Friday, August 14, 2009

Assumed Into Heaven - it just makes sense

I had a terrible time with the Immaculate Conception when I was studying the Catholic faith - what a year it was, that year before entering the Church. But the Assumption of Our Lady was easy in comparison.

It just made sense to me.

Once I accepted that Mary was conceived without sin, full of every grace from the moment of her conception, the Assumption seemed obvious.

She would not - could not - suffer from sins' final destructive force. Of course, the Lord would want to reach down and lift His mother out of the world.

Of course, He would want to bring her to Himself. There is no way on God's green earth that He would let His mother's perfect body remain here until the end of time.

If we believe that Christ will return one day and receive the faithful, that He will raise the faithful from the earth and give them new, glorified bodies, then why in heaven's name wouldn't we believe that He would first do it for His own mother?

A perfect son (who also happens to be the Word of God Incarnate) would most definitely break through the veil that separates this world from the eternal world and call His mother to His side.

Certainly, He would not wait for the end of time. Not a chance.

And this is the final clue that the Catholic Church got this one right. It doesn't take a rocket scientest to realize that the Church has gone to great lengths to preserve and venerate the remains of every saint they possibly can. If the Blessed Mother's body had not been assumed into heaven, every Catholic would know where her remains were buried.

Why do we not have the remains of Our Lord's body? Evangelicals respond immediately by saying, "Because He is not here. He has ascended, and He will come again."

Ah, yes. They are right. But why do we not have the remains of Our Lady's body? It is not a coverup. It is not a clever game. It is really very simple and altogether lovely. Our Lord loved His mother so much that He broke through the great divide and said, "Come."





And the entire Church, the Bride of Christ, looks to this event as a sign of hope. One day, He will come for us as well. One day, the heavens will open and the Lord will say to us, "Come."


It is not too difficult to understand. Not too difficult at all.

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2 comments:

  1. Denise, I've just stumbled onto your blog as I lie here in quarantine with the flu. I wanted to point out that science has finally caught up with the Church on this one, sort of. Stem cell researchers have learned that a mother carries fetal stem cells of each of her children, in her own body, for the rest of her life. That means Mary had actual cells of Jesus inside herself, so of course she had to be assumed! We receive the Eucharist and hold Jesus within ourselves for maybe ten minutes at a time. Could you imagine having that every moment for her entire life? Wow. That's often my answer to Protestants who don't believe Mary was sinless.

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  2. Dearest Lynn, thank you for your postscript to my article. What a beautiful thought. May God touch you as you carry this cross of illness with Him.

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