Friday Focus: Thanks, Mom
“An ounce of
mother is worth a pound of clergy.” That’s a humbling Spanish proverb I came
across while researching this gospel. If anything I bet it vastly understates
the case. On the brink of Christmas, this gospel gives us an opportunity to
honor Mary for her coming role in the Nativity and by extension honor all those
women who not only give us life, but teach us how to live it. And that’s an
essential distinction. As one wag put it: Giving birth doesn’t make you a
mother, any more than owning a piano makes you a musician. It is very telling
that the word “mother” is both a noun and a verb. As a verb “to mother” has
much broader implications than just the act of giving birth.
So, what kind of a mother was Mary? How did she mother?
And what can we learn from her, to draw closer to her Son? First of all, she
was an improbable mother – a village girl who had the sun, the moon and the
stars land on her one day. But for all her youth and inexperience, she looked
at life through the lens of faith. St. Ambrose captures Mary’s perspective
perfectly when he preaches that: “She, who bore the Savior, understood the
weight of an uncertain future. She, the humblest of women, found herself called
to serve her Lord in a way that seemed impossible. Yet she embraced the call,
both the gift of birth and the sacrifice of the cross.”
That’s what faith can do. It doesn’t banish fear.
But it gives us the grace to accept our fears and to give them to God for his
keeping. That’s the first lesson Mary teaches us: in the face of the
overwhelming … Faith; in the face of the tragic … Faith; beyond physical and
emotional endurance … Faith.
The human nature of Jesus was nurtured every day by
this woman of faith. And beyond faith was love, the defining characteristic of
motherhood. Mary loved and protected her child, struggling to give him life in
a stable, fleeing before Herod into Egypt, in torment at the foot of his cross.
This week’s gospel gives us another dimension of Mary’s love. How telling that
while still reeling from the angel’s message, she rushes to aid her cousin
Elizabeth, long-thought beyond her child-bearing years. How apt that Christ’s
first miracle at Cana was initiated by his mother’s compassion for a newly
married couple.
From Giotto to Bouguereau, the
masters have struggled to capture Mary’s mother love. We need only look around
to see that mother love mirrored in our own family and in our extended parish
family. One of the great privileges of my job is to stand with families in
times of great emotional and physical trial. Repeatedly I am in awe of a
mother’s faith and love, wisdom and endurance. This week’s gospel is a welcome
opportunity to express our appreciation to Mary the Mother of Jesus and to all
those women who love us and look after us. Thanks, Mom.
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