|
The Immaculate Vs. the Proud
BY Mark Shea
December 16-22, 2007 Issue |
Posted 12/11/07 at 12:20 PM
The Immaculate Vs. the Proud
Pope John Paul II once observed: “Original sin attempts ...
to abolish fatherhood ... leaving man only with a sense of the master/slave
relationship.”
All the 19th-century philosophies of pride, ranging from
Marx to Nietzsche to Freud to Darwin, were founded on the denial of God as
Father, and the consequent perception of God as Master, giving us only the
choice to be slave or rebel.
Consequently, they inevitably taught that the human person:
• is not in the image of God because God does not exist,
• comes from chaos and shall return to chaos,
• is the product of purposeless processes,
• is defined by Power, not Love,
• is either an Oppressor or a Victim,
• is an illusion disguising a fathomless abyss of conflicted
impulses and irrational desires,
• must kick down the ladder of history and biology by which
he climbed and create himself,
• cannot be hobbled by love, pity and a slave morality that
cringes before God,
• improves himself through competition, enmity and strife as
he destroys the weak,
• should seek pleasure in this world, because this is all
there is,
• must defeat and destroy anything standing in the way of
the quest for pleasure and power, and
• is arrogant for thinking himself “made in God’s image” and
superior to other creatures.
Conclusion: Since nature is all there is, and humans
dominate nature by virtue of natural selection, humans can be said to be the
“face” of nature and the most successful humans should, by any means necessary,
take their place as the only gods there will ever be, knowing the difference
between good and evil.
If that sounds like the temptation of Eve, it’s because it
is.
And so, right in the middle of this 19th-century
intellectual assault, the Holy Spirit did a providential thing: He prompted the
Church to formally proclaim the Immaculate Conception and hold up for us the
image of the most profoundly redeemed human person in the entire universe:
Mary, the Second Eve.
For the philosophies of pride lie that the first word about
the dignity and origin of the human person is chaos, that the story is nothing
but one endless power struggle, and that the final word is death.
The Immaculate Conception means that the first word about
the human creature is the Word who became flesh, that the story is love and the
final word is glory.
For by Mary’s creaturely humility and God’s subsequent
exaltation of her through the grace of Christ, she gives the lie to every
proposition upon which the philosophies of pride were founded and reminds us
again that salvation is found not by saying with Shelley’s hero Satan, “Better
to reign in hell than serve in heaven,” but by saying, “Let it be unto me
according to your word.”
Because Mary is the icon of the Church and highest of God’s
creatures (yet not herself divine), she gives the lie, in her very person, to
the philosophies of pride and their promise of liberation through rebellion by
showing that:
• The human person is in the image of God.
• The human person comes from God and is made for union with
God.
• The depth of Christ’s power to save from sin is most fully
displayed in Mary, so we may know he holds that same power to save us, no
matter how grave our sin.
• The human person is the product of fathomless divine love.
• Sin, though real, is neither the foundational nor the
final truth about Man. Jesus Christ is.
• The human person is defined by love, not enmity.
• The human person is called to love God and neighbor.
• The human person is a reflection of the reason, order and
love of God himself.
• The human person finds his life in losing it and receiving
the love of God.
• The human person only becomes more human through love,
mercy and humility.
• The human person grows in love by caring for the “least of
these” since they are precious to Christ, who humbled himself to be born in a
stable.
• The human person should seek self-donating love here on
earth and a reward in heaven, because this life is not all there is.
• It is humble for us to think ourselves “made in God’s
image” because that is what we are. The place for humility is when we recognize
our need of grace.
• Since God is the Lord of nature, we are merely stewards of
creation. We find ourselves, not by worshipping nature or ourselves, but by
worshipping God who made and redeemed us through Jesus Christ.
O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse
to you.
Mark Shea is
senior content editor
for CatholicExchange.com.
Filed under
Advertisement
Advertisement
Make a Donation now!
Insightful. Informative. Uncompromisingly faithful. The National Catholic Register is more than a newspaper. It’s a cause. Your support for the Register funds important journalism that helps to build a Culture of Life in our nation, and throughout the world. Help us promote the Church’s New Evangelization by donating to the National Catholic Register right now.
Click here to donate
|