Mediatrix of Grace
And when the ark of the Lord came into the city of David,
Michol the daughter of Saul, looking out through a window,
saw King David leaping and dancing before the Lord.
2 Samuel 6, 16
And whence is this to me, that the mother of my Lord should come
to me? For behold as soon as the voice of thy salutation sounded in
my ears, the infant in my womb leaped for joy.
Luke 1, 43-44
Grace originates
from God the Father and is produced for us by the merits of God the Son through
his passion, death, and resurrection. The distribution of divine grace is
appropriated to God the Holy Spirit. By her divine motherhood and mystical
union with the Holy Spirit as His chaste spouse, the Blessed Virgin Mary has
acquired a universal maternal role in dispensing all actual graces in
collaboration with the third Person of the Holy Trinity. Since it was through
Mary’s salutary cooperation with divine grace in faith and love that the living
Font of all grace came into the world by the power of the Holy Spirit, her Son
willed to continue coming to us through his most Blessed Mother’s mediation (Jn
2:2-8), and he continues to reach out to us through her until the end of this
age (Jn 19:26-27).
Vatican 2 Council
explains:
This maternity of Mary in the order of grace began with the consent that she gave in faith at the Annunciation and which she sustained without wavering beneath the cross and lasts until the eternal fulfillment of all the elect. Taken up to heaven she did not lay aside this salvific duty, but by her constant intercession continued to bring us the gifts of eternal salvation. Through her maternal charity, she cares for the brethren of her Son, who still journey on earth surrounded by dangers and cultics, until they are led into the happiness of their true home. Therefore, the Blessed Virgin is invoked by the Church under the titles of Advocate, Auxiliatrix, Adjutrix, and Mediatrix. This, however, is to be so understood that it neither takes away from nor adds anything to the dignity and efficaciousness of Christ the one Mediator. – Lumen Gentium, 62
Before we see how
the Virgin Mary is designated Mediatrix of Grace, it’s a good idea to clear up
any misunderstanding concerning Christ’s majestic
stateliness of being the “one mediator between God and man.” Protestants who
object to this Catholic Marian doctrine do so because they think it “takes away
from or adds to the dignity and efficacy of Christ the one Mediator.” To
support their objection, they usually quote in isolation 1 Timothy 2:5: “For
there is one God and one mediator between God and mankind, the man Christ
Jesus.”
However, St. Paul doesn’t mean to say that Jesus is our “one and only” mediator in the entire economy of salvation. If this were his intention, he would have chosen the Greek word monos (μόνος) instead of heis (εἷς). Using heis, the apostle means there is “one and the same mediator between God and mankind.” Jesus is exclusively the one mediator for both the Jews and the Gentiles in “uniqueness” but in “a sameness of function” (commonality or universality), which the word heis denotes. This is what Paul means, considering what he writes in the four preceding verses: “I urge, then, first of all, that petitions, prayers, intercession, and thanksgiving be made for all people… This is good and pleases God our Savior, who wants everyone to be saved and come to know the truth” (1 Tim 2:1-4). By no means are baptized Christians totally passive in the divine work of salvation.
If then, we were to
ask Paul, the father of the theology of human mediation, how it is that the
Blessed Virgin Mary is a mediator (mediatrix), he would reply by saying that
she intercedes for us in the name of her divine Son by making petitions and
prayerful intercessions in Heaven. And he would indeed underscore the fact that
she isn’t our Mediatrix of Grace by having given herself as “a ransom for all
people” through the outpouring of her blood (1 Tim 2:6). For the apostle, Mary
would be a factual mediator, not unlike himself and Abraham, who intercedes for
us by participating in the principal mediation of her divine Son (covenantal Mediator) in and through
his merits, as all baptized Christians can do as adopted sons and daughters of
God; only the mother of our Lord holds a pre-eminent place in the order of
grace because of her moral participation in the hypostatic order of Christ’s
incarnation and his work of redemption.
Hence, Vatican 2 has
made it clear that Christ is the one mediator as such by divine nature. He
alone has merited the initial grace of justification and forgiveness by being God and man in his work of redemption (Eph 2:8-9). And He alone has
produced all the actual graces (faith, hope, charity, etc.) we can now receive
and minister by his passion and death. What he alone has merited for us is the
ability to merit an increase of grace and charity for ourselves and others for
our growth in sanctification and justification. God hears the prayers of the
righteous (Jas 5:17). Christ alone has made this possible for us by his unique
mediation, in and through which we become adopted children of God who partake
of his divine nature and are a kingdom of priests to serve our God (1 Pet 2:5;
2 Pet 1:4). Indeed, God has prepared us to do good works in His grace given the merits of Christ, and these good works include corporal and spiritual
works of mercy, such as offering our prayers for others and making personal
sacrifices for the salvation of souls (Eph 2:10).
Moreover, there is only
one mediator, Christ, whose sacrificial work is necessary if mankind
is to be redeemed and reconciled to God. Without Christ, there can be no
salvation in the Divine plan. Although God has willed that the Blessed Virgin Mary
should participate in His plan of salvation, her involvement and contribution
aren’t necessary since she cannot merit grace for anyone, including herself,
in strict justice, but only by right of friendship, if this is what God wills.
What Mary can merit by her prayerful mediation is sufficient insofar as how God
has ordered her moral participation in and through her Son’s merits, without
which the reward of eternal life couldn’t be produced at all, not by the Virgin
Mary or any saint.
Christ’s mediation is
more than sufficient and necessary for the forgiveness of sins and our initial
justification. Still, God has obligated himself to honor the Blessed Virgin
Mary’s merits in His love and mercy. But she can only merit an increase
in sanctification and charity needed to attain salvation, a gift
and a reward that Christ alone has produced for mankind. Our Lord and Savior
does not depend on anyone in what he alone has merited for mankind
(justification and forgiveness). However, he desires that all the members of his
mystical body participate with him in his mediation or dispensation of grace now that he alone has merited grace for them. To be sure, we read in 1 Pet
4:10: “As every man hath received grace, ministering the same one to another:
as good stewards of the manifold grace of God.”
The Protestant doctrine
of sola Christo (Christ alone) was originally Catholic, but it has been grossly exaggerated in Protestantism. What follows is that all
baptized Christians are merely passive spectators in God’s plan of salvation
and dispensation of grace. We can do nothing to be
personally and instrumentally saved or reckoned as just. However, the Blessed
Virgin Mary was no coerced on-looker when she declared: “Let it be done to me,
according to thy word” (Lk 1:38). By her Fiat or free consent, she brought the
living Font of all grace into the world so that “all might be saved and come to
the knowledge of the truth” (1 Tim 2:4). God honored her free will pending the
Incarnation.
Meanwhile, the universal
Magisterium of the Catholic Church reminds us that Mary is only a human
creature. Suppose God has chosen her to be our Mediatrix. In that case, it is strictly because she
freely consented to be the mother of our Lord and Saviour and to intimately
associate herself with him in his redemptive work. But what she has and can
merit for us is in cooperation with her Son and participation in his merits,
not in coordination with them. Thus, we must never forget that Mary’s
association with her Son in his saving work receives its raison d’être in the
free decision of the Father. Mary (nor any saint) must not be counted together
with her divine Son in his unique mediation, which alone is necessary for our
redemption and without which her factual mediation for an increase in
sanctification or justification would be non-existent. Mary’s whole ability to
do anything in God’s plan comes entirely from her Son, the principle of all
human merit in his sacred humanity, and the divine source of all saving grace.
Finally, we should note
that the term Mediatrix of Grace refers to all actual or signal graces necessary for effecting our increase in sanctification and attaining eternal life with God (2 Cor 2:15; 4:16; Col 3:10, etc.). These include the
actual graces of faith, hope, charity, repentance, chastity, and final
perseverance, without which we cannot reap the fruits of Christ’s saving work.
On an individual basis, the baptized are in the process of “being saved” and
“renewed” daily. The justification of the person isn’t a one-time and completed
event. So, Catholics petition Mary for these helping graces when, for example,
they recite the Rosary. These signal graces, of course, do not include the
initial grace of justification and forgiveness for our sanctification, which Christ alone has merited and produced by his death and resurrection.
There is Mary, the
Mediatrix and Dispensatrix of grace. These titles signify that, by God’s
special ordinance, all the graces merited by Christ for our salvation are
conferred and distributed foremost through the factual mediation of his mother.
These are the actual graces that Christ pours out to us through the Holy Spirit
for an increase in our sanctification or justification by Mary’s moral
influence with her divine Son. Mary’s association with her divine Son is moral
in nature. Our Blessed Lady cooperates with him through her maternal prayerful intercession by applying saving grace to all people in spiritual need according
to God’s will. Mary cooperated in the same way when she, in charity and the state
of grace, freely consented to be the mother of our Lord for the redemption of
mankind in the shadow of the Cross on Calvary (Lk 2:34-35).
Sacramental grace is
communicated by the valid and fruitful reception of any of the seven
sacraments. A distinctive sacramental grace is imparted by each sacrament following its respective purpose in the supernatural life
of the soul. The actual graces given upon the reception of the sacraments
efficaciously sanctify the soul, making it just. The faithful, however, do not
receive graces that are physically channeled through supernaturally transformed
properties naturally intrinsic to Mary, as they are conferred, for instance, by
applying the sacramental water of baptism or the oil of chrismation.
On the contrary, the graces that they receive through her mediation are a share
of those graces that she herself has received from the Holy Spirit without
making any physical contact with her.
The Virgin Mary’s
cooperation in objective redemption points to what Catholic theologians call
“subjective redemption.” Unless we freely cooperate with the graces God
mercifully wills to give us for our sanctification, we have no hope of being
saved, for sanctification is supernatural life with God. The Holy Spirit
operates through Mary, our intermediary and chief steward of grace, as He
operates through the Seven Sacraments in the conferral of actual graces and
sanctifying grace. Unlike Mary, the sacraments are physical
instruments that communicate grace instead of a moral influence for its
conferral.
Sanctifying grace is the
supernatural state of being by the efficacious infusion of God’s grace, which
permeates the soul. Sanctifying grace is a quality of the soul created by the
activity of the Holy Spirit through His efficacious actual graces. If, then, one
should happen to receive an actual grace by touching the hem of Mary’s mantle,
that grace would be contained in this sacramental garment as a supernatural
healing property of it and not in Mary herself. However, she would undoubtedly be
endowed with that same grace that affects her soul's supernatural quality through the working of the Holy Spirit. In the same way, many people were cured
of their illnesses and liberated from demonic oppression or possession simply
by touching the handkerchiefs that were used by Paul to wipe sweat from his
body and the aprons he wore (Acts 19:12).
When we place our faith
in the powerful intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, on the other hand, we
are essentially placing our faith in her divine Son, who has granted his mother
the maternal prerogative of morally channeling the dispensation of his grace,
so that we may continue to abide in his love by faithfully observing all his
commandments (Jn 15:9-10). Christ’s redemptive work in our souls continues from
the time we are baptized and through our pilgrimage of faith as we grow in
spiritual perfection to attain our salvation by bearing fruit and persevering
in grace to the end (Col 1:11-12; 3:9-10). The grace of final perseverance is
one of the many actual graces we can receive through the intercessory prayers
of our loving Blessed Mother by her supernatural merits if only we humbly
implore her intercession as her Son desires (Prov 15:29).
“Under your mercy we take
refuge, O Mother of God,
Do not reject our supplications in necessity,
but deliver us from danger.”
– Sub Tuum Praesidium (c. A.D. 250)
And the ark of the Lord abode in the house of Obededom
the Gethite three months: and the Lord blessed Obededom,
and all his household.
2 Samuel 6, 11
And Mary abode with her about three months;
and she returned to her own house.
Luke 1, 56
John’s coming into the
world to prepare mankind for the coming of the Messiah was foretold by a
prophet who spoke of him as “A voice of one calling in the desert prepare the
way for the Lord; make straight in the wilderness a highway for our God” (Isa
40:3). And another: “I will send my messenger, who will prepare the way before
me. Then suddenly the Lord you are seeking will come to his temple; the
messenger of the covenant, whom you desire, will come,” says the Lord Almighty”
(Mal 3:1). If John had been sanctified and justified by being made holy in his
mother’s womb, making him more than a prophet, it would have happened in
anticipation of his ministry to administer or mediate the grace of
justification and forgiveness through the sacrament. John baptized his
followers in the Jordan River, which signifies the drowning of their old life
in the flesh and their emergence out of the water of purification into a new
life in the spirit through the foreseen merits of Christ.
The sanctifying grace
that the infant John received in his mother’s womb originated from the Divine
infant in Mary’s holy womb. But it was by the mediation of the mother that he
was cleansed of original sin. The powerful influence that the mother of our Lord
wielded resided in the voice of her salutation. Through Mary’s mediation, the infant John entered communion with Jesus. In Heaven, the sweet sound
of Mary’s prayers for her children never escapes the attention of her divine
Son. With that same dynamic influence only a mother can possess over her son,
the Blessed Mother petitions on behalf of all her children. David leaped and
danced with joy in the presence of the Ark of the Old Covenant, as John the
Baptist had in his mother’s womb in the presence of the Ark of the New Covenant, which, in the personification of the Blessed Virgin Mary, mediated God’s
physical presence and grace on earth.
We meet our Lord Jesus
Christ in his blessed mother, Mary, as the ancient Hebrews met God when YHWH
physically manifested Himself in the glory cloud (Shekinah) that descended on (“overshadowed”) the sanctuary and enveloped the Ark to be with them. Mary was overshadowed similarly by the Holy Spirit so that she would conceive the Son of God, and he would physically dwell among his people (Exodus 25:8; 40:34-35;
Lk 1:35; Jn 1:14).
Gary G. Michuta (Making
Sense of Mary, Grotto Press) cites Zechariah 2:10 to connect the verse with
John 1:14. In the prophecy, God says, “I am coming to dwell among you.” The
author informs us that the Greek word for “dwell” is kataskenoso, whose
root word for “tent” or “tabernacle” is skene, viz., the portable tent
or tabernacle that housed the Ark of the Covenant before Solomon built the
Temple. In the Gospel of John (1:14), the Greek word for “dwelt” is eskenosen, derived from the same root word skene. So, the evangelist literally says, “The Word became flesh and tabernacled among us.” This
occurred when Mary was overshadowed by the Holy Spirit and conceived our Lord.
God’s incarnated presence filled the temple of her body and the sanctuary of
her womb, in which He personally dwelled and filled her with His glory as He had the
Ark of the Covenant. Since Jesus comes to us through his blessed mother, Mary,
we can come to him only through her. As the living Ark of the New Covenant, our
Blessed Mother mediates the graces we need to tear down the walls or barriers
in our souls that separate and keep us from God and the life of grace.
Through Mary’s mediation, Jesus came to re-create the world and depose the Prince of darkness. The walls of Satan’s dominion in the world came crashing down through the mediation of our Lord’s mother, by whom our Lord physically manifested Himself and made His presence felt. The Virgin Mary carried in her pure womb the One who claimed, “The water that I will give him, shall become in him a fountain of water, springing up into life everlasting” (Jn 4:14). Jesus was alluding to the supernatural life we receive through Baptism, the sanctifying grace, and charity that raises us from spiritual death unto eternal life. This supernatural life of grace merited for us by the Son was made possible through the merciful and charitable mediation of our Blessed Mother, who brought the living Font of all saving grace into the world by the sacred tabernacle of her womb. The sound of Mary’s Fiat ascended to God’s heavenly throne sweeter than the fragrance of a burnt sacrificial offering: “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord. Be it done to me according to thy word” (Lk 1:38).
God instructed Moses to construct the Ark to mediate the divine theophany and God’s providential grace for His people, the two primary credibilities: God who is and God who saves. To inaugurate His New and everlasting covenant a millennium later, God sent the angel Gabriel to a virgin who was espoused to a man named Joseph, and the virgin’s name was Mary (Lk 1:27). It was she who was blessed above all women by being drawn into the mystery of the hypostatic order of Christ’s incarnation and his redemptive work (Lk 1:42). God willed Mary’s mediation, that we must go to the Son through His mother. All should be accomplished by her intercession from the time she joyously gave her salutary consent to be the mother of the Lord to the time she sorrowfully stood beneath the Cross on Calvary to make temporal satisfaction to God for the sins of humanity – and beyond this climactic event in salvation history until the end of this age. During this period (the new exodus anticipated by the Jews), she hasn’t laid her saving office aside as our Queen Mother (Gebirah) and Advocatrix.
Indeed, God decreed by
His consequent will that “all good should come to us through the hands of
Mary.” God gave us this Mediatrix by “His most merciful Providence” (Pope Leo
Xlll, Encyclical, Jucunda sempre). Our Lord and Saviour constituted her “Mother
of Mercy, Queen, and a most loving advocate, Mediatrix of His graces, Dispenser
of His treasures” (Pope Pius Xll, Radio Message to Fatima). ‘When Bathsheba
went to King Solomon to speak to him for Adonijah, the king stood up to meet
her, bowed to her, and sat down on his throne. He had a throne brought for
the king’s mother, and she sat down at his right hand. “I have one small
request to make of you,” she said. “Do not refuse me.” The king replied, “Make
it, my mother; I will not refuse you”’ (1 Kings 2:19-20).
Mary received her office
of Queen Mother and Advocatrix from God. By being the royal mother of the King,
she is intricately linked to Christ’s saving mysteries and the restoration of
the Davidic kingdom as foretold by the prophets (Lk 1:31-33). As our maternal advocate,
Mary offers our petitions to her Son for the graces we need to inherit the
kingdom. By this title, we are not so much her subjects as we are her children,
her being the mother of our Head and Body of which we are the members. Through
her life, the Blessed Virgin Mary relates to us as a genuine mother
should. Mary is not just a metaphor. “She (personally) teaches us all the
virtues; she gives us her Son, and with Him, all the help that we need, for God
has willed that we should have everything through Mary” ( Pope Pius Xll,
Encyclical, Mediator Dei).
God said to the serpent:
“I will put enmities between thee and the woman, and between her seed and thy
seed; she will crush your head, as you lie in wait for her heel” (Gen 3:15). In
the wake of the fall, of Adam and Eve, God foretold that He would designate
Mary to be the universal Mediatrix to help repair and undo the fall of mankind
in union with her Son. This was right after He chastised the serpent for having
caused the fall by deceiving the virgin Eve of her innocence. The Virgin Mary
was chosen “before all ages, prepared for Himself by the Most High” to be the
“Reparatrix of the first parents, the giver of life to posterity” (Pope Pius
lX, Apostolic Constitution, Ineffabilis Deus). At the beginning of creation, at the time of the fall which God foresaw but permitted for the sake of a greater good, “Mary was set up as the pledge of restoration of peace (with God) and salvation” (Pope Leo Xlll Encyclical, Augustissimae).
Mary is the Immaculate
Mother of the Church who is at total enmity with the serpent by being without
sin and standing ever-just before God as our pre-eminent patroness. In a
universal capacity, our Blessed Mother serves to help repair the fall of
mankind by giving her children a filial spirit through the graces they receive
through her maternal intercession. Mother Mary desires that we cease to offend God and be reconciled to Him. She is there to teach us her docility as a servant of God. Mary calls us to supplicate her for the
graces to humble ourselves before God and abide in His love. She truly
is our heavenly mother, for through her maternal patronage, we receive the
divine life if, in a childlike spirit, we truly wish to turn towards God
through her and be one with her divine offspring as from her regenerating womb
at enmity with the serpent and its offspring: wicked and sinful humanity.
The late Catholic
Theologian Father Garrigou-Lagrange (Mother of the Savior: Tan) tells us that
true devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary is a sign of being predestined to
glory. So, now that we Christians have been predestined to grace, being adopted
sons and daughters of God by partaking of the divine life, we have a far
greater chance of attaining our salvation and realizing our hope if we take
recourse to the Immaculate Heart of our Blessed Mother for the actual graces we
need to persevere in faith. This is because her divine Son has ordered it this
way. In Heaven, Mary prays for all God’s created children, but she is more
attentive to the spiritual needs of those regenerated in Christ and who humbly implore her intercession. For his mother’s sake more than ours, Jesus confers his graces on us from conversion through repentance to final
perseverance (the principle of predilection).
The prophet Elijah
prayed fervently so that it might not rain, and so it did not rain for three
years and six months. Then, when he prayed that God would provide rain for the fruit
harvest, his prayer was answered. This was because God heard the prayers of the
righteous who aligned their will with His. If God could work great wonders such
as these in response to the prayers of a prophet, what more marvelous wonders must He
perform in response to the prayers of His own mother? All Christians are
exhorted to pray for the conversion of sinners so that they might be healed and
saved by the grace of God (Jas 5:13-19).
In the order of grace,
the Blessed Virgin Mary leads the way. By joining our prayers to God with hers
and asking her to put in a good word for us, we can be confident that our Lord
will shower down an abundance of grace on us from Heaven. This is because our
Blessed Mother is holy with absolute perfection as we continue to strive towards that heavenly perfection that she has been graced with in our pilgrimage of
faith on earth. Mary has singularly attained her salvation: the
redemption and glorification of her body in anticipation of ours, and she has
received her eternal reward for her labor in Christ’s vineyard. At the same time, there is
no guarantee that we will attain ours.
So, we must implore our Blessed Mother for her moral
assistance since she has an immeasurably far more significant influence on her Son than
we can ever hope to have in our fallen human state.
Christ has designated his blessed mother, Mary, as Our Lady of Perpetual Help. And so, by this title, the pilgrim Church implores her powerful maternal intercession in Heaven. The Blessed Virgin Mary is the Mediatrix in the dispensation of grace – our Dispensatrix. She undertook the discharge of her maternal duties when the Church was born at Pentecost. She nurtured the infant Church in Jerusalem “by her holy example, authoritative counsel, sweet consolation, and fruitful prayers.” She was, in truth, “the Mother of the Church and the Queen of Apostles” (Pope Leo Xlll, Encyclical, Ubri primum).
Jesus entrusted the
Church to his mother Mary’s tender care and the whole human race in the
disciple John from the Cross (Jn 19:26-27). Mary received the redefinition of
her motherhood while uniting her sorrow with the suffering of her beloved Son. She prayed more fervently for sinful humanity while she was smitten with great sorrow, and a sword pierced her heart, all because of the perfect love she had for her Son, who was unjustly “wounded for our transgressions.” Thus, God
accepted her prayers as they were joined with her Son’s self-sacrifice for the
expiation of our sins. Only by suffering for the world's sins and dying to self together with Him could Mary become the mother of us all and reign with her Son, the King of Kings, as our Queen Mother (2 Tim 2:11).
The sword that pierced
our Great Lady’s heart or soul undid the vain and selfish pleasures Eve sought
for herself while she presumed she could be like God apart from Him and before
Him. By her sorrow, Mary repaired what Eve had wrought to God’s satisfaction.
Jesus would not undo what Adam had wrought in his pride unless his mother stood
at the foot of the Cross and united her interior suffering with his suffering
by the Father’s will. “From this community of will and
suffering between Christ and Mary, she merited to become most worthily the
Reparatrix of the lost world and Dispensatrix of all the gifts that our Saviour
purchased for us by His death and blood…By this union of sorrow and
suffering which existed between the Mother and the Son, it has been allowed
through the august Virgin to be the most powerful Mediatrix and advocate of the
whole world with her divine Son” (Pope Pius X, Encyclical, Ad Diem illum).
Hence, the Blessed Virgin Mary is the “help of Christians” and the “refuge of mankind.” She is “triumphant in all battles” with the serpent as she fights against it with her children in their spiritual warfare. Given this cosmic battle between light and darkness, in which we are involved as descendants of Adam and Eve, we should humbly prostrate ourselves before the heavenly throne of our Queen Mother as her loyal suppliants, “confident that we shall obtain mercy and grace, the needed assistance and protection, during the calamities of these days…through the goodness of [her] motherly heart” (Pope Pius Xll, Radio Message).
The Blessed Virgin Mary
is intimately associated with our Lord Jesus forever with infinite power and
majesty, in virtue of her royal dignity as a daughter of King David and the
mother of Christ the King in the New Dispensation of all the saving graces
which flow from the redemption gained for us by her royal Son. This is all possible because “she gave us Jesus, Himself, the source of grace.” Mary has
been the mediatrix and dispensatrix of all graces since the Annunciation.
Predestined to be the mother of our Lord, “she has been appointed the mediatrix
of all the graces which look towards sanctification” in and through the merits
of her divine Son (Pope Pius Xll, Apostolic Constitution, Sedes sepientiae).
All baptized Christians
in communion with the Vicar of Christ, whether alive or dead, are members of
the mystical Body of Christ, which comprises both the heavenly and the pilgrim
church on earth. We read in sacred Scripture that all members of Christ’s body
are bound together by mutual love (Jn 13:34-35; Rom 12:10, 13:8; Gal 5:13; Eph
4:2, 16:1, etc.). The Head has composed his body so that all its members “may
have the same care for one another” (1 Cor 12:25-27). Death doesn’t drive a
wedge between the love that unites all the saints with each other in Christ’s
mystical Body (Rom 8:38-39). Christians remain “in him” as living members of
his body even after death (Eph 2:5-7). Thus, the saints who have passed from
this world stay united with those still living on earth.
By being connected members of Christ’s Mystical Body, the saints in Heaven can express their love and concern for the pilgrim saints on earth as best they can, that is, through prayer, which presupposes an awareness of the needs of these other beings and a communicative link with them. Meanwhile, they don’t rely on the physical sense of hearing or any form of natural mental awareness, existing in God’s eternal presence beside real-time. The saints in Heaven have a direct vision of Christ and the Beatific Vision of God, which enables them to intuit what the Lord knows and, in this capacity, be like him in his glorified state and shared humanity (1 Jn 3:2). The saints in Heaven can intuit all that God knows about the saints or other beings on earth who are of concern, except what God knows about Himself. God reveals His knowledge to them so they can express their love for others on earth in the best way possible. The saints in Heaven must know what concerns the spiritual welfare of the saints on earth if they are to show concern for them. After all, we are all members of one mystical Body in Christ the Head and comprise the family of God as His adopted children.
We read in the
Apocalypse that the prayers of the saints (in heaven and on earth) are
presented to God by the angels and human saints in heaven. This reveals that
all the saints intercede on our behalf before God. It also shows that our
prayers on earth are united with their prayers in heaven (Rev 5:8).
Further, the martyred saints in Heaven are shown to be crying out to God to avenge
their blood “on those who dwell on the earth” (Rev 6:9-11; cf. Ps 35:1;
59:1-17; 139:19; Jer 11:20; 15:15; 18:19; Zech 1:12-13). This vision indicates
that the saints in Heaven are aware of what is happening to the pilgrim Church
on earth in the wake of persecution. The saints pray for their loved
ones and all the other pilgrim members of the Body. What affects one member
affects the other. These prayers for God’s judgment on the persecutors resemble
the imprecatory prayers of the Jews in the Old Testament. Similarly, God
hears and answers the intercessory prayers of the saints in Heaven for those
brothers and sisters in Christ who are being treated unjustly on earth,
primarily because of their profession of faith (Rev 8:1-5).
In the order of grace,
therefore, the Blessed Virgin Mary’s intercession is maternally based on her
care for Christ, who alone is both the Head and the Body. Since we who belong
to her Son are members of his body, we too are her sons and daughters (Rev
12:5, 17). In Heaven, our Blessed Mother has assumed the royal office of Queen
Mother, whose throne is situated in the heavenly court on the right of the
throne of our Lord and King in the royal line of David (Lk 1:31-33; Mk 10:40). Being our
Queen Mother or “Great Lady” (Gebirah), the Blessed Virgin Mary serves as our
Mediatrix and Advocatrix. She prayerfully intercedes for us by presenting our
petitions to her Son. Like the other saints in Heaven, our Blessed Mother
cares for us, but with a maternal love that immeasurably surpasses all the other saints combined in their concern for our spiritual
well-being. Thus, she constantly prays for us with the most perfect and
solicitous maternal love, being aware of our individual spiritual needs.
Therefore, the pilgrim saints on earth have a greater chance of growing and persevering in grace and attaining their salvation if they petition their Queen Mother daily in true filial devotion. Our Lord and King Jesus Christ knows all our needs even before we present our petitions, either directly to him (but not without the other member’s awareness in his Body) or indirectly, by asking his Blessed Queen Mother and our Mother, the pre-eminent member of Christ’s Body, to put in a good word for us while we pray. This is because our Lord Jesus desires that we, stewards of grace, pray for one another in mutual, filial love as members of God’s family (Eph 3:1-13, 4:7; 1 Pet 4:10).
Of all such stewards Peter and Paul speak of, the Blessed Virgin Mary is immeasurably the most influential member of God’s heavenly kingdom because of her supreme office in her Son’s royal court. Her Son, the King, will not refuse her. By
seeking God’s grace through Mary, the pilgrim saints on earth will receive it. By petitioning the King through his Blessed Queen Mother, they will
indeed receive her loving maternal patronage, which pleases God, who for her
sake more than anyone else’s, who lacks her spiritual perfection, shall
dispense His grace wherever it is wanting in a human soul.
May he send you help from the sanctuary,
and give you support from Zion.
Psalm 20, 2
Early Sacred Tradition
“The Word will become
flesh, and the Son of God the son of man –
the Pure One opening purely
that pure womb, which generates men unto God.”
– St. Irenaeus (A.D. 180-189)
“O Lady, cease not to watch
over us; preserve and guard us under the wings
of your compassion and mercy, for, after God, we have no hope but in you!”
– St. Ephraem of Syria (c. A.D. 361)
“God has ordained that she
(Mary) should assist us in everything.”
– St, Basil the Great (A.D. 379)