Talk:Our Lady of the Rosary of San Nicolás

English version of Our Lady of the Rosary of San Nicolás

 * translated and updated Spanish page of newly approved Diocesan devotion under this title, updated language link at WikiData and Template:Private_revelation_in_the_Catholic_Church linking Sanctuary (URL piped to titled page) under > Shrines > Marian shrines MrsKrishan (talk) 06:00, 23 January 2017 (UTC)
 * added three new subheadings under "Approval" adding context for St Nicolas of Bari/Myra in ecumenical movement on the American Continent re: schism East and West providing extended information from Italian wiki on a second St Nicolas from Greece venerated in southern Italy Saint Nicholas of Trani associated with contemporaneous events in church and stateMrsKrishan (talk) 02:31, 24 January 2017 (UTC)

Dedication (13th message)
January 22 2017, Sunday Mass for the [Third Sunday http://usccb.org/bible/readings/012217.cfm] in Ordinary Time, the second reading concluded with the versical quoted on November 3 1983
 * "She also asked me to read St. Pauls first letter to the Corinthians 1:17
 * "For Christ did not send me to baptize, but to proclaim his Gospel.
 * And not with beautiful words! That would be like getting rid of the cross of Christ."

MrsKrishan (talk) 06:57, 30 January 2017 (UTC)

Citations from the Old Testament
Have moved the following section here pending clarification as to what it has to do with the subject of the article.

Biblical semiosography consecrates time with a seventh day of rest after six days of Divine creation of the cosmos ex nihilo. Common to religious observations and worship of Divine Providence in JudeoChristian cultures is a cycle of pastoral seasons revolving around the sabbath. For example, the Jewish Festival of Weeks, in Hebrew שבועות shavuot meaning "seven sevens" (a week of weeks or 49 days) coincides with Simchat Torah, the commemoration of the Giving of the Torah to Moses on Mount Sinai after a Passover deliverance from slavery in Egypt. Pentecost, the Christian culmination of the Pascal season, is derived from the Greek Πεντηκοστή, meaning fifty days. Indeed, a full pastoral-liturgical year—approximated with primitive calculations using a lunar calendar of 12 lunations—can be seen to be roughly equivalent to a week of week of weeks, or seven to the power three (7³).

Eight verses from the 13th 'Lāmed ל (Greek lambda) strophe FM 014: "Our Lady said to me: When in need turn to me and I will respond. I am happy with you. You are worthy of my trust. Glory be to the Lord.  She asked me to read Psalm 119:89-96" from 11-8-83; online "Book of Messages" web portal "Centro de difusión" of the Sanctuary of "María del Rosario de San Nicolás" de los Arroyos of Psalm 119 were cited in a lectio divina-styled instruction received in mid-November 1983. In the system of Greek numerals - as in Hebrew gematria - lambda has a value of 30, representing a month in the lunar cycle and thus the female, maternal character in classical poetry and ancient cultures. Psalm 119 is associated with the Gospel proclamation of the kingdom concluding the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus' teaching of the Beatitudes as fulfilment of the Decalog found in Matthew and Luke. Mannanan51 (talk) 03:20, 27 May 2018 (UTC)

Dead Links
please correct them or drop them