastern Michigan with her husband Bryan and their 4-year-old daughter, 2-year-old son, and twin boys born May 2011. She has a bachelor's degree in theology. She dreads laundry, craves sleep, loves to read novels and do logic puzzles, and can't live without tea. Her personal blog site …
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Rebecca Teti

Rebecca Teti
Rebecca Teti is married to Dennis and has four children (3 boys, 1 girl) who -- like yours no doubt -- are pious and kind, gorgeous, and can spin flax into gold. A Washington, DC, native, she converted to Catholicism while an undergrad at the U. Dallas, where she double-majored in …
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Robyn Lee

Robyn Lee
Robyn Lee is a 30-something, single lady, living in Connecticut in a small bungalow-style kit house built by her great uncle in the 1950s. She also conveniently lives next door to her sister, brother-in-law and six kids ... and two doors down are her parents. She received her undergraduate degree from …
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DariaSockey

DariaSockey
Daria Sockey is a freelance writer and veteran of the large family/homeschooling scene. She recently returned home from a three-year experiment in full time outside employment. (Hallelujah!) Daria authored several of the original Faith&Life Catechetical Series student texts (Ignatius Press), and is currently a Senior Writer for Faith&Family magazine. A latecomer …
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Guest Bloggers

Kate Lloyd

Kate Lloyd
Kate Lloyd is a rising senior, and a political science major at Thomas More College of Liberal Arts in New Hampshire. While not in school, she lives in Whitehall PA, with her mom, dad, five sisters and little brother. She needs someone to write a piece about how it's possible to …
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Lynn Wehner

Lynn Wehner
As a wife and mother, writer and speaker, Lynn Wehner challenges others to see the blessings that flow when we struggle to say "Yes" to God’s call. Control freak extraordinaire, she is adept at informing God of her brilliant plans and then wondering why the heck they never turn out that …
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Mary Makes a Splash

Reflecting on Our Lady of Lourdes

(The feast of Our Lady of Lourdes is February 11.)

Mary to the Poor and Simple

At Lourdes, France, Mary appeared to a fourteen-year-old who wasn’t very bright and wasn’t very big. Marie Bernadette Soubirous, called by the diminutive of her name because she was so tiny, was the oldest of six, born to a poor miller.  She was weak and sickly as a child, suffering from asthma.

When her parents sent her to live for a time with her aunt, so she would be better off, her aunt gave up trying to teach her about the Catholic Faith, calling her thick-headed and impossible to teach. 

Why, then, did Mary appear to her?  Why didn’t she pick someone else on February 11, 1858?  Why did she keep coming back to a poor, simple teenager?

Mary doesn’t care about our weaknesses, our hesitations, our hang-ups.  She doesn’t care who we are…or who we aren’t.  She will come to us regardless, if we will see her.

Mary in the Pigs’ Shelter

Mary appeared 18 different times to Bernadette in a filthy grotto, called “Old Rock” and “the pigs’ shelter” by the locals.  It was a cave where pigs feeding in the area would take cover.

Imagine the contrast between the golden light and the beautiful lady and the dingy, dark surroundings.  Picture Bernadette’s astonishment.

An obscure town, a dirty grotto, a simple seer – they all combined to bring us a message of God meeting us where we are, smack dab in the middle of our needs and our failings, through His Mother .

Praying Through Doubt

No one believed Bernadette.  Her mother forbade her to return to the cave after word of the first apparition slipped out during evening prayers.

Bernadette couldn’t believe she had been deceived:  the lady had been carrying a rosary and praying the Gloria with Bernadette. 

The Soubirous house must have been filled with tension for those first few days – teenage Bernadette wasn’t arguing, but she wasn’t agreeing; mother Louise saying it was all an illusion, a trick of the devil.

Can you hear Bernadette begging to return to Old Rock?  It took two days before Bernadette couldn’t ignore the internal summons.  Bernadette had her sister, Marie, try to persuade their mother.  Failing, Marie went to their neighbor.

Louise, after three days of arguing with teenage girls and a day of neighborly nagging, finally allowed the visit, probably throwing up her hands and sighing heavily as she clutched her rosary and prayed for the best.

Doubt was everywhere.  Louise was worried that her daughter was flirting with danger; Bernadette was between her parents’ worry and the call of the lady; the friends and family who knew about it shook their heads at the gentle hint that the Virgin Mary could be appearing to someone like little Bernadette.

They must have all prayed.  What else could they have done?  There was no understanding without the passage of time.

What’s in a Name?

Bernadette met with her beautiful lady 16 times before her request for a name was answered.

On March 25, 1858, the Feast of the Annunciation, Bernadette asked the lady’s name.  By this point, it was habit – everyone else wanted to know, but Bernadette didn’t need a name to confirm whom she knew she was meeting. 
After the third request that day, the lady bowed, joined her hands, and looked to heaven, replying, in the local dialect, “I am the Immaculate Conception.”

How shocked was the local priest, hearing Bernadette say “Immaculate Conception,” mispronouncing it and not understanding it?  She had to repeat it to herself all the way to the rectory.  He later said that he was “so amazed by it that I felt myself stagger and I was on the verge of falling.”

Only a few years before, in December, 1854, Pope Pius IX had declared Mary as the Immaculate Conception, conceived without sin, a dogma of the Catholic Church.  There was clearly significance in Mary’s using this more difficult name for herself – wouldn’t it have been easier to tell Bernadette she was the Mother of God or the Blessed Virgin?

The Ongoing Lesson of Lourdes

There are many well-documented miracles from Lourdes.  There’s a spring that wasn’t there before Bernadette dug into a rock at Mary’s bidding.

What’s most amazing to me is the lesson of the imperfect being made perfect.  I see, in the story of the events at Lourdes, that how I define “perfect” is, in itself, imperfect.

Here’s a Mary who can remind me that, even as I seek perfection, I often lose sight of what I should be seeking.  How often, as I rush toward an “ideal” day, do I fail to enjoy the perfection God has sent me this day, covered in the mud of everyday life?

—Sarah Reinhard writes and blogs about Mary, motherhood, and more at SnoringScholar.com.

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Comments

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I love this. I enjoyed the review of the story of Lourdes, and the ongoing lesson is one I needed for sure!  God bless.

 

Thank you Sarah. Your always an encouragment sharing what you do and God uses you to bolster my faith very much. I post your writings on my blog a lot and hope others are encouraged as well.
Emma


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