When considering the feast of Our Lady’s Visitation to Elizabeth, we are apt to be a little too hasty in applying its “meaning” to ourselves. We are likely, that is, to generalize and conclude at once that we are all naturally bearers of a mystery we ought to share with others, the mystery of who we are. True enough… But what exactly is the mystery we bear? Simply the mystery of our own existence, of our own goodness and good will? I wonder whether this is enough to save the world… To view things only in this way appears to me as deflating, because such moralism excludes from the Christian experience the sense of radical wonderment. It forgets God’s unaccountable desire, attested everywhere in Scripture, to dwell with us and use us as instruments of salvation.
We should pay close attention to Elizabeth’s chief sentiment: How does this happen to me, that the Mother of my Lord should come to me? These simple words contain the whole range of marveling Christian jubilation, triggered by God’s free initiative and its result in a historical event. The Visitation is Elizabeth’s personal way of experiencing the foundational mystery of the Word’s Incarnation. This question of Elizabeth’s, spoken in amazement and awe, ought to motivate our whole life of faith, too. The mystery of the Visitation is above all the revelation of God’s initiative, of God’s design to come to us through the cooperation of the Immaculate One, in order to make his home with us, accompany us in all our life’s trials, and transform our lives by his active presence.
Only as a result of God coming to us in Jesus through Mary can we receive the eternal Word of salvation into our lives and allow him to become in us the source and energy of our service of love. Only as graced participants in a mystery greater than ourselves—the primal Mystery of the Incarnation—can we, in turn, become bearers of the same saving mystery for others. We do not share ourselves; we share Christ in us. And let us not forget, either, that baby John leapt for joy in his mother’s womb as a response to his divine cousin’s approach in Mary’s womb! Christian faith is not mainly about affirming conceptual truths or celebrating our own intrinsic human goodness, but above all about rejoicing ecstatically, about dancing for joy in our spirit in grateful reaction to an overwhelming Presence and Event: the coming of God to us in the human flesh of his Son.
Indeed, through a life steeped in prayer and the sacraments we must continually welcome the approach of the Word to us through the mediation of his and our human Mother. Only by so participating in the mystery of salvation as conceived by God’s Wisdom will we be able to live a life of fruitful charity. We do not bear ourselves; our whole bliss ought to be to become for others bearers of the one divine mystery of love with which we have first been graced.