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RE: Holy Women Through the Ages

 
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RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 19/3/2007 10:00:05 PM   
Sophie


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The foundress of the Loreto Sisters was Mary Ward, a Yorkshire woman, born in 1585, at a time when Catholics were suffering persecution under the English Penal Laws of the time.

Mary Ward was a woman of great courage, a quality she would need throughout her life. She was certain that God was calling her to religious life but this call also involved a new vision which would see religious sisters living without enclosure and free to work wherever the need was greatest. Her sisters were to wear the dress of their time and not a religious habit.

Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary

Mary Ward's foundation came to be called the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary. She chose the Constitutions of St Ignatius, founder of the Jesuits, as the way of life which she and her sisters would follow. Their aim would be to give glory to God through their work of service in the church through education and other ministries.

Soon Mary Ward had many companions. Her Institute flourished in Europe, but her prophetic vision proved to be too radical for church authorities. The Institute was suppressed in 1631 and Mary was imprisoned by the church as a heretic. She was later acquitted of heresy although official approval of her Institute was not granted until 1877. By this time her Institute had grown significantly.

http://www.ibvmloreto-uk.org/history/

< Message edited by Sophie -- 19/3/2007 10:55:05 PM >

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RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 19/3/2007 10:04:31 PM   
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Mary Ward’s visionary ideas:  Mary Ward was far in advance of her time. She had a more far-reaching understanding of Catholic women and the part they could take in the work of the Church than her contemporaries. She saw the need to educate women for this work. Being open to respond to this need led Mary to revolutionary forms of religious life for women. These included the ability to travel, work and live among the people rather than being enclosed in a convent; central government of the Institute - “women ruling women” - subject to the Pope alone rather than to local bishops; wearing the clothes of the time rather than a religious habit; and being able to dismiss those who were found to be unfitted for religious life or who were troublesome or seditious.

The Education of Girls:  The general education of young girls for a ‘praiseworthy Christian life in the world’ was always the primary focus of Mary Ward’s Institute. She was a great enemy of ignorance, and did not like to see people of little and mean spirit, or anything vile and base. One of her sayings was ”The spirit of God is not boorish, but teaches all that is noble.”

Social justice and concern for the poor: 
The class distinctions of her time were rigid. The main work of the Institute, the education of the young, could be carried out only by ladies who had themselves received a good education. The word “lady” indicated someone who came from the upper classes, who had grown up surrounded by servants and had no experience of domestic work, and who brought a substantial dowry to marriage or to the religious life. Those who were not ladies, who had little education or financial resources, could join as lay sisters and supported the work of the Institute by doing the kind of work they were accustomed to, which was mainly domestic. Despite the rigid class system, Mary Ward sought to provide for the poor. The Sisters’ work was to include the children of the poor as well as the daughters of rich families entrusted to their care. Her gravestone bears the inscription:

To love the poor
persevere in the same
live, dy, and Rise with
them, was all the ayme
of
Mary Ward, who
Having lived 60 years
and 8 days dyed the
20 Jan. 1645


The Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary:
Despite ill-health and much opposition, Mary Ward established convents and schools in Belgium, Bavaria, Austria, Hungary, Italy and England. Her commitment to her vision for the Institute, which she saw as God’s will for her, was unshakable, as was her persistence. Before the suppression of her Institute and her imprisonment as a heretic by the Pope in 1631, there were hundreds of sisters and of students in these convents and schools. She died in 1645 at the age of sixty, an apparent failure. The 1631 Papal Bull of Suppression, written in the most immoderate language, has never been rescinded. However, it was contradicted in 1703 by the approval of the Rules and the approbation of the Institute in 1877. It was only in 1909 that Mary Ward was publicly acknowledged as foundress of the Institute.

http://www.loretonh.nsw.edu.au/mary_ward/Mary_Ward.htm

< Message edited by Sophie -- 19/3/2007 10:56:07 PM >

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RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 19/3/2007 10:07:43 PM   
Sophie


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The text of the Papal Bull of Suppression issued in January 1631 against Mary Ward and the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary, is available here: http://www.loretonh.nsw.edu.au/mary_ward/Bull_Suppression.htm

An extract is here:

In virtue of holy obedience and under penalty of major excommunication to be incurred ipso facto and from which they can be absolved, except at the point of death, only by Ourselves or the Roman Pontiff for the time being existing, we order and command the women or virgins and their so-called Superiors, as previously designated or by any other name, to dwell separately and apart outside the colleges or houses where they have hitherto lived; not to come together at the same time to consult about or to treat of any spiritual or temporal matter or to deal with it in any way; to lay aside at once the habit which they have put on and which they display, and not to wear it further; a fortiori, not to admit to it or receive other women or virgins, nor give advice, help or favour, directly or indirectly or in any other way, to any of them in regard to these matters; not to act as religious or members of a pretended Congregation or sect of their kind. We also declare that the women and virgins, although they in fact pronounce vows, (and this is public knowledge), but in such a state of mind that they would not have done so in a situation which has been condemned by the Apostolic See -inasmuch as the tacit condition of their vows was not fulfilled -are completely free and released from the obligation of such vows. Those, however, who wished unconditionally to take vows, since their vows are simple, will be able to live honourably in the world, but apart from the rest of this condemned state and pretended Congregation or Sect, and abstaining from everything forbidden above, under obedience to the Ordinary, with the use but not the ownership of property and with the permission, which we compassionately grant them, to dispose of it in life and in death for pious purposes only and to dispose also of what comes to them from someone who had died intestate in favour of those who would have succeeded them if they had not taken a vow of poverty.


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RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 19/3/2007 10:27:39 PM   
Sophie


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from The Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary: Mary Ward Spirituality

We have as our inspiration and inheritance the vision of Mary Ward. At the heart of our spirituality is relationship with Jesus. Like Jesus we desire to be in tune with God through prayer and reflection on daily experience.

This calls for Freedom:

* From all earthly things (use, not abuse of creation)
* For application to good works (in the service of others)
* To refer all to God (tuned in to God)

This calls for Justice -- living in right relationship:

* With God
* With myself
* With others
* With planet earth

A life of Integrity is one of sincerity, without masks or pretence. Joy overflows from the heart of women who are free, just and sincere. As we seek to be women of freedom, justice, and integrity, we reflect on daily experience. We ask: Is God in the happenings and relationships of today? This is summed up in the insight of St. Ignatius of Loyola as “finding God in all things.” For St. Ignatius and for Mary Ward, daily life, the ordinary way of doing things, was viewed as the place where God works. God’s desire for us is revealed in the deepest longing of our hearts. www.ibvm.org

< Message edited by Sophie -- 19/3/2007 10:57:13 PM >

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RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 20/3/2007 3:55:27 AM   
Guest
life in our church is not for the faint of heart -- battling the hierarchy to do the will of God!!! good grief!!!

I need to learn a lot more of our history.

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RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 20/3/2007 4:32:28 AM   
Guest


It is dangerous to be right in matters on which the established authorities are wrong.
Voltaire

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RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 20/3/2007 4:35:21 AM   
Guest
yeah...usually the authorities don't like when someone knows they are in the wrong.

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RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 20/3/2007 5:02:33 AM   
Sophie


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March 20 Feast Day of the Holy Martyr Photina and her Companions
~Photina (also known as Svetlana) the Samaritan Woman~
 
         
                 St. Photina the Samaritan Woman
            1st century martyr Feast day: March 20
 
Photina ('light' in some languages)  is the name given by Christian tradition to the Samaritan woman in the Gospel of John.  She gave Jesus a drink of water at Jacob's well. Jesus offers her a drink of living water (John 4:14) and then sends her to preach to her neighbours -- including men -- in her town.  Responsible for the conversion of many Samaritans,  Photina became a Christian missionary to Carthage. Under the Emperor Nero she, her 5 sisters and 2 sons were martyred as Christians.

~~~~~~~~~

Greek legend also identifies Photina as the Samaritan woman of Sychar--John's woman at the well--with whom Jesus speaks. After telling her neighbors about Jesus, she continued to preach the Gospel.  She was imprisoned for three years and died for her faith at Carthage. According to tradition, she and her sons, Joseph and Victor, as well as Sebastian, Anatolius, Photius, Photis, Parasceve, and Cyriaca, were all martyred in Rome under Nero. Photina reputedly converted Emperor Nero's daughter Domnina and 100 of her servants to Christianity before suffering martyrdom. Baronius may have placed them in the Roman Martyrology because he believed that the head of Saint Photina was preserved at Saint Paul's-Outside-the Walls (Attwater2, Benedictines, Delaney, Encyclopedia). 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Throughout Church history, women no less than men, have witnessed to their Christian faith unto death. According to ancient tradition, men or women on the way to martyrdom had the power to forgive sins. The Apostolic Tradition of Hippolytus (3rd cent) states that any ‘confessor’ imprisoned for faith automatically attained the rank of presbyter (priest) in the Roman communities. 


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RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 20/3/2007 5:03:54 AM   
Sophie


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 March 20 Feast Day of the Holy Martyr Photina and her Companions
~Photina (also known as Svetlana) the Samaritan Woman~



Both the Catholic Byzantine rite and the Eastern Orthodox honour Photina as 'Equal to the Apostles.'  A precis of the teaching about her is this:

Though the original name of the Samaritan woman is unknown,  the church knows her as Photini (Svetlana in Russian), "Equal to the Apostles".  Baptized after the resurrection, her zealous apostolic ministry began on the day she met the Lord Christ at the well.  There He commissioned her to preach and she did, in many areas, including Carthage and Smyrna in Asia Minor where she was martyred. Her five sisters and two sons were all martyred with her.  Now known as Photina and her Companions, they are commemorated in the Eastern Church on one of February 26th, 28th and May 21 and on the fifth Sunday of Pascha -- which means Easter.  [Photina is commemorated in the Latin Rite on March 20.]

"The holy martyr Photina (Svetlana) ... was that Samaritan woman who had the rare fortune to speak with the Lord Christ Himself at Jacob's Well in Sychar (John. 4). Coming to faith in the Lord, she then came to belief in His Gospel, together with her two sons, Victor and Josiah, and five sisters who were called Anatolia, Phota, Photida, Paraskeva and Kyriake. They went to Carthage in Africa. But they were arrested and taken to Rome in the time of the Emperor Nero, and thrown into prison. By the providence of God, Domnina, Nero's daughter, came into contact with St. Photina and was brought by her to the Christian faith. After imprisonment, they all suffered for Christ. Photina, who first encountered the light of truth by a well, was thrown into a well, where she died and entered into the immortal Kingdom of Christ." (Bishop Nikolaj Velimirovic, The Prolog from Ochrid / Ohridski Prolog)

By the well of Jacob, O holy one, 
thou didst find the Water 
of eternal and blessed life; 
and having partaken
thereof, O wise Photina, 
thou wentest forth proclaiming Christ, the Annointed One.

< Message edited by Sophie -- 20/3/2007 9:20:10 PM >

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RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 20/3/2007 5:41:18 AM   
Sophie


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While Jesus and the Samaritan Woman, Photina, share conversation beside the well of Jacob, the astonished Apostles are visibly dismayed that the Master is speaking to a woman!

John 4. 5-42

< Message edited by Sophie -- 22/3/2007 4:02:03 PM >

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RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 21/3/2007 6:33:37 PM   
Guest
  Deborah was the Bible's answer to "Xena, the Warrior Princess." --Kenneth C. Davis
 "When the Israelites once again found themselves in trouble, Deborah described as a prophetess and a woman judge, emerged as savior. A woman warrior in a time when few women held such roles, Deborah establishes herself as a forceful leader, massing an army against a Canaanite enemy. and then drawing up the plan of battle. Although she is as epic character as Xena, the Warrior Princess of modern pop culture, Deborah is overlooked as a biblical character when compared to some of her more notorious male compatriots. Is that Biblical sexism? How else to explain the general ignorance of this heroic warrior, the Jewish Joan of Arc?
   There are 2 accounts of Deborah's leadership in Judges, Judges 4, Deborah leads the army and unites her people, and another women, Jael also emerges as a hero, Jael kills the general Sisera when he is sleeping,  Judges 5 has a poetic rerun of the story,which is thought to be one of the oldest portions of the Hebrew Bible, which some historians think might have been written by a woman, poetic "Song of Deborah". Dated to about 1100 BCE and may have been written shortly after the event that inspired it took place, the prose version of Deborah's conquest was probably written about 750 BCE.
  from Kenneth C. Davis's book : Don't Know Much About The Bible.
       Did you know Deborah was a warrior?  I only knew she was a judge.    from Constance

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RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 21/3/2007 9:58:04 PM   
Guest
I like the picture of Jesus and the Samaritan woman with the apostles in the background.

They have looks on their faces that seem to say: 'What? We just don't get it. How can He do that? She is a woman! Does He know what he's doing? Who's going to straighten Him our?"

Oh, to be a fly on the wall to hear what they say when they find out He's sent her to preach!

Probably the same conversation members of the hierarchy are having today about women priests!

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RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 25/3/2007 6:52:17 AM   
Sophie


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Dear friends,

Today, March 25, is the feast day of the Annunciation.  An important holy woman who has been with us through the ages is Jesus's mother, Mary.  In honour of her on this special day, I offer some information about her here and will also include some in the thread that is specifically dedicated to her, Mary, the first Christian.  

More to follow!
With love and blessings,
~Sophie~ 
THE ANNUNCIATION


Guido di Pietro da Mugello, called "Fra Angelico" (c.1400-1455)
Museo Nacional del Prado: Madrid

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RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 25/3/2007 6:59:30 AM   
Sophie


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Dear friends,

I am pleased to share this wonderful article about Mary written by our friend in faith and the cause, Sister Elizabeth Johnson, CSJ.*  Please enjoy!

With love and blessings,
~Sophie~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

In Search of the Real Mary
Elizabeth Johnson, C.S.J.

Every century and culture has interpreted Mary in different ways. You could almost drown in the various ways that the Christian tradition has honored Mary! Consider the paintings, sculptures, icons, music, liturgies, feasts, spiritual writings, theologies, official doctrines. George Tavard wrote a book recently, and his title gets it exactly right: The Thousand Faces of the Virgin Mary. It seems that the image of Mary has allowed the Christian imagination to think very creatively and very differently about understanding Mary. But now it's our turn, we the generation alive today. How should we consider Mary (or Miriam, as she would be known in Hebrew) in the 21st century?

Recognizing Mary of the Gospels: We know very little about Miriam of Nazareth as an actual historical person. In this she is in solidarity with the multitudes of women through the centuries, especially poor women and poor men, whose lives are considered not worth recording. We must also be respectful of her historical difference from us in time and place. She is a first-century Jewish woman; she is not a 21st-century American. And that difference must be respected.

The four Gospels portray her in very different ways, reflecting their very different theologies. At first glance, Mark comes across as having a negative view of Jesus' mother. She arrives with other members of the family as Jesus is preaching and they call to him. When the crowd tells Jesus his mother is asking for him, he replies, "Who is my mother and brother and sister? Those who do the will of my father are mother and brother and sister to me" (see Mark 3:31-35). And Mary remains outside. Mark does not seem to have a positive view, at that point, of Mary as a disciple.

Matthew's view of Mary is rather neutral by comparison. He places her in the genealogy of the Messiah, in line with four other women who act outside the patriarchal marriage structure, thereby becoming unexpectedly God's partners in a promise-and-fulfillment schema. In Matthew's Gospel, though, Mary doesn't speak, and all the focus on the birth story is around Joseph.  Luke describes Mary as a woman of faith, overshadowed by the Spirit at Jesus' conception and at the beginning of the Church at Pentecost. She is the first to respond to the glad tidings to hear the word of God and keep it. This is a pictorial example of Luke's theology of discipleship. It's a very positive view of Mary from which we have mostly gotten our tradition.  Finally, John has a highly stylized portrayal of the mother of Jesus, and that's all he ever calls her. He never names her. She is pierced twice in John's Gospel, at the beginning and at the end, at Cana and at the cross. And again she is there embodying responsive discipleship to the word made flesh.

As with the Gospel portraits of Jesus, these diverse interpretations cannot always be harmonized. But each is instructive in its own way.  To glimpse the actual woman behind these texts is difficult. Now we get help from new studies of the political, economic, social and cultural fabric of first-century Palestine. New studies are enabling us to fill in her life in broad strokes.  Much of this knowledge of the circumstances in which she lived has resulted from the contemporary quest for the historical Jesus. But it serves us as well for a quest for the historical Mary. So let's go questing for Miriam of Nazareth—as a Jewish village woman of faith.

Mary as Jewish: As a member of the people of Israel, Mary inherited the Jewish faith in one living God, stemming from Abraham and Sarah onwards. She prays to a God who hears the cry of the poor, frees the enslaved Hebrews and brings them into their covenant relationship. Given Jesus' clear knowledge and practice of the Jewish faith in his adult life, as reflected in the Gospels, it is reasonable to assume that Mary, with her husband, Joseph, practiced this Jewish religion in their home, following Torah, observing Sabbath and the festivals, reciting prayers, lighting candles and going to synagogue, according to the custom in Galilee. Later at the end of Jesus' life, Luke depicts Mary in her older years as a member of the early Jerusalem community, praying with 100 other women and men in the upper room before the coming of the Spirit at Pentecost. What we see from this—and most scholars think that that's a historical glimpse—is that Mary participated in the early Christian community in Jerusalem. Now in the light of the death and resurrection of Jesus, this gathering of disciples believed that the Messiah had come. But in no way did they think that this was a cause to leave their religion; they kept going to the Temple, and so forth.

For many years, they preached the good news to their fellow Jews trying to get them to understand the promise of God has been fulfilled, before finally being persuaded by Paul and others that the gospel was meant for gentiles too. To use a term coined in scholarship, Mary was a Jewish Christian—the earliest kind of Christian there was. This was before Christianity split off from the synagogue. She was never a Roman Christian, never a gentile at all. So it does no honor to her memory to bleach her of her Jewishness. We've done this ethnically by turning her swarthy Jewish complexion into fair skin and blonde hair and blue eyes. But we've also done this religiously by turning her deeply rooted Jewish piety into that of a latter-day Catholic. She wasn't.

Mary, a Peasant Woman: Mary lived in a Mediterranean rural village, Nazareth, whose population consisted largely of peasants working the land and craftsmen who served their basic needs. Married to the local carpenter, she took care of the household. Now how many children were in that household? Well, her firstborn son, Jesus, obviously lived there, but we also read in Mark's Gospel that the mother and the brothers and the sisters lived together in Nazareth. And these brothers are named in Chapter Six: James, Joses, Judas and Simon. His sisters Mark leaves unnamed, as typically happened with groups of women in the New Testament.

The apocryphal gospels explain that these are Joseph's children by previous marriage. But however many were in the household, we would know that in her setting, her days would ordinarily be taken up with the hard, unrecompensed work of women of all ages: to feed and clothe and nurture her growing household. Like other village women of her day, she was probably unlettered, illiterate.  The economic status of this family is a matter of some dispute. Scholars like John Meier place them in a blue-collar working-class arrangement, while others such as John Dominic Crossan assign them to the peasant class, desperately struggling under the triple taxation of Temple, Herod and Rome.  Either way the times were tough. This village was part of an occupied state under the heel of imperial Rome. Revolution was in the air. The atmosphere was tense. Violence and poverty prevailed. We owe a debt to Third-World women theologians who have noticed the similarities between Mary's life and the lives of so many poor women, even today. Notice how the journey to Bethlehem in order to be counted for a census accords with the displacement of so many poor people today separated from their ancestral homes because of debt and taxation. Notice how the flight into Egypt parallels the flight of refugees in our day—women and men running with their children to escape being killed by unjust military force. Notice how Mary's experience of losing her son to death by unjust state execution compares with so many women who have had their children and grandchildren disappear or be murdered by dictatorial regimes. Mary is a sister, a compañera, to the suffering lives of marginalized women in oppressive situations. It does Mary no honor to rip her out of her conflictual, dangerous historical circumstances and transform her into an icon of a peaceful middle-class life dressed in a royal blue robe.

Woman of Faith: Mary walked by faith, not by sight. As one theologian once said, "She did not have the dogma of the Immaculate Conception framed and hanging on her kitchen wall." Scripture tells us she asked questions. She pondered things in her heart. And she went on faithfully believing even when grief stabbed her to the heart.  She had a relationship with God that was profound. Now in those days, people's hope for the coming of the Messiah included the hope that he would liberate the suffering poor from oppressive rule. Luke's infancy narrative gives a particular twist to our memory of Mary's faith by placing her in a key position of partnership with God to bring about this historic occurrence. The Annunciation scene, as biblically analyzed today, depicts her being called to the vocation of being God's partner in the work of redemption on the model of the call to Moses at the burning bush. It's a prophetic call, a call of vocation to be a partner with God in this great work. Mary gives her free assent, thus launching her life on an adventure whose outcome she does not know. She walks by faith, not by sight. Indeed her very pregnancy takes place through the power of the Spirit.

Mary's virginity has been used to disparage women who are sexually active, as if they aren't as perfect as Mary the virgin. But again this event actually sounds a powerful theme for women. Sojourner Truth, the 19th-century freed slave, was speaking once in a hall where a group of black-clad clerics were arguing that she should not even have the right to be on the stage. She noticed their mumbling and said to them, "Where your Christ come from, honey? Where your Christ come from? He come from God and a woman. Man had nothin' to do with it."  Business as usual, including patriarchal marriages, is superseded. And God stands with the young woman pregnant outside of wedlock, in danger of her own life. God stands with her to begin fulfilling the divine promise. Now Mary's faith-filled partnership with God in the work of liberation is sung out in Luke's Gospel in her magnificent prayer, the Magnificat (Lk 1:46-55). It's the longest set of words placed on the lips of any woman in the New Testament.

Oddly enough, it is a prayer omitted from most traditional Mariology. Here's the scene: Mary is newly pregnant; Elizabeth her cousin, an older woman, is six months pregnant; Zechariah, Elizabeth's husband, has been struck dumb for his lack of faith; and so there's no male voice to inject itself into this scene. The house is quiet of men. Mary arrives. Elizabeth, filled with the Spirit, embraces her and sings out, "Blessed art thou among women." And also filled with the Spirit, Mary breaks into a new prophetic language of faith. She sings a song in the pattern of Miriam, Deborah, Huldah and Hannah, other great hymn-singers in the Old Testament, and she launches into divine praise. Her spirit greatly rejoices in God her savior.

Mary of the Magnificat: Though Mary is poor and lowly, and a culturally insignificant woman, the powerful living holy God is doing great things to her. And God does this not only to her but to all the poor: bringing down the mighty from their thrones; exalting the lowly; filling the hungry with good things and sending the unrepentant rich away empty. And all of this is happening in fulfillment of the ancient promise—and in her very being. For she embodies the nobodies of this world, on whom God is lavishing rescue.  In this song she sings of the future too, when finally, peaceful justice will take root in the land among all people. This is a great prayer; it is a revolutionary song of salvation. As writer Bill Cleary once commented, "It reveals that Mary was not only full of grace but full of political opinions."

Miriam's song has political implications—socially radical ones at that. With a mother like this, it's no wonder that Jesus' first words in Luke proclaim that he has come to free the captives and bring good news to the poor. The apple doesn't fall far from the tree! So Mary lived in solidarity with the project of the coming Reign of God, whose intent was to heal, redeem and liberate. It does no honor to reduce her faith to a privatized piety. Worse yet, which sometimes happens in traditional Mariology, is to reduce her faith to a doting mother-son relationship. She hears the word of God and keeps it. What I'm suggesting is that before Jesus was born she had her own relationship to God that wasn't focused on Jesus. Even after his death and resurrection, when she is now part of the community proclaiming him as the Messiah, her pattern of faith is still that of Jewish hope: God's Messiah who now has come will come again soon and bring this justice to the land as a whole.  She hears the word of God and keeps it. And in this too she is, as Paul VI called her in Marialis Cultus, our sister in faith. We can begin to see the potential in other Gospel scenes. As we remember her and keep foremost the idea that she is a Jewish peasant woman of faith, then we can interpret the other scenes in the Gospels where Mary shows up and where we are presented with the dangerous memory of this very inconsequential woman in her own culture and historical context. With a heart full of love for God and for her neighbor, Mary of Nazareth gives us this tremendous example of walking by faith through a difficult life.

Our partner in hope: We began by asking, what would be a theologically sound, spiritually empowering and ethically challenging view of Mary, mother of Jesus Christ, for the 21st century? My answer has been to suggest that we remember Mary as a friend of God and prophet in the communion of saints. Let her dangerous memory inspire and encourage our own witness. We ought to relate to Miriam of Nazareth as a partner in hope, in the company of all the holy women and men who have gone before us. This can help us reclaim the power of her memory for the flourishing of women, for the poor and all suffering people. It can help us to draw on the energy of her example for a deeper relationship with the living God and stronger care for the world.  When the Christian community does Marian theology this way, our eyes are opened to sacred visions for a different future. We become empowered to be voices of hope in this difficult world. Like Mary, we will be rejoicing in God our savior and announcing the justice that is to come.

Five Features of Good Marian Theology: In 1975 Pope Paul VI wrote an apostolic exhortation on Mary, Marialis Cultus (To Honor Mary). He began that letter by saying that he observed that, for many modern people, devotion to Mary was not only problematic, it was on the wane. He suggested that one of the main reasons for this lay in the fact that our approach to Mary reflected outdated ideas of the Middle Ages and the Counter-Reformation period of the Church, views of Mary that are unappealing to contemporary people. He named, for example, the way that some theology presented Mary as timidly submissive and said that this is repellent to the piety of modern women. Then he said the Church is not bound to these older images of Mary, some of which are showing the ravages of time—this is his language. He ended up by calling on the whole Christian people and their pastors to be creative in doing for our age what our ancestors in the faith did for their age, namely develop an appealing view of Mary suitable for our own culture. To do this he suggested that such a theology would have five characteristics. It would be:
  • Biblical: Marian theology should be rooted in the testimony of Scripture.
  • Liturgical: It would be in tune with the great liturgical seasons. He named especially Advent, where Mary joins the Church in expecting the birth of the Messiah, and then Pentecost, the coming of the Spirit of the Church.
  • Ecumenical: It would be in harmony with the agreements we have reached with fellow Christian Churches. Rather than being a dividing point between Catholicism, Orthodoxy and Protestantism, it would be a unifying point.
  • Anthropological: By this term, Paul VI meant that it would be aware of the changing role of women in society. As women take leadership in various aspects of society, we cannot expect women or men to appreciate a Mary who is presented as a passive and subservient woman.
  • Theological: This means it would have God at the center—with Mary placed in relation to Christ and to the Church.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
*Elizabeth Johnson, a sister of St. Joseph, is professor of theology at Fordham University; an international lecturer and a former president of the Catholic Theological Society of America. Her Ph.D. is from Catholic University of America. The article was adopted from a talk given at the Los Angeles Religious Education Congress in 2000; the full talk is available as an audiocassette, A Theology of Mary for the Third Millennium (A8161), from St. Anthony Messenger Press.

http://www.americancatholic.org/Newsletters/CU/ac0501.asp

< Message edited by Sophie -- 4/4/2007 2:50:07 AM >

(in reply to Sophie)
Post #: 34
RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 25/3/2007 9:22:22 PM   
Sophie


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From the Eastern Church --the Byzantine Rite*
Feast of the Annunciation of the most holy lady,
the Theotokos and ever Virgin Mary



The Feast of the Annunciation of Our Most Holy Lady, the Theotokos and Ever-Virgin Mary is celebrated on March 25 each year. It commemorates the announcement by the Archangel Gabriel to the Virgin Mary that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, would become incarnate and enter into this world through her womb.

The biblical story of the Feast of the Annunciation is found in Gospel of Luke (1:26-39). The Archangel Gabriel appeared to the Virgin Mary, who was living in Nazareth, and said to her, “Hail, O favored one, the Lord is with you.” Mary was perplexed and wondered what kind of greeting this was. The angel urged her not to be afraid and explained she had found favour with God. He said, “You will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus. He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High; and the Lord God will give to him the throne of his father David, and he will reign over the house of Jacob forever; and of his kingdom there will be no end.” Mary responded to the angel by asking how this could happen since she had no husband. The angel told her that the Holy Spirit and the power of God would come upon her.  The child to be born of her would be called holy, the “Son of God.” The angel then proceeded to explain to Mary that her cousin Elizabeth had conceived a son in her old age (John the Baptist.)  Gabriel affirmed that with God nothing is impossible.  In faith, Mary replied to the angel, “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord; let it be according to your word.” 

The Feast of the Annunciation is a commemoration of the divine initiative of God and the human response.  Mary freely accepted the vocation offered to her. God became human and did this with Mary's willing agreement.  She could have said 'no.'  She was not a passive instrument but an active participant with a free and positive part to play in God’s plan for our salvation. Thus, when on this and other feasts the Church honors the Theotokos, the Mother of God, it is not just because God chose her but also because she said 'yes' and chose to participate.

Icon of the Feast: The icon of the Annunciation presents the joy of the announcement of the coming of Christ. It's bright colors depict Archangel Gabriel, who has descended from heaven, and Mary, who has been chosen to be the Mother of God.


  • The Archangel Gabriel presents the good news of the coming of Christ to Mary.  One wing is raised telling us he has just come from heaven to deliver the news.
  • The Archangel is shown with his feet spread apart as if he is running to share the good news with Mary. In his left hand is a staff, the symbol of a messenger. His right hand is extended toward Mary as he delivers the message and announces the blessing bestowed upon her by God.

  • Gabriel's right hand is extended towards Mary as he announces the blessing bestowed upon her [Mary] by God.
  • On the right side of the icon the Virgin sits on an elevated seat, indicating that as the Mother of God she is “greater in honor than the cherubim, and beyond compare more glorious than the seraphim, who without corruption gave birth to God the Word.”
  • In her left hand she holds a spindle of scarlet yarn.  This depicts the task she was assigned of preparing the purple and scarlet material to be used in making the veil for the Temple in Jerusalem.
  • Her right hand is raised in a gesture of acceptance of Gabriel’s message. Her posture expresses willing cooperation with God’s plan of salvation.
  • The three stars on her garments represent that she was a Virgin before, during, and after the birth of Christ.

  • Her left hand holds a spindle of crimson yarn depicting the task that she had of making the veil of the Temple in Jerusalem.
  • Her right hand is raised showing her acceptance of Gabriel's message.

  • At the top of the icon the segment of a circle represents the divine realm  from which three rays emerge. This demonstrates the action of the Holy Spirit coming upon her.
The Feast of the Annunciation of the Theotokos is celebrated with the Divine Liturgy [mass] of Saint John Chrysostom. It is conducted on the morning of the Feast and preceded by a Matins (Orthros) service. Great Vespers are held on the evening before the day of the Feast. Scripture readings include:
In Greece, the Feast of the Annunciation coincides with Greek Independence Day.  On March 25, 1821 Greece officially declared its independence and began the revolution that would bring freedom after the 400 year Ottoman rule.  March 25 is a day of national celebration.

Resources:
Festival Icons for the Christian Year by John Baggley (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, 2000), pp. 21-30.
The Festal Menaion. Translated by Mother Mary (South Canaan, PA: St. Tikhon’s Seminary Press, 1969) pp. 60-61.
The Incarnate God: The Feasts of Jesus Christ and the Virgin Mary, Catherine Aslanoff, editor and Paul Meyendorff, translator (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1995).
The Life of the Virgin Mary, The Theotokos, written and compiled by Holy Apostles Convent (Buena Vista, CO: 1989).
The Synaxarion: The Lives of the Saints of the Orthodox Church, Vol. 4, compiled by Hieromonk Makarios of Simonos Petra and translated from the French by Mother Maria Rule and Mother Joanna Burton (Chalkidike, Greece: Holy Convent of the Annunciation of Our Lady, 2003) pp. 227-232.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To learn more about the Eastern Catholic Churches (who are in full communion with the Latin Rite of the Church) and the Eastern Orthodox Church, visit our thread Ecumenism, Inter-Religious Dialogue, Benedict in Turkey (see post 80.)
I struggled to discern where properly to include this article. Since the Eastern Catholic Church and the Western Catholic Church (commonly referred to as the Roman Catholic Church) are technically 'one,'  it is not a Church  of 'ecumenical concern.'  But since it is very similar in nature to the Byzantine Orthodox Church, and the article refers to both, it struck me as currently the best thread for inclusion of the article. ~Sophie~


< Message edited by Sophie -- 27/3/2007 4:40:43 AM >

(in reply to Sophie)
Post #: 35
RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 26/3/2007 9:18:03 PM   
Guest
  Beautiful art and icons and wonderful information and text that explains them to us. Thank you Sophie and guests who kindly post them.

(in reply to Sophie)
  Post #: 36
RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 27/3/2007 5:22:31 AM   
Guest
reclaiming women's stories

perpetua a very brave woman:  Her diary is the very first text written by a woman in the Christian tradition.  Through her diaries,  we are privileged to have remarkable access to her inner life. 

She was a Carthaginian martyr  in early third century. With her maid Felicity, she was long remembered in the Tridentine canon of the Roman Catholic Mass.  Perpetua's description of her days in prison give us a sense of her ordeal. She records her struggle between the desire to please her father and the conviction that she must live up to her own conscience. Along with this dilemma is her sense of responsibility for her child and the guilt she experiences as she realizes that her public witness to Christian truth will deprive her infant son of his mother. Finally, there is evidence of real fear, less of the physical pain to come than of her weakness in confronting it.  It is the manner in which Perpetua deals with these tensions and the candour with which she narrates the stages of her growing autonomy that engage the interest of women today and create a sense of empathy with her.

An understanding of historical context helps us to grasp the force of patriarchal obligations and how thoroughly her defiance of civil law would affect her family.  They stood to lose their estates and standing in the community. It also illuminates other aspects of her risk. The new Christian faith was as yet marginal.  Her committment to it as a catechumen was not an obvious choice and not one that yet received social approbation. Her gender excluded her from serious consideration in her society.  She lacked the cachet of virginity that would have increased her standing in the Christian community. All that we know about her historical context,  therefore, sharpens our understanding of the tensions that she faced.

(in reply to Guest)
  Post #: 37
RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 28/3/2007 8:46:12 AM   
Guest
yes.  Thank you for the pictures and especially the explanations.  Very meaningful and appreciated.

(in reply to Guest)
  Post #: 38
RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 28/3/2007 4:58:21 PM   
Sophie


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On this day, March 28, 1515 - St. Teresa of Avila was born. Prominent mystic, writer, monastic reformer, major figure of the Catholic Reformation. She was born at Ávila (85 km or 53 miles northwest of Madrid), Old Castile and died in 1582 at Alba de Tormes (province of Salamanca) in Spain. In 1970, she was recognized by the Church Catholics as one of its thirty-three Doctors of the Church. Of this, she is one of only three women recognised Doctors of the Church, along with St. Catherine of Siena, also proclaimed so in 1970 and St. Thérèse of Lisieux, made so in 1997.

Her feast day is October 15.

< Message edited by Sophie -- 28/3/2007 7:32:02 PM >

(in reply to Guest)
Post #: 39
RE: Holy Women Through the Ages - 28/3/2007 8:31:13 PM   
Guest
  What qualifies the saint to be designated Doctor of the Church? Is dying young and getting shushed that way when female help the Curia eventually accept them - after 400- 500 years of course! 
   Other holy ladies also wrote wonderful writings and bravely wrote letters to Popes, Archbishops and Bishops and Kings but did not get this designation or missed out on official sainthood too. Burn, baby, burn was the fate of many from 1200 on by courtesy of the Inquisition.
     Did the young deaths of these (age 24 years, age 25 years) help the Curia to see that these 3 could qualify for sainthood as the church did not get to burn them to death before they died.  Hildegard of Bingen just missed the burning times by dying in 1179 by about 20 years. Her wanting to have some autonomy of abesses and nuns, especially some access and control over use of the nun's own dowry money, meant she would be marked for death by the newly formed Inquisition begun in 1200.  Can we ever see her as an official saint or did this "feminism" block that forever with Rome?
They claim her miracles were inaccurately recorded after her death, but how much accuracy do we have on ancient saints of the past and they are still saints?  What qualifies "Doctor Of Church" designation please?  THANK YOU

(in reply to Sophie)
  Post #: 40
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