Therefore the intercession of Mary is
morally necessary for our
salvation.
Although not infallibly
defined as a doctrine of Church teaching, as are Mary's Immaculate
Conception and her Assumption into heaven, St. Alphonsus de Liguori
considers it to be a certain truth that all graces come to us through
the Mother of God. He copiously demonstrates the reasons for this in
his book The Glories of Mary. St Alphonsus (1696-1787), who
has been declared a Doctor of the Church, penned this Catholic
classic 250 years ago. Following are selected passages from chapter
five of The Glories of Mary:
That it is most useful
and holy to have recourse to the intercession of Mary can only be
doubted by those who have not faith. But that which we intend to
prove here is, that the intercession of Mary is even necessary to
salvation; we say necessary – not absolutely, but morally. This
necessity proceeds from the will itself of God, that all graces that
He dispenses should pass by the hands of Mary, according to the
opinion of St. Bernard, and which we may now with safety call the
general opinion of theologians and learned men. In the words of the
saint, “Such is His will, that we should have all by Mary.”
Another author, in a
commentary on a passage of Jeremias [Jer. 31: 22], in which the
prophet, speaking of the Incarnation of the Eternal Word, and of Mary
His Mother, says that “a woman shall compass a man,” remarks,
that “as no line can be drawn from the center of a circle without
passing by the circumference, so no grace proceeds from Jesus, who is
the center of every good thing, without passing by Mary, who
compassed Him when she received Him into her womb.” Saint
Bernadine says that for this reason, “all gifts, all virtues, and
all graces are dispensed by the hands of Mary to whomsoever, when,
and as she pleases.” Richard of Saint Lawrence also asserts “that
God wills that whatever good things He bestows on His creatures
should pass by the hands of Mary.”
TAN Books |
That it is not only
lawful but useful to invoke and pray to the saints, and more
especially to the Queen of Saints, the most holy and ever Blessed
Virgin Mary, in order that they obtain us the Divine grace, is an
article of faith, and has been defined by general councils, against
heretics who condemned it as injurious to Jesus Christ, who is our
only mediator. But on the other hand it is impious to assert that
God is not pleased to grant graces at the intercession of His saints,
and more especially of Mary His mother, whom Jesus desires to see
loved and honored by all.
No one denies that Jesus
Christ is our only mediator of justice, and that He by His merits has
obtained our reconciliation with God. But . . . mediation of justice
by way of merit is one thing, and mediation of grace by way of prayer
is another. There can be no doubt that by the merits of Jesus, Mary
was made the mediatress of our salvation; not indeed a mediatress of
justice, but of grace and intercession; as St. Bonaventure expressly
calls her “Mary the most faithful mediatress of our salvation.”
There is certainly
nothing contrary to faith in this, but the reverse. It is quite in
accordance with the sentiments of the Church, which, in its public
and approved prayers, teaches us continually to have recourse to this
Divine Mother, and to invoke her as the “health of the weak, the
refuge of sinners, the help of Christians, and as our life and hope.”
In the office appointed to be said on the feasts of Mary, this same
holy Church, applying the words of Ecclesiasticus to this Blessed
Virgin, gives us to understand that in her we find all hope, “In me
is all hope of life and of virtue;” in Mary is every grace, “In
me is all grace of the way and of the truth [Eccl. 24:25].” In
Mary, finally, we shall find life and eternal salvation: “Who finds
me finds life, and draws salvation from the Lord [Prov. 8:35].”
And elsewhere: “They that work by me shall not sin; they that
explain me shall have everlasting life [Eccl 24: 30-31].” And
surely such expressions as these sufficiently prove that we require
the intercession of Mary.
By Fra Angelico |
And thus, finally, do we
understand why the holy Church requires that we should salute and
invoke the Divine Mother under the glorious title of “our hope.”
The impious Luther said that he “could not endure that the Roman
Church should call Mary, who is only a creature, 'our hope;' for,”
said he, “God alone, and Jesus Christ as our Mediator, is our hope:
and God curses those who place their hope in a creature, according to
the prophet Jeremias: 'Cursed be the man that trusteth in man, and
maketh flesh his arm, and whose heart departeth from the Lord' [Jer.
17:5].”
But the Church teaches to
invoke Mary on all occasions, and to call her “our hope; hail, our
hope!” Whoever places his confidence in a creature independently
of God, he certainly is cursed by God; for God is the only source and
dispenser of every good, and the creature without God is nothing and
can give nothing. But if our Lord has so disposed it, as we have
proved that He has done, that all graces should pass by Mary as by a
channel of mercy, we not only can but ought to assert that she, by
whose means we receive the divine graces, is truly our hope. Saint
Thomas says that “Mary is the whole hope of our salvation.”
Jesus was the fruit of
Mary, as Saint Elizabeth told her: “Blessed are thou amongst women,
and blessed is the fruit of they womb. Whoever therefore desires the
fruit must go to the tree; whoever desires Jesus must go to Mary; and
whoever finds Mary will most certainly find Jesus. And as we have
access to the Eternal Father, says Saint Bernard, only through Jesus
Christ, so we have access to Jesus Christ only through Mary: “By
thee we have access to the Son, O blessed finder of grace, bearer of
life, and mother of salvation, that we may receive Him by thee, Who
through thee was given to us.”
See my Catholic books on Mary, the
Rosary, and others Here.
The last paragraph reminds me of St. Padre Pio. So often, when a healing or miracle had taken place after his intercession, he was known to say, "Thank the Madonna." He always turned to her, and of course to Jesus and the Sacred Heart. He urged everyone to love the Madonna and pray to her. He lived with the Rosary in his hand and wrapped around his wrist, and prayed it ceaselessly. His dying words were "Gesu, Maria..."
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