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WHY
DID MARY APPEAR AS OUR LADY OF MOUNT CARMEL?
By Father Alfred Combe
Whenever Our Lady appears to her children on earth under a particular
name, it is not without a purpose. At Lourdes in 1858, when a young
Bernadette Soubirous asked the beautiful lady who she
was, the answer came: I am the Immaculate Conception.
This was clearly a reaffirmation of the newly proclaimed dogma of
the Immaculate Conception decreed by Pope Pius IX a few short years
before in 1854. When Our Lady came to Fatima in 1917 as The
Lady of the Rosary, it was to emphasize that most powerful
prayer and urge us to use it in imploring Gods mercy and gaining
Our Ladys help and protection against the catastrophic events
which were to come in the form of World War II and the global spread
of atheistic communism.
Why then did the Blessed Virgin come to Garabandal as Our
Lady of Mount Carmel? What significance does this have for
Christians today?
A Divine Theme
If we go back to Lourdes we can begin to see a divine theme being
developed. The Blessed Virgins last appearance at Lourdes
was on July 16, 1858, feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. During
the final apparition at Fatima, October 13, 1917 when the miracle
of the sun occurred, Our Lady first appeared as she had been
appearing to the three shepherd children with her sorrowful heart
exposed. And then she appeared as Our Lady of Mount Carmel with
something hanging from her right hand. We can safely
assume that the something was the scapular. Forty-four
years later in the little mountain hamlet of San Sebastian de Garabandal
in northern Spain, Our Lady appears with a large brown scapular
prominently draped over her right wrist.
The Title and the Sacrament
In 1251, Mary appeared as Our Lady of Mount Carmel to Saint Simone
Stock, General of the Order of Carmelites, holding in her hand a
scapular. She directed him to found a confraternity whose members
should wear it and consecrate themselves to her service. Ever since
then, the title Our Lady of Mount Carmel and the scapular
have been inseparably linked.
It is also a tradition among the Carmelites that when Elijah the
prophet (of Mount Carmel) threw his cloak over Elisha thus imparting
his spirit to him, it was a prefiguration of Mary clothing her children
with the brown scapular. It is of the greatest importance for Catholics
living today as we enter into humanitys darkest hour, to be
consecrated by scapular to our heavenly Mother, placing ourselves
under the mantle of her protection. A prophecy attributed to Saint
Dominic further underlines this importance, one day through
the rosary and the scapular, she (Our Lady) will save the world.
But aside from its connection with the scapular, does the title,
Our Lady of Mount Carmel, have any other significance?
Carmel-A Symbol of Beauty
Carmel is a celebrated mountain near modern Haifa. Its Hebrew name
means garden or orchard. In early times
it was so named because of the fertility of its slopes, well irrigated,
they bore a vegetation so abundant and varied, that Carmel passed
into Biblical verse to evoke the very idea of beauty and abundance.
In the Song of Solomon, the bridegroom, so dazzled by the beauty
of the bride, says to her, Thy head is held high like Carmel
How
beautiful thou art
Oh love, oh delight! (Song 7:6,7).
Isaiah, the prophet, speaking of the glory of Lebanon is bestowed
upon it, the splendor of Carmel and Sharon; they shall see the glory
of Yahweh, the splendor of our God (Is 35:2). In its piety,
inspired by the Holy Spirit, the Church has taken this Biblical
image and applied it to the Blessed Virgin, Flower of Carmel,
Fruitful Vine, Splendor of Heaven. Indeed at Garabandal, the
four little seers were in ecstasy before Our Lady of Carmel, enraptured
by her beauty. Thus through her title, Our Lady of Mount Carmel,
the Blessed Virgin, the Entirely Beautiful, the Entirely Holy, the
Entirely Good, the Joy of God recalls to us, as in the Magnificent,
the marvels that God did for her-and for us. If, by
her beauty she wishes to attract us to her heart, is it not to make
us hear and to heed her message of salvation?
Carmel-A Symbol of Faith
Just as Mount Horeb in Sinai reminds us of Moses and the Law,
Mount Carmel calls to mind Elijah and the Prophets.
It is the Holy Mountain, the Inspired Mountain.
During the time of Elijah, the kingdom of Israel was in a pitiable
state. False priests and prophets by the hundreds, under the protection
of the court, openly preached the worship of Baal. To this idolatry
were added corruption, injustice and crime. The situation was so
drastic that the very foundation of Israels faith was threatened.
The Man of Faith
Then Elijah made his appearance. Alone in the face of the priests
and prophets of Baal, alone before the king and the people, alone
against all the forces of decomposition, Elijah rose up-a champion
of the ABSOLUTE. A man of prayer and penance, of contemplation of
action; of boldness and humility, incorruptible before the great
ones, good to the poor and the widowed, completely consumed
by the fire of God, Elijah preached conversion to the living God
of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.
After all of Israel had fallen to the worship of Baal, Elijah assembled
the entire population and the 450 false prophets on Mount Carmel
and proposed a test. Both he and the false prophets would call upon
Baal to provide the fire and Elijah would call upon the Lord. Everyone
agreed that whichever sacrifice was set ablaze would determine the
true God. The prophets of Baal, after many hours of preparation,
hopping around the altar and slashing themselves with swords were
unable to produce the fire. Then Elijah called upon the Lord and
fire came down from heaven not only consuming the sacrifice, but
the altar as well. When the Israelites saw this, they fell prostrate
in worship of the one true God.
Elijah became so popular in Israel that his name will forever associated
with Mount Carmel and its dramatic role in Elijahs contest
on behalf of God. Since that time, Mount Carmel has been a symbol
of conversion or turning back to God.
False
Prophets
Today, all the powers of evil are breaking out against our Christian
faith, sometimes openly, but more often under the guise of prophets
or as wolves in sheeps clothing. False prophets attack the
most sacred of dogmatic truths, and they lure to shipwreck the principal
mystical, ascetic, moral, spiritual and humane values of our time.
The Woman of Faith
Like Elijah, but more than Elijah, because she is the Queen of Prophets,
Mary repeats to us the word of God which spans the ages, be
converted (Acts 3:19). At Garabandal she said, We must
do much penance
If we do not change
a chastisement will
come. She recalls to us the ABSOLUTE of the Eucharist and
of the priesthood, We must
visit the Blessed Sacrament
frequently
Many cardinals, bishops and priests are on the
road to perdition
Because she is the Co-redemptress,
she puts before us the ABSOLUTE of the Cross-and the sacrifice,
We must make many sacrifices
Think of the passion of
Jesus. And because she is the Immaculate One, she calls us
to perfection, But above all we must be very good.
The Full Meaning
Now we can begin to see why the Blessed Virgin came to Garabandal
as Our Lady of Mount Carmel-that symbol of motherly protection,
of beauty, faith, and conversion.
In a locution on July 20, 1963, Our Lord told Conchita that as a
result of the miracle, she (Russia)
will be converted,
and thus everybody will love Our Hearts, If we meditate on
this, we realize that we cannot begin to imagine the full impact
the total Garabandal event will have on the world. Perhaps the real
significance of the Blessed Mothers title at Garibandal is
reserved for the future. And here is a point to contemplate: On
one side of the scapular which Mary had on her wrist at Garabandal
was a cross; on the other side was a mountain.
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