The
Catholic preacher, Fr. John Corapi, once began a homily on the Blessed Virgin
Mary asking the question: "If you could have created your own mother,
would you not have made her perfect in every way?"
God
chose Mary among all the women who ever lived to be the mother of his Son,
Jesus. From the moment she was conceived, God kept her free from the stain of
sin. He sustained her with his grace throughout her life and formed in her a
heart open to his will. When the angel Gabriel appeared to her, she said
"yes" to God's plan for her because God had been preparing her all
along for the great mission she would undertake. She would be the Mother of
God.
The
Son of God did have the opportunity to create his own mother. And he made her
perfect in every way.
When
we call Mary the "Mother of God" it can be confusing for some. Some
people take it to mean that Mary is greater than God or that God would not have
existed without Mary the way we could not have existed without our mothers. But
nothing could be further from the truth. Mary was a human being created by God
just as all of us were. When we call Mary "Mother of God" we are not
so much saying something about her but something about her child, Jesus.
Jesus
is the Son of God. Because he is God, he is the Creator of all things and has
always existed throughout eternity. It is this Son of God who is conceived in
Mary's womb through the power of the Holy Spirit. This child born of the Virgin
Mary is both fully God and fully human. Because Jesus is God and Mary is his
mother, Mary can rightly be called the "Mother of God."
In
the same homily, Father Corapi went on to say: "If Mary is good enough for
Jesus, then she is good enough for me!"
When
we call Mary, "Mother of God", we are also making an act of faith in
who we are as baptized followers of Jesus. At our baptism we each became
members of the Church and, by the power of the Holy Spirit, were made daughters
and sons of God. This is what Saint Paul teaches us in today's second reading
from the letter to the Galatians: "...God sent his Son, born of a
woman...so that we might receive adoption as sons."
If
by Jesus' death and resurrection we can dare to call ourselves sons and
daughters of God, then Mary must also be our mother! God's plan for Mary did
not end with Jesus' birth. Rather God in his mercy and generosity willed that
Mary should also be the Mother of the Church, the Mother of all believers.
While
he was dying on the cross, Jesus turned to his beloved disciple, Saint John and
told him, "Behold your mother." It has always been understood that
Jesus was not only entrusting his mother to the care of his disciple, but
entrusting all believers to the care of his mother. And from her place in
heaven, she continues to pray for all the faithful that we receive every
possible grace from her Son. Just as we would turn to our own mothers in our
time of need, we can turn to our heavenly mother, Mary, with confidence that
she will bring our prayers to her Son for us.
The
act of faith we make today, then, is that Jesus is the eternal Son of the
Father and that Mary is his Mother. Furthermore, the Holy Spirit we received at
our baptism and confirmation teaches us that we are also sons and daughters of
God. If so, then Mary is also our mother.
It
is traditional at the beginning of a new year to set goals and make
resolutions. It is no coincidence that, as a Church, we dedicate this first day
of the year to Mary, the Mother of God. Following her example, our firmest
resolution for the coming months should be to seek out God's will for us and to
put it in practice. As individuals and as a parish community, I would like all
of us to consecrate this coming year to Mary, the Mother of God. Whatever it is
we hope to accomplish, whatever it is we want to change in our lives, we can
count on the Mother of Jesus to keep our prayers in her heart and to present
them to her Son for us. If our resolutions are not in keeping with God's will,
we may stick to them for a few weeks or months, but we will eventually fail.
However, if we seek God's will with Mary to both inspire us and pray for us, we
can rest assured that we can conquer any difficulty in the strength provided by
her Son, Jesus.
So
I would ask all of us to bring to mind those resolutions right now. In our
hearts, let us offer them to Mary so that she may pray for us this year.
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