Catholic, Catholicism, Mary the Mother of Jesus, Our Lady

WHAT MAKES MARY HOLY?

HAIL, FULL OF GRACE!

In my previous post, we looked at why Mary is the Queen who intercedes for us with her Son, lifts up souls fallen from divine grace, and reconciles them to God.

Now we’ll discover why this amazing and compassionate lady is not some ordinary woman who ‘happened’ to carry Our Lord in her womb.

COULD JESUS HAVE BEEN BORN OF ANY WOMAN?

Non-Catholics are baffled by the importance given to Mary. It’s true that she doesn’t feature heavily in the New Testament, the way the Apostles or St. Paul do.

Yet the Angel Gabriel greeted her with the words “Hail, full of grace”, which alone sets her apart from most of mankind! And she is called “blessed among women” (Luke 1:42) by her cousin Elizabeth, who recognizes her as the Mother of Our Savior.

And consider this statement from Catholic Answers: “Mary is the Mother of God, the Incarnate Word, Jesus Christ. Consequently, Jesus received His DNA from the Blessed Mother, Mary, and, by extension, her direct ancestors.” Still think she was an ordinary woman?

Mary also instigated Jesus’ first miracle, causing His ministry to begin, as we saw in the First Blog Post.

So for Catholics, it doesn’t make any sense that God should choose some random Jewish woman to bear His Son. The woman upon whom was bestowed that amazing honor would have to be spotless. Jesus could not have been born of an ordinary sinner. He is the New Covenant, and by carrying the New Covenant in her womb for nine months, Mary became the Ark of the New Covenant.

Mary is portrayed above in her role as Our Lady of Guadalupe, the only apparition in which she appeared as a pregnant lady.

The Ark of the New Covenant could not be a sinful woman; she had to be pure. God prepared the perfect woman to bring Our Lord into the world, and thus was born the Immaculate Conception.

WHY IS MARY CALLED THE ‘IMMACULATE CONCEPTION’?


The Church did not create the term ‘Immaculate Conception.’ It is how Mary referred to herself when she appeared to Bernadette Soubirous at Lourdes, in the southwest of France in the Pyrenees, during an apparition recognized by the Catholic Church.

“So, what?” you might say, “I’m not Catholic, and I don’t have to believe in apparitions.”

Actually, neither do Catholics. But, to help us believe in her apparitions, Our Lady often performs miracles when she appears to mortals, which even skeptics can’t deny. On this particular occasion, she caused water to flow out of dry ground, which has now become the famous Lourdes spring, site of 70 official miraculous healings and tens of thousands more unrecognized ones. (See also the Miracle of the Sun at Fatima, witnessed by a vast crowd of believers and non-believers and the tilma of Our Lady of Guadalupe.)

When visiting the lady in white the Lourdes grotto, Bernadette had no idea what the term ‘Immaculate Conception’ meant. She asked the beautiful apparition who she was, partly because her parish priest, Father Peyramale, was growing frustrated and told her to.

The lady replied: “I am the Immaculate Conception.” Uneducated but devout, Bernadette had no idea what those words meant when she repeated them to the priest. Stunned, he informed his bishop, aware Bernadette could never have heard the term before; he knew she was telling the truth – and that Our Lady was appearing to the young peasant girl.

MARY, THE EPITOME OF HUMILITY

Father Gabriel Amorth, the famous exorcist, had several encounters with Satan, and asked him why he hated Mary so much. Here are Satan’s responses:

“She makes me angry because she is the humblest of all creatures, and because I am the proudest; because she is the purest of all creatures, and I am not; because, of all creatures, she is the most obedient to God, and I am a rebel!”

“I am more afraid when you say the Madonna’s name, because I am more humiliated by being beaten by a simple creature, than by Him (Jesus Christ)…”

“Because she always defeats me, because she was never compromised by any taint of sin!” (my italics)

Father Amorth also recalls, “During an exorcism, Satan told me, through the possessed person, ‘Every Hail Mary of the Rosary is a blow to the head for me; if Christians knew the power of the Rosary, it would be the end of me!’”

Mary was totally obedient to God. When the Angel Gabriel appeared to her and announced that she would be overshadowed by the Holy Spirit and conceive a child out of wedlock, he appeared to be condemning her to death by stoning under Jewish law. But Mary accepted it as God’s Will, and said, “Be it done unto me, according to Thy Will.” (Luke 1:38)

She showed complete obedience to God and her complete humility was a sign of how worthy she is to be the Mother of Jesus.

Mary is no ordinary woman!

Given the above, it is impossible to underestimate Mary’s importance in the salvation of the human race.  Recognizing this, Catholics venerate her. We don’t worship her: worship belongs to God alone. But we realize how special she is and ask her to intercede for us with her Son.

It amazes me that she loves all of us so much that she is willing to do this, even though it was thanks to our past, present and future sins that her Son had to endure the cruel tortures and death which she witnessed. Yet she bears us no grudge; instead she actively works for our salvation. It’s more than we deserve!

Only a truly holy person could do that.

Catholic, Mary Our Queen, Mary the Mother of Jesus, Mary's Queenship, Our Lady, To Jesus through Mary

WHY DO CATHOLICS MAKE A BIG DEAL ABOUT MARY?

Many of my friends and readers have a hard time understanding why we Catholics have such strong devotion to Jesus’ mother, Mary.

Since St. Peter 3:15 says that we should “always be ready to give a logical defense to anyone who asks you to account for the hope that is in you,” I decided to write a series of posts about why Our Lady is so important to us.

The first defense I shall give is for Mary’s Queenship.

The notion of Mary as queen is a stumbling block for many people. Christ is Our King; why do we need a queen? We can go straight to Jesus, the Mediator between us and God the Father; we don’t need anyone to mediate between us and Jesus!

So why do Catholics talk about going ‘to Jesus through Mary’?

Edward Sri, in his article Is Mary’s Queenship Biblical? explains how in the Old Testament, the mother of the king was always the queen.

“(I)t is precisely from a Biblical perspective that Mary’s queenship makes perfect sense. For in ancient Israel, it was the king’s mother who reigned as queen, not the king’s wife.”

He demonstrates how this was for practical reasons. “Most kings in this period had large harems. King Solomon, for example, had 700 wives and 300 concubines (1 Kings 11:3). It would have been impossible to bestow the queenship on 1,000 women!  Yet, since each king had only one mother, the queenship was typically given to her.”

The author writes that “the queen mother had a real share in her son’s reign, helping in his mission to shepherd the people (Jer. 13:18-20) and serving as a trusted counselor (see Proverbs 31).  But most of all, the queen mother served as an advocate for the people, hearing their petitions and presenting them to the king.”

When Bathsheba tells her son Solomon that she wishes to ask a favor of him, his response is ‘Make your request, my mother, for I will not refuse you’ (1 Kings 2:20).”

At the marriage feast at Cana, Jesus listened to His mother’s petition even before His public ministry had begun, as Saint Alphonsus de Ligouri points out in his wonderful book, The Glories of Mary. Her compassion for the wedding hosts who had run out of wine was so great, that she appealed to her Son for help.

He told her that His time had not yet come (John 2:4) yet, despite that, He honored His mother’s request. Such is the power of Mary to intercede on our behalf with her Son!

These Biblical insights help us understand why Mary is the Queen Mother in her Son’s Kingdom. I highly recommend reading Edward Sri’s article, which cites other Scriptural references to support Catholic belief in Mary as Our Queen.

Since He is King of the whole world, she is Queen of the whole world. Therefore, all of us who serve God should also serve Mary, says St. Bernadine of Sienna. Note that we shouldn’t serve Mary instead of God. But, as Our Queen, Mary does merit our service.

RELUCTANCE TO APPROACH OUR KING & JUDGE

St. Alphonsus de Ligouri reminds us that we can lose God’s friendship through sin. “But your iniquities have separated you from your God (Isaiah 59:2).”

Yet in the words of St. Bernard, he tells us to “Take courage, oh, sinner, who has lost God. Thy Lord Himself hath given thee a mediator, even His Son Jesus Christ Who can obtain for thee whatever thou desirest.” Without question, we can go straight to Jesus when we have offended Him.

But what about those times when we are too ashamed to present ourselves before Him “Who was crucified and died for us men and our salvation,” as the Creed declares? Well aware that “Christ will come again in glory, to judge the living and the dead,” we sometimes cringe at the thought of approaching Our Fearsome Judge.

Here St. Bernard says, “if ever you fear to have recourse to Jesus Christ because His divine majesty alarms you” – for He is still God, even though He became man – “if you ever wish for another advocate with this mediator, invoke Mary, for she will intercede for you with the Son, Who will surely graciously listen to her, and the Son will intercede with the Father, who can refuse nothing to this Son.”

The saint concludes with a delightful image of Mary as “the ladder of sinners, by which they ascend anew to the height of divine grace.”

APPROACHING THE COMPASSIONATE QUEEN OF MERCY

Mary wields enormous power in her role as queen, and she happily exercises it for our good, if we acknowledge her and show her allegiance.

We call her the Queen of Mercy because she is not a severe empress, but a compassionate ruler, who has for her object the good of her subjects. She is not “queen of justice, intent upon the punishment of the guilty, but queen of mercy, solely intent upon compassion and pardon for sinners. Accordingly, the Church requires us explicitly to call her queen of mercy.”

St. Alphonsus tells us that Mary was compared to the moon by St. Bonaventure, because, as the moon is placed between the heaven and earth, “so she continually interposes between God and sinners, that she may appease the Lord towards them, and enlighten them on their return to God.”

FROM GOATS TO SHEEP

Mary’s most important office is that “of lifting the souls fallen from divine grace, and reconciling them to God.” St. Alphonsus says that William of Paris speaks of Mary’s intercession turning sinners – those wicked goats who will be separated from the elect of God – into sheep, and placing them on the right hand of the Lord, instead of abandoning them to the left, where they “have merited to be banished.”

I hope the above has helped you begin to see the importance of Mary for Catholics.

Next time I will delve into why we consider Mary the Holy Mother of God.

RESOURCES

THE GLORIES OF MARY By Saint Alphonsus de Liguori

IS MARY’S QUEENSHIP BIBLICAL?

Isaiah 52: https://biblehub.com/niv/isaiah/59.htm