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Our Lady of the Star - March 7th, 2026 | No Greater Delight
No Greater Delight is a daily Marian podcast meant to start the day with a Marian touch. After examining the Marian feasts celebrated throughout the world on a given day, Fr. Nate offers a brief reflection to help make our love for Our Lady concrete in daily living. The title "No Greater Delight" is inspired by a homily of Saint Bernard of Clairvaux, wherein he expresses his joy in preaching about the Virgin Mother, even though he acknowledges the challenge of adequately praising her. Mary's greatness is beyond words. 0:00 Feasts of Mary Today 07:52 The Imitation of Mary WhatsApp Channel: Catholic Voice Links: catholicvoice | Instagram, Facebook | Linktree
March 7 – Our Lady of the Star, Portugal
In the year 1050 there were two Benedictine monks who lived in the convent of Monte Cassino. They decided to go on pilgrimage, teaching and catechizing all those they met along the way.
One night they found themselves wandering on the coast of Normandy, France, near a place called Grand Champ. Tired and sleepy, they decided to spend the night on the beach under the stars. Father Rogerio slept on the cool sand and the other monk found himself a place to rest in a small boat nearby.
As the night went on the tide came up and the little boat was gently drawn out onto the sea. Without realizing it, the monk was going on an adventure in which he would not awaken until he was just off the coast of England.
In Salisbury, England, everyone was amazed to see the monk in the little boat, convinced that it was a miracle that he had crossed the French Sea in a small boast and lived to see the shores of England. Soon, the monk was made Bishop and his period in office was marvelous to the people because he was a humble man of prayer who sacrificed everything in the name of God.
The monk who had stayed on the beach, Father Rogerio, knew nothing of what had happened to his friend. All he knew was that he and the boat had disappeared, and giving his concerns into the hands of God, he determined to continue on his journey alone.
One night not long afterward, Father Rogerio went to sleep and had a dream that would change his life forever. In his dream he saw a great star fall from the sky, burning all the bushes and trees, and heard a voice that said: "Our Lady wants a church built in this place."
When he awoke, Father Rogerio looked about himself. He was not injured, but this indeed was the place he had seen in his dream, for everything around him was burned. Father understood that Our Lady really did desire that he should build a church there in her honor. He also felt in his heart the desire to give Mary the title of "Our Lady of the Star," because of the star he had seen in his dream.
Due to the poverty of those who inhabited that region, Father Rogerio was only able to build a small altar and a tiny chapel which would be the seed of the great Abbey of Our Lady of the Star of Monteburgo. One day an immense chapel would be built, sheltering not only the Church but a very large convent as well.
King William, who was the Duke of Normandy and he who had conquered England, learning of the shrine of Our Lady of the Star, sent his private doctor to visit the little chapel to find out for himself how it had all come about. Upon arriving there, the doctor discovered that he was the brother of the monk Rogerio! He listened to his brother's account of how he had been separated from his friend, and then told about his dream. The doctor believed everything at once, and to Father Rogerio's surprise, the doctor knew the monk who had crossed the channel in a small boat, and informed his brother that his lost friend had become the Bishop of Salisbury! The two brothers excitedly thanked Our Lady for providing this reunion.
The Bishop of Salisbury, our former friend of the monk Rogerio, asked King William to help his brother in the faith, for they were both blessed by Our Lady on their pilgrimage.
William the Conqueror, with a glad heart, donated to Father Rogerio the entire region of Monteburg, along with the resources to build a great church and an Abbey there that became a great seminary. The work was finished by the son of King William, King Henry. He, taking the throne, continued the work until its completion. The Abbey of Our Lady of the Star was, for many centuries, a center of reference of the Church for the whole region.
Dark centuries ensued, and the church and abbey suffered a decline until in 1842, the Vicar General of Coutances took possession of what was by that time little more than an enclosure of ruins. He turned it over to the Brothers of Mercy, a new order meant to promote Catholic education. The abbey church was rebuilt, but as time went on the Brothers of Mercy also left, and all is now used as part of an agricultural school. As for Our Lady of the Star, it is a story almost completely forgotten, even to Catholics.
Prayer to Our Lady of the Star
"O, Our Lady of the Star, to you our gaze turns and our childlike hearts. You are the Morning Star that announces the arrival of the day. You are the Evening Star that shines in our night. You are the Star of the Sea who sends us her son Jesus, the eternal Light of the world. Through the darkness and storms of life, in the hour of doubt or of temptation, in the revolt be our clarity and our peace. Be our hope and our purity, be our sweetness and our strength, O Lady of the Star. May our gaze and our hearts forever rest on you. O Lady of the Star, Pray for us."

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Virgen del Rosario (Quetzaltenango)
La imagen fue tallada en madera de ce
dro por un artista anónimo en la actualidad, se cuenta que llevaba camino hacia otra ciudad, pero que por las dificultades del camino, dejaron la caja donde se encontraba la imagen frente a la Parroquia de Quetzaltenango y finalmente al descubrir los habitantes, que se encontraba la imagen de la Virgen, le dispusieron un lugar en aquella Iglesia.

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Patrona de Quetzaltenango y Señora de Guatemala

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March 7
Nuestra Señora del Rosario, Quetzaltenango, Guatemala
The legend relates that the Spanish were carrying the image of the Virgin of the Rosary to the capital of Guatemala, but took a rest stop in the city of Quetzaltenango while crossing the high plains. When the time came to leave, the image became too heavy for the oxen to pull its cart. Spanish and local people tried repeatedly to move it but could not. When they turned the cart around, the weight lessened; and everyone understood that the Virgin wanted to remain in Quetzaltenango. The image was consecrated on January 20, 1781 by Archbishop Cayetano Francos y Monroy in the cathedral there. Devotion intensified after April 18, 1902, when at 8:00 pm the San Perfecto earthquake struck. Constant temblors provoked a fire which consumed most of the church that housed the statue. When the flames finally reached the Virgin's altar, residents rescued it and placed it in the bandstand in the park. The townspeople who were there knelt immediately and began to pray to the Virgin, and the movements subsided. The city thanked Our Lady of the Rosary for its survival. Xela (as Quetzaltenango is usually called), now the second most important city in Guatemala, celebrates its patron in late September and early October, with festivities culminating on October 7, feast of Our Lady of the Rosary. On March 7, 1983, Pope John Paul II crowned the statue during his pastoral visit to the native communities of the Department in the plains of Olintepeque.