Necedah Shrine
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Necedah Shrine (officially "Queen of the Holy Rosary, Mediatrix of Peace Shrine" [1]) is a Marian shrine located in Necedah, Juneau County, Wisconsin, in the Diocese of La Crosse. On November 12, 1949, Mary Ann Van Hoof (1909-1984) reported to have received a vision from the Blessed Virgin Mary. In her various visions, Van Hoof said she was told to "bring the truth to people" through prayer and the Rosary. The Roman Catholic Church does not recognize the shrine, and put Van Hoof under interdict.
Contents |
[edit] Visions
Van Hoof reported that she received nine visions between November 2, 1949 and October 7, 1950. Pilgrims reportedly saw Van Hoof in a state of religious ecstasy[1]. The messages were recorded on a tape recorder, and long hand by at least two people[1]. Some messages were repeated word for word, but in most cases Van Hoof was inspired by her own language[1]. There were 100,000 people attending vision on August 5, 1950, and witness accounts vary significantly. Many messages were given at home[1].
Van Hoof said that she suffered the Passion of Our Lord on the Fridays of Advent and Lent. Van Hoof reported she was told in a vision that the most perfect way of offering mass is the Tridentine Mass approved by Saint Pius V and the Council of Trent in the Western Roman Rite Church. [2] She was reportedly told that the Novus Ordo mass developed during the Second Vatican Council is watered down[2]. Believers believe in modest dress, not talking with the priest before mass, only priests should distribute communion, not taking communion by hand, and oppose numerous other changes from Vatican II[2].
Believers are building a new "House of Prayer" at the spot of the visions.
[edit] Interdict
Van Hoof and her followers were put under interdict by the Roman Catholic Church; the church considers the visions of Mary Ann Van Hoof of the Blessed Virgin Mary to be false, and Bishop John Patrick Treacy of the Diocese of La Crosse had ordered the Necedah Shrine to be closed in 1950. Van Hoof and her associates did not obey these orders, however. Bishop Treacy's successors refused to recognize the shrine. Bishop Frederick William Freking, Treacy's immediate successor, excommunicated Van Hoof and anyone else associated with her shrine, precipitating her final schism with Roman Catholicism.[1]
[edit] Criticism
According to one critical website, Van Hoof was brought up as a spiritualist, and her first husband was a divorcee, which would have been illegitimate under church doctrine, as would her subsequent divorce of her first husband, and remarriage to Ted Van Hoof, as well as her third marriage to her final spouse, Ray Hirt. In the first and third cases, there may have been no marriage certificate. [3]
This did not stop Mary Ann Van Hoof and Myrtle Sommers from maintaining and recording disclosures from a traditionalist Marian apparition manifestation at the site. In the Library of Congress, there are two volumes listed as credited to the Queen of the Holy Rosary Mediatrix of Peace Shrine which were dated until 1978. However, as their website notes, it still maintains some commemorative and merchandising services.
Unity Publishing, an orthodox and non-schismatic conservative Catholic organization, noted that other people associated with the shrine have had other difficulties. In 1987, Old Catholic priest Father Garry McLaughlin was convicted of mail fraud. David Schott, another Old Catholic priest, was later convicted of paedophile offenses against an eleven year old boy. With the alleged assistance of Shrine personnel, he escaped custody. Harry Binkowski, another Shrine acolyte, shot and killed Tommy Huber, an associate. The police were called, and Binkowski, an apparent survivalist, was shot dead. It was later learnt that he had amassed considerable armaments in his on-site dwelling: [2]
As for the content of the alleged revelations, there are repeated references to 'imminent' Chastisement, a thermonuclear World War III, Soviet submarines, and accusations that the mainstream Roman Catholic hierarchy and Papacy have been subverted. According to Unity Publishing, the shrine associates claim that a spaceship will transport "the faithful" to an underground civilization, "Middle Earth", at the end of the world. [3].
Since 1975, the shrine has disaffiliated itself from mainstream Roman Catholicism, affiliating itself instead to an Old Catholic traditionalist schismatic organization, the American National Catholic Church. Former Old Catholic Archbishop Edward Stehlik, who had previously presided at the shrine, was married twice beforehand. According to Milwaukee media cited on F. John Loughlan's website [4], he misled others about a faked former past as an ordained Catholic priest and a Discalced Carmelite monk. He later attempted to become an Episcopalian priest, and also asserted that he was gay.
Fidelity Magazine, a Catholic periodical, quotes one of Van Hoof's messages, in its February, 1989 Issue as detailing that the devotees of the Necedah Shrine would be spared Armageddon when, right before the world's doom, a 1,200 year-old man named Joe will come in a spaceship to save them.
[edit] Aftermath
The shrine currently runs a private traditionalist Catholic primary school, established in 1982, as well as a Visitors Center. Despite local Wisconsin Catholic hierarchy disassociation, the shrine still conducts business and is strongly affiliated with conservative Catholic anti-abortion politics. It is also integrated into an associated network of schismatic traditionalist Catholic Marian apparitions that usually go unrecognized by the mainstream US Catholic hierarchy. According to F. John Loughnan's website, the Necedah Shrine may have served as an inspiration for Mrs Veronica Lueken's Bayside Marian apparition in New York, as Mrs Lueken apparently lived in Indianapolis in 1953, and may have visited the shrine.
Although his study focuses on Lueken and the Bayside Marian apparition, Michael Cuneo's framework of traditionalist Catholic apocalyptic dissent is also applicable to Van Hoof and the Necedah Shrine. [citation needed] As with the Bayside apparition, the Necedah Shrine message referred to a Chastisement, promoted an anticommunist and apocalyptic worldview, which incorporated elements of conspiracy theory. In addition, it regarded the Catholic Church and Papacy as convulsed by institutional crisis, which meant that its 'seer' and her followers could rely on their own thaumaturgical (or magical) claims to authority rather than adhere to magisterial or papal assessment of the veracity or otherwise of her visions. Unlike Bayside, however, Van Hoof and her followers relinquished their Catholic ties, rather than accept the authority of the institutional church.
[edit] Bibliography
- Cuneo, Michael. "The Vengeful Virgin: Studies in Contemporary Catholic Apocalypticism" in Millennium, Messiahs and Mayhem. Henry Robbins and Susan Palmer, editors. New York: Routledge, 1997. ISBN 0-415-91649-6
- Maloney, Marlene. "Necedah Revisited: Anatomy of a Phony Apparition" Fidelity Magazine (Volume 8, Number 3) February 1989 pg. 18-34. E. Michael Jones, editor. ISSN 0730-0271
- Queen of the Holy Rosary Mediatrix of Peace Shrine
- Swan, Henry My Work With Necedah Necedah: For My God and My Country Inc, 1959.
- Van Hoof, Mary Ann and Myrtle Sommers. Revelations and Messages as Given Through Mary Ann Van Hoof at Necedah Wisconsin: "Volume 1: 1950-1970", "Volume 2: 1971-1975" Necedah: For My God and My Country Inc., 1978.
- Zimdars-Swartz, Sandra. "Religious Experience and Public Cult: The Case of Mary Ann Van Hoof." Journal of Religion and Health 28 (1989): 36-57.
- Zimdars-Swartz, Sandra Encountering Mary: Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1991. ISBN 0-691-07371-6
[edit] Reference
- ^ a b c d e July 2006, Volume 8, Issue 3, Page 3 of Shrine Newletter
- ^ a b c July 2006, Volume 8, Issue 3, Various pages of Shrine Newletter
- ^ Necedah at Unity Publishing
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Necedah Shrine
- John Loughnan's website on Necedah
- Case, Thomas W. "The Tridentine Rite Conference and Its Schismatic Cousins" Originally published in Fidelity Magazine, 1993