Thursday, December 2, 2021

Why Mariology Matters: Oliver Treanor on Mary being the Spouse of the Spirit and Relationship to the inner processions of the Son and Spirit

  

. . .the Virgin has been caught up in an extraordinary way in the life and being, work and missions of the Holy Trinity. Even in her earthly existence she already participates in the mystery of the divine perichoresis, the inner processions of the Son and the Holy Spirit from the Father, the mutual indwelling of the three in one, their giving and receiving of the divine substance, their accepting and reciprocating the divine love. Drawn into the heart of that eternal communion, she beholds at once God as he is in himself and her own self as she is in her knowing her.

 

Obedient daughter to the Father, beloved mother to his Son, faithful spouse to their Spirit, she is all things to him who is all in all to her. (Oliver Treanor, “Mary as the Sacramental Matrix of Ecclesial Personhood in Christ,” in Brendan Leahy and Séamus O’Connell, eds., Having Life in His Name: Living, Thinking and Communicating the Christian Life of Faith [Dublin: Veritas, 2011], 91-120, here, p. 92)

 

Since Mary is completely free from sin there is no obstacle to her to this many-personed process of the Trinity’s self-revelation. Her humanity is perfectly poised for God’s work; her virginal emptiness a vacant space for his fecundity; her capacity for communion with him untrammelled by rival relationships; her personhood open and available for the reception of his divine will. Dwelling within the mutual indwelling of him who is three, she is overshadowed by the Spirit, impregnated with the Son, drawn to the Father by the inclination and attraction of grace as she recognises truth and beauty and goodness in their absolute form as God. In Mary, the eternal takes concrete shape historically so that what has become for us doctrinal and sacramental is for her existential and primordial, an original experience of the deposit of faith. (Ibid., 97)

 

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