Tuesday, 16 July 2019

Our Lady of Mount Carmel

According to a pious tradition, the Blessed Virgin appeared to St Simon Stock at Cambridge, England on Sunday, June 16, 1251. In answer to his appeal for help for his oppressed order, she appeared to him with a scapular in her hand and said to him:”Take, beloved son, this scapular of your order as a special sign of grace for all Carmelites; whoever dies with this scapular, will not suffer everlasting fire. It is a sign of salvation, a safeguard in danger, a pledge of peace.” Images of Our Lady of Mount Carmel usually show the Blessed Mother with the Child Jesus in her arms, each holdings scapulars. Some poor souls in purgatory or hell are seen underneath asking for prayers and intervention.
The Carmelites are a religious order founded on Mount Carmel in the 13th century, named thus in reference to the mountain range found in the Holy Land. The founder was a certain Berthold, who was either a pilgrim or a crusader. The order was founded at the site that it claimed had once been the location of Elijah’s cave, 1700 feet above sea level. 
By 2001, there were 2,100 religious monks in 25 provinces in the Carmelite order, besides 700 cloistered nuns in 70 monasteries. In addition, the Third Order of lay Carmelites counts 28,000 members throughout the world. Besides St Simon Stock, there are other Carmelite saints such as St Therese of the Child Jesus, St John of the Cross, St Teresa Benedicta of the Cross, St Teresa of Avila and even Sister Lucia of Fatima.

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