The month of May is the
"month which the piety of the faithful has especially dedicated to Our
Blessed Lady," and it is the occasion for a "moving tribute of faith
and love which Catholics in every part of the world [pay] to the Queen of
Heaven. During this month Christians, both in church and in the privacy of the
home, offer up to Mary from their hearts an especially fervent and loving
homage of prayer and veneration. In this month, too, the benefits of God's
mercy come down to us from her throne in greater abundance" (Paul VI:
Encyclical on the Month of May, no. 1).
This Christian custom of
dedicating the month of May to the Blessed Virgin arose at the end of the 13th
century. In this way, the Church was able to Christianize the secular feasts
which were wont to take place at that time. In the 16th century, books appeared
and fostered this devotion. The practice became especially
popular among the members of the Jesuit Order — by 1700 it took hold among
their students at the Roman College and a bit later it was publicly practiced
in the Gesu Church in Rome. From there it spread to the whole Church.
The practice was granted a
partial indulgence by Pius VII in 1815 and a plenary indulgence by Pius IX in
1859. With the complete revision of indulgences in 1966 and the decreased
emphasis on specific indulgences, it no longer carries an indulgence; however
it certainly falls within the category of the First General Grant of
Indulgences. (A partial indulgence is granted to the faithful who, in the
performance of their duties and in bearing the trials of life, raise their mind
with humble confidence to God, adding — even if only mentally — some pious
invocation.
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