LOVING DEVOTION TO MARY
The
following is the text of Bishop Rhoades’ homily on December 8, 2014 in the
Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, Fort Wayne
Ordination of Bishop Kevin Rhoades as Bishop, December 9, 2004 |
It is with special joy and gratitude that I
celebrate this Mass on the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception, the title of
our beautiful cathedral, the patroness of our diocese and nation. Tomorrow, December 9th, the feast
of Saint Juan Diego, is my 10th anniversary of episcopal
ordination. My heart is filled with
gratitude to God for the gift and privilege of serving as a successor of the
apostles these past ten years. My heart
is also filled with gratitude to you and all the faithful of our diocese for
your love and goodness to me during the past five years that I have been
privileged to serve as your bishop. Half
of my life and ministry as a bishop was in Harrisburg and half of my life and
ministry as a bishop has been here in Fort Wayne-South Bend. It’s hard to believe it has been ten years
already. I think back to December 9th,
2004 and the joy of my family and friends that day. It was Pope Saint John Paul II who named me
as a bishop at the age of 46, a huge surprise to me. God is a God of surprises, Pope Francis
says. It’s true. Another big surprise came when Pope Benedict
XVI transferred me to Fort Wayne-South Bend.
These surprises have all been blessings for which I thank the Lord.
The greatest surprise and greatest event of
grace in human history was the Incarnation, the great mystery of God becoming
man. We heard the surprising
announcement of the Incarnation in our Gospel today. Imagine Mary’s surprise (shock really) when
the angel Gabriel said to 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.”
Though Mary was surprised and even naturally
afraid, God had prepared her for the awesome vocation to be the Mother of His
Son. He prepared her by preserving her
from all stain of original sin from the moment of her conception. In view of the merits of His Son, God
enriched her with the rich fullness of His grace. That’s why Gabriel would greet her as “full
of grace.” This is the beautiful mystery
we celebrate today: the Immaculate
Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
I have always felt close to Mary throughout my
life, including these past 10 years as a bishop. I think back to the Marian year we celebrated
in the diocese of Harrisburg when I was bishop there and also of the Marian
consecration here in our diocese this past summer. Pope Saint John Paul II used to speak about
“the Marian thread in his life.”
Inspired by the great John Paul, I also see a Marian thread in my life. It is good today for all of us in this
diocese, which has Immaculate Mary as our patroness, to think about our
relationship with Mary – are we close to her?
Do we practice devotion to her?
She is our model of holiness. She
is our loving mother who protects us and leads us to her Son. She is an advocate of grace for us. Saint Thomas Aquinas wrote that “the Blessed
Virgin was so full of grace that it overflows onto all mankind.” She then surpasses even the angels. In every struggle or danger, we can find refuge
in her. She’s involved in our
salvation. Love for Mary helps us tremendously
to live a deep spiritual life of love with her Son.
As I mentioned, I was ordained a bishop on
December 9th, the feast of Saint Juan Diego. Interestingly, 500 years ago the feast of the
Immaculate Conception was celebrated throughout the Spanish empire on December
9th. December 9, 1531, was
the date of the first apparition of the Virgin of Guadalupe to the humble
Indian, Juan Diego. At the fourth and
final apparition, Mary said some beautiful words to Juan Diego, words that have
meant so much to me and given me so much joy and consolation these past ten
years. They express our Blessed Mother’s
love and tenderness. Our Lady told Juan
Diego to put these words into his heart.
I invite all of you to do the same.
Mary says: “Am I not here, I, who
am your mother? Are you not under my
shadow and protection? Am I not your
fountain of life? Are you not in the
folds of my mantle, in the crossing of my arms?
Is there anything else you need?”
“O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who
have recourse to thee.”
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