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Our Lady of Guadalupe celebrations are set

By Glenn Rutherford, Record Editor

Pope Francis held an image of Our Lady of Guadalupe after receiving it as a gift from a journalist aboard the papal flight to Brazil July 22. The pope was making his first international trip at the time. In the Archdiocese of Louisville, a dozen or so parishes will be celebrating the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe on Dec. 12. (CNS Photo)

While people throughout the Archdiocese of Louisville are making final plans for their last pre-Christmas shopping trip or placing the inflatable Santa Claus in their yard, Hispanic Catholics in the archdiocese are preparing for one of the most significant days of their year — the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe.

The day, Dec. 12, “is very, very significant to the Hispanic community — especially the Mexican community,” said Eva Gonzalez, director of Hispanic ministry for the archdiocese’s Office of Multicultural Ministry.

“We saw a great outpouring of Christianity following her appearance,” Gonzalez said.

That appearance came first on Dec. 9, 1531, when a man named Juan Diego, who was canonized in 2002, said he saw an apparition of a young girl on the Hill of Tepeyac near Mexico City. She told him to build a church at that site dedicated to her, and St. Juan Diego said he recognized the girl as the Virgin Mary.

According to the Internet site CatholicOnLine.com, St. Juan Diego was a poor, 57-year-old Aztec when he encountered the apparition. He was told to tell his story to the Spanish archbishop of Mexico City, but felt unworthy.

So he returned to Tepeyac Hill, saw the Virgin Mary once again and implored her to send someone else. But she said “My little son, there are many I could send. But you are the one I have chosen.”

The archbishop asked Juan Diego to return to the site once again and ask the Virgin Mary for a sign that would prove who she was.

Though it was December and past the growing season, Juan Diego went back to the hill and found Castilian roses growing there, roses not native to Mexico.

The Virgin arranged the roses on Juan Diego’s cloak, or tilma, according to CatholicOnLine, and when he opened his cloak before the bishop on Dec. 12, the flowers fell to the floor and on the fabric was the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe. The image of the Virgin on the cloak’s fabric “is Mexico’s most popular religious and cultural image,” the Internet site said.

And Gonzalez agreed.

“In the Hispanic community, you can’t talk about our culture without mentioning Our Lady of Guadalupe,” she said. “She is especially important for the Mexican community. You will see people of that community wearing shirts with images of her on them, and most homes have medals or other images of Our Lady.”

Our Lady of Guadalupe is known, Gonzalez said, as “the Empress of the Americas.”

This year a dozen parishes in the archdiocese will hold special celebrations and services surrounding Our Lady of Guadalupe. Gonzalez said some of the celebrations will feature upwards of 1,000 people, while smaller groups will gather at those parishes with smaller Hispanic communities.

What follows is a listing that identifies the time and place of those services. All activities, unless specified, will occur on Dec. 12.

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