Pope at Mass: Mary is Woman,
Mother, Mestiza
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| Pope Francis celebrates Mass for the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe (Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis shares a reflection on Mary’s essence as woman,
mother and mestiza on the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe celebrated on Thursday
evening in St Peter’s Basilica. (With photo gallery.)
By Sr Bernadette Mary Reis, fsp
As has been his custom since the beginning of his
pontificate, Pope Francis celebrates the liturgy in honour of Our Lady of
Guadalupe. He was joined by many members of the Latin American community in
Rome for the celebration in St Peter’s Basilica on Thursday afternoon. Pope
Benedict XVI was the first Pontiff to celebrate this liturgy in 2011 in honour
of the bicentenary of independence of the Latin American and Caribbean nations.
Mary’s essence
Pope Francis delivered his homily off the cuff, saying that
the liturgy for the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe, and her image displayed on
the altar, suggested three adjectives to him. These three adjectives explain
Mary’s essence: Woman, mother, mestiza, he said.
Mary as woman
Mary is a woman, the Pope began. She is the woman par
excellence most particularly because she is a disciple of her Son, whose
message she bears. “It is that simple”, the Pope said. Even though Christians
have venerated her under many other loving titles throughout the ages, “nothing
else is needed” to describe Mary, he said. Mary is humble and faithful to her
teacher, her Son, the only Redeemer.
Mary as mother
Mary never took anything from her Son because she is His
mother. “She is our Mother, the Mother of our peoples…the mother of our
hearts,” the Pope explained. Not only is she the Mother of the Church, she is
also an image of the Church. Therefore, “what can be said of Mary can also be
said of the Church which is feminine”, Pope Francis said. The Church cannot be
imagined except in this Marian sense. This is essential in understanding the
role of women in the Church, the Pope went on. Understanding the role of women
only in a functional way is incomplete, he said.
Mary as mestiza
Our Lady wanted to be seen as a “mestiza”, the Pope noted,
“not only with Juan Diego. She became a mestizo to show that she is everyone’s
mother.” Mary speaks to us just as she spoke with Juan Diego, tenderly,
maternally. The Pope concluded his homily noting that Mary appears as a person
of mixed race in order to communicate that her Son too is a “mestizo”: that is,
He is God, and He is man.

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