The Mystery of the Annunciation is the Mystery of Grace | Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger (Pope Benedict XVI) | Ignatius Insight
The Mystery of the Annunciation is the Mystery of Grace | Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger (Pope Benedict XVI) | Ignatius Insight
http://ignatiusinsight.com/features2009/ratzinger_annunciation_mar09.asp
The mystery of the annunciation to Mary is not just a
mystery of silence.It is above and beyond all that a mystery of grace.
We feel compelled to ask ourselves: Why did Christ really
want to be born of a virgin? It was certainly possible for him to have been
born of a normal marriage. That would not have affected his divine Sonship,
which was not dependent on his virgin birth and could equally well have been
combined with another kind of birth. There is no question here of a downgrading
of marriage or of the marriage relationship; nor is it a question of better
safeguarding the divine Sonship. Why then?
We find the answer when we open the Old Testament and see
that the mystery of Mary is prepared for at every important stage in salvation
history. It begins with Sarah, the mother of Isaac, who had been barren, but
when she was well on in years and had lost the power of giving life, became, by
the power of God, the mother of Isaac and so of the chosen people.
The process continues with Anna, the mother of Samuel, who
was likewise barren, but eventually gave birth; with the mother of Samson, or
again with Elizabeth, the mother of John the Baptizer. The meaning of all these
events is the same: that salvation comes, not from human beings and their
powers, but solely from God—from an act of his grace.
(From Dogma und Verkundigung, pp. 375ff; quoted in Co-Workers of the Truth: Meditations
for Every Day of the Year [Ignatius Press, 1992], pp. 99-100.)
The annunciation to Mary happens to a woman, in an
insignificant town in half-pagan Galilee, known neither to Josephus nor the
Talmud. The entire scene was "unusual for Jewish sensibilities. God reveals
himself, where and to whom he wishes." Thus begins a new way, at whose center
stands no longer the temple, but the simplicity of Jesus Christ. He is now the
true temple, the tent of meeting.
The salutation to Mary (Lk 1:28-32) is modeled closely on
Zephaniah 3: 14-17: Mary is the daughter Zion addressed there, summoned to
" rejoice", in formed that the Lord is coming to her. Her fear is
removed, since the Lord is in her midst to save her. Laurentin makes the very
beautiful remark on this text: "... As so often, the word of God proves to be a
mustard seed.... One understands why Mary was so frightened by this message (Lk
1:29). Her fear comes not from lack of understanding nor from that
small-hearted anxiety to which some would like to reduce it. It comes from the
trepidation of that encounter with God, that immeasurable joy which can make
the most hardened natures quake."
In the address of the angel, the underlying motif the Lucan
portrait of Mary surfaces: she is in person the true Zion, toward whom hopes
have yearned throughout all the devastations of history. She is the true Israel
in whom Old and New Covenant, Israel and Church, are indivisibly one. She is
the "people of God" bearing fruit through God's gracious power. ...
Transcending all problems, Marian devotion is the rapture of joy over the true,
indestructible Israel; it is a blissful entering into the joy of the Magnificat
and thereby it is the praise of him to whom the daughter Zion owes her whole self
and whom she bears, the true, incorruptible, indestructible Ark of the Covenant.
(From Daughter Zion: Meditations on the Church's Marian Belief [Ignatius
Press, 1983], pp. 42-43, 82.)