The New New Age

Brown Scapular

$20
  • Made of 100% Wool
  • Features the Traditional Images of Our Lady Giving the Scapular to Saint Simon Stock, Complete with Rear Panel Featuring Our Lady's Scapular Promise
  • Includes Brown Scapular Enrollment Papers.

The Brown Scapular is a popular sacramental in the Catholic Church with a rich history and spiritual significance. Its origins trace back to the Carmelite Order, specifically to a vision received by Saint Simon Stock, the Prior General of the Carmelites, in the 13th century.

According to tradition, in the year 1251, the Blessed Virgin Mary appeared to Saint Simon Stock in Cambridge, England, presenting him with the Brown Scapular and making a promise of special graces and protection for those who wear it devoutly. The scapular symbolized Mary's maternal care and the wearer's dedication to a life of prayer, penance, and devotion to Christ.

The Brown Scapular consists of two small pieces of brown cloth, usually connected by strings or bands, worn over the shoulders and hanging down both front and back. Traditionally, one piece of cloth rests on the chest, and the other on the back. The scapular is often adorned with images or inscriptions related to the Carmelite Order or devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary.

The scapular is not merely a piece of cloth; it is a sign of one's commitment to the Christian faith and devotion to Mary. By wearing the Brown Scapular, one expresses their desire to follow in the footsteps of Christ and to seek the intercession and protection of Mary, the Mother of God.

In addition to its spiritual significance, the Brown Scapular is associated with various promises and indulgences granted by the Church to those who wear it devoutly. These include the promise of Mary's assistance at the hour of death, as well as spiritual benefits for the wearer and their loved ones.

Over the centuries, devotion to the Brown Scapular has spread widely among Catholics around the world. It is often given as a sacramental at First Holy Communion or as a sign of affiliation with the Carmelite Order. Many Catholics wear the scapular daily as a visible sign of their faith and as a reminder of Mary's presence and protection in their lives.

The Brown Scapular serves as a tangible expression of the Catholic faith's rich tradition of devotion to Mary and reflects the Church's belief in the power of sacramentals to foster spiritual growth and holiness in the lives of believers.

The following is from the Sisters of Carmel

 

 

HistoryOur Lady's apparition to St. Simon Stock

In the year 1251, in the town of Aylesford in England, Our Lady appeared to St. Simon Stock, a Carmelite. She handed him a brown woolen scapular and said, “This shall be a privilege for you and all Carmelites, that anyone dying in this habit shall not suffer eternal fire.” In time, the Church extended this magnificent privilege to all the laity who are willing to be invested in the Brown Scapular of the Carmelites and who perpetually wear it.

Devotion

True devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary consists in three things: VENERATION, CONFIDENCE AND LOVE. By simply wearing the Scapular, we can tell her every moment of the day that we venerate her, love her and trust in her protection.

The Scapular Is a Silent Prayer

As Our Lord taught us to say the Our Father, Our Blessed Mother taught us the value of the scapular. When we use it as a prayer, Our Lady draws us to the Sacred Heart of Her Divine Son. It is good, therefore, to hold the scapular in the hand. A prayer offered while holding the Scapular is as perfect as a prayer can be. It is especially in time of temptation that we need the powerful intercession of God’s Mother. The evil spirit is utterly powerless when the wearer of a scapular faces temptation, calling upon the Holy Virgin in this silent devotion. “If you had recommended yourself to me, you would not have run into such danger,” was Our Lady’s gentle reproach to Blessed Alan de la Roche, one of her devoted servants.

Enrollment in the Confraternity

To be eligible for the scapular promise, one must be enrolled in the Brown Scapular Confraternity. This is a simple ceremony which can be performed by any priest (see below). The members of the Confraternity have the added benefit of sharing in all the spiritual benefits of the Carmelite Order.

According to a statement made by the Carmelite Fathers at the National Scapular Center, every priest now has the right to invest the faithful in the Brown Scapular and to substitute the rosary in lieu of the Little Office (see below).

The scapular must be 100% wool without plastic casing and should not be pinned or affixed to clothing. It is worn over the head, under one’s clothes, with one square of wool hanging on the chest and the other on the back. Pictures are not necessary.

The Sabbatine Privilege

The Blessed Virgin of Mount Carmel has promised to save those who wear the scapular from the fires of hell; She will also shorten their stay in purgatory if they should pass from this world still owing some debt of punishment.

This promise is found in a Bull of Pope John XXII. The Blessed Virgin appeared to him and, speaking of those who wear the Brown Scapular, said, “I, the Mother of Grace, shall descend on the Saturday after their death and whomsoever I shall find in purgatory I shall free so that I may lead them to the holy mountain of life everlasting.”

The Blessed Virgin assigned certain conditions which must be fulfilled:
1.Wear the Brown Scapular continuously.
2.Observe chastity according to one’s state in life (married/single).
3.Recite daily the Little Office of the Blessed Virgin OR Observe the fasts of the Church together with abstaining from meat on Wednesdays and Saturdays OR With permission of a priest, say five decades of Our Lady’s Most Holy Rosary OR With permission of a priest, substitute some other good work.

Pope Benedict XV, the celebrated World War I Pontiff, granted 500 days indulgence for devoutly kissing your scapular.

The Morning OfferingOur Lady of Mt. Carmel,

O my God, in union with the Immaculate Heart of Mary (here kiss the scapular as a sign of your consecration), I offer Thee the Precious Blood of Jesus from all the altars throughout the world, joining with It the offering of my every thought, word and action of this day. O my Jesus, I desire today to gain every indulgence and merit I can, and I offer them, together with myself, to Mary Immaculate, that she may best apply them to the interests of Thy most Sacred Heart. Precious Blood of Jesus, save us! Immaculate Heart of Mary, pray for us! Sacred Heart of Jesus, have mercy on us!

The Popes and the Brown Scapular

Pope Leo XIII: “The Carmelite Scapular’s nobility of origin, its extraordinary spread among Christian peoples for many centuries, the spiritualizing effects produced by it and the outstanding miracles worked in virtue of it render the Scapular of Carmel commendable to a wondrous degree.”

Pope Pius XI: “In consideration of the munificent goodness of the heavenly Mother towards her children, it surely ought to be sufficient merely to exhort those who belong to the Scapular Confraternity to persevere in the holy exercises which have been prescribed for the gaining of the indulgences to which they are entitled.”

Pope Pius XII: “All Carmelites, whether they live in the cloisters of the First or Second Orders or are members of the Third Order or of the Confraternities, belong to the same family of our Most Blessed Mother and are attached to it by a special bond of love. May they all see in this keepsake of the Virgin herself a mirror of humility and purity; may they read in the very simplicity of the Garment a concise lesson in modesty and simplicity; above all, may they behold in this same Garment, which they wear day and night, the eloquent expressive symbol of their prayers for divine assistance.”

Pope John XXIII: He spoke “of the Mother of God who is honored in this Church of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. Devotion to her becomes a necessity; towards Our Lady of Mount Carmel we are drawn with a most tender, yet irresistible, attraction.”

Pope Paul VI, speaking of Marian devotions, especially of the Scapular, says “Let the faithful hold in high esteem the practices and devotions to the Blessed Virgin approved by the teaching authority of the Church. It is Our conviction that the Rosary of Mary and the Scapular of Carmel are among these recommended practices. The Scapular is a practice of piety, which by its very simplicity is suited to everyone.”

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