Q: Is there a biblical basis for the Rosary?
A:
As you know the bible does "not" tell us to pray the rosary because
this form of prayer originated only during the middle ages. However,
important elements of the Rosary are biblical and/or belong to the
common Christian beliefs. Judge for yourself.
1) The "creed" or profession of faith at the beginning of the Rosary
is nothing else but the earliest baptismal profession still common to
all Christian documentation.
2) The "Our Father"--also part of the Rosary--is literally biblical.
3) Among the "fifteen mysteries" there are very few which are not
directly biblical, namely the Assumption of Mary and her crowning.
The Assumption is related to Gen 3,15; the crowning can be
assimilated to Apoc 12.1.
4) The first part of the "Hail Mary" corresponds to the Angel's
salutation at the Annunciation and that of Elisabeth at the
Visitation (Lk 1:28 and 2:42).
5) The second half, "Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners,
now and at the hour of our death," might be understood as follows:
"Holy Mary" again corresponds to the biblical passage of the
Annunciation (Lk 1:28: "full of grace")
"Mother of God" is the very meaning of the biblical annunciation even
if the term as such was approved at Ephesus (431)
"Pray for us": although not explicitly mentioned in Scripture, the
intercession can be related to the Wedding Feast at Cana where Mary
intercedes with her Son for the young couple in trouble. See also Lk
18:13. The earliest prayer of intercession regarding Mary (Sub Tuum)
dates from the fourth century. It was common to all Christian traditions
for more than one thousand years, until the Reformation. It is important to
remember that Mary intercedes for us only in and through Jesus
Christ.
"Now and at the hour of our death": these concluding words were added
only in the ninteenth century. They are not in the bible but can be
related to Mary's station at the foot of the Cross as refuge of hope.
6) Finally, the "Glory be to the Father" makes direct reference to
the Trinity. It is not mentioned as such in the Bible but nobody
would question Father, Son and Spirit and the praise due to them.
This page, maintained by The Marian Library/International Marian Research Institute,
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, was last modified
Monday, 09/29/2008 15:10:40 EDT
by
Kiran Shakapuram
. Please send any comments to jroten1@udayton.edu. URL for this page is http://campus.udayton.edu