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MARY’S PRIVILEGES




This Rock
Volume 5, Number 2
  February 1994  

 Up Front
By Karl Keating
 Letters
 Dragnet
  FRANCE CONVERTS A BAPTIST MISSIONARY
By KENNETH R. GUINDON
  CRIMINAL REHABILITATION—CATHOLIC STYLE
By RUSSELL FORD
 Profile
The "By-Your-Own-Bootstraps" Heretic
By Karl Keating
 Classic Apologetics
The Approach to the Skeptic
By Hilaire Belloc
 Verse by Verse
 Old Testament Guide
Minor Prophets
By Antonio Fuentes
 Iron Sharpens Iron
The Wonder of the Church
By Canon Francis J. Ripley
 Fathers Know Best
Mary's Privileges
 Heresy of the Month
Quietism
By Todd M. Aglialoro
 Quick Questions

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THE Fathers of the Church taught that Mary remained a virgin after the birth of Christ and that she could be titled quite properly the "Mother of God" (see "The Fathers Know Best," October and December 1991). The Fathers also taught that Mary had other distinctive blessings, such as her role as the New Eve (corresponding to Christ's role as the New Adam), her Immaculate Conception, her spiritual motherhood of all Christians, and her Assumption into heaven. These gifts were given to her by God's grace. She did not earn them, but she had them none the less.

Justin Martyr


"[Jesus] became man by the Virgin so that the course which was taken by disobedience in the beginning through the agency of the serpent might be also the very course by which it would be put down. Eve, a virgin and undefiled, conceived the word of the serpent and bore disobedience and death. But the Virgin Mary received faith and joy when the angel Gabriel announced to her the glad tidings that the Spirit of the Lord would come upon her and the power of the Most High would overshadow her, for which reason the Holy One being born of her is the Son of God. And she replied `Be it done unto me according to your word' [Luke 1:38]" (Dialogue with Trypho the Jew 100 [ca. A.D. 155]).



Irenaeus


"Consequently, then, Mary the Virgin is found to be obedient, saying, `Behold, O Lord, your handmaid; be it done to me according to your word.' Eve, however, was disobedient, and, when yet a virgin, she did not obey. Just as she, who was then still a virgin although she had Adam for a husband--for in paradise they were both naked but were not ashamed; for, having been created only a short time, they had no understanding of the procreation of children, and it was necessary that they first come to maturity before beginning to multiply--having become disobedient, was made the cause of death for herself and for the whole human race; so also Mary, betrothed to a man but nevertheless still a virgin, being obedient, was made the cause of salvation for herself and for the whole human race.... Thus, the knot of Eve's disobedience was loosed by the obedience of Mary. What the virgin Eve had bound in unbelief, the Virgin Mary loosed through faith" (Against Heresies 3:22:24 [ca. A.D. 189]).



Tertullian


"And again, lest I depart from my argumentation on the name of Adam: Why is Christ called Adam by the apostle, if as man he was not of that earthly origin? But even reason defends this conclusion, that God recovered his image and likeness by a procedure similar to that in which he had been robbed of it by the devil. It was while Eve was still a virgin that the word of the devil crept in to erect an edifice of death. Likewise through a Virgin the Word of God was introduced to set up a structure of life. Thus what had been laid waste in ruin by this sex was by the same sex re-established in salvation. Eve had believed the serpent; Mary believed Gabriel. That which the one destroyed by believing, the other, by believing, set straight" (On the Flesh of Christ 17:4 [ca. A.D. 210].



Ephraim


"You alone and your Mother are more beautiful than any others, for there is no blemish in you nor any stains upon your Mother. Who of my children can compare in beauty to these?" (Nisibene Hymns 27:8 [ca. A.D. 370]).



Ambrose


"Mary's life should be for you a pictorial image of virginity. Her life is like a mirror reflecting the face of chastity and the form of virtue. Therein you may find a model for your own life . . . showing what to improve, what to imitate, what to hold fast to" (The Virgins 2:2:6 [A.D. 377]).



Ambrose


"Come, then, and search out your sheep, not through your servants or hired men, but do it yourself. Lift me up bodily and in the flesh, which is fallen in Adam. Lift me up not from Sara but from Mary, a virgin not only undefiled but a virgin whom grace had made inviolate, free of every stain of sin" (Commentary on Psalm 118 22:30 [A.D. 388]).



Timothy of Jerusalem


"Therefore the Virgin is immortal to this day, seeing that he who had dwelt in her transported her to the regions of her assumption" (Homily on Simeon and Anna [ca. A.D. 400]).



Augustine


"Our Lord . . . was not averse to males, for he took the form of a male, nor to females, for of a female he was born. Besides, there is a great mystery here: that just as death comes to us through a woman, Life is born to us through a woman; that the devil, defeated, would be tormented by each nature, feminine and masculine, as he he had taken delight in the defection of both" [Christian Combat 22:24 [A.D. 397]).



Augustine


"That one woman is both mother and virgin, not in spirit only but even in body. In spirit she is mother, not of our head, who is our Savior himself--of whom, even herself, all are rightly called children of the bridegroom--but plainly she is the mother of us who are his members, because by love she has cooperated so that the faithful, who are the members of that head, might be born in the Church. In body, indeed, she is the mother of that very head" (On Holy Virginity 6:6 [A.D. 401]).



Augustine


"Having excepted the holy Virgin Mary, concerning whom, on account of the honor of the Lord, I wish to have absolutely no question when treating of sins--for how do we know what abundance of grace for the total overcoming of sin was conferred upon her, who merited to conceive and bear him in whom there was no sin?--so, I say, with the exception of the Virgin, if we could have gathered together all those holy men and women, when they were living here, and had asked them whether they were without sin, what do we suppose would have been their answer? Would it be what Pelagius says, or would it be what the apostle John says? I ask you, however excellent might their holiness have been when in the body, if they had been so questioned, would they not have declared in a single voice: `If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us!' [1 John 1:8]?" (On Nature and Grace 36:42 [A.D. 415]).



Gregory of Tours


"The course of this life having been completed by blessed Mary, when now she would be called from the world, all the apostles came together from their various regions to her house. And when they had heard that she was about to be taken from the world, they kept watch together with her. And behold, the Lord Jesus came with his angels, and, taking her soul, he gave it over to the angel Michael and withdrew. At daybreak, however, the apostles took up her body on a bier and placed it in a tomb, and they guarded it, expecting the Lord to come. And behold, again the Lord stood by them; the holy body having been received, he commanded that it be taken in a cloud into paradise, where now, rejoined to the soul, [Mary] rejoices with the Lord's chosen ones and is in the enjoyment of the good of an eternity that will never end" (Eight Books of Miracles 1:4 [A.D. 575]).



Gregory of Tours


"But Mary, the glorious Mother of Christ, who is believed to be a virgin both before and after she bore him, has, as we said above, been translated into paradise, amid the singing of the angelic choirs, whither the Lord preceded her" (ibid. 1:8).



Theoteknos


"If the God-bearing body of the saint has known death, it has not, nevertheless, suffered corruption; it has been preserved from corruption and kept free from stain and it has been raised to heaven with her pure, spotless soul by the holy angels and powers" (Homilies [ca. A.D. 600]).



Germain I of Constantinople


"Let death pass you by, O Mother of God, because you have brought life to men. Let the tomb pass you by, because you have been made the foundation stone of inexplicable sublimity. Let dust pass you by; for you are a new kind of formation, so that you may be mistress over those who have been corrupted in the very stuff of their potter's clay . . . Painful though it be for the soul to be drawn away from the body, most immaculate lady, it is far more painful to be deprived of you!" (Second Sermon on the Dormition of the Blessed Virgin Mary [ca. A.D. 683]).



John Damascene


"We had closed paradise; you [Mary] opened again the entryway to the tree of life. We turned joys into sorrow; you turned sorrow back into the greatest of joys for us. And how would you, the immaculate, taste of death? You are the bridge of life, you are the staircase to heaven; and [for you] death will be but a passage to immortality. O Most Blessed, truly blessed are you!" (Second Homily on the Dormition of Mary 8 [ca. A.D. 697]).



John Damascene


"[The apostles] could only think that he who had been pleased to become incarnate from her in his own Person and to become man and to be born in the flesh, God the Word, the Lord of Glory, who preserved her virginity intact after her paturition--he was pleased even after her departure from life to honor her immaculate and undefiled body with incorruption and with translation prior to the common and universal resurrection" (ibid. 18).


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