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THE
RICHES OF KNOCK
The Apparition at Knock
is a fountain filled
with eternal riches and
good things for mankind
in an uncertain world of
many misfortunes.
It
testifies to the truth
and the reality of the
Gospel Story, and its
language is the language
of silent symbolism, a
medium of communication
superior to any words.
By means of this
language it speaks to
the heart. The more one
thinks about it, the
clearer does its meaning
and message become.
Let us
then draw out of the
riches of Knock
something of that
meaning and message in
order that we may better
appreciate and
understand the
significance of that
August evening in 1879.
Our Lady
appears attired as a
queen with her brilliant
and sparkling crown.
Here we see the queen of
Heaven asserting the
truth of her coronation.
She is already crowned
as queen of the church
in Heaven and she would
have us see that this is
really so. By coming to
Knock she would have us
see also that she is
queen of the church on
earth. Because of her
queen ship, she has a
special responsibility
for the human race. We
are all her children.
She cares for each and
every one, especially
for her suffering and
sinful children. It is
because she cares she
comes to show her
concern and she comes to
Knock because no nation
has been more loyal to
her Crown of Roses.
Because of her queen
ship, it is our duty to
pay her homage,
reverence and respect.
Her role as queen is
universal in the scheme
of God and for this
reason homage, reverence
and respect are due to
her in all lands and at
all times.
Mary
appears at Knock wearing
her crown which
presupposes her glorious
assumption. She comes to
Knock within the octave
of the Feast of the
Assumption. She comes
from heaven to clarify,
for all time, the fact
and reality of her
assumption, which in
1879, has not been
proclaimed a Dogma of
the universal church.
Mary, is
assumed into Heaven and
there crowned queen
because she has shared
in the work of our
Redemption.
All these
things are possible only
because, first and
foremost, Mary is chosen
as God's Mother and
later as our mother,
too. Knock is a reminder
of her universal
motherhood, a reminder
of salvation day on
Calvary. On that day
"when Jesus saw his
mother, and the
disciple, whom he loved
standing near, he said
to his mother, "Woman,
behold, your son!' Then
he said to the disciple,
'Behold, your mother!'
And from that hour the
disciple took her to his
own home." (John 19)
At Knock,
Mary and John stand,
side by side, in the
presence of the Cross,
standing upright on an
altar with the Lamb of
God. Because of Our
Lady's motherhood, the
world is given a saviour,
Jesus Christ, the Lamb
of God who takes away
the sins of the world.
She gives us her Son for
our salvation and shares
in our salvation with
him. At Knock, Mary
would have us reflect
upon the implications of
her motherly role, the
incarnation and the
drama of our salvation.
She would have us
appreciate the value of
these mysteries,
pondering them in our
hearts.
At Knock,
Mary's hands and eyes
are raised up in prayer.
Doubtless, her prayer is
for that church of which
she is the mother. She
is the first redeemed,
the first flowering of
the pilgrim church. Her
prayer is for all her
children, especially for
those most in need. As
mother of the universal
church she would have us
understand the necessity
of prayer in our lives
and the efficacy of that
same prayer especially
when it is made through
her who appears as our
intercessor and helper.
Prayer leads to glory
and to the enjoyment of
all good things.
The
church is a universal
family made up of
countless individual
family units. Knock is a
reminder of the
importance of the
Christian family and the
good
home. The
Holy Family is present -
Mary,
Joseph
and the
Lamb. Here. Mary is
mother of the universal
family. Joseph is patron
of the universal family.
The lamb is the saviour
of the universal family.
Mary would have us learn
at Knock the lessons of
the family home of
Nazareth.
St. John
the Evangelist appears
at Knock as the
universal preacher. He
represents the official
teaching church. The
beloved disciple also
represents the
ministerial church, the
priesthood, empowered to
offer the Eucharistic
celebration, which is
Calvary continued and
renewed, until the end
of time. Mary would have
us learn at Knock,
respect for and
acceptance of, the word
of God, which St. John
holds in the open book,
in his left hand.
The
vision of Knock is a
consolation in hungry
times but it is also a
pointer to a deeper and
more lasting hunger in
mankind, a hunger which
can only be satisfied by
a spiritual food,
namely, the Blessed
Eucharist, the Bread of
Life. In 1879 there are
blighted fields in
Ireland but they too are
outward signs of a more
destructive blight,
which kills the soul -
the blight of sin and
wrongdoing. The Irish
people fight for their
land but Knock reminds
them of another land,
the possession of which
is all that really
matters. It is a
guarantee of the
resurrection and the
reality of Heaven and as
such is a source of
unending joy, a beacon
of Christian hope.
Our
pilgrim journey to glory
is made possible at
Knock, for Mary would
have us avail of the
fruits of the
Incarnation and
Redemption. She invites
us to receive the
Sacraments, and by
receiving them, our
eternal destiny is
assured.
In a very
real sense, the hungry
are fed with the Bread
of Life at Knock but not
before they have made
their peace with God and
are in his friendship.
This takes place in and
through a good
confession. The
reconciling of souls to
God is at the very heart
of any understanding of
the true nature and
message of Knock. It is
at Knock that those
hungry in spirit are
fed. It is at Knock that
those who are blighted
in spirit are restored
to a new life and a new
relationship with God,
the father of creation.
This work must be dear
to the heart of Mary at
Knock.
In the
Apparition at Knock
there stands a cross
upon the altar of the
lamb. It is a reminder
of the value of
suffering and the reward
of bearing it well. At
Knock the sick are given
an appreciation of their
vocation and an
understanding of its
immeasurable merits. Not
infrequently is the
cross lifted from the
bruised and broken
bodies and to all the
afflicted is given
strength, hope,
resignation and
consolation. The graces
and blessings of God
come to them, in and
through the Sacrament of
the Anointing, the
Blessing of the Sick and
the Bread of Strength.
The
Apparition at Knock is
rich in the mysteries of
God, the mysteries of
the Rosary. The
beautiful full-blown
rose on her brow is a
call to pray her Crown
of Roses and in so doing
to reflect upon the
mysteries of Redemption.
She is the Mystic Rose
pondering in her heart,
the mysteries of God, in
the silence of Knock -
Immaculate, Seat of
Wisdom.
Excerpts from "I saw our
lady" - Tom Neary
Excerpts
from Patrick Hill, an
eyewitness, his
testimony:
I
remember the 21st August
last; on that day I was
drawing home turf, or
peat from the bog, on an
ass. While at my aunt's
house at about eight
o'clock in the evening,
Dominick Byrne came into
the house; he cried out:
"Come up to the chapel
and see the miraculous
lights, and the
beautiful visions that
are to be seen there.'
... When we, running
southwest, came so far
from the village that on
our turning, the gable
came into view, we
immediately beheld the
lights; a clear white
light, covering most of
the gable, from the
ground up to the window
and higher. It was a
kind of changing bright
light, going sometimes
up high and again not so
high. We saw the figures
- the Blessed Virgin
Mary, St. Joseph and St.
John, and an altar with
a lamb on the altar, and
a cross behind the lamb.
At this time we reached
as far as the wall
fronting the gable:
there were other people
there before me; some of
them were praying, some
not; all were looking at
the vision; they were
leaning over the wall or
ditch, with their arms
resting on the top. ...
It was raining. ...
After we prayed awhile I
thought it right to go
across the wall and into
the chapel yard. ... I
went then up closer, I
saw everything
distinctly. The figures
were full and round as
if they had a body and
life; they said nothing;
but as we approached
they seemed to go back a
little towards the
gable. I distinctly
beheld the Blessed
Virgin Mary, life size,
standing about two feet
or so above the ground
clothed in white robes
which were fastened at
the neck. Her hands were
raised to the height of
the shoulders, as if in
prayer, with the palms
facing one another, but
slanting inwards towards
the face; the palms were
not turned towards the
people, but facing each
other as I have
described; she appeared
to be praying; her eyes
were turned as I saw
towards heaven. She wore
a brilliant crown on her
head, and over the
forehead where the crown
fitted the brow, a
beautiful rose; the
crown appeared
brilliant, and of a
golden brightness, of a
deeper hue, inclined to
a mellow yellow, than
the striking whiteness
of the robes she wore;
the upper parts of the
crown appeared to be a
series of sparkles, or
glittering crosses. I
saw her eyes, the balls,
the pupils and the iris
of each. I noticed her
hands especially, and
face and appearance. The
robes came only as far
as the ankles; I saw her
feet and the ankles; one
foot, the right, was
slightly in advance of
the other. At times she
appeared, and all the
figures appeared, to
move out and again, to
go backwards; I saw them
move; she did not speak;
I went up very near; one
old woman went up and
embraced the Virgin's
feet, and she found
nothing in her arms and
hands; they receded, she
said, from her.
I saw St.
Joseph to the Blessed
Virgin's right hand; his
head was bent, from the
shoulders, forward; he
appeared to be paying
his respects; I noticed
his whiskers; they
appeared slightly grey;
there was a line or dark
mearing between the
figure of the Blessed
Virgin and the spot
where he stood. I saw
the feet of St. Joseph,
too. His hands were
joined like a person at
prayer.
The third
figure that stood before
me was that of St. John
the Evangelist. He stood
erect at the side of the
altar, and at an angle
with the figure of the
Blessed Virgin, so that
his back was not turned
to the altar nor to the
Mother of God. His right
arm was at an angle with
a line drawn across from
St. Joseph to where Our
Blessed Lady appeared to
be standing. St. John
was dressed like a
bishop preaching; he
wore a small miter on
his head; he held a Mass
Book, or a Book of
Gospels, in his left
hand; the right hand was
raised to the elevation
of his head; while he
kept the index finger
and the middle finger of
the right hand raised;
the other three fingers
of the same hand were
shut; he appeared as if
he were preaching, but I
heard no voice; I came
so near that I looked
into the book. I saw the
lines and the letters.
St. John did not wear
sandals. His left hand
was turned towards the
altar that was behind
him; the altar was a
plain one, like any
ordinary altar, without
any ornaments.
On the
altar stood a Iamb, the
size of a Iamb eight
weeks old - the face of
the Iamb was fronting
the west, and looking in
the direction of the
Blessed Virgin and St.
Joseph. Behind the Iamb
a large cross was placed
erect or perpendicular
on the altar. Around the
Lamb I saw angels
hovering during the
whole time, for the
space of one hour and a
half or longer; I saw
their wings fluttering,
but I did not perceive
their heads or faces,
which were not turned to
me.
For the
space of an hour and a
half we were under the
pouring rain; at this
time I was very
wet; I noticed
that the rain did not
wet the figures which
appeared before me,
although I was wet
myself.
I went
away then."
May Hail
Holy Queen
Communications give this
silent blessed vision
voice!
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