Marie Martha Chambon


Marie Martha Chambon was a Roman Catholic nun known for introducing the Rosary of the Holy Wounds.

Biography

Françoise Chambon was born March 6, 1841 to a poor farming family in the village of Croix Rouge, near Chambéry, in Savoy. Her first reported vision occurred when she was nine years old. As she was attending Good Friday services with her godmother, in the parish church of Lémenc, Françoise saw the crucified Jesus covered in wounds and blood. She said that later that year, when she received First Communion, she saw the baby Jesus, who told her, "Child, my favorite, so it will be every time you go to Holy Communion." She worked in the refectory at the boarding school.
At the age of twenty-one, she joined the Monastery of the Visitation Order in Chambéry, France as a lay sister, and was given her name Marie-Marthe.
She died on March 21, 1907, and the cause for her beatification was introduced in 1937.

Private revelations

She began to report visions of Jesus in 1866, telling her to contemplate the Holy Wounds. The mother superior kept a chronicle of her life which was published in 1923 and sold widely. The next year the Vatican granted an indulgence to those who said the following prayer, based on her reported visions: "Eternal Father I offer the wounds of Our Lord Jesus Christ, to heal those of our souls."
She reported that Jesus asked her to unite her sufferings with His in the Rosary of the Holy Wounds as an Act of Reparation for the sins of the world. She reported that Jesus told her that "hen you offer My Holy Wounds for sinners, you must not forget to do so for the souls in Purgatory, as there are but few who think of their relief... The Holy Wounds are the treasure of treasures for the souls in Purgatory."

Holy Wounds devotion

Part of the devotion to the Holy Wounds may include the Chaplet of Mercy of the Holy Wounds of Jesus, which was based on Chambon's private revelations. The Chaplet of the Holy Wounds is prayed on a standard five decade rosary. This chaplet was approved for the Institute of Visitation in 1912, and was authorized by Decree of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on March 23, 1999.

Format of the Chaplet

One method of praying the chaplet consists of three prayers that are said on specific portions of the rosary beads as follows: