My time at Mount Angel Abbey continues to be very rich. Abbot Jeremy Driscoll's homily took my understanding of the Assumption of Mary to an entirely new level. I wasn't sure whether it was a preached poem or a homiletic hymn! We were spellbound.
I don't have the Abbot's homily to share with you--I hope it will be available in due course on the Abbey's website--but last evening's reading from a 1953 book by the English Dominican Father Gerald Vann provides some real food for thought and prayer. It, too, has a poetic quality...
From The Water and the Fire (pp. 175‒176)
The gulf between
matter and spirit, between material things and the praise of God, is widening
at a pace and to an extent hitherto unknown: it would be very easy to despair
of this civilization of ours, very easy to despair of the future of our race,
very easy to feel that, so far from marching triumphantly forward to a golden
age, we are rushing headlong into an abyss; very easy to feel that our world is
doomed because all the physical and material side of life must continue to drag
man down and degrade him till the heavens are closed to him. But it is just at
this moment that the voice of the Church comes to us like a challenge: we are
on the contrary to shout aloud our belief in the dignity and holiness of
material things; we are to affirm our faith and our hope in the future of man’s
flesh. The woman who stands in the heavens, the Mother of God, is also the
mother of men, and her glory is the guarantee of theirs.
The doctrine of
the Assumption is of supreme importance not only to Catholics but to all men
and women because it means that there is still in the world, there will always
be in the world, a voice to affirm and a power to defend the dignity and the
ultimate glory of matter, of material things, of human flesh and blood, of the
lovely mystery of human love, of the beauty which is the work of men's hands.
There is a voice with affirms, there is a power which defends all the material
things which make life worthwhile; and they bid us be of good heart because we
can hope in the end to achieve our own lives, full, rich, deep, unified, free,
not by escaping from the flesh and material things, but by the healing and
sanctifying of the flesh and material things.
In the greatest of
the Church’s definitions of doctrine concerning Our Lady, the doctrine that she
is the Mother of God, it was her Son that the Church was defending. But she is
also the mother of all men; and here, in the doctrine of her Assumption, it is
all her sons that the Church is defending. Just as the figure of motherhood is
at the very centre of the earthly history of every human soul, of the earthly
history of the human race, so the figure of this Maiden-Mother is at the very
center of the eternal history of individuals and of the race. If she is
attacked, later on her Son will be attacked, and in the end her other children
will be attacked. Men will begin by denying some part of the God-given
greatness and glory; they will go on sooner or later to deny the divinity of
her Son; and in the end there will be no defense for the greatness of humanity
itself. The Church’s voice is a challenge because, while it tells us to hope
because in Mary the flesh is sanctified and glorified, material things are sanctified
and glorified, it also tells us to beware because the dragon, defeated, went elsewhere to make war on the rest of
her children…. and he stood there waiting on the sea shore.
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