When Vancouver Archbishop J. Michael Miller consecrates the Archdiocese of Vancouver to Mary, Mother of the Church, tomorrow, it will be the second consecration in three years.

Archbishop Miller will join the bishops of Canada and the United States in consecrating their nations to Mary on Friday. And for both countries it will be a re-consecration, as both countries have been consecrated to Mary before – as has the entire world, several times.

Archbishop Miller will consecrate the archdiocese, pray the Rosary, and offer Mass from Holy Rosary Cathedral at 12:10 p.m. Friday.  The event will be livestreamed here.

To follow along use the prayer resource provided by the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops.

In 2017, he consecrated the Archdiocese of Vancouver for the 150th anniversary of Confederation, joining bishops across Canada in consecrating the country to the Immaculate Heart of Mary.

The U.S. bishops said in a statement that reconsecrating the country is meant to serve as a reminder to the faithful of Mary’s witness to the Gospel, and as a way of asking for Mary’s intercession before Jesus on behalf of those in need.

“Every year, the Church seeks the special intercession of the Mother of God during the month of May. This year, we seek the assistance of Our Lady all the more earnestly as we face together the effects of the global pandemic,” Archbishop Jose Gomez, president of the US bishops, said in his April 22 letter announcing the consecration.

Salt and Light Media’s Deacon Pedro Guevara-Mann interviewed Archbishop Richard Gagnon, president of the CCCB, and Archbishop Jose Gomez, president of the U.S. bishops conference, to discuss the historic joint consecration. The interview can be watched here as part of the network’s Faith in a Time of Crisis coverage.

The Vatican’s Congregation for Divine Worship defines consecration to Mary as an overt recognition of the “singular role of Mary in the Mystery of Christ and of the Church, of the universal and exemplary importance of her witness to the Gospel, of trust in her intercession, and of the efficacy of her patronage.”

St. Louis de Montfort, a 17th-century French priest, was “one of the great masters of the spirituality underlying the act of consecration to Mary,” the congregation wrote, noting that de Montfort proposed to the faithful “consecration to Jesus through Mary.”

Pope St. John Paul II, who consecrated the entire Church and world to Mary three times during his pontificate, taught that by consecrating oneself to Mary, we accept her help in offering ourselves fully to Jesus.

“It means accepting her help – by having recourse to her motherly heart, which beneath the cross was opened to love for every human being, for the whole world – in order to offer the world, the individual human being, mankind as a whole, and all the nations to him who is infinitely holy,” the Pope said in May 1982.

Bishop John Carroll of Baltimore, the first bishop of the United States, promoted devotion to Mary, the Mother of God, and placed the United States under her protection in a pastoral letter of 1792.

Archbishop Miller consecrates the Archdiocese of Vancouver in 2017. (B.C. Catholic)

In 1847, Pope Pius IX approved the U.S. bishops’ decision to name the Blessed Virgin Mary, under the title of the Immaculate Conception, as the Patroness of the United States.

The U.S. bishops once again consecrated the nation to Mary during the 1959 dedication of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C.

Canada was first consecrated to Mary at a National Marian Congress in Ottawa in 1947, then again in 1954. The bishops last renewed the consecration in 2017.

The bishops of many other countries over the years – including, most recently, Mexico and the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean on Easter Sunday – have consecrated their nations to Mary.

After receiving more than 300 letters during the coronavirus pandemic, the bishops of Italy will also consecrate the nation to Mary on May 1, at a shrine in northern Italy.

In addition, several popes have consecrated the entire Church and world to Mary.

Pope Pius XII consecrated the entire world to the Immaculate Heart of Mary on October 31, 1942, and Pope St. John Paul II renewed that consecration on May 13, 1982, again on March 25, 1984, and once more on Oct. 8, 2000.

Pope Francis during Oct. 2013 renewed the consecration of the world to the Immaculate Heart of Mary, and dedicated his pontificate to Our Lady of Fatima.

The title “Mary, Mother of the Church” was given to the Blessed Mother by Pope St. Paul VI at the Second Vatican Council, and a memorial under the title was added to the Church’s liturgical calendar in 2018.

The act of consecration to Mary, Archbishop Gomez said, “will give the Church the occasion to pray for Our Lady’s continued protection of the vulnerable, healing of the unwell, and wisdom for those who work to cure this terrible virus.”

With B.C. Catholic files