We can learn from Mother Teresa's devotion to Mary Print E-mail
By Deacon Jim Lannan   
Thursday, 12 August 2010
At the conclusion of every daily Mass, the sisters of the Mis­sion­a­ries of Charity sing this simple prayer written to the Immaculate Heart of Mary:

16_lannan.jpg  Sunday Scriptures

Deacon Jim Lannan
“O most pure and loving Heart of my Mother and my Queen,
Grant that I may love thee, love thee daily more and more!”


This prayer, written by Blessed Mother Teresa of Calcutta, points to the personal desires of the sisters to follow God’s will in their daily du­ties with an amazing sense of joy, as they lift their hearts to the Lord.

Perhaps if we struggle to joyfully recognize God’s presence in our daily work, we can learn from their devotion to Mary. These holy wom­en joyfully radiate the presence of Jesus Christ, through Mary, because they reflect her fidelity to God’s will in the “attraits” of her life.

“Attrait,” a French word meaning an interior desire, is used by Father Jean Pierre de Caussade in his spiritual classic “Abandonment to Di­vine Pro­vidence” to ex-plain how God is concealed in the shadow of our interior desires and daily work, bringing Jesus to life in our heart.

Shadows enhance light

Shadows are relevant in the spiritual life. If we overlook the presence of a shadow, we take for granted the light that preceded the natural ob­ject casting the shadow’s shape. In noticing God’s shadow in the duties of the moment, we acknowledge the divine light presently drawing us closer.

Parents and children all have ordinary duties such as: typing a document at work, changing a baby’s diaper or doing homework. We can often dismiss these as just routine work. Yet, Mary looked at her own ordinary duties as momentary op­por­tunities for divine union by surrendering her will. She joyfully recognized God’s shadow in them as part of his plan to sanctify her life.

This Sunday’s Gospel is the visitation of Mary to Elizabeth and her joyful proclamation of the Magni­fi­cat. Yet, just prior to the visitation is Mary’s fiat, the extraordinary movement of the Lord in her life, as the angel Gabriel told her: “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; therefore the child to be born will be called holy, the Son of God” (Luke 1:35).

Readings


Sunday, Aug. 15
Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary


» Revelation 11:19a; 12:1-6a, 10ab
» 1 Corinthians 15:20-27
» Luke 1:39-56

For reflection


Make a list of the things you do to live a happy life. Thank God for the opportunities you have been given.
Joy in the ordinary

Mary says “yes” to the Father’s will and then does what may seem like an ordinary task of visiting her cousin. Here we see the spiritual animation of Mary’s heart as she joyfully bursts into the Magnificat. This teaches us that this kind of joy is possible when we surrender our de­sires to the divine will in both the ex­tra­ordinary and ordinary mom­ents of our lives, over which God casts his shadow.

If it has been some time since we found joy in our daily routine while waiting for some fantastic gesture from God, we can learn from what Mother Teresa taught her sisters.

Such extraordinary movements of the Lord within us have al­ready occurred and still remain with us today. They include our participation in the sacramental life of Christ’s church: baptism, confession, confirmation, holy Com­mu­n­ion and marriage.

Fully living the sacramental life in Christ spiritually transforms every duty into a form of nourishment for our faith as a sacrament of the sacred moment. So we lift up our hearts in joy to Jesus through the Immaculate Heart of Mary, our “Mother and our Queen.”

Deacon Jim Lannan is in formation for the priesthood at the St. Paul Seminary. His home parish is Our Lady of Grace in Edina and his teaching parish is St. John Neu­mann in Eagan.