Tag Archives: Miraculous Medal

Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal Comes to the People of Japan

Recently, on a recent IRL Facebook Live interview, Br. Didacus Gottsacker, fbp, of the Franciscan Brothers of Peace, mentioned an apostolate that he is involved in—the Maria Kannon Mission of Japan.  Brother speaks Japanese and also studied there before becoming a Franciscan friar. (You can read vocation story and love for the Japanese people here)

Following the zealous example of St. Maximilian Kolbe and St. Francis Xavier, who brought the Catholic Faith to Japan, the Maria Kannon Mission seeks to evangelize the Japanese people by first introducing them to Our Lady, the first missionary of Christ and the Mediatrix of All Graces through her Miraculous Medal, to win souls for Jesus Christ.

On a pilgrimage to Japan, the initiators of Maria Kannon began handing out Miraculous Medals to the Japanese people, whom, they realized, were eager to accept them. When they got home, they had the medals struck in Japanese and created printed materials to go along with them, so that the recipients would know the graces they could receive when the prayers were recited in faith.

The name Maria Kannon is derived from the time of the Great Persecution of Christians in Japan. Christians created statues of the Blessed Virgin Mary with child, disguised as the Buddhist deity Kannon (Goddess of Mercy).  Many statues had a Christian icon hidden inside the body or camouflaged in the artwork.

The fields are ripe for the harvest in Japan. Here is what it says on the Maria Kannon website:

Just as with the United States and the rest of the world, the Japanese people suffer from a great spiritual poverty, the greatest of all forms of poverty. While the Word of God suffers in developed countries in the West, it has virtually been stamped out in Japan, despite being a land that was once fertile and receptive to becoming overwhelmingly Catholic. With the decline of religions like Shintoism and Buddhism in Japan, people are searching for answers to the meaning of their lives…

Interestingly, one of the Miraculous Medal miraculous stories on the website involved Servant of God, Father John A. Hardon, SJ, founder of the IRL. At the time of the story, he had no particular devotion to the Medal when called to the bedside of a boy in a coma, incurred from a sledding accident. Father placed the Medal around the boy’s neck and initiated him into the Confraternity of the Miraculous Medal. All concerned were amazed and joy-filled to see the boy open his eyes and ask for ice cream!

“At times I have failed to place an image of Our Savior’s Mother beside His cross. At such times, I have always found the people rebellious to the Gospel.”                                       — St. Francis Xavier

The website has a beautiful description of the origins of the Miraculous Medal, including the most famous conversion story— that of Rev. Alphonse Ratisbonne,  a nominal Jew who scoffed at religion and subsequently became a Catholic priest.

If you would like to support Our Lady’s mission to Japan, please visit the Maria Kannon website.

The Miraculous Medal is Miraculous!

Grave of Alphonse
Grave of Alphonse

Today is the Feast of the Miraculous Medal and tomorrow we celebrate the Feast Day of St. Catherine Laboure who propagated the devotion. It testifies to the power of the Miraculous Medal that an “inanimate” object gets its own feast day!

One of the most famous converts due to Our Lady’s intercession via the Miraculous Medal is Alphonse Ratisbonne (1814-1884). While I was living in Jerusalem at Ecce Homo Convent (run by the Sisters of Sion) on a sabbatical from my computer job, I visited the Sisters of Sion’s convent in Ein Karim. While wandering through their incredible garden of Eden of fruits and foliage, I stumbled across Alponses’ grave in a remote corner of the garden. How did his remains get there? I was so driven to find out that I ended up writing a book called “A Spiritual Pilgrimage to France.”

Anyway, Alphonse, a Jewish non-believer, was dared by a friend while visiting Rome to wear a Miraculous Medal and to pray the Memorarae twice a day. He did so and while in the Basilica of Sant’Andrea delle Fratte had a vision of the Blessed Mother and was instantly converted. His brother Theodore, a Catholic convert and priest, had the joy of announcing in the Basilica of Notre Dame des Victoires in Paris that his brother had become “a fully believing Catholic.” This is the same Church that filled St. Therese of Lisieux with delight as she made her journey to Rome before her entrance into Carmel. Sant’Andrea delle Fratte is also the Church where St. Maximilian Kolbe celebrated his first Mass, at the very altar where Alphonse experienced his vision. We at the IRL are privileged to be housed at Marytown, the National Shrine of St. Maximilian, a great proponent of the Miraculous Medal. Life is full of twists and turns and coincidences.

Ecce Homo Covent Chapel
Ecce Homo Covent Chapel

To wind things back up, Alphonse after his conversion became a Catholic priest and with his brother Theodore co-founded the Congregation of Our Lady of Sion and came to the Holy Land to bring the Good News to the Jewish people. He built Ecce Homo convent on the Via Dolorosa, run by the Sisters of Sion, which today is a pilgrim house and hosts a biblical studies program. I was there as a volunteer for three months, an experience I highly recommend.

Alphonse died in Ein Karim and was buried inside the walls of the Sisters of Sion’s convent. His room at Ecce Homo is left as it was when he was alive. Maybe if you ask the sisters, you can have a private viewing.

God bless all who wear the Miraculous Medal with faith. May the Blessed Mother be their protectress and intercessor for all their needs, all through their lives.