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Easter Rosary with Capped Our Father Beads
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In Stock
Item Number: JT661-GF
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Easter Rosary with Capped Our Father BeadsA beautiful velveteen hinged gift box with the Ave Maria logo comes with every Ave Maria rosary.
Ave Maria Gift Box. -- 7mm Crystal/Oxidized Silver, Loc-Link -- 21" L
The traditional story of the rosary was that Mary herself appeared to
Saint Dominic in the twelfth century. At that time, tradition says she
gave him the rosary and promised Dominic that if he spread devotion to
the rosary, his religious order would flourish. It is quite true that
Dominic was quite devoted to the Blessed Mother, but no one knows for
sure if Our Lady herself gave Dominic the rosary. If she did, it is
quite certain that she did not give him a rosary that looks like the
one we have today.
Originally the rosary had 150 beads, the
same number of psalms in the Bible. In the twelfth century, religious
orders recited together the 150 Psalms as a way to mark the hours of
the day and the days of the week. Those people who didn’t know how to
read wanted to share in this practice, so praying on a string of 150
beads or knots began as a parallel to praying the psalms. It was a way
that the illiterate could remember the Lord and his mother throughout
the day. The “Divine Office”; the official prayer of the church; is the
recitation of the psalms over a four week period, and is still prayed
today.
This first rosary was prayed as we do today, a person
would pass their fingers over each bead and say a prayer, usually the
“Our Father”. The “Hail Mary” as we know it wasn’t even around at that
time.
The Hail Mary owes its origin to the rosary. When people
said the rosary in the twelfth century, Gabrielle’s greeting “Hail
Mary, full or grace, the Lord is with thee” was often said along with
the Our Father. Later, Elizabeth’s greeting ”blessed are you among
women” was added. It was not until the sixteenth century that the words
“Holy Mary., Mother of God, pray for us sinners now and at the hour of
our death” were added.
Various people have added other things to the
rosary over the centuries. In the fifteenth century, a Carthusian monk
divided the rosary into fifteen brackets (or decades) and a Dominican
assigned mysteries to each of the decades. These mysteries were events
in the life of Jesus as written in the gospels. By meditating on these
events even the illiterate could know the stories in the Bible. These
decades were the same as ours except for the last two Glorious
mysteries. In those two, the Coronation and the Assumption together
made up the fourteenth decade and the fifteenth decade was the Last
Judgment.
On October 16, 2002, Pope John Paul II, declared that
the following year would be the “Year of the Rosary”. For the first
time in centuries a change was made in the rosary. The Pope added and
defined 5 new mysteries that concerned events in the public life of
Jesus. These new mysteries were called the “Luminous Mysteries” or
“Mysteries of Light”
Today’s
complete rosary is now made up of twenty decades of the Hail Mary,
separated by an Our Father and a Glory Be and sometimes the Fatima
prayer. Evidence again that the rosary is a living prayer that grows
with the church. We usually break the rosary into four sets. The four
sets are The Joyful Mysteries, The Sorrowful Mysteries, The Glorious
Mysteries, and the Luminous Mysteries. One set is prayed on a rosary
that has five decades. Each set is prayed on designated days of the
week. There are variations however, and in some countries the rosary
may even have different mysteries.
Despite all the additions
and changes, the important core of the rosary has always remained the
same. It is a way for God’s people to make holy the day, and to
remember the life of Jesus and his mother. May these humble origins
always be with us each time we pray the rosary.
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