For almost 40 years, Blessed Alvaro del Portillo lived and worked side by side with the Founder of Opus Dei, Saint Josemaria Escriva, to lay the groundwork for the foundation of Opus Dei in many countries around the world. Although they were both from Spain, they spent many of those years together in Rome, Italy, close to the Pope and the Holy See.
Saint Josemaria and Blessed Alvaro used to like to “visit” Our Lady, by praying the rosary while walking or traveling to a specific Marian shrine, or even simpler places bearing her image. Over the course of the years they lived in Rome, they discovered many lesser known sanctuaries of popular devotion around the city.
When facing problems or periods of more intense suffering, the saint and the blessed had recourse to Our Lady, often physically
seeking out one of her many images.
2. "If I want you to imitate me in anything, it is in the
love I have for our Lady." - Saint Josemaria Escriva
For almost 40 years, Blessed Alvaro del Portillo lived
and worked side by side with the Founder of Opus
Dei, Saint Josemaria Escriva, to lay the groundwork for
the foundation of Opus Dei in many countries around
the world. Although they were both from Spain, they
spent many of those years together in Rome, Italy, close
to the Pope and the Holy See.
Saint Josemaria and Blessed Alvaro used to like to
“visit” Our Lady, by praying the rosary while walking or
traveling to a specific Marian shrine, or even simpler
places bearing her image. Over the course of the years
they lived in Rome, they discovered many lesser-
known sanctuaries of popular devotion around the city.
When facing problems or periods of more
intense suffering, the saint and the blessed
had recourse to Our Lady, often physically
seeking out one of her many images.
Starting in 1978, three years after Saint Josemaria's
death, Blessed Alvaro wanted to retrace the paths they
had taken to find Mary in Rome. Turns out they had
prayed at over 40 Marian sites and churches in and
around the city. What follows could serve as a Marian
"tour book" for your next visit to the eternal city.
3. We'll begin chronologically: when Alvaro del Portillo,
our guide, came to Rome for the first time, one of the
very first things he did was to visit St. Peter's Basilica,
the heart of the Church, as well as two Marian churches
close to his lodgings.
Over the years, Alvaro went to St. Peter's frequently,
renewing his love for the Pope there often. The basilica
is full of Marian images, -and some are less well-known:
the Madonna del Soccorso, the
Mater Ecclesiae, and the
mosaic of our Lady (also Mater
Ecclesiae) in the square.
Santa Maria Regina Pacis was among the first places
Blessed Alvaro, not yet a priest, visited when he first
arrived in Rome in 1943. Alvaro went to this church, just
- completed and dedicated to the Queen of
Peace, every morning to pray and attend
Mass. We can imagine what he told Our
Lady at that difficult time, as World War
-II was raging. During that trip, Alvaro met with bishops
in Rome to explain what Opus Dei was all about, and to
seek Vatican approval.
When Alvaro, now a priest, returned to Rome in 1946,
he celebrated daily Mass on the altar of the Sacred
Heart in Nostra Signora del Sacro Cuore.
4. -
The next leg of our pilgrimage takes us
to some of the most ancient places of
-Marian veneration. Alvaro inherited a passion for the
Roman catacombs from Saint Josemaría and visited the
catacombs of Priscilla, where the oldest picture of
Mary, represented as Mother of God, is kept.
He also visited the Marian image of Santa Maria in
Cosmedin and the ancient icon of Santa Maria in
Aracoeli.
But of all the
ancient
representations
of Our Lady, the
one that Alvaro
visited -
most was the Salus Populi Romani of Saint Mary Major.
The entire fifth-century basilica is a hymn of
thanksgiving for the Divine Maternity of Mary, and
over the years, Alvaro also prayed before the Regina
Pacis statue, a commemoration of the First World War.
(Click on the churches above to see their pictures.)
5. Blessed Alvaro had a lively devotion to the scapular of
Our Lady, and that's why he visited Rome's Carmelite
churches more than once.
One of these is Santa
Maria della Scala, a
church in Trastevere with
a relic of Saint Teresa's
foot.
Continuing with Alvaro, our pilgrimage also takes us to
Santa Teresa in Corso Italia, where there is a beautiful
image of the Madonna and Child with the Scapular, -
and to Santa Teresina del Bambin
Gesù in Panfilo.
Alvaro's visits to these churches were brief trips made
early in the morning, to bring many of his concerns to
Our Lady's attention.
(Click on the churches above to see their pictures.)
6. With Blessed Alvaro, we learn to consider
Our Lady as the tradition of the Church
-
often seemed impossible.
For example, the Madonna
della Clemenza in Santa
Maria in Trastevere, the
Stella Maris (also called
Fons Lucis and Our Lady
Advocate) in Santa Maria in
Via Lata, Santa Maria del
Popolo, Our Lady of the
Rosary in Santa Maria
sopra Minerva, and the
Gran Madre di Dio at Ponte
Milvio.
He also went to our Lady of Lourdes in Tor Marancia,
and to the reproduction of the grotto of Lourdes in the
Vatican Gardens.
(Click on the churches above to see their pictures.)
does: she is the "Omnipotent Supplicant" whom God
cannot refuse. Alvaro visited many churches with
images of Mary to ask Our Lady for graces that
-.
7. In 1978, Alvaro made visits to an impressive number of
Marian churches: Saint Rocco and Santa Maria in
Traspontina in December and February, Santa Maria
delle Vitoria, the Consolatrix Afflictorum in San Camillo
de Lillis, the Addolorata (Our Lady of Sorrows) and
the Madonna delle Grazie (Our Lady of Grace) in San
Marcello in Corso, and Santa Maria degli Angeli in
Piazza Esedra in March, the twin churches of Santa
-
in Santa Maria in Campitelli, the Madonna de Parto
statue in Sant'Agostino, and the Immaculate Heart of
Mary in the Euclid Square in May, Mary Help of
Christians at the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Via Marsala,
the Immaculate and the Madonna in the Basilica of the
Holy Apostles, and our Lady of the Rosary in Christ the
King in June, the Madonna del Carmine in San Martino
ai Monti, the Pantheon, our Lady of the Rosary in Santa
Sabina, the Madonna del Perpetuo Soccorso in
Sant'Alfonso, the Madonna Liberatrice in the chapel of
San Zenone in Santa Prassede. and the Immaculate in
the Capuchin Church in Via Vittorio Veneto in
September and October.
Maria dei Miracoli
and Santa
Maria in
Montesanto
in Piazza
del Popolo,
the Santa
-Maria in Portico image
8. Blessed Alvaro's pilgrimages the next year, 1979, were
largely visits to images of our Lady in churches not
named after her: to the Madonna in the apse of the
Santi Quattro Coronati, for example, and to the
Madonna of the Rosary in the Basilica of San Clemente,
the Nunziatina near Via della Conciliazione, the
Madonna del Buon Aiuto in Santa Croce in
- Gerusalemme, and the Madonna di San
Gaetano in Sant'Andrea della Valle. Our
tour takes us next to two images of our
Lady in the Basilica of St. John Lateran:
-
And at the end of November,
Blessed Alvaro went to pray
before a reproduction of the
Madonna of the Miraculous
-
the Madonna and Child with
Saints and Our Lady of the
Apocalypse.
Medal in the Leonine College in Via Pompeo Magno.
(Click on the churches above to see their pictures.)
9. Blessed Alvaro visited some shrines more than once
because of their special significance, and it is fitting
that our tour nearly draws to a close with three of
these.
The church of San Salvatore in Lauro holds an image of
the Virgin of Loretto which reminded Blessed Alvaro of
Saint Josemaria's 1951 pilgrimage to Loretto, and the
facade is sculpted with beautiful iconography. (While
- Blessed Alvaro didn't live to see it, in
2009 an image of Saint Josemaria
was installed in one of the side
chapels.)
Similarly, Alvaro visited the Church of our Lady of
Guadalupe (just beyond the limits of this map), thinking
of Saint Josemaria's 1970 trip to Mexico.
Finally, he was one of many Catholics devoted to the
Madonna del Divino Amore, and visited the sanctuary
just outside of Rome. Rome's salvation during the war
is attributed to her, and the Pope had called for a
novena and processions through the city streets with
the image.
(Click on the churches above to see a picture.)
10. Lastly, our pilgrimage takes us to the edicole and
Marian statues around the city, beautiful expressions of
popular devotion to our Lady.
Saint Josemaria and Blessed Alvaro often visited the
Immaculate Conception in Piazza di Spagna on
December 8, for example, and the Madonna and Child in
Via del Pellegrino is so
beautiful that Saint
Josemaria had it
reproduced on a terrace
in the headquarters of
Opus Dei.
There was a small edicola that St. Josemaría particularly
liked in Piazza delle Cinque Lune on a facade of the
Palazzo dell'Apollinare (recently transferred to Via
della Scrofa).
Finally, in the outskirts of Rome, just outside Genzano
at the junction to Nemi, there is another edicola with
the inscription "Cor meum vigilat." Of this image
Blessed Alvaro said, This representation of the Virgin
Mary is very beautiful. The child sleeps on her arms and
the Virgin is watching. Cor meum vigilat.
(Click on the churches above to see their pictures.)