Hope | AirMaria.com https://dev.airmaria.com Breathe Freely Mon, 04 Mar 2019 16:57:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://airmaria.s3.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/28143228/amicon-r-100x100.png Hope | AirMaria.com https://dev.airmaria.com 32 32 Video – Fra Joseph – No Apologies#14: The Co-Redemtrix and Mediatrix of All Graces https://dev.airmaria.com/2007/07/10/video-fra-joseph-no-apologies-the-co-redemtrix-and-mediatrix-of-all-graces/ Tue, 10 Jul 2007 15:21:20 +0000 http://www.airmaria.com/?p=291 No Apologies #14 – Fra Joseph showing that the Co-Redemtrix is Scripturally based. >>> Play Ave Maria! In this weeks episode of No Apologies Fra Joseph defends what many hope to be the...

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No Apologies #14 – Fra Joseph showing that the Co-Redemtrix is Scripturally based. >>> Play

Ave Maria!

In this weeks episode of No Apologies Fra Joseph defends what many hope to be the fifth and final Marian Dogma: that Mary is the CO-Redemtrix and Mediatrix of All Graces.

Ave Maria!

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Video – Roving Reporter #15: Cross at Ground Zero https://dev.airmaria.com/2007/09/30/video-roving-reporter-cross-at-ground-zero/ Sun, 30 Sep 2007 16:19:14 +0000 http://www.airmaria.com/?p=521 Roving Reporter #15 – John Solicia who discovered the Cross at Ground Zero. (10min) >>> Play Ave Maria! While we were in NY on 9/11 we ran into John Solicia who found the...

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Roving Reporter #15 – John Solicia who discovered the Cross at Ground Zero. (10min)
>>> Play

Ave Maria!

While we were in NY on 9/11 we ran into John Solicia who found the famous Steal I-Beam Cross that fell from the towers when they collapsed. The Cross is now mounted alongside St. Peters 50 feet from were Our Lady of America was placed on 9/11. Eventually the Cross will be part of the memorial at Ground Zero when it is completed. While we were doing the interview the names of those who died where being read on the load speaker at the memorial service at Ground Zero and can be heard in the background. Listen to this inspiring account of hope and light that the Cross can bring in the midst of great darkness and despair.

Ave Maria!

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From the Web – The Truth https://dev.airmaria.com/2008/04/16/from-the-web-the-truth/ https://dev.airmaria.com/2008/04/16/from-the-web-the-truth/#comments Wed, 16 Apr 2008 16:34:23 +0000 http://www.airmaria.com/?p=1295 Ave Maria! Very clever video from YouTube for our troubled times. [youtube jsPBVNecOMo]

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Ave Maria!

Very clever video from YouTube for our troubled times.

[youtube jsPBVNecOMo]

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Nov 23 – Homily – Fr Bonaventure: Christ the King https://dev.airmaria.com/2008/11/23/nov-23-homily-fr-bonaventure-christ-the-king/ https://dev.airmaria.com/2008/11/23/nov-23-homily-fr-bonaventure-christ-the-king/#comments Sun, 23 Nov 2008 16:21:19 +0000 http://airmaria.com/?p=2292 Homily #081123 ( 24min) Play – On the Solemnity of Christ the King, Fr. Bonaventure places this in the teaching of Pope Pius XI who proclaimed this feast. He contrasts this to all...

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Homily #081123 ( 24min) Play – On the Solemnity of Christ the King, Fr. Bonaventure places this in the teaching of Pope Pius XI who proclaimed this feast. He contrasts this to all those who deny the Kingship of Christ throughout history, starting with Pontius Pilate. He then underscores the sure hope we have in our difficult times, that Christ will be the absolute victor over any of the many modern Pilates. Long live Christ the King!!
Ave Maria! Mass readings
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Jan 09 – Homily – Fr Angelo: Faith, Hope and Charity https://dev.airmaria.com/2009/01/09/jan-09-homily-fr-angelo-faith-hope-and-charity/ Fri, 09 Jan 2009 23:07:30 +0000 http://airmaria.com/?p=2495 Homily #090109 ( 07min) Play – Ave Maria! Mass readings “Lord, if you wish, you can make me clean.” Jesus stretched out his hand, touched him, and said, “I do will it. Be...

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Homily #090109 ( 07min) Play

Ave Maria! Mass readings

“Lord, if you wish, you can make me clean.”
Jesus stretched out his hand, touched him, and said,
“I do will it. Be made clean.”
And the leprosy left him immediately.

Fr. Angelo Geiger relates this miracle account to the three Theological Virtues of faith, hope and charity.

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Our Lady of Pontmain: “But Pray, My Children…” https://dev.airmaria.com/2009/01/16/our-lady-of-pontmain-but-pray-my-children/ https://dev.airmaria.com/2009/01/16/our-lady-of-pontmain-but-pray-my-children/#comments Fri, 16 Jan 2009 19:00:56 +0000 http://airmaria.com/?p=2460 Ave Maria Meditations “But pray, my children. God will hear you in a short time. My Son allows Himself to be moved by compassion.” January 17, 1871 She was dressed in a star-studded...

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“But pray, my children. God will hear you in a short time.

My Son allows Himself to be moved by compassion.”

January 17, 1871

She was dressed in a star-studded robe of dark blue with slippers of the same colour. A black veil on which she wore a gold crown decorated with a red band covered her head. It was in a little village of Pontmain, near the northern end of the diocese of Laval, that the miraculous event occurred. From six to nine that evening the Blessed Virgin appeared continuously in the sky over one of the houses in the village.

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At the time of the apparition Pontmain was a small village, inhabited by simple and hardworking country folk, who were guided by their parish priest Abbé Michel Guérin. The Barbadette family consisted of father César, his wife, Victoire, with their two sons Joseph and Eùgene, aged ten and twelve, and another older boy who was away in the army. On the evening of 17 January 1871, the two boys were helping their father in the barn when the eldest, Eùgene, walked over towards the door to look out.

As he gazed at the star studded sky he noticed one area practically free of stars above a neighbouring house. Suddenly he saw an apparition of a beautiful woman smiling at him; she was wearing a blue gown covered with golden stars, and a black veil under a golden crown.

His father, brother, and a neighbour came out to look and Joseph immediately said he too could see the apparition although the adults saw nothing. The mother, Victoire, came out but she too could see nothing, although she was puzzled because her boys were usually very truthful. She suggested that it might be the Blessed Virgin, and that they should all say five Our Fathers and five Hail Marys in her honour.

As it was now about a quarter past six, and time for supper, the boys were ordered inside but soon after allowed to go outside again. The Lady was still there and so the local schoolteacher, Sister Vitaline, was sent for. She couldn’t see the Lady, and so she went to fetch three young children from the school to see their reactions.

Immediately they arrived the two older children, two girls aged nine and eleven, expressed their delight at the apparition, describing it as the boys had done, although the youngest child saw nothing.

The adults in the crowd, which had now grown to about sixty people including the priest, could still see nothing and began to say the rosary, as the children exclaimed that something new was happening. A blue oval frame with four candles, two at the level of the shoulders and two at the knees, was being formed around the Lady, and a short red cross had appeared over her heart.

As the rosary progressed the figure and its frame grew larger, until it was twice life size; the stars around her began to multiply and attach themselves to her dress until it was covered with them.

As the Magnificat was being said the four children cried out, “Something else is happening.” A broad streamer on which letters were appearing unrolled beneath the feet of the Lady, so that eventually the phrase, “But pray, my children,” could be read.

Fr. Guérin then ordered that the Litany of Our Lady should be sung, and as this progressed new letters appeared, making the message, “God will soon answer you.” As they continued to sing, another message was formed, one that removed any doubt that it was the Blessed Virgin who was appearing to the children; “My Son allows Himself to be moved.”

The children were beside themselves with joy at the beauty of the Lady and her smile, but her expression then changed to one of extreme sadness, as she now contemplated a large red cross that had suddenly appeared before her, with a figure of Jesus on it in an even darker shade of red.

One of the stars then lit the four candles that surrounded the figure, as the crucifix vanished and the group began night prayers. As these were being recited, the children reported that a white veil was rising from the Lady’s feet and gradually blotting her out, until finally, at about nine o’clock, the apparition was over.

The following March a canonical inquiry into the apparition was held, and in May the local bishop questioned the children, the inquiry being continued later in the year with further questioning by theologians and a medical examination. The bishop was satisfied by these investigations, and in February 1872 declared his belief that it was the Blessed Virgin who had appeared to the children.

Joseph Barbadette became a priest, a member of the Congregation of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate, while his brother Eùgene became a secular priest. He was assisted by one of the girls who had seen Mary as his housekeeper, with the other, Jeanne-Marie Lebossé, becoming a nun. A large basilica was built at Pontmain and consecrated in 1900.

Source: Beevers, The Sun her Mantle, Dublin, 1954.

OL Pontmain

THE APPARITION OF OUR LADY AT PONTMAIN, FRANCE.

January 1871 was one of the darkest times in the history of France. The Empire had fallen before the advance of the Prussian armies, Paris was under siege, and the enemy forces were driving West. On January 17, the Prussian armies were at the outskirts of Laval. That afternoon the Bishop of Saint-Brieuc signed a solemn vow to Our Lady of Hope, which was read, in the cathedral at six o’clock. Mary chose this particular time to show, in a most extraordinary way, that the prayers of the French people would be answered.

It happened on January 17th, 1871. The German army neared the west of France. The mass of its deserters was endless. They would not heed the commands of their officers, and even though two were executed, it did not stop others from running away.

The snowy weather made for miserable discomfort. All day and night wagons passed through Laval from east to west. All bearing wounded whom needed care. The countryside farmers feared the onslaught of needy and hid their possessions of money, food, wine and linens.Typhoid had broken out and Small pox threatened all. Everything seemed doomed.

Just days before, the Aurora Borealis produced fear and awe in many. Some reported the evening lights as tall masts of ships and others claimed them to look like the steeples of a great cathedral.

The worst fear came with an earthquake at about half past twelve the day of January 17th. No one saved hope for anything. Despondency surmounted unbeatable. Shouts of “No use in praying. God doesn’t hear us!” prevailed from even the most optimistic.

In a barn, a family of two young boys and their father crushed thorns to feed the horses. Eugene Barbedettes, twelve and his brother, Joseph, aged ten, were fascinated with the Northern lights and were anxious to see the show that night.

It was in a little village of Pontmain, near the northern end of the diocese of Laval, that the miraculous event occurred. From six to nine that evening the Blessed Virgin appeared continuously in the sky over one of the houses in the village.

The apparition was witnessed by four small children, Eugene and Joseph Barbadette, Francoise Richer, and Jeanne-Marie LeBosse. Joseph, who later became an Oblate of Mary Immaculate, described the Lady as about twenty years of age and very beautiful.

She was dressed in a star-studded robe of dark blue with slippers of the same colour. A black veil on which she wore a gold crown decorated with a red band covered her head. It was in a little village of Pontmain, near the northern end of the diocese of Laval, that the miraculous event occurred. From six to nine that evening the Blessed Virgin appeared continuously in the sky over one of the houses in the village.

When the children first saw here she stood with her hands extended “like the miraculous medal.” What impressed the children most was her delightful smile, which seemed to be directed at each one of them individually. As news of the strange doings spread quickly throughout the little village, the Curé, the Sisters, and all the inhabitants gathered on the spot. After they had recited the rosary at the pastor’s direction, a large white banner slowly unfolded under the figure of the Lady and on it were written in letters of gold the words:

“But pray, my children. God will soon answer your prayer. My Son is willing to hear you.”

The need for prayer was all around them and through the children’s innocence to see Mary; the hopelessness gave way to prayer for hope. Hope that God would hear their prayers.

Then one of the Sisters led the group in the singing of the hymn, “Mother of Hope”. Our Lady’s reaction was immediate. Her smile broadened until the children cried out, “She is laughing!” and she raised her hands to beat time to the music.

When the hymn ended, however, her expression became grave for the first time and in her hands there appeared a large crucifix. The cross itself was blood red, the corpus a darker shade. At the top was an extra crosspiece, of white, on which was printed in red letters the inscription, “Jesus Christ.” During this part of the apparition, Our Lady’s eyes sadly contemplated the cross, the symbol and the pledge of our salvation. With the singing of the hymn, “Ave Maris Stella,” the cross disappeared, and Our Lady smiled again, though this time not without a touch of sadness. This tender expression remained on her face until, after the recitation of night prayers by the crowd, a white cloud veiled the Lady from view and the apparition was at an end. Before the news of the event at Pontmain had spread beyond the neighbourhood, Our Lady’s promise came true. The very day after the apparition, the Prussians halted their advance and withdrew ten mils. Peace came to the devout clients of Mary in Western France.

The Bishop of Laval lost no time holding a thorough inquiry into the apparition. Careful questioning of the four children and many adult bystanders led him to pronounce that a true apparition of the Blessed Virgin had taken place at Pontmain and to authorize her “cultus” at the scene. Many years later Pope Pius XI, after an exhaustive examination of the evidence, confirmed the decision of the Episcopal court and granted a Mass and Office proper to our Lady of Hope of Pontmain. The barn from which the children had first seen the strange vision in the sky was turned into a chapel and soon became a place of pilgrimage. After the death of the elderly pastor, Father Michael Guerin, the Oblates of Mary Immaculate were placed in charge of the shrine. They erected the great basilica of Our Lady of Hope, which was consecrated in 1900.

During the trying days of German occupation in the last war, devotion to Our Lady of Hope received a new impetus. Since the end of the war, tens of thousands of pilgrims have journeyed to Pontmain to pay their thanks to the Mother of Hope or to seek her further intercession. The Oblate Fathers and Brothers introduced the devotion to America in 1952.

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Video – 2009 National and Global Difficulties – Dr Miravalle: Mcast s36 https://dev.airmaria.com/2009/02/07/video-2009-national-and-global-difficulties-dr-miravalle-mcast-s36/ Sat, 07 Feb 2009 08:01:17 +0000 http://airmaria.com/?p=2609 Marycast Specials #36 ( 10min) Play – Dr. Miravalle discusses some of the burning concerns on the hearts of the faithful at the start of 2009, and gives us words of encouragement and...

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Marycast Specials #36 ( 10min) Play – Dr. Miravalle discusses some of the burning concerns on the hearts of the faithful at the start of 2009, and gives us words of encouragement and of words of hope to refocus our attention on what matters most.

To ask questions regarding Mary, email Dr Mark Miravalle: marycast@airmaria.com
Ave Maria!

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Video – Face of Pro-Life #58: Healing from Abortion https://dev.airmaria.com/2009/02/15/video-face-of-pro-life-58-healing-from-abortion/ https://dev.airmaria.com/2009/02/15/video-face-of-pro-life-58-healing-from-abortion/#comments Sun, 15 Feb 2009 08:01:29 +0000 http://airmaria.com/?p=2617 Face of Pro-Life #58 – Dawn Cousineau’s Story of Hope ( 30min) >>> Play Ave Maria! In this episode, hostess Corinn Dahm speaks with Dawn Cousineau on the healing process for women who...

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Face of Pro-Life #58 – Dawn Cousineau’s Story of Hope ( 30min) >>> Play

Ave Maria!

In this episode, hostess Corinn Dahm speaks with Dawn Cousineau on the healing process for women who have had abortions.  Dawn shares her own personal testimony of the family and life trama she experienced in her college years after having had an abortion, and how, later on, she found a new life through Our Lady, the Sacraments, and the Rachel’s Vineyard Retreats.

Ave Maria!

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Look Down upon Me, Good and Gentle Jesus https://dev.airmaria.com/2009/04/05/look-down-upon-me-good-and-gentle-jesus/ Sun, 05 Apr 2009 17:00:08 +0000 http://airmaria.com/?p=3880 Ave Maria Meditations Look down upon me, good and gentle Jesus (En ego, o bone et dulcissime Iesu) Look down upon me, good and gentle Jesus, while before your face I humbly kneel,...

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Ave Maria Meditations

Look down upon me, good and gentle Jesus (En ego, o bone et dulcissime Iesu)

Look down upon me, good and gentle Jesus, while before your face I humbly kneel, and with burning soul pray and beseech you to fix deep in my heart lively sentiments of faith, hope and charity, true contrition for my sins, and a firm purpose of amendment, while I contemplate with great love and tender pity your five wounds, pondering over them within me, calling to mind the words which David, your prophet, said of you, my good Jesus: “They have pierced my hands and my feet; they have numbered all my bones” (Ps 21, 17-18).

How to Approach Christ’s Passion


Listen to the Lord’s appeal: In me, I want you to see your own body, your members, your heart, your bones, your blood. You may fear what is divine, but why not love what is human? You may run away from me as the Lord, but why not run to me as your father?


Perhaps you are filled with shame for causing my bitter passion. Do not be afraid. This cross inflicts a mortal injury, not on me, but on death. These nails no longer pain me, but only deepen your love for me. I do not cry out because of these wounds, but through them I draw you into my heart.


My body was stretched on the cross as a symbol, not of how much I suffered, but of my all-embracing love. I count it no loss to shed my blood: it is the price I have paid for your ransom. Come, then, return to me and learn to know me as your father, who repays good for evil, love for injury, and boundless charity for piercing wounds.


St. Peter Chrysologus

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Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking into heaven? https://dev.airmaria.com/2009/05/21/men-of-galilee-why-do-you-stand-looking-into-heaven/ Thu, 21 May 2009 20:00:02 +0000 http://airmaria.com/?p=4657 Ave Maria Meditations This Jesus who was taken up from you into heaven, will come in the same way as you saw Him go into heaven. (Acts 1:11) + The Ascension of Jesus...

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Ave Maria Meditations

This Jesus who was taken up from you into heaven, will come in the same way as you saw Him go into heaven. (Acts 1:11)

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The Ascension of Jesus gives rise to manifold sentiments in the faithful soul that contemplates it. If Christ no longer merits, His Ascension has, however, the virtue of efficaciously producing the graces that it signifies or symbolizes.

It strengthens our faith in the Divinity of Jesus; it increases our hope by the vision of the glory of our Head by stirring us up to the observance of His commandments on which our merits rest, and that are themselves the principle of our future beatitude, it still further enkindles our love.  It engenders in us wonder at so marvelous a triumph, and gratitude for the share in it that Christ gives to us. Lifting up our souls towards heavenly realities, it quickens in us detachment from passing things: Seek the things that are above; where Christ is sitting at the right hand of God, not the things upon the earth. (Col.3:.1-2) It gives us patience in adversity for, says St. Paul, if we suffer with Christ, we shall also share in His glory: so if we suffer with Him, we may be also be glorified with Him. (Rom.8:17)

There are two dispositions upon which I would dwell with you a few instants because, springing with special abundance from the contemplation of this mystery, they are singularly profitable for our souls: they are joy and confidence.


And first of all why should we rejoice?

Our Lord Himself said to His Apostles before leaving them: if you loved Me, you would indeed be glad because I go to the Father. (Jn.14:28) To us, too, Christ repeats those words. If we love Him, we shall rejoice in His glorification; we shall rejoice in that having finished His course, He ascends to His Father’s right hand, to be there exalted to the highest heaven; there to taste, after His labors, sufferings, and death, eternal repose in incommensurable glory. Bliss, such as is incomprehensible to us, envelops and penetrates Him forever in the bosom of the Divinity. Supreme power is given Him over every creature.

How can we fail to rejoice in that justice is rendered in all fullness to Jesus, by His Father. See how the Church invites us, in her liturgy, to celebrate with gladness this elevation of her Bridegroom, our God and our Redeemer.

With this deep joy we ought to combine unwavering confidence. This confidence especially rests on the almighty power of mediation that Christ has with His Father, not only as an invincible King entering into His triumph, but as a supreme High Priest interceding for us, after having offered to His Father an oblation of infinite worth. Now, it is on the day of His Ascension that Jesus, in a special manner, began this unique mediation. We have here a very interior aspect of the mystery on which it is highly useful to dwell for some instants. May the Holy Spirit grant us to understand how marvelous are the divine works.

Blessed Columba Marmion: Christ in His Mysteries


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