Our Lady of Lourdes, 11 February

 

Our Lady of Lourdes

Theme: “From the Grotto of Lourdes to Our Hearts – A Mother Who Grants Healing.”
Feast: 11 February


Introduction: A Mother Who Comes Close

Dear brothers and sisters in Christ,
Today we celebrate Our Lady of Lourdes, a feast that draws the whole Church to a small grotto in southern France—and even more, to the depths of the human heart. Lourdes is not famous because Mary appeared with grandeur, but because she appeared with tender closeness. She came near the poor, the sick, the broken, and the searching.

This feast is also the World Day of the Sick, reminding us that the Church never forgets those who suffer. Lourdes proclaims a simple but demanding Gospel truth: God meets us where we are—and heals us in ways more profound than we imagine.


I. God Chooses the Humble

Biblical Foundation

  • “God has chosen what is weak in the world to shame the strong.” (1 Corinthians 1:27)
  • “He has looked upon the humility of his servant.” (Luke 1:48)

Mary chose a poor, uneducated girl—Saint Bernadette Soubirous. No influence. No education. No power. Just simplicity and sincerity. God’s logic is upside down. He entrusts heaven’s message to the lowly so that no one can claim credit but Him.

Illustration

In villages, we often say, "Clear water flows quietly." God’s most significant works usually happen silently—in ordinary people who speak a simple “yes.”

Application

  • Do I believe God can work through me—with my limitations?
  • Do I listen to the voices of the poor, the sick, and the simple, through whom God may be speaking today?

II. “I Am the Immaculate Conception” – A God Who Prepares a Dwelling

Biblical Foundation

  • Genesis 3:15 – The promise of a woman who will crush evil
  • Ephesians 1:4 – Chosen to be holy and blameless
  • Luke 1:28 – “Full of grace”

When Mary reveals her identity, she does not say what she does, but who she is. She is grace-filled from the beginning—God’s pure dwelling place. Lourdes points us to a God who prepares, heals, and restores from the inside out.

Illustration

Before a king visits, the house is cleaned. God prepared Mary as a spotless dwelling. In Lourdes, He invites us to become clean dwellings again.

Application

  • Is my heart a place where God feels welcome?
  • What areas of my life need cleansing, confession, and renewal?

III. The Call to Prayer, Penance, and Conversion

Biblical Foundation

  • Mark 1:15 – “Repent and believe in the Gospel.”
  • Joel 2:12 – Return to me with all your heart

Mary’s message at Lourdes is not dramatic. It is Gospel-simple: pray, do penance, convert. Healing begins with turning back to God.

Illustration

A doctor first diagnoses before prescribing medicine. Mary diagnoses humanity’s illness—sin, pride, forgetfulness of God—and points us to the cure: repentance and prayer.

Application

  • Do I take prayer seriously, or only as an option?
  • Is penance part of my Christian life, or have I grown comfortable with sin?

IV. The Spring of Water – Healing That Flows from God

Biblical Foundation

  • Exodus 17:6 – Water from the rock
  • John 4:14 – Living water
  • John 7:38 – Rivers of living water will flow

The water of Lourdes is not magic. It is a sign—a sacrament-like symbol—pointing to Christ, the trustworthy source of life. Many are cured physically; countless more are healed spiritually.

Illustration

A woman once said after bathing at Lourdes: “My disease remained, but my fear disappeared.” That is healing of the soul.

Application

  • Do I seek only physical miracles, or inner healing too?
  • Do I allow Jesus to touch my wounds—resentment, guilt, fear?

V. Mary, Mother of the Sick and the Suffering

Biblical Foundation

  • Isaiah 53:4 – He bore our infirmities
  • Matthew 25:36 – I was sick, and you visited me
  • John 19:26–27 – “Behold your mother”

At Lourdes, Mary stands beside the sick, not above them. She teaches the Church to stay close to suffering, not run away from it.

Illustration

In hospitals, the presence of a loved one often heals more than medicine. Mary’s presence assures the sick: You are not alone.

Application

  • How do I treat the sick, elderly, and dying?
  • Do I see Christ in those who suffer?

VI. Lourdes and the Cross: Meaning in Suffering

Biblical Foundation

  • Colossians 1:24 – Sharing in Christ’s sufferings
  • Romans 8:18 – Suffering leads to glory

Not everyone returns cured. But no one returns untouched. Lourdes teaches us that suffering, united with Christ, becomes redemptive.

Application

  • Can I unite my pain with the Cross of Christ?
  • Do I offer my sufferings for the salvation of others?

Conclusion: From Lourdes to Our Lives

Dear brothers and sisters,
Lourdes is not just a place—it is a path:

  • from pride to humility
  • from sin to grace
  • from fear to trust
  • from sickness to hope

Mary of Lourdes invites us to walk this path daily. She does not promise a life without suffering, but she promises presence, hope, and healing.

Let us entrust ourselves, our families, and especially the sick to her maternal care.


Final Prayer

Our Lady of Lourdes,
Mother of compassion and hope,
touch our wounded hearts,
strengthen the sick,
convert the sinner,
and lead us always to your Son, Jesus Christ.
Amen.

Dr. ADDANKI RAJU.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

ఆదివారం ప్రసంగము తపస్సు కాలం – 1వ ఆదివారం (Year A)

ఆదివారం ప్రసంగము - 6వ సామాన్య ఆదివారం - (సంవత్సరం A)

విభూతి బుధవారం ప్రసంగం – సంవత్సరం A