The Feast of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary December 8
AT length, on the distant horizon, rises, with a soft and radiant
light, the aurora of the Sun which has been so long desired. The happy
Mother of the Messias was to be born before the Messias Himself; and
this is the day of the Conception of Mary. The earth already possesses
a first pledge of the Divine mercy; the Son of Man is near at hand. Two
true Israelites, Joachim and Anne, noble branches of the family of
David, find their union, after a long barrenness, made fruitful by the
Divine omnipotence. Glory be to God, Who has been mindful of His
promises, and Who deigns to announce, from the high heavens, the end of
the deluge of iniquity, by sending upon the earth the sweet white dove
that bears the tidings of peace!
The Feast of the blessed Virgin's Immaculate Conception is the most
solemn of all those which the Church celebrates during the holy time of
Advent; and if the first part of the cycle had to offer us the
commemoration of some one of the mysteries of Mary, there was none
whose object could better harmonize with the spirit of the Church in
this mystic season of expectation. Let us, then, celebrate this
solemnity with joy; for the Conception of Mary tells us that the Birth
of Jesus is not far off.
The intention of the Church, in this Feast, is not only to celebrate
the anniversary of the happy moment in which began, in the womb of the
pious Anne, the life of the ever-glorious Virgin Mary; but also to
honour the sublime privilege, by which Mary was preserved from the
Original Stain, which, by a sovereign and universal decree, is
contracted by all the children of Adam the very moment they are
conceived in their mother's womb. The faith of the Catholic Church on
the subject of the Conception of Mary is this: that at the very instant
when God united the soul of Mary, which He had created, to the body
which it was to animate, this ever-blessed soul did not only not
contract the stain, which at that same instant defiles every human
soul, but was filled with an immeasurable grace which rendered her,
from that moment, the mirror of the sanctity of God Himself, as far as
this is possible to a creature. The Church with her infallible
authority, declared, by the lips of Pius IX, that this article of her
faith had been revealed by God Himself. The Definition was received
with enthusiasm by the whole of Christendom, and the eighth of December
of the year 1854 was thus made one of the most memorable days of tile
Church's history.
It was due to His Own infinite sanctity that God should suspend, in
this instance, the law which His Divine justice had passed upon all
the children of Adam. The relations which Mary was to bear to the
Divinity, could not be reconciled with her undergoing the humiliation
of this punishment. She was not only daughter of the eternal Father;
she was destined also to become the very Mother of the Son, and the
veritable bride of the Holy Ghost.
Nothing defiled could be permitted
to enter, even for an instant of time, into the creature that was thus
predestined to contract such close relations with the adorable Trinity;
not a speck could be permitted to tarnish in Mary that perfect purity
which the infinitely holy God requires even in those who are one day to
be admitted to enjoy the sight of His Divine majesty in Heaven; in a
word, as the great Doctor St. Anselm says, 'it was just that this holy
Virgin should be adorned with
since God the Father was to give to her, as her Child, that
only-begotten Son, Whom He loved as Himself, as being begotten to Him
from His Own bosom; and this in such a manner, that the self-same Son
of God was, by nature, the Son of both God the Father and this blessed
Virgin. This same Son chose her to be substantially His Mother; and the
Holy Ghost willed that in her womb He would operate the conception and
birth of Him from Whom He Himself proceeded.' [the greatest purity
which can be conceived after that of God Himself,De conceptu virginali,
cap. xviii]
Moreover, the close ties which were to unite the Son of God with Mary,
and which would elicit from Him the tenderest love and the most filial
reverence for her, had been present to the Divine thought from all
eternity: and the conclusion forces itself upon us that therefore the
Divine Word had for this His future Mother a love infinitely greater
than that which He bore to all His other creatures. Mary's honour was
infinitely dear to Him, because she was to be His Mother, chosen to be
so by His eternal and merciful decrees. The Son's love protected the
Mother. She, indeed, in her sublime humility, willingly submitted to
whatever the rest of God's creatures had brought on themselves, and
obeyed every tittle of those laws which were never meant for her: but
that humiliating barrier, which confronts every child of Adam at the
first moment of his existence, and keeps him from light and grace until
he shall have been regenerated by a new birth-----oh! this could not be
permitted to stand in Mary's way, her Son forbade it.
The eternal Father would not do less for the second Eve than He had
done for the first, who was created, as was also the first Adam, in the
state of original justice, which she afterwards forfeited by sin. The
Son of God would not permit that the woman, from whom He was to take
the nature of Man, should be deprived of that gift which He had given
even to her who was the mother of sin. The Holy Ghost, Who was to
overshadow Mary and produce Jesus within her by His Divine operation,
would not permit that foul stain, in which we are all conceived, to
rest, even for an instant, on this His Bride. All men were to contract
the sin of Adam; the sentence was universal; but God's Own Mother is
not included. God Who is the author of that law, God Who was free to
make it as He willed, had power to exclude from it her whom He had
predestined to be His Own in so many ways; He could exempt her, and it
was just that He should exempt her; therefore, He did it.
Was it not this grand exemption which God Himself foretold, when the
guilty pair, whose children we all are, appeared before Him in the
garden of Eden? In the anathema which fell upon the serpent, there was
included a promise of mercy to us. 'I will put enmities,' said the
Lord, 'between thee and the Woman, and thy seed and her seed: she shall
crush thy head.' [Gen. iii. 15] Thus was salvation promised the human
race under the
form of a victory over Satan; and this victory is to be gained by the
Woman, and she will gain it for us also. Even granting, as some read
this text, that it is the Son of the Woman that is alone to gain this
victory, the enmity between the Woman and the serpent is clearly
expressed, and she, the Woman, with her own foot, is to crush the head
of thc hated serpent. The second Eve is to be worthy of the second
Adam, conquering and not to be conquered. The human race is one day to
be avenged not only by God made Man, but also by the Woman miraculously
exempted from every stain of sin, in whom the primeval creation, which
was in justice and holiness, [Eph. iv. 24] will thus reappear, just as
though the Original Sin had never been committed.
Raise up your heads, then, ye children of Adam, and shake off your
chains! This day the humiliation which weighed you down is annihilated.
Behold! Mary, who is of the same flesh and blood as yourselves, has
seen the
torrent of sin, which swept along all the generations of mankind, flow
back at her presence and not touch her: the infernal dragon has turned
away his head, not daring to breathe his venom upon her; the dignity of
your origin is given to her in all its primitive grandeur. This happy
day, then, on which the original purity of your race is renewed, must
be a Feast to you. The second Eve is created; and from her own blood
(which, with the exception of the element of sin, is the same as that
which makes you to be the children of Adam), she is shortly to give you
the God-Man, Who proceeds from her according to the flesh, as He
proceeds from the Father according to the eternal generation.
And how can we do less than admire
and love the incomparable purity
of
Mary in her Immaculate Conception, when we hear even God, Who thus
prepared her to become His Mother, saying to her, in the Divine
Canticle, these words of complacent love: 'Thou art all fair, O My
love, and there is not a spot in thee! [Cant. iv. 7] It is the God of
all holiness
that here speaks; that eye, which sees all things, finds not a vestige,
not a shadow of sin; therefore does He delight in her, and admire in
her that gift of His Own condescending munificence. We cannot be
surprised after this, that Gabriel, when he came down from Heaven to
announce the Incarnation to her, should be full of admiration at the
sight of that purity, whose beginning was so glorious and whose
progress was immeasurable; and that this blessed spirit should bow down
profoundly before this young Maid of Nazareth, and salute her with,
'Hail, O full of grace!' [St. Luke i. 28] And who is this Gabriel? An
Archangel, that
lives amidst the grandest magnificences of God's creation, amidst all
the gorgeous riches of Heaven; who is brother to the Cherubim and
Seraphim, to the Thrones and Dominations; whose eye is accustomed to
gaze on those nine angelic choirs with their dazzling brightness of
countless degrees of light and grace; he has found on earth, in a
creature of a nature below that of Angels, the fullness of grace, of
that grace which had been given to the Angels measuredly. This fullness
of grace was in Mary from the very first instant of her existence. She
is the future Mother of God, and she was ever holy, ever pure, ever
Immaculate.
This truth of Mary's Immaculate Conception-----which was revealed to the Apostles by
the Divine Son of Mary, inherited by the Church, taught by
the holy fathers, believed by each generation of the Christian people
with an ever increasing explicitness-----was implied in the very notion of
a Mother of God. To believe that Mary was Mother of God, was implicitly
to believe that she, on whom this sublime dignity was conferred, had
never been defiled with the slightest stain of sin, and that God had
bestowed upon her an absolute exemption from sin. But now the
Immaculate Conception of Mary rests on an explicit definition dictated
by the Holy Ghost. Peter has spoken by the mouth of Pius; and when
Peter has spoken, every Christian should believe; for the Son of God
has said: 'I have prayed for thee, Peter, that thy faith fail
not.'
[St. Luke xxii. 32]
And again: 'The Holy Ghost, Whom the Father will send in My name, He
will teach you all things, and bring all things to your mind,
whatsoever I shall have said to you.' [St. John xiv. 26]
The Symbol of our faith has therefore received not a new truth, but a
new light on a truth which was previously the object of the universal
belief. On that great day of the definition, the infernal serpent was
again crushed beneath the victorious foot of the Virgin-Mother, and the
Lord graciously gave us the strongest pledge of His mercy. He still
loves this guilty earth, since He has deigned to enlighten it with
one of the brightest rays of His Mother's glory. How this earth of ours
exulted! The present generation will
never forget the enthusiasm with which the entire universe received the
tidings of the definition. It was an event of mysterious importance
which thus marked this second half of our century; and we shall look
forward to the future with renewed confidence; for if the Holy Ghost
bids us tremble for the days when truths are diminished among the
children of men, [Ps. xi. 2] He would, consequently, have us look on
those times
as blessed by God in which we receive an increase of truth; an increase
both in light and authority.
The Church, even before the solemn proclamation of the grand dogma,
kept the Feast of this eighth day of December; which was, in reality, a
profession of her faith. It is true that the Feast was not called the
Immaculate
Conception, but simply the Conception of Mary. But the fact
of such a Feast being instituted and kept, was an unmistakable
expression of the faith of Christendom in that truth. St. Bernard and
the angelical doctor, St. Thomas, both teach that the Church cannot
celebrate the Feast of what is not holy; the Conception of Mary,
therefore, was holy and immaculate, since the Church has, for ages
past, honoured it with a special Feast. The Nativity of the same holy
Virgin is kept as a solemnity in the Church, because Mary was born full
of grace; therefore, had the first moment of Mary's existence been one
of sin, as is that of all the other children of Adam, it never could
have been made the subject of the reverence of the Church. Now, there
are few Feasts so generally and so firmly established in the Church as
this which we are keeping today.
The Greek Church, which, more easily than the Latin, could learn what
were the pious traditions of the east, kept this Feast even in the
sixth century, as is evident from the ceremonial or, as it is called,
the Type, of St. Sabas. In the west, we find it established in the
Gothic Church of Spain as far back as the eighth
century. A celebrated calendar which was engraved on marble, in the
ninth century, for the use of the Church of Naples, attests that it had
already been introduced there. Paul the deacon, secretary to the
emperor Charlemagne, and afterwards monk at Monte-Cassino, composed a
celebrated hymn on the mystery of the Immaculate Conception; in 1066,
the Feast was first established
in England, in consequence of the pious Abbot Helsyn's [
Some writers call him Elsym, and others Elpyn. See Baronius in his notes on the
Roman Martyrology, Dec. 8. (Tr.)] being
miraculously preserved from shipwreck; and shortly after that, was made
general through the whole island by the zeal of the great St. Anselm,
monk of the Order of St. Benedict, and archbishop of Canterbury. From
England it passed into Normandy, and took root in France. We find it
sanctioned in Germany, in a council held in 1049, at which St. Leo IX
was present; in Navarre, 1090, at the abbey of Irach; in Belgium, at
Liege, in 1142. Thus did the churches of the west testify their faith
in this mystery, by accepting its Feast, which is the expression of
faith.
Lastly, it was adopted by Rome herself, and her doing so rendered the
united testimony of her children, the other churches more imposing than
ever. It was Pope Sixtus IV who, in the year 1476, published the
decree of the Feast of our Lady's Conception for the city of St. Peter.
In the next century, 1568, St. Pius V published the universal edition
of the Roman breviary, and in its calendar was inserted this Feast as
one of those Christian solemnities which the faithful are every year
bound to observe. It was not from Rome that the devotion of the
Catholic world to this mystery received its first impulse; she
sanctioned it by her liturgical authority, just as she has confirmed it
by her doctrinal authority in these our own days.
The
three great Catholic nations of Europe, Germany, France, and
Spain, vied with each other in their devotion to this mystery of Mary's
Immaculate Conception. France, by her king Louis XIV, obtained from
Clement IX, that this Feast should be kept with an octave throughout
the kingdom; which favour was afterwards extended to the universal
Church by Innocent XII. For centuries previous to this, the theological
faculty of Paris had always exacted from its professors the oath that
they would defend this privilege of Mary; a pious practice which
continued as long as the university itself.
As regards Germany, the emperor Ferdinand III, in 1647, ordered a
splendid monument to be erected in the great square of Vienna. It is
covered with emblems and figures symbolical of Mary's victory over sin,
and on the top is the statue of the Immaculate Queen, with this solemn
and truly Catholic inscription:
TO GOD, INFINITE IN GOODNESS AND POWER,
KING OF HEAVEN AND EARTH,
BY WHOM KINGS REIGN;
TO THE VIRGIN MOTHER OF GOD
CONCEIVED WITHOUT SIN,
BY WHOM PRINCES COMMAND,
WHOM AUSTRIA, DEVOUTLY LOVING, HOLDS AS HER
QUEEN AND PATRON;
FERDINAND III, EMPEROR,
CONFIDES, GIVES, CONSECRATES HIMSELF,
CHILDREN, PEOPLE, ARMIES, PROVINCES,
AND ALL THAT IS HIS,
AND ERECTS IN ACCOMPLISHMENT OF A VOW
THIS STATUE,
AS A PERPETUAL MEMORIAL.
[D. O. M. supremo coeli terrreque
imperatori, per quem reges regnant;
Virgini Deiparae Immaculatae Conceptae, per quam principes imperant, in
peculiarem Dominam, Austriae Patronam, singulari pietate suseeptae, se,
liberos, populos, exercitus, provincias, omnia denique confidit, donat,
consecrat, et in perpetuam rei memoriam statuam hanc ex voto ponit
Ferdinandus III Augustus.]
But the zeal of Spain for the privilege of the holy Mother of God
surpassed that of all other nations. In the year 1398, John I, king of
Arragon, issued a chart in which he solemnly places his person and
kingdom under the protection of Mary Immaculate. Later on, kings Philip
III and Philip IV sent ambassadors to Rome, soliciting, in their names,
the solemn definition, which Heaven reserved, in its mercy, for our
days. King Charles III, in the eighteenth century, obtained permission
from Clement XIII, that the Immaculate Conception should be the
patronal Feast of Spain. The people of Spain, which is so justly called
the Catholic kingdom, put over the door, or on the front of their
houses, a tablet with the words of Mary's privilege written on it; and
when they meet, they greet each other with an expression in honour of
the same dear mystery. It was a Spanish nun, Mary of Jesus, abbess of
the convent of the Immaculate Conception of Agreda, who wrote God's
Mystic City, which inspired
Murillo with his Immaculate
Conception, the
masterpiece of the Spanish school.
But, whilst thus
mentioning the different nations which have
been foremost in their zeal for this article of our holy faith, the
Immaculate Conception, it were unjust to pass over the immense share
which the seraphic Order, the Order of St. Francis of Assisi, has had
in the earthly triumph of our blessed Mother, the Queen of Heaven and
earth. As often as this Feast comes round, is it not just that we
should think with reverence and gratitude on him, who was the first
theologian that showed how closely connected with the Divine mystery
of the Incarnation is this dogma of the Immaculate Conception? First,
then, all honour to the name of the pious and learned John Duns
Scotus! And when at length the great day of the definition of the
Immaculate Conception came, how justly merited was that grand audience,
which the Vicar of Christ granted to the Franciscan Order, and with
which closed the pageant of the glorious solemnity! Pius IX received
from the hands of the children of St. Francis a tribute of homage and
thankfulness, which the Scotist school, after having fought four
hundred years in defence of Mary's Immaculate Conception, now presented
to the Pontiff.
In the presence of the fifty-four Cardinals, forty-two archbishops, and
ninety-two bishops; before an immense concourse of people that filled
St. Peter's, and had united in prayer, begging the assistance of the
Spirit of truth; the Vicar of Christ had just pronounced the decision
which so many ages had hoped to hear. The Pontiff had offered the holy
Sacrifice on the Confession of St. Peter. He had crowned the statue of
the Immaculate Queen with a splendid diadem. Carried on his lofty
throne, and wearing his triple crown, he had reached the portico of the
basilica; there he is met by the two representatives of St. Francis:
they prostrate before the throne: the triumphal procession halts: and
first, the General of the Friars Minor Observantines advances, and
presents to the holy Father a branch of silver lilies: he is followed
by the General of the Conventual Friars, holding in his hand a branch
of silver roses. The Pope graciously accepted both. The lilies and the
roses were symbolical of Mary's purity and love; the whiteness of the
silver was the emblem of the lovely brightness of that orb, on which is
reflected the light of the Sun; for, as the Canticle says of Mary, 'she
is beautiful as the moon.' [Cant. vi. 9] The Pontiff was overcome with
emotion at
these gifts of the family of the seraphic patriarch, to which we might
justly apply what was said of the banner of the Maid of Orleans: 'It
had stood the brunt of the battle; it deserved to share in the glory of
the victory.' And thus ended the glories of that grand morning of the
eighth of December, eighteen hundred and fifty-four.
It is thus, O thou the humblest of creatures, that thine Immaculate
Conception has been glorified on earth! And how could it be other than
a great joy to men, that thou art honoured by them, thou the aurora of
the Sun of justice? Dost thou not bring them the tidings of their
salvation? Art not thou, O Mary, that bright ray of hope, which
suddenly bursts forth in the deep abyss of the world's misery? What
should we have been without Jesus? And thou art His dearest Mother,
the holiest of God's creatures, the purest of virgins, and our own most
loving Mother!
How thy gentle light gladdens our
wearied eyes, sweet Mother!
Generation had followed generation on this earth of ours. Men looked up
to Heaven through their tears, hoping to see appear on the horizon the
star which they had been told should disperse the gloomy horrors of the
world's darkness; but death came, and they sank into the tomb, without
seeing even the dawn of the light, for which alone they cared to live.
It is for us that God had reserved the blessing of seeing thy lovely
rising, O thou fair morning star! which sheddest thy blessed rays on
the sea, and bringest palm after the long stormy night! Oh! prepare our
eyes that they may behold the Divine Sun which will soon follow in thy
path, and give to the world His reign of light and day. Prepare our
hearts, for it is to our hearts that this Jesus of thine wishes to show
Himself. To see Him, our hearts must be pure: purify them, O thou
Immaculate Mother! The Divine wisdom has willed that of the Feasts
which the Church dedicates to thee, this of thine Immaculate Conception
should be celebrated during Advent; that thus the children of the
Church, reflecting on the jealous care wherewith God preserved thee
from every stain of sin because thou wast to be the Mother of His
Divine Son, might prepare to receive this same Jesus by the most
perfect renunciation of every sin and of every attachment to sin. This
great change must be made; and thy prayers, O Mary! will help us to
make it. Pray-----we ask it of thee by the grace God gave
thee in thine
Immaculate Conception-----that our covetousness may be destroyed,
our
concupiscence extinguished, and our pride turned into humility. Despise
not our prayers, dear Mother of that Jesus Who chose thee for His
dwelling-place, that He might afterwards find one in each of us.
O Mary! Ark of the covenant, built of an incorruptible wood, and
covered over with the purest gold! Help us to correspond with those
wonderful designs of our God, Who, after having found His glory in
thine incomparable purity, wills now to seek His glory in our
unworthiness, by making us, from being slaves of the devil, His temples
and His abode, where He may find His delight. Help us to this, O thou
that by the mercy of thy Son hast never known sin! and receive this day
our devoutest praise. Thou art the ark of salvation; the one creature
unwrecked in the universal deluge; the white fleece filled with the dew
of Heaven, whilst the earth around is parched; the flame which the many
waters could not quench; the lily blooming amidst thorns; the garden
shut against the infernal serpent; the fountain sealed, whose limpid
water was never ruffled; the house of the Lord, whereon His eyes were
ever fixed, and into which nothing defiled could ever enter; the mystic
city, of which such glorious things are said. [Ps. lxxxvi. 3] We
delight in telling all
thy glorious titles, O Mary! For thou art our Mother, and we love thee,
and the Mother's glory is the glory of her children. Cease not to bless
and protect all those that honour thine immense privilege, O thou who
wert conceived on this day! May this Feast fit us for that mystery, for
which thy
Conception, thy Birth, and thine Annunciation, are all preparations-----the
Birth of thy Jesus in Bethlehem: yea, dear Mother, we desire thy Jesus,
give Him to us and satisfy the longings of our love.
Taken from THE LITURGICAL
YEAR, Vol. I by Dom
Gueranger