Our Lady of Tears
Our Lady of Tears | |
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Painting with the apparition of Our Lady of Tears to Sister Amália of Jesus Flagelado in Campinas – Brazil
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Location | Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil |
Date | 1930 |
Witness | Amália de Jesus Flagelado |
Type | Marian apparition |
Holy See approval | March 8, 1931[1] Bishop Francisco de Campos Barreto Archdiocese of Campinas |
Our Lady of Tears (Portuguese: Nossa Senhora das Lágrimas) is one of the Marian invocations attributed to the Virgin Mary. This Brazilian invocation originated in the apparitions received by Sister Amalia of Jesus Flagellated in 1930.
The apparitions appeared in the chapel of the convent of the Congregation of the Missionary Sisters of Jesus Crucified, located in the city of Campinas, State of São Paulo, Brazil.[2][3][4][5][6]
Contents
History
The monastery
The Congregation of the Missionary Sisters of Jesus Crucified was founded in 1928 by Bishop Francis of Campos Barreto, Bishop of Campinas, and Mother Maria Villac, who lived with Sister Amalia de Jesus Flagelado, a Spanish Galician nun. Sister Amalia (born Amália Aguirre) was co-founder of the Congregation and part of the group of first sisters.[7]
Apparitions
Sister Amalia received the phenomenon of the stigmata, as well as several Marian apparitions. These appeared in the chapel on Benjamin Constant Avenue, no. 1344, in Campinas, State of São Paulo. On March 8, 1930, the Virgin Mary presented herself as Our Lady of Tears and revealed to her the Crown (or Rosary) of Tears.[8]
Both the Virgin Mary and Jesus Christ appeared several times to Sister Amalia, communicating many messages to her with calls for prayer, sacrifice and penance.
Ecclesiastical recognition
On March 8, 1931, Monsignor Francisco de Campos Barreto, Bishop of Campinas, recognized the veracity of the phenomena of stigmata and the apparitions received by Sister Amalia. He granted the proper authorizations - among them, the Imprimatur - for the publication of all her writings (which included the original messages of Jesus and Our Lady) and the prayers of the Crown (or Rosary) of Our Lady of Tears.[1] On February 20, 1934, he published an episcopal declaration and reinforced the importance of devotion to the Virgin Mary under the invocation of Our Lady of Tears.[5]
In 1935, the Crown of Our Lady of Tears received more authorizations for its dissemination: by Archbishop John Robert Roach of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, Minnesota (United States); bishop Michael James Gallagher of the Diocese of Detroit, Michigan (United States); the diocesan censor in Sopron (Hungary); Bishop Stephanus Breyer of the Diocese of Győr (Hungary); and also by Vicar General Ferdinand Buchwieser of the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising (Germany).
References
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Bibliography
In Portuguese.
- Devocionário de Nossa Senhora das Lagrimas. Santuário, 2021. ISBN 6555271361
- Irmã Amália e a devoção a Nossa Senhora das Lágrimas. Imaculada, 2022. ISBN 6587985580
External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Our Lady of Tears. |
- International Apostolate of Our Lady of Tears – Official website
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- ↑ Where We Walked website, March 8: Nossa Senhora das Lágrimas, Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil
- ↑ "Amalia de Jesús Flagelado", Stigmatics, University of Antwerp
- Pages with reference errors
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- Marian apparitions
- Catholicism in Brazil
- History of São Paulo (state)
- 1930s in Brazil