Hearts of Jesus and Mary- Rev. Luciano Alimandi |
AVE MARIA
“Mother of our Surrender and Capitulation”
Rev. Luciano Alimandi
Agenzia Fides-
Vatican City
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Marian writings of the author...
Vatican City (Agenzia Fides) - Speaking of surrender,
capitulation, one immediately thinks of a battle between two sides
one of which at a certain point surrenders seeing that the other is
too strong and it would be useless to continue when defeat is
certain. Perhaps something similar comes about in our life of
relationship with the Lord. If on the one hand it is true we must
fight the world, our selfishness and the temptations of Satan, on
the other it is also true that we appear to be involved in a
struggle with God, quite different from the former of course, but
which is bound to end with our capitulation. It is clear in fact
that in the fight against temptations it would be absurd to
surrender, indeed we must live as far as possible what we are told
by Saint Paul: “draw your strength from the Lord and from his mighty
power. Put on the armour of God so that you may be able to stand
firm against the tactics of the devil” (Eph 6, 10-11).
However in that other sort of struggle - at least as we see it -,
the grace of transformation in Christ comes with the full awareness
of the necessity to surrender: to surrender to God and stop
resisting him, handing everything over to Him; putting aside once
and for all our self-sufficiency, our “knowing better” and letting
ourselves be led step by step by Divine Providence. When in the
Gospel we hear the Lord say to us “whoever wishes to save his life
will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake and that of the
gospel will save it” (cfr. Mk 8, 35), do we not feel that this
“losing” entails surrendering to Him?
The Apostles show us the necessity of a surrender, a “handing over”,
to live in total self-giving to the Master. For example Peter. At a
certain point Jesus asks him “do you love me?”. Precisely after his
denial, the leader of the Apostles, as if stunned by the Risen
Lord’s inexhaustible love for him and conquered by the divine
tenacity with which he is “recovered”, gives a reply which looks
just like total capitulation: “Lord you know everything, you know
that I love you” (Jn 21, 17). It is as if he were saying: “Yes Lord
you know everything better than I and you alone are right; my
reasons are worthless and it is absurd for me to compete with yours,
all I can do is to learn to lose myself so I may live of You”. The
Lord Jesus will confirm to Peter the path of surrender: “Follow me”
(Jn 21, 19).
To surrender to the Lord means accepting to walk behind Him not in
front of Him! This is true for every genuine Christian who day after
day strives to surrender to Jesus and his Gospel; he is led by paths
and means which at times seem contorted, unknown and mostly
mysterious, but they lead him as the Lord of history wishes. Are not
the trials of faith of the Saints to be read in this perspective? On
their faces, in their writings and testimony we recognise the taste
of this surrender which, like that of Simon Peter, is not bitter, it
is made sweet by God’s patient love. However more than anyone else
it is Jesus’ Mother who can show us this way.
Mary never needed to surrender to God because, unlike us, she never
resisted Him but was always totally His, letting herself by led by
Him by the hand. As Vatican II teaches, Mary embraced “God's
salvific will with a full heart and impeded by no sin” (LG 56).
Always obedient to God she became an expert in His ways and is
therefore given by Him to us to guide and sustain us on the path of
progressive surrender, the quickest way to Heaven.
A great master of Marian spirituality, Saint Luigi Grignion de
Montfort, described Mary’s greatness magnificently: “God the Father
could not give the world His only Son except through Mary. Despite
all the sighs of the patriarchs, all the supplications of the
prophets of the old law in four thousand years, to obtain this
treasure, Mary alone was worthy and found grace in the Lord’s eyes
with the power of her prayer and the sublimity of her virtues. The
world was unworthy - says Saint Augustine - to receive the Son of
God directly from the hands of the Father ; He gave him to Mary that
from her the world might receive Him.” (Treaty, n. 16). Mother of
our surrender help us!
(Agenzia Fides 19/7/2006 - righe 48, parole 770)