On November 10, 1947, cloistered
away in rural Kentucky, the famous American Cistercian monk Thomas Merton wrote
in his journal: “It seems to me that that definition [the Immaculate
Conception] was a turning point in the modern history of the Church. The world has been put into the hands
of our Immaculate Lady and she is our hope in the terrible days we live in.”
When I was in grade school, not that many years after Merton wrote that journal entry, the invocation and response, O Mary conceived without sin, pray for us
who have recourse to thee, were a regular part of our school prayers.
Although I dutifully joined in responding pray
for us who have recourse to thee, in fact I probably had only the vaguest idea at first what
the word recourse really meant. (It's in the nature of public prayers - as with any formal language - to employ fancier vocabulary than ordinary speech.) But,
given the very high quality of religious instruction that we still had in those
days, my guess is that I probably better understood the meaning of the words Immaculate Conception before I ever completely figured out the word recourse!
Of course, back in 1858, when the Blessed Virgin
Mary appeared to Bernadette Soubirous in what was then more-or-less a
garbage dump in the cold, wet, little town of Lourdes in the Pyrenees Mountains
and identified herself with the words, “I am the Immaculate Conception,” poor
Bernadette did not recognize the reference or understand the meaning of those words
at all. Intellectuals, on the other hand, had been arguing about their meaning
for centuries – so much so that in 1497 the University of Paris had decreed
that no one should be admitted to the University without first swearing to
assert and defend Mary’s Immaculate Conception! (Imagine how different European
society might be today if that were still the rule at the Sorbonne!)
Meanwhile, on May 13, 1846, meeting
in Baltimore’s Cathedral of the Assumption, the 23 bishops of the United States
designated the Blessed Virgin Mary, conceived without sin, as Patroness of the
United States. Their choice was approved by Blessed Pope Pius IX less than a
year later, on February 7, 1847.
That same Pope, in the Bull Ineffabilis Deus, exactly 160 years ago on December 8, 1854,
would then go on to define the dogma of the Immaculate Conception - the Church’s faith that,
thanks to the salvation Jesus accomplished on our behalf, Mary was preserved
from sin, from the very beginning of her existence, and so was from the very
start completely holy. She is, as the English Romantic poet William Wordsworth
[1770-1850] had already famously addressed her: “Woman! above all nature glorified, Our tainted nature’s solitary boast.”
Meanwhile, a mere two months after Pius IX’s
dogmatic definition, the small, struggling Catholic community in Knoxville, TN,
purchased this land on Summit Hill outside the town’s then northern limits
intending to build their first parish church here. And, at its dedication later
that year, the church was named for the Immaculate Conception.
I know I have told this story before, but it bears
repeating. Nearly 30 years ago, I got a phone call one day from someone worried
that the Devil was throwing things at him. At first, I felt totally at a loss
how to answer. Nothing in my seminary training had, I thought, adequately prepared
me for this. As we talked, however, it became obvious to me what the right
answer really was – namely, that, in Christ, God has already decisively defeated
the Devil. The Devil can fight, but he cannot win. For God is more powerful than anything we can throw at him – or the
Devil can throw at us. God is more powerful than sin. And that is what we
celebrate in a very special way today on this great festival of the Immaculate
Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, the patronal feast of our historic parish.
The story we just heard from the Old Testament [Genesis
3:9-15, 20]
highlights the serious damage done to the entire world by human sin - our
alienation simultaneously from God, one another, and the world. Mary’s
sinlessness, however, represents the healing effect of God’s far-greater power,
empowering Mary to say Yes” to God where Eve had said “No” – God’s powerful
plan to save us from ourselves.
The story calls Eve the mother of all the living.
In spite of sin, human life continued – the very first sign that God was not
going to give up on us. Of course, the serpent still lives and continues his
mischief, but his doom is already certain. In the fullness of time, Eve’s
greatest descendant, Mary’s Son, will strike at the serpent’s head and crush
him.
When Mary appeared to Saint Juan Diego in Mexico
in 1531, she spoke in the Aztec language. The Aztec
word (which to the Spaniards sounded like an already familiar title,
Guadalupe) literally meant “Who crushes the serpent.”
God’s great plan for our salvation, the purpose of the One who accomplishes all
things according to the purpose of his will [Ephesians
1:11], the mystery decided upon
from all eternity and hidden for so many centuries, has been realized in Mary’s
Son, Jesus, and is now revealed in the life and mission of the Church. Mary’s
holiness at the very beginning of her earthly life is also the Church’s
holiness at its beginning and invites us to look forward to the Church as it
will one day be in the perfect holiness of God’s kingdom. Thus, the Church
looks to Mary as a model of the Church’s essential mission. As Pope Francis has
written: “We implore her maternal intercession that the Church may become a home
for many peoples, a mother for all peoples, and that the way may be opened to
the birth of a new world. … With Mary we advance confidently toward the
fulfillment of this promise, and to her we pray [EG
288].
An
American prayer from 1959 fittingly invokes Mary's patronage on our nation:
Most
Holy Trinity, we put the United States of America into the hands of Mary
Immaculate in order that she may present the country to you. Through her we
wish to thank you for the great resources of this land and for the freedom
which has been its heritage. Through the intercession of Mary, have mercy on
the Catholic Church in America. Grant us peace, Have mercy on our President and
on all the officers of our government. Grant us a fruitful economy born of
justice and charity. Have mercy on capital and industry and labor. Protect the
family life of the nation. Guard the innocence of our children. Grant the
precious gift of many religious vocations. Through the intercession of our
Mother, have mercy on the sick, the poor, the tempted, sinners - on all who are
in need.
Homily for the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Immaculate Conception Church, Knoxville, TN, December 8, 2014.
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