Sunday, May 02, 2010

Discovering Mary

If you are a convert to Catholicism and your Protestant friends and family are worried that you now 'worship Mary'...join the club. I remember bumping into an old Evangelical tutor of mine in England. He was very much the hearty, Evangelical Anglican sort--all rugby, cold showers and winning souls to Jesus sort of chap. When he learned that I had become a Catholic his face fell and he said, "But the Roman Catholics still have such a problem with Mariolatry." And this from an Oxford tutor! I said, "Colin, you have made a mistake in terminology. You meant to say 'Mariology' not 'Mariolatry'. The first is the devotion to the Mother of God. The second is a form of idolatry. Surely you were not implying that Catholics worship Mary? I mean, you are a theology tutor at Oxford. You know better than that don't you?"

He changed the subject, and he's now a bishop. Ah well...

If you have ever longed for a book that explains the whole 'Mary thing' to your Evangelical friends and family, than this is the book. David Mills, who is himself a convert to Catholicism has put together a little book that explains it all. He does so in a very winning and personal style, not only explaining the Marian dogmas and devotions, but also helping Evangelicals to understand how the proper devotion to the Mother of God complements and  magnifies the proper relationship to Christ. He also does so with a fair sprinkling of his own experience and witness.

The personal witness was, for me, was the most attractive part of the book. This is because the Marian dogmas and devotions are part of the Catholic faith that really has to be experienced to be understood. One can argue about the perpetual virginity of the Blessed Virgin or the truth of the Immaculate Conception until you are blue in the face, but it is when one begins to pray the Rosary that it all begins to come together. It is this personal experience of Mary's love, power and assistance that is the clincher, and David Mills is wise to interweave his own experiences in such an eloquent and pithy manner.

After his introduction explaining how he came to love Mary, David goes on to expound the life of Mary, Mary in the Scriptures, Mary in Catholic Doctrine, The feasts of Mary, her titles and then a chapter on Apparitions, Devotions and Prayers. Packed at the back is a terrific appendix with lots of further reading, full notes and help for inquirers.

This book is really a must read for all Protestants on the Path to Rome, and even for those who feel that a bridge across the Tiber is a bridge too far, Discovering Mary will help to inform them about this rich and beautiful part of the Catholic faith.

16 comments:

Neophyte said...

I like this, very helpful. Thank you Father.♥♥♥

kkollwitz said...

David Mills, my second-favorite Cat'lic writer! For those not aware of Mills, here's an old bit that I re-read once a year or so:

"..the attempt to seize what life offers without paying the price life requires does not bring life or its fruits. Those who try to steal the fruits are like those fools in fairy tales who grab for jewels and find their hands full of sand. You cannot get them by stealing. They may be taken only by one who seeks them by the rules."

Which dovetails nicely with this bit from today's readings:

“It is necessary for us to undergo many hardships to enter the kingdom of God.”

David said...

Father, thank you for the encouraging review. My own deepening experience of Mary, even since writing the book, keeps showing me that one understands the formulas ever more deeply the more you get to know her. Even putting it that way is something I had to learn, because as an Anglican I had learned to think of her at a distance, as someone I had no more chance of knowing that I had of becoming friends with Queen Elizabeth. And now I've found that I can know her as I knew my own mother. Very cool.

But I ramble. Thank you. And thanks to KKollwitz for the kind words.

David Mills

Jonathan said...

As a convert to Catholicism myself, I struggled with these issues as well, even moreso than on a personal level. While I *do* believe the Church itself has the right of things as regards Mary, I do however feel that some individual Catholics, from lay-people to priests, put too much focus on her. I definitely oppose the idea of naming her "co-redemptrix" as some sort of fourth Marian dogma.

cricket said...

I definitely oppose the idea of naming her "co-redemptrix" as some sort of fourth Marian dogma.

When is that coming up for a vote? I definitely wanna be in town for that.

Joseph D'Hippolito said...

He was very much the hearty, Evangelical Anglican sort--all rugby, cold showers and winning souls to Jesus sort of chap.

Fr. Longnecker, I hope you're not against the idea of "winning souls to Jesus." I mean, isn't that what evangelization is all about? The specific terminology might turn you off but the idea shouldn't...especially if you're a priest. I think the Book of Acts makes that quite clear.

Neophyte said...

Back off D'Hippolito, Father L. is a Priest and I have his back, even though he probably doesn't need any back up. ♥♥♥

StevieD said...

The image on the book cover closely resembles the miraculous image of Our Lady of Absam, Austria which appeared on the window of a house in that town in 1797 whilst the occupant prayed for the safety of her father who was a miner (a portion of the same image is used as a logo by Mel Gibson's production company Icon Films). The original image is kept in a side altar of the church in Absam. (I thought you might like to know that!)

Suburbanbanshee said...

I think it's a personality description, not a criticism. Some people are like that.

It's a Catholic tendency, too. (Watch old movies, where priests teach kids boxing or other sports. Think about all the Notre Dame movies. Think about that great EWTN show, Crossing the Goal.)

But yeah, in Catholicism, that kind of muscular Christianity usually goes along with saying the Rosary, going to prolife demonstrations, and wearing the scapular. And Notre Dame football. :)

Suburbanbanshee said...

Ha! Case in point! The chapel of Our Lady of Rugby!

http://campus.udayton.edu/mary/ladyofrugby.html

Suburbanbanshee said...

This one includes a picture of the stained glass window of the Child Jesus throwing the ball out to the players.

http://wesclark.com/rrr/notre_dame_du_rugby.html

I like this rugby chapel, because it concentrates on asking for players' safety and remembering players who have died. It has a playful spirit, but it's not frivolous.

Joseph D'Hippolito said...

Neophyte, you back off. Nothing I asked Fr. Longnecker contradicts anything he said about Mary. In face, I think Christ's mother would approve. ;)

I asked what I did because I am absolutely sick and tired of Catholics dumping on Protestants, Protestants dumping on Catholics, Christians dumping or making snide remarks about other Christians simply because they don't belong to the "right" church or hold the "right" theology. The only "theology" that matters is the crucifixion and the resurrection. Without those, all theology is arrogance and vanity.

Neophyte said...

AMEN to that Brother.

salvemaria said...

Our Lady at Fatima said that though suffering and chastisement must come to the world, "finally my Immaculate Heart will triumph.” Saint Louise Marie de Montfort foretold this triumph as the beginning of the ‘Reign of Mary’.

Creations’ forth reign after the Reign of the Father (up to Noah), the Reign of Christ (up to Pentecost) and the current Reign of the Holy Spirit?

To Mariologists this concept is a feast to richly feed our devotional appetites: to others it may separate the wheat from the chaff.

What do you think?

Joseph D'Hippolito said...

salvemaria, I've never read St. Louis de Montfort but I'm very skeptical of any analysis that breaks things down into a "reign of the Father," a "reign of Christ" and a "reign of the Holy Spirit," especially since all three are inseperable parts of the Triune Godhead. If one "reigns," what happens to the other two; do they go on vacation? I know I'm being flippant but I'm trying to make a point.

Also, any "reign of Mary's Immaculate Heart" would by definition have to include the reign of the Triune Godhead because, without the Triune Godhead, Mary is irrelevant. Besides, her heart should point the way to her Son and His Father, not to itself.

StevieD said...

Joseph, Our Lady said at Fatima that God wished to establish devotion to Her Immaculate Heart, not that She did. Perhaps it's because Her Heart is the most beautiful and perfect created thing. This is not instead of the adoration of the Trinity (read the prayers taught to the children) but something separate and wonderful.