THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
I will greatly rejoice in the Lord,
and my soul shall be joyful in my God:
for he hath clothed me with the garments of salvation:
and with the robe of justice he hath covered me,
as a bridegroom decked with a crown,
and as a bride adorned with her jewels.
Isaiah 61, 10
And Mary said,
“My soul glorifies the Lord,and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior,
for he has been mindful of the humble state of his servant.
From henceforth all generations shall call me blessed;
for He who is mighty has done great things to me,
and holy is His name.”
Luke 1:46-49
In Catholic
theology, original sin is regarded as the general state of sinfulness, that is
the absence of sanctity and perfect charity into which all human beings are
born. We read in the Catechism of the Catholic Church that original sin is the
natural state of “deprivation of the original holiness and justice” which we
inherit as descendants of Adam and Eve. It is a sin that is contracted by all
human beings by natural propagation, not a sin committed by them. Because
original sin is a state or condition of our human nature and not a sinful act
on our part, it “does not take on the character of a personal fault in any of
Adam’s descendants” (Catechism of the Catholic Church, 405).
However, we are all
implicated in Adam’s sin and guilty by association, including Mary, the fact
that we are of the same human nature as our primordial Head of humanity. But
because God did not hold Mary personally responsible for the sin of Adam and
Eve, He could and did preserve Mary free from contracting the stain of original
sin by a singular grace and privilege, in view of the foreseen merits of
Christ, without negating His Divine justice in His Divine mercy. If God hadn’t
intervened by His grace, Mary would have been conceived in the state of
original sin, since she is a human creature and not a divine person like her
Son is in his humanity acquired from her.
All Adam’s
descendants are conceived and born in the state of original sin (Ps 51:7). St.
Paul tells us: “As sin came into the world through one man and death through
sin, and so death spread to all men inasmuch as all men sinned” (Rom 5:12). The
apostle adds: “Then as one man’s trespass led to condemnation for all men, so
one man’s act of righteousness leads to acquittal and life for all men” (Rom
5:18). Physical death is a sign of spiritual death. Though physical death
remains a temporal penalty for our common sins against God, Christ restored
humanity to spiritual life with God through his passion and death on the Cross.
The second death – eternal damnation or separation from God – is no longer an
irrevocable prospect for all human beings.
At any rate,
original sin is the state of being deprived of supernatural grace. When Adam
fell from the supernatural life with God, he fell into a defective state.
Having fallen from grace, the supernatural life was something that he should
have possessed as God destined him to. But since he lost it, his lower natural
condition is what we call the state of original sin: the deprivation of the
original sanctity and justice in which Adam was originally created by God in
His goodness. Since the Fall, all his biological descendants are thus inclined,
as natural members in the organic body of Adam, to evil: concupiscence of the
eyes, the concupiscence of the flesh, and the pride of life. Not unlike their
primordial father, human beings tend to want to be like God, but apart from
God, before God, and not in accordance with the will of God. Human acts that
originate from this attitude may constitute mortal sins that deprive the soul
of sanctity and justice before God through the fall from grace.
Thus, original sin
is called sin only in an analogical sense: it is a sin “contracted” and not
“committed” – a state and not an act. Only one’s own personal sins carry with
them the character of a personal fault and guilt. Mary’s soul, therefore, could
proclaim the glory of the Lord, since she was liberated from man’s fallen state
by the singular grace of God. Her human nature was unaffected by the ill moral
effects of the sin we have all contracted upon our conception in the womb.
Unlike the rest of us who have descended from Adam and Eve, Mary did not
possess a wounded or tainted human nature that was inclined to evil. If she
wanted to be like God, it was with God, as a daughter created in His image and
likeness, ever mindful of His sovereignty over her, and in perfect keeping with
His will.
In the redemption of
mankind, God restored sanctifying or justifying grace to all humanity by
Christ’s merits. Without this merciful act of God, man could never have
retrieved that supernatural state above nature which is the end for which God
destined him. The grace of redemption blots out the sin of Adam, although the
moral and physical ill-effects of original sin remain after we are baptized.
Dom Bruno Webb describes original sin as “some disease that has infected the
original cell of the human body” which may “permeate every organ and cell of
the body, as it grows forth from that [first] cell.” The original sin that we
contract is like a “poison” that has “passed into every member of the human
race.” The sin of Adam, therefore, is something that belongs to each member of
humanity as such and is “our common heritage.”
Again, Mary was
included as a fellow member of our human family, but God prevented her from
contracting this disease and prevented the poison from affecting her soul and
body. He did this by the most perfect means of redemption ever applied to any
fallen child of Adam: The Immaculate Conception. This singular privilege was
granted to Mary by the foreseen merits of Christ because of her election to the
Divine Maternity (Isa 7:14; Lk 1:35, 43).
Unlike Eve, Mary
never fell from God’s grace and lost her original innocence (Lk 1:28). Her soul
glorified or magnified the Lord (Luke 1:46). This means there wasn’t a trace of
selfishness or inordinate self-love within her which would have naturally led
to a sinful act, this being what original sin essentially is – the sin of the
heart that precedes the commission of personal sins. The effects of original
sin (concupiscence of the eyes, concupiscence of the flesh, and the pride of
life) had no hold on our Blessed Lady since God had preserved her from
contracting all stains of sin. We read in the First Letter of John that “fear
has to do with punishment,” whereas “love drives out fear” of God’s justice (1
Jn 4:18). At the Annunciation, the angel Gabriel told Mary that she had no
cause to be afraid, for she had found favor or grace with God (Lk 1:30). Her
love of God was impeccable, and so she had no cause to fear the Divine justice.
She was in fact clothed in righteousness and justice by the infusion of sanctifying
grace into her soul by the time the angel appeared to her.
Mary had cause to
rejoice in God her savior, not because she was a sinner who had been saved, but
because she had been redeemed in the most perfect way – by being “clothed with
the garments of salvation” and “wrapped in a mantle of justice” upon her conception
in the womb, in view of the foreseen merits of Christ. As Israel was God’s
restoration to grace after having been in exile, the Blessed Virgin Mary, the
culmination of Daughter Zion, was God’s re-creation of humanity before the fall
and enslavement to sin. By the efficacy of His sanctifying or justifying grace,
God made Mary perfect in love for Him and her neighbor. If she ever had
committed any personal sin and thereby tarnished the sanctity of her soul at
some point in her life before the Annunciation, the angel Gabriel would not
have appeared to her with the good news he brought, because she would then have
been unworthy to conceive and bear God incarnate and be intimately associated
with Him in His work of redemption.
The New Adam desired
a perfect helpmate in the New Eve. We read in Genesis 2:18: “It is not good for
the man to be alone. I will make a helper suitable for him.” Eve was formed out
of Adam to start a human family or, in broader terms, to build a community in
love and harmony that reflects the love and communion that exists in the
Tri-personal God and has a share in that communion of love within the Holy
Trinity. But, as we know, Eve failed her husband by enticing him to distance
himself from God. To undo the disharmony that Eve initiated after succumbing to
the words of the serpent, God promised to create an immaculate woman from whom
her offspring would restore humanity to a life of grace with God (Gen 3:15).
The woman’s offspring, therefore, would include all who have been regenerated unto God by His grace as members of His Mystical Body, of which the New Adam would be the head. The New Eve could be the mother of this re-created family and restored community, but only if she hadn’t ever fallen from grace together with her offspring and new Head of humanity (Lk 1:42). She had to be in total enmity or complete opposition with the serpent which is the author of sin and death (Gen 3:14). The Virgin Mary had to be the woman in her originally innocent state to be Eve’s anti-type in the Divine order of humanity’s re-creation and restoration to the life of grace with God.
St. Paul tells us:
“I see another law in my members fighting against the law of my mind and
captivating me in the law of sin that is in my members” (Rom 7:23). What the
apostle is describing are the moral ill-effects of original sin. When God
sanctified or justified Mary’s soul at the first instant of her conception, it
was because He had made Mary in such a remarkable and mysterious way that there
should be nothing wrong with her, no moral defects of any sort. Now it was not
that Mary should receive this singular grace by any merit of her own, but
rather that it was conferred on her because of the love the Father has for the
Son (Jn 15:20). God intervened in a hidden way so that there exists no internal
rebellion within Mary’s soul or war being waged against her will by the members
of her body. Her lower nature must not at any time have revolted against her
higher nature, viz., divine image or proper deified self.
This dark reflection
within man himself, of his primordial rebellion against God, should not be
allowed to diminish or obscure the light of His glory that had permeated Mary’s
soul. God exempted our Blessed Lady from being subjected to the law of sin with
the rest of humanity by ensuring that there be supernatural harmony of her soul
with Him. And by the plenitudes of grace, God bestowed on Mary, He helped keep
her from ever forfeiting this supernatural and spiritual harmony through any
commission of sin, mortal or venial (Eph 3:20; Jude 1:24-25). All the faculties
of the soul that Mary possessed weren’t weakened by any lack of harmony in her
physiological human nature.
Moreover, Mary’s
intellect wasn’t subject to ignorance and error either; her power of will had
never lost its perfection of command but was always aligned with the Divine
will; it was never infected with an inherent obstinacy lurking in her soul that
resisted what God desired of her in His goodness and righteousness. Her senses
were never abnormally drawn to material things which could impede her intellect
and will from attending to the things of God. No dark thoughts or disordered
passions disfigured Mary’s soul in the least. God who is holy and perfect
created her to be holy and thereby the perfect mother of the Son. For Mary to
be the worthiest mother of the Son, her love of the Father, however finite, had
to resemble the love the Son had had for the Father as best as it could with
the help of divine grace.
Thus, Catholics affirm Mary was subject to inheriting the stain of original sin and in need of being redeemed like everyone else (Rom 5:18). Yet, by the grace of God, the Immaculate Conception is the most perfect and complete form of redemption by the foreseen merits of Christ. God intervened with His grace and fashioned her so that she wouldn’t be inclined to sin by nature. Mary was saved by being kept from falling into the mud, so to speak, while we are saved by being pulled out from it. Mary’s redemption was preservative, while ours is curative – now that we have contracted the disease started by one free errant cell in the whole organism of humanity in the beginning.
In Romans 5:19, Paul
writes: “Many (polloi) were made sinners. He isn’t contradicting himself by not
using the word “all” (pantes), since what he means to say here as in verse 18
is that all people are subject to original sin, but not everyone rejects God.
He certainly doesn’t mean to say in the distributive sense that everyone who
has ever lived has sinned without exception since infants and mentally disabled
people cannot sin, at least not subjectively or with moral responsibility. The
act of sin requires full knowledge and full consent on the part of the subject.
But given the right circumstances, they might sin, since they fall short of
God’s glory by their very lower nature as collectively part of humanity.
Infants and young children below the age of moral reason do in fact suffer and
die, though they have never committed any personal sins in their short lives
because all human beings are guilty of Adam’s sin by association.
In this sense, then,
Mary was included in God’s plan of redemption, but her redemption was the most
perfect form that could ever be and a singular privilege granted only to the
Mother of God by no natural merit of hers – by the mercy of God without the negation
of His justice; since original sin isn’t a personal sin, but a collective sin
or guilt by association with our natural primordial head in the figure of Adam.
We are conceived and born with a lower nature deprived of the divine life of
grace, albeit having been created in the divine image, which we haven’t lost by
the sin of Adam. But we must supersede our wounded and defective natural state
and willingly be transformed through the power of divine grace, and rise to the
divine life, which God in His goodness originally intended we should possess.
When the Lord restored the fortunes of Zion,
we were like those who dreamed.
Our mouths were filled with laughter,
our tongues with songs of joy.
Then it was said among the nations,
“The Lord has done great things for them.”
The Lord has done great things for us,
and we are filled with joy.
Psalm 126, 1-6
In a mysterious way,
known only to God Himself, Mary was preserved free from being subjected to this
law of sin by the grace of God. The sight of the forbidden fruit never enticed
our most Blessed Lady at any moment in her life as it had Eve (Gen 3:6). She
received such an abundance of efficacious grace that she always felt persuaded
to want to say “Yes” to God amid all worldly allurements. Mary was at enmity
with the world as much as she was with the Tempter (Gen 3:15; Jas 4:4; Jn
15:19). Far from being an unfaithful bride, Mary never proved herself to be an
adulteress in her marriage covenant with God (Jer 2:2). Her soul magnified the Lord. Mary was free to
choose between a life with God and death, and she never felt compelled to say
No to Him (Deut 30:19). She is Daughter Zion par excellence – re-created and
restored to God’s grace before even being subjected to the slavery of sin by
birth, not unlike Moses who was born free of slavery in Egypt so that he could
liberate God’s people from captivity.
The benign influence
of the many graces our Blessed Lady received was overpoweringly persuasive.
Mary was endowed with a fullness of grace that no other human being has ever
been so she would never want to disobey God. This was fitting because of whose
mother she was predestined to be. And since God knew that Mary would consent to
be the mother of the Son and never choose to sin, by the efficacy of His actual
grace, when He fashioned her soul, He sanctified it upon her conception. The
original holiness and justice that Adam and Eve had forfeited for both
themselves and all their descendants were re-created in Mary by this singular
Divine favor. The Lord had “done great things to her” by restoring in her the
spiritual fortunes Adam had forfeited for all his offspring as the fountainhead
of humanity (Lk 1:49).
The Blessed Virgin
Mary, our Daughter Zion in the flesh, was created “clothed with the sun” of
justice and “with the moon (Heb. yareah) under her feet” (Rev 12:1). The light
of God’s glory shone forth from her soul in full radiance without ever having
paled in the least. Her enmity with the serpent or dragon was in the same
likeness as her Son’s (Gen 3:15). The Lord had done “great things” for His
blessed daughter Mary and divine mother elect, for holy is His name. Indeed, we
are glad.
How long wilt thou be dissolute in deliciousness, O wandering
daughter?
for the Lord hath created a new thing upon the earth:
A woman shall compass a man.
Jeremiah 31, 22
In the primary
context of Jeremiah’s prophecy, we find Israel having unfaithfully turned this
way and that from God in her marriage covenant with Him by worshiping the false
idols of the surrounding pagan nations. The prophet foretells of the time when
God shall put His spirit in His virgin bride so that she will be most eager to
renounce her false idols and return to Him. Daughter Zion, who metaphorically
represents God’s faithful and chaste bride, will press around her husband, and
woo Him to restore the Israelites in His favor. She will be prompted by God’s
spirit to contrive a way to get back into good graces with Him as His faithful
spouse and, so, be delivered from captivity.
In this prophecy’s
secondary fulfillment, the unfaithful daughter represents in her wandering the
dissolute Eve who has wandered in her unfaithfulness to God by turning this way
and that ever since the Fall. It was Eve who idolized the forbidden fruit in
the Garden of Eden and chose to replace God with it, whom she should have loved
more. Ever since then, she has been in exile.
In classical Judaic
theology, the woman of promise in Genesis 3:15 represents the faithful Daughter
Zion by whom righteous offspring shall be begotten, beginning with Abel and
including the Messiah, the culmination of all the righteous. It is the Hebrew people
who are removed from their original paganism or fallen state to be God’s chosen
ones as His own faithful and chaste spouse and a holy nation; consecrated to
God and sanctified by Him through the establishment of His covenant with them
so that from God’s chosen people the Messiah should come into the world in a
becoming way, and through him, all nations be blessed. Faithful Daughter Zion
culminates in the Blessed Virgin Mary who gives birth to the Messiah because of
her perfect fidelity to God. She woos Him to become incarnate by the beauty of
her faith and purity of love despite the heartless indifference of sinful pagan
humanity.
Jeremiah’s prophecy
reaches its fulfillment in the Blessed Virgin Mary. Eve is re-created in her as
the woman she was before the Fall. Mary is the spiritual “mother of all the
living” and faithful Daughter Zion who is a mother to all God’s righteous children
(Ps 87:5). God looks with favor on the lowliness of His handmaid by removing
her from her lowly origin and separating her from the rest of sinful humanity
to be His own faithful and chaste spouse and the mother of the Divine Messiah.
God has put His Spirit in her so that the woman shall press all around Him and
eagerly use all her faculties to remain in good relations with Him as His
spotless bride and the mother of His only-Begotten Son.
In Mary, the New
Eve, the woman is no longer dissolute and enslaved by the allurements of this
world. The fortunes of the fallen children of Daughter Zion are restored in the
faithful virgin spouse of the Holy Spirit who has been delivered from subjection
to the slavery of sin by God’s grace and remains in good relations with Him by
hearing the word of God and keeping it in her Immaculate Heart. The Lord’s
handmaid shall never be an adulteress in her marriage covenant with God, for
her soul proclaims His glory, which the rest of humanity without distinction
needs because of the many personal sins that arise from a selfish heart of
stone (Rom 3:23).
God put His Spirit
in the Blessed Virgin Mary and gave her a heart of flesh so that there should
be no place for any idols in her soul. God preserves her from being born in
exile when He sanctifies her soul at the first instant of her conception. And
by God’s efficacious grace, our Blessed Lady never ever falls into exile or
alienation from God like a “wandering daughter” straying from the right path
that leads to life everlasting. And so, God shines forth out of Zion. She gives
birth to a Son who is to be called Emmanuel: God with us (Isa 7:14). A woman
has compassed a man who is God in the flesh (Jn 1:14). The Blessed Virgin Mary
is the great sign foretold by the prophets and envisioned by John the
Evangelist: A woman clothed with the sun and with the moon under her feet (Rev
12:1).
“The Holy Virgin is herself
both an honourable temple of God and a shrine made pure, and
a golden altar of
whole burnt offerings. By reason of her surpassing purity she is the Divine
incense of oblation (προθέσεως), and oil of the holy grace, and a precious vase bearing in
itself
the true nard; yea and the priestly diadem revealing the good pleasure of God,
whom
she alone approacheth holy in body and soul. She is the door which looks
eastward, and by
the comings in and goings forth the whole earth is
illuminated. The fertile olive from which
the Holy Spirit took the fleshly slip
(or twig) of the Lord, and saved the suffering race of
men. She is the boast of
virgins, and the joy of mothers; the declaration of archangels, even
as it was
spoken: “Be thou glad and rejoice, the Lord with thee”; and again, “from thee”;
in
order that He make new once more the dead through sin. ”
St. Gregory Thaumaturgus
On the Holy Mother of God
(A.D. 270)
My dove, my undefiled is but one;
she is the only one of her mother,
she is the choice one of her that bore her.
The daughters saw her, and blessed her;
yes, the queens and the concubines,
and they praised her.
Song of Solomon 6, 9
Virgin Mary, in the first instance of her conception, by a singular grace and privilege
granted by Almighty God, in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, the Savior of the human
race, was preserved free from all stain of original sin, is a doctrine revealed by God and
therefore to be believed firmly and constantly by all the faithful.”
Pope Pius lX, (Apostolic Constitution)
Ineffabilis Deus
8 December 1854