Saturday, June 07, 2008

Lady in Blue



The following reflection is by Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen on the Wedding Feast at Cana.

Wedding at Cana
Picture the marriage feast of Cana.

There our blessed Lord is beyond the Jordan, gathering up His first disciples. Mary is already at the feast. The Lord comes with His new disciples, and Mary who always knows our wants before we know them, says, "They have no wine."

They had water, the water of the Old Testament, but they had no wine.

And Jesus replies, "Woman"- not mother- "Woman, what to me is to thee?" That is the way it is in the original. "My hour has not yet come." The hour refers to His passion and death, His combat with evil.

Now He is equivalently saying to His mother, "My dear mother, you want me to begin my public life,
to declare myself the Messiah and the Son of God.
Do you realize that the moment I do that, your relationship to me changes?
You will then no longer be my mother.
You will then be the mother of everyone whom I will redeem.
You will be the universal mother of all mankind.
You will be the woman of Genesis.
You will be the mother of the living."

Mary's heart must have burned at not hearing herself called "mother." So our blessed Lord, it seems, anticipated His public life.

It is not often that mothers send their sons to the battlefield. Mary did. If the Father sent the Son, the mother would send the Son.
From Through the Year with Fulton Sheen: Inspirational Selections for Each Day of the Year. Compled by Henry Dieterich.

2 comments:

  1. The Wedding at Cana is my favorite rosary mystery!
    If Our Lady was concerned with a party and the lack of 'gastronomic and vineal delights'(LOL)...then she is definitely concerned with the requests for intercession for the essentials we cry to her for and ask for assistance.
    Don't kow if this is a double post...please delete if delivered 2x.

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  2. Good point Teresa!

    ReplyDelete