Consecration to Mary
by noted Theologian Father William G. Most

God, in His
infinite wisdom and goodness,
has planned that there be many and varied approaches
to the spiritual life, so that
thereby He might mercifully
adapt His ways to the manifold differences
found in the sons of men. Some descriptions of the way of perfection make it appear to be a very complex process.
To Saint John of the Cross, however, it
is utterly simple, so simple
that it could be summed up in two words: ALL
- NOTHING. God is
All - to have Him, one needs to void himself of everything that
does not help to attain the All. If one has
any disordered desire whatsoever, "... the more the desire for that thing fills the soul, the less
capacity has the soul for God." On the other hand, "When ... the soul voids itself of all things ... it is impossible ...
that God should fail to perform His own part by communicating Himself to the soul at least
secretly and in silence. It is more impossible than that the sun should fail to shine in a
serene and unclouded sky .... God, like the sun, is above our souls and ready to
communicate Himself to them." In the thought of Saint John,
God not only sincerely wills
the salvation of all
men; such is His incomprehensible goodness,
such His desire to give Himself to all, that if the soul
does not become filled with God, the reason
is not that God for
any reason has held back, but solely because the soul failed
to do its part by
emptying itself to
make room for God.
The goal, then, that Saint John proposes is, "... union and transformation of the soul with God,"
which "comes to pass when the two wills - namely that of
the soul and that of God - are conformed together in one, and there is naught in the one
that is repugnant to the other."
It is remarkable how admirably a total consecration to Our Lady
accords with Saint John's principles,
and how powerfully it aids
the soul in putting these principles
into practice. It is true, Saint John himself,
in his major works, does not point this out, but the reason is not that he did not
appreciate the place of Mary in
the spiritual life - it is rather the fact
that he was intent on a rather speculative presentation of principles.
For there is no doubt that Saint John in his personal life was greatly devoted
to Mary, who
seems to have saved his life miraculously on more than one occasion. And was he
not a member of a thoroughly Marian Order,
enriched with the special favor of her Scapular,
of which our present Holy Father wrote: "...
may it be to them a sign of their consecration to the Most Sacred Heart of the Immaculate
Virgin."
The consecration we have in mind is a total
consecration, which one not only makes, but
lives out most fully, so that it affects his
whole life. Such a total consecration
is found in different forms, three such
forms are provided below. Probably the best known is that
presented by Saint Louis de Montfort. The consecration
which the saintly Father Chaminade gave to his Society
of Mary is substantially the same, differing only, as the eminent
Marianist theologian, E.
Neubert, says, "in certain nuances."
To live out a total consecration
to Mary means to
give oneself completely into her hands by an
entire gift of oneself, so that, under the inspiration of her example, and with her
all powerful help, he may, as our present Holy Father
says, "conform [his] whole life to her direction and
desires." It is obvious, then, that if one really gives all to Mary, he must thereby also strive to void himself
of everything that would impede him from attaining the All.
And if he tries to fulfill not only her commands,
but even her desires, he must by that very
fact tend powerfully toward that "union and transformation
of the soul with God" which "comes to pass
when the two wills - namely that of the soul and that of God - are conformed together in
one ...." For if a soul,
abandoning its own desires, tries to conform
its whole life to her
desires, then, since her will is entirely one with
the will of God, there will be
"naught in the one," the human
will, "that
is repugnant to the other," the will of
God. It is easy to see, therefore, what a great help to spiritual growth comes from such a consecration by the very fact that it so strongly promotes detachment
and conformity to the will of
God. But we must not forget also, that while our Blessed
Mother, the Mediatrix of all Graces,
cares lovingly for all her
children, when she sees that some are giving
themselves totally into her hands, she will not be outdone in generosity,
but will obtain for them the choicest graces
to bring them as close as possible to her divine Son.
Let us examine each of these points more fully
The power of example is tremendous. The great Saint
Augustine before his conversion, though he had reached a point at which he no
longer felt any intellectual obstacle
to entering the Church,
yet was held back by his evil
life. Speculative considerations on the goodness of virtue were familiar to him, but these did not
suffice. The external means through which grace
actually led him to change from a great
sinner into a great
saint was the example of saintly
men of his time, of which he read and heard. What then must be the force
of the matchless example of Mary, if one places it before his mind
by means of frequent meditation! As Pope Pius XII said:
Anyone who has been consecrated to Mary belongs to her in a
special way .... The love of Mary gives him the courage to undertake great things, to
conquer human respect, to shake off egoism, to serve and to obey patiently. With his
interior gaze fixed steadily on her, he falls in love with the purity, the humility, the
charity, with which the soul of the Virgin was resplendent.
Saint John of the Cross insists that faith,
hope, and love
are the true means of union with
God in this life. Whoever had faith that could compare to Mary's
faith? Although her
own people, even the divinely approved teachers
of Israel, failed to understand the prophecies which
told of the divinity of
the coming Messiah;
although she encountered apparent
contradictions to what the Archangel had
told her, her
faith never wavered. For Gabriel had said that her Son
would sit on the throne of David; yet He
came into His own, and His own received Him not. He was to be a mighty King forever, yet had to flee from
the wrath of the petty Herod. For the thirty
years of His hidden
life, He seemed to all eyes, except
the eyes of faith, to be just an ordinary
child - a good child - but still not basically different from
the others. Yet Mary never ceased to
believe and to adore. Finally, dying in public
disgrace, He Himself cried
out "My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?"
Yet Mary's faith
and hope did not waver, and during those dark three days
before the first Easter,
when the very pillars of the Church had
fallen from belief, she remained almost the sole
vessel of faith upon the earth. In fact,
since our Lord Himself, because He always possessed the Beatific
Vision, was incapable of having the virtues of faith and hope,
it is plain that Mary's faith and hope
were greater than those of any other soul.
Again, it is good for us to try - though the attempt can never fully succeed - to
picture to ourselves Mary's love of God. Her
divine Son said: "He
who has My commandments and keeps them, he it is who loves Me." The very
first picture the Gospels give us of her
provides a glimpse of her utter self-effacement before the will
of God. The Archangel
had just brought the divine message to
her. She who
at that very moment was raised to the highest dignity
of all creatures, to a "dignity second only to God,"
as Pope Pius XI said, replied by saying: "Behold
the slave girl of the Lord. Be it done to me according to thy word." Saint
John of the Cross tells us that when a soul
reaches the most perfect love and conformity
with the will of God,
"God alone moves the faculties of these souls to do those
works which are meet, according to the will and ordinance of God, and they cannot be moved
to do others .... Such were those of the most glorious Virgin, our Lady, who, being raised
to this high estate from the beginning, had never the form of any creature imprinted in
her soul, neither was moved by such, but was invariably guided by the Holy Spirit."
Even when Saint Joseph, the just man,
was tempted to doubt her chastity,
and was minded to put her away privately, Mary would not speak one word in her own defense, for such was the will of God. The Holy
Spirit, Whose ever faithful spouse she was, had not moved her to defend herself,
preferring instead to accept her loving surrender to the divine
will, and to inform Joseph
through an angel.
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Mary is the
"Aqueduct" or "Channel" by which God's Grace flows from Heaven's
Treasury to Mankind. To block that Channel is deadly to the Soul. |
Pope Pius IX, in speaking of Mary's
holiness (and, therefore, her love,
for these are always equal) wrote that it is
so great that "none greater under God can be thought of,
and no one, except God, can comprehend it." We can comprehend to some
extent the sanctity of even so great a saint
as Saint John of the Cross, with his tremendous austerities and burning love.
But were we to multiply his sanctity
to the greatest degree of which our minds could conceive, we still would not have formed
anything like an adequate idea of Mary's love and holiness,
for as Pope Pius IX said, "No one except
God can comprehend it"! Here indeed is the perfect example of a soul completely filled with
love, completely voided of
self - so empty of
self that God
has made her the channel through which all
graces pass to all
mankind.
Saint John of the Cross with keen clarity has stressed that
all perfection depends on the union of our
wills with the will
of God. We can do nothing more perfect than to
conform our will
and our actions as exactly as possible to those of God.
Let us see, then, what we can discern of the will of
God in regard to Mary.
Many good Catholics, though they have a tender devotion to the Mother
of God, may yet fail to realize
fully the position which God has
willed to give to her in His
dealings with us. For although they do have a
good knowledge of most of the Marian teachings of the Church, they may not
have heard of certain less familiar points, and, what is of particular importance, they
never may have added together the various elements of the truth to form a unified picture,
and, as a result, fail to
learn a most important spiritual lesson.
Let us, therefore, briefly attempt to sketch such a synthesis
From all eternity, God had planned for the Mother of Christ. As Pope Pius IX said: in
the eternal designs of God, our divine Redeemer and His
Blessed Mother were provided for in one
and the same eternal decree.
Hardly had our first parents started mankind on its long course of rejecting the generous advances of God, when the Father,
His thoughts bent not
on vengeance, but
on pardon, at once
promised the Redeemer, and, in the very same
sentence, spoke of a mysterious woman who
would be associated with Him
in crushing the head of
the infernal serpent. Many thousands of years
later, when the fullness of time had come, the same kind Father began to put His
eternal plan into execution by sending the Archangel
Gabriel to ask Mary to
consent, "in the name of the whole human race,"
as Pope Leo XIII said, to become the Mother
of the Savior.
Then there began what Saint Pius X described as a "never dissociated manner of life and labors of the Son and the Mother."
Even before His birth, the Savior brought cleansing grace to the unborn precursor,
Saint John the Baptist - and He
did it through the instrumentality of His Mother (i.e. Visitation).
After the brief glory of the angel's song
at Bethlehem, our Redeemer
withdrew with Mary into obscurity, and, though He
had come to save the world, deemed
it best, according to the will of the Father,
that He
should go down to Nazareth and be subject to Mary
and Joseph, spending
thirty of His
thirty-three years in that marvelous
communion in obscure faith,
showing no signs and wonders.
During His public life, Mary appears briefly at the very start, revealing her intimate union with Him
and her power over His
Heart, when He, at her request, performed His first sign (at Cana),
advancing the divinely set hour.
Thereafter, during the days when the crowds acclaimed Him,
she withdrew into the shadows,
but remained ever united to Him in the obscurity of faith,
hope, and love,
and in meriting for us, for we know
that even this time did not interrupt that "never
dissociated manner of life and labors of the Son and the Mother." But
finally, when the dread hour of the great Sacrifice had come, Mary
emerged from the shadows into the far more obscure dark night
that hung over Calvary. There, as Pope
Benedict XV said, "With her suffering and dying
Son, Mary endured suffering and almost death." For her
sufferings were proportioned to His indescribable
torment, and to her love for Him,
which was so great that "no one except God can comprehend
it." "She gave up her Mother's rights over
her Son to procure the salvation of mankind, and, to appease the divine justice, she, as
much as was hers to do, immolated her Son." Therefore, as Saint
Pius X wrote: "She merited for us congruously
... what Christ merited condignly," or, to continue with
the words of Pope Benedict XV, "one can
rightly say that together with Christ she has redeemed the human race."
Hence, as most theologians understand these words of the popes, we arrive
at the tremendous conclusion that what the Eternal Father
accepted as the price of our salvation
was a joint offering, made by the New Adam, with the co-operation of
the New Eve: He,
alone sufficient and necessary, alone
paying a superabundant ransom; she, in her
inferior way, joining in the offering, so that, to paraphrase Saint
Pius X: she paid
congruously (harmoniously) the price
that Christ paid condignly
(worthily). For the goodness and generosity of the Eternal
Father was so great that He willed
to accept even her
lesser, and in itself insufficient, offering, as fused,
so to speak, with His great
offering, into one
great price of the ransom of all.
But the dark night of Calvary soon passed, and the Bridegroom
Himself rose in glory.
Just as His Resurrection was, in the words
of Pope Pius XII, "an essential part and
final sign of this victory" over sin
and death, so also that struggle which was common
to the Blessed Virgin and her Son
had to be closed by the glorification of
her virginal
body. In other words, since Mary's
cooperation had been so much an integral part of the obtaining of Redemption that the
"struggle ... was common" to both,
a common cause had to have
a common effect. In Christ,
this effect was the Resurrection:
in Mary, it would be the Assumption.
Then, in everlasting splendor, "He, the Son of God, reflects on His heavenly Mother the glory, the
majesty, and the dominion of His kingship. For, having been associated with the King of
Martyrs in the unspeakable work of human Redemption as Mother and Co-operatrix, she
remains forever associated to Him, with an almost unlimited power, in the distribution of
the graces that flow from the Redemption.... And her kingdom is as vast as that of her Son
and God, since nothing is excluded from her dominion." Hence by this
"royal power ... she is able to dispense the treasures of
the Kingdom of the Divine Redeemer." Or, as Pope Leo XIII
expressed it: "... absolutely nothing of that great
treasury of grace which the Lord brought us ... is given to us except through
Mary, for such is the will of God: so that just as no one can go to the Most High Father
except through the Son, in much the same way, no one can come to Christ except through His
Mother." There are no exceptions
- even the graces of
the Sacraments, even infused
contemplation and the choicest
fruits of the Holy
Spirit come through Mary.
For was it not even true that on the first Pentecost,
as our present Holy Father said: "She it
was who, by her most mighty prayers, obtained that the Spirit of the Divine Redeemer,
already given on the Cross, should be bestowed on the new-born Church ... in the company
of miraculous gifts."
We see, then, that Mary
is inseparable from her divine Son.
As Pope Pius XII said, she
is "always sharing His lot" and "always most intimately united with her Son...." There
is and always has been a "never dissociated manner of life
and labors of the Son and the Mother." We might sum it all up in a brief
word: Mary's role, according to the
will of God, is best described as all-pervading.
She is everywhere in His dealings with us. She
shared intimately in earning all graces, she shares equally in distributing
every grace. Would it not, then, be an
excellent means of conformity with the ways
of God if we would give to her
an equally all-pervading place in our own spiritual
lives, by making and living
a total consecration to
her?
It is obvious, then, that if one really lives out a life of total consecration to Mary, our Mother,
our most glorious Queen, the inseparable associate of
Christ in all His
works, he will find therein a most powerful help toward
carrying out the ideals set before us by Saint John of the Cross.
For he is thereby brought more fully under the powerful attractiveness of the perfect example of Mary's virtues.
He is led to hate, and to void himself of
all that is disordered, by his attempt to
"conform [his] whole life to her direction and her desires."
His will is drawn gradually into complete
conformity with Mary's will,
which is ever in perfect unison
with the will of God.
Even his very manner of seeking to achieve conformity with the will of God by conformity
with the will of Mary is particularly in accord with God's
good pleasure, for, if one gives to Mary
an all-pervading role in his spiritual life,
he is thereby imitating the ways of God,
Who gives to Mary
an all-pervading place in all His dealings
with us. And if, in carrying out his total consecration,
one goes so far as to give to Mary the right
to dispose of all his spiritual treasures -
and a really total consecration
naturally implies this - he is thereby imitating most closely the example of Christ the King, Who
makes His Queen and Mother
His treasurer,
without whom absolutely no
grace is given to mankind.
It is obvious, further, that in surrendering to Mary
even the disposition of his dearest treasures, he is greatly aided in avoiding attachments which, as Saint John of
the Cross points out so well, can lurk
in even the holiest things. Finally, the soul is aided to accomplish these things not only
by the inherent tendency of the consecration
to promote detachment and conformity to the will of God: for Mary,
our Queen and Mother,
the all-powerful Mediatrix of
all Graces, while she cares lovingly
for all her children, has a still greater,
most special love and assistance for those
who joyfully give themselves totally into her hands.
It is easy to see, then, how true are the
words of Saint Pius X:
For who does not know that there is no more certain and easy
way than Mary to unite all with Christ, and to attain through Him the perfect adoption of
sons that we may be holy and immaculate in the sight of God?

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