Thursday, December 8, 2022

Homily for the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception December 8, 2022

Introduction

In his article “The Beauty of the Virgin Mary and the History of Art,” Theo Howard claims that, other than Our Lord, “there has been no more frequent subject in Western figurative art than the Blessed Virgin Mary.”[1]

Why is Mary’s image sculpted, painted, and drawn more than just about any subject in world history?

Is it because she is the Mother of God? Possibly. Is it because she is the greatest of all God’s creatures and the most important among all the saints? That’s also possible.

I may be wrong, but I think it is for another reason. I think the reason Our Lady is so often an object of art is because no one has been able to capture her beauty! They keep trying and trying but never get it just right. So, they try again and again and again.

When St. Bernadette was shown a beautiful statue of the Blessed Mother and asked what she, a someone who had a vision of Mary, thought of the work of art, Bernadette responded, “Oh, it doesn’t look like her at all!”

What is the source of Mary’s beauty and why does it matter to us?

What is beauty?

Let’s begin by asking the question, “What is beauty?”

There is a famous Mount professor with a double first name and Italian last name who wrote a book on beauty. He explains that beauty “expresses God’s intelligence and freedom.”

Allow me to re-phrase that definition using the Gospel for today: “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord.” Here we see God’s freedom active in His creature. God freely offers divine motherhood and leaves it to the freedom of His creature to say yes.

The Virgin of Nazareth concludes her response: “May it be done to me according to your word.” Here we see Divine Intelligence, God’s Word, becoming flesh.

On this feast of the Immaculate Conception, we see human beauty at its zenith – we contemplate, celebrate, rejoice in the person of Our Blessed Mother who is most beautiful.

Tota Pulchra

As you may know, there is an ancient title of Our Lady “tota pulchra” or “all beautiful.” Since the 10th Century there has been a special Mass of the Blessed Mother called “Mother of Fairest Love,” which honors Mary as “tota pulchra.”

The instruction for this Mass says that the Church, both East and West, “contemplates with joy her spiritual beauty. Beauty is the radiance of the holiness and truth of God, ‘the origin of all beauty’, and it is the image of the goodness and fidelity of Christ, ‘fairest of all God’s children on earth’.”

Our Blessed Mother is “fair” or “beautiful” because in her there is no flaw of sin or corruption. “From the first moment of her conception,” the Catechism says, “by a singular grace” she was “preserved immune from all stain of original sin.” She fulfills to a perfect degree the words of St. Paul in our Second Reading, “blessed… with every spiritual blessing to be holy and without blemish before him.”

The grace of the Immaculate Conception means that Mary is “tota pulchra” or “Mother of Fairest Love.”

The Beauty of Full of Grace

Mary is called beautiful for several reasons. She is beautiful because she is full of grace, as we heard her called in the Gospel. This means that she is resplendent with the glory of her Son and the beauty of Christified holiness. The Preface to the Mass of “Mary, Mother of Fairest Love” says, “Beauty was hers at her conception: free from all stain of sin, she is resplendent in the glory of grace.”

Beauty and ugliness, you see, are fundamentally spiritual realities. As one author puts it, “If beauty manifests the perfection and splendor of something, ugliness distorts it, corrupting what it is meant to be and blinding us to its true reality.”

We hear in our First Reading from the Book of Genesis just how God’s beauty of man and woman and creation is distorted by the ugliness of sin. Disobedience distorts the loving gaze that Adam and Eve had toward each other in their nakedness. The serpent now has to crawl and eat dirt.

A flower crumpled and crushed. A stained-glass window dirty and broken. The Philadelphia Eagles losing to the Dallas Cowboys. They are all ugly because they are not what God meant them to be.

Holiness, on the other hand, is beautiful. Mary is beautiful because she is “full of grace.” She is the new Eve, who reverses the disobedience and fear of Genesis and offers herself as His “handmaid” to the Word of God. She is what God meant all of us to be.

Our world needs to know Mary so that it can seek holiness above all, so that “live significantly” is understood as “live holiness.”

The Beauty of Love

Mary is also beautiful because she loves God, her Son, and loves the entire human race as her children with a love that is full of beauty; that is, a love that is virginal, bridal, and maternal.

Love, as you know, is the fundamental vocation for all men and women.

St. Paul tells the Ephesians in our Second Reading that “in love he destined us for adoption to himself through Jesus Christ.” God has created us out of love and for love. It is our common and most important vocation. In loving, human being are perfected. We become beautiful.

Our Lady is stunningly beautiful. She knows how to love as Christ taught and shows us this more than anyone else.

Love has so many counterfeit images in the world today and we struggle to deal with them. We have the plague of pornography and the scourge lust. We see the failure of commitment to marriage and to the celibate priesthood.

God wants us to be truly ourselves, truly creatures capable of loving and being loved. Unchastity is ugly. Chaste love is beautiful.

Our world needs to know Mary so that it can know how to truly love.

Fairest Love and Evangelization

Is there a concrete application for the beauty of Mary, Our Mother? Yes – for evangelization.

Many people today claim to be spiritual but not religious. They have faith, but in a secular “gospel,” if you will, that answers their need to be authentic and to define themself and their lives as they see fit. They are satisfied with the comfort they experience and the good feelings they achieve by a certain altruism to those in need. As one author puts it, people aren’t just “walking away from faith,” they are “opting for a way of life that they found more attractive.”

Evangelization cannot bear much fruit in this secularized world by condemnations and purely intellectual arguments. We need to introduce the beauty of the Catholic faith and make it more attractive – the beauty of our beliefs, the beauty of our liturgy, the beauty of our lives.

Pope Emeritus Benedict puts in succinctly, “I have often affirmed my conviction that the true apologia of Christian faith, the most convincing demonstration of its truth against every denial, are the saints, and the beauty that the faith has generated. Today, for faith to grow, we must lead ourselves and the persons we meet to encounter the saints and to enter into contact with the Beautiful.”[2]

We call Mary the “Star of Evangelization” because of the way she brings people to Christ. I would propose that the more we introduce others to her beauty, her holiness, the way she loves, the more people will see just how she is “Mother of Fairest Love.” People will be surprised by her beauty and respond to her attractiveness by coming to faith in Christ.

Conclusion

At a Gala raising money for a good cause, an elegant woman served as the MC. She was stunning in her manners and dress. All eyes were on her throughout the evening. At the end of the evening, a little girl went up to a table and asked those seated whether they thought the woman was beautiful. They all answer, “Why, yes, of course.” The little girl replied with satisfied pride in her eyes, grinning from ear to ear, “She is my mom!”

And we can feel today just like that child. As we contemplate the Immaculate Conception, we contemplate the one who is full of grace in the beauty of holiness, the one who loves God and her children most beautifully. She is God’s supreme masterpiece. She is most beautiful, and she is our mom.

Mother of Fairest Love and the Immaculate Conception, pray for us!



[1] Howard, Theo, “The Beauty of the Virgin Mary and the History of Art,” November 25, 2021, One Peter 5, https://onepeterfive.com/the-beauty-of-the-virgin-mary-and-the-history-of-art/

[2] Joseph Ratzinger, “The Feeling of Things, the Contemplation of Beauty” (August 24, 2002).