Be It Done to Me

 The New Eve

Establish thy word to thy servant, in thy fear.
Psalm 119, 38

Behold the handmaid of the Lord;
be it done to me according to thy word.
And the angel departed from her.
Luke 1, 38

What was essential in the Divine plan of salvation was that the Blessed Virgin Mary should have the freedom to decide whether to be the mother of our Lord and Savior. It was necessary that her liberty of will be honored for the sake of all righteousness in harmony with the Divine essence. God desired that Mary say Yes, and only then would He become incarnate to redeem the world in the Person of the Divine Word.

In Catholic theology, there is a marked difference between God's desires and decrees. What God desires is His antecedent will, and what God decrees is His consequent will. God desires that everyone be saved (Ezek 18:23; 1 Tim 2:4; 1 Jn 2:2, etc.), but He decrees that unrepentant souls must be cast into the everlasting fire of Hell in eternal expiation for their grave sins (Mt 25:41; Lk 13:3, etc.). So, God desired Mary to say yes to His will before He would become a man. What God desired (antecedent will) would not have been realized if Mary had said No to His messenger. But God’s decree (consequent will) that Mary should have the freedom to choose to be the mother of His Only-begotten Son would have been fulfilled whether she said Yes or No to Him.

If God has decreed or determined that we all say Yes to Him with no qualification or condition, then no human soul could possibly perish. Nor could we be at liberty to choose God and accept His will for the sake of His love and goodness above all else. If we choose to say No to God, the negative consequence of being alienated and separated from Him is something we bring upon ourselves (Deut 30:19; 2 Tim 2:12, etc.). God has willed with the necessity that we have the freedom to say Yes or No to His will, for He desires that we truly love Him to make our abode with Him (Jn 14:23).

God desires that we say Yes instead of No, so He has given us the liberty to decide for ourselves. He does not determine that we say yes to His will, or else our love for God and our faithful obedience to Him become non-sequiturs because of our love. Similarly, God neither determined nor coerced Mary to say yes to the angel Gabriel. God willed with the necessity that Our Lady be free to choose Him over her natural desire. This liberty of will that God decreed for Mary should have entailed consequences for her and all humanity.

When God fashioned Mary’s soul at the first instant of her conception, He knew that she would confidently say Yes just by having created her without having to peer into the future to discover for Himself what her answer to the angel would be (Scientia media). It’s like someone who can know an entire story from beginning to end by looking at a book's cover. Mary couldn’t have said No because God infallibly knew in the immediate eternal present that she would say Yes to Him. And since He knew Mary would say Yes, she would have had to. Thus, God did not have to depend on her Fiat to become incarnate, though He desired that she freely say Yes before He would.

For God, it wasn’t a question of whether Mary would say Yes or No. God didn’t rely on other possible options either if she should say No. Nothing outside of God can constrain Him, for He infallibly knows all things that do or shall exist. But God may obligate Himself to do what is righteous in concurrence with His moral attributes. God decreed with necessity that He send the angel Gabriel to Mary for her free consent so that all people might be saved as He desired, knowing that she would say Yes to Him according to His will. Elizabeth could also praise her kinswoman for her obedient act of faith to Our Lady’s merit (Lk 1:45).

God could only have coerced Mary to say Yes if He did not know for certain what her reply would be or if He knew she would say No. There is nothing glorious about God imposing His will on anyone created in His image and acting like a benevolent tyrant or a patronizer. And, of course, God sent His Son into the world because of His absolute love for us, not because He had to. A traditional hyper-Calvinist will tell us that God decreed or determined Adam should sin so that the Son could save the Elect from the bondage of sin and damnation for the glory of God. However, we, in turn, must freely reciprocate our heavenly Father’s love just as Jesus did by being obedient to Him if we hope to be saved and make our eternal dwelling with Him as He desires (Jn 14:15, 23; 15:10). Our salvation is conditional. This is why God has written His laws in every human heart. These laws concern our inner life, not our outward circumstances.

Our relationship with God is covenantal from the time He first created Adam, who sinned by his own free will, or else there could be no such thing as original sin in the first place and no need for a redeemer and savior. Indeed, Mary proclaims in her Magnificat: “My soul glorifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my savior” (Lk 1:46-47). Without her Fiat, our Blessed Lady would have no cause to rejoice. God’s glory is proclaimed by the supernatural quality of our souls through cooperation with His saving grace and the gifts of the Holy Spirit. Our righteousness must be our own in collaboration with the Holy Spirit to enter the kingdom of heaven (Mt 5:20).

At the Annunciation, Mary led our way to God in the order of grace by helping make our pilgrimage of faith possible. By her free consent to be the mother of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ came into the world to save us from our sins and to exemplify in his humanity what we must do to be saved in concurrence with his own spiritual disposition (1 Jn 1:7; 3:3). Without free will, we couldn’t possibly possess the supernatural virtues that sanctify and justify the soul before God and unite it to Him.

That the Son of man should suffer for our transgressions and die as an expiation for our sins wasn’t an option for God either. Jesus himself said: “Was it not necessary for the Messiah to endure these things and to enter into his glory?” (Lk 24:26). So, what was also necessary was that our Lord be “made of a woman” who had the liberty to accept or reject the will of God, as much as Eve had, as to fulfill all righteousness (Gal 4:4). God didn’t depend on Mary’s reply to the angel, but the Incarnation did. Nor did God depend on Eve to cast her and her husband out of Eden. Adam and Eve had themselves banished from paradise by freely disobeying God. They weren’t predetermined to sin, or else they would be morally inculpable. Their disobedience, therefore, could be undone only by the obedience of Jesus (New Adam) and Mary (New Eve) in their filial love for the Father and complete willingness to propitiate His justice.

So, our Lord didn’t have to become a man to expiate sin. Still, in His love and mercy for mankind, God willed to reconcile the world to Himself by the sacrifice of the Son, provided a woman should humbly and lovingly receive Him into the world (Rev 3:20). That Mary should say Yes was as necessary as it was for her divine Son to suffer and die to atone for the sins of mankind since the Father graciously willed her moral participation and decreed it should be enough. The sacrifice Jesus made of himself in the person of the Son was his humble and loving Yes to the Father in his humanity (Jn 14:31). God would have it no other way, or else the angel Gabriel wouldn’t have appeared to the Virgin Mary at all.

Thus, God desired that Mary say Yes to His will and decreed that she shouldn’t decide to say No if she hoped to be saved with the rest of humanity. Our Blessed Lady’s Yes to God temporally preceded her Divine Son’s Yes to the Father. They brought the Lamb of God into the world so that his Yes may redeem humanity (Jn 1:29). Mary freely chose what God desired since she desired nothing but what He desired. For this reason, the Holy Spirit overshadowed her, and she conceived and bore God’s holy Son (Lk 1:35).

Mary sought the fulfillment of their shared desire so that it would redound to God’s glory. Whatever reward she might merit for her obedient act of faith was secondary in value to her. Apart from her compassion towards fallen humanity, what mattered to her was that God should be appeased for the world's sins because of His infinite love and goodness in His justice. The handmaid of the Lord proved to be the ideal model of what it means to have the saving theological virtue of faith in charity and grace, without which no person can ever hope to be saved.

γένοιτό μοι κατὰ τὸ ῥῆμά σου

The angel Gabriel departed upon Mary’s Fiat as instantly as when he appeared to her. The purpose of his visit was accomplished as expected when Mary humbly decided to align her will with God’s will so that what the angel had said to her should be fulfilled. The original Greek text is transliterated genoito moi kata to rhēma. What our Lady declared to the angel in Aramaic, therefore, was, “Be it to me what you have said.” In other words, seeing that the angel was God’s messenger, Mary said, “May it be for me by God’s will.” Our Lady’s response was an act of faith working through love (Gal 5:5-6).

The expression genoito (γένοιτό) or “be it” indicates that our Blessed Lady did not merely act in passive submission like a slave who has no choice but to submit to her master’s command in dreadful fear. Rather, she responded freely and appreciatively in a spirit of great joy. This Greek word is a form of the verb ginomai (γίνομαι) or “to come into being.” God’s word found fulfillment, and the Incarnation happened because Mary found no true joy in this world except in God. The Divine Logos would not come into the world unless He were joyfully and lovingly received by the young maiden he chose to be His mother.

What gave Mary much cause to rejoice was that which God had decreed from all eternity should come through His chosen handmaid. Mary freely chose to do God’s will by giving her salutary consent because she cherished the spirit of the Torah and yearned for God’s justice and mercy to be visibly manifested in a wicked world. She constantly sought the Lord throughout her life, understanding and appreciating everything that pleased God. The Annunciation happened because, in her humility and poverty of spirit, Mary sought nothing for her own glory, owning that only God Himself could exalt her by looking with favor on his handmaid's lowliness (Lk 1:48).

The Annunciation happened because of Mary’s love of God and her poverty of spirit. Eve helped alienate humankind from God because of her pride and vanity. The Lord’s chosen handmaid was called to undo Eve’s disobedience and to do so in a reciprocal way: by being radically opposed. God’s goodness and love required no other path than this one in His plan of redemption. It is through Mary’s faith and love that the Son should undo the sin of Adam and conquer the serpent once and for all. Mary was called to be more of a faithful helpmate than a physically nurturing mother of the new Adam (Gen 2:18; Lk 11:27-28).

What happened, then, was that the angel Gabriel appeared to Mary with a Divine proposition. She wasn’t commanded to be the mother of our Lord in the least. The angel simply revealed God’s plan to her, which Mary could embrace or reject. Now, the angel speaks of the conception and birth of a son, whom Mary is to call Jesus, as being definite future events. But this doesn’t necessarily mean that Mary had no choice but to be the mother of the Lord. God’s foreknowledge doesn’t determine our actions. Rather, God knew from all eternity that His faithful handmaid would find no joy in this world except in life with Him. And so, our Blessed Lady would joyfully say Yes to His will without hesitation.

God knew that by the efficacious influence of His actual graces and the prompting of the Holy Spirit, Mary would never want to say No to Him. Perhaps the apostle Paul had the mother of our Lord in the back of his mind when he wrote: ‘For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them’ (Eph 2:10). And since “God desires that everyone be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth,” He sent His angelic messenger to the woman who He foretold to the serpent would crush its head by her act of faith in charity and grace which bore the redemptive fruit of her womb.

The Holy Spirit overshadowed Mary because He was already dwelling in her soul. The angel appeared to her since she was a pure and chaste temple of God, the worthiest of all young maidens to be the mother of the Lord (1 Cor 3:16). Mary understood through the Spirit’s gift of wisdom and humbly accepted in faith that she was God’s creative handiwork, and as such she was not “her own” but belonged primarily to God her Creator Spirit (1 Cor 6:19). “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us” (Jn 1:14), for Mary’s soul “magnified the Lord” (Lk 1:46). Being “the temple of the living God,” there were no worldly idols in her soul that could defile her. Mary was chosen to be the mother of God because she was a true servant of Israel in the spirit – God’s chosen daughter who had no affinity with sinful humanity (2 Cor 6:16).

God had put His Spirit in Mary when He fashioned and sanctified her soul at the first instant of her conception. He preserved her free from contracting the stain of original sin so that His handmaid would always walk in His statutes and observe His ordinances without ever falling from His grace. Without violating Mary’s liberty of the will but being exceptionally persuasive, God caused her to never want to say No to Him by the efficacy of His actual graces and the gifts of the Holy Spirit, which enabled her to refrain from committing any personal sins in either thought, word, or deed (Ezek 36:27; Lk 1:28).

Our Blessed Lady “guarded the treasures” of the Holy Spirit entrusted to her as His gifts throughout her entire life (2 Tim 1:14). She would have had to, or else God wouldn’t have sent His messenger to her with His proposal. The mother of God must never fall from grace but should always find favor with Him (Luke 1:30). Mary had no cause to fear the Divine justice, having been preserved free from every stain of sin. The Annunciation happened because she bore the fruit of the Spirit in conducting her life: “love, joy, peace, kindness, goodness, faithfulness” – and I should add humility and poverty of spirit (Gal 5:22). Our Lord’s faithful and chaste handmaid lived her life “not in the flesh, but in the spirit.” She conceived Christ because His Spirit dwelled in her. Mary could be his mother, for she belonged to him, having been pledged to her Divine Son by the grace of God in her own mother’s womb (Rom 8:9). Mary received a singular anointing from Him, who would be her Son, upon her Immaculate Conception, so that she would always abide in him, as to be a mother worthiest of him (1 Jn 2:27).

“You have knowledge of all things, and you know that I hate the splendor of the wicked and abhor
the bed of the uncircumcised and of any alien. You know my necessity—that I abhor the sign of
my proud position, which is upon my head on days when I appear in public. I abhor it like a filthy
rag, and I do not wear it on the days when I am at leisure. And your handmaid has not eaten at
Haman’s table, and I have not honored the king’s feast or drunk the wine of libations. Your
handmaid has had no joy since the day that I was brought here until now, except in you, O Lord
God of Abraham. O God, whose might is over all, hear the voice of the despairing, and save us
from the hands of evildoers. And save me from my fear!”
Esther [C] 14, 14-19

In the spirit of Queen Esther, the Virgin Mary possessed a steadfast love of God and trust in His mercy. She felt sorrowful compassion for humanity in exile no less than the Jewish heroine had for her people in their captivity. Mary’s Fiat rose to heaven as sweetly as Esther’s prayer had risen to God, that He may deliver His people from slavery to sin and the clutches of impending spiritual death. Mary understood that God desired to be merciful to humankind and offer sinful humanity its redemption with the coming of the promised Messiah. She desired as much that God’s justice be manifested so that the enemies of mankind, viz., suffering and death, could be destroyed once and for all.

When our Blessed Lady declared, “Be it done to me,” she wished to relieve the world of the distress brought about by its sinful condition. She believed that only God could deliver the world from the powers of darkness through His Messiah if it were His will. By the sanctifying light of faith, Mary saw that her Yes to God would cast the prince of darkness from his throne and bring permanent ruin to his dominion on earth and his wicked seed who have cause to fear the Divine justice. God’s hatred for sin would now be turned against the author of sin for His love and tender compassion for His people (Gen 3:14). God would honor Mary’s consent, for His beloved handmaid was a daughter after His own heart.

Mary couldn’t possibly want to say No, for the child she should bear would inherit the throne of his father David and establish his heavenly kingdom on earth upon deposing the dark ruler of this world (Lk 1:31-33). It was “in the presence of the lion” which prowled around in the world to devour vulnerable souls that Mary freely consented to be the mother of the divine Messiah. God honored her decision by becoming incarnate since her will had aligned with His. Her soul “magnified the Lord,” unaffected by pride and inordinate desires. There was no place for alluring idols in the depths of her soul. Mary “never graced the banquets of earthly kings or drank the wine of libations” to any idols, for the God of Abraham was her only true joy.

Indeed, the Messiah was forever her King and Savior, in whom her spirit rejoiced (Lk 1:46-47). In him, she had hoped to find refuge and receive strength in a wicked world. She always yearned He would finally come to satisfy the righteous in their hunger for justice and send away the wicked empty along with their vain riches. Mary couldn’t resist the joy of bearing the One who she desired would rule the world with a rod of iron or justice (Rev 2:27; 19:15). From his throne, he would “scatter the proud in their conceit, cast down the mighty from their thrones, and lift up the lowly” (Lk 1:50-51).

Mary was blessed (eulogemene) above all women for being chosen to be the Mother of God. Still, unless she first found joy in helping to accomplish what God desired, she would never have been graced with the joy of being His mother, nor could there be any explanation for Mary’s joy if she were nothing more than a subjected slave who had no choice but to submit to her master’s command in fear of his wrath. The angel assured our Blessed Lady that she had no cause to fear his presence, and that was because she had found grace with God by having observed His word throughout her life (Lk 1:30). And he implicitly assured her that she would remain in God’s grace from that time on, or else she wouldn’t have been chosen to be the mother of the Lord (Lk 1:28). Jesus himself would affirm that his mother Mary was more or truly (menoun) blessed for her faith and impeccable obedience to God rather than for being a natural mother to him (Lk 11:27-28).

The Lord’s handmaid heard the word of God and kept it treasured in the depths of her immaculate heart, not because she feared the Divine wrath but because she loved God more than any created thing. So, she had no cause to fear His wrath, unlike the wicked. ‘There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear because fear has to do with punishment’ (1 Jn 4:18). God’s grace went before the Virgin Mary from the first instant of her conception, through her birth, and until her Dormition since she was predestined to be the Mother of God (Isa 7:14; Lk 1:35, 43). She was infallibly made and kept pure of heart and inviolate in body and soul by the power of divine grace, which our Blessed Lady was exceptionally endowed with and opened her soul to because of her election to the Divine Maternity. Now to Him, the one who could keep Mary from falling and present her before His glorious presence without fault and with great joy, be glory, power, majesty, and authority through Jesus Christ our Lord (Jude 1:24-25).

From the time God first promised Abraham that He would make him the father of many nations, at the time God established His covenant with His chosen people through Moses at Mount Sinai, during the reign of the Davidic kings, and through the time of the prophets, all things were hastening towards the day when the Holy Spirit would come, bringing the light of life and fire from heaven. Ezekiel envisioned the coming of the Paraclete whom Christ would send as he promised he would after his resurrection and ascension into heaven: “Therefore prophesy and say to them, ‘Thus says the Lord GOD: “Behold, O My people, I will open your graves and cause you to come up from your graves, and bring you into the land of Israel. “Then you shall know that I am the LORD, when I have opened your graves, O My people, and brought you up from your graves. “I will put My Spirit in you, and you shall live, and I will place you in your own land” (Ezek 37:12-14). And again: “A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you: and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you a heart of flesh” (Ezek 36:26; cf. Acts 2:17).

It was on Pentecost that the Scriptures were fulfilled. On this day, the Mystical Body of Christ, the Church, was conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit came down in the upper room. At the same time, all the disciples were “persevering with one mind in prayer with the women, and Mary, the mother of Jesus, and with his brethren” (Acts 1:14). Mary was placed at the center of this small company of disciples when the Holy Spirit came down upon them in a rush of wind and with fire because of her association with Him in the hypostatic order of Christ’s incarnation. The Holy Spirit descended upon the Apostles and the disciples present there since He had already come upon Mary. By the descent of the Holy Spirit, the Church was born. The word of God was conceived by all the faithful in the upper room in the womb of their souls as the living Word of God had been conceived in the womb of his most Blessed Mother because of her immaculate heart.

All this began with the Blessed Virgin Mary, the handmaid of the Lord, when the angel Gabriel appeared to her in the month of Nisan to give her the good news of salvation. Mary conceived the Divine Word in her womb, for she had found favor with God, who had put His spirit within her at the first instant of her conception. The Spirit came into her heart and filled her soul with abundant grace. And, so, she physically conceived Jesus, as the Apostles and all the disciples would spiritually conceive him, for the Church to be born. There could be no Church without her spotless and unblemished prototype: The Blessed Virgin Mary. No bride of Christ could have been born without the personal spouse of the Holy Spirit who has sanctified the Church by His presence only by having first sanctified Mary’s womb. Our Blessed Lady represents the nuptial union between Christ and his Church.

What was fulfilled on Pentecost in the heart and soul of mankind was anticipated in the heart and soul of Mary. She was the first member to have formed the mystical Body of Christ with her Son as Head. Our Blessed Lady pronounced her Fiat because the charity of God was poured forth into her heart by His sanctifying grace through the Spirit who was given to her (Rom 5:5). She received the Spirit of adoption as a daughter of God whereby she could joyfully cry “Abba Father” (Rom 8:15): “May it be done to me according to thy word.” There could be no Pentecost without the Incarnation, no incarnation without the Virgin Mary. Her Fiat or loving consent was her “I do.” The Annunciation was Mary’s wedding day. Her marriage with the Divine Bridegroom in the Holy Spirit was consummated the first instant she conceived him in her womb so that he would be conceived in the womb of the virgin Church and born into the world through the proclamation of the Gospel and the administration of the sacraments – signs of our new life with God.

Perhaps we could say the Church was born at the Annunciation. The Incarnation did occur within the sanctuary of Mary’s immaculate heart. Her innermost being was where her Divine Son was initially conceived before he should physically enter his mother’s sacred womb. Mary the Immaculate Mother was in her person the “holy and unblemished bride” of her Son – a living symbol of the Church (Eph 5:27). The Holy Spirit overshadowed and filled her with an abundance of even more grace since she was trusting and obedient to God whom she loved and adored above all created things. The heart of Mary was a redeemed heart of flesh, which foreshadowed the upper room where the redeemed would be gathered, waiting for the promised Spirit to inflame their hearts with the law of Christ.

The mystery of the heart of the Church was initially manifested in the heart of Mary when she joyfully consented to be the mother of God incarnate and our Divine Bridegroom. She kept God’s words and signs, pondering them in her heart and even more fervently since the angel appeared to her. (Lk 2:19, 51). The Holy Spirit came down in the upper room because Mary had persevered in faith to the end. Through her perseverance in faith, conversions of the heart in living souls would occur from the day the Church was born (Acts 2:41). Mary truly is the Mother of the Church, our mother in virtue of our marriage covenant with her divine Son (Jn 2:2-11).

Thus, Mary represents the Church her Son has established – the New Jerusalem coming down from heaven – as the prototype of all faithful believers. Because of her faith in working through love, God’s only Son became man by the power of the Holy Spirit. By her salutary consent, many sons and daughters were to be born to God from the womb of the Church by the power of that same Holy Spirit who overshadowed her. All the prophecies were fulfilled in Mary, Isaiah’s sign of the restoration, for the Holy Spirit had breathed life into her soul, this same Spirit who shall change the world in the last age in collaboration with her.

I delight to do Your will, O my God;
Your Law is within my heart.
Psalm 40, 8

What Ezekiel envisioned with other prophets was God’s establishment of His New Dispensation, which would replace the Old and include the Gentiles, who, together with the faithful remnant of Israel, would constitute His heavenly kingdom, the Church of the New Testament. The Christian ethic was not to be found in a collection of commands and norms but was to be the Holy Spirit Himself, who, in essence, is love. Mary was the first of God’s newly chosen people to be moved and motivated by the Holy Spirit as God is in His deeds.

Mary is the prototype of the Church: the living members of Christ’s mystical body in virtue of their baptism and adherence to the one true faith. She conceived the Word of God in her womb because she faithfully collaborated with the Holy Spirit, who prompted her to live the same way as God in emulating her Divine Son. God looked with favor on His handmaid because she opened her heart and soul to the Spirit given to her. Mary was chosen to be the mother of God incarnate because she lived by the spirit of the law, the natural law of love and freedom which God had inscribed in every human heart. This law is love, which is the person of the Holy Spirit, our instructor. By following this single command, Mary could abide in God as all her Son’s faithful disciples do by fulfilling their baptismal commitments (Mt 22:37-40; 1 Jn 4:16).

Our Lord and Savior came into the world because the maiden he had chosen to be His mother was filled with the Holy Spirit, specially prepared by God to receive Him in her holy womb. He had filled her soul with His sanctifying grace and regenerated her heart in anticipation of sanctifying her womb and His personal dwelling place with His presence. There was unity and harmony between the Holy Spirit and Mary, a true daughter of God and His covenant with her people. Unlike most of the Jews in her time, she was in no dire need to be solely dependent upon the religious instructions of her elders and kept in rein. God Himself was her counselor whom she heeded with spiritual perfection.

Indeed, Mary was free of the law's curse, for the Holy Spirit dwelled inside her and ruled her soul, instructing her on how to live. Not once did she commit a personal sin, for her heart was pure and untainted. Mary abided in God’s love, for the door to her heart was always left open to Him. She joyfully received all she was taught in the depths of her heart and soul (1 Jn 2:27) just as she had the angel's words in humility and poverty of spirit. The Annunciation happened because Mary was like a child who depended on her father for all her spiritual needs. Mary pondered all His words in humble silence and kept them in her heart. The Holy Spirit overshadowed Mary because she allowed Him to lead her in doing what He desired. In this sense, she was truly free and completely personalized in the divine image she was originally created in (2 Cor 3:17).

Hence, Mary conceived and bore the Divine Word and made man because she desired only what God desired. The Spirit Himself bore witness with her spirit (which rejoiced in God, her savior) that she was truly a daughter of God after His own heart (Rom 8:16). And so, the Church was born when Mary joyfully declared: “May it be done to me according to thy word.” The mystery of Mary is the same mystery of the Church, whose existence is grounded in the faith and love she possessed as the result of the Spirit’s presence (the life-giving water of Christ that draws us to the Father) within her (Rev 22:17), without which Christ would not have been conceived in her womb and entered the world for our redemption. And unless we fail to emulate the faithfulness of our Blessed Mother, our redemption will not be applied. 

Our Blessed Lady and Handmaid of the Lord was the first laborer to joyfully work in her Son’s vineyard for the salvation of souls in faith, working through love by consenting to be his mother and following him all the way to the Cross on Calvary (Mt 20:1-16). Without her presence at the foot of the Cross, no blood (justification) and water (regeneration) would have flowed from our Lord’s side to give birth to the Church as one visible corporate entity united in faith, for there could be no Calvary unless Mary faithfully stood beneath the Cross uniting her interior suffering with her Son’s anguish because of sin. Without the Blessed Virgin Mary, no Disciple could be standing there with her as a fellow pilgrim of faith rejoicing in God’s salvation despite the great trials.

Shall not Zion say:
This man and that man is born in her,
and the Highest himself hath founded her?
Psalm 87, 5

Early Sacred Tradition

“For as Eve was seduced by the word of an angel to flee from God, having rebelled against His
Word, so Mary by the word of an angel received the glad tidings that she would bear God by
obeying his Word. The former was seduced to disobey God, but the latter was persuaded to
obey God, so that the Virgin Mary might become the advocate of the virgin Eve. As the human
race was subjected to death through [the act of]  virgin, so it was saved by a virgin.”
St. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, V:19,1
(A.D. 188)

“Holy and wise in all things was the all-blessed Virgin; in all ways peerless among all nations,
and unrivalled among women. Not as the first virgin Eva, who being alone in the garden, was
in her weak mind led astray by the serpent; and so took his advice and brought death into the
world; and because of that hath been all the suffering of saints. But in her alone, in this Holy
Virgin Mary, the Stem of Life hath shot up for us. For she alone was spotless in soul and body.”
St. Gregory Thaumaturgus
On the Holy Mother of God
(262 A.D.)

“It was, to divulge by the manner of His Incarnation this great secret; that purity is the only
complete indication of the presence of God and of His coming, and that no one can, in reality,
secure this for himself, unless he has altogether estranged himself from the passions of the
flesh. What happened in the stainless Mary when the fullness of the Godhead which was in
Christ shone out through her, that happens in every soul that leads by rule the virgin life.”
St. Gregory of Nyssa, On Virginity, 2
(A.D. 371)

“And if the God-bearing flesh was not ordained to be assumed
of the lump of Adam, what need was there of the Holy Virgin?”
St. Basil, To the Sozopolitans, Epistle 261
(A.D. 377)

“The first thing which kindles ardour in learning is the greatness of the teacher. What is
greater than the Mother of God? What more glorious than she whom Glory Itself chose? What
more chaste than she who bore a body without contact with another body? For why should I
speak of her other virtues? She was a virgin not only in body but also in mind, who stained the
sincerity of its disposition by no guile, who was humble in heart, grave in speech, prudent in
mind, sparing of words, studious in reading, resting her hope not on uncertain riches, but on
the prayer of the poor, intent on work, modest in discourse; wont to seek not man but God as
the judge of her thoughts, to injure no one, to have goodwill towards all, to rise up before her
elders, not to envy her equals, to avoid boastfulness, to follow reason, to love virtue.”
St. Ambrose, On Virginity, 2:15
(A.D. 377)

‘There shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse, and a flower shall grow out of his roots.’
The rod is the mother of the Lord–simple, pure, unsullied; drawing no germ of life from
without but fruitful in singleness like God Himself…Set before you the blessed Mary, whose
surpassing purity made her meet to be the mother of the Lord.”
St. Jerome, To Eustochium, Epistle 22:19,38
(A.D. 384)

“Mary, the holy Virgin, is truly great before God and men.
For how we shall not proclaim her great, who held within her
the uncontainable One, whom neither heaven nor earth can contain?”
St. Epiphanius, Panarion, 30:31
(ante A.D. 403)

“We must except the holy Virgin Mary, concerning whom I wish to raise no question when it
touches the subject of sins, out of honour to the Lord; for from Him we know what abundance
of grace for overcoming sin in every particular was conferred upon her who had the merit to
conceive and bear Him who undoubtedly had no sin.”
St. Augustine, Nature and Grace, 36:42
(A.D. 415)

“Hail, Mary, you are the most precious creature in the whole world;
hail, Mary, uncorrupt dove; hail, Mary, inextinguishable lamp;
for from you was born the Sun of justice…
through you, every faithful soul achieves salvation.”
St. Cyril of Alexandria, Homily 11 at the Council of Ephesus
(A.D. 431)

Salve Regina

Cry Aloud, O Wall of Daughter Zion

 Daughter zion

Cry aloud to the Lord! O wall of daughter Zion!
Let tears stream down like a torrent day and night!
Give yourself no rest, your eyes no respite!
Lamentations 2, 18

And Simeon blessed them,
and said to Mary his mother:
Behold this child is set for the fall,
and for the resurrection of many in Israel,
and for a sign which shall be contradicted:
And thy own soul a sword shall pierce,
that, out of many hearts,
thoughts may be revealed.
Luke 2, 34-35

The Virgin Mary rejoiced in the good news brought to her by the angel Gabriel when she declared: “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord. May it be done to me according to your word.” She responded in a spirit of gladness despite whatever trials she might endure by being the mother of the expected Messiah. As our Blessed Lady joyfully contemplated the divine favor that was granted to her by God in His infinite mercy, she knew that she would eventually have to sacrifice her maternal rights to fulfill whatever purpose lay in her divine motherhood. Being the mother of Jesus (Heb. Yeshua: “God is salvation”) certainly entailed much more than the natural state of being a mother. Mary was chosen to nurse and raise a son destined to be much more than a carpenter (Lk 1:31-33). He was, in fact, God who became incarnate to save mankind from sin and death: a king-priest like his royal ancestor, David. Indeed, Mary’s maternity was a supernatural divine calling and a spiritual vocation that God preordained to benefit all human souls. God’s handmaid was chosen to render humanity a spiritual service since she had found favor with God (Lk 1:30).

Mary knew that the patriarchs, judges, and prophets were called to serve God lifelong, so she understood that her saving office shouldn’t end once she had completed raising Jesus upon his reaching manhood, nor would it preclude any hardships for her. Still, in the obscurity of faith, which demanded her full trust in God, our Blessed Lady could only imagine what might lay in store for her. She must have thought that her Son’s birth entailed a life-long mission, along with hers, and that the two of them would somehow be associated together in a work of great personal sacrifice until God’s plan should be fulfilled.

The Lord’s faithful handmaid would eventually come to see the fullness of this divine mystery of the Incarnation on Calvary beneath the Cross while enduring her terrible sorrow because of the world’s sins. The Annunciation marked the beginning of her journey in faith under the shadow of the Cross, which loomed before her, a journey she was valiantly prepared to take like the Hebrew heroes and heroines who had gone before her because of her love of God and humanity. Conversant with Judaic tradition, Mary understood that the time of the new exodus had arrived with the coming of the long-awaited Messiah who, as foretold by the prophets, would redeem not only Israel but all humanity of sin and, by doing so, liberate man from bondage and re-create the world. Mary’s faith and trust in God gave her the moral courage to endure the many trials that should come her way for the world's salvation and entry into the promised land of God’s eternal kingdom.

By pronouncing her Fiat, Mary dedicated herself to the spiritual service of mankind because of humanity’s fall from grace and its need to be restored to God’s favor. Working together with God in the salvation of souls required that Mary should suffer for the sins of the world together with her Divine Son (Col 1:24). In true faith, our Blessed Lady was willing to accept all the trials she might have to face as the mother of God’s anointed One. Her flight into Egypt with the infant Jesus was the first of several tremendous sorrows she would have to endure as the Lord’s handmaid (Mt 2:13-23). And so, she was prepared by the power of divine grace to renounce her maternal rights and satisfy God for the world's sins by offering His gift to her back to Him ultimately on Calvary in the faithful spirit of Abraham (Gen 22:9-10).

It was beneath the Cross where our sorrowful Lady understood all too well how the child she had joyfully conceived and borne was in His Divine Person the ultimate and final propitiation for sin; that he alone could accomplish once and for all what any of the paschal lambs of the Old Covenant could never do: achieve an eternal atonement for the people’s sins through the single sacrifice of himself (Heb 9:11-14, 23-26). Our Lord’s handmaid acted believing with all her heart that all the suffering she might have to endure because of her love of God and Son, who was God in the flesh, would be for the greater good (Gen 22:15-18).

The Lord’s faithful daughter begot us in Christ Jesus by having received the Gospel message in the depths of her heart (1 Cor 4:15). Mary became our spiritual mother once she accepted the word of the angel in good faith, despite all the suffering that might entail for her but remained obscure. And so, she could have asked herself as she stood at the foot of the Cross: “Was it I who conceived all these people? Was it I who brought them forth, that You should say to me, ‘Carry them in your bosom as a nurse carries a nursing infant,’ to the land which You swore to their fathers?” (Num. 11:12). Mary became the spiritual mother of all the living – the new Eve – and the mother of all nations because she believed and acted on the word of God as Abraham had to become the father of many nations.

Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice his only beloved son, Isaac, foreshadowed Mary’s sacrificial offering of her only beloved Son, Jesus, when, in the shadow of the Cross, she presented her infant Son in the Temple partly as an act of consecration to his heavenly Father in commemoration of Abraham’s great act of faith (Lk 2:22-36). On this occasion, Simeon alluded to the greater soteriological importance of Mary’s maternal role in the economy of salvation when he prophesied to her: “And thy own soul a sword shall pierce, that, out of many hearts, thoughts shall be revealed” (Lk 2:35).

Although Mary couldn’t have envisioned the scene in Golgotha that would take place about thirty-three years later, the time would arrive when the Mother should stand at the foot of the Cross to witness the horrible suffering and death of her precious Son at the hands of ungrateful sinners, recalling not only the prophetic words of Simeon but also those piercing words of the prophet Isaiah, which the Jews never associated with the expected Messiah (53:3-5). Along with Simeon, Mary was the first to know who the Suffering Servant was. Still, how he was to suffer, this she must experience in her pierced soul as the maternal participant and protagonist in the drama of salvation envisioned by Isaiah. Perhaps our sorrowful Lady drew the connection between Jesus and the Suffering Servant at some point afterward while pondering in her heart what Simeon had portentously said to her.

Thus, Mary came to fully realize through her sorrowful experience in the Paschal mystery that her motherhood was essentially more entwined with her Son’s suffering and death than it was with his birthing and nurturing (Lk 11:27-28). The relationship between Mary and Jesus, from his nativity to the inauguration of his public ministry at the wedding feast in Cana, where he performed his first miracle upon his mother’s request, mattered little compared to the Divine plan for her. The Lord’s handmaid was predestined to be much more than the natural mother of Jesus. She was chosen to be the spiritual mother of redeemed humanity. By pronouncing her Fiat, Mary acquired dual maternity, which was eschatological in scope and continues to this day and shall continue with the end of time.

Being the new Eve and promised woman, the Virgin Mary had no offspring other than Jesus, the new Adam. Her sacred womb was meant to produce the fruit of eternal life. But by having conceived our Lord and Saviour physiologically and borne the Font of all saving grace, Mary conceived and bore spiritually all who have been regenerated unto God in Christ her Son and bear fruit that lasts to eternal life. This required that she give birth to redeemed humanity in painful labor beneath the Cross. As Mary sorrowfully gazed upon her suffering and dying son, “She was pregnant, and she cried out in her birth pangs, in the anguish of her delivery” (Rev 12:2).

Mary became our spiritual mother at the Annunciation, for she first conceived Jesus in her heart before conceiving him in her womb, as St. Augustine said. Without Mary, the Incarnation would not have taken place, and there would be no hope of salvation since there would be no Calvary without the Lamb of God. This was all part of God’s perfect plan when He sent the angel Gabriel to an innocent fourteen-year-old girl and “fair ewe” in Nazareth by the name of Mary who, not unlike Eve in her innocence, was expected to place all her faith in Him over and against any wilfulness of hers. Eve’s unfaithfulness led to Adam’s fall from grace and banishment from Eden; Mary’s faithfulness resulted in the new Adam being raised from the dead and taken up to Heaven to sit on his throne at the right hand of God, where he has cast out the serpent or our accuser by the just merits of his precious blood (Rev 12:5, 10).

Mary’s motherhood was meant to be redefined when she said: “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord. Let it be done to me according to your word.” Of course, Mary may not have imagined this when she consented to be the mother of our Lord and Savior, but Mary was predestined to become the mother of all the living. Being the spouse of the Holy Spirit, by His overshadowing her (Lk 1:35), God’s faithful handmaid and the chaste virgin bride was predestined, in the order of grace, to become a mother of a spiritual kind. It was for this reason that God sent His Son to be “made of a woman” (Gal 4:4), and her Son called her “Woman” – notably from the Cross in the presence of the Disciple whom our Lord addressed as her own son (Jn 19:26-27).

Mary was called to suffer as the mother of our Lord to “make up for what was lacking” in her Son’s suffering for the redemption of mankind. Unless she did suffer in her maternal agony because of her love of God, who was offended by sin, and her love of the Son, who was nailed to the cross because of sin, her divine motherhood couldn’t have been redefined at all. Our Blessed Lady’s spiritual motherhood received its raison d’être in her association with Jesus in mankind’s redemption, which could be achieved only through reparatory suffering and dying to self. Jesus ratified and validated Mary’s universal motherhood of mankind from the Cross, given her participation in his passion. 

Mary gave birth in the agony of labor to help redeem humanity, for she was willing to take up and lovingly embrace her cross in union with her Son. The Cross that bore her precious offspring and on which she rested her tear-stained cheek was hers as well. In spirit, Mary was nailed to the Cross. The nails that were driven into her Son’s flesh had pierced her soul, too. The Mother and the Son were crucified together on that dark but promising day for the world's sins, just as Simeon had foretold. Perhaps our sorrowful Mother reflected on the words the apostle Paul would write in his Letter to the Galatians (2:20): ‘I have been crucified with Christ, and it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me.’

Indeed, Mary sacrificed her maternal rights by faithfully offering the fruit of her womb over and against a mother’s natural instinct for the sins of the world. She made temporal satisfaction to God in union with her beloved Son’s satisfaction. God honored her peace offering to reconcile sinful humanity to God, for her Son lived in her by her supernatural act of charity and grace. The Lord was with His Blessed Mother, and she was with Him. The full force of the angel’s words at the Annunciation pierced her soul as she caressed the Cross in her mother’s anguish. Because of her sacrifice, Mary rightfully became the spiritual mother of all within whom her Son lives.  Our sorrowful “mother with the Redeemer” is our Mother by being our co-Redemptrix.

Hence, only through sorrow because of sin could Mary give birth to her descendants, regenerated in the life of grace. Her sacred womb, in which she bore the Head and Body of all her Son’s members, is the proto-type of his Mystical Body, which is the Church (Eph 4:4-13), her maternity being dual in aspect. Mary is our heavenly Mother because she conceived and gave birth to Jesus, the head and body of the Church, whose members we are. By her Divine Maternity, we are conceived in the Church and reborn in the Spirit when baptized. Spiritually and mystically, all validly baptized Christians are conceived in Mary’s womb and brought forth from it through the sacrament of initiation, by which they receive the grace of justification and forgiveness. Our Lord’s faithful handmaid is the Mother of the Church.

Our Lord implies this when he calls his Blessed Mother “Woman” from the Cross in allusion to Eve before her fall from grace and banishment from Eden to become the mother of all Adam’s fallen descendants. All Christ’s faithful disciples are made of Mary and are as much her sons and daughters as Jesus is her offspring, though not biologically or physically. Jesus is our “brother,” so this must be true. “For those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers and sisters”(Rom 8:29).

Now, why art thou drawn together with grief?
Hast thou no king in thee,
or is thy counsellor perished,
because sorrow hath taken thee as a woman in labour?
Micah 4, 9

As Mary sorrowfully stood beneath the Cross because of the world’s sins, her heart and soul were pierced with immeasurable anguish. What motherly agony she felt made temporal reparation for all the sinful pleasures man obstinately indulges in with no thought given to an offended God. Mary emptied herself and took the form of a slave together with her divine Son in his humanity to help restore the equity of justice between God and mankind. Suffice it to say, our Blessed Lady’s great personal sacrifice counter-acted Eve’s selfish act. Her interior suffering, therefore, gave temporal satisfaction to God, for she willingly suffered by her love of God, whom she wished to appease for the sins that offended Him, and her love for the Son who suffered because of sin.

Mary’s maternal sacrifice was a peace offering to God for the sake of mankind, which was ravaged by sin. In harmony with the Divine will, she desired that humanity be liberated from slavery to sin and the oppression of death wrought by Adam and Eve’s transgression. Her temporal satisfaction to God was made with her Son’s temporal and eternal satisfaction. Both the sorrowful Mother and the afflicted divine Son aligned their human wills with the will of the Father so that He would be both temporally and eternally propitiated for the sins of the world. Temporal satisfaction for sin had to be made before Christ opened the gates of Heaven. And this he willed to do only in union with his most blessed Mother and Handmaid.

For I heard a cry as of a woman in labor,
anguish as of one bringing forth her first child,
the cry of daughter Zion gasping for breath,
stretching out her hands,
“Woe is me! I am fainting before killers!”
Jeremiah 4, 31

I believe it is St. Paul who tells us: “For they disciplined us for a short time at their pleasure, but he disciplines us for our good, that we may share his holiness” (Heb 12:10). The apostle’s words reflect what he implicitly tells us in Colossians 1:24, that what is “lacking in Christ’s afflictions” refers to the debt of temporal punishment. He means to say that we can “complete” the eternal expiation for sin Christ has made for humanity by offering up our suffering in union with his suffering for the temporal remission of our debt of sin. God requires this redemptive form of suffering because it restores sinners to equality of justice in their relationship with Him through sanctification or justification to be worthy to enter heaven. God demands that such temporal satisfaction be made on our part in union with Christ’s eternal satisfaction, “for the Lord is a God of justice” (Isa 30:18), and “he judges the people with equity” (Ps 9:8). The Blessed Virgin Mary endured temporal punishment as a satisfaction for the past, present, and future sins of the world in union with her divine Son’s temporal and thereby eternal satisfaction.

Having been preserved free from the stain of original sin, she could help restore the friendship and the equality of justice between God and mankind, thereby completing what was lacking in her Son’s afflictions in his redemptive work. Her Son had taken up his cross, and so should she carry hers to complete and perfect God’s saving work by His decree. The handmaid of the Lord endured her suffering as our new maternal representative so that we might reign together with the Lord (2 Tim 2:12). We, too, must take up our cross along with her if we hope to benefit from what our Blessed Mother Mary gained to our credit by her congruous merits in union with her Son.

Our Lord’s Handmaid undid the transgression of the woman of Eden by being radically unlike her. Mary chose a painful loss in charity and grace to counterbalance Eve’s selfish pursuit of personal gain. Mary loved God to the extent of dying to her maternal self, whereas Eve loved herself more than God to the point of being totally indifferent toward Him. Thus, it took the Blessed Virgin’s pleasing sacrifice to temporally appease God for the virgin’s sin. Mary’s sacrifice was acceptable, for it was informed by love and mercy (Hos 6:6). Meanwhile, Jesus sacrificed himself more for his mother’s sake than ours because of her willingness to unite her suffering with his in charity and grace. The formal redemption of mankind (objective redemption) would be incomplete unless it was instrumentally applied – initially through the sorrow of a loving mother who has shown us what we must do to reap the fruit she has provided and be saved: take up our cross in union with her Son and follow him (“subjective redemption”).

There can be no greater sacrifice than that of a loving mother who offers the life of her beloved offspring to God and no greater sorrow to appease the Divine wrath than the sorrow of a mother who sacrifices her beloved child because of the offenses against Him. Being the Lord’s handmaid was a divine call for Mary to help reconcile the world to God in union with her divine Son by personal sacrifice, not in coordination with his merits, but in cooperation with them. Her divine motherhood was intended to be something that should extend to the whole world and embrace all of God’s fallen, created children. Having vindicated fallen Eve by persevering in grace and denying herself in faith and love, Mary rightfully became the mother of redeemed humanity: the mother of all those who have been restored to new life with God in and through the merits of her beloved Son.

Enlarge the place of thy tent,
and stretch out the skins of thy tabernacles,
spare not: lengthen thy cords,
and strengthen thy stakes.
For thou shalt pass on to the right hand, and to the left:
and thy seed shall inherit the Gentiles,
and shall inhabit the desolate cities.
Isaiah 54, 2-3

Only in union with the Mother's sorrow in obedience to God's will would the Son justify fallen man by outpouring his blood and meriting the grace of forgiveness that leads to his spiritual regeneration. Our valiant Handmaid was prepared by the grace of God to make personal sacrifices for the redemption of Israel and the whole world before the Incarnation would occur, pending her consent. True, Jesus offered to lay down his life freely to eternally atone for mankind’s sins, that he might rescue all from the evils of sin and death (Jn 10:18; Gal 1:4), but only on the condition that his blessed mother should be willing to deny her maternal rights and carry her cross after him (Lk 9: 23-24). Mary precisely did this when she pronounced her Fiat by the prompting of the Holy Spirit with whom she collaborated in the obscurity of faith.

As the spiritual mother of the world, our Blessed Lady stood morally courageous in the culmination of her sorrow by having to face the terrible agony of gazing upon her beloved Son from beneath the Cross and losing him, all because of her great love for humanity which had been ravaged by sin, and insofar that she wished to align her will with God’s desire that “everyone be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth” (1 Tim 2:1-4). As the mother of all people and in the figure of Mother Zion, Mary acted as any mother normally would by interceding for her children and soliciting their needs. And because she acted in charity and grace in observance of the Divine will, God honored His handmaid’s sacrifice and blessed it as he had Abraham’s offering of Isaac.

Your sun will never set again,
and your moon will wane no more;
the LORD will be your everlasting light,
and your days of sorrow will end.
Then all your people will be righteous
and they will possess the land forever.
They are the shoot I have planted,
the work of my hands,
for the display of my splendor.”
Isaiah 60, 20-21

And so, Mary became the mother of our Lord and Savior by her free consent in collaboration with the Holy Spirit and cooperation with divine grace. The grace of the Holy Spirit conferred true merit on her. By His prompting, Mary acted in the only way acceptable and pleasing to God. She could not conceive Jesus physically unless she had first conceived him in her heart. Nor could she be the worthy mother of the Son unless she were willing to unite herself to him in his redemptive work in perfect oneness of love for God and human souls and hatred for sin and its ravaging. “In burnt offerings and sin offerings, you have taken no pleasure. Then I said, ‘See, I have come to do your will, O God” (Heb 10:6-9). Mary’s consent was as important as her Son’s should be by the Father’s wisdom and righteousness. God could only honor her consent to bring the Messiah into the world because it conformed to His will, just as the Son’s consent to come into the world was honored by his Father. After all, it conformed to His will.

Mary’s faithful assent to the will of God had to follow throughout her entire life, just as the Son of Man’s assent to the will of the Father had to in his life on earth. Jesus became the source of our salvation through his perfect obedience to the will of the Father. His heavenly Father did designate him to be our eternal High Priest in the order of Melchizedek because he was perfected by learning obedience through suffering for the sake of His love and goodness (Heb 5:8-10). Mary had to be perfected in the same way as her Son was in his humanity for God to redefine her motherhood and designate her Mother of the Church.

Mary conceived and bore the Divine Messiah because she was willing to do any good work that God may have prepared for her (Eph 2:10). Only by her good works of mercy in charity and grace could Mary become the spiritual mother of us all. We, her children, must follow in her footsteps if we hope to conceive Christ in the womb of our souls and be saved. Mary willed in a way that God had wanted her to will with the help of His grace in conformity to His will, which conferred supernatural merit on her act of faith. Her consent to the will of God eradicated Eve’s consent to the serpent's will. Mary’s Yes to God undid the No of sinful Eve. By her Fiat, Mary crushed the serpent’s head with her heel, and by her virtuous act of faith, not only did she humiliate the Devil after what he had done to Eve to reach Adam, but God’s saving light shone forth into the world. All this because God’s light had shone forth from our Blessed Handmaid’s soul, which magnified His glory (Lk 1:46).

But we must consider another marvelous aspect of the comparison between Eve and
Mary. Eve became for men the cause of death, because through her death entered the
world. Mary, however, was the cause of life, because life has come to us through her. For
this reason, the Son of God came into the world, and, ‘where sin abounded grace super
abounded (Rom. 5:20). Whence death had its origin, thence came forth life, so that life
would succeed death. If death came from woman, then death was shut out by him who, by
means of the woman, became our life.”
St. Epiphanius of Salamis, Against Heresies, 87
(ante A.D. 403)

Out of Zion, the perfection of beauty,
God hath shined forth.
Psalm 50, 2

Salve Regina Caeli

All Generations Shall Call Me Blessed