Our Lady ofPerpetual Help
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PAINTED in tempera on hard nutwood,
21 inches by 17, the original picture of Our Lady of Perpetual Help is one of
many copies of the famed Hodeguilria of
St. Luke.* It is, however, THE ONE COPY singled out - by Our Lady Herself -
for special heavenly favors. You may
see it today enshrined above the high altar in the Redemptorist Church of San
Alfonso, at Rome.
HISTORY
How it got there is a long
story.
Briefly, at the close of the
15th century, a merchant stole the picture from its shrine on the island of
Crete, miraculously weathered a tumultuous sea voyage and finally brought it to
Rome. There, before he died, he gave it
to a Roman friend, begging him to have it placed in a worthy church. This, the friend neglected to do.
Our Lady then appeared,
urging the Roman to comply with the request, threatening him even with
death. At his wife's bidding, however,
the man paid little heed to the apparition.
Shortly after, he died.
Next Our Lady appeared to
the little daughter of the family.
"Go to your mother and grandfather," She commanded, "and
say to them: 'Holy Mary of Perpetual Help
warns you to take Her from your house; else all of you will soon die.' "
The girl relayed the message to her mother.
Panic stricken, the woman promised to obey.
Our Lady then told the
little girl just where the picture
should be placed: in the church "between the basilica of St. Mary Major
and that of St. John Lateran." In solemn procession, on March 27, 1499, it
was carried to that church, the church
of St. Matthew the Apostle. The same
day, a miracle occurred; a man's arm, crippled beyond use, was completely
restored.
SO, FOR 300 YEARS, the
picture hung over the main altar in the church of St. Matthew the Apostle,
loved by all, renowned far and wide for miracles.
Then came June, 1798. Napoleon entered Rome. The church of St. Matthew was leveled to the
ground. The picture disappeared.
For sixty-four years it
remained hidden, almost forgotten, until . . . one day at recreation, in the
Redemptorist house in
Rome, one of the Fathers
mentioned having read, in an old tome, that their present church, San Alfonso,
was built on the ruins of St. Matthew's, where once was enshrined a miraculous
picture: Out- Lady of Perpetual Help.
The name startled Father Michael Marchi. He recalled, as a boy, having served Mass in the oratory of the
Irish Augustinians at Santa Maria in Posterula. There he had seen the picture.
An old Brother had pointed it out to him.
SOME MONTHS LATER, in February, Father Francis
Blosi, S.J., preaching in the Gesu on
"the lost Madonna of Perpetual Help," told how it was Our Lady's wish
that the picture be enshrined in the church "between the basilicas of St.
Mary Major and St. John Lateran." Word got back to the Redemptorists. The Superior General was informed. But he waited three more years. He wanted to be certain.
Finally, on December 11,
1865, the whole matter was presented to Pope Pius IX. On January 19, 1866, the miraculous picture was brought once more
to the site of its former glory, the church between the two basilicas, now that
of San Alfonso. Three months later, it was solemnly enshrined.
And on June 23, 1867, it was crowned.
* The picture of Our Lady, reputedly painted by St. Luke, venerated
for centuries at Constantinople as a miraculous icon. It was destroyed by the Turks in the year 1453.
** Taken from a pamphlet published
with Ecclesiastical approval