CHAPTERS
- Preliminaries
- Eternal Plans
- Prophetic Plan
- Sinai Covenant
- Immaculate Conception
- Realisation of the Eternal Plan
- Perpetual virginity
- Divine Motherhood
- The Temple Presentation
- The Finding in the Temple
- Difficulties for Mary's faith
- Start of His Public Life
- Cooperation in Redemption
- Mediatrix of All Graces
- At the First Pentecost
- Mother of the Church
- Assumption
- Queenship
- Consortium
- Mary and Vatican II
- Revelation 12
- Some Marian Devotions
- To Imitate Her Virtues
- Marian Consecration
- Infused Contemplation
- Our Lady in Heaven
- Private Revelations
- Appendix: Discernment of Spirits
- Supplement: Appearances and revelation
- Study Questions
- Answers To Study Questions
Books/Resources by Fr. Most
- EWTN Scripture Q & A
- Basic Scripture
- Bible Commentaries
- Our Lady in Doctrine And Devotion
- Outline of Christology
- An Introduction to Christian Philosophy
- The Living God
- The Holy Spirit and The Church
- Catholic Apologetics Notes
Apologetic Resources
- Ask Father
- Biblical Catholicism
- Theology/Philosophy
- Scripture Resources
- Scott Hahns Lectures
- Apologetics Links
Other Services
- Catholic Chaplaincy
- St. Anthony Communications
|
CHAPTER XII. Cooperation in the Objective Redemption
a)Terminology:
The objective redemption is the once-for-all acquisition by the sacrifice
of Calvary of the claim to all grace and forgiveness. The subjective
redemption is the giving out of that grace and forgiveness throughout all
ages after Calvary.
Remote cooperation in the objective redemption is being the Mother of the
Redeemer, in faith and obedience furnishing Him with the flesh and blood in
which He could die. Immediate cooperation is some role in the sacrifice of
Calvary. A further question: just how did that cooperation operate? What
was the nature of that role?
b)How did the Redemption operate?:
Of course, Jesus redeemed us by His death. But we must go deeper, and ask
in what way His death accomplished that.
1)Scriptural data:
Mt 20. 28: "The Son of Man... came to give His life as a ransom for many."
(Mt. 10. 45 is the same).
Gal. 3. 13: "Christ has bought us back from the curse of the law, by
becoming a curse for us." (Cf. also Gal 4. 5).
1 Cor. 6. 20 (cf. 7. 23):"You were bought at a price."
COMMENT:
The question had to arise: to whom was the price or ransom paid? It would
seem at first sight that it was paid to the one who held our race in
captivity, to satan. St. Ambrose, in Epistle 72 went so far as to accept
that. Most Fathers and later writers recoiled from that. Yet the idea
that sin was a debt was very ancient. It is found for example in the Our
Father: "Forgive us our debts"
2)Patristic texts:
St. Athanasius probably was not original in the matter, but he does tell us
of four possible answers: (1) Substitution: "He takes to Himself a body
capable of death that it, by partaking of the Lord who is above all, might
be worthy to die instead of all... . All being considered to have died in
Him. [Cf. 2 Cor 5. 14]." (On the Incarnation 9). (2) Blunting or absorbing
the impact of a force. He died so that "the law involving the ruin of men
might be undone, inasmuch as its power was fully spent in the Lord's body."
(On the Incarnation 8). (3)Physical-mystical solidarity: "Such a union was
made so He might join what was by nature divine with what was by nature
human, so (human) salvation and divinization might be secure." (Second
Oration Against the Arians 70). The notion is that all humanity forms a
unit, a solidarity. But the humanity of Christ is part of that solidarity.
Further, in Him that nature is joined in one Person to the divinity. So a
power spreads out from the divinity through His humanity to all humanity to
heal it. (4) Payment of a debt: "The Word of God... by offering His own
temple and corporeal instrument for the life of all, satisfied the debt by
His death." (On the Incarnation 9).
St. Anselm (1033 - 1109) in Cur Deus homo? following up on the debt idea,
said that man was created for obedience, service, devotion to God. By sin
he evaded it. So God had to demand satisfaction in justice. Hence the
Incarnation, the means of satisfying the debt.
COMMENT:
Many have been displeased with the Anselmian theory. First, God does not
have to do anything. Second, people could say: If someone offends me, I
often just let it go. Why cannot God be so kind?
3)Further development on sin as a debt: However, the notion of sin as a
debt to be paid is found in the OT, in intertestamental literature (where
Hebrew hobah is often used to mean sin, while its basic sense is debt. It
is found in the NT. It is found widely in rabbinic literature. (cf.
Appendix, Sedaqah to Wm. Most, St. Paul commentary)
Pope Paul VI, in Indulgentiarum doctrina, Jan 9, 1967. AAS 59. 7, wrote:
"Every sin brings with it a disturbance of the universal order, which God
arranged in His inexpressible wisdom and infinite love... So it is
necessary for the full remission and reparation of sins... not only that
friendship with God be restored by a sincere conversion of heart, and that
the offense against His wisdom and goodness be expiated, but also that all
the goods, both individual and social, and those that belong to the
universal order, lessened or destroyed by sin, be fully reestablished,
either through voluntary reparation... or through the suffering of
penalties."
The same thought is brought out well in the image of a two-pan scales by
Rabbi Simeon ben Eleazar, in Tosefta, Kiddushin 1. 14. He wrote c 170 AD,
and says he is quoting Rabbi Meir, a disciple of the great Rabbi Akiba:
"Someone has carried out one commandment. Blessings [on him]. He has tipped
the scales to the side of merit for himself and for the world. Someone has
committed a transgression. Woe [to him]. He has tipped the scales to the
side of debt for himself and for the world."
A sinner takes from one pan of the scale what he has no right to. The scale
is out of balance. The holiness of God wants everything morally right, and
so wants it rebalanced. If the sinner stole property, he begins to
rebalance by giving it back. If he stole a pleasure, he begins to rebalance
by giving up some other pleasure he could have lawfully had. But in either
case, he only begins - for the imbalance from even one mortal sin is
infinite. Hence if the Father wanted full reparation - he was not obliged -
the only way to accomplish it would be to send a Divine Person to become
man.
So there is a price of redemption, not paid of course to satan, nor to the
Father (He was not the captor) but to the objective order, to rebalance it,
as willed by the holiness of God. This price is the sacrificial death of
Christ, done in obedience: cf. Romans 5. 19 and LG 3. Another aspect is
that of covenant, as foretold by Jeremiah 31. 31ff. The obedient death of
Christ was the covenant condition. Without obedience it would have been a
tragedy, not a redemption. We note the threefold aspect: covenant,
sacrifice, payment of debt or rebalance of objective order.
A sinner, as we said, takes from one pan what he has no right to take.
Jesus in His painful death gave back more than all sinners have taken. And
the infinity of His Person would have made even a slight thing from Him
infinitely valuable. His Mother too, completely sinless, joined in that
rebalance as we shall see. (The infinity of His offering does not dispense
us, His members, from doing what we can. St. Paul makes clear that we are
saved and made holy if and to the extent that we are not only members of
Christ, but also like Him. That likeness of course must include this
sharing in rebalancing. St. Paul says we are members of Christ: 1 Cor 12.
12-27. We must do all with Him: Rom 6. 3-8; 8. 18; Col 3. 1-4. We must be
like Him: Rom 8. 9, 13 & 17. What we can call merit is really our getting
on the claim generated by Christ, by being His members and being like Him.)
4)Patristic teaching on the New Eve: The use of the New Eve theme begins
with St. Justin the Martyr, around 150 AD. It is then taken up widely in
the other Fathers. St. Paul had spoken of Christ as the New or Second Adam.
The Fathers teach there was also a New or Second Eve. The thought is this:
Just as the first Eve really contributed to bringing down the damage of
original sin on our race, so the New Eve, Mary , really contributed to
reversing that damage.
a)St. Justin Martyr, ( c. 100-165) Dialogue with Trypho 100: "... we have
understood that He came forth from the Father before all things... and was
made man of the Virgin, so that the disobedience brought on by the serpent
might be canceled out in the same manner in which It had begun. For Eve,
being untouched and a virgin, conceiving the word from the serpent, bought
forth disobedience and death. But Mary the Virgin, having received faith
and joy, when the angel Gabriel announced to her that the spirit of the
Lord would come upon her and the power of the Most High would overshadow
her, so that the Holy One born of her would be the Son of God, answered:
'Be it done to me according to your word.'"
b)St. Irenaeus (c. 120-202) Against Heresies III. 22. 4: "Just as Eve...
being disobedient, because a cause of death for herself and the whole human
race, so Mary... being obedient, became a cause of salvation for herself
and the whole human race... . for in no other way can that which is tied be
untied unless the very windings of the knot are gone through in reverse: so
that the first joints are loosed through the second, and the second in turn
free the first... . Thus, then, the knot of the disobedience of Eve was
untied through the obedience of Mary." V, 19. 1: "Although the one had
disobeyed God, the other was persuaded to obey God, so that the Virgin Mary
became the advocate of the virgin Eve. And just as the human race was bound
over to death through a virgin, so was it saved through a virgin; the scale
was balanced - a virgin's disobedience by a virgin's obedience."
COMMENT:
We notice the words about balancing the scales - of the objective order.
We note too that Vatican II, LG 56 cited most of the first of the above
texts, and put stress on obedience in 56 and 61. Also, the knot was not
really untied until Calvary was completed -- so the words of St. Irenaeus
objectively imply more than he is likely to have seen (he was speaking of
the annunciation, it seems from context). As a Father of the Church,
Divine Providence could so use him.
c) Tertullian (c 150 -c 240). On the Flesh of Christ 17: "Therefore, since
we are told that the first Adam was from the earth, God fittingly also made
the next, the new Adam, into a life-giving spirit out of the earth - that
is, of a flesh not yet used for generation. And yet, so I may not miss the
opening provided by the name of Adam - why did the Apostle call Him Adam if
Christ as man was not of earthly origin? But here reason also helps to show
that God, by a rival method, restored His image and likeness which had been
captured by the devil. For into Eve when she was yet a virgin had crept the
word that established death; likewise, into a virgin was to be brought the
Word of God that produced life: so that what had gone to ruin by the one
sex might be restored to salvation by the same sex. Eve had believed the
serpent, Mary believed Gabriel. What wrong the one did by her unbelief, the
other destroyed by her belief."
d) St. Cyril of Jerusalem (313-386) Catecheses 12. 15: "Through the virgin
Eve came death. It was necessary that life appear through a virgin, or
rather, of a virgin, so that just as the serpent deceived the one, so
Gabriel brought the good tidings to the other."
e) St. Jerome ( c. 347-419), Epistle 22. 21 [internal quote: Is 9. 6): "But
after the Virgin conceived in her womb and brought forth for us a child for
whom 'the government is upon his shoulder... God the Mighty, the Father of
the world to come, ' the curse was dissolved. Death through Eve; life
through Mary".
f) St. Ambrose (c 333 -397) Epistle 63. 33): "Through a man and a woman
flesh was cast out of paradise; through a virgin it was joined to God." On
the Gospel of Luke 4. 7: "From the virgin earth [came] Adam, Christ [came]
from a virgin; the former was made to the image of God, the latter [was]
the image of God; the former was exalted above all irrational animals, the
latter above all living things. Through a woman [came] folly, through a
virgin [came] wisdom. Death [came] through the tree, life through the
cross."
g) St. Augustine ( 354 - 430):Sermon on Psalm 149. 2: "For He received
flesh from us and offered it. But whence did He receive it? From the womb
of the Virgin Mary, so that He might offer clean flesh for the unclean." On
the Christian Combat 22. 24: "Here also is a great mystery: since death had
come upon us through a woman, life was born for us through a woman, so that
the conquered devil was tormented by both sexes, that is, male and female,
since he had rejoiced in the ruin of both. His punishment would have been
too small if both had been freed and had not been freed through both." On
Holy Virginity 6. 6: "... but certainly she is the Mother of His members,
which we are; for she cooperated in love that the faithful might be born in
the Church." Sermon 289. 2: "Since our original fall took place when a
woman conceived in her heart the poison of the serpent, it is not
surprising that our salvation came when a woman conceived in her womb the
flesh of the Almighty. Both sexes had fallen; both had to be restored.
Through a woman we were sent to ruin; through a woman salvation was
restored to us."
COMMENT:
A more extensive collection of Patristic New Eve texts in English
is found in: T. Livius, The Blessed Virgin in the Fathers of the First Six
Centuries (London, 1893). Other Fathers quoted in Livius are: St.
Theophilus of Antioch, Origen, St. Gregory Thaumaturgus, St. Gregory of
Nyssa, St. Amphilocius, St. Ephrem, St. Epiphanius, St. Maximus, St. John
Chrysostom, St. Peter Chrysologus, St. Proclus, St. Eleutherius
Tornacensis, and the Epistle to Diognetus. Still more texts in Latin are to
be found in Gabriel M. Roschini, Mariologia (2nd ed. Rome, 1947. II, 300-
01, 304-09.
5)Ordinary Magisterium on Mary's Immediate Cooperation in the Objective
Redemption
Preliminary Note:
1: We need to distinguish carefully
between two things: (a) The fact that she cooperated immediately on
Calvary, (b)The manner in which that cooperation worked.
2: Any doctrine proposed repeatedly by the Ordinary Magisterium is rated as
infallible. In fact, Pius XII added in (Humani generis, Dec. 28, 1950. DS
3885): "Nor should one think that the things proposed in Encyclical Letters
do not of themselves call for assent on the plea that in them the Popes do
not exercise the supreme power of their Magisterium. For these things are
taught by the Ordinary Magisterium, to which this also applies: 'He who
hears you hears me. '... But if the Popes in their acta deliberately pass
judgment on a matter controverted up to then, it is clear to all that
according to the mind and will of the same Pontiffs, the question can no
longer be considered open to free discussion among theologians." But: If a
doctrine comes under the promise of Christ "He who hears you hears me" that
doctrine cannot be in error. The reason is that in the case described by
Pius XII, the Pope who can speak for the whole Church, shows clearly the
intention to make a teaching definitive: so it comes under the promise of
Christ which cannot fail.
1. Leo XIII, Encyclical, Iucunda Semper, Sept 8, 1884. ASS 27. 178 "For
when she presented herself to God as a handmaid for the role of Mother, or
when she totally dedicated herself with her Son in the temple, from each of
these facts she was already then a sharer in the laborious expiation for
the human race. Hence we cannot doubt that she greatly grieved in soul in
the most harsh anguishes and torments of her Son. Further, that divine
sacrifice had to be completed with her present and looking on, for which
she had generously nourished the victim from herself. Finally this is more
tearfully observed in the same mysteries: There stood by the Cross of
Jesus, Mary His Mother... of her own accord she offered her Son to the
divine justice, dying with Him in her heart, transfixed with the sword of
sorrow."
2. Leo XIII, Encyclical, Adiutricem populi, Sept. 5, 1895. ASS 28. 130-31:
"For thereafter, by the divine plan, she so began to watch over the Church,
so to be present to us and to favor us as Mother, that she who had been the
minister of accomplishing the mystery of human redemption, would be
likewise the minister of the dispensation of that grace, practically
limitless power being given to her."
3. St. Pius X, Encyclical, Ad diem illum, Feb. 2, 1904, ASS 36. 453-55:
"Hence that never disassociated manner of life and labors of the Son and
the Mother... . But when the final hour of her Son came, His Mother stood
by the cross of Jesus, not just occupied in seeing the dread spectacle, but
actually rejoicing that her Only-Begotten was being offered for the
salvation of the human race... . from this common sharing of sufferings and
will, she merited to become most worthily the reparatrix of the lost world,
and so the dispensatrix of all the gifts which were gained for us by the
death and blood of Jesus... . . She... since she was ahead of all in
holiness and union with Christ, and was taken up by Christ into the work of
human salvation, she merits congruously, as they say, what Christ merited
condignly, and is the chief minister of the dispensation of graces."
4. Benedict XV, Epistle, Inter Sodalicia, May 22, 1918. AAS 10. 182 : "With
her suffering and dying Son she suffered and almost died, so did she
surrender her mother's rights over her Son for the salvation of human
beings, and to appease the justice of God, so far as pertained to her, she
immolated her Son, so that it can be rightly said, that together with
Christ she has redeemed the human race".
5. Pius XI, Apostolic Letter, Explorata res est. Feb. 2, 1923. AAS 15. 104:
"... the sorrowful Virgin shared in the work of redemption with Jesus
Christ... . COMMENT: The word "sorrowful" shows this was a cooperation on
Calvary, not just in the annunciation.
6. Pius XI, Encyclical, Miserentissimus Redemptor, May 8, 1928. AAS 20.
178: "May the kindly Virgin Mother of God be present and smile on these our
prayers and undertakings, who, since she brought forth Jesus the Redeemer,
fed Him, offered Him as a victim at the cross, by her hidden union with
Christ, and an altogether singular grace from Him, was likewise the
Reparatrix, and is devoutly called that."
7. Pius XI, Radiomessage to Lourdes, April 28, 1935. Osservatore Romano,
April 29, 1935: "O Mother of piety and mercy, who as Coredemptrix stood by
your most sweet Son suffering with Him when He consummated the redemption
of the human race on the altar of the cross... preserve in us, we beg, day
by day, the precious fruits of the Redemption and of your compassion."
8. Pius XII, Encyclical On the Mystical Body, June 29, 1943. AAS 35. 247:
"She it was who, as the New Eve, free from every stain of original or
personal sin, always most closely joined with her Son, offered Him to the
Eternal Father on Golgotha together with the holocaust of her motherly
rights and love for all the sons of Adam, defiled by his miserable fall."
9. Pius XII, Radiomessage to Fatima, May 13, 1946, AAS 38. 266: "Jesus is
King of the Eternal Ages by nature and by right of conquest; through Him,
with Him, and subordinate to Him, Mary is Queen by grace, by divine
relationship, by right of conquest, and by singular choice [of the
Father]". COMMENT: The same title "by right of conquest", is given for both
Jesus and Mary. A triple subordination is carefully expressed even though
it would be obvious in itself, therefore there should be no other
reservation thought to be understood. Hence, with subordination, the title
applies in the same way to each.
10. Pius XII, Apostolic Constitution, Munificentissimus Deus, Nov. 1, 1950.
AAS 42. 768: " We must especially remember this, that starting in the
second century, the Virgin Mary is presented by the holy Fathers as the New
Eve, who, although subject to the New Adam, was most closely joined with
Him in that struggle against the infernal enemy, which, as was foretold in
the Protoevangelium [Gen 3:15], was to come to the most full victory over
sin and death, which are always joined together in the writings of the
Apostle of the Gentiles. Hence, just as the glorious resurrection of
Christ was an essential part and final sign of this victory, so that
struggle which was common to the Blessed Virgin with her Son, had to be
closed by the glorification of her virginal body."
COMMENT:
In spite of the fears of some scholars, such as Altaner, that the
Assumption was not in the sources of revelation, the Pope found the
Assumption there in the New Eve theme, and more precisely, in her
cooperation on Calvary, which was most close, to such an extent that the
Pope even could speak of a struggle that was "common to the Blessed Virgin
and her Son".
11. Pius XII, Encyclical, Fulgens corona, Sept. 8, 1953. AAS 45. 583: "...
she was joined with her Only-begotten Son in the struggle against the most
wicked infernal serpent."
12. Pius XII, Encyclical, Ad Caeli Reginam, Oct. 11, 1954. AAS 46. 634-35:
"In accomplishing this work of the redemption, the Most Blessed Virgin Mary
was certainly closely joined with Christ... was associated with Jesus
Christ, the very principle of salvation, by divine plan, and indeed in a
way similar to that in which Eve was associated with Adam, the principle of
death, so that we can say that the work of our salvation was accomplished
according to a certain recapitulation... and if she was joined with her
Son, even on Golgotha, [and] she offered Him, together with the holocaust
of her Mother's rights and love, like a New Eve, for all the sons of Adam,
defiled by his wretched fall, as a result, beyond doubt, it is right to
conclude that just as Christ, the New Adam should be called King not only
because He is the Son of God, but also because He is our Redeemer, so by a
certain analogy, the most Blessed Virgin is Queen, not only because she is
the Mother of God, but also because as the New Eve she was associated with
the New Adam"
COMMENT:
Mary acted in a way parallel to that of Eve, who did not receive a sin
from Adam [as the German Mariology would imply] but in an effective and
active way generated sin. Therefore Mary's work was not active
receptivity, as the Germans assert, but an effective and active
cooperation in generating the title for the Redemption.
13. John XXIII, Radiomessage to the Eucharistic Congress of Italy at
Catana, Sept. 13, 1959. AAS 51. 714: "We trust that they will imitate in
her the most perfect model of union with Jesus, our Head; we trust that
they will join Mary in the offering of the divine Victim... ."
14. John XXIII, Homily for the Canonization of St. Peter Julian Eymard.
Dec. 9, 1962. AAS 65. 10: "Intimately associated in the Redemption in the
eternal plans of the Most High, Our Lady, as Severianus of Gabala sung, is
the mother of salvation, the fountain of light made visible".
15. Vatican II, Constitution on the Church, §58: "So also the Blessed
Virgin advanced in her pilgrimage of faith, and faithfully bore with her
union with her Son even to the cross, where, in accord with the divine
plan, she stood, vehemently grieved with her Only-Begotten, and joined
herself to His Sacrifice with a motherly heart, lovingly consenting to the
immolation of the victim born of her."
§61: "In conceiving Christ, in giving birth to Him, in feeding Him, in
presenting Him to the Father in the Temple, in suffering with her Son as He
died on the cross she cooperated in the work of the Savior in an altogether
singular way, by obedience, faith, hope and burning love, to restore
supernatural life to souls."
COMMENT:
Her cooperation was by way of obedience, which was the covenant
condition, the very thing that gave the sacrifice its value, for without
obedience, it would have been only a tragedy, not a redemption. Hence in §3
of the same constitution: "By His obedience, He brought about redemption.
:" Cf. also Romans 5. 19. She cooperated officially "in accord with the
divine plan" as the New Eve. She was made interiorly apt for this by the
Immaculate Conception. Such a cooperation is clearly active, in generating
the title for redemption.
16. John Paul II. Encyclical, Redemptoris Mater, March 25, 1987. AAS 79.
382. 83. Vatican Press Translation. "How great, how heroic then is the
obedience of faith shown by Mary in the face of God's 'unsearchable
judgments'! How completely she 'abandons herself to God without reserve, '
offering the full assent of the intellect and the will' to Him whose 'ways
are inscrutable... . Through this faith, Mary is perfectly united with
Christ in his self-emptying... . At the foot of the Cross Mary shares
through faith in the shocking mystery of this self-emptying. This is
perhaps the deepest 'kenosis' of faith in human history. Through faith the
Mother shares in the death of her Son, in His redeeming death... . as a
sharing in the sacrifice of Christ - the new Adam - it becomes in a certain
sense the counterpoise to the disobedience and disbelief embodied in the
sin of our first parents. Thus teach the Fathers of the Church and
especially St. Irenaeus, quoted by the Constitution Lumen gentium: 'The
knot of Eve's disobedience was untied by Mary's obedience; what the virgin
Eve bound through her unbelief, the Virgin Mary loosed by her faith. '"
COMMENT:
In his Apostolic Exhortation, Redemptoris Custos, the same Pope
said that in Redemptoris Mater, he intended to deepen the teaching of
Vatican II on Mary's faith. Now since faith involves total adherence of a
person to God, requiring intellectual assent, confidence in promises, and
the "obedience of faith" [Rom 1. 5], and since all spiritual perfection
lies in the alignment of one's will with the will of God, it is clear that
on Calvary her conformity to the will of the Father required that she
positively will the terrible death of her Son. To do that was indeed the
deepest kenosis of faith in all history, for she had to will His death in
spite of her love, which was so great that Pius IX, in Ineffabilis Deus, in
1854, taught that at the very start of her life, her holiness (= love of
God) was so great that "none greater under God can be thought of, and only
God can comprehend it." - The very value of His death depended on His
obedience to the will of the Father (cfr. Lumen gentium §3 and Rom 5. 19)
for that obedience was the condition of the New Covenant, the essential
interior disposition of the great sacrifice. But then, her cooperation
consisted in the obedience of faith, and so was a share in the covenant
condition, in His obedience; hence her obedience became "the counterpoise
to the disobedience and disbelief embodied in the sin of our first
parents." -She did this as the one appointed by the Father to cooperate, as
the New Eve, who was there, as Lumen gentium ## 58 &61 said, "by plan of
divine Providence."
17. John Paul II, Allocution at the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Guayaquil,
given on Jan 31, 1985, reported in Osservatore Romano Supplement of Feb. 2,
1985 and in English Osservatore Romano, March 11, 1985, p. 7: "Crucified
spiritually with her crucified Son (cf. Gal 2:20), she contemplated with
heroic love the death of her God, she 'lovingly consented to the immolation
of this Victim which she herself had brought forth' (Lumen gentium #58)...
as she was in a special way close to the Cross of her Son, she also had to
have a privileged experience of his Resurrection. In fact, Mary's role as
co-redemptrix did not cease with the glorification of her Son."
COMMENT:
Same sense as the previous text. We note the Pope even uses the
word Co-redemptrix.
6)Conclusions from Texts:
a)The Patristic texts do not go beyond remote cooperation, explicitly. But
St. Irenaeus implies more in his knot comparison. A Father of the Church
may be used by Providence to say more than he realizes, even as the writers
of Scripture sometimes are. And we shall see that it is very likely that
happened to Vatican II as well.
b)The Popes and Vatican II give us clearly the following data:
(1) She was appointed officially to cooperate , for her role was "in
accordance with the divine plan." Further the position of the New Eve is
official, with the New Adam.
(2)She was made intrinsically apt to cooperate by the Immaculate
Conception.
(3)Her role was entirely singular, i. e, unlike that of St. John, who was
present.
(4)Her cooperation was done by way of obedience, faith, hope and burning
love.
(5)We notice specially that obedience was (a)the covenant condition, and
(b)was that which gave the value to His sacrifice, which otherwise would
have been only a tragedy. (c)It also was a means of joining in payment of
the debt, i.e. , of rebalancing the objective order.
f) Her obedience consisted in precisely "the obedience of faith", in
willing what the Father willed - which is the essential of all and any
sanctity. So the Popes and Council say she "consented" and "immolated Him".
John Paul II says this is part of the deepest kenosis, self-emptying in all
history. This was more than just agreeing to let it go: For she had to
positively will this, going counter to her love for Him, which was so
great, as we learn from Pius IX, Ineffabilis Deus, that "none greater under
God can be thought of, and no one but God can comprehend it".
7. Theological reasoning on the data tells us this: Her Son generated a
claim to all forgiveness and grace in three ways: First, by obeying and so
fulfilling the covenant condition. She as the Council and Popes make clear
shared in that covenant condition by her obedience, of which LG spoke three
times. So she shared in the "price" of redemption (cf. 1 Cor 6. 20 and 7.
23). Second her obedience joined in His obedience, which was the interior
disposition that gave all the value to His sacrifice. Third her obedient
suffering, together with His, was the payment of the debt, the rebalancing
of the objective order.
It was surely possible for the Father to accept her obedience as part of
the covenant condition, and as the interior disposition of His sacrifice,
and as suffering to pay the debt or rebalance the objective order: He
called for it at immense cost to her, as we have seen. He made her
intrinsically apt. He appointed her to cooperate. Could we then suppose
He would not accept that which He Himself had arranged? Not at all. So,
factually, He did accept her obedience in all three aspects, which
generated a claim to all forgiveness and grace. This is far beyond what
the German Mariologists supposed, with their theory of mere active
receptivity, which sounds so much like the position of Luther saying our
role is mere appropriation.
This does not mean she was on the same level as Jesus. Her very ability to
do anything came from Him. Further, even His offering was on the secondary
level of the covenant, in the sense explained in our study of Sinai. That
is, the Father did not cease being angry because Jesus came and died:
rather, it was because the Father always loved us that He came. On the most
basic level no one can generate a claim to move the Father. He did not have
to be moved. He cannot be moved, or changed. Yet, within the covenant
framework, which He established, He does repay (cf. Romans 2. 6).
8. Answer to an objection: Vatican II, in LG §54 said it did not intend to
settle debates among theologians, chiefly, between the German Mariologists
and those who hold she actively contributed to generating a title to all
forgiveness and grace. Yet, In LG §55 the Council made clear that even if
the human writers of Gen 3. 15 and Is 7. 14 may not have seen the full
import of their words, the Church now does see them, in the light of the
Holy Spirit. Jeremiah the prophet in 31. 31 ff. wrote more than he probably
knew. St. Irenaeus wrote more than he understood, with his knot comparison.
Why could not the Council, an instrument of Divine Providence, also write
more than it realized? We have seen, by careful analysis, that its words do
objectively mean more than it realized.
Still further, Msgr. G. Philips of Louvain, one of the chief drafters of
LG, shows in his commentary that he himself did not fully understand all
that he wrote. In his commentary on §§ 61 and 62 of LG (L'Eglise et son
mystere aux Deuxieme concil du Vatican. Histoire, text et commentaire de la
Constitution Lumen Gentium, Desclee, Paris, 1968, reprinted in Ephemerides
Mariologicae XXIV, 1974, pp. 87-97. We cite from this reprint) he thinks
that only (p. 92) "a mental distinction... between the acquisition and the
distribution of grace is possible." That is, between objective and
subjective redemption. But on p. 90 of his commentary, he says that her
cooperation was "concretized in her unconditional obedience." While on p.
92 he said her present role (subjective redemption) is one of intercession.
Intercession and obedience are not at all the same thing. In obedience, she
does the will of the Father, in intercession she asks the Father to do her
will, to grant graces to her children.
9. The alternatives of redemption: If we imagine the Father looking over
the scene after the sin of our first parents, of course He willed to
restore our race. But there were several alternatives open to Him: (1) He
could forgive with no reparation at all. This would not satisfy His
generosity to us, nor would it at all rebalance the objective order, as His
Holiness wanted. (2) He could have appointed any mere human and ordered
that one to perform any religious act. That would be of finite value, but
He could have accepted, even could have bound Himself by promise to accept
it as the whole of redemption. (3) He could have sent His Son to be born in
a palace, fitted with every possible luxury. The Son would not need to die
at all. The mere fact of becoming Incarnate was a come-down for a Divine
Person, and so would be infinitely satisfactory and meritorious. He could
have added a short prayer, perhaps, "Father, forgive them" and then could
have ascended in a blaze of glory without ever dying. This would have been
an infinite redemption [cf. the physical-mystical theory of the Easter
Fathers described above]. (4)He went beyond the palace to the stable,
beyond a deathless prayer to the Cross. Without any rhetoric we can say:
this is beyond infinity. In the lowly terrain of mathematics, infinity plus
a finite quantity does not increase. But this is the realm of divine
generosity, which wills to make everything as rich as possible. (5)
Further, recalling He could have used a mere human for the whole of
redemption: why not use the Virgin Mary as the associate of the Divine
Redeemer? - Our magisterium texts and analysis have shown He did precisely
that. We recall again St. Thomas I. 19. 5. c.
10. Parallel to the Mass: The Mass, says Vatican II (On Liturgy §10) is the
renewal of the New Covenant. But in that renewal we, the members of Christ,
are called on to join our obedience to His, to form the one great offering
of the obedience of the whole Christ, Head and members. Therefore, if the
renewal is faithful to the original, there must have been in the original a
parallel, i. e, the infinite value of the obedience of Christ, to which was
joined the obedience of His Mother.
11. She is also our spiritual Mother. For Vatican II, in LG §61, right
after the portion already quoted, added: "As a result she is our Mother in
the order of grace." An ordinary Mother must do two things: (1) Share in
bringing a new life into being - Our Spiritual Mother did share in that, in
immense pain, by the Cross. (2) She must take care of that life so long as
she is needed, willing, and able. In time children naturally outgrow the
need of great help from their earthly mother. Not so Mary: we will need her
help, since all graces come through her, until we finally reach the
mansions of the Father. Ordinary mothers may be unwilling or unable to
help. Not so Mary, who is never unwilling, always most able. (We shall see
in a moment the magisterium texts on that point). Pope Benedict XV (Epistle
Decessorem nostrum, of 19 April, 1915, called her "suppliant omnipotence."
That is: all that God can do by His own inherent power, she can obtain by
her intercession.
Pope Pius XII in a message to the Marian Congress of Ottawa, Canada, on
July 19, 1947, said: "When the little maid of Nazareth uttered her fiat to
the message of the angel... she became not only the Mother of God in the
physical order of nature, but also in the supernatural order of grace she
became the Mother of all, who... would be made one under the Headship her
divine Son. The Mother of the Head would be the Mother of the members. The
Mother of the Vine would be the Mother of the branches." (English text from
AAS 39. 271. Cf. also Marian Studies III, 1952, pp. 14-217. )
12. Scriptural Basis for the teaching on Immediate Cooperation
The claim is often made that the Catholic doctrine on Our Lady is largely
unscriptural. The culmination of this charge is of course the teaching on
her immediate cooperation in the objective redemption.
Yet, it is easy to show that even this most advanced doctrine is
Scriptural:
First, we want to notice that in the very earliest Fathers of the Church,
such as St. Justin Martyr (c. 145-150), we find the New Eve doctrine, i.e.,
that just as the first Eve really contributed to the damage of original
sin, so Mary, the New Eve, really contributed to removing it. They had in
mind her obedient acceptance, in faith, to be the Mother of the Messiah.
But today as we saw above, the Church has gone beyond that early teaching.
Let us recall the Constitution on the Church of Vatican II, §61: "... in
suffering with Him as He died on the cross, she cooperated in the work of
the Savior, in an altogether singular way, by obedience, faith, hope and
burning love, to restore supernatural life to souls." Basically this same
doctrine is found in every Pope from Leo XIII up to and including John Paul
II. By the time of Vatican II, nearly all the die-hard Catholic theologians
who disliked this teaching had admitted they had to concede.
So Vatican II was merely restating a repeated teaching. But the way it
expressed it is very helpful. It said her role on Calvary was one of
obedience. Earlier, in §56 it had pointed out that obedience twice, in
citing St. Irenaeus: "By obeying, she became a cause of salvation for
herself and for the whole human race." Then, after recalling the comparison
St. Irenaeus made of all sin to a complex knot, in which the Saint said
that to untie a knot, one must take the end of the rope backwards through
every turn taken in tying it. And it added, from St. Irenaeus again: "Thus
then, the knot of the disobedience of Eve was untied through the obedience
of Mary."
At first sight this teaching seems to have no basis in Scripture. But if we
look more closely, we will see something quite obvious. First, at the
Annunciation, she was asked to consent, in faith, to be the Mother of the
Messiah. She knew this perfectly clearly, for as soon as the Archangel
said, "He will reign over the house of Jacob forever," she knew that only
the Messiah could reign forever. So she knew it was the Messiah. Then there
would begin to crowd into her thoughts all the ancient prophecies of the
Messiah, especially Isaiah 53, of His dreadful sufferings and death. She
was asked to consent to be the Mother of such a Messiah.
She did consent, as St. Luke tells us, saying: "Be it done to me according
to your word." She gave her fiat, her obedience to the will of God, as the
angel told her of His will.
Did she later retract this acceptance of God's will? Of course not. Any
soul either falls back or goes ahead in holiness. Holiness really consists
in the alignment of our wills with the will of God - for the free will is
the only thing free we have.
So she faithfully stood by Him, keeping in the background when the crowds
gave Him praise, but moving out into the dark blackness that hung over
Calvary. There she stood.
What was her reaction? Of course, she grieved, as any Mother would, seeing
her Son suffering so horribly. And she saw that suffering as our crucifixes
do not generally let us see it - they contain no trace at all of the horrid
scourging, leaving Him bloody all over.
But now we can begin to realize something tremendous. As we said, spiritual
perfection consists in the alignment of our will with the will of the
Father. Further, when we know what He positively wills, it is not enough
for us to say, as it were: "Let it go". No, we are called on to positively
will what He wills.
But what did He will in that dread hour? She knew from Isaiah 53:10: "It
was the will of the Lord to crush Him with pain." So the Father willed that
His Son should die, die then, die so horribly. So did the Son will it. So
she was then called upon to will what the Father willed, what her Son
willed, in other words, she was called on to will positively that He die,
die then, die horribly.
We must add: the redemption was, under one aspect, the making of the New
Covenant, foretold by Jeremiah 31:31 ff: "I will make a New covenant. It
will not be like the covenant I made with your Fathers, for they broke my
covenant, and I had to show myself their master. But this is the Covenant.
I will write my law on their heart. I will be their God, and they will be
my people."
In the Covenant of Sinai, the essential condition had been the obedience of
the people (Ex 19:5): "If you really hearken to my voice, and keep my
covenant, you will be my special people." So the New Covenant would have
again as its essential condition obedience, which Jeremiah expressed by
speaking of a law written on hearts. Perhaps Jeremiah did not see it fully,
but that obedience was to be the obedience of Christ.
What did that law of the Father, written on her heart call for? It called
for what we have just said: That she positively will that her Son die, die
then, die horribly. In that, she was joining in the fulfillment of the
Covenant condition. He, in Gethsemani, had said: "If it be possible, let
this chalice pass... but nonetheless, not what I will, but what you will."
In other words, He obeyed. St. Paul stressed that too in Rom 5:19: "Just as
by the disobedience of the one man [the first Adam] the many were made
sinners [original sin] so by the obedience of the one man [the New Adam]
the many will be constituted just."
In fact, had His death taken place without obedience, it would not have
been a redemption, it would have been merely a tragedy. So it was obedience
that was the covenant condition, it was that which gave the value to His
death.
To look at the same reality from a different perspective, His death was a
sacrifice. God had once complained through Isaiah 29:13: "This people
honors me with their lips... their hearts are far from me." The ancient
Jews were very adept at what is sometimes, simplistically, called
"participation." They loved to make the responses, to sing, to join in
processions. But it was all empty, for their hearts were far from Him:
their hearts did not act in obedience.
But Jesus did offer His sacrifice in obedience. So just as obedience is the
covenant condition, so too, it is that without which His sacrifice would be
as worthless as those of which God complained through Isaiah.
But we return to Our Lady. At the annunciation, she obeyed, she said her
fiat. She knew too much for comfort even then, of what that entailed, as we
explained above. But now in the blackness of Calvary, she was called on to
continue to obey the will of the Father. That she did. As we said, we know
this since any soul is required to conform its will to that of the Father.
But then, she knew that will of the Father, knew it all too well. It was
that He should die then, die horribly.
So what she had to do, unless she would break with the Father, was to will
what He willed, to will the terrible death of her Son.
All this is, of course, entirely Scriptural. It merely points out that at
the start, she obeyed in saying her fiat, as St. Luke tells us. At the
Cross, as any soul that loves the will of the Father must do, she had to
continue her fiat, to continue to obey. Isaiah 53 had said that, "by His
stripes we are healed", that, "it was the will of the Lord to crush Him in
pain." Even the Targum knew Isaiah spoke of the Messiah, although in the
stiff-necks of many, the message was even inverted. But she was not such,
she understood, and yet she did not take back her fiat, she obeyed the will
of the Lord. That obedience of hers was a joining in the essential
condition of the New Covenant, it was a joining in the necessary interior
of His sacrifice.
Her love of Him would multiply the difficulty. It was the love of the best
of Mothers for the best of Sons, a Son whom she understood as no other
person could. We cannot really calculate the terrible difficulty of her
obedience, going counter to such love.
Would the Father accept her obedience as part of the covenant obedience? In
the old covenant, He accepted the obedience of even very ordinary, sinful
people - how much more hers! Would He put her in such straits, call on her
to obey when it was so incredibly hard, and then not accept her obedience
as part of the covenant condition even as He had accepted the obedience of
very ordinary, sinful people, as we said, in the old covenant.
He could have redeemed us with something immeasurably less painful - the
mere fact of the incarnation, even without so much as a short prayer added,
would have been superabundant. Yet in His love of all goodness, in His love
of us, He would not stop short when there was any way to make it all
richer. It was in that attitude that He called for the death of His Son,
that He called for her immeasurably difficult obedience.
So, Vatican II in its teaching, merely unfolded, by pondering in hearts,
what the Scripture contains: "In suffering with Him as He died on the
cross, she cooperated in the work of the Savior" - in the essential
requirement of the New Covenant, in the essential interior of the Great
Sacrifice - "by obedience, faith, hope and burning love."
12. Her Role in Each Mass: Since Vatican II said (On Liturgy #10) that the
Mass is the renewal of the new covenant, and since the Council of Trent (DS
1743) said the Mass is the same as Calvary ,"only the manner or offering
being changed", therefore we would expect her to have a role in the Mass
parallel to that which she had on Calvary.
Pope John XXIII in a radio message to the 16th Eucharistic Congress of
Italy on Sept. 13, 1959, (AAS 51. 713) said he hoped all would grow in
their fervor and veneration for the Blessed Virgin, "the Mother of the
Mystical Body, of which the Eucharist is the symbol and vital center." And
he added: "We trust that they will imitate in her the most perfect model of
union with Jesus our Head; we trust that they will join Mary in the
offering of the Divine Victim."
Pope John Paul II in an address in St. Peter's square (Sunday Feb. 12, 1984
(from English edition of Osservatore Romano, Feb. 20, 1984, p. 10) said:
"Today I wish to dwell with you on the Blessed Virgin's presence in the
celebration of the Liturgy... . Every liturgical action... is an occasion
of communion... and in a particular way with Mary... Because the Liturgy is
the action of Christ and of the Church... she is inseparable from one and
the other... . Mary is present in the memorial - the liturgical action -
because she was present at the saving event... . She is at every altar
where the memorial of the passion and Resurrection is celebrated, because
she was present, faithful with her whole being to the Father's plan, at the
historic salvific occasion of Christ's death."
A sacrifice consists of the external sign and the interior dispositions
which the sign expresses. In the Cenacle the external sign was the seeming
separation of His body and blood. On the Cross, it was the physical
separation. But in both cases, and on our altars the interior is the
disposition of His Heart, most basically, obedience to the Father (cf. Rom
5. 19 and LG §3). His disposition on our altars is not a repeat of that
which He had on Calvary, it is the continuation, for death makes permanent
the attitude of soul with which one leaves the body. She shares in the
external sign of the Mass in that the flesh and blood are still those He
received from her. She shares in the interior dispositions of His Heart,
with which she is eternally united. Therefore the Mass is not the time to
stop thinking of her. Rather, the more closely one is united with her, the
more closely one is united with Her Son. Therefore, let no one say we
should forget her at Mass. Rather, the more closely one is joined to her
there, the more closely to Jesus - and vice versa. (This is true
objectively, even if one's diversity of grace does not lead him to realize
it).
|