Feast Day—December 12
Our Lady of Guadalupe
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A Beautiful LadyJuan Diego was an Aztec in Mexico and a convert to the Catholic faith. On Saturday, December 9, 1531, he was walking to church for Mass when a beautiful lady appeared to him, surrounded
by light. She told him she was the Immaculate Virgin Mary, the Mother of the true God. She wanted to have a shrine built at Tepeyac Hill so that she could show her love for the people. She said,
“Ask for my help. Here I will listen to people’s prayers, and I will help them.”
Mary then asked Juan to tell the bishop her wishes. Juan did so, but the bishop didn’t believe him. Juan returned to the lady and suggested she send to the bishop someone who spoke better. But Mary told Juan she had chosen him for this work, and she would bless him for helping her.
The second time Juan visited the bishop, the bishop told him to ask “his Lady” for a sign that proved she was the Mother of God. When Juan did so, Mary told him to return on Monday for the sign.
Her Miraculous ImageIn the meantime, Juan’s uncle became very ill, and Juan had to stay home to care for him. He was unable to return on Monday for Mary’s sign. By Tuesday, his uncle was dying, so Juan set off to get a priest. On the way, he met the Holy Virgin. Embarrassed, he apologized for not meeting her. Mary replied,
“Do not let anything bother you, and do not be afraid of any illness, pain, or accident. Am I, your mother, not here? Are you not under my shadow and protection? What more could you want? Don’t worry about your uncle. He is well already.”
Mary told Juan to go to the top of a hill and gather the flowers he would find growing there. Juan knew that nothing ever grew on that rock hill, let alone in the middle of winter. However, he did as the Virgin told him and climbed the hill. At the top, he found gorgeous roses. He picked them and brought them to Mary, who arranged the roses in his tilma. She told Juan to take them to the bishop.
When the bishop saw Juan, he wanted to know what he had in his tilma. Juan opened it, letting the fragrant roses fall in a shower to the floor. You can imagine the bishop’s surprise at
Juan Diego
seeing roses in winter. As he looked, however, the bishop saw an even greater miracle. There on Juan’s tilma, a beautifully painted image began to appear. It was the Lady who had appeared to Juan!
The bishop cried out, “The Immaculate!” and knelt and with tears, asking the Blessed Mother’s pardon for not believing Juan.
On that same day, Mary appeared to Juan’s uncle and cured him. Uncle Bernadino went to the bishop and told how he had been cured. He also gave the bishop a message from the Virgin, saying that she would “crush
the serpent’s head.” The bishop did not understand the Aztec language. He heard the Aztec words for “crush the serpent” which sounded like “Guadalupe,” the name of Mary’s shrine in Spain. Thinking that the Virgin wanted the new shrine to have the same name, the bishop called her Our Lady of Guadalupe.
Our Lady Today The picture of Our Lady of Guadalupe has meaningful symbols. Its main message is that Mary loves us and wants to help us. The cloak itself is made from the rough fibers of a cactus plant. If this type of material is painted on, it will not last more than 20 years. Yet the picture remains fresh and beautiful on the cloak after almost 500 years! It can be seen above the main altar in the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico.
The feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe is celebrated by the Church on December 12. Do you know why that date was chosen?
1. How can we dedicate—give ourselves wholeheartedly—to Mary?
2. What hidden and silent sacrifice can we perform?
3. How can we walk the way of complete faithfulness to Jesus and the Church?
❮
Our Lady of Guadalupe
❮ Jose Guadalupe Posada, Saint Juan Diego and the Virgin image.
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© 2019 Catholic Inspired
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The Image that Converted Millions
In 1531, the Blessed Virgin Mary appeared to a simple Aztec Indian,
Juan Diego. Since the discovery of the New World by Christopher Columbus in
1492, the Spanish had conquered much of Mexico. They put a stop to the
human sacrifices that were occurring there by many of the natives and they
destroyed their pagan temples. There was much conflict between the Spanish
and the natives of Central America. Most of the natives refused to convert to
Catholicism, but Juan Diego was one of the few Aztecs who did. Mary
appeared to him on a hill asking for a church to be built there. The bishop
found Juan’s amazing story hard to believe. So Mary supernaturally provided
Juan Diego with roses from Spain. She arranged them in his cloak, which was
called a tilma. When Juan opened his tilma, the roses dropped to the floor in
front of the bishop and the image of Our Lady of Guadalupe appeared on Juan
Diego’s tilma!
This simple image of a pregnant woman standing in front of the sun and on a crescent moon
changed the course of Christian history forever. In a time when the Catholic Church was losing millions
in Europe, Our Lady of Guadalupe was bringing in millions more from the former Aztec empire and
beyond.
But why did this image mean so much to the natives as well as the Spanish? Why did it bring so
many natives into the Catholic Church? The Aztec Indians had much symbolism in their culture and God
used those beliefs to touch the hearts of the people. For example:
SUN
Mary is standing in front of the sun so this showed the Aztecs that she is mightier
than their sun god.
On Mary’s dress there is a flower that the Aztecs called the Nahui Ollin. It represented
the sun. The Aztecs saw the sun as the giver of life. It is placed over the baby within her
so it showed that she was carrying the true God who truly gives life.
MOON
Mary is standing on the moon. To the Aztecs, the moon was associated with the god,
Tezcatlipoca. So this showed them that Mary was greater than him.
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STARS
The stars shown on her mantle indicate that she comes from Heaven.
Also, scientists have shown that the 46 stars in the image are exactly as the stars appeared
before dawn on the morning of December 12, 1531. (The day she appeared on the tilma.)
Fact: The image of Our Lady of Guadalupe was anticipated in Scripture:
Revelation 12:1 "A great sign appeared in the sky, a woman clothed with the sun, with the
moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars"
CLOUDS
Mary is surrounded by clouds, showing that she is from Heaven.
FACE
Her face is bowed down and she is looking slightly to one side.
The Aztecs believe it was not proper to look directly at anyone’s face.
HER EYES
Her eyes are looking downward. This shows humility and compassion unlike how their gods always
looked: straight ahead with wide-open eyes. This shows that Mary is not a god.
It was only recently discovered in the last 50 years that when the image of the tilma
is magnified over 2,000 times, there are human figures reflected in Mary’s eyes: a
total of thirteen people. The same people are found in both the left and right eyes
but in different proportions. This is exactly what happens in human eyes; they reflect
the objects before them. Basically, her eyes acted like a photograph of the moment
Juan Diego opened his tilma!
In her eyes, you can see the following:
1. a bearded and mustached Indian (likely Saint Juan Diego)
2. a sitting Indian, who is looking up to the heavens;
3. the profile of a balding, elderly man with a white beard (Bishop Zumárraga)
4. a younger man (interpreter Juan González)
5. a woman of dark complexion (possibly a Negro slave)
6. a man with Spanish features stroking his beard with his hand.
7. in the center of the pupils, on a much more reduced magnification scale, there is another
scene. It is an Indian family: a man, woman, and several children. In the right eye, other people
can also be seen standing behind the woman.
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ANGEL
Mary is supported by an angel. In Aztec culture, only a king, queen, or other royalty were carried on the
shoulders of someone.
The angel has wings that are similar to an eagle’s wings. The
Aztecs believed that eagles delivered sacrifices to the gods.
This meant that Mary and the child in her womb were
offerings that please God.
The book of Revelation refers to this: “But the woman was given the two wings of the great eagle that
she might fly from the serpent into the wilderness” (Revelation 12:14).
HAIR
Her long unbraided hair meant that she was a virgin since married Aztec women braided their hair.
KNEE
Her knee was raised. This was done by Aztecs
during prayer and praise (like song and dance).
HANDS
Her hands are together in prayer, as the Spanish did. In fact, her hands are
different colors. One is darker than the other one. This represented the union of
two races coming together. Her skin is a combination of Mexican and Spanish
appearance (mestizo). She shows herself as a bridge between the 2 cultures.
Also, since she is praying, this means that she is not a god
but praying to someone who is.
CLOTHING
Mary’s rose-tinted, flowery tunic symbolizes the earth, while her turquoise, starry
mantle represents the heavens. She is of both Heaven and Earth.
To the native people, her mantle was a color of the gods and of royalty.
The gold border of her mantle is another sign of nobility.
FLOWERS
In addition to the Nahui Ollin flower mentioned above, there are eight other golden
flowers on Mary’s dress. The flowers are upside down and look like hearts with arteries.
Hearts were part of the Aztec sacrifices.
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BROOCH
The gold brooch under her neck represents holiness and sanctity. It is also engraved with
a cross. To the Aztecs, a medallion symbolized consecration and in this case to Jesus.
BOW ON WAIST
Aztec noble women tied a black ribbon just above their waist to show they were
pregnant. In fact, the high placement of the bow and the apparent swelling of her
abdomen show that Mary is very pregnant. Equally, it appears that the infant is head
down with a vertical body. Dec. 12, the day of the unveiling, is only two weeks from
Christmas.
This would again connect her to Revelation 12: verse 2 “She was with child...she labored to give birth.”
To the Aztecs, the trapezoid-shaped ends of the ribbon (the same shape as their pyramids) also
represented the end of one cycle and the birth of a new era.
This image surely did begin a new era to the Spanish and the Aztec people, and it still continues to show
us miracles today!
TILMA’S MATERIAL
Juan Deigo’s tilma is a cactus-fiber mantle. It was a rough fabric that normally would not last very long
(normally 10 years at the most) yet it’s about 500 years old! Also, the area on the tilma where the image
is feels like silk but the other parts are coarse!
IMAGE COLORING
There are no brush strokes on the image. It’s as if the image was produced all at once.
Whatever created the color of the image is not made from animal, plant, or mineral elements.
DURABILITY AND STRENGTH
The tilma was exposed to humidity, infrared and ultraviolet lights for 116 years without
any protection. In 1785, a worker spilled nitric acid on the image but the image and
tilma were not damaged. In 1921, a bomb containing 29 sticks of dynamite detonated
underneath the image. The bomb shattered the marble altar rail and windows; a brass
crucifix was twisted out of shape, but the tilma and glass case were unharmed.
Through this amazing image, which was given to us by the hand of Heaven, we can see the
knowledge, artistry, and love of God. Its perfection had all of the right symbolism to convert the hearts
of the Aztecs as well as millions of people throughout the years! Even now, it still proves what Our Lady
of Guadalupe told St Juan Diego: “I am the ever Holy Virgin Mary, Mother of the true God.”
Our Lady of Guadalupe, pray for us!