(Holy Angels’ Patronal Feast 2006: This homily was given on
[For the audio version of this homily, click here: Holy Angels Feast 2006]
It’s nice to be back home for this great celebration, which was so much a part of my youth—although I will admit that in my younger days I was more enthused about the carnival than I was about the Mass and the procession. After all, at the carnival I had a chance to win a brand new album at the “record booth”. Some of you young people might not know what a “record” is; you’ll have to ask your parents when Mass is over.
As many of you know, my second home now is in
Although I’ve been away from Holy Angels and this feast for awhile, I’ve still been a part of a yearly celebration in honor of the Blessed Mother. Every year in July (often, it seems, on the hottest day in July) at the neighboring parish, Immaculate Conception, there’s a big procession in honor of Our Lady of
I mention this today because I want to make it clear to you in this homily why celebrations like these so important, and why they need to be preserved: It’s because of what Mary can do for the world by her intercession before the throne of God. It’s because of what Mary—and perhaps only Mary—can do for the cause of world peace.
We know what’s going on in
The world has been experiencing what some have called “a clash of civilizations”. It’s been extremely violent, and it seems to be getting worse every day, in spite of the efforts of so many well-intentioned people.
Which begs the obvious question: Is there any hope? Can anything be done to change this situation and establish peace with the Muslim world? Or is this the way it will always be from now on?
Well, aside from the obvious political and diplomatic efforts that need to be made, I think there is something that all of us can do on a very practical level to bring about positive change and to help establish peace, in particular with devout Muslims: We can take our personal devotion to Mary very seriously—more seriously than ever before!
You know, it’s ironic. In the past three or four decades it’s been common to say that Mary should be ignored whenever we deal with people of other faiths—especially Protestants—because Mary somehow drives a wedge between us. But I’ve discovered that, in reality, the exact opposite is true! I’ve come to realize that Mary is actually the key to greater unity! She’s not the one who divides us; she’s the one who can bring us all together: Christians, Jews—and even Muslims.
Did you know, for example, that Muslims traditionally have had a deep regard for the Blessed Mother? (I’ll bet many of you didn’t! Most Christians are totally unaware of it.) She’s mentioned over thirty times in the Koran. No other woman is mentioned even once! There she’s described as “Virgin, ever Virgin.” Imagine, the very doctrine some liberal Christians reject—the perpetual virginity of Mary—is accepted by Muslims!
Concerning his daughter Fatima, Mohammad—the founder of Islam—once said: “She has the highest place in heaven after the Virgin Mary.”
Is it a coincidence that, in 1917, Mary appeared to three children in a place which was named after a Muslim convert to the Catholic faith: a woman who at birth had been named after Mohammad’s daughter? I don’t think that was a coincidence, I think it was a “God-incidence”! In fact, many Muslims today actually make personal pilgrimages to the Catholic shrine of Mary located there in
This means that, as we speak, Mary is already bringing Christians and Muslims together in peace.
And don’t you think that Mary can also be a bridge between Christians and Jews? What better way to share the Good News with someone of the Jewish faith than to speak to them about the greatest human person who ever lived: a Jewish mother!—one of their own who was faithful to the Mosaic Law, as St. Luke clearly indicates in his infancy narrative.
And what about our Protestant brothers and sisters? It’s been my experience that once devout Protestants understand what the Church really teaches about Mary, many of them fall in love with the Blessed Mother, and they realize that she’s a great biblical role model for them. Why? Because committed Protestants are devoted to God’s written Word (which is great!), and they want to obey Jesus. Well guess what? Mary was also devoted to God’s Word and wanted people to obey Jesus! We see that in her two famous lines from Scripture: “Be it done unto me, O Lord, according to your Word,” and, “Do whatever he [i.e. Jesus] tells you.”
So you see, Mary is not a barrier as many have mistakenly believed all these years, she’s actually a bridge—the bridge I believe God wants to use to bring greater peace to our world in the third millennium.
And we have a precedent for this. We’ve already seen historically how Mary can have a decisive role in bringing peace to a potentially cataclysmic situation. Remember the Cold War? Remember the threat that Soviet Communism was to the security of this nation? Remember the fallout shelters? Remember the threats of nuclear annihilation?
If I had told you thirty years ago that the
Let’s be honest about it, you probably would have laughed in my face and said, “Sure, Fr. Ray. That’s a really nice thought—a really nice idea—but that’s all it is, an idea. It will never, ever happen that way.”
But it did.
And even secular historians admit that one of the major players—if not THE major player—in this peaceful collapse of the Soviet bloc was Pope John Paul II. And many of them maintain that the collapse began in June of 1979, when the pope went to his native country of
Not coincidentally, of course, John Paul II was intensely devoted to Mary—so much so that he took as his papal motto “Totus Tuus”, meaning “Totally yours.” Some people think that the pope’s motto was a direct reference to Jesus, but it wasn’t. It was a reference to Mary. His motto meant, “I’m totally yours, Mary. I’m totally committed to Jesus Christ through you.”
At
As Peter Cetera once put it in an old 1980s song, “Just goes to prove what one good woman can do”—especially when the woman in question happens to be the Mother of God.
Do you see, now, why this feast is so important? Do you see why this tradition and others like it need to be maintained? Do you see why you should have a personal devotion to Mary and why you should be praying the Rosary—or at the very least a decade or two of it—every day without exception?
It’s because of what this Heavenly Woman can do for our world and will do for our world—if we ask, and if we continue to ask in faith every day.