Rejoicing at the Lord’s Loving & Mysterious Ways – Celebrating the Assumption of Mary into Heaven

Today you’re required to feast and to celebrate!  This holy day of obligation in the Church, reflects on when, at the end of Mary’s life, the Lord brought her up to heaven, body and soul. We rejoice because Mary persevered to the end, and like St. Paul could say “I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith” (2 Timothy 4:7).
 
Mary was the first disciple of Christ, and she illumines the path for us all. Her trusting “yes” to the Lord made possible the Incarnation, and Christianity really.  She followed Christ at every moment. She carried Him as an infant where the Lord led her to go – to the house of St. Elizabeth, to Bethlehem, to the Temple for His ritual presentation, to exile in Egypt while Herod sought to kill Him, and back to Nazareth in a quiet life while the Father desired Him to remain Hidden.  During His childhood and young adult life, she prayed, she listened, she contemplated, and she loved Christ and neighbor in her acts of service. 
 
When Jesus’ time had arrived for His public ministry, Mary accepted the pain of separation every mother feels when her child leaves home. Even more so, Mary knew that her Son’s path would include His suffering and sacrifice. Yet, she remained faithful to the Lord in every moment and every act, showing us the Little Way of Love that St. Therese would later articulate for us. She helped prepare the wedding celebration for neighbors in Cana, and rather than being distracted by getting to see her Son again, she noted their waning supply of wine and discreetly responded by asking Jesus to help. Even in this, she surrendered the impulse to control or coerce her Son when He questioned what it had to do with Him. Instead she simply told the servants to “Do whatever he tells you” (John 2:5).  Mary knew how to pray and how to pray purely. She didn’t try to control God but trusted the Lord and His creative and wonderful ways. She knew from experience and believed in her heart God’s words through the prophet Isaiah (55:8-9):
     “For my thoughts are not your thoughts,
             neither are your ways my ways, says the LORD.
      For as the heavens are higher than the earth,
             so are my ways higher than your ways
             and my thoughts than your thoughts.”
 
During Christ’s Passion, Mary was there every step of the way. She suffered alongside Him for love of us!  She knew Christ willingly walked the Via Dolorosa to the Cross and she offered the sacrifice of her own excruciating maternal pain and suffering for the salvation of souls, uniting her yes to the Father’s will to her Son’s. She accepted her next mission from Christ on the Cross: to mother Him by mothering His Church.
“When Jesus saw his mother, and the disciple whom he loved standing near, he said to his mother, ‘Woman, behold, your son!’ Then he said to the disciples, ‘Behold, your mother!’ And from that hour the disciple took her to his own home” (John 19:26-27).
 
She did not lose faith when she held His limp body after being taken down from the Cross or when He was placed in the tomb.  She did not lose faith when she went home alone that night with the apostle John; her Son away in death for three days. She did not curse God in her heartache, she blessed Him and she trusted Him. Mary faced the sacrifice of her Son with the courage and strength of a mighty spiritual warrior.  Whereas Abraham’s hand was stayed at the last moment from sacrificing Isaac, Mary endured the deadly strike to her only child with a faith as great and greater than even that of Abraham. 
 
When Christ rose from the dead Mary rejoiced with all of the disciples. When Jesus ascended into Heaven after forty days, she again accepted the bittersweet pull at her heart when He left His earthly home to enter His heavenly one.  She waited in patience with the apostles in Jerusalem for Pentecost and witnessed the power of the Holy Spirit come upon them. She was at the center of the early Church and maternally ministered to Christ’s spiritual children as He had asked of her. 
 
Finally, at the end of Mary’s life, she entered into eternal life body and soul. The Father had preserved her from Original Sin so she could be the Mother of Christ who is God (note: this miracle included an application of Christ’s merit on the Cross to her conception – thus she too is redeemed by Christ). She entered the world much like Adam and Eve in that way. However, unlike Adam and Eve, she willfully chose obedience and love of the Lord over every temptation she experienced. In consequence, she witnesses for us God’s original plan for mankind – that after our time on earth is completed and our choice is made – we would then enter eternal life without the necessity of death.  Death is a consequence of sin, and Mary never inherited sin nor committed any personal sins. Her love of God grew to completion and she entered into her heavenly home with her Son at last. From there she continues to mother her spiritual children enjoy everlasting life with her beloved Son.
 
Christ promises that all who persevere in faith will one day enjoy heaven with Him in His Father’s house. Christ opened the gates to this ineffable home and honored His mother by bringing her there to be with Him. We rejoice at her Assumption into Heaven because we rejoice at the love of her Son Jesus for His mother, we rejoice at her unmatched faithfulness in discipleship to which we aspire to imitate, and we rejoice at her glory in heaven which we hope to one day share. Mary rejoices in the Lord as the source of every grace in her life, and we rejoice with her as one of the many generations that call her blessed.
 
“My soul magnifies the Lord,
and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior,
for he has regarded the low estate of his handmaiden.
For behold, henceforth all generations will call me blessed;
for he who is mighty had done great things for me,
and holy is his name.” (Luke 2: 46-49)
 

© 2024 Angela M Jendro

*Scriptural texts, unless otherwise noted, are taken from The Holy Bible: Revised Standard Version Catholic Edition, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004)

*Pray and Reflect with full guided prayer meditations on the Sunday Gospel reading in my book Take Time For Him and its series on Amazon and Kindle!

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