Nuestra Señora de la Purificación y la Candelaria (English: Our Lady of Purification and Candle) is a venerated image of the Blessed Virgin Mary enshrined in Jaro Cathedral and the patroness of Western Visayas.[2][3]
Our Lady of Purification and Candle Nuestra Señora de la Purificación y la Candelaria | |
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Location | Jaro, Iloilo City, Philippines |
Date | April 1587[1] |
Witness | Don Cristobal Mercado |
Type | Limestone |
Approval | Pope John Paul II |
Shrine | National Shrine of the Our Lady of Candles |
Patronage | Jaro, Iloilo City, Western Visayas |
Feast day | February 2 |
The devotion to Candelaria de Jaro derives from the original Virgin of Candelaria in Canarias, Spain and its feast day or Candlemas is celebrated every February 2.[4]
Pope John Paul II (now a papal saint) personally crowned the image on February 20, 1981. It is the first Marian image in Asia crowned by a pope and saint in person. Later, the image is declared as the patroness of Western Visayas via decree Quod Urbes on 1982.[5]
Description
editThe title commemorates Mary's ritual purification during the Presentation of Jesus. Halakha (Jewish law) ordered that firstborn sons be redeemed at the Temple in Jerusalem when they were 40 days old. The mother, who expelled blood during the birth, was considered unclean for a week and 33 days thereafter, necessitating her purification at the same time the child is redeemed. Even though in Catholic doctrine, Mary herself was considered sinless ever since her Concepcion due to the merits of Christ. This, according to the theological treatises of Blessed Ramon Llull, the original author who wrote of the doctrine of "The Immaculate Concepcion". He was an ardent admirer as well as a staunch critic of Islamic thinkers: Al-Farabi, Avicenna and Ibn Sab'in. The Virgin Mary was pure and virginal: before, during and after Christ's birth, and has no need for "ritual purification" but due to her humility participated in the ritual anyway and by her humility showed the way for the purification of the whole of mankind.[6] The Christ-child wears a necklace of gold bearing an elephant, giving it connections to the ancient kingdom of Pannai in Sumatra where the elephant was sacred to Hinduism and Buddhism, making the Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria de Jaro a functional Palladium (protective image).
Marian cult and veneration
editThe limestone statue discovered in the 16th-century was miraculously lifted up by fishermen who discovered its weight changed from something unable to be carried to one which was able to, when the Bishop declared that it should be placed on the Jaro church. It was also once found floating in the Iloilo River, something fascinating since stone statues don't usually float. It depicts Mary and the Child Jesus carrying tapers in their right hands a symbol of light and purification. It is customarily vested in gold cloth; crowns adorn mother and son, the latter holding a globus cruciger in his left hand symbolizing Christ's reign over the whole earth. The candle held by the cathedral's holy image is today tipped with a red electrical bulb.
History
editTradition recounts the statue's first appearance in 1587, when a group of fishermen found it floating in the Iloilo River. The fishermen initially could not lift the image due to its weight, but when they decided to bring it to Jaro, the image suddenly became easier to carry. The statue was initially placed in a small niche near the apex of the local church's central spire. Folklore speaks of the statue's growth in size over the centuries, to the point that it was transferred to the balcony. The image's shrine is accessible today by a flight of steps attached to the cathedral's northeastern façade.[8]
The statue was declared patroness of the Western Visayas by Pope John Paul II who, in person, canonically crowned this image on February 20, 1981, during his first Apostolic Visit to the Philippines.[2][9] It is thus the only Marian statue in the Philippines personally crowned by the Pontiff (and saint) instead of a proxy legate.
National Shrine
editPope Pius IX authorised the canonical erection of the Diocese of Jaro on May 25, 1865. Bishop Mariano Cuartero took possession of the diocese in 1868, and later partitioned it into nine dioceses. In 1874, Cuartero had the cathedral built on the site, dedicating it to Elizabeth of Hungary.[6][10][11]
The original edifice was among the many structures destroyed in the Lady Caycay earthquake, an 8.2 surface wave magnitude tremor which struck Panay Island on January 25, 1948. Pope Pius XII elevated Jaro to an archdiocese on June 29, 1951, via a papal bull,[1] and the cathedral was fully restored by 1956 under José María Cuenco, the first Archbishop of Jaro.
In January 2012, the Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines approved "National Shrine of the Our Lady of Candles" as an additional title for the cathedral.
Confraternity
editThe Cofradia de la Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria is the shrine's lay confraternity recognized by the Archdiocese of Jaro.[12]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b "Archdiocese of Jaro". Claretianpublications.com. Retrieved February 10, 2012.
- ^ a b "About Our Lady of Candles National Shrine". Our Lady of Candles National Shrine.
- ^ "Jaro Cathedral to be declared National Marian Shrine". CBCP News. Archived from the original on February 3, 2014. Retrieved February 10, 2012.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ Feasts of OL of Candelaria, Presentation of the Lord today in Manila Bulletin (retrieved online on 17 February 2018).
- ^ "Quod urbes - Littera apostolica | Ioannes Paulus II". www.vatican.va. April 21, 1982.
- ^ a b Rosal, Joy. "Viva la Candelaria de Jaro". Thenewstoday.info. Retrieved February 10, 2012.
- ^ "Meeting with representatives of Catholic Organizations and Movements in the Cathedral of Jaro in Iloilo (February 20, 1981) | John Paul II".
- ^ Cf. Jojo Tamayo, The Queen of Jaro: Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria in artesacraph (retrieved online on 17 February 2018).
- ^ "Jaro cathedral to be declared Marian shrine Feb. 2 | GMA News Online". Gmanetwork.com. January 20, 2012. Retrieved February 10, 2012.
- ^ Barcelona, Mary Anne. Ynang Maria: A Celebration of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the Philippines. Edited by Consuelo B. Estepa, Ph.D. Pasig: Anvil Publishing, Inc, 2004.
- ^ viena mae banebane says (November 19, 2010). "Jaro Cathedral: Our Lady of Candles Parish Church, Iloilo | Philippines Travel Guide". Markmaranga.com. Retrieved February 10, 2012.
- ^ Cofradia de Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria de Jaro.