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Mary, Mary, quite contrary: defying the stereotypes of a meek, mild-mannered Mary, the Magnificat proclaims the liberating and revolutionary message of a passionate, prophetic woman. In her new book, Elizabeth A. Johnson takes a critical look at Mary--who she is and what she represents in the 21st century.


The first-century Jewish woman named Miriam of Nazareth, mother of Jesus, is the most celebrated female religious figure in the Christian tradition Christian traditions are traditions of practice or belief associated with Christianity.

The term has several connected meanings. In terms of belief, traditions are generally stories or history that are or were widely accepted without being part of Christian doctrine.
. She has been symbolized to such an extravagant degree divorced from her own history--symbol of the maternal face of God, of the eternal feminine, of the disciple, of the idealized i·de·al·ize  
v. i·de·al·ized, i·de·al·iz·ing, i·de·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To regard as ideal.

2. To make or envision as ideal.

v.intr.
1.
 church--that approaching her as an actual human being surprises us.

Whether studied from the point of view of theology, spirituality, or culture, this Galilean woman has been interpreted and explained, imagined and rejected, loved and honored in ways so diverse as to be impossible to codify codify to arrange and label a system of laws. .

Professor Mary Hines tells the story of the beginning of one semester at a theological school when she discovered that all the students registered for her course on the theology of Mary were young men; all the students in her course on feminist theology were women. When asked to explain their choices, the men said they knew next to nothing about the church's teaching on Mary but as ordained or·dain  
tr.v. or·dained, or·dain·ing, or·dains
1.
a. To invest with ministerial or priestly authority; confer holy orders on.

b. To authorize as a rabbi.

2.
 ministers would be expected to. The women, on the other hand, avoided the course because of their negative feelings about what they already knew. "Some responded with a sense of betrayal and disillusionment Disillusionment
Adams, Nick

loses innocence through WWI experience. [Am. Lit.: “The Killers”]

Angry Young Men

disillusioned postwar writers of Britain, such as Osborne and Amis. [Br. Lit.
, some with a sense of undefined unease" Hines said. "Some said there was just too much baggage for them to summon up interest in studying Mary."

Today we are faced with the task of developing and promoting a theologically sound, ecumenically fruitful, spiritually empowering, ethically challenging, and socially liberating interpretation of Mary for the 21st century. What is her significance in the light of Christian faith in the gracious mystery of God? What difference does remembering her make in the life of church and society? How can her image be construed as a source of blessing rather than a blight for women's lives in both religion and politics?

There is no one thread that would knit this tradition around Mary into a unified whole. While a historical woman obviously dwells at the root of this whole phenomenon, there has been a plasticity to her image that has allowed us to create widely different Marian symbols and theologies in relation to spiritual and social needs.

The diversity begins in scripture, where each of the four gospels portrays her in a different way according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the theological perspectives of the evangelists. Within the gospels are at least 13 scenes where Miriam of Nazareth, identified either by her own name or as the mother of Jesus, speaks, takes action, or is described as an essential part of the action. Drawing on these various gospel portraits, then, gives different glimpses or brief portrayals of incidents in Mary's life.

Mary's prophetic song

One of the longest glimpses of Mary is at the beginning of the gospel of Luke, when, pregnant with Jesus and visiting Elizabeth, Mary sings the Magnificat (Luke 1:46-55).

"The song of Mary is the oldest Advent hymn," preached Dietrich Bonhoeffer Noun 1. Dietrich Bonhoeffer - German Lutheran theologian and pastor whose works concern Christianity in the modern world; an active opponent of Nazism, he was arrested and sent to Buchenwald and later executed (1906-1945)
Bonhoeffer
, the German theologian killed by the Nazis. "It is at once the most passionate, the wildest, one might even say the most revolutionary Advent hymn ever sung. This is not the gentle, tender, dreamy Mary whom we sometimes see in paintings; this is the passionate, surrendered, proud, enthusiastic Mary who speaks out here.

"This song," Bonhoeffer continues, "has none of the sweet, nostalgic, or even playful tones of some of our Christmas carols A Christmas carol is a carol whose lyrics center on the theme of Christmas or that has become associated with the Christmas season even though its lyrics may not specifically refer to Christmas. Both types of Christmas carols are included in this list. . It is instead a hard, strong, inexorable song about collapsing thrones and humbled lords of this world, about the power of God and the powerlessness of humankind. These are the tones of the women prophets of the Old Testament that now come to life in Mary's mouth."

Swelling with new life by the power of the Spirit and affirmed by her kinswoman kins·wom·an  
n.
1. A female relative.

2. A woman sharing the same racial, cultural, or national background as another.

Noun 1.
 Elizabeth, Mary sings a song that proclaims God's gracious, effective compassion.

This is the most any woman gets to say in the New Testament. While we are told that other women proclaim the Good News, most significantly at the empty tomb Noun 1. empty tomb - a monument built to honor people whose remains are interred elsewhere or whose remains cannot be recovered
cenotaph

monument, memorial - a structure erected to commemorate persons or events
 on Easter morning, we unfortunately do not get to hear their own words.

The cadences of Mary's canticle can·ti·cle  
n.
1. A song or chant, especially a nonmetrical hymn with words taken from a biblical text other than from the Book of Psalms.

2. Canticles Bible The Song of Songs.
 call into question any such traditional silencing of women's voices, whether in scripture or throughout tradition. Following the logic of her praise of God, all voices, especially the voices of the lowly, should be welcome in the assembly.

And Mary said:
   My soul magnifies the Lord,
   and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior,
   for he has looked with favor on the
   lowliness of his handmaid.
   For behold, henceforth all generations
   will call me blessed,
   for the One who is mighty has done
   great things for me,
   and holy is his name.
   And his mercy is from generation to
   generation on those who fear him.
   He has shown strength with his arm;
   he has scattered the proud in the
   imagination of their hearts;
   he has put down the mighty from their
   thrones,
   and exalted those of low degree;
   he has filled the hungry with good things,
   and the rich he has sent away empty.
   He has helped his servant Israel,
   in remembrance of his mercy,
   according to the promise he made to
   our ancestors,
   to Abraham and to his posterity forever.


Mary stands in the long Jewish tradition of female singers, from Miriam with her tambourine tambourine (tăm'bərēn`), musical instrument of the percussion family, having a narrow circular frame and a single parchment drumhead, with metal plates or jingles set in the frame.  (Exod. 15:2-21) to Deborah (Judg. 5:1-31), Hannah (1 Sam. 2:1-10), and Judith (Jdt. 16:1-17), who also sang songs of salvation, victory songs of the oppressed op·press  
tr.v. op·pressed, op·press·ing, op·press·es
1. To keep down by severe and unjust use of force or authority: a people who were oppressed by tyranny.

2.
.

Structured as a thanks giving psalm, the Magnificat has two parts. The first praises God's mercy to the speaker and the second reflects God's victorious deeds for the oppressed. The two parts are linked by a profound sense of God's faithful compassion, by the joy that results in the lives of the liberated, and by virtue of the fact that Mary herself is a member of the oppressed people who experience redemption. Together, they reflect a way of life basic to Jewish and Christian traditions: spirituality and social justice.

God's mercy to the peasant woman

The song begins with a poor woman's cry of joy. Mary's spirit rejoices in "God my Savior." This lyric mood pervades the Jewish biblical tradition. The psalmist psalm·ist  
n.
A writer or composer of psalms.


psalmist
Noun

a writer of psalms

Noun 1.
 sings, "Then my soul shall rejoice in the Lord Rejoice in the Lord is a weekly nationwide television broadcast of the campus church, a ministry of Pensacola Christian College (PCC).

The show is broadcast on the charismatic-oriented Daystar Television Network on Sunday from 8 PM to 9 PM EST.
, exulting in his deliverance Deliverance
See also Freedom.

Aphesius

epithet of Zeus, meaning ‘releaser.’ [Gk. Myth.: Zimmerman, 292–293]

Bolivar, Simón

(1783–1830) the great liberator of South America. [Am. Hist.
" (Ps 35:9). Isaiah encourages, "This is the Lord for whom we have waited; let us be glad and rejoice in his salvation" (Isa. 25:9). Even the natural world is caught up in the gladness: "Let all the earth cry out to God with joy" (Ps 66:1).

This is not a superficial joy--it is aware of the struggle unto death yet hopeful that the great "nevertheless" of God leads to life. Mary magnifies God her Savior, which in Elizabethan English means to celebrate the greatness, or sing and dance in praise of the goodness of someone wonderful. Hers are not the words of half-hearted appreciation. She feels herself lifted up into God's good and gracious will, and she breaks forth in praise and singing.

Mary's song is the prayer of a poor woman. She proclaims God's greatness because the Holy One, regarding her low estate, has done great things for her.

The term for lowliness in Greek describes misery, pain, persecution, and oppression. Mary's self-characterization as lowly is not a metaphor for spiritual humility but is based on her actual social position. Young, female, a member of a people subjected to economic exploitation by powerful rulers and afflicted af·flict  
tr.v. af·flict·ed, af·flict·ing, af·flicts
To inflict grievous physical or mental suffering on.



[Middle English afflighten, from afflight,
 by outbreaks of violence, she belongs to the poor.

Yet it is to precisely such a woman that the call has come to partner with God in the great work of redemption. It is not just that God often chooses unconventional people for a task, not just that Mary is among the inconsequential poor of the earth, like unlettered women in any poor village on this planet. It is the combination that is revolutionary: God has regarded her precisely as a lowly woman. Her favored status, declared by Gabriel, Elizabeth, and now herself, results from God's surprising and gracious initiative. Rejoicing follows. Here the background picture of a poor, first-century Galilean peasant woman living in occupied territory Territory under the authority and effective control of a belligerent armed force. The term is not applicable to territory being administered pursuant to peace terms, treaty, or other agreement, express or implied, with the civil authority of the territory. See also civil affairs agreement. , struggling for survival and dignity, imbued with Jewish faith, aptly joins with this biblical portrait of Mary, singer of the song of justice in the name of God.

In his commentary on this canticle, Martin Luther teaches that, as in Mary's case, God desires to do great things for us too, despite our lowliness. What we need is faith, trusting in God as Mary did with "her whole life and being, mind and strength." Then we will be caught up in God's good and gracious will, which operates with kindness, mercy, justice, and righteousness. True, this always involves a reversal of values, and, Luther observes, "the mightier you are, the more must you fear; the lowlier you are, the more must you take comfort."

But just as the Spirit inspires Mary's joy and fortitude, so too the Spirit imbues us every day with abundant grace to follow our own calling. The important thing to remember is that Mary had confidence in God. "Thus we too should do; that would be to sing a right Magnificat."

God's mercy to the oppressed

What begins as praise for divine loving-kindness toward a marginalized and oppressed woman grows to embrace all the poor of the world. The second part of the Magnificat articulates the great biblical theme of reversal, where lowly groups are defended by God while the arrogant end up losers.

Proclaiming her song, Mary continues this deep stream of Jewish faith in the context of the advent of the Messiah, now taking shape within her. The approaching reign of God will disturb the order of the world run by the hard of heart, the oppressor OPPRESSOR. One who having public authority uses it unlawfully to tyrannize over another; as, if he keep him in prison until he shall do something which he is not lawfully bound to do.
     2. To charge a magistrate with being an oppressor, is therefore actionable.
. Through God's action, the social hierarchy Social hierarchy

A fundamental aspect of social organization that is established by fighting or display behavior and results in a ranking of the animals in a group.
 of wealth and poverty, power and subjugation Subjugation
Cushan-rishathaim Aram

king to whom God sold Israelites. [O.T.: Judges 3:8]

Gibeonites

consigned to servitude in retribution for trickery. [O.T.: Joshua 9:22–27]

Ham Noah

curses him and progeny to servitude. [O.
, is to be turned upside down. All will be well because God's mercy, pledged in covenant love, is faithful through every generation.

By placing the Magnificat on the lips of Mary, Luke depicts her as the spokeswoman for God's redemptive justice. She proclaims the Good News by anticipation, and she does so as a woman whose consciousness is rooted in the heritage and wisdom of the strong women of Israel. Knowledgeable about the liberating traditions of her own people and trumpeting them with "tough authority," Mary stands as a prophet of the coming age.

Rooted in the biblical heritage of Palestinian Jewish society, this is clearly a revolutionary song of salvation whose concrete social, economic, and political dimensions cannot be blunted. People are hungry because of triple taxes being exacted for Rome, the local government, and the temple. The lowly are being crushed because of the mighty on their thrones in Rome and their deputies in the provinces. Now, with the nearness of the messianic age Messianic Age is a theological term referring to a future time of peace and brotherhood on the earth, without crime, war and poverty. Many religions believe that there will be such an age; some refer to it as the "Messianic Age". , a new social order of justice is at hand. Mary's canticle praises God for the kind of salvation that involves concrete transformations.

People in need in every society hear a blessing in this canticle. The battered woman, the single parent without resources, those without food, the homeless family, the young abandoned to their own devices, the old who are discarded--all who are subjected to social contempt are encompassed in the hope Mary proclaims.

The church in Latin America Latin America, the Spanish-speaking, Portuguese-speaking, and French-speaking countries (except Canada) of North America, South America, Central America, and the West Indies.  more than any other is responsible for hearing this proclamation of hope in a newly refreshed way. The Magnificat's message is so subversive that for a period during the 1980s the government of Guatemala banned its public recitation rec·i·ta·tion  
n.
1.
a. The act of reciting memorized materials in a public performance.

b. The material so presented.

2.
a. Oral delivery of prepared lessons by a pupil.

b.
. Seeing the central point of this song to be the assertion of the holiness of God, Peruvian theologian Gustavo Gutierrez argues that any reading is fruitless that "attempts to tone down what Mary's song tells us about the preferential love of God for the lowly and the abused, and about the transformation of history that God's loving win implies."

This message will not appeal to those who are satisfied with the ways things are or to those who seek to restore intact some past era of culture or religion. Even affluent people of good will have difficulty dealing with its shocking, revolutionary ring.

Doesn't God love everyone? Indeed yes, but in an unjust world, the form this universal love takes differs according to circumstance. This song makes clear that divine love is particularly on the side of those whose dignity must be recovered. The divine intent is to build up a community marked by human dignity Human dignity is an expression that can be used as a moral concept or as a legal term. Sometimes it means no more than that human beings should not be treated as objects. Beyond this, it is meant to convey an idea of absolute and inherent worth that does not need to be acquired and  and mutual regard.

Georgetown theologian John Haught Dr. John (Jack) F. Haught is a Roman Catholic theologian and the Landegger Distinguished Professor of Theology at Georgetown University. His area of expertise is systematic theology, with a special interest in issues of science, cosmology, ecology, and reconciling evolution and  writes, "A major part of the message of prophetic religion is that the dreams that arise among the poor are not naive illusions but compelling clues to the nature of the real." Those who are affluent need to dream with the poor the dream of God's future that their suffering opens up, and thus be transformed themselves. For both poor and affluent, the Magnificat is a vehicle of that dream.

Mary not only sings of God's liberating transformation of the social order, but, like those in her song, she occupies a position of poverty and powerlessness in her society and does so with the added oppression that accrues to being a woman of little account. Hence her song puts her in solidarity with other women who strive for life. She sings pregnant with hope, bearing the Messiah, embodying the historic reversal she proclaims.

Who shall mother the Messiah? Not someone blessed with a bounteous boun·te·ous  
adj.
1. Giving or inclined to give generously.

2. Generously and copiously given. See Synonyms at liberal.
 table and a peaceful life, not a well-regarded woman of influence. Indeed, there is nothing wrong with these things "These Things" is an EP by She Wants Revenge, released in 2005 by Perfect Kiss, a subsidiary of Geffen Records. Music Video
The music video stars Shirley Manson, lead singer of the band Garbage. Track Listing
1. "These Things [Radio Edit]" - 3:17
2.
; peace and abundant nourishment are among the blessings hoped for in the messianic age. But the world is distorted by sin. People accumulate power and wealth at the expense of others. Suffering is rampant. And the pattern persists through the generations.

Hearing the cries of the oppressed, God aims to make the world right again, being faithful to the covenant promise. Thus God's choice of Mary to give birth to the Messiah is typical of divine action.

Read through these eyes, Mary's song of divine victory over the powerful becomes a song about the liberation of the most nondescript non·de·script  
adj.
Lacking distinctive qualities; having no individual character or form: "This expression gave temporary meaning to a set of features otherwise nondescript" 
 poor people on this earth. Imagine the world according to the defiant Mary's Magnificat, invites African writer Peter Daino: a heavenly banquet and all the children fed.

Through women's eyes

Mary's song of God's victory over those who dominate others rings with support for women in the struggle against sexism as well as against racism, classism class·ism  
n.
Bias based on social or economic class.



classist adj. & n.
, heterosexism heterosexism Psychology The belief that heterosexual activities and institutions are better than those with a genderless or homosexual orientation. See Homophobia. , and all other demeaning de·mean 1  
tr.v. de·meaned, de·mean·ing, de·means
To conduct or behave (oneself) in a particular manner: demeaned themselves well in class.
 injustice. The Spirit who filled Mary with life and empowered her prophetic voice is the same Spirit who inspires and fills with life women of all ages. Remembering her, women draw many and varied lessons of encouragement.

One of the strongest and most unusual lessons in the light of traditional Mariology is the right to say no. "Men toiling in the service of male power interests represent Mary only as the woman who knew how to say yes," liberation theologian Leonardo Boff Leonardo Boff was born 14 December 1938 in Concórdia, Santa Catarina state, Brazil. He is a theologian, philosopher and writer, known for his active support for the rights of the poor and excluded.  writes. Indeed, at the Annunciation Annunciation
dove and lily

pictured with Virgin and Gabriel. [Christian Iconography: Brewer Dictionary, 645]

Elizabeth

Mary’s old cousin; bears John the Baptist. [N.T.
 Mary uttered her yes to the call of God's Spirit, a consent to adventure that has been used to promote the passive submission of women.

Here she takes on as her own the divine no to what crushes the lowly. She stands up fearlessly and sings out that it will be overturned. No passivity here, but solidarity with divine outrage over the degradation of life and with the divine promise to repair the world. In the process she bursts out of the boundaries of male-defined femininity while still every inch a woman. Singing of her joy in God and God's victory over oppression, she becomes not a subjugated sub·ju·gate  
tr.v. sub·ju·gat·ed, sub·ju·gat·ing, sub·ju·gates
1. To bring under control; conquer. See Synonyms at defeat.

2. To make subservient; enslave.
 but a prophetic woman.

Catholic women wrestle with the significance of this canticle for their own subordinate position in current church structures. With no little irony, Brazilian theologians Done Gebara and Marfa Clara Bingemer cite the homily homily (hŏm`əlē), type of oral religious instruction delivered to a church congregation. In the patristic period through the Middle Ages the focus of the homily was on the explanation and application of texts read or sung during the  preached by Pope John Paul II Pope John Paul II (Latin: Ioannes Paulus PP. II, Italian: Giovanni Paolo II, Polish: Jan Paweł II) born Karol Józef Wojtyła   in Zapopan, Mexico, where he pointed to Mary of the Magnificat as a model for those "who do not passively accept the adverse circumstances of personal and social life and are not victims of alienation, as they say today, but who, with her, proclaim that God 'raises up the lowly' and, if necessary, 'overthrows the powerful from their thrones.'"

If this is applied to women's struggle for full participation in governance and ministry in the church, the reversals of the Magnificat become rife with significance. Mary's prophetic speech characterizes as nothing less than mercy God's intervention into a patriarchal social order.

Not only Mary, but the women disciples in Luke grasp that God is no longer to be sought in the clouds, as the men of Galilee Galilee (găl`ĭlē), region, N Israel, roughly the portion north of the plain of Esdraelon. Galilee was the chief scene of the ministry of Jesus.  once thought, but here on earth, in the flesh, in birth, and in a grave, however surprisingly empty. God is to be sought and found in daily encounters with suffering, in tears and in the laughter of the poor, and in the groaning of creation.

Theologian Susan Ross' critique spells out the implications. In many ways in the church, the mighty still occupy their thrones; the lowly still await their exaltation. "Women's very real lack of power in the church today stands as an indictment of the power structures as they exist.... The scandal of women's exclusion from power cannot be overlooked. Therefore any discussion of the empowerment of women must be juxtaposed jux·ta·pose  
tr.v. jux·ta·posed, jux·ta·pos·ing, jux·ta·pos·es
To place side by side, especially for comparison or contrast.
 with our lack of political and symbolic power and the failure of the leadership of the church to rectify this scandal."

In addition to hope against their dispossessed dis·pos·sessed  
adj.
1. Deprived of possession.

2. Spiritually impoverished or alienated.



dis
 status, women glean glean  
v. gleaned, glean·ing, gleans

v.intr.
To gather grain left behind by reapers.

v.tr.
1. To gather (grain) left behind by reapers.

2.
 from this song encouragement for their own creative behavior. Feminist theologian Rosemary Radford Ruether Rosemary Radford Ruether (b. 1936) is a renowned feminist scholar and theologian, who is married to the political scientist Herman Ruether. They have three children and reside in California.  sees in it an example of a woman becoming a theological agent in her own right, actively and cooperatively figuring out the direction of the Spirit.

Poet and essayist Kathleen Norris For the contemporary poet/essayist of the same name (b.1947), see Kathleen Norris (poet)

Kathleen Thompson Norris (b. July 16 1880, San Francisco, California; d.
 treasures Mary as an original biblical interpreter, linking her people's hope to a new historical event. Noting the powerful proclamation of the Good News that issues from Mary's mouth, feminist theologian Jane Schaberg writes, "Without an explicit commission to preach, she preaches as though she was commissioned," that is, with authority. In the struggle against sexism in the church, the great reversals roll on, their tone of judgment and promise resounding re·sound  
v. re·sound·ed, re·sound·ing, re·sounds

v.intr.
1. To be filled with sound; reverberate: The schoolyard resounded with the laughter of children.

2.
 in the voices of prophetic women today.

A song for all of us

It is above all in the reflections of women in the church of the poor that the profound dimensions of Mary's prophecy become clear. The 1979 Puebla document, issued by the bishops of Latin America, describes the situation: "The poor do not lack simply material goods. They also miss, on the level of human dignity, full participation in sociopolitical so·ci·o·po·li·ti·cal  
adj.
Involving both social and political factors.


sociopolitical
Adjective

of or involving political and social factors
 life. Those found in this category are principally our indigenous people, peasants, manual laborers, marginalized urban dwellers, and in particular, the women of these social groups. The women are doubly oppressed and marginalized" because they are women in a society where machismo machismo

Exaggerated pride in masculinity, perceived as power, often coupled with a minimal sense of responsibility and disregard of consequences. In machismo there is supreme valuation of characteristics culturally associated with the masculine and a denigration of
 reigns.

Latin American women in base Christian communities recognize a striking analogy between their own situation and that of Miriam of Nazareth. Both dwell in poverty as a result of structural injustices in the economic order; both inhabit worlds organized around the idea of masculine superiority and the inhibition of women's gifts. Appreciation grows: Mary is one of us.

Mary sings this song as a woman of the people, like millions of poor peasant women in Latin America, doubly and triply oppressed, old before their time. God regards her lowliness, as God regards theirs. Pregnant with new life, she cries out for transformation of the old order, as do they. She belongs to the tradition of women who beget be·get  
tr.v. be·got , be·got·ten or be·got, be·get·ting, be·gets
1. To father; sire.

2. To cause to exist or occur; produce: Violence begets more violence.
 their people amid suffering and despair. Who but a strong decisive woman would call down God's justice on the heads of the oppressors of the poor?

Her song sets out the game plan of the coming reign of God. It reveals that women fully participate in announcing and bringing about these redemptive changes. And it keeps hope alive that poor women themselves will taste justice on this earth according to the promise that God's "mercy is from age to age, on those who fear him."

The Magnificat gives us an image of Mary speaking with prophetic authority a liberating hymn of praise. Regarding this canticle, Luther observed: "She sang it not for herself alone but for all of us, to sing it after her." Doing so places us in intense relationship to the God who regards suffering with utmost mercy and summons us into the struggle to build a just world.

A DOWN-TO-EARTH SAINT

The Magnificat is just one glimpse of Mary. Other glimpses add different aspects to the church's memory of her, and together they form a mosaic image of an actual woman whose walk with the Spirit at a pivotal moment in salvation history made a unique contribution to the world. Whether she was taking initiative, rejoicing, criticizing, pondering, suffering, or otherwise finding her way through ordinary days, Mary's loving partnership with the Spirit inscribes in our history a story of grace. In this way she is sister to all women and men who respond to the gift of the Spirit in their own lives. Together they form the communion of saints The Communion of Saints is the union of all the "saints" which is all of the church on Earth, in heaven, and in purgatory. They are a single body, in which each member contributes to the good of all and shares in the welfare of all. .

Well-known saints like Mary form one part of the larger reality of the communion of saints. But the communion of saints affirms a link between all who have been brushed with the fire of divine love and who seek God in their lives. It is a most inclusive belief--it crosses boundaries, breaks down social divisions, and builds up a vastly diverse people by the play of the Spirit through the ages and across the world.

Remembering the saints operates as a practical, liberating force that energizes our resistance and protest, imagination and love. Their memory can galvanize gal·va·nize  
tr.v. gal·va·nized, gal·va·niz·ing, gal·va·niz·es
1. To stimulate or shock with an electric current.

2.
 the church. The pallid pal·lid  
adj.
1. Having an abnormally pale or wan complexion: the pallid face of the invalid.

2. Lacking intensity of color or luminousness.

3.
 state into which the traditional roster of saints has fallen can be measured by the degree to which the official memory of this company now fails to function in such a life-giving way. But groups on the margins of officialdom are rediscovering the power of critically remembering these friends of God and prophets.

In this way, women have been actively creating a discourse of Mary. Instead of stressing her stereotypical feminine virtues, this theology allows women to claim their concrete faith history and equal participation in the church. Instead of separating her out as an unreachable ideal, it connects her with the human race, women in particular, seeing her blessedness as a sign of the capacity of all women to bear the image and likeness of God. In a world still structured by patriarchal injustice, this approach taps the power of her memory to work against the status quo [Latin, The existing state of things at any given date.] Status quo ante bellum means the state of things before the war. The status quo to be preserved by a preliminary injunction is the last actual, peaceable, uncontested status which preceded the pending controversy.  of women's marginalization mar·gin·al·ize  
tr.v. mar·gin·al·ized, mar·gin·al·iz·ing, mar·gin·al·iz·es
To relegate or confine to a lower or outer limit or edge, as of social standing.
.

Mary is socially insignificant yet highly favored: this spills over to raise the dignity of other women. She is endangered yet God is with her, as with other women who risk or suffer violence at the hands of patriarchal power. She is impoverished, at times homeless, a refugee in a strange land, yet blessed, as are women and their families to whom sinful injustice also denies a full plate and a safe dwelling.

Unconventional woman though she be, God has done great things for her, as for others similarly outside the pale. She knows sorrow enough to break a human heart, yet she experiences the advent of God in the suffering of bringing life.

Together with Mary Magdalene Mary Magdalene (măg`dələn; formerly, and still in Magdalen College, Oxford, and Magdalene College, Cambridge, môd`lən, hence maudlin, i.e.  and many other women, she is filled with the Spirit and speaks out God's word. Women who speak with authority in the power of the Spirit today, even at risk of ridicule, are borne up by the Pentecost company of disciples, singly and together. She sings her joy in God because the mighty are brought down and the hungry fed; the revolutionary energy of her words inspires the song to go on in countless places where women struggle against their own diminishment and for the flourishing of the world.

Her courageous response to the Spirit's call is encouragement for both women and men. Faithful to God through all uncertainty, she becomes part of the community's story. Companion in memory, Mary becomes through solidarity with the struggles of women a companion in hope. She is truly, subversively, our sister.

--Elizabeth A. Johnson, C.S.J. (Excerpted from Truly Our Sister: A Theology of Mary in the Communion of Saints)
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Author:Johnson, Elizabeth A.
Publication:U.S. Catholic
Article Type:Cover Story
Date:Dec 1, 2003
Words:4075
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