September 25th
Commemoration of England's Marian Apparition: Our Lady of Walsingham
Our Lady of Walsingham - England's Apparition
of Mary
Most Catholics know of France's famous Marian
apparitions, such as those at Lourdes and Rue du Bac, and also the greater
Marian apparition sites such as the one at Fatima, Portugal or Guadalupe,
Mexico.
England's once famous shrine of Our Lady of
Walsingham is not as well known due to the onset of Protestantism in the 1500s.
Thankfully, the apparition is receiving greater devotion due to the efforts of
Catholics and Anglicans with a love for the Blessed Virgin.
The tradition of Our Lady of Walsingham began
with an apparition of the Immaculate Mother of God to Richeldis de Faverches, a
Catholic English noblewoman, in 1061 in the village of Walsingham in Norfolk,
England.
The Mother of God revealed the archetectural
plans of the Holy House of the Holy Family in Nazareth and she asked Lady
Richeldis to build the house as a shrine and place of pilgrimage.
The Holy House of Walsingham was an exact copy
of of the home in which the Annunciation occurred. The chapel was founded in the
time of Edward the Confessor, about 1053, the earliest deeds naming Richeldis,
the mother of Geoffrey of Favraches as the founder. In 1169, Geoffrey granted
'to God and St. Mary and to Edwy his clerk the chapel of our Lady' which his
mother had founded at Walsingham with the intention that Edwy should found a
priory. These gifts were, shortly afterwards, confirmed to the Austin Canons of
Walsingham by Robert de Brucurt and Roger, earl of Clare.
By 1500, Our Lady of Walsingham had become one
of the greatest religious centres in England, and Europe, together with
Glastonbury and Canterbury. It became the third most popular place of pilgrimage
next to Rome and Compostella, Spain.
The suppression of Walsingham came late in
1538. The Protestant bishop Latimer wrote of the image of Mary that "She hath
been the Devil's instrument, I fear, to bring many to eternal fire; now she
herself with her older sister of Walsingham, her younger sister of Ipswich, and
their two sisters of Doncaster and Penrhys will make a jolly muster in
Smithfield. They would not be all day in burning". Horrid words that reveal the
hate of early Anglicans for images and for the Blessed Virgin.
King Henry VIII approved for the image of Our
Lady of Walsingham to be burned. This confirms that Henry VIII was an impious
and perfidious tyrant. Those who claim that Henry VIII remained Catholic "in his
heart" are deceived. He was a murderous and adulterous man who mocked the
papacy.
"It was the month of July, the images of Our
Lady of Walsingham and Ipswich were brought up to London with all the jewels
that hung around them, at the King's commandment, and divers other images, both
in England and Wales, that were used for common pilgrimage...and they were burnt
at Chelsea by my Lord Privy Seal".
In 1897 Pope Leo XIII re-established the
restored 14th century Slipper Chapel as a Roman Catholic shrine, now the centre
of the National Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham. The Holy House had been
rebuilt at the Church of the Annunciation at King's Lynn.
There is a prophecy that when England returns
to Our Lady of Walsingham, Our Lady will return to England. It seems, then, that
this Marian shrine is intimately associated with the spiritual health of Merry
Ol' England.
Our Lady of Walsingham, pray for us.
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