July 11 - Saint Benedict of Nursia, abbot (d. 547, founder of the Benedictine Order) - Dedication of the church of Our Lady of Le Puy, Queen of France

Le Puy is possibly the most ancient Marian shrine in the world

© Shutterstock/milosk50
© Shutterstock/milosk50

In the department of Haute Loire in southern France (...) lies the oriental-looking Cathedral of Le Puy. It has a series of cupolas, Romanesque arches, and in some ways resembles a mosque. The capitals of the pillars which sustain the vault are as artistic as any of the basilicas in France; the facade is Moorish. The stairs leading up to the church from the city below pass next to the ancient druid altar and then rise to the shrine itself.

The image of the Black Madonna of Le Puy is an almost exact replica of the ancient one, which had been dragged about during a mock trial at the time of the French Revolution. This statue was guillotined like Marie Antoinette and then burned. The present statue, made of black marble, represents Our Lady seated on a stool and is about twenty-five inches high. She holds her son on her knees. According to tradition, the original venerated statue was brought to the sanctuary by St. Louis, King of France. During the Crusades, King Louis was captured by the Moors in Africa, but the Sultan, as a sign of his esteem, presented to the King of France a cedar wood figure of Our Lady with the Child, venerated also by the Moslems. There is another legend that the statue was carved by the prophet Jeremiah.

Le Puy thus claims to be the most ancient shrine of Our Lady in the world. In any case the origins of the shrine of Le Puy go back to the druidic age. Mont Anis, the hill on which the cathedral stands, was the site of a druidic altar and during the Roman occupation, it was replaced by a temple of Jupiter. Very soon after the arrival of Christianity, it is said that a woman seeking relief from a mysterious fever went up to this ancient place of worship. Suddenly, the Blessed Virgin appeared to her and asked that a chapel be built on the site. When the Bishop visited the spot, sometime in midsummer, he found snow on the mountain in a shape that indicated the building plan of a chapel. He fenced the place in with a hedge of thorns and, to his great astonishment, found on the next morning that the bushes had blossomed into flowers. The popular legend asserts also that the Bishop of St. George of Velay was a disciple of St. Peter.

The chapel, however, was built much later. Toward the end of the fifth century, another bishop of Velay was faced with a similar request: another woman was cured on the mountain, and Our Lady, who subsequently appeared to her, asked again that a shrine be erected on the spot.

The church was built but never consecrated by the bishop because, as in the case of the Swiss shrine of Einsiedeln, when the bishop arrived, "he found the chapel ablaze with lights and filled with music, and it was believed that it had been already consecrated by the angels." (H. M. Gillet, Famous Shrines of Our Lady.)

From this time forward, the history of Le Puy is one of glory. By the sixth century, so many pilgrims were flocking to Le Puy that a guest house had to be built. Charlemagne visited Le Puy twice; all the princes of the Carolingian dynasty showered gifts on the shrine. Later, St. Louis, King of France, donated a new statue and journeyed twice on pilgrimages with his queen.

The visits of Charlemagne, the seven popes, the kings and the saints live on at this place, not as shadows of the past, but as actual marks of an undying dedication to the Blessed Virgin who chose this part of France to be venerated as "Our Lady of France."

 

Zsolt Aradi

Source: www.catholicculture.org (Adapted)

 

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