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Post Info TOPIC: Appendix 3 Our Lady of Mylapore


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Appendix 3 Our Lady of Mylapore
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Appendix 3

Our Lady of Mylapore

Closely connected with the history of the Cathedral in San Thome

is the great devotion, from ancient times, to Our Lady of

Mylapore63.

Is it a mere coincidence that the Image of Our Lady (of Mylapore)

venerated in the Cathedral-Basilica of St. Thomas at Mylapore

should be intimately connected with the tomb of St. Thomas, the

Apostle, near which it has been for more than 400 years?

St.John Damascene, who died in the year 749, is known for his

defense of the veneration of images. He records that, according to

an ancient tradition, at the time of the death of the Blessed Virgin

Mary, the Apostles, who had been preaching in different parts of

the world, assembled to be present at her last moments of life.

They had a vision of the angels and heard them singing. After her

death, the Apostles gave her burial and the singing continued for

three consecutive days. After the singing ceased, Thomas, who

was not with the other Apostles arrived and was anxious to see the

sacred remains of Mary. In the presence of the assembled

Apostles, the sepulchre of Our Lady was opened, but to their great

consternation, they found that the grave was empty. Thus Thomas’

late arrival led the apostles to believe in the Bodily Assumption of

the Blessed Virgin into Heaven.

It would seem, therefore, that this close association of her Image

with the tomb of the apostle may signify Our Lady’s predilection for

this “Doubting Thomas”, who on a previous memorable occasion

was chosen to confirm the fact of Christ’s Resurrection. Thomas

at the sepulchre of Our Lady and a prominent the image of Our

Lady at the sepulchre of St. Thomas does not seem just a mere

coincidence! In fact in the two other shrines of St. Thomas, not too

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far from Mylapore, namely Little Mount and St. Thomas Mount

there is also this very significant coincidence; in the former it is Our

Lady of Health who is venerated very much even to this day; and

in the latter it is Our Lady of Expectation.

According to a Syrian tradition, St.Thomas received Our Lady’s

girdle after her Assumption. And this girdle is connected with some

local legends, as recorded by Bishop John de Marignolli, who was

in Mylapore for about four days in 1349. A wondrously large log

came floating from Ceylon to Mylapore, which the King with his

elephants and men could not drag it ashore. St. Thomas with his

girdle dragged it to the place where he built his own church and

where he was later buried. Was that the girdle that belonged to Our

Lady that was given to him after her Assumption?

It is said that in Westminster Abbey, England, there is a girdle of

St. Thomas. Was this girdle taken from Mylapore, when King

Alfred the Great sent his Embassy to Mylapore in 883 A.D. in

fulfillment of a vow that he made to St.Thomas?

The Image of Our Lady of Mylapore was also very closely

connected with St. Francis Xavier, the second Apostle of India, who

at the beginning of May 1545 made a pilgrimage on foot from

Nagapatam to the sepulchre of St. Thomas at Mylapore. He spent

about four months there, in continual prayer. He was imploring God,

through the intercession of Mary and St. Thomas, to be pleased to

make known to him, whether it was his divine will that he should

go to the Far East or not, for the mission of proclaiming the Gospel.

During his stay at Mylapore, St. Francis Xavier was the guest of

the Vicar, Father Gaspar Coelho, who later vouched for the fact

that Xavier spent his nights in prayer before the Queen of the

Angels, imploring her protection against the demons who, furious

with the saintly pilgrim priest for securing thousands of their wouldbe

victims used to beat him during the dark hours of his nights of

prayer.

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The image of wood three feet high, represents Our Lady seated on

a throne, her hands joined in prayer and her eyes piously cast down.

She wears a long-sleeved robe; a veil covers her head falling upon

her shoulders in the form of a long mantle. Below the veil the edge

of a second head-covering is to be seen, passing around the neck

and continuing almost to the waist. But the mantle and the veil are

gilded; the second head-covering is white, constituting a delicate

frame for the beautifully carved features. Mouth, nose and eyes are

finely fashioned and are of exquisite beauty. The whole statue

reveals western workmanship, and can be safely assumed to have

been brought by the Portuguese. It was probably brought by

Fr.Gaspar Coelho in 1543, when he came here as a Parish Priest,

for there are no records of it before his arrival. It is not only the

oldest, but also by far the most beautiful statue of Our Lady. There

is a similar statue which is also very historical, known as Our Lady,

Mother of God, in the Church of Saligao in the Archdiocese of Goa,

but the statue of Mylapore far exceeds it in beauty. When one

kneels before it, one instinctively feels drawn to prolong one’s

prayers.

It is from the time of the arrival of St. Francis Xavier at Mylapore

in 1545 that this Image has become famous and has been held in

great veneration and devotion by all the people, as the process for

the Canonization of St. Francis Xavier testifies.

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