The Apparitions and the Miracle 'Our Lady of Guadalupe' |
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All written narrations about the apparitions of
the Lady of Guadalupe are inspired by the Nican Mopohua,
or Huei Tlamahuitzoltica, written in Nahuatl, the Aztec
language, by the Indian scholar Antonio Valeriano around
the middle of the sixteenth century.
Unfortunately the original of his work has not been
found. A copy was first published in Nahuatl by Luis
Lasso de la Vega in 1649. Its cover is shown here.
Here follows an English translation:
Ten years after the seizure of the city of Mexico,
war came to an end and there was peace amongst the people;
in this manner faith started to bud, the understanding
of the true God, for whom we live. At that time, in
the year fifteen hundred and thirty one, in the early
days of the month of December, it happened that there
lived a poor Indian, named Juan Diego, said being a
native of Cuautitlan. Of all things spiritually he belonged
to Tlatilolco.
FIRST APPARITION |
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On a Saturday just before down, he was on his
way to pursue divine worship and to engage in his own
errands. As he reached the base of the hill known as
Tepeyacac, came the break of day, and he heard singing
atop the hill, resembling singing of varied beautiful
birds.
Occasionally the voices of the songsters would cease,
and it appeared as if the mount responded. The song,
very mellow and delightful, excelled that of the coyoltototl
and the tzinizcan and of other pretty singing birds.
Juan Diego stopped to look and said to himself: "By
fortune, am I worthy of what I hear? Maybe I dream?
Am I awakening? Where am I? Perhaps I am now in the
terrestrial paradise which our elders had told us about?
Perhaps I am now in heaven?" He was looking toward the
east, on top of the mound, from whence came the precious
celestial chant; and then it suddenly ceased and there
was silence. He then heard a voice from above the mount
saying to him: "Juanito, Juan Dieguito." Then he ventured
and went to where he was called. He was not frightened
in the least; on the contrary, overjoyed.
Then he climbed the hill, to see from were he was being
called. When he reached the summit, he saw a Lady, who
was standing there and told him to come hither. Approaching
her presence, he marvelled greatly at her superhuman
grandeur; her garments were shining like the sun; the
cliff where she rested her feet, pierced with glitter,
resembling an anklet of precious stones, and the earth
sparkled like the rainbow. The mezquites, nopales, and
other different weeds, which grow there, appeared like
emeralds, their foliage like turquoise, and their branches
and thorns glistened like gold. He bowed before her
and herd her word, tender and courteous, like someone
who charms and esteems you highly.
She said: "Juanito, the most humble of my sons, where are you going?" He replied: "My Lady and Child, I have to reach your church in Mexico, Tlatilolco, to pursue things divine, taught and given to us by our priests, delegates of Our Lord." She then spoke to him: "Know and understand well, you the most humble of my son, that I am the ever virgin Holy Mary, Mother of the true God for whom we live, of the Creator of all things, Lord of heaven and the earth. I wish that a temple be erected here quickly, so I may therein exhibit and give all my love, compassion, help, and protection, because I am your merciful mother, to you, and to all the inhabitants on this land and all the rest who love me, invoke and confide in me; listen there to their lamentations, and remedy all their miseries, afflictions and sorrows. And to accomplish what my clemency pretends, go to the palace of the bishop of Mexico, and you will say to him that I manifest my great desire, that here on this plain a temple be built to me; you will accurately relate all you have seen and admired, and what you have heard. Be assured that I will be most grateful and will reward you, because I will make you happy and worthy of recompense for the effort and fatigue in what you will obtain of what I have entrusted. Behold, you have heard my mandate, my humble son; go and put forth all your effort."
At this point he bowed before her and said: "My Lady, I am going to comply with your mandate; now I must part from you, I, your humble servant." Then he descended to go to comply with the errand, and went by the avenue which runs directly into Mexico City.
SECOND APPARITION |
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Having entered the city, and without delay, he
went straight to the bishop's palace, who was the recently
arrived prelate named Father Juan de Zumarraga, a Franciscan
religious. On arrival, he endeavoured to see him; he
pleaded with the servants to announce him; and after
a long wait, he was called and advised that the bishop
had ordered his admission. As he entered, he bowed,
and on bended knees before him, he then delivered the
message from the lady from heaven; he also told him
all he had admired, seen, and heard. After having heard
his chat and message, it appeared incredible; then he
told him: "You will return, my son, and I will hear
you at my pleasure. I will review it from the beginning
and will give thought to the wishes and desires for
which you have come." He left and he seemed sad, because
his message had not been realised in any of its forms.
He returned on the same day. He came directly to the
top of the hill, met the Lady from heaven, who was awaiting
him, in the same spot where he saw her the first time.
Seeing her, prostrated before her, he said: "Lady, the
least of my daughters, my Child, I went where you sent
me to comply with your command. With difficulty I entered
the prelate's study. I saw him and exposed your message,
just as you instructed me. He received me benevolently
and listened attentively, but when he replied, it appeared
that he did not believe me. He said: "You will return;
I will hear you at my pleasure. I will review from the
beginning the wish and desire which you have brought."
I perfectly understood by the manner he replied that
he believes it to be an invention of mine that you wish
that a temple be built here to you, and that it is not
your order; for which I exceedingly beg, Lady and my
Child, that you entrust the delivery of your message
to someone of importance, well known, respected, and
esteemed, so that they may believe in him; because I
am a nobody, I am a small rope, a tiny ladder, the tail
end, a leaf, and you, my Child, the least of my children,
my Lady, you send me to a place where I never visit
nor repose. Please excuse the great unpleasantness and
let not fretfulness befall, my Lady and my All."
The Blessed Virgin answered: "Hark,
my son the least, you must understand that I have many
servants and messengers, to whom I must entrust the
delivery of my message, and carry my wish, but it is
of precise detail that you yourself solicit and assist
and that through your mediation my wish be complied.
I earnestly implore, my son the least, and with sternness
I command that you again go tomorrow and see the bishop.
You go in my name, and make known my wish in its entirety
that he has to start the erection of a temple which
I ask of him. And again tell him that I, in person,
the ever-virgin Holy Mary, Mother of God, sent you."
Juan Diego replied: "Lady, my Child, let me not cause you affliction. Gladly and willingly I will go to comply your mandate. Under no condition will I fail to do it, for not even the way is distressing. I will go to do your wish, but perhaps I will not be heard with liking, or if I am heard I might not be believed. Tomorrow afternoon, at sunset, I will come to bring you the result of your message with the prelate's reply. I now take leave, my Child, the least, my Child and Lady. Rest in the meantime." He then left to rest in his home.
THIRD APPARITION |
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The next day, Sunday, before dawn, he left home
on his way to Tlatilolco, to be instructed in things
divine, and to be present for roll call, following which
he had to see the prelate. Nearly at ten, and swiftly,
after hearing Mass and being counted and the crowd had
dispersed, he went. On the hour Juan Diego left for
the palace of the bishop. Hardly had he arrived, he
eagerly tried to see him. Again with much difficulty
he was able to see him. He kneeled before his feet.
He saddened and cried as he expounded the mandate of
the Lady from heaven, which God grant he would believe
his message, and the wish of the Immaculate, to erect
her temple where she willed it to be. The bishop, to
assure himself, asked many things, where he had seen
her and how she looked; and he described everything
perfectly to the bishop. Notwithstanding his precise
explanation of her figure and all that he had seen and
admired, which in itself reflected her as being the
ever-virgin Holy Mother of the Saviour, Our Lord Jesus
Christ, nevertheless, he did not give credence and said
that not only for his request he had to do what he had
asked; that, in addition, a sign was very necessary,
so that he could be believed that he was sent by the
true Lady from heaven. Therefore, he was heard, said
Juan Diego to the bishop: "My lord, hark! what must
be the sign that you ask? For I will go to ask the Lady
from heaven who sent me here." The bishop, seeing that
he ratified everything without doubt and was not retracting
anything, dismissed him. Immediately he ordered some
persons of his household, in whom he could trust, to
go and watch where he went and whom he saw and to whom
he spoke. So it was done. Juan Diego went straight to
the avenue. Those that followed him, as they crossed
the ravine, near the bridge to Tepeyacac, lost sight
of him. They searched everywhere, but he could not be
seen. Thus they returned, not only because they were
disgusted, but also because they were hindered in their
intent, causing them anger. And that is what they informed
the bishop, influencing him not to believe Juan Diego;
they told him that he was being deceived; that Juan
Diego was only forging what he was saying, or that he
was simply dreaming what he said and asked. They finally
schemed that if he ever returned, they would hold and
punish him harshly, so that he would never lie or deceive
again.
In the meantime, Juan Diego was with the Blessed Virgin,
relating the answer he was bringing from his lordship,
the bishop.
The lady, having heard, told him:
"Well and good, my little dear,
you will return here tomorrow, so you may take to the
bishop the sign he has requested. With this he will
believe you, and in this regard he will not doubt you
nor will he be suspicious of you; and know, my little
dear, that I will reward your solicitude and effort
and fatigue spent of my behalf. Lo! go now. I will await
you here tomorrow."
FOURTH APPARITION |
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On the following day, Monday, when Juan Diego
was to carry a sign so he could be believed, he failed
to return, because, when he reached his home, his uncle,
named Juan Bernardino, had become sick, and was gravely
ill. First he summoned a doctor who aided him; but it
was too late, he was gravely ill. By nightfall, his
uncle requested that by break of day he go to Tlatilolco
and summon a priest, to prepare him and hear his confession,
because he was certain it was time for him to die, and
that he would not arise or get well.
On Tuesday, before dawn, Juan Diego came from his home
to Tlatilolco to summon a priest; and as he approached
the road which joins the slope to Tepeyacac hilltop,
toward the west, where he was accustomed to cross, said:
"If I proceed forward, the Lady is bound to see me,
and I may be detained, so I may take the sign to the
prelate, as prearranged; that our first affliction must
let us go hurriedly to call a priest, as my poor uncle
certainly awaits him." Then he rounded the hill, going
around, so he could not be seen by her who sees well
everywhere. He saw her descend from the top of the hill
and was looking toward where they previously met.
She approached him at the side of the hill and said
to him:
"What's there, my son the least? Where are you going?"
Was he grieved, or ashamed, or scared? He bowed before
her. He saluted, saying: "My Child, the most tender
of my daughters, Lady, God grant you are content. How
are you this morning? Is your health good, Lady and
my Child? I am going to cause you grief. Know, my Child,
that a servant of yours is very sick, my uncle. He has
contracted the plague, and is near death. I am hurrying
to your house in Mexico to call one of your priests,
beloved by our Lord, to hear his confession and absolve
him, because, since we were born, we came to guard the
work of our death. But if I go, I shall return here
soon, so I may go to deliver your message. Lady and
my Child, forgive me, be patient with me for the time
being. I will not deceive you, the least of my daughters.
Tomorrow I will come in all haste."
After hearing Juan Diego's chat, the Most Holy Virgin
answered: "Hear me and understand well, my son the
least, that nothing should frighten or grieve you. Let
not your heart be disturbed. Do not fear that sickness,
nor any other sickness or anguish. Am I not here, who
is your Mother? Are you not under my protection? Am
I not your health? Are you not happily within my fold?
What else do you wish? Do not grieve nor be disturbed
by anything. Do not be afflicted by the illness of your
uncle, who will not die now of it. Be assured that he
is now cured." (And then his uncle was cured, as
it was later learned.) When Juan Diego heard these words
from the Lady from heaven, he was greatly consoled.
He was happy. He begged to be excused to be off to see
the bishop, to take him the sign or proof, so that he
might be believed. The Lady from heaven ordered to climb
to the top of the hill, where they previously met. She
told him:
"Climb, my son the least, to the top of the hill;
there where you saw me and I gave you orders, you will
find different flowers. Cut them, gather them, assemble
them, then come and bring them before my presence."
Immediately Juan Diego climbed the hill, and as he reached
the summit, he was amazed that so many varieties of
exquisite rosas de Castilla were blooming, long before
the time when they are to bud, because, being out of
season, they would freeze. They were very fragrant and
covered with dewdrops of the night, which resembled
precious pearls. Immediately he started cutting them.
He gathered them all and placed them in his tilma. The
hilltop was no place for any kind of flowers to grow,
because it had many crags, thistles, thorns, nopales
and mezquites. Occasionally weeds would grow, but it
was then the month of December, in which all vegetation
is destroyed by freezing. He immediately went down the
hill and brought the different roses which he had cut
to the Lady from heaven, who, as she saw them, took
them with her hand and again placed them back in the
tilma, saying: "My son the least,
this diversity of roses is the proof and the sign which
you will take to the bishop. You will tell him in my
name that he will see in them my wish and that he will
have to comply to it. You are my ambassador, most worthy
of all confidence. Rigorously I command you that only
before the presence of the bishop will you unfold your
mantle and disclose what you are carrying. You will
relate all and well; you will tell that I ordered you
to climb to the hilltop, to go and cut flowers; and
all that you saw and admired, so you can induce the
prelate to give his support, with the aim that a temple
be built and erected as I have asked."
After the Lady from heaven had given her advice, he
was on his way by the avenue that goes directly to Mexico;
being happy and assured of success, carrying with great
care what he bore in his tilma, being careful; that
nothing would slip from his hands, and enjoying the
fragrance of the variety of the beautiful flowers.
THE MIRACLE OF THE IMAGE |
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When he reached the bishop's palace, there came
to meet him the major-domo and other servants of the
prelate. He begged them to tell the bishop that he wished
to see him, but none were willing, pretending not to
hear him, probably because it was too early, or because
they already knew him as being of the molesting type,
because he was pestering them; and, moreover, they had
been advised by their co-workers that they had lost
sight of him, when they had followed him.
He waited a long time. When they saw that he had been
there a long time, standing, crestfallen, doing nothing,
waiting to be called, and appearing like he had something
which he carried in his tilma, they came near him, to
see what he had and to satisfy themselves. Juan Diego,
seeing that he could not hide what he had, and on account
of that he would be molested, pushed or mauled, uncovered
his tilma a little, and there were the flowers; and
upon seeing that they were all different rosas de Castilla,
and out of season, they were thoroughly amazed, also
because they were so fresh and in full bloom, so fragrant
and so beautiful. They tried to seize and pull some
out, but they were not successful the three times they
dared to take them. They were not lucky because when
then tried to get them, they were unable to see real
flowers. Instead, they appeared painted or stamped or
sewn on the cloth. Then they went to tell the bishop
what they had seen and that the Indian who had come
so many times wished to see him, and that he had reason
enough so long anxiously eager to see him.
Upon hearing, the bishop realised that what he carried
was the proof, to confirm and comply with what the Indian
requested. Immediately he ordered his admission. As
he entered, Juan Diego knelt before him, as he was accustomed
to do, and again related what he had seen and admired,
also the message. He said: "Sir, I did what you ordered,
to go forth and tell my Ama, the Lady from heaven, Holy
Mary, precious Mother of God, that you asked for a sign
so that you might believe me that you should build a
temple where she asked it to be erected; also, I told
her that I had given you my word that I would bring
some sign and proof, which you requested, of her wish.
She condescended to your request and graciously granted
your request, some sign and proof to complement her
wish. Early today she again sent me to see you; I asked
for the sign so you might believe me, as she had said
that she would give it, and she complied. She sent me
to the top of the hill, where I was accustomed to see
her, and to cut a variety of rosas de Castilla. After
I had cut them, I brought them, she took them with her
hand and placed them in my cloth, so that I bring them
to you and deliver them to you in person. Even though
I knew that the hilltop was no place where flowers would
grow, because there are many crags, thistles, thorns,
nopales and mezquites, I still had my doubts. As I approached
the top of the hill, I saw that I was in paradise, where
there was a great variety of exquisite rosas de Castilla,
in brilliant dew, which I immediately cut. She had told
me that I should bring them to you, and so I do it,
so that you may see in them the sign which you asked
of me and comply with her wish; also, to make clear
the veracity of my word and my message. Behold. Receive
them."
He unfolded his white cloth, where he had the flowers;
and when they scattered on the floor, all the different
varieties of rosas de Castilla, suddenly there appeared
the drawing of the precious Image of the ever-virgin
Holy Mary, Mother of God, in the manner as she is today
kept in the temple at Tepeyacac, which is named Guadalupe.
When the bishop saw the image, he and all who were present
fell to their knees. She was greatly admired. They arose
to see her; they shuddered and, with sorrow, they demonstrated
that they contemplated her with their hearts and minds.
The bishop, with sorrowful tears, prayed and begged
forgiveness for not having attended her wish and request.
When he rose to his feet, he untied from Juan Diego's
neck the cloth on which appeared the Image of the Lady
from heaven. Then he took it to be placed in his chapel.
Juan Diego remained one more day in the bishop's house,
at his request.
The following day he told him: Well! show us where the
Lady from heaven wished her temple be erected." Immediately,
he invited all those present to go.
APPARITION TO JUAN BERNARDINO |
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As Juan Diego pointed out the spot where the lady
from heaven wanted her temple built, he begged to be
excused. He wished to go home to see his uncle Juan
Bernardino, who was gravely ill when he left him to
go to Tlatilolco to summon a priest, to hear his confession
and absolve him. The Lady from heaven had told him that
he had been cured. But they did not let him go alone,
and accompanied him to his home.
As they arrived, they saw that his uncle was very happy
and nothing ailed him. He was greatly amazed to see
his nephew so accompanied and honoured, asking the reason
of such honours conferred upon him. His nephew answered
that when he went to summon a priest to hear his confession
and to absolve him, the Lady from heaven appeared to
him at Tepeyacac, telling him not to be afflicted, that
his uncle was well, for which he was greatly consoled,
and she sent him to Mexico, to see the bishop, to build
her a house in Tepeyacac.
Then the uncle manifested that it was true that on that
occasion he became well and that he had seen her in
the same manner as she had appeared to his nephew, knowing
through her that she had sent him to Mexico to see the
bishop. Also, the Lady told him that when he would go
to see the bishop, to reveal to him what he had seen
and to explain the miraculous manner in which she had
cured him, and that she would properly be named, and
known as the blessed Image, the ever-virgin Holy Mary
of Guadalupe.
Juan Bernardino was brought before the presence of the
bishop to inform and testify before him. Both he and
his nephew were the guests of the bishop in his home
for some days, until the temple dedicated to the Queen
of Tepeyacac was erected where Juan Diego had seen her.
The bishop transferred the sacred Image of the lovely
lady from heaven to the main church, taking her from
his private chapel where it was, so that the people
would see and admire her blessed Image. The entire city
was aroused; they came to see and admire the devout
Image, and to pray. They marvelled at the fact that
she appeared as did her divine miracle, because no living
person of this world had painted her precious Image.
Links to other interesting pages in my 'Our Lady of Guadalupe' series
'Our Lady of Guadalupe' official page C.I.N. 'Our Lady of Guadalupe' page 'Our Lady of Guadalupe' Shrine (USA) site |
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