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Blessed
Virgin Was Filled with
God's Grace
Pope John Paul II
General Audience
May 8, 1996
1.
In the account of the Annunciation, the first word of the Angel's greeting,
"Rejoice", is an invitation to joy which recalls the oracles of the Old
Testament addressed to the "daughter of Zion". We pointed this out in our
previous catecheses and also explained the reasons for this invitation:
God's presence among his people, the coming of the messianic king and
maternal fruitfulness. These reasons are fulfilled in Mary.
The Angel Gabriel,
addressing the Virgin of Nazareth after the greeting, chaire, "Rejoice",
calls her kecharitomene, "full of grace". The words of the Greek
text, chaire and kecharitomene, are deeply interconnected:
Mary is invited to rejoice primarily because God loves her and has filled
her with grace in view of her divine motherhood!
The Church's faith
and the experience of the saints teach us that grace is a source of joy, and
that true joy comes from God. In Mary, as in Christians, the divine gift
produces deep joy.
2. Kecharitomene:
this term addressed to Mary seems to be the proper way to describe the woman
destined to become the mother of Jesus. Lumen gentium appropriately
recalls this when it affirms: "The Virgin of Nazareth is hailed by the
heralding angel, by divine command, as 'full of grace'" (Lumen gentium,
n. 56).
The fact that the
heavenly messenger addresses her in this way enhances the value of the
angelic greeting: it is a manifestation of God's mysterious saving plan in
Mary's regard. As I wrote in the Encyclical Redemptoris Mater: "'The
fullness of grace' indicates all the supernatural munificence from which
Mary benefits by being chosen and destined to be the Mother of Christ" (n
9).
God granted Mary the
fullness of grace
"Full of grace" is the name Mary possesses in the eyes of God. Indeed, the
angel, according to the Evangelist Luke's account, uses this expression even
before he speaks the name "Mary", and thus emphasizes the predominant aspect
which the Lord perceived in the Virgin of Nazareth's personality.
The expression "Full
of grace" is the translation of the Greek word kecharitomene, which is a
passive participle. Therefore to render more exactly the nuance of the Greek
word one should not say merely "full of grace", but "made full of grace", or
even "filled with grace", which would clearly indicate that this was a gift
given by God to the Blessed Virgin. This term, in the form of a perfect
participle, enhances the image of a perfect and lasting grace which implies
fullness. The same verb, in the sense of "to bestow grace", is used in the
Letter to the Ephesians to indicate the abundance of grace granted to us by
the Father in his beloved Son (Eph
1:6), and which Mary receives as the first fruits of Redemption (cf.
Redemptoris Mater, n. 10).
3. In the Virgin's
case, God's action certainly seems surprising. Mary has no human claim to
receiving the announcement of the Messiah's coming. She is not the high
priest, official representative of the Hebrew religion, nor even a man, but
a young woman without any influence in the society of her time. In addition,
she is a native of Nazareth, a village which is never mentioned in the Old
Testament. It must not have enjoyed a good reputation, as Nathanael's
question, recorded in John's Gospel makes clear: "Can anything good come out
of Nazareth?" (Jn
1:46).
The extraordinary and
gratuitous nature of God's intervention becomes even clearer in comparison
with Luke's text which recounts what happened to Zechariah. The latter's
priestly status is highlighted as well as his exemplary life which make him
and his wife Elizabeth models of Old Testament righteousness: they walked
"blameless in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord" (Lk
1:6)
But we are not
informed of Mary's origins either: the expression "of the house of David" (Lk
1:27) in fact refers only to Joseph. No mention is made then of Mary's
behaviour. With this literary choice, Luke stresses that everything in Mary
derives from a sovereign grace. All that is granted to her is not due to any
claim of merit, but only to God's free and gratuitous choice.
God's mercy reaches
the highest degree in Mary
4.
In so doing, the Evangelist does not of course intend to downplay the
outstanding personal value of the Blessed Virgin. Rather, he wishes to
present Mary as the pure fruit of God's goodwill: he has so taken possession
of her as to make her, according to the title used by the Angel, "full of
grace". The abundance of grace itself is the basis of Mary's hidden
spiritual richness.
In the Old Testament,
Yahweh expresses the superabundance of his love in many ways and on many
occasions. At the dawn of the New Testament, the gratuitousness of God's
mercy reaches the highest degree in Mary. In her, God's predilection, shown
to the chosen people and in particular to the humble and the poor, reaches
its culmination.
Nourished by the Word
of the Lord and the experience of the saints, the Church urges believers to
keep their gaze fixed on the Mother of the Redeemer and to consider
themselves, like her, loved by God. She invites them to share Our Lady's
humility and poverty, so that, after her example and through her
intercession, they may persevere in the grace of God who sanctifies and
transforms hearts.
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