Coordinates: 40°02′32″N 75°10′04″W / 40.0421°N 75.1677°W / 40.0421; -75.1677

Basilica Shrine of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal

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The Basilica Shrine of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal
The Basilica Shrine in 2016
Map
Location500 E. Chelten Ave
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
CountryUnited States
DenominationRoman Catholic
Websitewww.miraculousmedal.org
History
StatusBasilica
Founder(s)The Congregation of the Mission of St. Vincent de Paul, Eastern Province, USA
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Groundbreaking1875
Completed1879
Clergy
RectorFr. Timothy V. Lyons

The Basilica Shrine of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal, formerly known as The Miraculous Medal Shrine, is at 500 E. Chelten Ave. in the East Germantown neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The church now known as the Basilica Shrine was founded by the Congregation of the Mission in 1879 as the Chapel of the Immaculate Conception on the grounds of St. Vincent's Seminary. In 1927, Fr. Joseph Skelly, CM, commissioned the creation of Mary's Central Shrine within the chapel to promote devotion to Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal, a title of the Virgin Mary originating with her apparitions to Saint Catherine Labouré in Paris in 1830.[1]

On January 25, 2023, it was announced that the Vatican's Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments issued a decree granting The Miraculous Medal Shrine (jointly the Chapel of the Immaculate Conception and Mary's Central Shrine within it), the title Minor basilica. This made the Basilica Shrine the second basilica in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia along with the Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul.[2] It was the 92nd minor basilica designated by the Roman Catholic Church is the United States.

Founding

In 1841, the Congregation of the Mission established St. Vincent's Seminary on the outskirts of the borough of Germantown, six miles north of Philadelphia. (Germantown would later become part of a geographically expanded Philadelphia in the Act of Consolidation, 1854.) The Vincentians planned to build a chapel on the grounds of the seminary to serve Vincentian priests, brothers, and seminarians. Archbishop James Frederick Wood of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia requested that the plans be modified so that the chapel would also serve the working class immigrants in the area who did not have a parish church at the time. This chapel was opened to the public in 1879.[3]

Creation of Mary's Central Shrine

In 1927, Fr. Joseph Skelly, CM, expanded the chapel to create a shrine to our Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal. The focal point of the shrine is a large sculpture of Carrara marble depicting the Blessed Mother extending her arms as she did in her second apparition to Saint Catherine Labouré on November 27, 1830.[4]

Importance to migrant communities

The Vincentians have had a long history of serving the immigrant community in Philadelphia. They originally came to the city in 1841 at the request of Bishop Francis Kenrick, who asked them to administer and serve as faculty at the new seminary he founded, which is known today as St. Charles Borromeo Seminary. At the time, the Catholic population of the diocese was about 100,000 and growing rapidly largely due to immigration of European Catholic families to the city. Yet there were only 38 priests to serve them. In the ensuing years, the Vincentians traveled throughout the Philadelphia area and New Jersey serving as parish priests. In 1849, again at the request of Bishop Kenrick, they established St. Vincent de Paul Parish in Germantown to serve the growing number of Irish-Catholic immigrants in the area, many of whom had fled hunger and religious persecution in their home country. Later, the Vincentians would found local churches to serve Italian-American immigrants and African-Americans who came to the city in the Great Migration. In recent years, the Basilica Shrine has collaborated with various ethnic and cultural communities around Philadelphia to install devotional shrines in the lower chapel of the Basilica Shrine and on the grounds of the Basilica Shrine. Examples of these cultural shrines include[5]

In addition, each year The Basilica Shrine, in collaboration with the St. Thomas Syro-Malabar Forane Catholic Church in the Northeast section of Philadelphia, hosts a Holy Mass in the Syro Malabar Rite and a rosary procession on the feast day of Our Lady of Vailankanni, a Marian title originating with apparitions of the Blessed Mother in India in the 16th and 17th centuries. A statue of Our Lady of Vailankanni is permanently displayed in the lower chapel and moved to the main church for feast day services.[6]

The lower chapel also contains the Shrine of Our Lady of the Globe, a depiction of the Blessed Mother as she appeared in her third apparition to Saint Catherine later on November 27, 1830.[7]

External links

References

  1. ^ "Basilica Status Bestowed on The Miraculous Medal Shrine". Archdiocese of Philadelphia. Retrieved March 17, 2023.
  2. ^ CNA. "Miraculous Medal Shrine in Philadelphia elevated to basilica". Catholic News Agency. Retrieved March 17, 2023.
  3. ^ Tiblis, Laurence. "Welcome". The Miraculous Medal Shrine. Retrieved March 17, 2023.
  4. ^ "Philadelphia's Miraculous Medal Shrine Named Newest Basilica in the United States". NCR. Retrieved March 17, 2023.
  5. ^ Tiblis, Laurence. "Cultural Communities". The Miraculous Medal Shrine. Retrieved March 17, 2023.
  6. ^ says, PAUL rUCKER. "Indian Catholics welcome new shrine for Mary in a day of devotions". Catholic Philly. Retrieved March 17, 2023.
  7. ^ "Philadelphia's Miraculous Medal Shrine Named Newest Basilica in the United States". NCR. Retrieved March 17, 2023.

40°02′32″N 75°10′04″W / 40.0421°N 75.1677°W / 40.0421; -75.1677