Rev.
Fr. Leonard Goffine's
The Church's Year
THE
FEAST OF THE
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY
On
this day and the ensuing eight days, the Catholic Church celebrates
with special solemnity the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed
Virgin Mary.
What
does the Catholic Church understand by the Immaculate Conception?
By
the Immaculate Conception she does not
understand that great grace by which Mary
preserved herself pure from every, even
the least, actual sin; for, as concerns
this, the Church has long since declared
that Mary never sinned: nor does she understand
by it her continual virginity, for it
has been for a long time a doctrine of
faith that both before and after the birth
of her divine Son Mary remained a pure
virgin; nor yet that she was sanctified
before birth,; as were the
Prophets Jeremias and John the Baptist,
who were both conceived in sin, but by
a special grace of God were released
from it before their birth; neither does
she understand by it the conception of
Christ from the Holy Ghost, that is, that
Mary unstained conceived the Son of God
of the Holy Ghost; and without
the assistance of man, for this was always
the unalterable doctrine of the Church:
she does understand by it that exalted
favor, that unshared privilege, by which
the Blessed Virgin Mary, in the first
moments of her conception, by a
special grace and favor on the part of
God in reference to the merits of Jesus,
our Saviour, was preserved from every
stain of original sin.
What
has until now been held by the Church in regard to this privilege?
The
Catholic Church has always been of the
pious opinion that Mary, the blessed Mother
of the Redeemer, was conceived immaculate,
that her most pure soul had never from
the first moment of her existence the
least shadow of sin. This doctrine was
embraced by all the saints, the most learned
and most faithful children of the Church.
We have testimony of this, as far back
as the times of the apostles, in a document
concerning the sufferings of St. Andrew,
in which it is said: "As the first
man was created from the spotless earth,
so was it necessary that the perfect man
(Christ Jesus) should be born of an immaculate
virgin." St. Justin, who died a martyr
in the year 167 after Christ, compares
the Blessed Virgin to Eve, before she
sinned and while she was still a virgin.
St. Amphilochus says: "He who created
the first Eve free from shame, created
the second without spot or stain."
Origen, one of the Fathers of the Church,
writes that she was neither surprised
by the personated serpent, nor infected
by his poison, and calls her a pure and
immaculate mother. St. Ephrem calls her
the undefiled, the strong, the inviolate,
the most chaste virgin, far removed from
all spot and stain. The Abbot St. Sabbas
says of Mary: "On thee who never
took part in any guile, I place my hope.
No one but thou, O Lady, is without fault,
and besides thee no one is unsullied and
spotless." St. Ambrose calls Mary
a virgin who by the grace of God remained
always free from all shadow of sin. St.
Augustine says: "When there is mention
made of sin, the Virgin of whom on account
of our Lord no question is to be asked,
must be excepted." St. Proclus says,
"that the holy Mother of God was
made by the purest God free from all stain."
St. Fulgentius says: "The wife of
the first man was led astray and her soul
soiled toy the malice of sin, but in the
mother of the second (Christ) the grace
of God preserved the soul as well as the
body inviolate." St. Paschasius Radbertus
testifies: "It is certain that Mary
was free from original sin;" and
St. Peter Barman says: "The flesh
of the Virgin taken from Adam, would not
submit to the stain of Adam," and
before him the pious Doctor Alcuin wrote
of Mary: "Thou art beautiful as the
moon and free from all spot and every
shadow of changeableness!" And St.
Ildephonsus says: "It is certain
that Mary was free from original sin."
An immense number of saintly men and theologians
maintained the same. Many of them argued
with the greatest keenness and the most
indefatigable zeal the part of the Blessed
Virgin; the teachers at the universities
of Paris, Salamanca, Coimbra, Naples,
Cologne, Mayence, Ingolstadt, &c.,
made it their duty by vows to inculcate
this great privilege of the most favored
Virgin, and to defend it by speech and
by writings. Celebrated orders of monks,
especially the orders of St. Benedict,
St. Francis and St. Ignatius, made it
their duty to advance this pious faith
of the Immaculate Conception among the
people. A great number of popes and bishops
also honored the Immaculate Conception,
and forbade the contrary doctrine to be
taught. Even kings, princes and emperors
counted it a great honor to pay homage
to the Immaculate Conception of the Queen
of Heaven. Finally, the Catholic Church
gave definite expression to this universal
belief, by declaring in the Council of
Trent, that in the resolutions relating
to original sin, the Virgin Mary was not
included, and she confirmed the festival
of the Immaculate Conception, introduced
in the tenth century by St. Anselm, the
worthy son of the great St. Benedict,
and since that time observed in all the
Churches.
This
veneration for the Immaculate Conception, this pious view held by
the whole Catholic Church was not yet a matter of faith, that is,
the Catholic Church had not yet laid down this great privilege of
the Mother of God as a dogma. We were not commanded to believe it,
although to preach or teach against it was forbidden. But when,
in the course of time, a large number of the faithful, among whom
were archbishops, bishops, whole religious orders, as well as great
monarchs, besought the pope as head of the Church to pronounce concerning
the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin, that is, to elevate
the belief so widely spread throughout the Catholic Church to a
dogma, the pope could no longer hesitate to raise his voice in regard
to this most important affair.
What
did the supreme pastor of the Church, the pope, then do in regard
to the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin?
Pope
Pius IX. who, as he himself testified, had in many ways experienced
the assistance of the great Queen of Heaven, was urged by his love
and childlike veneration for the Blessed Mother of our Lord, to
set the last brilliant diamond in her crown of glory by declaring
the Immaculate Conception an article of faith. Not wishing to be
precipitate, he first addressed a circular to all the primates,
patriarchs, archbishops and bishops, of the whole Catholic world,
February 2, 1849, requesting them to send him reports of the devotion
of their clergy and the faithful concerning the Immaculate Conception,
and the extent of their desire in the matter, that the case might
be decided by the Apostolic See; at the same time he urged them
to pray with him that God would give him the necessary enlightenment,
and to call upon the clergy and the faithful for their prayers.
When this was done, five hundred bishops in different parts of the
world declared that they and their flocks firmly believed that Mary,
the most favored Virgin, was preserved from every stain of original
sin, and that they earnestly desired that the pope might raise this
pious opinion to a dogma of the Church. Then the holy father, filled
with delight, invited the bishops of the different countries to
Rome, to consult with him upon the matter. About one hundred and
fifty bishops, and a large number of learned men and superiors of
spiritual orders, met at Rome and the whole subject was once more
maturely examined; and at last, the 8th of December, 1854, the day
on which the Church celebrates the feast of the Immaculate Conception,
was appointed as the day on which the pope, the supreme head of
the Church, the mouth of the apostles, should solemnly announce
the dogma of the Immaculate Conception.
On
this day the holy father ascended the Apostolic Chair in the splendid
Church of St. Peter at Rome, and surrounded by the assembled cardinals,
archbishops, and bishops, the clergy and the people he once more
invoked the light of the Holy Ghost, and amid the perfect silence
which reigned in that immense church, the holy father in a loud
voice and with the most profound reverence and emotion read the
decree by which he solemnly pronounced and established, that:
"It
is an article of faith that the Blessed Virgin Mary by a special
grace and privilege of God, on account of the merits of Jesus
Christ, the Redeemer of mankind, was from the first instant of
her conception protected and preserved from every stain of original
sin."
Thus
has the head of Catholic Christianity drawn aside the veil, which
until then obscured the full glory of the Queen of Heaven, which
now shines in stainless loveliness radiant over the whole world.
The truth that the Blessed Virgin Mary was conceived immaculate
is no longer a pious opinion, but an article of faith which every
Catholic who wishes to remain a child of the Church, must profess
with heart and with lips.
But,
perhaps the decision of the pope concerning the Immaculate Conception
is a new doctrine?
By no means; it is an old
belief, established upon the holy Scriptures and laid down in the
bosom of the Church, but not solemnly pronounced and made public
previously. The pope cannot make a new article of faith, but he
can and must announce that, as a revealed truth, which is established
by the holy Scriptures and has been everywhere and at all times
believed as a revealed truth by all true Christians. But
if there is a truth founded on the holy Scriptures and tradition,
of which the pope, the representative of Christ on earth, speaks
officially, then every Catholic is bound to believe and openly to
acknowledge the same. As we have already seen, the doctrine of the
Immaculate Conception has been believed since the time of the apostles,
and it is also established by the Scriptures. In the oldest of the
sacred Books, in the Book of Genesis, (iii. 15.) is one of the most
weighty passages on this subject which reads: I will put enmities
between thee and the woman, and thy seed and her seed; she shall
crush thy head, and thou shalt lie in wait for her heel. After the
fall of the first man, God spoke to the serpent, Satan, announcing
that a woman would come and crush his head, that is, destroy his
power; and all Catholic interpreters and holy Fathers agree that
this woman is the Blessed Virgin. Mary is, therefore, placed by
God Himself as Satan's enemy, and must have been free from original
sin from the first moment of her conception, otherwise she would
have been, as St. Paul, the Apostle, says, a child of God's wrath
and under the power of Satan. In the gospel of St. Luke, (i. 28.)
it is further said: And the Angel being come in, said unto her:
Hail full of grace: the Lord is with thee: blessed art thou amongst
women. The angel, by the direction of God, called Mary full of grace,
that is, more than any of the just endowed with God's sanctifying
grace, as the holy Fathers agree. But would Mary be full of sanctifying
and all other graces, had she for one moment of her life been without
grace and burdened with sin? Would God have permitted the Blessed
Mother of His only begotten Son, from whom He received flesh, to
be touched by sin, even though for an instant, and be in the power
of Satan? No; God's hand preserved her; by His grace and by the
infinite merits of her divine Son she remained free from every stain
of sin, and the Church
most justly applies to her the words of holy Scripture: Thou art
all fair, O my love, and there is not a spot in thee. (Cant.
iv. 7.)
What
instructive meaning has the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed
Virgin for every Catholic?
The
Immaculate Conception teaches Catholics
to know in some measure the infinite sanctity
of the holy Trinity which makes sin so
hateful and detestable to Him. The Heavenly
Father could not see His beloved daughter
for one moment stained by sin. The Divine
Son could not wish to choose for His mother
a virgin upon whose soul there was a vestige
of sin. The Holy Ghost whose most pure
bride Mary is, was not willing that her
heart, His dwelling-place, should ever
be for one instant soiled by sin. Behold
how God detests sin! The Immaculate Conception
also teaches us the inestimable treasure
of sanctifying grace. Mary received this
priceless treasure from God even in the
first moment of her conception, without
it she would never have become the Mother
of the Saviour. Thou, my Christian, hadst
not this treasure at thy conception, it
is true, but thou didst receive it in
holy baptism; there God's hand arrayed
thee in the white garment of innocence;
there He sanctified thy soul, and the
Holy Ghost selected it for His dwelling-place.
Mary preserved this inestimable treasure
until death, she was always blooming as
a pure lily, the breath of sin never soiled
her loveliness. Ask thyself: Do I still
possess this treasure, which was given
to me in holy baptism; have I preserved
my soul's beauty from the poison of sin,
have I soiled it, destroyed it, lost it?
Oh, if thou hast lost this precious gift,
how unhappy art thou! if thou hast had
this great misfortune to have stained
thy garment of baptismal innocence by
sin, Mary, the peerless virgin, has borne
for thee the Saviour whose precious blood
cleanses from every sin, whose infinite
merits will restore to thee sanctifying
grace, if thou art contrite and dost confess
thy sin. But for the Saviour this treasure
would be forever lost to thee, and thy
soul forever forfeited. But for this Saviour
Mary would not have been preserved from
original sin, would not have received
sanctifying grace at her conception. We
can here learn the necessity of salvation
through Christ, gratefully thank God who
has given it to us, and praise Mary who
had the grace to conceive and give birth
to Him. In the Immaculate Conception,
O Christian, thou canst learn to know
something of the priceless value of virginity.
Jesus chose a pure and immaculate virgin
for His mother, who should be the mirror
of all virginal souls, her most pure and
immaculate image should be continually
presented to the corrupted world to show
how virginity is esteemed in the eyes
of our Lord.
INTROIT
I will greatly rejoice in the Lord,
and my soul shall be joyful in my God:
for He hath clothed me with the garments
of salvation: and with the robe of justice
He hath covered me, as a bride adorned
with her jewels. (Isai. Ixi. 10.)
I will extol Thee, O Lord, for Thou hast
upheld me: and hast not made my Enemies
to rejoice over me. f/fr.xxix.) Glory
etc.
COLLECT
O God, who by the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin, didst
prepare a worthy habitation for Thy Son: we beseech Thee, that as
Thou didst through the foreseen death of Thy same Son, preserve
her from all stain, so Thou wilt also grant that we may reach Thee
cleansed through her intercession. Through the same Jesus etc.
LESSON
(Prov. viii. 22—35.) The Lord possessed me in the beginning
of his ways, before he made any thing, from the beginning. I was
set up from eternity, and of old, before the earth was made. The
depths were not as yet, and I was already conceived: neither had
the fountains of waters as yet sprung out: the mountains with their
huge bulk had not as yet been established: before the hills I was
brought forth: he had not yet made the earth, nor the rivers, nor
the poles of the world. When he prepared the heavens, I was present;
when, with a certain law and compass, he enclosed the depths; when
he established the sky above, and poised the fountains of waters;
when he compassed the sea with its bounds, and set a law to the
waters, that they should not pass their limits; when he balanced
the foundations of the earth. I was with him, forming all things,
and was delighted every day, playing before him at all times, playing
in the world; and my delights were to be with the children of men.
Now, therefore, ye children, hear me: Blessed are they that keep
my ways. Hear instruction, and be wise, and
refuse it not. Blessed is the man that heareth me, and that watcheth
daily at my gates, and waiteth at the posts of my door. He that
shall find me shall find life, and shall have salvation from the
Lord.
EXPLANATION
AND APPLICATION This lesson is first a panegyric
on the divine, uncreated Wisdom, the eternal Son of God, who at
all times and before all things was with God and in God, by whom
was made everything that was made, ordered and preserved; who rejoices
in His works, loves them, and who admonishes man to love and imitate
Him, and promises him eternal and temporal happiness. The Church
causes this lesson to be read on this day, because the greater part
of it can be applied to Mary; for it can truly be said of her, that
she, as the most holy and excellent of all creatures, possessed
the first place in the heart of God. For this reason the Church
applies to her the words of the wise man: I came out of the mouth
of the most High, the first-born before all creatures. (Ecclus.
xxiv. 5.) For, as St. Richard says, she is the most worthy of
all; no one has received so full a measure of purity, and of all
supernatural gifts; in no creature are the marvels of divine goodness
so visible as in her. Admire, devout soul, this master-piece of
Almighty God, and make frequent use of the words of St. Chrysostom:
"Hail
Mother of God and our Mother! Hail O Heaven
in which God Himself dwells! O Throne
of grace from which the Lord distributes
His graces! Pray always to Jesus for us,
that on the Day of Judgment we may receive
forgiveness and eternal salvation."
GOSPEL.
(Luke i. 26—28.) at that time,
The angel Gabriel was sent from God into
a city of Galilee, called Nazareth, to
a virgin espoused to a man whose name
was Joseph, of the house of David, and
the virgin's name was Mary. And the Angel
being come in, said unto her: Hail, full
of grace, the Lord is with thee; blessed
art thou amongst women.
Why
is this gospel read today?
Because
it has a significant relation to the Immaculate Conception, and
proclaims the great honor shown to the Blessed Virgin by these words:
Hail, full of grace, the Lord is with thee; blessed art thou amongst
women.
Why
did the angel call Mary full of grace?
Because
Mary was filled with grace, even before she came into this world;
because she always increased in grace; because she was to bear the
Author of all grace; that we may consider how Mary obtains for us
the treasures of divine grace.
Mary
was filled with grace even before her birth. As we are all conceived
in sin, being children of a sinful ancestor, we are, therefore,
burdened by sin before our birth. Mary was free by the privilege
of the Immaculate Conception from all sin; her soul, pure and adorned
with sanctifying grace, came forth from the hands of the Creator,
and without the least prejudice to its purity and sanctity was united
to her most pure body, from which the Saviour was to take His humanity.
She could not from the first instant of her existence be wanting
in that original sanctity and justice, which were the most beautiful
adornments of our natural ancestress, Eve.
But Mary from the first moment
of her conception was not only in grace but full of grace, because
God appointed her for the highest dignity, of being the Mother of
His only-begotten Son, and had consequently endowed her with the
full measure of corresponding plenitude of graces and gifts of the
Holy Ghost; according to the opinion of many learned men, the measure
of grace which the Blessed Virgin received at her Immaculate Conception,
was greater than that which all the angels and blessed possess now
in glory. Mary ever increased in grace: But the path of the just,
as a shining light, goeth forward and increaseth even to perfect
day. (Prov. iv. 18.) These words of the Holy Ghost are verified
especially in the life of the Blessed Virgin. What abundance of
grace did she not receive, when the Holy Ghost overshadowed her,
and the divine Son, who is Himself the infinite plenitude of grace,
was conceived in her most pure body! Above all this, there yet came
that rich supply of grace by which her zealous, constant, perfect
and faithful cooperation made Mary increase every moment in grace.
Thus St. Bonaventure says: "As all the waters meet in the sea,
so all the graces were united in Mary."
Why
did the angel say to Mary: The Lord is with thee?
Because
God is with the Blessed Virgin in an extraordinary manner. It is
well to notice particularly, that the archangel Gabriel did not
say to Mary as the angel did to Gideon: The Lord be with thee, (Judges
vi. 12.) but: The Lord is with thee. These words are
not, therefore, the
wish that the favor, the blessing, the protection of God may be
with Mary, but the positive declaration that the Lord really is
with her, not simply because of His omnipotence and omnipresence
by which He is with all His creatures, nor merely because of His
goodness, love and intimacy by which He is with all the just. He
is with her in a peculiar manner, since she by her dignity of being
the Mother of God came into such close relationship with the Triune
God that our intellect can conceive nothing nearer. She became the
chosen Mother of the Son of God, the dearest, the most favored daughter
of the Heavenly Father, and the pure, beloved bride of the Holy
Ghost. "God the Father was with her," says St. Bonaventure,
"as with His most noble Daughter; God the Son was with her
as with His most worthy Mother; God the Holy Ghost was with her
as with His most pure Bride."
Why
did the angel say to Mary: Blessed art thou amongst women?
Because
he desired to honor her as the most blessed of her sex, since she
alone was chosen of all the others to be the Mother of God; because
the first woman brought the curse, but Mary, the salvation of the
world.
Mary,
Mother of God! An honor, indeed, which in its exaltation is second
only to divinity. Mary, the Virgin Mother of God! Mother and Virgin
at the same time, what a wonderful prerogative! Though the greatest
and most glorious of all mothers, she is the purest and most spotless
of virgins, the queen of virgins.
But
not only on account of her double glory as Mother of God and as
a Virgin, Mary is the most blessed of her sex, but because it was
given to her to mediate for us and for the whole world. She is that
woman, promised to our first and sinful parents in Paradise, who
would crush the serpent's head; she gave to her Son the body with
which He, by His death on the cross, accomplished the great work
of salvation.
ACT
OF PRAISE "Praised and blessed be the holy and
Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary!"
(Pope
Pius VI. granted an indulgence of one hundred days to those who,
with contrition and devotion repeat the above act of praise.)
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