Mary is One of Us
We must start with the fact that Mary was one of us, fully human. As Charles Dickens says in the opening lines of A Christmas Carol: “This must be distinctly understood, or nothing wonderful can come of the story I am going to relate.” Just as Marley’s death is an essential element in Dickens’ tale, the Incarnation’s meaning for mankind is directly connected to the Blessed Mother’s humanity. After all, if Christ isn’t born of a human woman, He’s not fully human himself. How else can He die and redeem humankind? Mary is the guarantor that Jesus, although truly God, is truly one of us.
We celebrate that wonderful yet confounding reality today. The World knows today, the Eighth Day of Christmas, as New Year’s Day. Merry Christmas, by the Way! In the Church today is the Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God, the final day in the Octave of Christmas. The secular observance celebrates no more than another turning of a calendar page, but in the Church we look at time with an eye on eternity. The Nativity of Christ turns around all of human history. That’s why we eventually adopted the BC/AD arrangement of the centuries with its mirror-image numbering of years. The Nativity is at the center of time. Jesus’s mother, Mary, plays an essential part in that unique and astonishing event.
Jesus is One of Us . . . and God
Both truly God, and truly one of us. It’s hard for us to reconcile both of those things in our finite minds, but both must be true if Christianity is true. At the same time, the title “Mother of God” is alarming. Some people claim that it seems to say that a mortal woman has brought God into existence, but it doesn’t really mean that at all. After all, we don’t think that ordinary mothers actually create their ordinary human babies, body and soul.
Mothers and Fathers are agents in a larger process, and the soul, of course, comes from God. The original Greek term Theotokos, literally “God-bearer,” while a little less difficult, still challenges us. It tells us that, just as the original Arc of the Covenant carried Manna from Heaven, along with Tablets of the Decalogue and Aaron’s staff, Mary carried the Second Person of the Trinity in her womb. We therefore call her the Arc of the New Covenant (see also Revelation 11:19-12:1).
But the first Arc was merely a container, it contributed nothing to its contents. Even before anyone knew anything of genetics, however, it would have been obvious that, in some way, Jesus’s fleshly body owed something, at least, to his mother. In his face, the color of his eyes, the shape of his nose, or some other physical feature, the familial relationship would be manifest. Through the Motherhood of Mary, Jesus, that is to say God, takes on our humanity in an utterly tangible, direct, and personal way.
An Invitation
The Motherhood of Mary, like the Incarnation itself, is a mystery. It is something that we can really understand (although never fully understand) only through experience. As the last day in the Octave of Christmas, The Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God is an invitation. it invites us look not only at the Child lying in the manger, but to start looking further at what that Child means for us as men and women.
O God,
Who through the fruitful virginity
of Blessed Mary
Bestowed on the Human race the grace of
eternal salvation,
Grant, we pray, that we may experience the
intercession of her,
Through whom we were found worthy to
receive the author of life,
Our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son.
Who lives and reigns with You in the unity of
the Holy Spirit,
One God, for ever and ever. -Amen
Featured image top of page: detail from Madonna of the Streets, by Roberto Ferruzzi, 1897
Music for Christmas and the Solemnity of Mary:
The Bach-Gounod Ave Maria by Judit V. Molnar
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