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Rosary devotions and spirituality

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Devotion to the Rosary is one of the most notable features of popular Catholic spirituality.[1] According to Pope John Paul II, rosary devotions can foster
some central objectives of Christian spirituality and they are "among the finest and most praiseworthy traditions of Christian contemplation."[2] From its
origins in the twelfth century the rosary has been seen as a meditation on the life of Christ, and it is as such that many Popes have approved of and
encouraged recitation of the rosary.

Use of repetitive prayer formulas goes far back in Christian history, and how these passed into the rosary tradition is not clear. It is clear that the 150
beads (Hail Marys) originated from the 150 Psalms prayed from the Hebrew Psalter. The rosary was a way for the ordinary faithful to simulate the
meditation of the monks from the hand-printed Psalter. It is clear that the second half of our Hail Mary, the petition to Mary, appeared for the first time in
the catechism of Peter Canisius in 1555 in the Counter-Reformation period, in reaction against Protestant criticism of some Catholic beliefs.[3][4]

Following the establishment of the first rosary confraternities in the fifteenth century, the devotion to the rosary spread rapidly throughout Europe. From
the sixteenth century onwards, rosary recitations often involved "picture texts" that assisted meditation. Such imagery continues to be used to assist in
rosary meditations.

Contents

 1Origins
 2Meditation and contemplation
 3Teachings of the saints
 4Papal views
 5Apparitions
 6Gallery of art and architecture
 7Notes
 8References
 9Further reading
 10External links

Origins[edit]
See also: History of the rosary

There are differing views on the origin of the rosary, with some traditions attributing it to Saint Dominic who integrated it into Dominican devotion, but
evidence shows its existence prior to his time, and a gradual development over centuries of practice.[5][6]

Part of a series on the

Rosary
of the Catholic Church

A Catholic rosary

Overview

 Blessed Virgin Mary

 Roman Catholic Mariology


 Devotions and spirituality

 History of the rosary

 Methods of praying the rosary

 Our Lady of the Rosary

 Rosary and scapular

 Battle of Lepanto

Prayers and promises

 Fatima Prayers

 Fifteen rosary promises

 The Mysteries

 Rosary-based prayers

 Rosary of the Holy Wounds

 Three Hail Marys

Writings

 God Alone

 Ingruentium malorum

 Marialis cultus

 The Power of the Rosary

 Rosarium Virginis Mariae

 Secret of the Rosary

People and societies

 Saint Dominic

 Blessed Alanus de Rupe

 Pope Saint Pius V

 Saint Louis de Montfort

 Rosary Pope (Leo XIII)

 Confraternity of the Rosary

 Our Lady's Rosary Makers

Catholicism portal

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 e

The practice of meditation during the praying of repeated Hail Marys goes back at least to the 1400s in Germany and the Carthusian monk Dominic of
Prussia who died in 1461, just as the Dominicans Alanus de Rupe and James Sprenger had started to promote the rosary. This meditative practice
was spread across Europe by traveling Carthusian monks, and was adopted by the Dominicans at large. A rosary hanging from the belt often forms
part of the Carthusian habit even today. [7]

By the middle of the 15th century the Dominican priest Blessed Alanus de Rupe had spent significant effort to spread the devotion in France and
the Netherlands, founding his first brotherhood for praying his Psalter in Douai in 1470.[8][9] James Sprenger formed the first confraternity of the
rosary in Cologne in 1475.[10][11] Rosary confraternities in Venice and Florence were formed in 1480 and 1481.[12]
Psalter of Alanus, 1492

By the 1500s the practice of meditation during the rosary had spread across Europe. Bartolomeo Scalvo's Meditationi del Rosario della Gloriosa Maria
Virgine (i.e. Meditations on the Rosary of the Glorious Virgin Mary) printed in 1569 for the rosary confraternity of Milan provided an individual
meditation to accompany each bead or prayer.[13]

Alanus de Rupe encouraged the rosary to be prayed in front of an image of Christ or the Virgin Mary. This style of meditation later resulted in
meditation using narrative images, the first of which was eventually printed by Dinkmut in Ulm, Germany. The use of "image directed rosary meditation"
soon gained popularity and at the end of the 16th century the most widely used rosary meditation in Germany was not a written one, but a picture
text.[14]

During the 16th century, the use of images as a form of religious instruction and indoctrination via silent preaching (muta predicatio) was promoted
by Gabriele Paleotti in his "Discourse on Sacred and Profane Images."[15] As the use of devotional images came to be seen as the "literature of the
layman," Paleotti's goal of the transformation of Christian life through the use of sacred images fostered and promoted Marian devotions including the
Rosary.[16]

By the 17th century, the 15 wood cut images of the picture rosary had become very popular and rosary books began to use them across Europe. In
contrast to written rosary meditations, the picture texts changed little and the same set of images appeared in woodcuts, engravings, and devotional
panels for over a hundred and fifty years.[14]

Meditation and contemplation[edit]


See also Christian meditation and Aspects of Christian meditation

A woman places a strand of rosary beads on a devotional image mounted on the wall beside her bed.[17] The Walters Art Museum.

The word meditation comes from the Latin word meditari which means to concentrate.[18] In 1577 in her book Interior Castle (Mansions 6, Chapter
7), Saint Teresa of Avila, a Doctor of the Church, defined the general approach to Christian meditation as follows:[19]

By meditation I mean prolonged reasoning with the understanding, in this way. We begin by thinking of the favor which God bestowed upon us
by giving us His only Son; and we do not stop there but proceed to consider the mysteries of His whole glorious life.

This perspective can be viewed as the basis of most scriptural rosary meditations.[20] Scriptural meditations on the rosary build on the Christian
tradition of Lectio Divina (divine reading) as a way of using the Gospel to start a conversation between the soul and Christ.

Christian meditation is differentiated from contemplation which involves a higher level of focus and detachment from the surroundings and
environment.[21] The word contemplation (coming from the Latin root templum, i.e. to cut or divide) means to separate oneself from the
environment. Saint John of the Cross called contemplation "silent love" and viewed it as an intimate union with God.[22] Contemplation with the
rosary is the next step beyond scriptural meditation. This does not mean that the Gospel is ignored during contemplation, but that the focus
moves toward the love of God.[23]

In his 2002 encyclical Rosarium Virginis Mariae, Pope John Paul II emphasized that the final goal of Christian life is to be transformed, or
"transfigured", into Christ, and the rosary helps believers come closer to Christ by contemplating Christ. He characterized the contemplative
aspects of the rosary as follow: "To recite the rosary is nothing other than to contemplate with Mary the face of Christ." [24] And quoting Pope Paul
VI he reiterated the importance of contemplation, stating that without contemplation, the rosary is "a body without soul."[25]
The rosary may be prayed anywhere, but as in many other devotions its recitation often involves some sacred space or object, such as an image
or statue of the Virgin Mary.[26] Anyone can begin to pray the rosary, but repeated recitations over a period of time result in the acquisition of
skills for meditation and contemplation.[27]

Teachings of the saints[edit]

The Virgin Mary and Saints on the Feast of the Rosary, by Albrecht Dürer, 1506.

In the sixteenth century, Saint Peter Canisius, a Doctor of the Church, who is credited with adding to the Hail Mary the sentence "Holy Mary,
Mother of God, pray for us sinners," was an ardent advocate of the rosary and its confraternities.[28] He developed and stressed the importance of
the meditative aspects of the rosary and was one of the first among the early Jesuits to teach that the principle virtue of each mystery of the
rosary should be applied to daily life.[29]

Saint Louis de Montfort, one of the early proponents of the field of Mariology, was a strong proponent of the rosary. He joined the Third Order of
the Dominicans in 1710, soon after being ordained a priest, in order to preach the rosary.[30] His books Secret of the Rosary and True Devotion to
Mary influenced the Mariological views of several popes. In Secret of the Rosary he taught how "focus, respect, reverence, and purity of
intention" are essential in praying the rosary. He stated that it is not the length of a prayer that matters, but the fervor, purity, and respect with
which it is said, e.g. a single meditatively said Hail Mary is worth many that are badly said. In the Secret of the Rosary, he also taught how to
fight distractions to achieve the proper mindset for meditating with the rosary. [31]

In the eighteenth century, Saint Alphonsus Liguori, a Doctor of the Church, also emphasized the need for proper devotion when praying the
rosary. In The Glories of Mary he wrote that the Virgin Mary would be more pleased with five decades of the rosary said slowly with devotion
than with fifteen said in a hurry and with little devotion. He recommended that the rosary should be said kneeling before an image of the Virgin
Mary and before each decade to make an act of love to Jesus and Mary and ask them for a particular grace.[32]

Saint Padre Pio was a firm believer in meditation in conjunction with the rosary and said: "Love the Madonna and pray the rosary, for her rosary
is the weapon against the evils of the world today. ...The person who meditates and turns his mind to God, who is the mirror of his soul, seeks to
know his faults, tries to correct them, moderates his impulses, and puts his conscience in order."[33]

Papal views[edit]
In 1569 Pope Pius V, a Dominican himself, officially established the devotion to the rosary in the Catholic Church with the papal
bull Consueverunt Romani Pontifices and in 1571 called for all of Europe to pray the rosary for victory at the Battle of Lepanto.[34][35][36]

Pope Leo XIII promulgated ten encyclicals on the rosary and instituted the Catholic custom of daily rosary prayer during the month of October. In
1883 he also created the Feast of Queen of the Holy Rosary.[37] In Laetitiae sanctae Leo XIII wrote that he was "convinced that the rosary, if
devoutly used, is of benefit not only to the individual but society at large."[38]

Pope Pius XII emphasized the benefits of rosary meditations in his encyclical Ingruentium Malorum and wrote:

And truly, from the frequent meditation on the Mysteries, the soul little by little and imperceptibly draws and absorbs the virtues they contain, and
is wondrously enkindled with a longing for things immortal, and becomes strongly and easily impelled to follow the path which Christ Himself and
His Mother have followed.[39]

The popes of the 19th and 20th centuries up to Pope Paul IV stressed the Mariological aspects of the rosary. However, in 1974 in his Apostolic
Exhortation Marialis Cultus, Pope Paul VI focused more on its traditional meditative, Christocentric nature and stated: "The rosary is therefore a
prayer with a clearly Christological orientation."[40]

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Mariology
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Virgo by Josef Moroder-Lusenberg

Overview[show]

Prayers[show]

Antiphons[show]

Hymns to Mary[show]

Devotional practices[show]

Movements and societies[show]

Apparitions[show]

Key Marian feast days[show]

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Pope John Paul II built on the Christocentric theme of Pope Paul VI,[41] stating: "The rosary, though clearly Marian in character, is at heart a
Christocentric prayer. In the sobriety of its elements, it has all the depth of the Gospel message in its entirety, of which it can be said to be a
compendium."[42]

He further emphasized the contemplative nature of the rosary and stated that: "The rosary belongs among the finest and most praiseworthy
traditions of Christian contemplation."[2]

Apparitions[edit]
References to the rosary have been part of a number of reported Marian Apparitions spanning two centuries. The reported messages from these
apparitions have influenced the spread of rosary devotions worldwide.[43][44]

Saint Bernadette Soubirous stated that in the first apparition of Our Lady of Lourdes in 1858, the Virgin Mary had a rosary with her and that
Bernadette prayed the rosary in her presence then and during subsequent apparitions.[45] The Rosary Basilica was built at that site in Lourdes in
1899.

The rosary was prominently featured in the apparitions of Our Lady of Fátima reported by three Portuguese children in 1917. The reported
Fatima messages place a strong emphasis on the Rosary and in them the Virgin Mary is identified as The Lady of the Rosary. According to Lucia
Santos (one of the three children) in one of the apparitions the Virgin Mary has a rosary in one hand and a Brown scapular in the other hand.
Reports of the Fatima apparitions helped spread rosary devotions and a Fatima prayer is now often added to the end of rosary
recitations.[46][47] The Basilica of Our Lady of the Rosary, Fatima, was built at that site in 1953 and has fifteen altars, each dedicated to a mystery
of the rosary.[48]
In January 1933 an eleven-year-old peasant girl called Mariette Beco reported apparitions of the Virgin Mary in Banneux, Belgium, which
became known as the Virgin of the Poor. Mariette reported seeing the Virgin Mary with a rosary in hand. Mariette reported that the apparition
repeated three days later after she went outside her house and prayed the rosary.[49] The reports of this apparition, also known as Our Lady of
Banneux, were approved by the Holy See in 1949.[50][51][52][53]

In the reported messages of Our Lady of Akita, Sister Agnes Sasagawa stated that in 1973 she was told by the Virgin Mary: "Pray very much the
prayers of the rosary. I alone am able still to save you from the calamities which approach." In 1984, the Bishop of Niigata, John Shojiro Ito,
authorized the veneration of the Holy Mother of Akita "...while awaiting for the Holy See to publish a definitive judgment on this matter."[54]

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