Below is a
column written by Father George Rutler, pastor of the Church of St. Michael in
New York City, on the Holy Rosary and the role it played in the victory of Pope
St. Pius’ alliance naval forces against the Islamic Ottomans as well as its use
in today’s world.
The rosary has been the weapon of choice for Catholics around the world for centuries to fight the forces of evil so prevalent, both in the past and in the present.
By
Father George W. Rutler, Pastor
Church
of St. Michael, NYC
Feasts are reminders that we are invited to the
eternal Feast in Heaven. October 7 is the Feast of the Holy Rosary, instituted
to celebrate the victory of Pope St. Pius’ alliance of naval forces against the
Islamic Ottomans. Even some English Protestants joined the effort in
realization that everything Christianity had given us was at stake. The Pope
attributed the victory of the sea battle at Lepanto to the prayers of the
Rosary. Had events gone otherwise, our world would be bereft of respect for
human life, universities, plastic and musical arts, the sacredness of marriage,
the equality of women, and the use of reason.
These gifts of Christian culture are vanishing today
by default of nominal Christians who have abandoned the faith that shaped their
culture. Our cultural struggle is wider and longer than Lepanto. Young men
preparing for the priesthood now are enlisting in history’s greatest spiritual
struggle. Happily, more men are now enrolled in seminaries in the United States
than in nearly two decades: a sixteen percent increase since 1995 and ten per
cent more than in 2005. As priests, they will support the faithful laity as the
faithful support them.
Attacks on Christianity are drawn in blood in places
like Pakistan, Syria and Nigeria. We may be blindsided if we think the dangers
are any less in our own country now. The enemy uses cynicism and social pressure
rather than weapons of steel.
The prayers of Our Lady are our great defense. Pope
Francis’ formal announcement in sonorous Latin that the popes John XXIII and
John Paul II will be canonized as saints next April, affirms their desire that we
enlist the Rosary in the crusade against Satan and all his evil works. In 1961
John XXIII signed the Apostolic Letter Il Religioso Convegno, along with his
personal meditations on the mysteries of the Rosary, which he perpetually
recited in between the duties of his daily schedule. In 2002, John Paul II
signed the Apostolic Letter on the Rosary, Rosarium Virginis Mariae, as his favorite
prayer and gave us the Luminous Mysteries to guide us in the darkness of these new
days.
Our Lord warned against the vain repetitions of the
Pharisees, who thought that the number of prayers apart from the devotion of
the will could bend the ear of God. But vain repetition does not invalidate
repetition altogether: the repetitious breathing of the lungs and beating of
the heart give physical life; so too does the repeating of the words of Gabriel,
Elizabeth, and Our Lord’s own prayer open the gates of eternity. We often bury
our beloved dead with Rosaries. My own mother had in her hands a Rosary that
John Paul II had given her. But we who are alive must make the Rosary a living prayer,
and by so praying we may live forever.

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