ad1
Latest issue: 4 February 2012
Last updated: 8 February 2012

tpr

The Catholic contributor?s view

Mary: Grace and Hope in Christ ? How those involved see it

Sr Sara Butler - 21 May 2005

DURING Holy Week, one Anglican member of Arcic sent the rest of us the poem, ?Good Friday Falls on Lady Day? via email. The poet, G. Studdert Kennedy, also an Anglican, wrote: She claims no crown from Christ apart
Who gave God life and limb
She only claims a broken heart
Because of Him.

I knew that the Feast of the Annunciation of the Lord would coincide with Good Friday this year, but I did not know the poem, and I was touched to receive it. In a way, this captures something special about the process of producing ?Mary: Grace and Hope in Christ?.

From the outset, we were aware that our subject had personal implications; that it was bound up with our traditions of prayer and our own devotional life. We could not approach our theme without appealing to some tangible expression ? a feast, a prayer, a poem, a hymn, an icon, a pious practice of some kind. When the Seattle Statement was finalised, we celebrated Solemn Vespers for the Feast of the Presentation of the Lord ? a joint feast of Our Lord and his Mother.

Throughout the years spent on this text, in fact, an Anglican colleague supplied for our daily offices readings from pre-Reformation texts that spoke of Our Lady?s place in the plan of salvation. We became more acutely conscious, when we sang or said the Magnificat at Evening Prayer, that we were praying it as Mary?s prayer and with Mary.

During our initial foray into the topic, one Anglican friend said he regarded Mary as a ?sinner?. I felt obliged to defend her, and had to be told that some Fathers of the Church had said the same thing! Then another asked, in all sincerity, if we could explain exactly what devotion to the Blessed Virgin contributed to our spiritual life, and why we were not satisfied to go straight to Our Lord with our petitions. I felt called upon to bear witness; it seemed I must share something very personal ? there was no place to hide and I didn?t want to be dishonest.

Had I not, perhaps, lost some of the fervour of my childhood? Was my own devotion authentic? I found the probing questions immensely helpful. Again, I clung to my experience of favourite hymns, feast days, prayers and images. During one winter meeting at the monastery of Chevetogne, the drafting committee observed with great solemnity the Feast of Mary Theotokos; the graces of that experience were tangible.

To re-receive the teaching of the Scriptures and ancient common traditions regarding Mary, Arcic had to re-live in some way the Church?s original experience, for Marian doctrine is the fruit not only of theological reflection but also of contemplation, of liturgical celebration, and of love. What was special for me in our re-reception process, then, was retrieving and even discovering together the springs of this devotion, and then feeling its waters wash over us and refresh us in a shared experience of Christian prayer.

Sr Sara Butler, a Missionary Servant of the Most Blessed Trinity, teaches dogmatic theology at St Joseph?s Seminary in the archdiocese of New York.

Related articles:
A lucid and valuable achievement - Editorial
Making Sense of Mary by Sarah Jane Boss
The Anglican contributor?s view Church in the World - Marian accord raises unity hopes


Back to the front page

       

 In this week’s issue

Back to basics
Faith and unity through diversity
Holy hearts that know how to adore
Lifetimes of service
For the halt and the lame
Tablet Education
A heart-warming tail
Is the Church too slow in recognising that academies are the future for Catholic schools?
Christopher Lamb

Goodwin the scapegoat
Elena Curti

The pain of being a coeliac Catholic
Sr M, guest contributor

Why the Benedictine family will survive
Christopher Lamb

Sexual abuse: a multi-faceted response
Cardinal Levada addresses Rome conference

"Toward Healing and Renewal" is the title given to this Symposium for Catholic Bishops and Religious Superiors on the Sexual Abuse of Minors. For leaders in the Church for whom this ...


Prayer for Queen's Diamond Jubilee
Chapter of St Paul's Cathedral issue text

The Chapter of St Paul's Cathedral has written a prayer for the Queen's Diamond Jubilee which will be used at the cathedral's service of thanksgiving on 5 June. The Archbishops of ...

mobile
2011 lecture