THIS VEIL OF VERONICA WEBSITE IS CONSECRATED TOTHE HOLY FACE OF JESUS
MISSION STATEMENT: This Veil of Veronica website is consecrated to and dedicated to promoting the adoration of the Holy Face of Jesus, which mirrors the Triune Godhead and the doctrine of the Catholic Church [1]. In union with the prayers and good works of the Archconfraternity of the Holy Face, the wounded Face of Christ imprinted on the Veil of Veronica is used as the image of veneration. It is offered to our Heavenly Father to beg for the conversion of sinners and to saves souls throughout the world [2].
THE MISSION OF THIS WEBSITE IS:
• to make reparation for sins against the first three commandments which wound the Holy Face of Jesus. These sins are the denial of God (especially in the ideology of revolutionary men), blasphemy (the abuse of God’s Holy Name and doctrine of the Catholic Church), and the profanation of Sundays and Holy Days [3]. The first three commandments sum up the teaching of Jesus to “love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind and strength” (Mark 12:30) which put us in the right relationship with God [4]. That relationship is the source and foundation of having a proper relationship with our neighbor which is expressed in the other seven commandments. When we love God, we can more easily love our neighbor.
• to praise the Holy Name of God [5].
• to console our Lord by wiping His wounded Face and to soothe His wounded Heart through prayer, as did Sr. Mary of St. Peter a Carmelite Nun in Tours, France and as St. Veronica did [6].
• to use this devotion as both a spiritual weapon for defense and a spiritual shield for courage to combat revolutionary men better known as Atheistic Communists, Global Elites, Socialists, Modernists, Liberals, Moral Relativists, and/or Satanists. This devotion makes reparation for and is the remedy for their heretical attacks against the Catholic Church and asks God to be merciful toward these blasphemers by converting them [7].
• to reorient man to God by bringing back respect for Sundays by making it a day of worship and rest. “When Sunday is no longer kept holy by not working, the Holy Name of the Lord is not adored, blessed, known, or glorified as it should be” [8].
• to promote enrollment into the Archconfraternity of the Holy Face in Tours, France [9].
THE MISSION OF THIS WEBSITE IS:
• to make reparation for sins against the first three commandments which wound the Holy Face of Jesus. These sins are the denial of God (especially in the ideology of revolutionary men), blasphemy (the abuse of God’s Holy Name and doctrine of the Catholic Church), and the profanation of Sundays and Holy Days [3]. The first three commandments sum up the teaching of Jesus to “love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind and strength” (Mark 12:30) which put us in the right relationship with God [4]. That relationship is the source and foundation of having a proper relationship with our neighbor which is expressed in the other seven commandments. When we love God, we can more easily love our neighbor.
• to praise the Holy Name of God [5].
• to console our Lord by wiping His wounded Face and to soothe His wounded Heart through prayer, as did Sr. Mary of St. Peter a Carmelite Nun in Tours, France and as St. Veronica did [6].
• to use this devotion as both a spiritual weapon for defense and a spiritual shield for courage to combat revolutionary men better known as Atheistic Communists, Global Elites, Socialists, Modernists, Liberals, Moral Relativists, and/or Satanists. This devotion makes reparation for and is the remedy for their heretical attacks against the Catholic Church and asks God to be merciful toward these blasphemers by converting them [7].
• to reorient man to God by bringing back respect for Sundays by making it a day of worship and rest. “When Sunday is no longer kept holy by not working, the Holy Name of the Lord is not adored, blessed, known, or glorified as it should be” [8].
• to promote enrollment into the Archconfraternity of the Holy Face in Tours, France [9].
[1] Janvier, Pierre Desire. (1884). Life of Sister Mary St. Peter Carmelite of Tours. Tours France: The Oratory of the Holy Face, pp. 244-246.
[2] Janvier, Pierre Desire. (1887). Manual of the Archconfraternity of the Holy Face. Tours, France: The Oratory of the Holy Face, p. 52.
[3] Scallan, Dorothy. (2012). The Golden Arrow: The Revelations of Sr. Mary of St. Peter. Rockford, Illinois: Tan Book and Publishers, p. 134.
[4] Hahn, Scott & Mitch, Curtis. (2010). The Ignatius Catholic Study Bible, Revised Standard Version, Second Catholic Edition. San Francisco, Ca: Ignatius Press, p. 89.
[5] Janvier, Pierre Desire. (1884). Life of Sister Mary St. Peter Carmelite of Tours. Tours France: The Oratory of the Holy Face, p. 326.
[6] Janvier, Pierre Desire. (1884). Life of Sister Mary St. Peter Carmelite of Tours. Tours France: The Oratory of the Holy Face, pp. 238-239.
[7] Janvier, Pierre Desire. (1884). Life of Sister Mary St. Peter Carmelite of Tours. Tours France: The Oratory of the Holy Face, pp. 318-320, 323.
[8] Janvier, Pierre Desire. (1884). Life of Sister Mary St. Peter Carmelite of Tours. Tours France: The Oratory of the Holy Face, p. 183.
[9] Janvier, Pierre Desire. (1887). Manual of the Archconfraternity of the Holy Face. Tours, France: The Oratory of the Holy Face, p. 53.
[2] Janvier, Pierre Desire. (1887). Manual of the Archconfraternity of the Holy Face. Tours, France: The Oratory of the Holy Face, p. 52.
[3] Scallan, Dorothy. (2012). The Golden Arrow: The Revelations of Sr. Mary of St. Peter. Rockford, Illinois: Tan Book and Publishers, p. 134.
[4] Hahn, Scott & Mitch, Curtis. (2010). The Ignatius Catholic Study Bible, Revised Standard Version, Second Catholic Edition. San Francisco, Ca: Ignatius Press, p. 89.
[5] Janvier, Pierre Desire. (1884). Life of Sister Mary St. Peter Carmelite of Tours. Tours France: The Oratory of the Holy Face, p. 326.
[6] Janvier, Pierre Desire. (1884). Life of Sister Mary St. Peter Carmelite of Tours. Tours France: The Oratory of the Holy Face, pp. 238-239.
[7] Janvier, Pierre Desire. (1884). Life of Sister Mary St. Peter Carmelite of Tours. Tours France: The Oratory of the Holy Face, pp. 318-320, 323.
[8] Janvier, Pierre Desire. (1884). Life of Sister Mary St. Peter Carmelite of Tours. Tours France: The Oratory of the Holy Face, p. 183.
[9] Janvier, Pierre Desire. (1887). Manual of the Archconfraternity of the Holy Face. Tours, France: The Oratory of the Holy Face, p. 53.