“God sent forth his Son, born of woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law, so that we might receive adoption as sons” (Galatians 4:4).
At the beginning of the civil New Year, we turn to Mary, Our Mother. The 8th day of a child’s birth was for the Jews the time of its insertion into the life of the family and therefore to the network of relationships to which the family is inserted. “Jesus” is now legally, “son of Joseph, of the house of David, of the tribe of Judah, son of Jacob — an Israelite. But we could not forget that the name given to Jesus was the name given by God the Father through the angel Gabriel — a name made known to Mary (Luke) and to Joseph (Matthew) even before the infant was conceived. Joseph is the legal father, but Mary is the real mother, as Matthew himself underlines in his genealogy.
In Paul’s letter to the Galatians, the apostle underlines the soteriological implication of the truth of Jesus’ birth “from a woman” when “the fulness of time had come”. Through the Son of Mary we all have become sons of God.
Relevant Articles
Guide to the Reading
1. Read the whole of Luke 2:1-21 and try to answer the following questions regarding vv.16-21 based on what your reading of the nearer context.
- Who told the shepherds to go to Bethlehem?
- How did they recognize the infant as the one referred to by the angel?
- What message did the shepherds relay to Mary and Joseph?
- Did Mary have no idea of the importance of her new-born? Where did Mary get her knowledge of the importance of her baby?
- What was Mary’s attitude towards the news of the shepherds?
- What did the shepherds do after their visit?
2. The Jews circumcised the newly born infant male on the eighth day. That is also the time when the father gives the name of the child. Luke stresses the fact that the name “Jesus” was “the name given him by the angel before he was conceived in the womb.”
Review of the Readings
January 1 is the eight-day after Christmas, and therefore the reading from Luke 2:16-21 is an apt selection. This is coupled with a selection from Galatians 4:4-7 where the phrase “the fulness of time had come” figures in Paul’s declaration of the dignity of the community of faith — that they have received adoptive divine filiation,the proof of which is the Holy Spirit poured in their hearts. It is also from this reading that Mary’s Motherhood is underlined.
Mary is the “Woman”. One may perhaps read this title as used in Johannine theology, but she is the woman from whom the Son that made us “sons of God” is born.
January 1 is also the civil New Year and so the blessings in Numbers 6:22-27 and the prayer in Ps. 67.
Suggestions for the Lesson
I would suggest that we take a hint from Benedict XVI’s sermon from 2008 about the feast of the Solemnity of Mary’s Motherhood:
The Apostle Paul refers to the mystery of the divine motherhood of Mary, the Theotokos, in his Letter to the Galatians. “When the time had fully come”, he writes, “God sent forth his Son, born of woman, born under the law” (4: 4). We find the mystery of the Incarnation of the Divine Word and the Divine Motherhood of Mary summed up in a few words: the Virgin’s great privilege is precisely to be Mother of the Son who is God. The most logical and proper place for this Marian feast is therefore eight days after Christmas. Indeed, in the night of Bethlehem, when “she gave birth to her first-born son” (Luke 2:7), the prophesies concerning the Messiah were fulfilled. “The virgin shall be with child and bear a son”, Isaiah had foretold (7: 14); “Behold, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son”, the Angel Gabriel said to Mary (Luke 1:31); and again, an Angel of the Lord, the Evangelist Matthew recounts, appeared to Joseph in a dream to reassure him and said: “Do not fear to take Mary for your wife, for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Spirit; she will bear a son” (Matthew 1:20-21).
The title “Mother of God”, together with the title “Blessed Virgin”, is the oldest on which all the other titles with which Our Lady was venerated are based, and it continues to be invoked from generation to generation in the East and in the West. A multitude of hymns and a wealth of prayers of the Christian tradition refer to the mystery of her divine motherhood, such as, for example, a Marian antiphon of the Christmas season, Alma Redemptoris mater, with which we pray in these words: “Tu quae genuisti, natura mirante, tuum sanctum Genitorem, Virgo prius ac posterius – You, in the wonder of all creation, have brought forth your Creator, Mother ever virgin”. Dear brothers and sisters, let us today contemplate Mary, ever-virgin Mother of the Only-Begotten Son of the Father; let us learn from her to welcome the Child who was born for us in Bethlehem. If we recognize in the Child born of her the Eternal Son of God and accept him as our one Saviour, we can be called and we really are children of God: sons in the Son. The Apostle writes: “God sent forth his Son, born of woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law, so that we might receive adoption as sons” (Galatians 4:4).
The Evangelist Luke repeats several times that Our Lady meditated silently on these extraordinary events in which God had involved her. We also heard this in the short Gospel passage that the Liturgy presents to us today. “Mary kept all these things, pondering them in her heart” (Luke 2:19). The Greek verb used, sumbállousa, literally means “piecing together” and makes us think of a great mystery to be discovered little by little. Although the Child lying in a manger looks like all children in the world, at the same time he is totally different: he is the Son of God, he is God, true God and true man. This mystery – the Incarnation of the Word and the divine Motherhood of Mary – is great and certainly far from easy to understand with the human mind alone.
Yet, by learning from Mary, we can understand with our hearts what our eyes and minds do not manage to perceive or contain on their own. Indeed, this is such a great gift that only through faith are we granted to accept it, while not entirely understanding it. And it is precisely on this journey of faith that Mary comes to meet us as our support and guide. She is mother because she brought forth Jesus in the flesh; she is mother because she adhered totally to the Father’s will. St Augustine wrote: “The divine motherhood would have been of no value to her had Christ not borne her in his heart, with a destiny more fortunate than the moment when she conceived him in the flesh” (De Sancta Virginitate, 3, 3). And in her heart Mary continued to treasure, to “piece together” the subsequent events of which she was to be a witness and protagonist, even to the death on the Cross and the Resurrection of her Son Jesus.
Tags: christmas, mary, motherhood




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