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![]() The Virgin and Angels by William Bouguereau, painted in 1900 |
"Whoever does not wish to have Mary Immaculate as his Mother will not have Christ as his Brother either; the Father will not send his Son to him; the Son will not descend into his soul; the Holy Spirit will not make him a member of the mystical body of Christ; for all these mysteries of grace take place in Mary full of grace and in her alone. No other creature is or will ever be immaculate like her, or full of grace, or capable of being so intimately united to the Lord as was the Immaculate Virgin. And since the first-born Son, the Man-God, was conceived only through the specific consent of the Most Blessed Virgin, the same holds true of all other humans, who must imitate in all things their primary model, Christ." -- Saint Maxmillian Kolbe, Martyr of Auschwitz, (in his book titled "Sketch", written in 1940) "Tell everyone that God grants his graces through the Immaculate Heart of Mary. It is to Her that we must ask them. The Sacred Heart of Jesus wants us to venerate the Immaculate Heart of Mary together with His"-- Jacinta of Fatima on her deathbed "I have been amazed that some are utterly in doubt as to whether or not the holy Virgin is able to be called the Mother of God. For if our Lord Jesus Christ is God, how should the holy Virgin who bore him not be the Mother of God?" -- Cyril of Alexandria (Letter to the Monks of Egypt 1 [A.D. 427]). As Father Steven Scheier says, "At the foot of the cross Jesus looked upon Mary and made her mother of the whole Church", and therefore all of its members. "The Mother of Christ, who stands at the very center of this mystery... is given as mother to ever single individual and all mankind" -- Pope John Paul II, 1987 "When Catholics pray to Mary we are asking her to pray our request to her Son. Basically we are requesting Mary to take our place before Christ because Jesus always listens to His mother. Perhaps a better way of saying it would be that we pray through her to Jesus." -- from your webmaster's memory of a conversation he had with Fr. George St. Laurent in 1964 (Fr. Saint Laurent, if you read this, write me at webmaster at olpg dot org). Understanding the Catholic Devotion to Mary This is often forgotten by Catholics themselves, and therefore it is not surprising that those who are not Catholic often have a completely wrong conception of Catholic devotion to the Mother of God. They imagine, and sometimes we can understand their reasons for doing so, that Catholics treat the Blessed Virgin as an almost divine being in her own right, as if she had some glory, some power, some majesty of her own that placed her on a level with Christ Himself. They regard the Assumption of Mary into heaven as a kind of apotheosis placed in the Redemption would seem to be equal to that of her Son. But this is all completely contrary to the true mind of the Catholic Church. It forgets that Mary's chief glory is in her nothingness, in the fact of being the "Handmaid of the Lord," as one who in becoming the Mother of God acted simply in loving submission to His command, in the pure obedience of faith. She is blessed not because of some mythical pseudo-divine prerogative, but in all her human and womanly limitations as one who has believed. It is the faith and the fidelity of this humble handmaid, "full of grace" that enables her to be the perfect instrument of God, and nothing else but His instrument. The work that was done in her purely the work of God. "He that is mighty hath done great things in me." The glory of Mary is purely and simply the glory of God in her. And she, like anyone else, can say that she has nothing that she has not received from Him through Christ. |
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