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Mary Magnifies the Lord (Catholic/Orthodox Caucus)
http://www.therealpresence.org/archives/Mariology/Mariology_037.htm ^ | Unknown | Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J.

Posted on 05/13/2008 12:16:05 PM PDT by stfassisi

Mary Magnifies the Lord by Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J.

Prayerful reflection on Mary’s Magnificat is always in order. It is the longest discourse we have recorded of the contents of Mary’s heart. Totally inspired, it is the perfect prayer of humility. It is a sublime prayer of humble adoration. The Magnificat has been a part of the Church’s liturgy since the first century. Ancient monks and hermits recited it daily and it might well be said to be The Prayer of Religious.

As all the Church Father and the great biblical masters of the ages have affirmed, there are four parts to the Magnificat, each with its own revealing theme. In the first part, Mary expresses her gratitude to God. In the second, she praises God for His power, His holiness and His mercy. In the third, she compares how differently God deals with the proud and the humble. And in the fourth, she recalls that all the ancient prophecies to the Jews are now being fulfilled in the Messiah, who was already then in her womb.

We begin with the gratitude of Mary. “My soul magnifies the Lord.” This is another way of saying, “My soul praises, honors, adores and admires the Lord.” Always the stress is on the Lord. What a contrast between Mary’s attitude and that of so many people over the centuries, including today. Think of al the praise and honor, medals and statues honoring human beings who sadly often deserve blame, even condemnation, rather than praise. Think of the heroes we have studied about – the great heroes whose exploits we had to memorize. There have been men who have destroyed who races of people to achieve their ambitions. We all remember Napoleon, but how many of us remember the Pope he forced into exile? How strange that we should be so ready to praise human beings and so slow to praise God Who deserves our every consideration.

Faith tells us that the prayer of praise and or adoration is the first and most important form of prayer we can offer to God. Indeed, unless this form of prayer is at least implicit, we are not even praying, because when we praise (or as Mary says, when we “magnify” God), what are we doing? We are acknowledging God for who He is and by contrast, admitting what we are. “How great thou art, O Lord, how great thou art!” And by contrast, how little and trifling is everything and everyone else.

And then Mary adds, “And my spirit rejoices in God my Savior.” Joy follows praise. God wants us to be happy. He wants us to rejoice in Him, but to rejoice in doing His Will and not that of the world’s, the devil’s or that of our own human inclinations. It is, indeed, a lie to think that we are happy doing our own wills. Such thinking was not only born in hell, but hell was born because of that declaration. That is how hell came into being. There is only one real joy on earth and that is to live in Him, for Him and with Him, our dearest Lord.

Mary had a very clear idea of who she was – she was the Mother of the Messiah. If she needed to be told (and she didn’t really), Elizabeth had just told her she was the mother of the Lord who had made her. Mary also had no doubt by whose favor she was thus blessed. Compare the two phrases “lowliness of His handmaid” and “He who is might has done great things for me.” God the Almighty did great things for Mary precisely because in her own estimation she was only the lowly servant of the Lord. This is all that God asks of us; to tell Him, “You alone are mighty and I, except for you, are nothing.” That is the truth. I am indeed just the servant of the Lord.

In the second stanza, Mary tells us about her praise of the Almighty. God does not need our prayers nor do they add to His happiness, but He still wants them. He wants us to recognize Him for what He is. And according to Mary, He is power, He is holiness, and He is mercy.

How is God power? He is power because He can do whatever He wills. Perhaps the clearest and most painfully obvious sign of our being just creatures is the distance, the chasm that separates what we want and what we can do. Not God. He had only to will the world into existence, and it was made. He had only to will our souls into existence, and we were made. We exist only because God wills it. If He withdrew His willing, we would cease to be. In our day, when power is the watchword and the rules of this world put so much fear into people’s hearts, we have to keep our balance. We must tell ourselves, “I am not impressed by human power, nor do I hear what any human being can do to me. The One I adore is also the only One I fear – the Almighty One.” If we have the honesty and humility to acknowledge God’s greatness and our many limitations, we are safe. He alone has the right to tell us what to do, and then we do it. No wonder the saints were so powerful – they had the Almighty Power at their disposal.

How is God holiness? He is holiness because He is the Wholly Other. He alone must be; He alone cannot not be. Everything else, including ourselves, is quite unnecessary. We talk about growing in holiness, but what do we mean? We mean that we are to become more and more like God. And what is it that makes God holy? In the last theological analysis, it is the fact that God is utterly unworldly. He does not need the world and yet there wouldn’t be a world without Him!

When God enlightens us it is always towards unworldliness. Look at what the world respects, what it considers great, what it honors and admires. An unworldly person is not preoccupied with the things of space and time but has his mind and heart on eternity. An unworldly person is not enamored of this world because he knows this world and all its vanity will soon pass away.

How is God’s Mercy? God is mercy because He loves the sinner even as He hates the sin. His mercy is boundless and his kindness toward the weak is fallen and proverbial. Yes, we have sinned often, perhaps deeply, but He still loves us. That word “still” is most consoling. God’s love is greater than my sin. He wants us to become more holy just because we have sinned. We cannot explain that, but we must believe it. He wants our humility to increase as well as our patience and our prayerfulness.

There are many books and magazines that advise us to be so conscious of our sins but rather to think of God’s love. True enough, we can’t think enough of His love for us, but not to think about our sins is nonsense. It is precisely that combination, divine love and our sins, that is the very definition of God’s mercy. That is what mercy is. The Infinite Love of the Trinity from all eternity became divine mercy only when man had sinned and that love could exercise its benevolence, its forgiveness toward the sinner. To live in a real world, we must be constantly counterpoising God’s love with our sinfulness. God’s perfect manifestation of His love is His Mercy shown toward us sinners.

Now, in the third stanza of the Magnifcat, Mary compares the proud person with the humble one. Mary tells us that, “He has scattered the proud.” “He has put down the mighty.” “He has sent the rich away empty.” Compare this with “He has exalted the lowly.” “He has filled the hungry with good things.” Mary goes on telling us these things, but it is really her son, Jesus, Who is in her womb that is speaking to us though the lips of His mother.

God exalts the humble; He humbles the proud. But we often suppose that this reward of the humble and retribution of the proud takes place with regularity in this life. That is not so. Sadly, but obviously, the proud grow prouder day by day. They, the proud, are exalted. Who makes the headlines? Who is honored and praised in this world, and who is ignored? But no matter how long a human life may be, it is very short compared to eternity. That is why faith in heaven and hell is so strengthened as we recite the Magnificat prayer and are assured by Jesus, speaking through His mother, of what God eventually always does. Heaven is the glorification of humility, and hell is the humiliation of pride. Remember heaven and hell are both real!

Finally, Mary tells us that God keeps His promises. Reread the Old Testament. It tells of one disloyalty after another as the Jewish people refuse to live up to their covenant with Yahweh. Their constant relapsing into idolatry, their resistance to God’s commands. Reread Jeremiah. What he calls the Jewish people is almost unprintable. And yet, after all their infidelity and disloyalty, after having murdered His prophets, ignored His laws and resisted His Will, there is nevertheless a covenant between Yahweh and His people. They had failed Him, but as Mary reminds us, God does not fail.

How we need God’s reassurance. In spite of all of our past infidelities, God will not abandon us. God is a faithful God. He asks us not to become discouraged.

Mother of Jesus, Mother of us, teach us your quiet peacefulness and childlike confidence in your Son. Help us to trust Him, especially when things go wrong. Help us to believe in Him as you did, that the promises He makes to us He will always fulfill. Keep us from worry and sadness, Mother, so that we may always rejoice like you in God your Savior and mind, your beloved Son and my dearest Lord.

The same loving peace and security that filled Mary’s heart with confidence on her Annunciation day, a lifetime ago, now rests in her saddened heart on Calvary’s height. Jesus’ last earthly words to her have just been said. His head is bowed, His eyes are closed, mankind’s Redemption has been accomplished. She holds her dead Son in her maternal embrace.


TOPICS: Catholic
KEYWORDS:
God exalts the humble; He humbles the proud. But we often suppose that this reward of the humble and retribution of the proud takes place with regularity in this life. That is not so. Sadly, but obviously, the proud grow prouder day by day. They, the proud, are exalted. Who makes the headlines? Who is honored and praised in this world, and who is ignored? But no matter how long a human life may be, it is very short compared to eternity. That is why faith in heaven and hell is so strengthened as we recite the Magnificat prayer and are assured by Jesus, speaking through His mother, of what God eventually always does. Heaven is the glorification of humility, and hell is the humiliation of pride. Remember heaven and hell are both real!
1 posted on 05/13/2008 12:16:06 PM PDT by stfassisi
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To: stfassisi

Beatiful meditation. And appropriate for May 13th, tha anniversary of Our Lady of Fatima and also the
Feast of Our Lady of the Blessed Sacrament.

Fr. John Hardon will one day be a canonized saint, I think.

Ave Maria!


2 posted on 05/13/2008 12:25:58 PM PDT by magdalen
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To: AveMaria1; Friar Roderic Mary; fr maximilian mary; Kolokotronis; Carolina; sandyeggo; Salvation; ...

Ping!


3 posted on 05/13/2008 12:27:35 PM PDT by stfassisi ( ("Above all gifts that Christ gives his beloved is that of overcoming self"-St Francis Assisi))
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To: stfassisi

Amen!


4 posted on 05/13/2008 12:31:45 PM PDT by tiki (True Christians will not deliberately slander or misrepresent others or their beliefs)
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To: stfassisi

I’m asking this question in all due respect. It is not meant to be demeaning in any way. I am not Catholic and was just curious .....

My question: Why is Mary more venerated than Jesus? (or seems to be)

(totally from my perspective of what I read and see)

Respectfully, Jane


5 posted on 05/13/2008 12:32:37 PM PDT by SkyDancer ("I Believe In The Law Until It Interferes With Justice")
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To: SkyDancer

She is not, but Mary, as the mother of Jesus, is a very blessed figure in our faith.


6 posted on 05/13/2008 12:44:05 PM PDT by RexBeach
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To: SkyDancer

“Why is Mary more venerated than Jesus? (or seems to be)

(totally from my perspective of what I read and see)”

I don’t think that is the case, although it may appear so to the eys of non-Catholics. Most Protestants have a different view of Saints than do Catholics. A lot of Protestants have their entire religious focus centered on Christ. Having this perspective probably impacts the way they view Catholic veneration of Mary and the Saints.


7 posted on 05/13/2008 12:47:45 PM PDT by ZULU (Non nobis, non nobis Domine, sed nomini tuo da gloriam. God, guts and guns made America great.)
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To: SkyDancer

I encourage you to ask some Catholic FReepers in your area what are some good Parishes and attend a Mass. While it may seem like we focus a lot on Mary and the rest of the Saints, I think you probably have a skewed view of it, since most Protestants pay them no attention whatsoever. Mass is all about Christ - He is there, in true Flesh and Blood!


8 posted on 05/13/2008 12:55:11 PM PDT by thefrankbaum (Ad maiorem Dei gloriam)
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To: stfassisi

Amen! What a wonderful Mother to us all.


9 posted on 05/13/2008 12:58:20 PM PDT by OpusatFR (Internet Torquemada of FR. Trip over yourself at your own risk.)
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To: stfassisi

Why is this in breaking news?


10 posted on 05/13/2008 1:02:28 PM PDT by steel_resolve (We are living in the post-rational world where being a moron is an asset)
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To: SkyDancer
Why is Mary more venerated than Jesus?

Because there is a difference between adoration and veneration. If what you are doing is just venerating Jesus then it's not enough. God is to be adored, completely and wholeheartedly, and He alone. Catholics worship God alone. We honor or venerate the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Saints. Their lives of heroic virtue and exemplary holiness are meant for our joy, hope, and encouragement. Honoring the Saints in no way detracts from God's glory...their honor is reflected glory.

Furthermore, all the Saints point toward God. We know that their lives are masterpieces of the Holy Spirit (as Pope Benedict likes to refer to the Saints). What God through the Holy Spirit does in their lives he desires for our own ordinary lives. The saints witness to the transformative power of God in their lives, in other words, the beauty of holiness and the holiness of beauty....what we are all called to live. In times of my own failure, I can look at the lives of the Saints and know that their perseverence was the grace of God in their lives. All I have to do is to ask for that same grace. (I do not have because I do not ask)

11 posted on 05/13/2008 2:03:53 PM PDT by Carolina
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To: Carolina

Nice post and thanks - greatly appreciated. I guess my problem the way I see it is all the various focusing on saints and Mary. I’m what’s called a Messianic Jew in that we believe that Jesus is the Son of G-d and to him only do we worship. All that G-d could mean to us is summed up in His Son Jesus - His love is G-d’s love, His anger (throwing out the money changers) is G-d’s anger (I will repay says G-d) ... anything else is just frosting on the cake ... we already have redemption through Jesus on a personal level...

I am grateful to all you who have replied. Thanks.

Regards,
Jane


12 posted on 05/13/2008 2:18:03 PM PDT by SkyDancer ("I Believe In The Law Until It Interferes With Justice")
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To: SkyDancer
I guess my problem the way I see it is all the various focusing on saints and Mary.

Think of the Saints as signposts on our pilgrimage to God. That we have a particular devotion to a Saint is partly due to how that Saint overcame a circumstances similar to what we're struggling with at the moment.

For mothers, especially those with children who are suffering, meditating on Virgin Mary's obedience and surrender to God's will strengthens us in our time of trial. We can ask for her intercessions because we know that God endowed her with special grace to suffer along with Christ at the foot of the Cross. It is God who is the source of our strength, but the knowledge of the Saints in heaven praying for us gives us hope now.

Some may say that dead people can't hear so Saints can't hear our pleas. The Saints are more alive than we are here on earth by virtue of the fact that they are beholding God face-to-face. We see darkly here. They are now in the resplendent light of Truth. We are not severed from the Saints because we belong to the One Body of Christ. It is not irrational to believe that they hear our petitions through the Holy Spirit who probes each man's thoughts and heart. Our unity in the Holy Spirit has a practical side. Thank the Lord for that! God bless, SkyDancer.

13 posted on 05/13/2008 2:49:32 PM PDT by Carolina
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To: SkyDancer
Why is Mary more venerated than Jesus?

She is not. Not even close.

(or seems to be)... (totally from my perspective of what I read and see)

That would be a problem with some folks perception ... as you acknowledge.

14 posted on 05/13/2008 3:12:58 PM PDT by ArrogantBustard (Western Civilization is Aborting, Buggering, and Contracepting itself out of existence.)
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To: Carolina; SkyDancer

Carolina’s post is much better than mine.


15 posted on 05/13/2008 3:13:47 PM PDT by ArrogantBustard (Western Civilization is Aborting, Buggering, and Contracepting itself out of existence.)
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Comment #16 Removed by Moderator

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