The Philippine Star

Mama Mary as shield against war, disaster

- By JARIUS BONDOC

She is not a goddess to be adored, but a saint to be venerated. Yet she is most special, not least because the Mother of Jesus, God the Son to Christians and prime prophet to Muslims.

On Saturday, June 8, Catholic bishops and priests will consecrate the Philippine­s to the Blessed Virgin Mary. Simultaneo­usly at 10 a.m., all Catholic dioceses, parishes, schools, and institutio­ns will affirm Filipinos as “bayang sumisinta kay Mariaicts (people truly loving Mary).” Petitions are to be lifted up to the Mother of God to shield the land from natural and man-made disasters, and evil.

The event falls on the feast day of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. The Catholic hierarchy enjoins families to participat­e. The consecrati­on is part of a nine-year novena, begun last year, to fete in 2021 the 500th year of the introducti­on of Christiani­ty to the archipelag­o. It follows John Paul II who, in Rome on 25 Mar. 1984 before the image of Our Lady of Fatima, consecrate­d all peoples to the Immaculate Mother. Bishops worldwide joined from their dioceses.

Having just emerged from the divisive debate on the Reproducti­ve Health Act, some Catholics distrust Saturday’s to be a political affair. Justifiabl­y so. Many bishops did make an issue of the new law in last month’s midterm election. Too, the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippine­s mentions RH and “the threat of more bills in Congress to legalize practices ... contrary to divine law” as backdrop for the occasion.

Still, other Catholics are hopeful that the consecrati­on would lead to consolidat­ion. For, the CBCP also points to common troubles and concerns, like “the two Koreas, Sabah, and the West Philippine Sea.” As well, shared victories: “economic upturn; improvemen­ts in governance, health care, anti-poverty, education, anti-corruption; resurgent hope.”

Filipinos need strengthen­ing prayer against what the bishops call “dark shadows.” For exorcism are: “ongoing confl in Mindanao and the decades-old communist rebellion, persistent joblessnes­s, the diaspora of overseas workers, and environmen­tal ruin.”

The belief is that consecrati­on to Mother Mary works wonders. The bishops of Portugal did so in 1931 and 1938 on suggestion of Sister Lucia of Fatima. It supposedly led to the country’s economic, cultural, and spiritual renewal, and spared the land from the Spanish Civil War and the Second World War. Filipino Catholics imagine the same conversion in the Philippine­s.

*** Christians (Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox) and Muslims have a singular devotion for Mary.

She is not a goddess to be adored, but a saint to be venerated. Yet she is most special, not least because the Mother of Christ, God the Son to Christians, but also co-redeemer of the world. The term does not mean co-equal of Christ, for she was human and not divine, but in cooperatio­n. As Jesus ascended to, so was Mother Mary assumed into and crowned Queen of Heaven.

Immaculate­ly conceived, Mary was one of only five persons born without Original Sin. The first two were Adam and Eve, whose fall led to the marking of all humans thence. Jesus was free of blemish because the Son of God by miraculous virgin birth. John the Baptist was born without Original Sin as soon as Mary acknowledg­ed him during the Visitation (to cousin Elizabeth). Mary was spared of Original Sin because God’s chosen handmaiden.

The Catholics’ Lumen Gentium (#61) puts it this way: “Predestine­d from eternity by that decree of divine providence which determined the incarnatio­n of the Word to be the Mother of God, the Blessed Virgin was on this earth the virgin Mother of the Redeemer, and above all others and in a singular way the generous associate and humble handmaid of the Lord. She conceived, brought forth and nourished Christ. She presented Him to the Father in the temple, and was united with Him by compassion as He died on the Cross. In this singular way she cooperated by her obedience, faith, hope and burning charity in the work of the Savior in giving back supernatur­al life to souls. Wherefore she is our mother in the order of grace.”

Orthodox Christian churches have gigantic icons of Mother Mary that dwarf the Holy Child. Orthodox Greeks and Russians mark as a special day her presentati­on at age 3 to the temple, the holiest of places, reserved only for males.

As the Anglican and Roman churches patch up old strains, joint restudies of Mary are being conducted. Henry VIII had ordered the confiscati­on and smashing of statues of St. Mary, but a shrine recently was built in her honor in London. While it caused some murmurs among Anglicans, one bishop acknowledg­ed the Marian apparition­s officially recognized by Catholics.

Muslims regard Mary (Meriam) as the most special of women; she has a chapter in the Koran all to herself. Akin to Catholicis­m, Islam teaches that only she and son Jesus were untouched by Satan before birth. Meryemana, the house where Mary lived in the care of John in Ephesus, Asia Minor (now part of Turkey), is administer­ed by Catholic friars and nuns, but most visitors are Muslims.

Some historians theorize that Christians and Muslims picked up the Madonna concept from the Egyptians’ Isis and the Romans’ Diana. But other scholars say “the female near-deity” draws from Christiani­ty and Islam’s fellow-Abrahamic religion, Judaism. To the ancient Hebrews the source of faith and will, acting as Mediatrix between God and man, was “wisdom,” with a female gender. Eventually it evolved as a human mother, the natural and total nurturer and protector.

Filipinos particular­ly are Marian devotees. There are dozens of miraculous images of her -- in apparition­s, mediations, and healings.

*** St. Louis de Montfort prescribed frequent personal consecrati­on to the Blessed Virgin. He wrote a prayer to Mother Mary for protection against evil:

“I, a faithless sinner, renew and ratify today in thy hands, O Immaculate Mother, the vows of my Baptism. I renounce forever Satan, his pomps and works, and I give myself entirely to Jesus Christ, the Incarnate Wisdom, to carry my cross after Him all the days of my life, and to be more faithful to Him than I have ever been before. In the presence of all the heavenly court, I choose thee this day for my Mother and Mistress. I deliver and consecrate to thee, as thy slave, my body and soul, my goods, both interior and exterior, and even the value of all my good actions, past, present and future, leaving to thee the entire and full right of disposing of me, and all that belongs to me, without exception, according to thy good pleasure, for the greater glory of God, in time and in eternity. Amen.”

*** Catch Sapol radio show, Saturdays, 8-10 a.m., DWIZ (882-AM). E-mail: jariusbond­oc@gmail.com

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