Your body is holy and glorious |
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In
their sermons and speeches on the feast day of the Assumption of the
Mother of God, the holy fathers and the great doctors of the church were
speaking of something that the faithful already knew and accepted: all
they did was to bring it out into the open, to explain its meaning and
substance in other terms. Above all, they made it most clear that this
feast commemorated not merely the fact that the blessed Virgin Mary did
not experience bodily decay, but also her triumph over death and her
heavenly glory, following the example of her only Son, Jesus Christ.
Thus St John Damascene, who is the greatest exponent
of this tradition, compares the bodily Assumption of the revered Mother
of God with her other gifts and privileges: It was right that she who
had kept her virginity unimpaired through the process of giving birth
should have kept her body without decay through death. It was right that
she who had given her Creator, as a child, a place at her breast should
be given a place in the dwelling-place of her God. It was right that
the bride espoused by the Father should dwell in the heavenly bridal
chamber. It was right that she who had gazed on her Son on the cross,
her heart pierced at that moment by the sword of sorrow that she had
escaped at his birth, should now gaze on him seated with his Father. It
was right that the Mother of God should possess what belongs to her Son
and to be honoured by every creature as the God’s Mother and handmaid.
St Germanus of Constantinople considered that the
preservation from decay of the body of the Mother of God, the Virgin
Mary, and its elevation to heaven as being not only appropriate to her
Motherhood but also to the peculiar sanctity of its virgin state: It
is written, that you appear in beauty, and your virginal body is
altogether holy, altogether chaste, altogether the dwelling-place of
God; from which it follows that it is not in its nature to decay into
dust, but that it is transformed, being human, into a glorious and
incorruptible life, the same body, living and glorious, unharmed,
sharing in perfect life.
Another very ancient author asserts: Being the most
glorious Mother of Christ our saviour and our God, the giver of life
and immortality, she is given life by him and shares bodily
incorruptibility for all eternity with him who raised her from the grave
and drew her up to him in a way that only he can understand.
All that the holy fathers say refers ultimately to
Scripture as a foundation, which gives us the vivid image of the great
Mother of God as being closely attached to her divine Son and always
sharing his lot.
It is important to remember that from the second
century onwards the holy fathers have been talking of the Virgin Mary as
the new Eve for the new Adam: not equal to him, of course, but closely
joined with him in the battle against the enemy, which ended in the
triumph over sin and death that had been promised even in Paradise. The
glorious resurrection of Christ is essential to this victory and its
final prize, but the blessed Virgin’s share in that fight must also have
ended in the glorification of her body. For as the Apostle says: When
this mortal nature has put on immortality, then the scripture will be
fulfilled that says “Death is swallowed up in victory”.
So then, the great Mother of God, so mysteriously
united to Jesus Christ from all eternity by the same decree of
predestination, immaculately conceived, an intact virgin throughout her
divine motherhood, a noble associate of our Redeemer as he defeated sin
and its consequences, received, as it were, the final crowning privilege
of being preserved from the corruption of the grave and, following her
Son in his victory over death, was brought, body and soul, to the
highest glory of heaven, to shine as Queen at the right hand of that
same Son, the immortal King of Ages.
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