Friday, March 9, 2018

Pius X and Frederick Justus Knecht: Mary as Mediatrix of All Graces


In his 1904 encyclical “Ad Diem,” Pius X (who reigned as Roman Pontiff from 1903-1914), wrote the following about Mary’s role in salvation:

The Blessed Virgin Mary, Mediatrix of Graces
[From the Encyclical, “Ad diem,” February 2, 1904]
1978a [DS 3370] As the result of this participation between Mary and Christ in the sorrows and the will, she deserved most worthily to be made the restorer of the lost world,”[1] and so the dispenser of all the gifts which Jesus procured for us by His death and blood.… Since she excels all in sanctity, and by her union with Christ and by her adoption by Christ for the work of man’s salvation, she merited for us de congruo, as they say, what Christ merited de condigno, and is the first minister of the graces to be bestowed. (Henry Denzinger, The Sources of Catholic Dogma [trans. Roy J. Deferrari; rev. by Karl Rahner; 13th ed.; St. Louis, Miss.: B. Herder Book Co., 1957], 502

In the footnote from this excerpt, we read:

[1] The monk, Eadmar, The Excellence of the Virgin Mary, c. 9 [ML 159, 573]. Cf. what Benedict XV, Litt. Apost., “Inter sodalicia,” March 22, 1918 (AAS 10 [1918] 182) holds: “So did she suffer with her suffering and dying son, and almost die; so did she abdicate her maternal rights over her Son for the salvation of men, and to placate God’s justice, insofar as was fitting for her, so did she sacrifice her Son, that it can properly he said that she with Christ redeemed the human race”; and also, what Pius XI has, Litt. Apost., “Explorata res,” February 2, 1923 (AAS 15 [1923] 104): “The Virgin participated with Jesus Christ in the very painful act of redemption.” In the decree of the S.C. of the Holy Office (section on Indulgences), “Sunt quos amor,” June 26, 1913 (AAS 5 [1913] 364), he praises the custom of adding to the name of Jesus the name of “His Mother, our coredemptor, the blessed Mary”; cf. also the prayer enriched by the Holy Office with an indulgence, in which the Blessed Virgin Mary is called “coredemptress of the human race” (Jan. 22, 1914; AAS 6 [1914] 108).

A contemporary of Pius X, writing in 1910, Frederick Justus Knecht, D.D., the then-Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Freiburg, wrote the following about Mary's role in salvation in his commentary on the Gospels and Acts which mirrors the Mariology of Pius X:

Mary co-operated in our salvation by giving her consent to become the Mother of the Saviour. The angel of the Lord was sent to Mary in order to procure this consent. The time had arrived, and the Son of God was ready to descend from heaven and become Man. It only remained for her, whom God the Father had chosen to be the Mother of His Son, to give her consent to be so. The angel of God therefore explained this great mystery, and waited for her answer, on which depended the salvation of the world. While meditating upon that decisive moment, St. Bernard uttered this prayer to Mary: “Now, O Virgin, thou hast heard what is to be, and how it is to be. Both mysteries are exceeding joyous and wonderful. But the angel awaits thine answer, for it is time for him to return to God who sent him. We too, O Mary, our Queen, we who are weighed down by the divine sentence, we wait for thy speech, thy words of mercy. For behold, the price of our redemption is offered to thee; and as soon as thou dost accept it, we shall be saved. We were all created by the eternal word of God, and yet, behold, we die! But if thou wilt speak one little word, we shall live! Speak then, Oh, speak that decisive word. Adam and his unhappy children, banished from Paradise, beseech this of thee! David and all our holy fathers—thy fathers too—beseech thee! The whole world, prostrate before thee, looks to thee and beseeches! On thy words depend the comfort of the afflicted, the deliverance of the condemned, the salvation of the children of Adam! Hesitate not, O Virgin! Speak, O Mary, that sweet word of consent, which we who are on the earth, and under the earth, now wait for!” Mary, as you know, did utter that decisive word of compliance: “Behold the handmaid of the Lord, be it done to me according to thy word!” By these glorious and precious words she pronounced the longed-for consent. Our Redemption began from the moment in which Mary acknowledged herself to be the handmaid of the Lord, and became the Mother of God! It is therefore reasonable, just, and right that all Christians should honour Mary as the “cause of our joy”, in the words of her Litany, and should venerate her as the “Mother most pure”, through whom our Redeemer was given to us. The Feast of her Annunciation is kept on March 25th. (Frederick Justus Knecht, A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture For the Use of Those who Teach Bible History [trans. M.F. Glancey; 3d ed.; London: B Herder, 1910], 388-89)

Again and again, when we study the official Mariology of Roman Catholicism, we see why (1) Catholic Mariology specifically and (2) Roman Catholicism in general should be rejected. For a fuller discussion, see my book, Behold the Mother of My Lord: Towards a Mormon Mariology

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