Assumption
of the Blessed Virgin Mary
In 1950 when the world was
still recovering from the ravages of the Second World War, Pope Pius XII
promulgated the doctrine of the Assumption of Mary into Heaven. Now Catholics
didn't start believing in the Assumption only in 1950. Think of how many
churches were constructed before 1950 dedicated to Our Lady of the Assumption.
Belief in Mary's Assumption can be found in the writings of the early Church
Fathers and for centuries artists have delighted in rendering the scene of Mary
being taken up into Heaven.
Of course, Catholics have
always loved images of Mary. In the first reading from the Mass of the
Assumption, we have the famous image from the Book of Revelation of "the
woman clothed with the sun" who was about to give birth to a son,
"destined to rule all the nations." In tthe gospel of the day we have
St. Luke's account of the Visitation. Almost immediately after the Annunciation,
Mary embarks on a journey to visit her cousin, Elizabeth, who is herself
expecting. Artists have loved to portray this tender scene of the meeting of
the two women. The young Mary, barely pregnant, greets her elder cousin whose
pregnancy is well advanced.
St. Luke is the only
evangelist to describe this meeting but, of course, he wasn't present. How did
he get his information? It's possible that he was merely relating an earlier
oral tradition and giving us an account of what the early Church believed Mary
would have said on this occasion. Perhaps he talked with the Blessed Mother
herself after the death and resurrection of her Son. In that event, this
passage would represent her profound recollection of the Visitation in the
light of everything that came after.
Nevertheless, what image does
St. Luke give us of Mary? We certainly can't take from his account that Mary
was a bewildered, frightened teenager. The very name, Mary or Miriam, means
"the exalted one." Scholars tell us that the expression "leaped
for joy" is only used in the Bible when one is in the presence of the
Almighty, such as the time King David danced in front of the Ark of the
Covenant. Elizabeth's greeting,
Blessed are you among women,
and blessed is the fruit of your womb...
which we repeat every day in
the "Hail Mary," proclaims that from Mary will come the Savior of the
world.
The beautiful prayer of Mary
which we call the Magnificat is a collection of verses from many sources in the
Hebrew scriptures, especially the Psalms, those beautiful hymns of praise. We
all know the beginning,
My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord;
my spirit rejoices in God my Savior
for he has looked upon his lowly servant.
From this day all generations will call me blessed:
This is the song of a great
Queen who has accepted a great mission.
In artistic renderings of the
Immaculate Conception Mary is portrayed as the woman clothed with the Sun, with
the Moon at her feet, and stars in her crown. Her dress is white but she is
covered with a blue mantle. Ordinarily, she is pictured with a red dress
covered with the blue mantle. Now "red" is the symbol of earth or
humanity but "blue" is the symbol of divinity. The artists follow the
teaching of the Church. Mary is human but she has been cloaked with
immortality. In the vigil Mass for today's feast, the words of St. Paul apply
not only to Mary but to any who put on the mantle of her Son.
When that which is mortal clothes itself with
immortality,
then the word that is written shall come about:
'Death is swallowed up in victory.
Where, O death, is your victory?
Where, O death, is your sting?
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