At the beginning of the new year that the Lord grants to our lives, it is beneficial to raise the gaze of our hearts to Mary. For she, as a mother, sends us back into our relationship with her Son: she brings us back to Jesus, she speaks to us about Jesus, and she leads us to Jesus. The Solemnity of the Most Holy Mother of God thus immerses us once again in the mystery of Christmas: God became one of us in Mary’s womb, and we, who have opened the Holy Door to begin the Jubilee, recall today that “Mary is therefore the door through which Christ entered this world” (St. Ambrose, Epistle 42, 4: PL, VII).
The Apostle Paul summarizes this mystery by stating that “God sent his Son, born of a woman” (Gal 4:4). These words—”born of a woman”—resonate in our hearts today and remind us that Jesus, our Savior, became flesh and is revealed in the fragility of the flesh.
He was born of a woman. This expression brings us back to Christmas above all: the Word became flesh. The Apostle Paul specifies that he was born of a woman, almost feeling the need to remind us that God truly became man through a human womb. There is a temptation that fascinates so many people today but which can also tempt many Christians: to imagine or manufacture an “abstract” God, linked to a vague religious idea, to some fleeting beautiful emotion. Instead, he is concrete; he is human: he was born of a woman, he has a face and a name, and he calls us to enter into a relationship with him. Jesus Christ, our Savior, was born of a woman; he has flesh and blood; he comes from the womb of the Father, but he was incarnated in the womb of the Virgin Mary; he went from the highest heaven, but he dwells in the depths of the earth; he is the Son of God, but he became the Son of man. He, the image of Almighty God, came in weakness, and though He was without blemish, “God made Him to be sin for us” (2 Cor. 5:21). He was born of a woman and is one of us. He is one of us. That is why He can save us.
He was born of a woman. This expression also speaks to us of Christ’s humanity, to tell us that he reveals himself in the fragility of the flesh. If he descended into the womb of a woman and was born like all creatures, here he reveals himself in the fragility of a child. That is why the shepherds who went to see with their own eyes what the angel had announced to them did not observe extraordinary signs or magnificent manifestations, but “they found Mary and Joseph, and the baby lying in a manger” (Lk 2:16). They found a helpless, fragile child who needed his mother’s care, needed swaddling clothes and milk, and needed caresses and love. Saint Louis Marie Grignion de Montfort says that divine Wisdom “did not want to give herself directly to men, even though she could have, but preferred to give herself through the Virgin Mary. Nor did she want to come into the world at the age of a perfect man, independent of others, but as a poor little child who required the care and nourishment of her mother” (Treatise on True Devotion to the Virgin Mary, 139). And so in the whole life of Jesus, we can see this choice of God, the choice of smallness and concealment; he never succumbs to the temptations of divine power to perform great signs and impose himself on others, as the devil suggested, but reveals God’s love in the beauty of his humanity, dwelling among us, sharing an ordinary life made up of work and dreams, showing compassion for the suffering of body and spirit, opening the eyes of the blind, and refreshing lost hearts. Compassion… The three attitudes of God are mercy, closeness, and compassion. God becomes close, merciful, and compassionate. Let us not forget this. Jesus shows us God through his fragile humanity and his care for the delicate.
Sisters and brothers, it is beautiful to think that Mary, the girl from Nazareth, always leads us back to the mystery of her Son, Jesus. She reminds us that Jesus comes in the flesh, and therefore the privileged place where we can encounter him is above all in our lives, in our fragile humanity, and in the humanity of those who pass us by every day. And by invoking her as the Mother of God, we affirm that Christ was begotten of the Father but truly born of the womb of a woman. We proclaim that He is the Lord; He is the Lord of time, but with His loving presence, He also inhabits this time of ours, even this new year. We admit that He is the world’s Savior, but we must seek Him in every person. And if he, who is the Son, made himself small to allow himself to be taken into the arms of his mother, to be cared for and nurtured by her, then this means that even today he comes in all those who need the same care: in every sister and brother we meet, who needs attention, listening, and kindness.
This new year that is opening, let us entrust to Mary, Mother of God, that we too may learn, like her, to find God’s greatness in the smallness of life; that we may learn to care for every creature born of woman and, above all, to protect the precious gift that is life, as Mary does: life in the womb, the life of children, the life of the suffering, the life of the poor, the life of the elderly, the lonely, and the dying. And today, on the World Day of Peace, it is precisely this invitation that flows from Mary’s maternal heart to which we are all called: we are called to care for life, to care for wounded life—so many wounded lives, so many—to restore the dignity of the life of every “born of woman”; it is the fundamental starting point for building a civilization of peace. Therefore, “I ask for a firm commitment to promote respect for the dignity of human life from conception to natural death, so that every person can love his or her life and look to the future with hope” (Message for the LVIII World Day of Peace, 1 January 2025).
Mary, Mother of God, and our mother await us right in the manger. She shows us, as she did to the shepherds, a God who always surprises us, who does not come in the splendor of heaven, but in the smallness of a manger. Let us entrust this new Jubilee Year to her, let us hand over to her our questions, our worries, our sufferings, our joys, and everything we carry in our hearts. She is a mother. Let us entrust the whole world to her so that hope may be reborn, so that peace may finally sprout for all the peoples of the earth.
History tells us that when the bishops entered the church in Ephesus, the faithful people, with staffs in their hands, cried out, “Mother of God!” Those sticks were surely a promise of what would happen if the “Mother of God” dogma were not proclaimed. Today, we do not have sticks, but we do have a child’s heart and a voice. Therefore, let us all together invoke the Holy Mother of God.
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