We're going to continue on a Marian Newman theme throughout the month of August in our Monday morning Son Rise Morning Show exchanges, so on Monday, August 15, on the Feast of the Assumption, Anna Mitchell or Matt Swaim and I will take a look at a few of Saint John Henry Newman's Meditations on the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
I'll be on at my usual time, about 6:50 a.m. Central/7:50 a.m. Eastern. Please listen live here on EWTN or on your local EWTN affiliate.
Newman mentions Mary's Assumption in the second of the two Discourses to Mixed Congregations I highlighted last week, "On the Fitness of the Glories of Mary":
I will be brief, but bear with me if I view her bright Assumption, as I have viewed her immaculate purity, rather as a point of doctrine than as a theme for devotion.
It was surely fitting then, it was becoming, that she {371} should be taken up into heaven and not lie in the grave till Christ's second coming, who had passed a life of sanctity and of miracle such as hers. . . . Why should {372} she share the curse of Adam, who had no share in his fall? "Dust thou art, and into dust thou shalt return," was the sentence upon sin; she then, who was not a sinner, fitly never saw corruption. She died, then, as we hold, because even our Lord and Saviour died . . . She died that she might live, she died as a matter of form or (as I may call it) an observance, in order to fulfil, what is called, the debt of nature,—not primarily for herself or because of sin, but to submit herself to her condition, to glorify God, to do what her Son did; not however as her Son and Saviour, with any suffering for any special end; not with a martyr's death, for {373} her martyrdom had been in living; not as an atonement, for man could not make it, and One had made it, and made it for all; but in order to finish her course, and to receive her crown.
Newman even mentions the tradition, shared by the Saint John Damascene, that the Apostles, having buried her, opened her tomb (because St. Thomas hadn't made to the funeral--late again!) and found it empty. That's why many paintings of the Assumption show her tomb and the Apostles at the bottom and her Assumption into Heaven on the top, like this painting by Andrea del Sarto (public domain).
In Newman's meditations on the Litany of Loreto, he offers another apologetic for believing that the Mother of God was Assumed into Heaven in considering her titles:
Holy Mother of God
Sinless Mother
Mystical Rose
Tower of David
Powerful Virgin
Help of Christians
Most Faithful Virgin
Morning Star
I've selected just a few of his arguments:
From his meditation on Mary as the Holy Mother of God:
We are told by St. Matthew, that after our Lord's death upon the Cross "the graves were opened, and many bodies of the saints that had slept"—that is, slept the sleep of death, "arose, and coming out of the tombs after His Resurrection, came into the Holy City, and appeared to many." St. Matthew says, "many bodies of the Saints"—that is, the holy Prophets, Priests, and Kings of former times—rose again in anticipation of the last day.
Can we suppose that Abraham, or David, or Isaias, or Ezechias, should have been thus favoured, and not God's own Mother? Had she not a claim on the love of her Son to have what any others had? Was she not nearer to Him than the greatest of the Saints before her? And is it conceivable that the law of the grave should admit of relaxation in their case, and not in hers? Therefore we confidently say that our Lord, having preserved her from sin and the consequences of sin by His Passion, lost no time in pouring out the full merits of that Passion upon her body as well as her soul.
From his meditation on the Sinless Mother title:
From the Mystical Rose meditation:
If you are interested in more background on the declaration of the Dogma of Our Lady's Assumption, I highly recommend Mary’s Bodily Assumption by Matthew Levering from Notre Dame University Press which I reviewed a few years ago. From the publisher:
In Mary’s Bodily Assumption, Matthew Levering presents a contemporary explanation and defense of the Catholic doctrine of Mary’s bodily Assumption. He asks: How does the Church justify a doctrine that does not have explicit biblical or first-century historical evidence to support it? With the goal of exploring this question more deeply, he divides his discussion into two sections, one historical and the other systematic.
Levering’s historical section aims to retrieve the rich Mariological doctrine of the mid-twentieth century. He introduces the development of Mariology in Catholic Magisterial documents, focusing on Pope Pius XII’s encyclical Munificentissimus Deus of 1950, in which the bodily Assumption of Mary was dogmatically defined, and two later Magisterial documents, Vatican II’s Lumen Gentium and Pope John Paul II’s Redemptoris Mater. Levering addresses the work of the neo-scholastic theologians Joseph Duhr, Aloïs Janssens, and Réginald Garrigou-Lagrange before turning to the great theologians of the nouvelle théologie—Karl Rahner, Hans Urs von Balthasar, Louis Bouyer, Joseph Ratzinger—and their emphasis on biblical typology. Using John Henry Newman as a guide, Levering organizes his systematic section by the three pillars of the doctrine on which Mary’s Assumption rests: biblical typology, the Church as authoritative interpreter of divine revelation under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, and the fittingness of Mary’s Assumption in relation to the other mysteries of faith.
Holy Mother of God, Assumed into Heaven, pray for us!
Saint John Henry Newman, pray for us!
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