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Fairest Daughter by Charles M. Mangan
The Solemnity of the Assumption, celebrated annually on August 15, presents a golden opportunity to reconsider the person of the Ever-Virgin Mary and her singular mission in the Church. It seems natural during this Year of the Father to reflect particularly on the relationship which Our Lady enjoys with the First Person of the Most Blessed Trinity. Mary has been hailed as the first-born daughter of the Father. This reality is evident if one remembers that Godand in a specific way the Father has created Mary, just as He has created us. She is one of us because she is fully human. We are children of the Almighty in a similar vein in which she is His daughter. As we rely on God for our very existence, so, too, does our Immaculate Mother. What do the Father and His sinless daughter share? Venerable Pius IX (1846-1878), in his Apostolic Constitution Ineffabilis Deus (December 8, 1854) in which he once-and-for-all defined the truth of Our Ladys Immaculate Conception, wrote: To her did the Father will to give His only-begotten Sonthe Son Whom, equal to the Father and begotten by Him, the Father loves from His Heartand to give this Son in such a way that He would be the one and the same common Son of God the Father and of the Blessed Virgin Mary. The Father gave many overwhelming spiritual riches to Mary to strengthen her in her inspiring vocation as the Mother of His Son. Yet, He gave no greater gift than that of the Lord Jesus. Mary, in turn, imitated the Father in raising Jesus from before infancy to manhood. Jesus knew well the best of all gifts which His Mother faithfully imparted: the boundless love of His Beloved Father. Now, as the Son of Mary, Christ came to experience the love of His Mother which was patterned after that of His Father. One may rightly assert that Jesus Christ is the link between the Father and Mary. We often claim that children receive much of their identity from their parents. Eye color, physical build and even disposition are often traced from the child back to its parents. Truly, the offspring rely on their father and mother for multiple and varied things. (And, of course, the Messiah willed to come forth from Mary and be dependent on her and Saint Joseph.) However, the Holy Family of Nazareth is a different case. Mary and her loving husband discovered their purpose in the Divine Child. In Jesus, they found their identityunto everlasting life! From her Immaculate Conception to her glorious Assumption body and soul into Paradise (and even now), Mary never lost her sense of utter dependence on the Father. Yes, she was chosen to be the Virgin Mother of Emmanuel. But, she always recalled that she needed God each moment of her life. When exclaiming the Lords unparalleled goodness in the Magnificat (Saint Luke 1:46-55), this humble maiden declared: The Mighty One has done great things for me, and holy is His Name (Verse 49). She did not contend: Holy is my name. Mary was entirely convinced that God alone is the source of all we are and all that we have. Father Jean Galot, a French theologian and member of the Society of Jesus and professor emeritus of Christology at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, recently explored in an article the intimate bond between the heavenly Father and Mary. We are able to locate this connection in the attitude of the Baby Jesus. Father Galot argues: In His Infancy, He (Jesus) developed a double fundamental love. He said Abba to the celestial Father and Mamma to the earthly Mother. Other babies unite in the affection for father and mother, who are both human; Jesus associated a divine Father and a human Mother in the same filial love. These two cries, Abba and Mamma, came from
the very same PersonJesus Christ. It is apparent that the Child recognized in His
Mother the care, concernyes, charity!which springs from the very Heart of the
Father.
The same Father Who sent His Son to Mary through the power of the Consoler invites us, as He did Mary, to find in Jesus the answer to all our questions and the balm to all the illnesses of our souls. We can seek to imitate in some way, with the Holy Spirits assistance, Marys sublime love of the Father. Our wholehearted acceptance of His love and compassion means that we will flourish spiritually in our day as the Mother of Christ didand continues, now assumed into Heavenin hers. Father Mangan is a priest of the Diocese of Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Back to Catholic Faith July/August 1999 Table of Contents Back to Catholic Information Center on Internets Main Periodical Page |
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