We
rejoice as we celebrate today the Name of Mary, a name we call on when we are
in distress. We remember someone years ago railing about Mary’s feast
days: “I don’t understand what they all mean. They give her too much, make her
too privileged.” We like to imagine what Mary’s response to him would be, maybe
something like this, “I was, I am, as amazed as you are. All I can tell you is
that the Almighty has done great things for me. He has looked on his servant in
her nothingness. This, this alone is why all generations have called me
blessed. It has little to do with me; it’s all about Him, His pleasure, His
delight in my nothingness.”
Clearly
to be distracted by Mary’s privileges would be to miss the point. For her
story, is our story, individually and as Church. For the Virgin Mary of
Nazareth shows us our true self- as total capacity for God in Christ. She shows
us the exquisite, breathtaking beauty of our own virgin-self, as totally
available to God.
Now
certainly we come to our nothingness by a route much different than Mary’s-
perhaps through the somewhat bitter self-knowledge of who we really are, what
embarrasses us most, our sinfulness. God is not daunted by any of it. He
chooses it, wants to transform it, reform it, and inform it with his love and
tender mercy, with Himself. And so with Mary we dare to believe in the reality
of God’s delight in our nothingness.
Francisco de Zurbarán, The Mystic
Marriage of Saint Catherine of Alexandria, ca. 1660-62.