Fr Eugene Lobo, SJ –
Feast of the Nativity of Mary September 08, 2024
The readings: Rom. 8:28-30 or Mic. 5:2-5; Mt. 1, 1-16, 18-23
Today we celebrate the birthday of Mary, the Mother of Jesus and our Mother. Any birthday we celebrate gives us the opportunity of celebrating the gift of life. In every family the birthday of a mother has a special time of joy as she is the one who cares for all and this is one opportunity to respond fondly to that love. The day of the nativity of Mary is dear to us as she is our special intercessor with her son Jesus and gets all favors to us. There are many Marian feast days celebrated in the Catholic Church and each one is dear to us.
Today’s feast is certainly a family feast and we thank God for the gift of the person of Mary who is so human and so loving. Before we are born, our mothers are our entire world; they enfold, nourish, and protect us. When we are born they continue to care for us, by comforting, nursing, and teaching us as we grow. Mothers do not stop being mothers just because we are grown. Our mother will always be our mother. So it is with our Blessed Mother, the Virgin Mary. She will always be Jesus’ Mother, and she will always be our Mother with Jesus our brother. And if, for whatever reason, our own birth mother is not quite all we would like her to be, our Blessed Mother stands ready, arms open to take us in. As our Mother, she will continue to nourish, protect, comfort, and teach us as we grow. She is the Mother of God, the Queen of the Saints, the humble spouse of the Church, and attentive patron of hundreds of persons and we depend on her for all our needs.
The feast of the Nativity of Mary celebrated on the 8th of September is closely connected with the Immaculate Conception of Mary. From all eternity God prepared a fit dwelling place for his son and chose the pure sinless womb of the Virgin Mary. She was to be prepared by divine providence to be the Mother of Jesus the son of God, and therefore was conceived in the womb of her mother Anna, her father being Joachim, without the stain of sin and her birth is considered by the Church as a solemn event. With a special role in the salvation of the world, Our Lady’s birthday has been described as the hope of the entire world and the dawn of salvation. That is why the Liturgy of the day says: “Let us celebrate with joy the birth of the Virgin Mary, of who was born the Sun of Justice…. Her birth constitutes the hope and the light of salvation for the whole world…. Her image is light for the whole Christian people”. St. Augustine connects Mary’s birth with Jesus’ saving work. He tells the earth to rejoice and shine forth in the light of her birth.
The Church’s liturgical calendar observes the birthdays of only three persons: John the Baptist, Mary the Mother of Jesus, and Jesus the Son of God. All the three persons were sinless at their birth of whom John was purified and was sanctified before his birth when he was in his mother’s womb. Luke tells us that Elizabeth felt the infant John leaping with joy in her womb at the presence of Jesus who was now in the womb of Mary. The mother of Jesus was preserved sinless in anticipation of the privilege granted by divine providence from eternity.Jesus the son of God was ever sinless by the fact that he is God.
The origin of this Feast of the Nativity of Mary is sought in Syria or Palestine at the beginning of the 6th century. It goes back to the consecration of a church in Jerusalem, which tradition identifies as that of the present Basilica of St. Ann. At Rome the Feast began to be kept toward the end of the 7th century, brought there by Eastern monks.
Gradually and in varied ways it spread to the other parts of the West in the centuries that followed. From the 13th century on, the celebration assumed notable importance, becoming a Solemnity with a major Octave and preceded by a Vigil calling for a fast. The Octave was reduced to a simple one during the reform of St. Pius X and was abolished altogether under the reform of Pius XII in 1955. The present Calendar characterizes the Birth of Mary as an important Feast in the church’s calendar.
In the first reading Prophet Micah announces the coming of the Lord of Israel who will come forth from Bethlehem of Judah. The Mother of the Messiah, presented as one about to give birth, will give life to the prince and pastor of the house of David who will bring justice and peace. She will work with the Messiah to bring forth a new people.
The alternate reading from the Letter to the Romans does not speak directly about Mary but about the believer justified by the grace of Christ and gifted with the indwelling of the Spirit. He or she has been chosen and called from all eternity to share Christ’s life and glory. This is true in a privileged manner for Mary, Spouse and Temple of the Holy Spirit, Mother of God’s Son, and intimately united with Him in a Divine plan of predestination and grace. Jesus descended from David according to the flesh that is he became a human person, and was declared to be Son of God by the Spirit.
Today we are celebrating the Feast of the Birth of Mary. This Feast provides us with an occasion for praise and thanksgiving in honor of the personal sanctity and vocation of Mary as the mother of Jesus. There is nothing contained in Scripture about the birth of Mary or her parentage, though Joseph’s lineage is given in the first chapter of the Gospel of Matthew.
The names of Mary’s parents, Joachim and Anna, appear in the apocryphal Gospel of James, a book dating from the 2nd Century AD, not part of the authentic canon of Scripture. According to this account, Joachim and Anna were also beyond the years of child-bearing, but prayed and fasted that God would grant their desire for a child. God listened to their prayers and granted them the child. According to tradition, the house in which Mary was born in Nazareth is the same one in which the Annunciation took place. Then she was offered in God’s holy temple and remained there, showing to all a great example of zeal and holiness, withdrawn from frivolous society.
In celebrating the nativity of Mary, Christians anticipate the Incarnation and the birth of her Divine Son, and give honor to the mother of Jesus. This Feast provides us with an occasion for praise and thanksgiving in honor of the personal sanctity and vocation of the Blessed Virgin Mary as the mother of Jesus. This Feast of the Nativity of Mary enables us to enter into God’s plan for the salvation of the world and at the same time of the delicate plan that God has for humankind. While this feast leads us to the Trinitarian understanding of God, it also affects our Christian life and family. Her Birth is an event which belongs at the very heart of the History of Salvation. She is the symbol of the hope and expectation of God’s faithful people and at the same time she is the beginning of a new hope, the beginning of the dawn of that newness which her Son would bring for all creation.
With Mary’s birth, sorrow and darkness have been dispersed filling our hearts with new hope and the Church is filled with the gift of faith. Faith is the gift that comes from God. The Gospels tell us of the response of Jesus when Mary and his cousins visit him. He tells the people that his family is the one which hears the word of God and keeps it. This applies to Mary who always listened to the word and meditated in her heart.
The Gospel of today presents us with the genealogy of Jesus and genealogies are very important. They give us our roots and help us to understand our heritage. Matthew’s genealogy of Jesus traces his lineage from Abraham, the father of God’s chosen people, through the line of David, King of Israel. Jesus the Messiah is the direct descent of Abraham and David, and the rightful heir to David’s throne. God in his mercy fulfilled his promises to Abraham and to David that he would send a Savior and a King to rule over the house of Israel and to deliver them from their enemies. When Jacob blessed his sons he foretold that Judah would receive the promise of royalty which we see fulfilled in David.
We can also see in this blessing a foreshadowing of God’s fulfillment in raising up his anointed King, Jesus the Messiah. Jesus is the fulfillment of all God’s promises. He is the hope not only for the people of the Old Covenant but for all nations as well. He is the Savior of the world. One is that God is doing something unusual. Matthew’s genealogy breaks from convention and on four occasions traces Jesus’ descent through women. And not just any women: Rahab, Ruth, Bathsheba, and Tamar. All had a whiff of scandal about them, but all had something in common: each was an instrument of God in the life of the Jewish people. Matthew’s inclusion of them signals that God is again going to do something significant through the fifth woman mentioned – Mary.
Generally, Genealogies traced lineage via the male line. Matthew may well have been using a genealogy which someone had already constructed. The genealogy proves Jesus is of the lineage of David, qualified to be the Messiah. Matthew preserves this interest by signaling it in his opening verse. Here he emphasizes that Jesus is Son of David and Son of Abraham. Mark had spoken of “the beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God”. Matthew will certainly go on to speak of Jesus as Son of God, but the primary concern here is to underline the link between Jesus and David, as Messiah, Son of David, and the link with Abraham, a descendant of Abraham. Jesus belongs to Israel, to God’s dealing with Israel.
This connection is important. It both lays claim to representing Israel and its tradition and to being connected with God’s dealings in the past. The genealogy secures the emphasis on divine involvement not only by the direct links through the family. The genealogy also has some unusual features. Breaking the rule that males only appear in the lists, it lists four women, all of whom were figures of some controversy and were Gentiles. The fifth one is Mary specially chosen by God. This appears to be Matthew’s way of making a point about the kind of thing which would happen through Jesus: people normally marginalized because of their gender, are included and have become part of the divine action.
The feast of the Nativity of Mary on September eighth is specially remembered for social celebrations. As it marks the end of summer and beginning of fall, this day also has many thanksgiving celebrations and customs attached to it. In the Old Roman Ritual there is a blessing of the summer harvest and fall planting seeds for this day. The winegrowers in France called this feast “Our Lady of the Grape Harvest”. The best grapes are brought to the local church to be blessed and then some bunches are attached to hands of the statue of Mary.
A festive meal which includes the new grapes is part of this day. In the Alps section of Austria this day is “Drive-Down Day” during which the cattle and sheep are led from their summer pastures in the slopes and brought to their winter quarters in the valleys. This was usually a large caravan, with all the finery, decorations, and festivity. In some parts of Austria, milk from this day and all the leftover food are given to the poor in honor of Our Lady’s Nativity. In some parts of India harvest festival is celebrated on this day.
One night a man went to friend’s house and told St Mother Theresa that there was a family with eight children. They have not eaten for days. So they took some food and went to the family. When they saw the family and the faces of those little children disfigured by hunger they were shocked. There was no sorrow or sadness in their faces, just the deep pain of hunger. They gave the rice and other eats to the mother. She divided it in two, and went out, carrying half the food with her. When she came back they asked her where she went with that food. She gave them this simple answer that she went to their neighbors who were hungry also. Mother Therese and the group were not surprised that she gave because poor people are generous. But they were surprised that she knew they were hungry. As a rule, when we are suffering, we are so focused on ourselves we have no time for others.