The Pope, the Eucharist, and Mary
The Pope, the Eucharist, and Mary. These
three words summarize the most vivid area of disagreement between Catholics and
other Christians. Most converts will admit that confusion with one of these
realities was the last obstacle they had to overcome before finally entering
the Church. As to those who do not convert, Catholic teaching on these three
areas appears extravagantly theoretical and foreign to the basic gospel
message. After all, where is “transubstantiation” in Scripture? What about
“infallibility” or “immaculately conceived”? The Catholic doctrines concerning
Mary, the Eucharist, and the Pope seem to many to be utterly groundless
innovations of a Roman theology that has become hopelessly speculative.
After all,
what’s the point? Why do we need Mary and the Pope and the Eucharist? Why
become distracted with these fringe issues when all that matters is that the
Christian grow in divine life? All we want, all we need, is a personal relationship
with God.
Fair
enough. That is all we want, and that is all we need. But there are two things
to keep in mind when we talk about a personal relationship with God. The first
is that God isn’t a person, He’s Three Persons. The second thing to
remember is that a personal relationship can only be cultivated if there’s a
point of contact – it might be through words, or through physical connection or
through some other kind of expression, but you can’t build a relationship in a
vacuum. So the question becomes: what are those contact points where Christians
can relate to God, where they can cultivate a loving connection between
themselves and the Father, Son and Spirit? Well, the answer of the Scriptures
and the Catholic Church of today is pretty clear; those contact points are Mary,
the Eucharist, and the Pope.
The Pope: Point of Contact with the Father
The Catholic Church has always
seen the establishment of the papacy as being rooted in Matthew 16:13ff, where
Christ gives Peter the keys of the kingdom of heaven. Before doing so, however,
Jesus quizzes the Apostles on what people are saying about his identity. Of
course, the poll comes back inconsistent, inconclusive and ultimately,
inaccurate: “John the Baptist,” “Elijah,” “Jeremiah,” or some other prophet. So
you can’t get the truth about Jesus just by doing a survey. Then Jesus asks the
Apostles as a group, “Who do you say that I am?” The Apostles are silent. No
one, apart from Peter, says a word. Maybe that’s why the Orthodox, who still
have successors of the Apostles, haven’t been able to call a general council since
they separated from the Pope. Apart from Peter, they are silent. In any case,
Peter steps forward and gets the right answer, “You are the Messiah, the Son of
the living God.”
How does Jesus
react? By saying this, “Blessed are
you, Simon son of Jonah. For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my heavenly Father.”
What, then, is the source of Peter’s gift, of Peter’s
true and reliable profession of faith? It is the heavenly Father. He who before
all Ages uttered the Eternal Word now gives His revealed word through the lips
of Peter, the Rock.
People form relationships through words. If there’s
someone you love, you ask that person to tell you about themselves, and they
tell you by talking. God the Father speaks to us still, He expresses the truths
about who He is and what He has done. And He speaks these words clearly, and
reliably, through Peter and through Peter’s successor, the Pope. The Pope is
the verbal contact point between us
and the First Person of the Trinity, so that the teachings of the Holy Father
can enable a relationship with our Father who Art in Heaven.
The Eucharist:
Point of Contact with the Son
When Christ gave His Apostles the command, “Do this in
memory of me,” they obeyed by the solemn and perpetual celebration of the
sacred mass. When Christ assured them, “Know that I am with you always, even to
the end of time,” we understand that assurance to refer to His physical abode
in the tabernacle. When Jesus said, “my flesh is true food, and my blood is
true drink,” (Jn 6:55) Catholics imagine the taste and texture of the Host.
Of
the Three Persons, only the Son took on flesh, and it is that same flesh which
the Catholic Church treasures in the sacrament of the Eucharist.
People form relationships through bodily contact. Two men
are brothers when the same blood runs in both their veins, and we become
brothers of Christ because His blood, which we drink from the sacred chalice,
runs in our veins as well. A man and a woman have a spousal relationship which
they express by the commingling of their bodies, and we become Christ’s brides
when we receive his Sacred Body into ours. Friends embrace upon meeting each
other, and surround each other with their arms, but a Catholic embraces the
Second Person of the Trinity by eating Him, and surrounding Him with his whole
physiology.
Like
Thomas, we can touch the risen Christ, not only with our fingers but with our
tongues, for we have been given the Eucharist, the physical contact point which lets us cultivate a relationship with
the Son of God.
Mary: Point of
Contact with the Holy Spirit
The Holy Spirit, for most Christians, is the
Trinitarian Person with whom it is hardest to cultivate a relationship, because
the forms He assumes are deeply mysterious. Take the Baptism of Christ; there
we hear the Father speak, and the Son is present in the flesh, but the Spirit
comes as a dove. How can we have a relationship with a dove?
Yet if we can hear the Father’s words through the Pope,
and if we can touch the Son’s flesh in the Eucharist, perhaps we can see the work of the Spirit in Mary.
Mary
is the one who gives us a picture of what the Holy Spirit is doing. After all,
Mary is the one who is “Full of Grace” (Lk 1:28), which means that she was so
suffused with the Spirit that there was never an disparity between what the
Spirit wanted from Mary, and what Mary did. The result is, if we want to see
the effects of the Holy Spirit on a mere creature, like ourselves, we have only
to look at her. That’s why the Holy Spirit’s impact on the world is done
through the Blessed Virgin. When the Holy Spirit causes the Christ to enter the
world as an embryo, it is in Mary’s womb. When the Holy Spirit creates the
Church on Pentecost, Mary is there (Acts 1:14).
Sometimes
people cultivate relationships by just looking. We can relate to an artist
through his artwork, we can learn from an expert by watching, and we can
interpret the meaning of certain visible actions, as in the case of sign-language,
in such a way that brings us closer to the agent.
In
this way we can form a relationship with the Holy Spirit through Mary. She is
His masterpiece and the manifestation of His work.[1] If we would meditate on what the Holy Spirit does, we can
see it done in Mary, for “In Mary, the Holy Spirit fulfills the plan of the
Father's loving goodness.”[2]
She is the visual contact point, the
“Sign”[3]
which lets us cultivate a relationship with the Holy Spirit. It may be
difficult to build a strong connection with the Holy Spirit using the images of
fire, wind, cloud or a dove, but it isn’t hard to build a strong connection
with the Holy Spirit using that most beautiful image of the perfect Woman and
Mother.
The doctrines of the Church concerning the papacy, the Blessed
Sacrament and the Mother of God, aren’t extras. They aren’t just intellectual
conclusions that Catholicism entails, for whatever reason, which might be
interesting for people with a lot of time on their hands but don’t matter much
to everybody else. They are the bridges by which the Father, Son and Holy
Spirit make Themselves accessible, so that we can form a relationship with Them,
a relationship which is constitutive of a holy life on earth and unending joy
in Heaven.
[1] C.f., Catechism of the Catholic Church, #721, “Mary, the all-holy
ever-virgin Mother of God, is the masterwork
of the mission of the Son and the Spirit in the fullness of time. For the first
time in the plan of salvation and because his Spirit had prepared her, the
Father found the dwelling place where his Son and his Spirit could dwell among
men. In this sense the Church's Tradition has often read the most beautiful
texts on wisdom in relation to Mary. Mary is acclaimed and
represented in the liturgy as the ‘Seat of Wisdom.’ In
her, the ‘wonders of God’ that the Spirit was to fulfill in Christ and the
Church began to be manifested.”
[2] Ibid.,
#723.
[3] C.f., Ibid., #2674, “Mary, his mother and ours, is wholly
transparent to him: she ‘shows the way’ (hodigitria),
and is herself “the Sign” of the way, according to the traditional iconography
of East and West.”
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