The Blessed Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel
by VP
Posted on Wednesday July 16, 2025 at 12:00AM in Saints
"A FEAST in honour of our Blessed Lady is kept on this day, on which, as we are assured by several writers of the Carmelite Order, St. Simon Stock, general of the Carmelites, was admonished by the holy Mother of God in a vision, to establish the confraternity of the Scapular. This confraternity has been approved, and favoured with many privileges by many popes. The object of it is to unite the devout clients of the Blessed Virgin in certain regular exercises of religion and piety.
Learn from the Blessed Mother of God clothing her devout children with the humble scapular, a thorough contempt of the world. She proclaims to us: Love not the world, nor the things that are in the world. Love not its riches, its fine apparel, or other vanities; but having food, and wherewith to be clothed, learn to be content. For they that would become rich fall into temptation and the snares of the devil. Despise the honours of the world; and keep not a high and proud heart beneath an humble garment. Be not greedy of power and pre-eminence above others; but willingly sit down in the lowest place, by far the most secure. Equally dangerous, and to be shunned by every faithful follower of Jesus and Mary, are the pleasures of the world. You are called in this life to labour and penance. The time of rest and enjoyment will not fully arrive till you have passed through the gate of death. To live in pleasures and sensual enjoyments, is a life full of danger, and too often leads to eternal death; but by a life of mortification, you secure joy everlasting. This is that holy violence which carries away victoriously the kingdom of heaven. And be not disturbed or fearful about the judgments of the world. Men of the world fear where there is no fear: but for your part, fear only him who has power to cast into hell. Place yourself under the patronage of the holy Mother of God; she will protect you by her powerful intercession, and procure for you the true fear and love of God." The Catholic Year by Fr. John Gother
Prayer to the Holy Virgin of Mount Carmel:
O Most Blessed and Immaculate Virgin, ornament and splendor of Carmel,
thou who regardest with an eye of special kindness those who wear thy
blessed habit, look down also benignly upon me and cover me with the
mantle of thy special protection. Strengthen my weakness with thy power;
enlighten the darkness of my mind with thy wisdom; increase in me
faith, hope, and charity. Adorn my soul with such graces and virtues as
will ever be pleasing to thy divine Son and to thee. Assist me in life,
and console me in death, with thy most amiable presence, and present me
to the most august Trinity as thy devoted servant and child; that I may
eternally bless and praise thee in paradise. Amen 2 Hail Marys and Glory be to the Father. The New Raccolta 1903
Links:
Carmelites of Fairfield, Pennsylvania
Monks of the Most Blessed Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel, Wyoming
Monastery of the Little Flower of Jesus Discalced Carmelite Nuns of Jacksonville, Florida
Seven Carmelite
Nuns of the Strict Ancien observance of the Mother-Carmel at Lanark,
Allentown, Pa., will soon be transferred to Asheville, N.C. , to found a
new Carmelite Monastery there under the title of "Carmel of St. Joseph
and the Holy Child."
The nuns are going to North Carolina at the
invitation of the Most Rev. Vincent S. Waters, Bishop of Raleigh. Their
establishment in the Raleigh Diocese will be the first monastery for
strictly cloistered nuns in North Carolina.
Bishop to Pontificate
Solemn opening services and the first Mass will be celebrated at the new Asheville Carmel by Bishop Waters on March 19..
Authorization
for the new monastery has come from Pope Pius XII through the Sacred
Congregation for the Religious, since the nuns are members of a Papal
Institute. Previous approval had been granted by the most Rev. John F.
O'Hara, C.S.C., Archbishop of Philadelphia.
This will be the second
Carmelite monastery to be founded in the United States from the
Allentown Mother-Carmel. In November 1954, seven nuns left there to
establish a new Carmel in Wahpeton, North Dakota.
Departure Ceremonies
Special
departure ceremonies were conducted at the Allentown Monastery on March
7. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Leo G. Fink, P.A., V.F., presided and presented
Mission Crosses to the seven nuns who will form the new North Carolina
community. They are: Reverend Mother M. Bernadette of Our Lady of
Lourdes, a native of Philadelphia, who entered the Allentown Carmel on
March 5, 1934. She will serve as Mother Prioress to the new community.
Sister
Mary Magdalen of Jesus, of Allentown, who entered the Allentown Carmel
on July 16, 1933, Assistant to the Mother Prioress.
Also, Sister Mary
Anne of St. Bartholomew, of Philadelphia; Sister Mary Veronica of the
Holy Face, Jersey City, N.J.; Sister Mary Patricia of the Nativity, of
Philadelphia; Sister Mary Genevieve of the Holy Face, of Philadelphia;
and Sister Marie of the Sacred Heart, candidate for the new novitiate of
New Bedford, Mass.
Note 25th Anniversary
The Allentown
Carmelites are currently celebrating the 25th anniversary of their
establishment in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, which marks their
first foundation in the United State, under the leadership of the late
Reverend Mother Therese of Jesus and her companion, Mother Clement Mary
of the Guardian Angel. The Carmelites were established by the General of
the Carmelite Order, Blessed John Soreth, Ord. Carm. , on October 14,
1453, at Guelder, Holland. About 26 years before, St. Teresa of Avila
began her reform of the Carmelites, in Spain, a branch of the original
monastery was founded in Naples, Italy, in 1536. it was from this
Carmelite Monastery of Naples in Italy that Carmel of the Strict Ancient
Observance extended to American soil its first Foundation on May 22,
1931, at Lanark, near Allentown.
Life of a Carmelite
These
Carmelite nuns take Solemn Vows of obedience, chastity and poverty, and
observe strict Papal Enclosure. The choir religious chant the Divine
Office in common. In addition to the Divine office, the cloistered
religious observe perpetual adoration of the Holy Sacrament. Day and
night, one or two Sisters kneel before the tabernacle, adoring,
praising, petitioning for the needs of Mother Church throughout the
world, for the Vicar of Christ on earth, for personal sanctification,
and for the sanctification of all. The greater part of the day and night
of the cloistered nuns is spent in prayer, meditation and other
spiritual exercises. A certain part of the day is devoted to manual
labor.
Source: The Catholic Standard and Times, Vol. 61, 9 March 1956