Her miraculous icon was stolen, carried across a storm-tossed sea, hidden for decades, and nearly forgotten.
It was then recovered because the Mother of God would not permit the world to lose her image.
This is its story. 🧵
Centuries ago, an unknown Christian painted an icon on the island of Crete.
It shows the Theotokos holding the Divine Child as the Archangels Michael and Gabriel approach with the instruments of His Passion.
The Cross. The nails. The lance. The sponge.
The Christ Child sees what awaits Him.
Startled by the vision of Calvary, He runs into His Mother’s arms so quickly that one sandal nearly falls from His foot.
His little hands cling to hers.
The God who created His Mother allows Himself to be comforted by her.
Yet Mary does not look at the angels.
She does not look at the instruments of torture.
She looks directly at us.
Her sorrowful eyes seem to say:
“Behold what your sins will cost my Son. But do not flee from Him. Come to Him through me.”
According to ancient tradition, the icon was already renowned for miracles when a merchant stole it from a church in Crete.
He carried it aboard a ship bound for Rome.
Then a violent storm arose.
The passengers believed they would die.
They turned to the Mother of God.
The sea became calm.
The stolen icon had crossed the waters under the protection of the woman whom the Church calls Stella Maris—Star of the Sea.
But when the merchant reached Rome, he concealed the sacred image in his home rather than returning it to a church.
As he lay dying, the merchant begged a friend to place the icon in a church.
The promise was made but not kept.
Then the Blessed Virgin appeared repeatedly, commanding that her image be placed for public veneration between the basilicas of St. Mary Major and St. John Lateran.
The adults resisted.
So Our Lady appeared to a little girl.
She identified herself with the title by which millions would one day invoke her:
“Our Mother of Perpetual Help.”
At last, the family obeyed.
On March 27, 1499, the icon was carried to the Church of San Matteo.
For nearly 300 years, Romans came before the image to pray.
Graces multiplied. Miracles were reported. The afflicted found consolation beneath Mary’s gaze.
Then, in 1798, invading French forces devastated Rome and destroyed the ancient Church of San Matteo.
The icon vanished.
Decades passed.
The miraculous image was hidden in an Augustinian chapel, largely forgotten by the city that once loved it.
But an elderly brother remembered.
He told a young altar boy that he had once seen the famous Madonna of San Matteo and that she must someday return.
That altar boy later became a Redemptorist.
And by Providence, the Redemptorists built their church on almost the exact site where San Matteo had stood.
The forgotten testimony was investigated and the icon found.
Pope Pius IX ordered that it be restored to public veneration.
On April 26, 1866, Our Lady returned in solemn procession to the place she had chosen centuries before.
Tradition records healings along the route, including a gravely ill child and a girl whose paralyzed leg was restored.
Rome had recovered its Mother.
Pope Pius IX then entrusted the icon to the Redemptorists with a command:
“Make her known throughout the world.”
They obeyed.
Copies traveled through Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas….Into cathedrals, village chapels, hospitals, missions, schools, and Catholic homes.
The icon is not sentimental religious art.
It is a proclamation of the Catholic Faith.
Christ truly became man.
He freely accepted the Cross.
Mary is the sorrowful Mother who leads sinners to her Son.
And no soul who takes refuge beneath her mantle is ever abandoned.
“Perpetual Help” means precisely that.
Not occasional help.
Not help only for the righteous, composed, or strong.
Perpetual help for sinners, the frightened, the tempted, the grieving, the dying, and those who have exhausted every earthly hope.
Today, bring her the thing you have been afraid to ask for.
The conversion that seems impossible.
The child who has left the Faith.
The marriage that is breaking.
The sin you cannot conquer.
The grief you cannot carry.
She has not ceased being a Mother.
O Mother of Perpetual Help, thou whose very image teaches us to flee into thy arms and cling to Jesus, despise not our petitions.
Guard the Church.
Convert sinners.
Strengthen the suffering.
Lead us safely through death and place us at the feet of thy Divine Son.
Amen.
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🧵 THREAD: The Day St. Maximilian Kolbe Declared War for the Immaculata
Today in 1917, one young friar stood in St. Peter’s Square and saw Satan’s banners raised against the Church.
He didn’t flinch.
He didn’t despair.
He formed an army under the Queen of Heaven and changed history.
This is the story of the Militia Immaculata. ⚔️
It was October 1917.
Europe was bleeding from World War I.
And in Rome, the Freemasons were celebrating their bicentennial.
They paraded through St. Peter’s Square shouting that Satan would rule in the Vatican and that the Pope would serve him as a slave. 👇
They carried black flags showing Lucifer crushing St. Michael the Archangel.
Young Brother Maximilian Kolbe, just 23 years old, stood among the crowd. His heart was burning with grief and holy anger.
He saw not just mockery.
He saw a spiritual war being waged in the open. 👇
Today is one of the most obscure Marian feasts in the Church calendar:
Our Lady of Good Remedy.
It goes back more than 800 years, to an order of priests who risked their lives to free Christian slaves.
A thread 🧵👇
In the 1100s, the Order of the Holy Trinity was founded by St. John of Matha.
Their mission? To redeem Christians captured and enslaved by Muslims during the Crusades.
But there was one problem: this mission was incredibly expensive.
🧵 👇
St. John had no money. No powerful connections. No way to buy back thousands of captives.
So what did he do?
He turned to Our Lady.
He begged the Blessed Virgin for help, and Our Lady provided.
🔥 October 7, 1571: The day Europe should have fallen.
The day Christendom should have drowned in the Mediterranean.
But instead, it was the day Our Lady showed the power of the Rosary and saved a continent.
The Battle of Lepanto. 🧵
For decades, the Ottoman Empire had been advancing, city after city, kingdom after kingdom.
Constantinople had fallen. The crescent moon of heretics and barbarians flew over lands that had been Christian for over a thousand years.
Europe was next.
By 1571, the unity of Christendom in Europe had been severely weakened by the Protestant revolt, and the Muslim Turks from the Ottoman Empire were on a mission to conquer it.
They had stated publicly their intention to convert St. Peter’s Basilica into a mosque.
The thread below is one of many documented stories of St. Thérèse performing miracles & saving lives on the battlefields of World War I….about 20 years after her death.
At this point in history, she had not even been declared a “Blessed” yet!
🧵 👇
It was the middle of the night on the Western Front. Shells were screaming overhead, the earth shaking with constant bombardment. A young French soldier crouched low in his trench, clutching his rosary and trying not to give in to terror. 🧵 👇
Suddenly, through the smoke and fire, he saw a figure moving along the trench line. It was a Carmelite nun in a brown habit, her face serene, her presence strangely radiant amidst the carnage.
She looked at him, smiled gently, & said, “Do not be afraid. You will not die here.”👇