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Mary our Mother
by Father William G. Most
"As a result, she is our Mother in the order of grace." With these few
words Vatican II (On the Church # 61) gave us a brilliant
theology of the Motherhood of Our Lady, and a marvelous help to
understand the motherhood of all Mothers. To follow it, we need to read
the two sentences that come before it: "The Blessed Virgin, predestined
from eternity along with the Incarnation of the Divine Word, as the
Mother of God, on this earth was the gracious Mother of the Divine
Redeemer, His associate more than others, in a singular way, and the
humble maid-servant of the Lord. In conceiving Christ, in bringing Him
forth, in nourishing Him, in presenting Him to the Father in the Temple,
in suffering with her Son as He died on the cross, she cooperated in the
work of the Savior, in an altogether singular way, by obedience, faith,
hope and burning love, to restore supernatural life to souls. As a
result, she is our Mother in the order of grace."
"As a result, she is our Mother in the order of grace." An ordinary
Mother does two things to gain that glorious title: she shares in
bringing a new life into being, she takes care of that life so long as
she is needed, as long as she is willing and able.
Mary gives us supernatural life
We have seen in our discussion of Mary's cooperation in the redemption
how she shares in bringing new life into being. And what a life that is!
Compared to it mere mortal life is as nothing. The Second Epistle of St.
Peter (1:4) says that in it we are made "sharers in the divine nature."
And, we have seen in our discussion of Mary's continuing mediation how
she takes care of our supernatural life.
Let us try to explore this mystery a bit. St. Paul says that in heaven
we will see God "face to face". Now of course, God does not have a face.
Nor do souls have mortal eyes. But the solid reality is far beyond what
the words can readily convey. When I look at another person in this
life, I do not take that one into my mind--no, I take in an image. The
person is finite, limited, and so a finite image can let me know about
that one.
But God is infinite. No image could begin to convey what He is like. So
the next, the inevitable step is staggering: it must be that the
divinity will join itself to the created human soul immediately, without
even an image in between, so that the soul can know Him even as His Son
knows Him, as He knows His Son. Within that divinity there as it were
flow infinite streams of knowledge and of love. For the first chapter of
John's Gospel tells us that in the beginning the Father spoke the Word.
That Word is not a ripple in the air as our words are. No, it is
substantial, it is the second Person of the Holy Trinity. Between Father
and Son there arises love--again, not the feeble reality we know, but it
too is substantial, it is another Divine Person, the Holy Spirit,
proceeding by way of infinite love.
Only a being at least partly divine could as it were plug into these
infinite streams of knowledge and of love. Yet that is what it means to
be "sharers in the divine nature", which we are by the life of grace,
which she shared in gaining for us, at a cost so great that, as we said,
only God can comprehend it. So she really is our Mother in the order of
grace.
A Mother's Care
But a Mother has a second role to fulfill: to take care of the new life,
so long as she is willing, able, and needed. In ordinary human affairs,
there comes a time when the Mother is not really much needed, for the
child grows to adult stature. But in the spiritual life, we remain
children - for unless we become as little children we shall not inherit
the kingdom. Or, to put it more clearly, we always stand in the need of
grace as long as we have not yet entered the mansions of our Father.
That grace, every grace, comes to us through her, for, as Vatican II
taught (62), she is the Mediatrix.
We said an ordinary Mother should give care as long as she is willing
and able. Sadly, some human mothers stop being willing. Not so our
Heavenly Mother. The children she brought into life by such tremendous
pain she will never forget. She is always willing. Moreover, an ordinary
mother may come to points at which she is unable to help, howsoever
pathetically she way wish to do so. Not so our Mother in Heaven: Pope
Benedict XV called her "suppliant omnipotence". That is, all that God
can do by His very inherent power, she, with and through her Son, can
obtain by asking Him for it. And that she does.
From what we have said, we see that she brought us forth on Calvary. Yet
there is a sense in which we can correctly say that she became our
Mother even before that day. On June 19, 1947, Pope Pius XII sent a
message to the Marian Congress of Ottawa, Canada. He said: "When the
little maid of Nazareth uttered her fiat to the message of the
angel...she became not only the Mother of God in the physical order of
nature, but also in the supernatural order of grace she became the
Mother of all who...would be made one under the Headship of her divine
Son. The Mother of the Head would be the Mother of the members. The
Mother of the vine would be the Mother of the branches."
The thought is obvious. Her Son is the Head of the Mystical Body, of
which we are members. She really could not become the Mother of the Head
without automatically, as it were, becoming the Mother of the Members of
Her Son. Of course, that was only begun at the Annunciation. It was to
be brought to light, with immense pain, only on the hill of Calvary.
Ordinary mothers cannot of course be both virgin and mother. But they
can imitate, at a distance, her devotion to the Word of God, her
fidelity to His will, her carrying out of the role designed for her by
our Father's plan. Even when the need for physical care of their sons
dims, the sons still need spiritual care--and that the Mothers should
provide, even as she did.
St. Luke tells us that when young, Jesus went down to Nazareth and was
subject to his parents. He, in His strictly divine humility, allowed
Himself to be formed, humanly, by His Mother and St. Joseph. Ordinary
mothers can imitate this and should realize that to form a new life in
the likeness of Jesus or His Mother is far higher than to be a business
executive, a policewoman, a tram operator, or whatever--it is far higher
and nobler than the masterpieces of Michaelangelo, who carved in
marble--Mothers carve in human souls!
From a
file by Fr. William G. Most Electronic text (c) Copyright EWTN 1996. All
rights reserved.
(Source:
EWTN.com)
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St. Michael the Archangel
St.
Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle; be our safeguard against the
wickedness and snares of the devil. May God rebuke him, we humbly pray.
And do you, O prince of the heavenly host, by the power of God, cast
into Hell Satan and all the evil spirits who prowl about the world
seeking the ruin of souls. Amen.
Copyright ©
2002 Saint Michael Center for the Blessed Virgin Mary.
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