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Gold over silver with 6mm semi-precious gem stones
(HEMATITE)

Item # SPG57/3/39

$100.00

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Rosary Prayers
Prayer rosary Catholic

There are many people who know little about the prayers said on rosary beads, including a large number of modern Catholics. Although there have been various ways that Catholics have prayed the rosary throughout its history, one way is universal today: meditating on fifteen mysteries while reciting a series of Hail Mary's broken into groups of ten by Our Father's and Glory Be's. The rosary prayer begins, as does all Catholic prayer, with the sign of the cross, and continues with the recitation of the Apostles' Creed on the rosary's crucifix. Then an Our Father is said on the closest large bead, followed by Hail Mary's on the next three smaller beads. The prayer continues with the Little Doxology or Glory Be on the next large bead. Here the pendant part of the rosary that carries the crucifix, (a uniquely Catholic symbol), is attached to the circle of beads upon which the meditations begin. Catholics start each decade with An Our Father on the large bead and then say a Hail Mary on each of the ten small beads. Although there is no bead for it, it is customary to say the Little Doxology after each meditation. The prayer continues in this manner to the end of the rosary's circle of beads. The complete rosary prayer has fifteen decades although most rosary beads have only five sets of ten beads. It is perfectly acceptable to stop the prayer after each group of five decades as the Catholic rosary is broken up into three sets of five meditations. The meditations are all on episodes in the lives of Jesus and Mary in accordance with the Gospels and the teachings of the Catholic Church. The first set of meditations, or mysteries as they are customarily called, has been named the Joyful Mysteries. It contains the Annunciation, the Visitation, the Nativity, the Presentation in the Temple, and the Finding of the Child Jesus in the Temple. The second set is called the Sorrowful Mysteries and includes the Agony in the Garden, the Scourging at the Pillar, the Crowning with Thorns, the Carrying of the Cross and the Crucifixion. The third set of meditations, called the Glorious Mysteries begins with the Resurrection, followed by the Ascension, the Descent of the Holy Spirit, the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin and the Crowning of Mary as Queen of Heaven. In 2003, proclaiming that year the Year of the Rosary, the Roman Catholic Pope, John Paul II added a fourth set of mysteries known as the Luminous Mysteries. These are the Baptism of Jesus, the Wedding at Cana, the Proclamation of the Kingdom, the Transfiguration and the Institution of the Eucharist. Meditating while vocalizing prayers is a very old practice in the Catholic Church and, in fact, is a method of prayer for many religions. Science has shown that there are physiological benefits to saying the rosary, as well as spiritual ones; meditating as you pray the rosary, can lower your blood pressure and heart rate. The rate of breathing is reduced and brain activity resembles that of those in a state of deep relaxation. So, praying the rosary is beneficial for your soul and body, good reasons to dust off those old rosary beads, and turn your heart to the rosary prayer.