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- POPE CALLS MARY "STAR" OF THIRD MILLENNIUM
- Sign of Hope for the Mass of Poor, He Says
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VATICAN CITY, MAR. 21, 2001 (Zenit.org).- The Blessed Virgin
Mary is the "star of the third millennium," John Paul
II said during a midweek general audience in which he went on
quote the father of the Protestant Reformation, Martin Luther.
The Pope recalled passages of the commentary on the Magnificat
written by Luther in 1521, in
which he referred to the "Mother of God" as the example
who "teaches us how we must love and
praise God."
"She wishes to be the greatest example of God´s
grace, so as to encourage all to confidence
and praise of divine grace," the rebel theologian said.
Quoting other passages of both Eastern and Western Christian
tradition, the Holy Father
referred to Mary as "the sign of hope for the mass of poor,
of the last of the earth," who
wander through the world at the beginning of the third millennium.
"She faithfully copies the
choice of Christ, her Son, who repeats to all the afflicted throughout
history: ´Come to me,
all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest,´"
the Holy Father said.
"The humble Virgin of Nazareth," the Pope said,
quoting St. Ambrose, "is not the God of the
temple, but the temple of God.´ As such, she guides all
those who take recourse to her toward
the meeting with the Triune God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit."
This is a road of faith that Mary also had to take, despite
overwhelming difficulties. From
the Annunciation, until her Son´s tragic death on the cross,
her life unfolded in the
"interplay of light and shadow, of revelation and mystery,"
the Pope said.
"Her exceptional pilgrimage of faith represents a constant
point of reference for the Church,
for individuals and communities, for peoples and nations, in
a certain sense, for all
humanity," John Paul II added. "She is the star of
the third millennium, as she was at the
beginning of the Christian era, the dawn that preceded Jesus
on the horizon of history."
Her hymn, the Magnificat, "unites the spirits of the
disciples of Christ beyond historical
divisions, which we are determined to surmount in view of full
communion," he said. In it,
Mary celebrates "the primacy of God and His grace, who chooses
the last and the neglected, the
poor of the Lord, of which the Old Testament speaks; overturns
their fortune and introduces
them as protagonists in the history of salvation," the Pope
explained.
The Pontiff concluded: "The Church follows Mary and the
Lord Jesus walking on the torturous
roads of history to raise, promote and appreciate the immense
procession of women and men,
poor and hungry, humiliated and offended."
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