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Praying
the Rosary with H. Lyman Stebbins (Part Three)
To Live the Faith
“Pray always and never lose heart...” (Lk. 18:1)
by H. Lyman Stebbins
This article originally appeared on page 15 of the May
1982 issue of Lay Witness.
We continue with the general intentions which some of us
here in New Rochelle[1] follow in praying the Holy Rosary.
Today we consider the fourth and fifth decades of the Joyful,
Sorrowful, and Glorious Mysteries.
The Fourth Decades: for all those living whom we
have promised to pray for or ought to pray for. Among the
Joyful Mysteries, THE PRESENTATION has always had a special
meaning for us in CUF, a meaning which has become deeper and
more explicit since the Consecration of our apostolate to
the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary
last August 22. For what is that mystery if not the Consecration
of the Sacred Humanity, in accordance with the law, by His
Mother Mary? In that mysterious act Our Lord goes before us,
the first-born of many brethren, in a double consecration,
making a total oblation of Himself to the Father, and doing
it through the heart and in the arms of His Blessed Mother.
We, in praying it, join in offering to Him ourselves and all
those of His brethren whom His Providence has in any way entrusted
to our love; and we too make our offering through the Immaculate
Heart of the new and perpetual Mother of All the Living.
In the Sorrowful Mysteries, THE CARRYING OF THE CROSS finds
Our Lord persevering in His first oblation for our sakes:
taking upon His sacred shoulders, in wholly voluntary obedience,
the crushing weight of the Cross on which He would exchange
His death for our life. We ask for the grace to persevere
in our own oblation, knowing that there is nothing we can
possibly do for the sake of our friends more valuable than
to take up in joyful obedience the crosses, small or great,
which each day presents to us.
In the fourth of the Glorious Mysteries, we celebrate the
glorious ASSUMPTION of the Holy Virgin Mary. “I will
not leave you orphans,” He had promised; and He kept
that promise in many ways. The Assumption is one of them.
In praying for our brothers and sisters, how can we do it
in a way more joyful and sure than by turning to her whom
He both left to us and took to Himself: the Mother of divine
grace, Cause of our joy, Gate of heaven, Health of the sick,
Refuge of sinners, Comfort of the afflicted! Blessed Mother,
accept our prayers and present them before the Throne of Grace!
The Fifth Decades: for our immediate families, for
those especially dear to us, and for ourselves. THE FINDING
OF THE BOY JESUS IN THE TEMPLE is the very model of all we
pray for with regard to ourselves and those nearest to us.
Accepimus, domine, misericordiam tuam in medio templi
tui: “It is in the midst of Your Church, O Lord,
that we receive Your mercy—that mercy which is the gift
of salvation.” May we all find Him there; and may He
lead us all alike to life everlasting!
To that ardent prayer full of hope, Christ’s answer
is ever the same: Yes, you can find Me there. The Cross which
bore Me to death is ready to bring you to life; but you must
take your place on it. The door of My Cross is the only door
to a share in My glory. That door is open now. Follow Me!
These are not mere words; they are living truths, verifiable
every day. We beg God to spare us and our nearest and dearest:
We ask Him not to treat us as if we were braver and stronger
than we are; but we do not, we cannot, ask Him to give us
and our dear ones no cross at all, for is it not fitting that
the brethren of the Son of man should suffer and thus
enter into His glory? We glory in the CRUCIFIXION OF OUR LORD:
Nothing else can make it possible for us to bear (and to bear
even with joy) the sufferings which afflict us and those whom
we Love the most. Whenever suffering comes to those we are
praying for, we must let our faith overcome our revulsion
and embrace the words of Psalm 90: “He shall cry to
me and I will give ear to his prayer; I will be with him in
all tribulation; I will rescue him and bring him into my glory;
I will fill him with length of days, and show him my salvation.”
Thanks be to God!
And then, by God’s grace and mercy, we shall be witnesses
at the CORONATION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY AS QUEEN OF HEAVEN,
QUEEN OF ANGELS AND OF SAINTS! Glorious mystery indeed, in
which the Fairest of Creation, Mother of all the living, gathers
around herself and before the Throne of God her universal
Family of families, and they sing with one voice: My soul
doth magnify the Lord, and my spirit hath rejoiced in God
my Savior!
First Decade: for our dead
Annunciation—The Agony—Resurrection
Second Decade: for the Holy Father
Visitation—Scourging—Ascension
Third Decade: for CUF
Nativity—Crowning with Thorns—Sending of the Holy
Spirit
Fourth Decade: for all who want or need our prayers
Presentation—Carrying the Cross—Assumption
Fifth Decade: for those nearest and dearest
The Finding—The Crucifixion—The Coronation
Back to Part
One
Back to Part
Two
——————
[1] CUF was headquartered in New Rochelle, New York, until
the summer of 1994, when CUF moved to its present headquarters
in Steubenville, Ohio.
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