Genesis 3:9-15, 20, Ephesians 3:1-6, 11-12, Luke
1:26-38
Most
Favoured One
Popular
imagination has added an interesting slant to the story of the woman taken in
adultery. You know the story: The Pharisees bring the woman before Jesus for
judgment and Jesus says, "Let the person who is without sin cast the first
stone." They fell silent, and then, all of a sudden a stone came flying
from the crowd. Jesus looks up, surprised and amused, and then says, "Hold
it, mother? I am trying to make a point, here." This joke likens the
sinlessness of Mary to the sinlessness of good women and men we have known. For
we have known many good men and women who think that their holiness of life is
their personal achievement. As a result they develop a certain holier-than-thou
attitude toward others who have not attained their level of holiness. They become
intolerant, angry and judgmental toward those they regard as sinners. People
like that would not hesitate to throw the first stone at a sinner caught
red-handed, like the woman in our story.
That
is why the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, which we celebrate today,
becomes a very important one. It reminds us that Mary's sinlessness is not
something that Mary achieved by her own power. It is a gift of God, given to
her right from the very moment of her conception. It is in the genes, as they say.
In the same vein, those of us who happen to be holy, who sin less than the
average sinner, should regard our holiness as basically a gift of God and not
an achievement. Our attitude should then be characterised by two basic
attitudes, thankfulness to God, and humility before those who are naturally and
spiritually less gifted than we are.
The
dogma of the Immaculate Conception of Mary was defined by Pope Pius IX in 1854.
It affirms the belief that the Blessed Virgin Mary was free from sin right from
the very beginning of her life. That means that by the grace of God, she was
shielded from original sin which all humankind inherit at the very moment they
begin to live, i.e. at the moment they are conceived in their mother's womb.
That means that Mary was not burdened with a defective human nature with which
you and I come into the world. She came into the world with a perfect human
nature like that of Eve and Adam before they sinned and fell from grace. God
gave her this perfect human nature not as a reward for anything she did, not on
account of any merit on her part, but in view of the singular role she was to
play in life, namely, that of being the mother of God's Son. The doctrine of
the Immaculate Conception tells us something about who Mary is. But maybe it
tells us more about who God is and who we are in light of God's providential
love.
Belief
in the Immaculate Conception of Mary is belief in a provident God, i.e., a God
who provides for the future, who prepares His children for their assigned task
in life even before they are born, a God who foresees and equips us with all
the natural and supernatural qualities we need to play our assigned role in the
drama of human salvation. God anoints them already in the womb those men and
women whom He created to be His prophets. As He told Jeremiah, "Before I
formed you in the womb I knew you, and before you were born I consecrated you;
I appointed you a prophet to the nations" (Jeremiah 1:5). God does not
just throw us into this world wide wilderness and then leave us to fight it out
among ourselves. The theory of evolution with its doctrine of the survival of
the fittest may describe human nature in its fallen state, in the state of
original sin, it does not describe life for the people of God redeemed by grace
from the unbridled effects of the Fall.
As
we rejoice with Mary, God's most favoured one ("full of grace") on
the feast of her conception, let us thank God for His love and mercy which
embraces us right from the moment of our own conception. As Scripture says,
"For who makes you different from anyone else? What do you have that you
did not receive? And if you did receive it, why do you boast as though you did
not?" (1Corinthians 4:7). Everything is gift, everything good in us is
God's grace. For we all, children of God, are also favoured ones and heirs of
God's grace. Yet Mary remains the most favoured one, the mother of all favoured
ones, the one that enjoys the fullness of grace.
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