Joy of the Gospel:
Jesus’ gift to his people
285. On
the cross, when Jesus endured in his own flesh the dramatic encounter of the
sin of the world and God’s mercy, he could feel at his feet the consoling
presence of his mother and his friend. At that crucial moment, before fully
accomplishing the work which his Father had entrusted to him, Jesus said to
Mary: “Woman, here is your son”. Then he said to his beloved friend: “Here is
your mother” (Jn 19:26-27). These words of the dying Jesus are not chiefly the
expression of his devotion and concern for his mother; rather, they are a
revelatory formula which manifests the mystery of a special saving mission.
Jesus left us his mother to be our mother.
Only after doing so did Jesus know
that “all was now finished” (Jn 19:28). At the foot of the cross, at the supreme
hour of the new creation, Christ led us to Mary. He brought us to her because
he did not want us to journey without a mother, and our people read in this
maternal image all the mysteries of the Gospel. The Lord did not want to leave
the Church without this icon of womanhood. Mary, who brought him into the world
with great faith, also accompanies “the rest of her offspring, those who keep
the commandments of God and bear testimony to Jesus” (Rev 12:17).
The close
connection between Mary, the Church and each member of the faithful, based on
the fact that each in his or her own way brings forth Christ, has been
beautifully expressed by Blessed Isaac of Stella: “In the inspired Scriptures,
what is said in a universal sense of the virgin mother, the Church, is
understood in an individual sense of the Virgin Mary... In a way, every
Christian is also believed to be a bride of God’s word, a mother of Christ, his
daughter and sister, at once virginal and fruitful... Christ dwelt for nine
months in the tabernacle of Mary’s womb. He dwells until the end of the ages in
the tabernacle of the Church’s faith. He will dwell forever in the knowledge
and love of each faithful soul”
286. Mary
was able to turn a stable into a home for Jesus, with poor swaddling clothes
and an abundance of love.
- She is the handmaid of the Father who sings his praises.
- She is the friend who is ever concerned that wine not be lacking in our lives.
- She is the woman whose heart was pierced by a sword and who understands all our pain.
- As mother of all, she is a sign of hope for peoples suffering the birth pangs of justice.
- She is the missionary who draws near to us and accompanies us throughout life, opening our hearts to faith by her maternal love.
- As a true mother, she walks at our side, she shares our struggles and she constantly surrounds us with God’s love.
Through her many titles, often linked
to her shrines, Mary shares the history of each people which has received the
Gospel and she becomes a part of their historic identity. Many Christian
parents ask that their children be baptized in a Marian shrine, as a sign of
their faith in her motherhood which brings forth new children for God. There,
in these many shrines, we can see how Mary brings together her children who
with great effort come as pilgrims to see her and to be seen by her. Here they
find strength from God to bear the weariness and the suffering in their lives.
As she did with Juan Diego, Mary offers them maternal comfort and love, and
whispers in their ear: “Let your heart not be troubled… Am I not here, who am your
Mother?”
287. We
ask the Mother of the living Gospel to intercede that this invitation to a new
phase of evangelization will be accepted by the entire ecclesial community.
Mary is the woman of faith, who lives and advances in faith, and “her
exceptional pilgrimage of faith represents a constant point of reference for the
Church”. Mary let herself be guided by the Holy Spirit on a journey of faith
towards a destiny of service and fruitfulness. Today we look to her and ask her
to help us proclaim the message of salvation to all and to enable new disciples
to become evangelizers in turn. Along this journey of evangelization we will
have our moments of aridity, darkness and even fatigue. Mary herself
experienced these things during the years of Jesus’ childhood in Nazareth:
“This is the beginning of the Gospel, the joyful good news. However, it is not
difficult to see in that beginning a particular heaviness of heart, linked with
a sort of night of faith – to use the words of Saint John of the Cross – a kind
of ‘veil’ through which one has to draw near to the Invisible One and to live
in intimacy with the mystery. And this is the way that Mary, for many years,
lived in intimacy with the mystery of her Son, and went forward in her
pilgrimage of faith”.
288. There
is a Marian “style” to the Church’s work of evangelization. Whenever we look to
Mary, we come to believe once again in the revolutionary nature of love and
tenderness. In her we see that humility and tenderness are not virtues of the
weak but of the strong who need not treat others poorly in order to feel
important themselves. Contemplating Mary, we realize that she who praised God
for “bringing down the mighty from their thrones” and “sending the rich away
empty” (Lk 1:52-53) is also the one who brings a homely warmth to our pursuit of
justice. She is also the one who carefully keeps “all these things, pondering
them in her heart” (Lk 2:19). Mary is able to recognize the traces of God’s
Spirit in events great and small. She constantly contemplates the mystery of
God in our world, in human history and in our daily lives. She is the woman of
prayer and work in Nazareth, and she is also Our Lady of Help, who sets out
from her town “with haste” (Lk 1:39) to be of service to others.
This interplay of justice and tenderness, of contemplation and concern for others, is what makes the ecclesial community look to Mary as a model of evangelization. We implore her maternal intercession that the Church may become a home for many peoples, a mother for all peoples, and that the way may be opened to the birth of a new world. It is the Risen Christ who tells us, with a power that fills us with confidence and unshakeable hope: “Behold, I make all things new” (Rev 21:5). With Mary we advance confidently towards the fulfilment of this promise, and to her we pray:
This interplay of justice and tenderness, of contemplation and concern for others, is what makes the ecclesial community look to Mary as a model of evangelization. We implore her maternal intercession that the Church may become a home for many peoples, a mother for all peoples, and that the way may be opened to the birth of a new world. It is the Risen Christ who tells us, with a power that fills us with confidence and unshakeable hope: “Behold, I make all things new” (Rev 21:5). With Mary we advance confidently towards the fulfilment of this promise, and to her we pray:
Mary,
Virgin and Mother,
you who,
moved by the Holy Spirit,
welcomed
the word of life
in the
depths of your humble faith:
as you
gave yourself completely to the Eternal One,
help us
to say our own “yes”
to the
urgent call, as pressing as ever,
to
proclaim the good news of Jesus.
Filled
with Christ’s presence,
you
brought joy to John the Baptist,
making
him exult in the womb of his mother.
Brimming
over with joy,
you sang
of the great things done by God.
Standing
at the foot of the cross
with
unyielding faith,
you
received the joyful comfort of the resurrection,
and
joined the disciples in awaiting the Spirit
so that
the evangelizing Church might be born.
Obtain
for us now a new ardour born of the resurrection,
that we
may bring to all the Gospel of life
which
triumphs over death.
Give us
a holy courage to seek new paths,
that the
gift of unfading beauty
may
reach every man and woman.
Virgin
of listening and contemplation,
Mother
of love, Bride of the eternal wedding feast,
pray for
the Church, whose pure icon you are,
that she
may never be closed in on herself
or lose
her passion for establishing God’s kingdom.
Star of
the new evangelization,
help us
to bear radiant witness to communion,
service,
ardent and generous faith,
justice
and love of the poor,
that the
joy of the Gospel
may
reach to the ends of the earth,
illuminating
even the fringes of our world.
Mother
of the living Gospel,
wellspring
of happiness for God’s little ones,
pray for
us.
Amen.
Alleluia!
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