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
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CHAPTER XX. Apocalypse/Revelation 12
"And a great sign appeared in the sky: a woman clothed with the sun, and
the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars. And
being with child, she cried out, laboring in birth, and was in pain to be
delivered. And there was seen another sign in heaven: and behold a great
red dragon... and the dragon stood before the woman who was ready to be
delivered so that, when she should be delivered, he might devour her son.
And she brought forth a man child, who was to rule all nations with an
iron rod. And her son was taken up to God, and to his throne. And the
woman fled into the wilderness, where she had a place prepared by God,
that there they should feed her a thousand two hundred sixty days... .
And when the dragon saw that he was cast to the earth, he persecuted the
woman who brought forth the man child. And there were given to the woman
two wings of a great eagle, that she might fly into the desert into her
place, where she is nourished for a time and times, and half a time, from
the face of the serpent... . And the dragon was angry against the woman,
and went to make war with the rest of her seed... ."
St. Pius X, Ad diem illum. ASS 36. 458 - 59: "No one of us does not know
that that woman signifies the Virgin Mary, who brought forth our Head with
her virginity intact. But the Apostle continues: 'And being with child, she
cried out, laboring in birth, and was in pain to be delivered. ' Therefore
John saw the Most Holy Mother of God already enjoying eternal happiness,
and yet laboring from some hidden birth. With what birth? Surely ours, we
who, being yet detained in exile, are still to be brought forth to the
perfect love of God and eternal happiness."
Pius XII, Munificentissimus Deus. AAS 41. 762-63: "We frequently find
theologians and preachers who, following the footsteps of the Holy Fathers,
use words and events from sacred Scripture with some freedom to explain
their belief in the Assumption... . And furthermore, the Scholastic doctors
have considered the Assumption of the Virgin Mother of God as signified not
only in the various figures of the Old Testament, but also in that woman
clothed with the sun, whom the Apostle John contemplated on the island of
Patmos."
Paul VI, Signum Magnum, May 13, 1967 AAS 59: "The great sign which the
Apostle John saw in heaven, 'a woman clothed with the sun' is interpreted
by the sacred liturgy, not without foundation, as referring to the most
Blessed Mary, the Mother of all men by the grace of Christ the Redeemer."
John Paul II, Redemptoris Mater, March 15, 1987. Vatican Translation. #24:
"... she who was the one 'full of grace' was brought into the mystery of
Christ in order to be his Mother and thus the Holy Mother of God, through
the Church remains in that mystery as 'the woman' spoken of by the Book of
Genesis (3:15) at the beginning and by the Apocalypse (12:1) at the end of
the history of salvation."
COMMENTS:
1. St. Pius X says flatly that John saw Mary in this passage.
Pius XII is less clear, he attributes the interpretation to the Fathers and
Scholastic Doctors. Paul VI says the liturgy sees her in this text "not
without foundation". But John Paul II is rather explicit.
2. Some features of the image surely fit Our Lady, specially the rule "with
an iron rod" which clearly reflects Psalm 2. 9 speaking of the Messiah. Yet
the pain in birth seems to be more apt for the Church than for Our Lady.
Hence it is likely we have here a well known Hebrew pattern, in which an
individual stands for, and even is identified with a group. Then it will be
both Mary and the Church. For an excellent defense of the view that the
woman is both Mary and the Church, cf. B. J. Le Frois, The Woman Clothed
with the Sun, Orbis Catholicus, Rome, 1954. Le Frois suggests that if the
image stands for both Mary and the Church, then it could be a forecast that
before the end of time, the Church will take on especially Marian
character, an age of Mary. St. Louis de Montfort in True Devotion #49
predicts an age of Mary.
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