Transcript of Day 4: Prayer With Mary
The Rosary in a Year (with Fr. Mark-Mary Ames)Hi, I'm Father Marc Marier with the Franciscan Friars of the Renewal, and this is the Rosary in a Year podcast. We're through prayer and meditation. The rosary brings us deeper into relationship with Jesus and Mary and becomes a source of grace for the whole world. The Rosary in a Year is brought to you by Ascension. This is day four. To download the prayer plan for Rosary in a Year, visit ascensionpress. Com/rosaryineyear or text R-I-Y to 33-777. You'll get an outline of how we're going to each month, and it's a great way to track your progress. The best place to listen to the podcast is in the Ascension app. There are special features built just for this podcast and also recordings of the full rosary with myself and other friars. Today and tomorrow, we're going to look at what it means to pray in relationship to Mary, as we use the litany of the sacred heart to aid our encounter with Jesus in our contemplation of his face. We're going to turn to the litany of Loretto as a source of inspiration for a prayer with Mary. For for those of you who aren't familiar with it, the litany of Loretto is a litany dedicated to the blessed mother with a list of prayers invoking a wide range of Mary-entitled.
Today, we're going to pray with Mary as the mirror of justice. The Prophet Malachi In Chapter 4:2, he writes this, But for you who fear my name, the Son of Righteous shall rise with healing in its wings. Son here, for clarification, is spelled S-U-N. The Son of Righteousness, or the Son of Justice, same word, just different translation. It's a title for God. Most specifically, most accurately, it is the title for Jesus, the savior. Mary, the Immaculate Virgin, is the mirror of justice or the mirror of righteousness. Because in her perfect purity, she perfectly reflects the light, the truth, and the love that radiates from the sun of righteousness. Mary is not the source of light, but she perfectly reflects the light. And as the Prophet Malachi prophesied, there will be healing in its wings. So too there is healing in the face of Mary, the all-beautiful one. Now that we've laid a bit of the groundwork and introduced the title, let's just pivot for a quick moment here. I want you to Listener to know that I am keenly aware that Jesus suffered a great deal in his earthly life, most specifically in his public ministry.
Yes, Jesus faced the harsh elements of the desert where he experienced cold in hunger. He was misunderstood, slandered, and betrayed. He experienced abandonment, most specifically during his agony in the garden of Gethsemani, while Peter, James, and John were fast asleep while he was undergoing his agony. And of course, Jesus suffered the most terrible of sufferings during his passion in total. This is all 100% true. And it's also 100% true that Jesus tells us that we, his disciples, need to pick up our cross daily and follow wherever the Father's will leads. This is all 100% true. This is all fact. What's also fact is often overlooked or at least not emphasized. However, is that Jesus also had approximately 30 years living in Nazareth with the most intimate and privileged relationship with Mary, his mother. For three decades, he lived in the most beautiful relationship with his most beautiful and loving mother. It was in Nazareth that in a particular way Mary mirrored to Jesus the love that God, the Father, had of him. Long before the baptism of Jesus, where the heavens were rents, and at the banks of the Jordan, the Father's voice, complained publicly, this is my beloved Son.
' Mary's words, her countenance, her motherly embrace, they never ceased speaking this truth, reflecting this light in the privacy of their home in Nazareth. For 30 years, whatever Jesus was doing, what was mirrored back to him is, You are beloved. And yes, this was true of Mary's love of him, but Mary was also an icon, a mirror communicating to Jesus the Father's love of him. And this love would follow him then, as he would eventually enter into the dangers of his public ministry. And as we know, this love would follow him even to the cross, where Mary stood at his feet, never ceasing to mirror to Jesus, You are my beloved son. ' A couple of years ago, a friend of mine, she received a letter from her 14-year-old son on Mother's Day. And in the note, it said, 'Your voice sounds like home. ' I love everything about this. I love the 14-year-old boy writing this to his mom, 'Your voice sounds like home. I think it's just so moving. And it's an incredible description of a mother's voice and a mother's love. My friends, this is true of Jesus and Mary. To Jesus, Mary's voice sounds like home.
And so no matter where his travels would take him, if Mary was there and he heard her voice, you could say he was taken back home. From the cross, Jesus looked at Mary and said, 'mother, behold your son. ' And he looked at St. John and said, 'behold your mother. ' And the gospel of John says, And from that hour, the disciple took her to his own home. My friends, this is the specific invitation today, and I propose the most perfect way for us to understand authentic and healthy and vibrant, marrying devotion. It's simply to take Mary into your home. As John and Mary shared life together after Jesus' resurrection, his ascension, Mary wasn't just a statue, right? She wasn't just a wallflower. She wasn't just a quiet passive presence in the home of John. She's a living, breathing, loving mother. They talked, they shared their lives. John did nice things to honor her. Mary was active in his life. She comforted him, gave him counsel, taught him to pray, encouraged him when life was difficult. In all of this, as Mary looked upon John, as when she looked upon Jesus, she mirrored the Father's love.
You are my beloved son. You You, John, you are beloved Son. And Mary, according to God's plan, I think it's so beautiful, she doesn't just mirror this light. She mothers it. So there's this particular tenderness of God for us that we experience us through her. It's mirrored through her, but it's also mothered as it comes to us from him, but through her. As Mary and John would share their lives together, eventually for John as well, Mary's voice began to sound like home. This is the relationship with Mary, the mirror of justice that we are all invited to. If I can just put some flesh on it by sharing a quick story. A few years ago, I was in the South Bronx at the post office this. I was waiting in line, I had to mail something. In front of me was a teeny tiny Guatemalan mother with her probably 15, 16-year-old son. He was just... This little guy. Poor guy, man. He was in the height of teenage angst. He had a hat on pulled real low, and his hair was really disheveled, and his clothing was all ragged, and he had his headphones in.
You could just tell, man, this guy. Poor guy. For him, life was difficult. And the mother was a Catholic, and she was just a really beautiful light soul. We struck up a great conversation. What they were doing is they were getting ready. They were going to go travel back to Guatemala, so the son needed to take some passport photos. As he standing in front of the backdrop with the cameras in front of him, he takes off his hat, and he's just a mess. His hair is all over the place. No smile, nothing. He's just struggling. What was so striking is that in front of all of us, his mom just began to like, rejoice in him. Oh, isn't he so handsome? My beautiful boy. And all of us at first were like, I don't know if we're looking at the same young man, my friend. But the thing was this, this mother, she wasn't blind to, she wasn't ignorant to his hair being disheveled or his clothes being out of place and his angsty face. But this mother, she saw her son at a deeper level. She saw more than we saw, even in the midst of his struggle here.
He was beloved son. I think what stands out to me as well is that I think for all of us in that room, in that post office, somehow her rejoicing in him made us see his belovedness as well. This is the power of a mother's love. I would dare say through this mother, this guatemalan mother at the post office, something of what Mary can do for us, it happened. She was mirroring as well. She was mothering as well, something of the deepest truth that he is beloved to God the Father as well. Okay, friends. As we come in for a close, particularly with prayer today, the invitation is to ask for the grace to experience the In the main face of Mary. And this can certainly be aided through to use your own favorite, like Mary, an image or an icon or just in your imagination. If you can, in your imagination, in prayer, ask for the grace of the Holy spirit. Go to your room, your apartment, your home. Now picture Mary there. Notice how she looks at you. Notice how she delights in you. Notice how she's excited to be with you, how she's proud of you.
If you can, now find this place of prayer and remain here. If you can now find this place of prayer, this relationship with Mary. Remain here, rest here. A last little note. The catechism says that, yes, we're called to pray at all times. We're not going to pray at all times if we don't pray at specific times. To use this logic. Similarly, like Jesus and John, we're invited to do all things in relationship with Mary under her loving gaze. And I think we can really get there. I think we can really get there. But we're not going to experience this. Again, her loving gaze, her mirroring to us the deepest truth of who we are as beloved. We're not going to experience this at work or at school or at the post office if we don't first learn to experience this in our prayer. In a primary goal, primary prayer for you and for me during this rosary in a year journey, Pilgrimage, is for us to learn to experience this in prayer, particularly our praying with the rosary, so that we can also experience this as we go about our daily lives. That we can, like John and Jesus, have Mary in our homes and have her as our most faithful companion on all of our journeys.
All right, my friends, let us pray. In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy spirit. Amen. Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our truspasses, as we forgive those who truspass against us. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us Now and at the hour of our death. Amen. Hale Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee. Blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus. Holy Mary, mother of God, pray for us, sinners. For us, sinners, now and at the hour of our death. Amen. Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy spirit, as it was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be, world without end. Amen. In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and the Holy spirit. Amen. All right. Thank you so much for joining me and praying with me today. I look forward to continuing this journey with you again tomorrow.
All right, poco a poco, friends. God bless you all..
The Rosary is a Marian prayer, which means we can deepen our experience of prayer through meditating on Mary’s life and virtues. Follow along with Fr. Mark-Mary as he explains how Mary mirrors God the Father’s love, and shares a meditation on how we can experience the loving face of Mary in our prayer of the Rosary today. Today’s focus is “Mary, the mirror of justice,” and we will be praying one Our Father, three Hail Marys, and one Glory Be.
For the complete prayer plan, visit https://ascensionpress.com/riy.