2003-05-11 All liturgical celebrations reflect the glory of the Resurrection...
May 11, 2003
All liturgical celebrations reflect the glory of the Resurrection.
Great feasts in May, especially the Ascension, are commentaries on
Christ’s victory. May is a special time for honoring our Mother of our
Risen Lord. The custom developed over a long period. King Alphonsus X
of Castille supplied music for the “Lady Month” of May and the devotion
spread so that within a few centuries May was identified with Mary as
June came to be identified with the Heart of Jesus and October with the
Rosary. The last word our Lord spoke to the human race from the Cross
was “Mother.” Mary shows the way to her Son. People who try to find God
without his mother will get lost, and those who call themselves
Christians without calling on Mary are confused children. All honor
paid to Mary is tribute to her Risen Son. Had Christ not risen from the
grave, the most famous woman in history would be unknown as if she had
never existed.
The fairest month of May belongs to the “Mother of Fair Love.” The
first day of May was an ancient celebration of the beginning of growth.
Hard and cynical people replaced the maypole with coarse Communist
parades, but that illusion of a worker’s paradise without God has
fallen on the ash heap of history. Ancient Romans dedicated May to the
goddess of blossoms, Flora, and prepared for her feast with late April
“floral games” (ludi florales). Christianity did not extrapolate a
Marian month from these customs; these customs were an unconscious
intuition that there would someday be a Blessed Mother.
The bishops of the United States in 1987 approved this direction:
“Coronation is one form of reverence frequently shown to images of the
Blessed Virgin Mary...It is especially from the end of the 16th century
that in the West the practice became widespread …The popes not only
endorsed this devout custom but ‘on many occasions, either personally
or through bishop-delegates, carried out the coronation of Marian
images.’ ” Mary is ceremoniously crowned with flowers and jewels
because she is the mother of the messianic King and his perfect
follower. She has won the “crown of righteousness” (2 Timothy 4:8), the
“crown of life” (James 1:12; Revelation 2:10) and the “crown of glory”
(1 Peter 5:4) which Christ promises to all his followers.
Saints like Elizabeth Ann Seton, Frances Cabrini, and Teresa of
Calcutta (to be beatified October 19) are instinctively called “Mother”
because of their maternal grace. Great as the title “saint” is, every
man and woman harbors in the heart a hushed reverence for the title
“mother.” This Sunday the parish crowns Holy Mary, commending our
earthly mothers living and deceased to the care of our Lord who gave us
His own Mother in the midst of his deepest suffering for the whole
world.
Fr. George W. Rutler
