In Today’s Daily Meditation in the Magnificat we contemplate…
Why We Need Not Fear
Mary is the one creature who unconditionally accepted her creatureliness with all its limitations and weaknesses, with the trust that the Lord, who has seen the humility of his servant, would accomplish great things in her soul. Those women who have repeatedly been deemed “weak” find in Mary their special title of glory. How sweet to be weak when one is carried by the all-loving and all-powerful God who can do all things.
That this “weakness,” this gentleness and frailty (she is called in the liturgy “the meekest of the meek”) is transfigured by grace is powerfully expressed in the liturgy in which the sweet flower of Nazareth is referred to as an army set in array….
“God has never made or formed but one enmity, but it is an irreconcilable one: it is between Mary, his worthy mother, and the devil; between the children and servants of the Blessed Virgin and the children and instruments of Lucifer. Satan fears Mary not only more than all angels and men, but in some sense more than God himself.
It is not that the anger, the hatred, and the power of God are not infinitely greater than those of the Blessed Virgin, for the perfections of Mary are limited; but it is because Satan, being proud, suffers infinitely more from being beaten and punished by a little and humble handmaid of God, and her humility humbles him more than the divine power. The devils fear one of her sighs for a soul more than the prayers of all the saints, and one of her menaces against them more than all other torments” (Dom Prosper Gueranger, o.s.b.).
No other human being has been given such a power, because no other human being was more anxious to love and to serve.
The liturgy has this admirable prayer, “O Adonai, Lord God, great and wonderful, who didst give salvation by the hand of a woman; hear the prayers of thy servants.”
This willingness to give everything and to feel privileged in doing so explains why Mary is the “one who refutes all heresies.” Fathers of the Church, Doctors of the Church, truly Catholic theologians, are all called upon to defend Catholic orthodoxy. But it is the humble Virgin of Nazareth who refutes all the errors that the enemy of man keeps spreading.
~Alice von Hildebrand