The Assumption and the
World
by Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
1952
TAKEN FROM THE WORLD'S FIRST LOVE
The definition of the Immaculate Conception was made when the
Modern World was born. Within five years of that date, and within six
months of the apparition of Lourdes where Mary said, "I am the
Immaculate Conception," Charles Darwin wrote his Origin of Species,
Karl Marx completed his Introduction
to the Critique of the Philosophy
of Hegel ("Religion is the Opium of the people"), and John
Stuart
Mill published his Essay on Liberty.
At the moment the spirit of the
world was drawing up a philosophy that would issue in two World Wars in
twenty-one years, and the threat of a third, the Church came forward
to challenge the falsity of the new philosophy. Darwin took man's mind
off his Divine Origin and fastened it on an unlimited future when he
would become a kind of God. Marx was so impressed with this idea of
inevitable progress that he asked Darwin if he would accept a
dedication of one of his books. Then, following Feuerbach, Marx
affirmed not a bourgeois atheism of the intellect, but an atheism of
the will, in which man hates God because man is God. Mill reduced the
freedom of the new man to license and the right to do whatever he
pleases, thus preparing a chaos of conflicting egotisms, which the
world would solve by Totalitarianism.
If these philosophers were right, and if man is naturally good and
capable of deification through his own efforts, then it follows that
everyone is immaculately conceived. The Church arose in protest and
affirmed that only one human person in all the world is immaculately
conceived, that man is prone to sin, and that freedom is best preserved
when, like Mary, a creature answers
Fiat to the Divine Will.
The dogma of the Immaculate Conception wilted and killed the false
optimism of the inevitable and necessary progress of man without God.
Humbled in his Darwinian-Marxian-Millian pride, modern man saw his
doctrine of progress evaporate. The interval between the Napoleonic and
Franco-Prussian Wars was fifty-five years; the interval between the
Franco-Prussian War and World War I was forty-three years; the interval
between World Wars I and II, twenty-one years. Fifty-five, forty-three,
twenty-one, and a Korean War five years after World War II is hardly
progress. Man finally saw that he was not naturally good. Once having
boasted that he came from the beast, he now found himself to be acting
as a beast.
Then came the reaction. The Optimistic Man who boasted of his
immaculate conception now became the Pessimistic Man who could see
within himself nothing but a bundle of libidinous, dark, cavernous
drives. As in the definition of the Immaculate Conception, the Church
had to remind the world that perfection is not biologically inevitable,
so now in the definition of the Assumption, it has to give hope to the
creature of despair. Modern despair is the effect of a disappointed
hedonism and centers principally around Sex and Death. To these two
ideas, which preoccupy the modern mind, the Assumption is indirectly
related.
The primacy of Sex is to a great extent due to Sigmund Freud, whose
basic principle in his own words is: "Human actions and customs derive
from sexual impulses, and fundamentally, human wishes are unsatisfied
sexual desires. ... Consciously or unconsciously, we all wish to unite
with our mothers and kill our fathers, as Oedipus did unless we are
female, in which case we wish to unite with our fathers and murder our
mothers." The other major concern of modern thought is Death. The
beautiful philosophy of being is reduced to Dasein, which is only in-der-Weltsein.
There is no freedom, no spirit, and no personality. Freedom is for
death. Liberty is contingency threatened with complete destruction. The
future is nothing but a projection of death. The aim of existence is to
look death in the eye.
Jean-Paul Sartre passes from a phenomenology of sexuality to that which
he calls "nausea," or a brazen confrontation of nothingness, toward
which existence tends. Nothing precedes man; nothing follows man.
Whatever is opposite him is a negation of his ego, and therefore
nothingness. God created the world out of nothingness; Sartre creates
nothingness out of the world and the despairing human heart. "Man is a
useless passion."
Agnosticism and Pride were the twin errors the Church had to meet in
the Doctrine of the Immaculate Conception; now it is the despair
resulting from Sex and Death it has to meet in this hour. When the
Agnostics of the last century came in contact with the world and its
three libidos, they became libertines. But when pleasure diminished and
made hungry where most it satisfied, the agnostics, who had become
libertines by attaching themselves to the world, now began in disgust
to withdraw themselves from the world and became philosophers of
Existentialism. Philosophers like Sartre, and Heidegger, and others are
born of a detachment from the world, not as the Christian ascetic,
because he loves God, but because they are disgusted with the world.
They become contemplatives, not to enjoy God, but to wallow in their
despair, to make a philosophy out of it, to be brazen about their
boredom, and to make death the center of their destiny. The new
contemplatives are in the monasteries of the jaded, which are built not
along the waters of Siloe, but along the dark banks of the Styx.
These two basic ideas of modem thought, Sex and Death, are not
unrelated. Freud himself hinted at the union of Eros and Thanatos.
Sex brings death, first of all because in sex the other person is
possessed, or annihilated, or ignored for the sake of pleasure. But
this subjection implies a compression and a destruction of life for the
sake of the c Eros. Secondly, death is a shadow which is cast over sex.
Sex seeks pleasure, but since it assumes that this life is all, every
pleasure is seasoned not only with a diminishing return, but also with
the thought that death will end pleasure forever. Eros is Thanatos. Sex
is Death.
From a philosophical point of view, the Doctrine of the Assumption
meets the Eros-Thanatos philosophy head on, by lifting humanity from
the darkness of Sex and Death to the light of Love and Life. These are
the two philosophical pillars on which rests the belief in the
Assumption.
1. Love. The Assumption
affirms not Sex but Love. St. Thomas in his
inquiry into the effects of love mentions ecstasy as one of them. In
ecstasy one is "lifted out of his body," an experience which poets and
authors and orators have felt in a mild form when in common parlance,
"they were carried away by their subject." On a higher level, the
spiritual phenomenon of levitation is due to such an intense love of
God that saints are literally lifted off the earth. Love, like fire,
burns upward, since it is basically desire. It seeks to become more and
more united with the object that is loved. Our sensate experiences are
familiar with the earthly law of gravitation which draws material
bodies to the earth. But in addition to terrestrial gravitation, there
is a law of spiritual gravitation, which increases as we get closer to
God. This "pull" on our hearts by the Spirit of God is always present,
and it is only our refusing wills and the weakness of our bodies as a
result of sin which keep us earth-bound. Some souls become impatient
with the restraining body; St. Paul asks to be delivered from its
prison house.
If God exerts a gravitational pull on all souls, given the intense love
of Our Lord for His Blessed Mother which descended, and the intense
love of Mary for Her Lord which ascended, there is created a suspicion
that love at this stage would be so great as "to pull the body with
it." Given further an immunity from Original Sin, there would not be in
the Body of Our Lady the dichotomy, tension, and opposition that exists
in us between body and soul. If the distant moon moves all the surging
tides of earth, then the love of Mary for Jesus and the love of Jesus
for Mary should result in such an ecstasy as "to lift her out of this
world."
Love in its nature is an Ascension in Christ and an Assumption in Mary.
So closely are Love and the Assumption related that a few years ago the
writer, when instructing a Chinese lady, found that the one truth in
Christianity which was easiest for her to believe was the Assumption.
She personally knew a saintly soul who lived on a mat in the woods,
whom thousands of people visited to receive her blessing. One day,
according to the belief of all who knew the saint, she was "assumed"
into heaven. The explanation the convert from Confucianism gave was:
"Her love was so great that her body followed her soul." One thing is
certain: the Assumption is easy to understand if one loves God deeply,
but it is hard to understand if one loves not.
Plato in his Symposium,
reflecting the Grecian view of the elevation of
love, says that love of the flesh should lead to love of the spirit.
The true meaning of love is that it leads to God. Once the earthly love
has fulfilled its task, it disappears, as the symbol gives way to
reality. The Assumption is not the killing of the Eros, but its
transfiguration through Agape. It does not say that love in a body is
wrong, but it does hold that it can be so right, when it is Godward,
that the beauty of the body itself is enhanced.
Our Age of Carnality which loves the Body Beautiful is lifted out of
its despair, born of the Electra and Oedipus incests, to a Body that is
Beautiful because it is a Temple of God, a Gate through which the Word
of Heaven passed to earth, a Tower of Ivory up which climbed Divine
Love to kiss upon the lips of His Mother a Mystic Rose. With one stroke
of an infallible dogmatic pen, the Church lifts the sacredness of love
out of sex without denying the role of the body in love. Here is one
body that reflects in its uncounted hues the creative love of God. To
a world that worships the body, the Church now says: "There are two
bodies in Heaven, one the glorified human nature of Jesus, the other
the assumed human nature of Mary. Love is the secret of the Ascension
of one and of the Assumption of the other, for Love craves unity with
its Beloved. The Son returns to the Father in the unity of Divine
Nature; and Mary returns to Jesus in the unity of human nature. Her
nuptial flight is the event to which our whole generation moves."
2. Life. Life is the second
philosophical pillar on which the
Assumption rests. Life is unitive; death is divisive. Goodness is the
food of life, as evil is the food of death. Errant sex impulses are the
symbol of the body's division from God as a result of original sm.
Death is the last stroke of that division. Wherever there is sin, there
is multiplicity: the Devil says, "My name is Legion; there are many of
us." (Mark 5:9.) But life is immanent activity. The higher the life,
the more immanent is the activity, says St. Thomas. The plant drops its
fruit from a tree, the animal drops its kind for a separate existence,
but the spiritual mind of man begets the fruit of a thought which
remains united to the mind, although distinct from it. Hence
intelligence and life are intimately related. Da mihi intellectum et vivam. God
is perfect life because of perfect inner intellectual
activity. There is no extrinsicism, no dependence, no necessary
outgoing on the part of God.
Since the imperfection of life comes from remoteness to the source of
life and because of sin, it follows that the creature who is preserved
from Original Sin is immune from that psychological division which sin
begets. The Immaculate Conception guarantees a highly integrated and
unified life. The purity of such a life is threefold: a physical purity
which is integrity of body; a mental purity without any desire for a
division of love, which love of creatures apart from God would imply;
and finally, a psychological purity which is immunity from the uprising
of concupiscence, the sign and symbol of our weakness and diversity.
This triple purity is the essence of the most highly unified creature
whom this world has ever seen.
Added to this intense life in Mary, which is free from the division
caused by sin, there is still a higher degree of life because of her
Divine Motherhood. Through her portals Eternity became young and
appeared as a Child; through her, as to another Moses, not the tables
of the Law, but the Logos was given and written on her own heart;
through her, not a manna which men eat and die, but the Eucharist
descends, which if a man eats, he will never die.
But if those who commune with the Bread of Life never die, then what
shall we say of her who was the first living Ciborium of that
Eucharist, and who on Christmas day opened it at the communion rail of
Bethlehem to say to Wise Men and Shepherds: "Behold the Lamb of God Who
taketh away the sins of the world"?
Here there is not just a life free from the division which brings
death, but a life united with Eternal Life. Shall she, as the garden in
which grew the lily of Divine sinlessness and the red rose of the
passion of redemption, be delivered over to the weeds and be forgotten
by the Heavenly Gardener? Would not one communion preserved in grace
through life ensure a heavenly immortality? Then shall not she, in
whose womb was celebrated the nuptials of eternity and time, be more of
eternity than time? As she carried Him for nine months, there was
fulfilled in another way the law of life: "And they shall be two in one
flesh."
No grown men and women would like to see the home in which they were
reared subjected to the violent destruction of a bomb, even though
they no longer lived in it. Neither would Omnipotence, Who tabernacled
Himself within Mary, consent to see His fleshy home subjected to the
dissolution of the tomb. If grown men love to go back to their homes
when they reach the fullness of life, and become more conscious of the
debt they owe their mothers, then shall not Divine Life go back in
search of His living cradle and take that "flesh-girt paradise" to
Heaven with Him, there to be "gardenered by the Adam new"?
In this Doctrine of the Assumption, the Church meets the despair of the
world in a second way. It affirms the beauty of life as against death.
When wars, sex, and sin multiply the discords of men, and death
threatens on every side, the Church bids us lift up our hearts to the
life that has the immortality of the Life which nourished it. Feuerbach
said that a man is what he eats. He was more right than he knew. Eat
the food of earth, and one dies; eat the Eucharist, and one lives
eternally. She, who is the mother of the Eucharist, escapes the
decomposition of death.
The Assumption challenges the nothingness of the Mortician
philosophers
in a new way. The greatest task of the spiritual leaders today is to
save mankind from despair, into which Sex and Fear of Death have cast
it. The world that used to say, "Why worry about the next world, when
we live in this one?" has finally learned the hard way that, by not
thinking about the next life, one cannot even enjoy this life. When
optimism completely breaks down and becomes pessimism, the Church holds
forth the promise of hope. Threatened as we are by war on all sides,
with death about to be rained from the sky by Promethean fires, the
Church defines a Truth that has Life at its center. Like a kindly
mother whose sons are going off to war, she strokes our heads
and says: "You will come back alive, as Mary came back again after
walking down the valley of Death." As the world fears defeat by death,
the Church sings the defeat of death. Is not this the harbinger of a
better world, as the refrain of life rings out amidst the clamors of
the philosophers of death?
As Communism teaches that man has only a body, but not a soul, so
the
Church answers: "Then let us begin with a Body." As the mystical body
of the anti-Christ gathers around the tabernacle doors of the cadaver
of Lenin, periodically filled with wax to give the illusion of
immortality to those who deny immortality, the Mystical Body of Christ
bids the despairing to gaze on the two most serious wounds earth ever
received: the empty tomb of Christ and the empty tomb of Mary. In 1854
the Church spoke of the Soul in the Immaculate Conception. In 1950 its
language was about the Body: the Mystical Body, the Eucharist, and the
Assumption. With deft dogmatic strokes the Church is repeating
Paul's truth to another pagan age: "Your bodies are meant for the
Lord." There is nothing in a body to beget despair. Man is related to
Nothingness, as the philosophers of Decadentism teach, but only in his
origin, not in his destiny. They put Nothingness as the end; the Church
puts it at the beginning, for man was created ex nihilo. The modern man
gets back to nothingness through despair; the Christian knows
nothingness only through self-negation, which is humility. The more
that the pagan "nothings" himself, the closer he gets to the hell of
despair and suicide. The more the Christian "nothings" himself, the
closer he gets to God. Mary went so deep down into Nothingness that
she became exalted. Respexit
humilitatem ancillae suae. And her
exaltation was also her Assumption.
Coming back to the beginning ... to Eros and Thanatos: Sex and Death,
said Freud, are related. They are related in this sense: Eros as
egotistic love leads to the death of the soul. But the world need not
live under that curse. The Assumption gives Eros a new meaning. Love
does lead to death. Where there is love, there is self-forgetfulness,
and the maximum in self-forgetfulness is the surrender of life.
"Greater love than this no man hath, that he lay down his life for his
friends." (John 15:13.) Our Lord's love led to His death. Mary's love
led to her transfixion with seven swords. Greater love than this no
woman hath, that she stand beneath the Cross of her Son to share, in
her own way, in the Redemption of the world.
Within three decades the definition of the Assumption will cure the
pessimism and despair of the modern world. Freud, who did so much to
develop this pessimism, took as his motto: "If I cannot move the Gods
on high, I shall set all hell in an uproar." That uproar which he
created will now be stilled by a Lady as powerful as an "army drawn up
in battle array." The age of the "body beautiful" will now become the
age of the Assumption.
In Mary there is a triple transition. In the Annunciation we pass from
the holiness of the Old Testament to the holiness of Christ. At
Pentecost we pass from the holiness, of the Historical Christ to the
holiness of the Mystical Christ or His Body, which is the Church. Mary
here receives the Spirit for a second time. The first overshadowing was
to give birth to the Head of the Church; this second overshadowing is
to give birth to His Body as she is in the midst of the Apostles
abiding in prayer. The third transition is the Assumption, as she
becomes the first human person to realize the historical destiny of the
faithful as members of Christ's Mystical Body, beyond time, beyond
death, and beyond judgment.
Mary is always in the vanguard of humanity. She is compared to Wisdom,
presiding at Creation; she is announced as the Woman who will conquer
Satan, as the Virgin who will conceive. She becomes the first person
since the Fall to have a unique and unrepeatable kind of union with
God; she mothers the infant Christ in Bethlehem; she mothers the
Mystical Christ at Jerusalem; and now, by her Assumption, she goes
ahead like her Son to prepare a place for us. She participates in the
glory of Her Son, reigns with Him, presides at His Side over the
destinies of the Church in time, and intercedes for us, to Him, as He,
in His turn, intercedes to the Heavenly Father.
Adam came before Eve chronologically. The new Adam, Christ, comes after
the new Eve, Mary, chronologically, although existentially He preceded
her as the Creator a creature. By stressing for the moment only the
time element, Mary always seems to be the Advent of what is in store
for man. She anticipates Christ for nine months, as she bears Heaven
within her; she anticipates His Passion at Cana, and His Church at
Pentecost. Now, in the last great Doctrine of the Assumption, she
anticipates heavenly glory, and the definition comes at a time when men
think of it least.
One wonders if this could not be the last of the great Truths of Mary
to be defined by the Church. Anything else might seem to be an
anticlimax after she is declared to be in Heaven, body and soul. But
actually there is one other truth left to be defined, and that is that
she is the Mediatrix, under Her Son, of all graces. As St. Paul speaks
of the Ascension of Our Lord as the prelude to His intercession for us,
so we, fittingly, should speak of the Assumption of Our Lady as a
prelude to her intercession for us. First, the place, Heaven; then, the
function, intercession. The nature of her role is not to call Her Son's
attention to some need, in an emergency unnoticed by Him, nor is it to
"win" a difficult consent. Rather it is to unite herself to His
compassionate Mercy and give a human voice to His Infinite Love. The
main ministry of Mary is to incline men's hearts to obedience to the
Will of Her Divine Son. Her last recorded words at Cana are still her
words in the Assumption: "Whatsoever He shall say to you, that do ye."
Added to these is the Christian prayer written by Francis Thompson to
the daughter of the ancient Eve:
The celestial traitress play,
And all mankind to bliss betray;
With sacrosanct cajoleries,
And starry treachery of your eyes,
Tempt us back to Paradise.
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