Friday, April 19, AD 2024 7:55pm

PopeWatch: Mary

The North is full of tangled things and texts and aching eyes
And dead is all the innocence of anger and surprise,
And Christian killeth Christian in a narrow dusty room,
And Christian dreadeth Christ that hath a newer face of doom,
And Christian hateth Mary that God kissed in Galilee,
GK Chesterton, Lepanto

 

Nothing is safe from the machinations of the current Pope, not even Mary.  Sandro Magister explains:

On the eighth day after Christmas, when Jesus was circumcised and given the name received from the angel, the Catholic Church celebrates the feast of Mary, Most Holy Mother of God.

But who is Mary in the devotion and in the preaching of Pope Francis? A recent homily of his has caused astonishment, for how he has redrawn the profile of the mother of Jesus.

Pietro De Marco has sent us this analysis of the papal homily. The author, a former professor of the sociology of religion at the University of Florence and at the Theological Faculty of Central Italy, a philosopher and historian by training, has for years been known to and appreciated by the readers of Settimo Cielo.

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“NO NOS PERDAMOS EN TONTERAS.” MARIAN DOGMAS ACCORDING TO POPE FRANCIS

by Pietro De Marco

Over the span of a few days we have received news both of the entrusting of the commentary for the feast of the Immaculate Conception to two Baptist pastors, husband and wife, for the parishioners of the archdiocese of Milan, and above all of Pope Francis’s astonishing homily on Mary, during the Mass at Saint Peter’s for the feast of the Virgin of Guadalupe.

If Francis did not emulate the Protestant style in Mariological matters, he nevertheless wanted, in his fervor, to make public his restrictive personal judgment on Marian dogmas and in the negative on the title of coredemptrix, object of centuries of theological reflection. “No nos perdamos en tonteras,” let’s not get lost in absurdity, in nonsense, he said about the age-old explorations of Marian theology and spirituality.

What did the pope intend to uphold in his homily? First of all, that Mary is woman. And as woman she is the bearer of a message, she is lady, she is disciple. “It is so simple. She does not demand anything else.” The other titles, for example those of the hymn “Akathistos,” or the Loreto litanies, in any case the millenary titles of praise to Mary, for Francis “do not add anything.” Now already this much is wrong. Mary has never been “the woman,” a dangerous homology in the variety of Mediterranean and Middle Eastern female cults. Nor has she ever been the feminine as such, in one of the romantic or decadent versions, as striking as may be the devotion that generations of artists had for the Sistine Madonna by Raphael. Nor is Mary the woman of the contemporary female revolutions, whose Catholic fringes abhor the icons of Mary’s motherhood. She is not Lady, “domina,” in that she is woman, “mujer,” and not even in being mother. She is “domina” inasmuch as that motherhood, the divine motherhood, gives her royalty. The humble handmaid of Luke 1:38 is the virgin mother of God, so defined above all by the Christian traditions over the centuries, and is not interchangeable with sacred figures of Mother Earth or of the female principle.

The reader notes that the title of virgin never appears in the homily of Jorge Mario Bergoglio, while the “Nican mopohua” (“Here is recounted,” circa 1556) that he quotes, the narrative in the Nahuatl language of the apparition of Mary to Juan Diego, explicitly states this in the testimony of Juan Bernardino, uncle of Juanito: the miraculous image must be designated as “la perfecta Virgen Santa Maria de Guadalupe.” And it obviously appears in other passages of that text, for example in the invocation: “Noble queen of heaven, ever virgin, mother of God.”

The appellation of “lady,” then, is not a generic formula, as the pope seems to believe, but is a lofty title, of sovereignty, like the Byzantine “déspoina.” The absolute use of “our lady” (the old Italian “nostra donna” comes from “nostra domina”) shows that “domina” is a royal title, equivalent to queen: “Salve regina.” Thus, and on the model of Esther, Mary is “domina,” “patrona,” “advocata nostra.” When Ignatius of Loyola, quoted in the homily, also calls Mary “nuestra señora,” he is using an ancient and constant expression among Christians, beginning, it seems, with the “emè kyría,” my sovereign, of Origen, analogous to “Despoina.”

A simple reflection on “domina,” “señora” etc. thus nullifies the minimalist thesis of the homily. It is evident, in fact, that this kind of papal statement is aimed at the downgrading of the great Western and Eastern Mariology, in favor of a horizontal image of Mary, suited instead for dignifying the daily life of contemporary woman.

*

So is Mary a mom who became a “disciple” following Jesus, her son? In order that the title “disciple,” rare in tradition, may not deteriorate into pastoralistic obviousness, it must be at least taken in the sense of Maximus the Confessor: “The holy Mother became a disciple of her sweet Son, true Mother of wisdom and daughter of Wisdom, because she no longer looked at Him in a human manner or as a mere man, but served Him with respect as God and accepted His words as words of God.”

The papal pairing of woman-disciple, however, if declined between the spirituality of the everyday and sociological exegesis, remains eccentric to the order of divine revelation and gives us a glimpse in the pope’s imagination of that itinerant Jesus with his followers, including women, so dear to exegetes and writers extraneous to Christology; a Jesus separated from the whole theological and sacramental history of the Church. The mom-disciple of the homily recalls too much the mother of a recent film featuring Mary Magdalene, one of the products on which the theo-sociological proponents of the “movement of Jesus” can boast they worked for free as screenwriters.

A Mary stripped of dogma to be “type” of the feminine, then, projects this same captivating simplification onto the feminized Church. Everything little bit helps against dogma. And this is exactly what has been going on for centuries, but never coming from the see of Rome, until today.

The combative tone of the homily (“no pretenden,” “no tocaba,” “tocaban para nada,” “jamas quiso” etc.) therefore appears ill-founded and poorly directed. There appears in it a sort of showy theological indifference, with contempt for the perennial Church, in order to have the hands free in practical arenas, even if this means alliances with progressive global public opinion.

To this attitude, good for mesmerizing the simple, also belongs the curious papal argument that Our Lady never wanted to take anything away from her Son (“tomar algo de su Hijo,” or again: “no robó para sí nada de su Hijo”). No coredemption, therefore, which would be theft; but also almost nothing of all Marian theology. Any Mariological treatise, in fact, presents in addition to the motherhood and by virtue of this the immaculate conception of Mary, her “immunitas” from sin and the other “privilegia” up to the glorious assumption into heaven. Classical theology continues by affirming  that the Virgin is objectively, ontologically, mediatrix of all graces, partaker of the merits of Christ “in quantum universo mundo dedit Redemptorem,” since she gave the Redeemer to the world.

The “sui generis” union with the redemptive flesh of the Son necessarily places Mary within the order of redemptive action and grace: “omnium gratiarum mediatrix.” From redemptive mediation to coredemption there is a step that many Marian theologians have taken. Being mother of God raises Mary to this height “de congruo,” as theological language would have it, meaning not by her nature nor because she is “immediate co-operans”: only Christ works “immediate,” only the Son is redeemer “de condigno,” that is as a due, just consequence of his sacrifice. In the magnificent passage of Saint Anselm attributed today to Eadmer of Canterbury (“De excellentia Virginis,” 11), often quoted by dogmatists and in the encyclical “Ad caeli Reginam” of Pius XII, we read: “Just as God, who made all thing in his power, is Father and Lord of every creature, so also the Blessed Virgin Mother of God who has repaired everything with her merits is Mother and sovereign of all things.” Elsewhere, for Eadmer, Mary is “nutrix Reparatoris totius substantiae meae,” she who nourished, took upon herself, the Regenerator of my whole being.

The “servant of the Lord par excellence,” the “disciple,” is either all that her “privilegia” as mother of God declare, or would be of little account, as she already is in the Protestant traditions and as she is becoming in Catholic preaching. An enormous part of Christian spirituality is lived and lives from the unfolding of theological riches that Mary merited and drew to herself. It will not be a populistic Mariology that will preserve these riches, much less replace them. That the “privilegia” of the mother of God, which descend theologically from her status as an eminent and unique creature, can then be downgraded, transmitting to the faithful the ridiculous suspicion that in Mary these would have been thefts, or unworthy ambitions of a mother-disciple, is equivalent to arguing for “boutade.” This and other excesses of the homily really mean, at their core, that the pope denies the entire meaning and value of Christian theological work from its origins. And he despises the wonderful food given by theology to worship, to the traditions, to the living spiritualities. And he ignores the sanctity of its deposit in the tradition of the Church. For what? To propose a Christian revelation without mystery, without transcendence, without glory, without divine-humanity, as in the reformed churches?

“Cecidere manus,” that is the arms fall in front of so much impertinence and malice, even; that reductionistic malice of the innovator theologians who previously enveloped the event of Vatican Council II, barely disguised. If there applies to the pope’s men – I dare not speak for him – the “I cannot believe it” of the liberal Anglican bishop and theologian John A. T. Robinson, they should say so. They should take refuge, if they will be accepted, in the Protestant household. But just for now I will refrain from examining the issue of the Protestantization underway. Suffice it to recall that the Protestant ambition to Christianize secularization, after having contributed to it, has failed and has overrun the reformed churches.

*

Here I dwell rather on the question of the Christological “mixing,” with which Francis’s homily of December 12 ends, promptly targeted by stern commentators such as Maria Guarini, Roberto de Mattei and others of the “traditional” area; but is there elsewhere in the Church such courage and care for the faith?

I recall that “mestizaje” is the Spanish equivalent of the general category of inter-racial or inter-ethnic mixture, while “mestizos” indicates those born from the mix of Hispanics and Indians. In the miraculous image on Juan Diego’s cloak, the Virgen de Guadalupe is “morenita,” as many of us have contemplated on Tepeyac. This suggests to Bergoglio a brilliant development, which however results in another blunder.

In fact, the pope says that Mary “se mestizó para ser Madre de todos. […] ¿Por que? Porque ella mestizó a Dios.” In fact, continues the homily, this is the great mystery: “Maria mixes God, true God and true man, in her Son”. What this really means, we would like to have explained to us.

Go here to read the rest.  Throughout Church history the mark of the heretic has ever been a disparagement of the Mother of God.  May Our Lady help us in our hour of need.  Go here to read Archbishop Vigano’s response to the homily of the Pope.

 

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Don L
Monday, January 6, AD 2020 6:14am

When faith is reduced by design, to mere pragmatism, it no longer exists…to the joy of Satan.

Mary De Voe
Mary De Voe
Monday, January 6, AD 2020 6:41am

Mary is the Mediatrix of all graces. Mary is not the source of all graces. Grace is created for man by The Supreme Sovereign Being WHO creates man as His children as Divine offspring. Jesus Christ did nothing of Himself that was not done through His Father for Jesus Christ’s will was in perfect conformity to His Father’s will in heaven. (Jesus prayed to His Father in heaven before every miracle)
The Immaculate Conception asked God for the grace to sublimate herself to God’s Holy Will perfectly and God granted Mary’s petition. Mary remained a virgin, immaculate, before, during and after the birth of the God-man, Jesus Christ. Having prevented her soul from becoming darkened by concupiscence, Mary was able, the only finite person able to give fully informed consent to the will of God, to sublimate her will, her body and soul to God.
God, the Father, the Creator, may be referred to as Co-Redeemer since God, the Father sent His only Son, Jesus Christ to redeem mankind (man and woman, kind of like a man, imbued with divinity and immortality, but not infinity, all sovereign persons made in the image and likeness of The Supreme Sovereign Being.)
Mary’s Immaculate Conception begins at her Immaculate Conception. All angels and men are created in the mind of The Supreme Sovereign Being outside of time and space.
Jesus Christ rose from the dead to lead all mankind to heaven to be with God in the Beatific Vision. In Justice, all mankind belongs to God, as our Creator. Jesus set about performing an act of Justice in claiming mankind for His Father in heaven.
Mary is the Mediatrix of all graces. Mary is not infinite, nor God, nor the source of all grace she mediates.
Mary is the “handmaid of God” as we all might be if we practiced the fear of the Lord and the wisdom of God.
(Why would Mary as Co-Redemptrix bring us to Jesus Christ? Mary takes our misplaced worship and places our misplaced worship into the hands of God. Mary does not accept our worship, thereby informing us of our proper place in the order of creation.)
Mary, the Mother of God is Queen of heaven and earth; Queen of the universe. If Mary a virgin, humble, the finite handmaid of the Lord sublimates herself to The Supreme Sovereign Being and maintains her Immaculate Conception without regard to her titles why cannot we, too, who are the children of God sublimate ourselves, body and soul, to The Supreme Sovereign Being?

Philip Nachazel
Philip Nachazel
Monday, January 6, AD 2020 9:32am

Since when does the artist feel threatened by His own work?
Never.
In this case The Creator makes a work that is above and beyond any other created work, and in so doing uses this masterpiece to co-redeem mankind since she must give her consent as free will offering. No co-redeemer? The Pope is cheating and cheapening the artist.

Personally I will abide with the teachings of St. Louis Marie De Montfort, Maximillian Maria Kolbe and the utterances from St. Bernadette….She said she IS the Immaculata Conception.

A bouncers word…or words from humble children.

At 10 years old Raymond Kolbe is asked which crowns would he like, the red or the white. When he replied to the Virgin Mary that he would like them both she acknowledged his request. Ground into ash on the vigil of Her feast day the Assumption, August 14th 1941, I can not accept that it was merely coincidental.

I can not accept the Pope’s personal opinions regarding Our Queen.

Won’t do it.

Ernst Schreiber
Ernst Schreiber
Monday, January 6, AD 2020 9:50am

I’m sorry, I’m not seeing disparagement, unless it’s De Marco disparaging Francis for not being as precise and exacting in his use of language as De Marco would have him be.

That said, I agree that the “mixing” metaphor is potentially a problem. But we already knew Francis is a sloppy thinker, and I doubt very much there’s an intent to deny, question, undermine or subvert the hypostatic union.

And yes, Francis brings this scrutiny on himself because of his imprecision.

Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus
Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus
Monday, January 6, AD 2020 11:44am

I think Mary De Voe is correct. The actual Greek in Luke 1:28 states:

και εισελθων ο αγγελος προς αυτην ειπεν χαιρε κεχαριτωμενη ο κυριος μετα σου ευλογημενη συ εν γυναιξιν.
And the messenger having come in unto her, said, ‘Hail, favored one, the Lord [is] with thee; blessed [art] thou among women.’

The address, κεχαριτωμένη, literally means “having been graced” or “having been favored.” It is the perfect passive nominative singular participle of the verb χαριτόω which means:

to make graceful, charming, lovely, agreeable
to pursue with grace, compass with favor
to honor with blessings

The Vulgate rendering gratia plena or “full with (of) grace” is imprecise. That does NOT mean that Mary isn’t gratia plena. But as Mary De Voe stated, the Blessed Virgin isn’t the source of grace; rather, grace was bestowed on her. Thus the phrase “ad Iesum per Mariam” reflects the intent of the graces we receive via or through but not from Mary as Mediatrix. Thus, she in having been full of Jesus (pregnant with Him) was indeed full of grace! After all, she’s the Ark of the New Covenant containing the Manna (the Bread of Life), Aaron’s Rod (the High Priestly authority) and the Tablets of Stone (the fulfillment of the Ten Commandments) – Hebrews 9:4.

Amy Parr
Amy Parr
Monday, January 6, AD 2020 11:48am

Hence, then, the naked bestial fecundity of the Pachamama. This is a horror.

CAM
CAM
Monday, January 6, AD 2020 9:41pm

Archbishop Vigano’s response to Pope Francis’ homilies is a scathing attack on the pope. Vigano sites specific examples of the pope’s lies and calls him a heretic. Vigano comments on modernists, Pachamama,the Synod and the use of “Dew”.
It is well worth reading the whole letter. Here are some excerpts:
“The tragic story of this failed pontificate advances with a pressing succession of twists and turns. Not a day passes: from the most exalted throne the Supreme Pontiff proceeds to dismantle the See of Peter, using and abusing its supreme authority, not to confess but to deny; not to confirm but to mislead; not to unite but to divide; not to build but to demolish.”

“Material heresies, formal heresies, idolatry, superficiality of every kind: the Supreme Pontiff Bergoglio never ceases stubbornly to humiliate the highest authority of the Church, “demythologizing” the papacy — as perhaps his illustrious comrade Karl Rahner would say. His action seeks to violate the Sacred Deposit of Faith and to disfigure the Catholic Face of the Bride of Christ by word and action, through duplicity and lies, through those theatrical gestures of his that flaunt spontaneity but are meticulously conceived and planned, and through which he exalts himself in a continuous narcissistic self-celebration, while the figure of the Roman Pontiff is humiliated and the Sweet Christ on earth is obscured.”
“On the occasion of the liturgical memorial of the Virgin of Guadalupe, Pope Bergoglio once again gave vent to his evident Marian intolerance, recalling that of the Serpent in the account of the Fall, in that Proto-Gospel which prophesizes the radical enmity placed by God between the Woman and the Serpent, and the declared hostility of the latter, who until the consummation of time will seek to undermine the Woman’s heel and to triumph over her and her posterity. The Pontiff’s intolerance is a manifest aggression against the prerogatives and sublime attributes that make the Immaculate Ever-Virgin Mother of God the feminine complement to the mystery of the Incarnate Word, intimately associated with Him in the Economy of Redemption.”
“A few weeks after the conclusion of the synodal event, which marked the investiture of pachamama in the heart of Catholicity, we learned that the conciliar disaster of the Novus Ordo Missae is undergoing further modernization, including the introduction of “Dew” in the Eucharistic Canon instead of the mention of the Holy Spirit, the Third Person of the Most Holy Trinity.”

‘But let us return for a moment to the idolatrous statues of rare ugliness, and to Pope Bergoglio’s declaration the day after their removal from the church in Traspontina and their drowning in the Tiber. Once again, the Pope’s words have the scent of a colossal lie: he made us believe that the statuettes were promptly exhumed from the filthy waters thanks to the intervention of the Carabinieri [Italian police]. One wonders why a crew from Vatican News coordinated by Tornielli, and Spadaro of Civiltà Cattolica, with reporters and cameramen from the court press, did not come to film the prowess of the divers and capture the rescue of the pachamamas. It is also unlikely that such a spectacular feat did not capture the attention of a few passers-by, equipped with a mobile phone to film and then launch the scoop on social media. We are tempted to pose the question to the person who made that statement. Certainly, this time too, he would answer us with his eloquent silence. “

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