Friday, November 20, 2020

The Presentation Of The Blessed Virgin Mary Feast Day - 21 November

Quoted without emphasis and hyperlinks from Britannica [1]:

Presentation of the Virgin Mary, also called Entry of the Most Holy Theotokos into the Temple, feast [is] celebrated in the Roman Catholic and Eastern churches on November 21. It was held in the Eastern church in the 6th century but did not become widely accepted in the West until the 15th century. The pope St. Pius V (1566–72) suppressed it, but in 1585 Pope Sixtus V reestablished the feast. Generally considered a feast of popular piety, it signifies Mary’s total and lifelong devotion to God, as anticipated by her Immaculate Conception, and heralds her future vocation as the sacred vessel for the Incarnation.

The feast is based on a legend contained in the Protevangelium of James, a 2nd-century work not included in the Bible. It commemorates a visit by the three-year-old Mary to the Temple in Jerusalem, where she was dedicated to the service of God and left to be raised as a consecrated virgin. This act was done in fulfillment of a sacred promise made by her parents, Saints Anne and Joachim, during their long struggle with childlessness.

An essay written by Father Francis Xavier Weninger, 1876, The Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, provides more information on the consecration of children [2].

With regard to the Blessed Virgin Mary, Fr. Francis Xavier Weninger had this to say, in part [3]:

Her consecration differed greatly from that of all other children. Many were brought to the temple only because their parents desired it, and without their own knowledge of the reasons for which it was done. Others wept bitterly at parting with their parents. No other at that tender age, had understood the ceremony, and none had made the consecration with such entire devotion to the Lord.


[3] Ibid.

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