Mary conceived in her soul |
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before |
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she conceived in her body
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A
royal virgin of the house of David is chosen. She is to bear a holy
child, one who is both God and man. She is to conceive him in her soul
before she conceives him in her body. In the face of so unheard of an
event she is to know no fear through ignorance of the divine plan; the
angel tells her what is to be accomplished in her by the Holy Spirit.
She believes that there will be no loss of virginity, she who is soon to
be the mother of God. Why should she lose heart at this new form of
conceiving when she has been promised that it will be effected through
the power of the Most High? She believes, and her faith is confirmed by
the witness of a previous wonder: against all expectation Elizabeth is
made fruitful. God has enabled a barren woman to be with child; he must
be believed when he makes the same promise to a virgin.
The Son of God who was in the beginning with God,
through whom all things were made, without whom nothing was made, became
man to free him from eternal death. He stooped down to take up our
lowliness without loss to his own glory. He remained what he was; he
took up what he was not. He wanted to join the very nature of a servant
to that nature in which he is equal to God the Father. He wanted to
unite both natures in an alliance so wonderful that the glory of the
greater would not annihilate the lesser, nor the taking up of the lower
diminish the greatness of the higher.
What belongs to each nature is preserved intact and
meets the other in one person: lowliness is taken up by greatness,
weakness by power, mortality by eternity. To pay the debt of our human
condition, a nature incapable of suffering is united to a nature capable
of suffering, and true God and true man are forged into the unity that
is the Lord. This was done to make possible the kind of remedy that
fitted our human need: one and the same mediator between God and men
able to die because of one nature, able to rise again because of the
other. It was fitting, therefore, that the birth which brings salvation
brought no corruption to virginal integrity; the bringing forth of Truth
was at the same time the safeguarding of virginity.
Dearly beloved, this kind of birth was fitting for
Christ, the power and the wisdom of God: a birth in which he was one
with us in our human nature but far above us in his divinity. If he were
not true God, he would not be able to bring us healing, if he were not
true man, he would not be able to give us an example.
And so at the birth of our Lord, the angels sing in
joy: Glory to God in the highest, and they proclaim peace to his people
on earth as they see the heavenly Jerusalem being built from all the
nations of the world. If the angels on high are so exultant at this
marvellous work of God’s goodness, what joy should it not bring to the
lowly hearts of men?
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