“Blessed
is she who believed that there would be a fulfillment
of what was spoken to her by the Lord” (Luke
1:45).
These
words belong to an event which is simple and sublime
at the same time: it is the encounter between two
expectant mothers whose spiritual and physical symbiosis
with their sons is total. They lend them their lips,
their sentiments. When Mary speaks, Elizabeth’s
son leaps with joy in her womb. When Elizabeth speaks,
it seems that her words have been placed on her lips
by the Precursor. But while the first words of her
hymn of praise to Mary are addressed personally to
the mother of the Lord, her final ones are in the
third person: “Blessed is she who believed.”
Thus
her “affirmation acquires the character of universal
truth: beatitude applies to all believers; it concerns
those who accept the Word of God and put it into practice,
and who find in Mary their model.”(1)
“Blessed
is she who believed that there would be a fulfillment
of what was spoken to her by the Lord.”
It
is the first beatitude of the Gospel in reference
to Mary, but also to all those who want to follow
her and imitate her.
In
Mary, there is a close bond between faith and maternity,
as a consequence of listening to the Word. And in
this passage Luke suggests that it concerns us too.
Further ahead in his Gospel Jesus says: “My
mother and my brothers are those who hear the word
of God and act on it” (Lk 8:21).
Almost
anticipating these words, Elizabeth, moved by the
Holy Spirit, announces to us that every disciple can
become “mother” of the Lord. The condition
is that he or she believe in the Word of God and live
it.
“Blessed
is she who believed that there would be a fulfillment
of what was spoken to her by the Lord.”
After
Jesus, Mary is the one who best and most perfectly
said “yes” to God. Her sanctity and greatness
lies, above all, in this. If Jesus is the Word, the
incarnate Word, Mary, because of her faith in the
Word, is the Word lived out, but a created being like
us, just like us.
Mary’s
role as the mother of God is lofty and magnificent.
But the Virgin is not the only one God calls to generate
Christ. Every Christian has a similar task, even though
in a different way: to incarnate Christ to the point
of repeating, like St. Paul: “It is no longer
I who live, but it is Christ who lives in me”
(Gal 2:20).
How
can we accomplish this?
By
approaching the Word of God as Mary did, that is,
by being totally open to it. Therefore, to believe,
as Mary did, that all the promises contained in the
Word of Jesus will be fulfilled, and if necessary,
to risk the consequences which his Word can sometimes
imply, as Mary did.
Wonderful
things always happen to those who believe in the Word
– big things, little things. We could fill books
with facts that prove this.
We
will never forget the experience we had when, in the
midst of the war, believing in the words of Jesus:
“Ask and it will be given to you” (Mt
7:7), we asked for all that the many poor people in
the city needed, and we saw sacks of flour, boxes
of powdered milk, jam, firewood, and clothes arrive.
Things
like this happen today, too. “Give and gifts
will be given to you” (Lk 6:38), and the cupboards
of provisions to be shared is always full because
it is regularly emptied.
What
is most striking is to see that the words of Jesus
are true always and everywhere. God’s help arrives
on time, even in the most impossible circumstances
and in the most isolated points on earth, as it happened
a short time ago to a mother who lives in dire poverty.
One day she gave the little money she had left to
someone who was in greater need. She believed in that
promise, “Give and gifts will be given to you”
of the Gospel. And she felt at peace. Shortly afterwards,
her youngest daughter showed her a gift she had just
received from an elderly relative who happened to
be in the neighborhood that day: in her little hand
was double the amount that the mother had given away.
A
“small” experience like this encourages
us to believe in the Gospel. Each one of us can experience
the joy, the beatitude that comes from seeing the
promises of Jesus come true.
When
we come in contact with the Word of God, through the
everyday circumstances of our life, by reading from
Sacred Scripture, let us open our heart and listen,
believing that what Jesus is asking us and promising
will come true. We will soon discover, like Mary and
like that mother, that he keeps his promises.
1) Gerard Rosse, Il Vangelo di Luca, Rome, 1992, p.
67.