Sept. 15: OUR LADY OF SORROWS. The Seven Sorrows of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Audiovisual summary and text.
Today’s feast has its origin in that Christian devotion which associates Our Lady with the Passion of her Son, Our Lord Jesus Christ. Pope Pius VII extended this devotion to the whole Church and, in 1912, St. Pius X fixed the feast on this day, within the octave of the Nativity of our Mother the Virgin.
God extolled Mary entrusting her the highest mission ever given to any creature: to be the Mother of God. But then, the Blessed Trinity did not exempt her from suffering and sorrow throughout her life, right from the start till the end, wanting her to participate in His Son’s Redemptive mission.
About to give birth, Our Lady had to TRAVEL TO BETHLEHEM to find out that there was “no room in the inn” and had to give birth to the Son of God in a manger! ! A life filled with joys and sorrows is to be confirmed when Our Lady and St. Joseph PRESENTED the child Jesus in the temple and was told by Simeon that her soul will be pierced by a sword.
Right after giving birth to the Savior, again, Mary and Joseph had to leave and FLEE TO EGYPT, an unknown place with different customs, without knowing anyone, and hastily, in the middle of the night.
When the Holy Family went up to the temple of Jerusalem to fulfill what was prescribed by Old Law, JESUS GOT LOST. Mary and Joseph realized Jesus’ disappearance in the journey back to Nazareth and both suffered looking for Jesus in the long caravan of people returning to their places of origin.
On Jesus’ way to Calvary and while He was CARRYING THE WOOD OF THE CROSS, MARY MEETS HER SON, all-bruised, humiliated, insulted, spat at, disfigured, unrecognizable, victim of men’s injustice and hatred…we couldn’t just imagine how much sorrow was tearing apart Our Lady’s heart!
Such sorrow reaches its climax with the CRUCIFIXION AND DEATH OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST: how could a mother withstand seeing her son undergo such terrible and painful torture! But Mary was there, standing at the foot of the Cross, keeping company with her Son, in grief but with the strength founded on her firm faith in God’s saving plan.
The anguish and dreadful sight of her dead Son finally ends when his BODY WAS TAKEN DOWN FROM THE CROSS. Mary eagerly receives and lovingly embraces the still warm and bleeding, lifeless body of her Son…
Then, the sorrow experienced by her farewell during the BURIAL of Jesus.
Dear friends, all these, and perhaps a lot more which the Gospels have not told us, Mary suffered with faith, fortitude, dignity, without any complaint and out of love for God.She teaches us to follow and to live, together with her, beside the Cross of her Son, without fleeing from the Cross and all that it entails: suffering, sacrifice, pain, difficulties, sorrow…for when they are accepted having one’s gaze fixed towards Jesus on the Cross, and united with Him like Mary was, they are converted into prayer and possess an immense redemptive value, making us then co-redeemers with Christ, like Our Lady was.
Below is the SEQUENCE “STABAT MATER” proper to today’s feast or memorial (depending on the place) which is an excellent piece for personal meditation.
-Fr. Rolly Arjonillo, priest of Opus Dei. CATHOLICS STRIVING FOR HOLINESS Facebook page and website. Hope you like our Facebook page and invite your friends as well to do so we can reach and help more people.
AUDIO SOURCE:
“Stabat Mater” (The Mother stood..[beside the Cross]) by The Tudor Consort is licensed under aAttribution 3.0 International License in http://freemusicarchive.org/music/The_Tudor_Consort/Stabat_Mater_-_Domenico_Scarlatti/01_Stabat_Mater
VIDEO PHOTO SOURCES:
WILLIAM BOUGUEREAU, Pietà in https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piedad_(Bouguereau)#/media/File:William-Adolphe_Bouguereau_(1825-1905)-_Pieta(1876)_modif.jpg
ANTHONY VAN DYCK, “Rest on the flight to Egypt,” Pinacoteca Muchen (picssr.com), “Golgotha” and “Lamentation” in http://uploads0.wikiart.org/images/anthony-van-dyck/golgotha-1630.jpg; “Pietà” in http://images.fineartamerica.com/images-medium-large-5/pieta-c1629-oil-on-canvas-detail-of-179424-sir-anthony-van-dyck.jpg
RAUL BERZOSA (painter) of Virgen de Macarena, Virgen de la Gloria in http://raulberzosa.com/index.php/pintura-cofrade