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She brought forth the Tabernacle of God |
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Novana Prayer to St. Ann O Glorious St. Ann, filled with compassion for those who invoke you and with love for those who suffer, heavily laden with the weight of my troubles, I cast myself at your feet and humbly beg of you to take under your special protection the present affair which I commend to you. (State your Petition) Be pleased to commend it to your daughter, the Blessed Virgin Mary, and lay it before the throne of Jesus, so that He may bring it to a happy outcome. Cease not to intercede for me until my request is granted. Above all, obtain for me the grace of one day beholding my God face to face, and, with you and Mary and all the Saints, of praising and blessing Him for all eternity. Amen. Good St. Ann, mother of her who is our life, our sweetness and hope, pray to her for us and obtain our request. (three times) Good St. Ann, pray for us. Jesus, Mary, Ann |
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The Biography of St. Ann - source Good St. Anne by Tan Publishing, Inc. St. Ann is the mother of Mary and the grandmother of Jesus. She is the great model of all in the married state and of those otherwise charged with the education of children. Great was her honor in being the mother of the Mother of God and in giving to a lost world the Advocate of Mercy. Sublime was her duty in instructing this blessed child in virtue and holiness. St. Ann herself was a "vessel of grace," not in name only, but in the possession of those gifts with which God had endowed her to be the worthy mother of the Virgin Mary. Her motherly care for the Blessed Virgin was the means of St. Ann's sanctification. Because of this she receives and will receive a special glory in the Church to the end of ages. How encouraging this is to all parents who make the holy education of their children their principal duty. By this they glorify their Creator, perpetuate His honor on earth and sanctify their souls. From the hands of the parents God will one day require the souls of their children. Happy will those parents be who can say to the Divine Judge: "Not one of those who You have given me has been lost through my fault." Realizing, therefore, the great duty she has in rearing her children well, the Catholic mother will daily recommend her children to God and pray especially to St. Ann for the gift of imparting to them a good training, the highest and most difficult of all arts. St. Ann obtains many graces, priceless graces, for all who venerate her, but she grants her maternal assistance in particular to Christian mothers who choose her for their patroness and model. Numberless examples prove that St. Ann obtains great favors for Christian mothers. She preserves peace in married life, restores harmony in discord and often wonderfully changes the bad disposition of a husband or wife. She protects the birth of children in extraordinary manner; bestows blessings that lighten the task of rearing children properly; brings wayward children back upon the right path; obtains restoration to health for the mother when sick; preserves her precious life for her family, for her helpless children; and prevents the loss of husband and father. She revealed to St. Bridget that she would protect all who live chastely and peacefully in the married state. St. Ann is glorious among the Saints, not only because she is the mother of Mary, but also because she gave Mary to God. She did not hesitate to sacrifice this child, her greatest joy, to the call of God, dedicating her at the age of three to His service in the Temple. In this she is a beautiful example to parents to foster and encourage vocations to the religious life among their children, rather than running the dread risk of hindering them. Through the intercession of St. Ann, parents come to know and acknowledge divine guidance and learn that children are born to them not for earthly ends, but for God. Titles of St. Ann Mother of the Poor: St. Ann's love for the poor is evident from the praise bestowed upon her by St. John Damascene, who relates that she and St. Joachim (her husband) distributed one third of their possessions to the poor. St. Ann still continues her charity in Heaven by assisting the poor, often in a wonderful manner. Nor does St. Ann forget the dying, the poorest of the poor. These, above all others, experience her motherly protection. Health of the Sick: The number of cures produced through the intercession of St. Ann is countless. Day after day the churches dedicated to her, as that at St. Anne de Beaupré, have resounded with the suppliant voices of her clients. Sight has been restored to the blind, hearing to the deaf, soundness to the bodies of the infirm and crippled. Good St. Ann, like a true and faithful mother, does not turn a deaf ear to the pleas of her children; and as a mother's heart is deeply touched at the sight of the afflictions of her children, so is St. Ann's motherly heart touched by the petitions of those who come to her seeking solace and comfort. Patroness of the Childless: Childless women invoke good st. Ann because, only after many years of married life, did this Saint finally receive from God the child of grace, Mary. Full of compassion for those in like sorrow, she intercedes with God and, if it be His holy will, obtains for them the favor which completes the happiness of conjugal union. Help of the Pregnant: This title of good St. Ann is connected with the foregoing. As she obtains for women the much-desired favor of motherhood, so she will also guard the fruit of the womb, so that the child may receive holy Baptism. She assists mothers when they are in their great anxiety, and she obtains a happy delivery. Model of Married Women and Mothers: St. Ann is the shining example of all Christian women. This was her vocation on earth as wife of St. Joachim and mother of the Blessed Virgin. She is indeed, the patronesses of Christian women and mothers their special protectress and advocate, having herself borne the heavy burdens of the married state and tasted all the bitterness which makes this vocation difficult. In every family where good St. Ann is invoked, she shows herself a loving protectress, and never has she been venerated or invoked in vain. She obtains for women, particularly in our misguided age, the light to understand the high purpose of Matrimony. God instituted this Sacrament for the propagation of mankind. Since the Fall, the state of Matrimony is, especially for the wife, a state of penance, of labor, of submission. But although children are often a source of much trouble and care to parents, particularly to the mother, they are, nevertheless, to be regarded as a blessing, "the blessing of children," for they are a gift of God, a pledge of His fatherly goodness. This is the sublime, the sacred purpose of Matrimony: to bring forth children who will be children of God, heirs of Heaven, who are destined to possess forever the places of the Fallen Angels! The hope of the Church is in good Christian mothers; their sons and daughters will fill the sanctuaries and convents. Protectress of Widows: Difficult is the state of the Christian widow. Bereft of her husband, her staff and the support of her children, she stands alone in the world - if poor, doubly needy. Is it any wonder, then, that Holy Scripture, after recommending to our charity the poor and orphans, also begs our compassion for widows? Their patroness, good St. Ann, will lovingly shield and protect them in their many dangers and temptations, both spiritual and temporal. Hence, Christian widows feel drawn to place themselves under her powerful protection. Patroness of Laborers: Among the various classes of laborers, many regard St. Ann as their special protectress. But it is very significant that Christian sculptors venerate her as their model. They have chosen as their emblem the image of St. Ann teaching the child Mary, with these words inscribed beneath: "Thus she brought forth the Tabernacle of God." For every Christian artist, the Tabernacle, the dwelling of God, is in a certain sense the masterpiece of his art.
Viewing: Wednesday, March 10, 2010
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