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                                               Intro Mary Garden

Announcement: May 1996

+ . Mary's Gardens http://www.mgardens.org marysgardens@mgardens.org May 1,1996 Friends: For May an important piece of research, "The Blessing of Mary Gardens as Holy Places" is being added to the Mary's Gardens Internet Web Site . . . encouraging the sacramental blessing of garden beds, statuary, plants and seeds as objects of piety for those who work, meditate or visit in the Mary Garden. Such blessings, ecclesiastically administered, extend to the Mary Garden and its objects the holiness of the Church, such that the common experience of this holiness in the Mary Garden serves in turn as a witness to the holiness of the Church and of Mary - especially in the context of the symbolical Flowers of Our Lady. The article, with documentation, tells the story of the herb, Ruta graveolens, which still today is known as "Herb O' Grace" and "Rue" from its widespread use, dating back to the ninth century, in the sprinkling of Holy water on persons, objects or places being blest - when it was know as "Graciosa" and "Rauta". The "Herb of Grace" was chosen for such use because of its finely divided leaves which, when dipped in holy water and then shaken, distributed hundreds of tiny droplets onto the objects blest; and also because of the bitter, acrid, fragrance and taste of these leaves, which served as a reminder of the mortification and penance required if, through the piety engendered through encounter with the objects blest, one were to be most fully disposed to the reception of sacramental and gratuitous graces - because of which it was also known as "Rue". From this origin the word, "rue", was adopted into the language with the general connotation of bitter regret, sorrow and pain of loss, as in the expression: "You will rue the day." Ruta graveolens, itself, was given special blessings for this use - one for use by the clergy and one for use by the laity - when it was included in the "Assumption Bundles" of harvest grains and herbs blest on the altar for reservation as holy objects in a special liturgical ceremony for the Feast of the Assumption, August 15th - much as today palm fronds are blest for reservation as holy objects, on Palm Sunday. The Rural Life Prayer Book (1956) of the U.S. National Catholic Rural Life Conference observes that today sacramental blessings are "riches of the Church which have been long unknown and unused like a treasure hidden under our very doorstep". The importance of these blessings has been reaffirmed for our times in the Second Vatican Council Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy (par. 62) which states: "The liturgy of the sacraments and sacramentals sanctifies almost every event in (our) lives . . . There is hardly any proper use of material things which cannot thus be directed toward the sanctification of men and the praise of God." Within this context a number of the blessings from the Roman and other rites appropriate for Mary Garden beds, statuary, seeds, plants and flowers are given (in English translation) in the article. Through these blessings, ecclesiastically administered, those who work in or visit Mary Gardens may be opened to the piety engendered by them, particularly when meditating with love on the blest luminous centuries-old flower symbols of Our Lady's life and mysteries and of her place in the Divine Plan for the salvation of the world. Go to Home Page