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Our Lady of Lourdes Grotto
Joseph was faithful to his promise. A pile of volcanic rocks seemed an unlikely place to start, but the energetic lay brother, now in his fifties, was soon hard at work, transforming the hillside into a beautiful grotto in Mary’s honor. The white marble statue was placed there in the early 1920’s. Joseph kept the garden and shrine a thing of beauty, working there until two days before his death and telling visitors how he was cured and his leg was saved through Our Lady's intercession. He died on August 1, 1953, at the age of 88 and is buried at the Jesuit cemetery at the Mount. When Mount St. Michael was purchased from the Jesuits in 1978 to be a parish church and center of traditional Catholicism, the grotto was in a state of sad neglect and was quite overrun by brush and weeds. Once there had been a life-sized statue of St. Bernadette in the grotto as well, but it had been smashed by vandals. Parishioners and religious set to work, clearing away the brush and restoring the steps and walkways. In the fall of 1979 a few dedicated women began the work of restoring the grotto to its former beauty. On October 8, 1980, the first Mass in the grotto since the purchase of the Mount was offered. In his sermon, Father reminded those present of the many miraculous graces granted through the intercession of our Blessed Mother at the shrine in Lourdes, France, and assured them that this grotto, too, is a very special place where great favors may be granted.
Those who visit the grotto often find that it soon becomes one of their favorites places, both for prayer and for simply enjoying its beauty. And when the winter snows cover the rose plants and the flowers take their long sleep until spring, the Lady of the Grotto still draws her children there. In the still whiteness, they see the symbol of the virginal purity of God’s sinless One, the Immaculate Conception.... St. Michael’s Church Copyright 1998 - 2004 CMRI |