Sister Mary Ephrem
(Mildred Neuzil), a Precious Blood Sister, was a semi-cloistered [lived
in a cell but taught school children] nun in 1938 when she began to
have interior locutions and other mystical experiences. It was not for
another ten years before her confessor learned of them; he advised
prudence because sometimes these occurrences are a result of an
overactive imagination. However, the mystical events became more pronounced
and vivid. She wanted to become fully cloistered, which she did,
when her community established a cloister and she was permitted to
enter in 1958.
She gave no external signs that she was different from any other
member of the Community.
Eventually
she began to write about these occasions of special communication with
God. These were read by another priest to whom she had gone for
direction: there was nothing in them contrary to faith and morals, nor
anything to indicate mental instability. In fact, the great emphasis on
the Indwelling of the Blessed Trinity, gave evidence of a deep a
theological understanding surpassing that which he had been taught. In
1954 these visits from Heaven involved a
special devotion to Mary which this Sister was commanded to promote the
Message of Mary, who presenting herself under the title, Our Lady of
America.
Archbishop Paul Leibold was Sister's spiritual
director from 1940 to 1972, when he died. He authorized the first and
the second printing of these messages and had the metal of Our Lady of
America struck.
Words of St. Joseph, March 1958
"Fatherhood is
from God, and it must take once again its rightful place among men. My special
protection of the Holy Father and the Church should be made known to him. God
wishes to make this known to him that he may receive thereby renewed consolation
and encouragement. "Jesus and
Mary desire that my pure heart, so long hidden and unknown, be now honored in a
special way. Let my children honor my most pure heart in a special manner on the
First Wednesday of the month by
reciting the Joyful Mysteries of the Rosary in memory of my life with Jesus and
Mary and the love I bore them and the sorrow I suffered with them. Let them
receive Holy Communion in union with the love with which I received the Savior
for the first time and each time I held Him in my arms."
Sister Mildred Mary
Neuzil
Regarding Our Lady of
America Most Reverend Raymond L. Burke
Archbishop of St. Louis
In a
letter to the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, Archbishop Burke,
then the Ordinary of St. Louis, Missouri, now Prefect of the Apostolic
Signatura, revealed the results of his review of the history and canonical
status of devotion to Our Lady of America.
May 31, 2007 — Feast of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin
Mary
To the Bishops of the United States Conference of Catholic
Bishops:
Dear brothers in Christ,
During the November meeting of our Conference of Bishops, you may
have had occasion to view the statue of Our Lady of America, which was displayed
in one of the meeting rooms; and to receive one of the Our Lady of America
prayer cards or other information about Our Lady of America, which was
available, thanks to the devout lay faithful who made the arrangements for the
display of the statue. The faithful involved in the promotion of the devotion to
Our Lady of America have asked me, some months ago, to review the history and
present state of the devotion to Our Lady of America, in what pertains to its
canonical status. Finally,
I am able to give them a
report of the results of my study, which I want also to communicate to you.
The devotion to Our Lady of America has its source in private
revelations to Sister Mary Ephrem (baptized Mildred) Neuzil, who was born in
1916 and was professed,
in 1933, in the Congregation of the Sisters of the Most
Precious Blood of Jesus, which has its generalate in Dayton, Ohio. She later
became part of a contemplative branch of the same congregation. The
contemplative branch was located at Our Lady of the Nativity Convent at New
Riegel, Ohio. After the suppression of the contemplative branch in 1979, the Sisters who were members took up residence in Seneca County, Ohio.
From the time of the suppression, Sister Mary Ephrem used her baptismal name,
Sister Mary Mildred Neuzil. Sister Mary Ephrem (Mary Mildred) died in 2000. One
of the Sisters survives and continues to live in Seneca County, Ohio.
Having reviewed the correspondence between Sister Mary Ephrem and
her spiritual director of many years, Monsignor Paul F. Leibold, Vicar General
of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, who later became the Bishop of Evansville and,
then, Archbishop of Cincinnati, it is clear that the devotion, asproposed by Sister MaryEphrem, received his approbation. In addition to the
correspondence by which Monsignor Leibold declared the approval of the devotion,
he also carried out the first of Our Lady of America's requests, made through
Sister Mary Ephrem, namely, he had a medal struck with the image of Our Lady of
America on one side and the coat of arms of the Christian family on the
other.
The coat of arms symbolically represents the substance of the
private revelation received by Sister Mary Ephrem, namely, the
Indwelling of the Holy Trinity in the Christian home, which
is the source of life and unity in the family. The coat of arms points to the
purity and selflessness of love in the family, because of the Indwelling of the
Holy Trinity, the model of which isthe Mother of God, under her title of the Immaculate Conception,
patroness of our nation. In a particular way, Our Lady of America expressed her
desire that the United States of America, through her intercession, be devoted
to the purity of love. She identified herself to Sister Mary Ephrem as"Our Lady of America, The Immaculate Virgin." In the consecration of our
nation to our Blessed Mother, made in 1959 at the National Shrine and renewed,
in our name, by Bishop David Ricken on November 11, 2006, the Saturday before
the November meeting of our Conference of Bishops, our Blessed Mother is
addressed as "Immaculate Virgin."
The contents of the private revelation received by Sister Mary
Ephrem were published in a booklet, first in 1960, and, again, in 1971. Both of
these editions were published with the Imprimatur of Archbishop Leibold.
A final edition, with some new contents, was published in 1989. The new contents
were added at the direction of Father Edmund Morman, S.V.D., the last chaplain
of Our Lady of the Nativity Convent at New Riegel. Father Morman was sadly
killed in an automobile accident on February 17, 1986.
As Archbishop of Cincinnati, Archbishop Leibold commissioned a
wooden plaque with the image of Our Lady of America, which he gave to the
cloister at New Riegel, at which it was displayed for many years in a public
area. He had the wooden plaque created for the specific purpose of its use in
processions at the New Riegel convent.
Archbishop Leibold also authorized the Weberding Woodcarving Shop
at Batesville, Indiana, to carve a statue of Our Lady of America. The statue was
carved for Our Lady of the Nativity Convent at New Riegel, Ohio, at which public
devotions to Our Lady of America were regularly celebrated.
Other bishops have permitted the public display of a statue of Our
Lady of America for devotion. For instance, the late Bishop William G. Connare
of Greensburg permitted a statue to be displayed at the Carmel of the Assumption
at Latrobe, Pennsylvania. Also, a statue of Our Lady of America was carried in
procession in the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception
in Washington, D.C., on several occasions by the Apostolatus Uniti and other
groups. On May 31, 2006, a statue of Our Lady of America was enthroned at the
Shrine of the Most Blessed Sacrament and Our Lady of the Angels Monastery in
Hanceville, Alabama, by the Franciscan Friars of the Immaculate. The statue
which was enthroned at Hanceville is the very same statue which Bishop Connare
authorized for public devotion at Latrobe.
A specific request of Our Lady of America was that her statue be
placed in the Basilicaof the National Shrine of the Immaculate
Conception. There is a providential connection between Sister Mary Ephrem and
the late Archbishop Bishop John Francis Noll of the Diocese of Fort Wayne, who
is celebrated as the Apostle of the National Shrine. The principal apparitions
of Our Lady of America to Sister Mary Ephrem took place in the chapel of the
Precious Blood Sisters Convent in Kneipp Springs Sanitorium, near Rome City,
Indiana. Archbishop Bishop Noll, who died in 1956, maintained a summer residence
at the Sanitorium, within a few hundred feet of the place of the apparitions.
While the National Shrine is the largest shrine in the world at which there was
not a previous apparition, the private revelation to Sister Mary Ephrem very
much confirms the mission of the National Shrine.
The prayer attached to the devotion also received the
imprimatur of the then Monsignor Leibold, Vicar General of the Archdiocese of
Cincinnati. Archbishop Leibold was Sister Mary Ephrem's spiritual director from
the time that he was Vicar General of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati until he
died in 1972. Archbishop Leibold was always clear that the approved devotion had
its origin in private revelation received by Sister Mary Ephrem over many
years.
What can be concluded canonically is that the devotion was both
approved by Archbishop Leibold and, what is more, was actively promoted by him.
In addition, over the years, other Bishops have approved the devotion and have
participated in public devotion to the Mother of God, under the title of Our
Lady of America.
Although the devotion to Our Lady of America has remained constant
over the years, in recent years the devotion has spread very much and has been
embraced by many with special fervor. Seemingly, as has been suggested by Father
Peter Damian Mary Fehlner, F.I., in his homily of August 5, 2006, at the Shrine
of the Most Blessed Sacrament in Hanceville, the moral crisis of our time, which
demands a new teaching and living of the virtue of purity, has found an
especially fitting response of loving care from the Mother of God in her message
to Sister Mary Ephrem.
Some have raised with me the canonical question regarding the
status of Our Lady of the Nativity Convent in Seneca County, Ohio, which has
been the residence of any remaining member of the suppressed contemplative
branch of the Congregation of Sisters of the Most Precious Blood of Jesus. In
response, I observe that the canonical question has no bearing on the devotion
or its approbation.
As one deeply devoted to fostering the devotion to Our Lady of
Guadalupe in our nation, I have wondered about the relationship of the devotion
to Our Lady of America to the devotion to Our Lady of Guadalupe. Archbishop
Leibold, in fact, raised the question with Sister Mary Ephrem. Sister Mary
Ephrem responded that Our Lady of Guadalupe is Empress of all the Americas,
whereas "Our Lady of America, The Immaculate Virgin," is the patroness of our
nation, the United States of America. The two devotions are, in fact, completely
harmonious. As our late and most beloved Pope John Paul II reminded us, Our Lady
of Guadalupe, Mother of America and Star of the New Evangelization, draws all of
the nations of America into unity in carrying out the new evangelization. Our
Lady of America calls the people of our nation to the new evangelization through
a renewed dedication to purity in love.
I hope that the above may be of some help to you in responding to
questions regarding the devotion to Our Lady of America.
May the Immaculate Virgin intercede for the intentions of our
dioceses and our nation. With fraternal gratitude and esteem, I remain
Yours devotedly in Christ, (Most Rev.) Raymond L. Burke
Archbishop of Saint Louis
Sister Mary Ephrem died January 10, 2000 in Fostoria, OH.
The devotion has the approval of the Church [the local bishops] since 1963.
Novena Prayer for Our Country
Our Lady of America, Lily of Purity,
intercede for our country during the coming elections. Since thou art the ever
Virgin Mary and Mother of the true God, obtain for us from the Most Holy Trinity
a President and other political leaders who will support life, who will change
the laws to make abortion in any form illegal, and who will protect the life of
each individual at every stage.
Our Sweet Mother, intercede for us that
our next President will be a man of God who will help the United States become a
country of great purity and high morality. A country that will uphold family
life and influence other countries throughout the world to love God above all,
to serve Him and to live for Him alone.
Our Sweet Mother, time and again thou hast given us your gracious assistance and thus we humbly and gratefully
acknowledge thee as Queen of America. Intercede for us now, as we beg for the end
of abortion in our country and for the uprising of a culture of life.
We
place our hope and our confidence in thee! Our Lady of America, pray for us and
may Our Eternal Father shine His light upon this country and the whole world.
Amen.