Homily for Sept. 8th, 2015: The birth of Mary: Rom.
8:28-30; Matt. 1:18-23.
What do today’s readings tell us
about the birth of Mary, which we celebrate today? Nothing. Nor do the
Scriptures tell us anything about how her earthly life ended. In defining Mary=s Assumption on All Saints Day 1950,
Pope Pius XII said simply: AWhen the course of [Mary=s] earthly life had ended, she was
taken up body and soul into the glory of heaven.@ Whether this happened before or
after physical death, the Pope did not say. The body the Pope referred to is
Mary=s new resurrection body: the body
with which Jesus rose from the dead B the heavenly and spiritual body
which, as St. Paul says, each one of us will receive in heaven (cf.1 Cor.
15:35-53). There Mary continues to pray for us. As the Catechism says: AThe Church loves to pray in communion
with the Virgin Mary ... and to entrust supplications and praises to her.@ (No. 2682).
The Scriptures do tell us one thing
about Mary, however, which we often overlook. When, after a frantic three-day
search, Mary and Joseph found their 12-year old son in the Jerusalem Temple ,
he answered their reproaches by asking: “Did you not know that I had to be in
my Father’s house?” (Luke 2:49). Already at age twelve, Jesus knew that God was
his Father, not Joseph. And Luke tells us that “they did not grasp what he said
to them” (2:50)
There would be much more that Mary
did not grasp. How much did she grasp about the angel’s message that she was to
be the mother of God’s Son? Well, she grasped at least this: that in a little
village where gossip was rife, and everybody knew everybody else’s business, people
would regard her as an unmarried mother. Yet despite this daunting prospect,
and her still young age (Scripture scholars think she may have been no more
than thirteen), Mary responded: “I am the maidservant of the Lord. Let it be
done to me as you say” (Luke 1:38).
Three decades later, after Jesus left
home, he seemed on more than one occasion to be fulfilling his command to his
disciples about turning one=s back on parents and other relatives (cf. Lk 14:26). At the
marriage at Cana Jesus seemed to speak coldly to his mother. She seems not to
have been present at the Last Supper. Only at Calvary
was Mary permitted to stand beside her now dying Son, along with Athe disciple whom Jesus loved@ (John 19:26); deliberately unnamed,
many Scripture scholars believe, to represent the ideal follower of Jesus
Christ in every time and place.
The last glimpse we have of Mary in
Scripture shows her with the apostles and Jesus= other friends, praying for the
descent of the Holy Spirit (Acts 1:14). Thereafter Mary disappears. Her work of
bringing Christ to the world was taken over by the Church. From her place in
heaven this woman whose life began and ended in obscurity continues to answer
the prayer which Catholics have prayed for two millennia: “Holy Mary, Mother of
God, pray for us now and at the hour of our death.”
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