Tag: Plain

Picture of the Day for December 8, 2015

Today is one of the most important Marian feasts celebrated in the liturgical calendar of the Roman Catholic Church, the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, “the conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the womb of her mother, Saint Anne, free from original sin by virtue of the foreseen merits of her son Jesus Christ”.

In 1858, Marian Apparitions came to a 14 year old Bernadette Soubirous in Lourdes, France. In the 16th appearance of Mary to Bernadette, the Blessed Virgin Mary stated “I am the Immaculate Conception”.  Lourdes has become one of the greatest pilgrimage sites of the world visited by millions of Catholics each year.

A replica of the Lourdes Grotto can be found on St. Anne’s Hill in Plain, Wisconsin and it is a peaceful spot to visit. And if you search in the crevices in the rock, you might even find my stash of pennies (and a nickel) as we would hide a penny on our visits up the hill to the chapel and shrine.

Our Lady of Lourdes Grotto

Our Lady of Lourdes Grotto

Picture of the Day for November 2, 2014

While this not the typical white rural church picture I normally would post on some Sundays, this church is still a rural church in a small village of less than 800 people in the farming community of Plain in southwestern Wisconsin.

It is actually the fifth Catholic church built in Plain after a cyclone in 1918 destroyed the the third church, leaving only the steeple.  The parishioners decided not to rebuild on the site where the first church was built in 1861 and the where the second and third church had also been built on, especially after a visiting priest made this comment on the old location, “A location, which even seemed to draw down the disapproval of God in destroying the third attempt to build in the poorest place in Plain – to erect a beautiful House of God in a hole surrounded by unsightly horse sheds.”

My great grandfather was one of the majority who voted yes to rebuild at a new location and so a combination church and school was built in 1919 on a new location and served as the fourth church until this fifth and current church was completed in 1940. On the left of the picture, a corner of the combination church and school building can be seen which still serves as the elementary and middle school now but also served as the high school in the past where my mom and her siblings attended.

St. Luke Catholic Church

St. Luke Catholic Church