Five Saturdays of Reparation

Fr. Hugh Gillespie, SMM

Five Saturdays of Reparation

 

 

This conference explores the rich history, theology, and spiritual meaning behind the Five First Saturdays Devotion . . .

 

. . . associated with Sister Lucia and Our Lady of Fatima. The conference explains that devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary on Saturdays long predates Fatima, arising from the Church’s meditation on Holy Saturday, when Mary alone remained steadfast in faith while Christ lay in the tomb.

Over centuries, Christians began dedicating Saturdays . . . and especially First Saturdays . . . to honoring Mary’s role in salvation history, meditating on the mysteries of the Rosary, and growing spiritually through communal prayer. The conference highlights how the Five First Saturdays requested at Fatima are not a completely new devotion, but a focused renewal of older Marian traditions, emphasizing fervor over routine and intentional prayer over empty habit.

Why Five First Saturdays?

The conference further explains the spiritual practices requested for the Five First Saturdays: Holy Communion, Confession, praying the Rosary, fifteen minutes of meditation on the mysteries, and offering these acts in reparation to the Immaculate Heart of Mary. The conference also explores the five types of Reparation.

The devotion is presented as both deeply personal and profoundly catechetical, inviting believers to understand and defend Marian doctrines such as the Immaculate Conception, perpetual virginity, and Mary’s motherhood of God and the Church. The reflection also stresses the importance of reverence, beauty, and intentionality in Catholic devotion, warning against mediocrity and neglect in honoring sacred things.

Ultimately, the Five First Saturdays are portrayed as an act of love, reparation, and perseverance, with the promise that the Blessed Mother will assist the faithful with the graces needed at the hour of death.

Two Views of the Official New York State Fatima Pilgrim Image

Five Saturdays of Reparation