home | about Catholic.net | Ask an Expert | Daily Meditations | Apologetics | Catholic Singles | Find a Mass | Free Newsletter | 
catholic.net  
englishespañol shopping mallsupport a cause book storenewspapers magazine racktravel vocationschurch documents
channels
Good News
Inspiring Stories
Global Catholic News
Rome’s Zenit News
US Catholic News
Powered by NCRegister.com
Holy Father
Pope Bendict XVI
Pro-Life
Umbert the Unborn
Faith & Finances
Our Sacred Obligation
Mariology
About Our Lady
Parenting
Parenting God's Way
Faith
Faith and Morals
Mass Media
Media Watch
Spiritual Living
Daily Devotional
Living Church
Liturgy and History
Mother Teresa
A Tribute
Vocations
Following Christ
In Love for Life
Marriage & Sexuality
TwentySomething
For Young Adults
Church Teaching
Apologetics
Christmas Songs
Joy for the World
Catechism
CCC
go!
 
 
 

MARY’S TITLES

 

Our Lady,

Queen of the Angels

 

by John O’Connell

 

In the Providence of God, angels played a significant role in the life of the Blessed Virgin Mary. St. Gabriel the Archangel had the privilege of announcing to the humble Virgin of Nazareth that God had chosen her to be the Mother of the Savior. Scripture also reports that an angel assisted Our Lady by telling St. Joseph not to fear to take her as his wife. Angels sang the praises of God when Mary gave birth to Christ in the stable at Bethlehem. And an angel instructed Joseph to flee to Egypt with Mary and the Child to escape from the machinations of the murderous Herod.

No doubt there were other times, not recorded in Scripture, when God sent His angels to minister to Our Lady. It would not be unreasonable to imagine that an angel prepared Mary for a visit from her Risen Son on Easter morning. And surely an angelic host accompanied the Blessed Mother when she was assumed into heaven and crowned as Queen of heaven and of earth, of men and of angels. Angels continue to serve the Blessed Virgin Mary as their Queen.

The angels’ acknowledgment of the humble maid of Nazareth as their Queen manifests both the great holiness of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the humility of the good angels. Our Lady’s human nature is inferior to the angelic nature, but in the order of grace, Mary far surpasses the angels. Indeed, her sanctity is greater than all the angels and saints in heaven. And the angels humbly and lovingly accept that a woman is their glorious Queen because she is the Mother of God.

At least two well-known shrines to Our Lady of the Angels exist.

According to pious tradition, in 1212, robbers set upon three merchants who were traveling through a desolate forest in France. The robbers, after stealing the merchants’ possessions, left them tied to trees. After a day and night of constant prayer by the merchants, angels appeared to unbind them. Nearby the merchants discovered a stream that they believed to be miraculous. In thanksgiving, they decided to build a shrine to Our Lady of the Angels there. Numerous miracles began to occur at the shrine. Enemies of Christ destroyed the shrine Our Lady of the Angels of Toulouse during the French Revolution, but it has been rebuilt. The original statue, richly clothed and bedecked with precious stones, has survived.

Our Lady, Queen of the Angels is the Patroness of Costa Rica. Pius tradition relates that in 1635 a young mulatto girl, while looking for firewood, found a small statue of the Blessed Virgin holding the Infant Jesus sitting on a large stone. Several times she took the statue home with her only to discover the next day that it had mysteriously returned to the original location where she had first seen it. The girl told her parish priest who took possession of the statue only to have the same experience of the statue returning to its place on the stone. "La Negrita"as she is called by Costa Ricans is housed in a beautiful gold reliquary in a large shrine dedicated to Our Lady, Queen of the Angels.

 

John O’Connell is the Editor of The Catholic Faith magazine.

 

© Copyright 1998 Inter Mirifica

Return to the Catholic Faith Table of Contents

(© Copyright 1998, As translated into HTML for Catholic Information Center on Internet by Jill Gooler 9/19/98)