Seeing how God uses creatures and creation to come to us
01/01/2025
Luke 2:16-21 The shepherds
went in haste to Bethlehem and found Mary and Joseph, and the infant lying in
the manger. When they saw this, they made known the message that had been told
them about this child. All who heard it were amazed by what had been told them
by the shepherds. And Mary kept all these things, reflecting on them in her
heart. Then the shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God for all they
had heard and seen, just as it had been told to them. When eight days were
completed for his circumcision, he was named Jesus, the name given him by the
angel before he was conceived in the womb.
I came across this meme on social
media last week that gets to the heart of today’s solemnity called "Mary,
the Mother of God." And before I share it, let me apologize for its
polemical tone. It sounds a little argumentative. But my purpose is not to
criticize our Protestant brothers and sisters, but rather, I only want to
comprehend better what we Catholics believe.
The meme stated this: “Protestants
have a problem when Catholics go to Jesus through Mary. They claim we should go
directly to Him. Now, we can go directly to Jesus, and we don’t negate that.
What they do not realize is that God did not come directly to us. He chose to
come to us through Mary. His ways are better than our ways.”
Can you hear the implicit polemic?
But we Catholics should not be trying to “one-up” the Protestants. Nonetheless,
the meme does state something very true, namely, God always uses go-betweens
when he deals with us human beings. In the Old Testament, God sent the angels,
or the prophets, and in the New Testament he comes through his own Mother, the
Blessed Virgin Mary.
Look at it this way. Even the human
flesh that Jesus took for his human nature came from Mary, his mother. Jesus
did not manufacture his human nature out of thin air, but out of a woman. Now,
no doubt Jesus was fully masculine, still I cannot help but think he had his
mother’s eyes, or perhaps his mother’s smile, or maybe his mother’s habits of
prayer, like we hear in the gospel today: “Mary kept all these things,
reflecting on them in her heart.” Jesus often spent the whole night in profound
prayer.
Archbishop Fulton Sheen wrote in
his masterful book, “The Life of Christ,” these insightful lines: “When the
Divine Child was conceived, Mary’s humanity gave Him hands and feet, eyes and
ears, and a body with which to suffer” (p. 24). By the way, the first occasion
when Jesus would shed his precious Blood was not on Good Friday, but today, 8
days after his birth, when he was circumcised, which we also heard in today’s
gospel.
In other words, the Jewish ritual
of circumcision at the hands of a Jewish priest was sort of a preview of coming
attractions, namely, when 33 years later other Jewish priests would incite the
crowds on Good Friday to chant, “Crucify him! Crucify him!” The same body Jesus
received from Mary that first suffered under the knife of circumcision was
later was thrust through with a lance hanging limp on the Cross.
You see, the Second Person of the
Holy Trinity could have come down in all the splendor and majesty of his
eternal Godhead and snapped his divine fingers to save us, but he didn’t do
that. He came to us through Mary. And in this respect, nothing has changed in
the last 2,000 years. God continues to come to us through his creation and his
creatures.
For example, in the Eucharist,
Jesus comes in the disguise of Bread and Wine. He borrows the lips of silly and
sinful priests to utter the words of consecration so that every altar becomes a
new Bethlehem. The Son of God is born again to save us, not as a Baby but as
Bread.
And what is the Holy Bible itself
if not another go-between for God to come to us? In fact, the Bible closely
parallels Mother Mary. Protestants revere the Bible like Catholics revere Mary.
Protestants don't worship the Bible, and Catholics do not worship Mary.
Protestants believe the Bible is inerrant (without errors), likewise Catholics
believe Mary is without sin (without moral errors).
Protestants carry their Bibles
everywhere they go, like we Catholics carry Mary’s rosary. In other words, both
are simply God’s go-betweens, because that is how God invariably prefers to
come to us and save us. Protestants and Catholics have a lot more in common
than we think.
Today on January 1st, we stand on
the threshold of a new year, indeed, a Jubilee Year, because it occurs every 25
years like an anniversary. And like her Son, Jesus, we too should learn Mary’s
habits of prayer and “reflect on these things in our hearts.” Reflect on what
things? Well, reflect on how God comes to save us.
Perhaps that would be a perfect New
Year’s resolution: take time for prayer and ponder how God loves to use
go-betweens in his work of salvation. Heck, maybe in 2025 God wants to use YOU
as his go-between to save others. All you have to do is say like Mary, “Fiat
mihi secundum verbum tuum” (be it done to me according to your word), and you
too can become a God-bearer.
Praised be Jesus
Christ!