Tuesday, September 25, 2018
Scripture Reflection for September 25, 2018
The mother of Jesus and his brothers came to him but were unable to join him because of the crowd. He was told, "Your mother and your brothers are standing outside and they wish to see you."
He said to them in reply, "My mother and my brothers
are those who hear the word of God and act on it." (Luke 8:19-21)
I’ve actually heard this Gospel passage for today's Mass used to denigrate Marian devotion. So sad, as the president might say. It wouldn't have been quite so bad if the culprit wasn't a vowed religious teaching a classroom full of undergrads in a Catholic college (I'll save that tirade for another time). The point of this passage isn't that Mary was somehow estranged from or even hostile toward her Son and his mission (as the professor argued) but that blood relationship alone doesn't connect us to the Lord or warrant us privilege. It is the faith that we put into practice that makes us truly a part of Christ's family.
In this spirit we venerate the Blessed Mother more for her faith than for her physical relation to her Son. That she is Jesus’ mother isn’t insignificant, but we know that being a biological parent isn’t a guarantee of parental love. There are parents who abandon their children. There are parents who abuse or neglect their children. There are parents who snuff out the life of their child before he or she is even born. So while Mary being the mother of the Savior is important, we know on an instinctual level that it isn’t enough to give her honor, as we do.
We are devoted to her because she heard the word of God and acted it out. I should say, she acts it out, since she is still active in her Son’s service to this day. She said yes to the Father’s invitation to be bear the Son of God. She prompted Jesus to reveal himself in the first of His signs at Cana. She stood by at the cross, suffering a spiritual crucifixion, when so many others had abandoned Him. She was present at the beginning of the Church at Pentecost, receiving the outpouring of the Spirit. She continues to be a prophetess by way of her apparitions.
We honor her for her faith. In saying yes to the angel who delivered God's call to be mother of the Messiah, she was risking, not only her reputation, but her very life, since she would have been accused of adultery, which carried with it a punishment of stoning. She suffered physically and materially when she had to travel late in her pregnancy from Nazareth to Bethlehem, then after His birth during the flight to Egypt to escape Herod. She had faith that her Son was truly the Son of God, so she didn't fear to prod Jesus at Cana to reveal Himself in the first of His signs. She continues to point Jesus out, delivering his message of repentance and mercy when she appears in places like Guadalupe, Lourdes and Fatima.
Succeeding generations continue to call her blessed because of her faith. When we live out our own call from God faithfully we are imitating Mary. When we venerate her, call her blessed, we are fulfilling the prophesy contained in Luke's Gospel. We do not contradict the Word of God, but putting the Word very clearly into action.
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