<http://secret-harbor.blogspot.com/2009/05/silence-of-lambs-mother.html>The 
Silence Of The Lamb's Mother

http://secret-harbor.blogspot.com/2009/05/silence-of-lambs-mother.html

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In the Apostolic Letter, Rosarium Virginis Mariæ, 
Pope John Paul II writes: “A discovery of the 
importance of silence is one of the secrets of 
practicing contemplation and meditation.”

In that same letter the Holy Father shares some 
thoughts on our Lady as a model contemplative: 
“The contemplation of Christ has an incomparable 
model in Mary. In a unique way the Face of the 
Son belongs to Mary. It was in her womb that 
Christ was formed, receiving from her a human 
resemblance which points to an even greater 
spiritual closeness. No one has ever devoted 
himself to the contemplation of the Face of 
Christ as faithfully as Mary. The eyes of her 
heart already turned to Him at the Annunciation, 
when she conceived Him by the power of the Holy 
Spirit. In the months that followed she began to 
sense His presence and to picture His features. 
When at last she gave birth to Him in Bethlehem, 
her eyes were able to gaze tenderly on the Face 
of her Son, as she 'wrapped Him in swaddling 
clothes, and laid Him in a manger' (Luke 2:7). 
Thereafter Mary's gaze, ever filled with 
adoration and wonder, would never leave Him. At 
times it would be a questioning look, as in the 
episode of the finding in the Temple: 'Son, why 
have You treated us so?' (Luke 2:48); it would 
always be a penetrating gaze, one capable of 
deeply understanding Jesus, even to the point of 
perceiving His hidden feelings and anticipating 
His decisions, as at Cana (cf. John 2:5). At 
other times it would be a look of sorrow, 
especially beneath the Cross, where her vision 
would still be that of a Mother giving birth, for 
Mary not only shared the Passion and death of her 
Son, she also received the new son given to her 
in the beloved disciple (cf. John 19:26-27). On 
the morning of Easter hers would be a gaze 
radiant with the joy of the Resurrection, and 
finally, on the day of Pentecost, a gaze afire 
with the outpouring of the Spirit” (cf. Acts 1:14).

Does our Lady desire that her gazes of 
tenderness, of adoration and wonder, even of 
sorrow, of questions, of penetration and being 
able to understand her Son, perceive His 
feelings, anticipate what He will do – does our 
Blessed Mother desire that these gifts be 
possessed by her alone? Mary longs to draw us to 
a closer union with her Son, our God, and thus 
achieve that closeness with our Brother, our 
Father, the Paraclete, that we too may possess 
all these wonderful gifts given from silence and contemplation.

That gaze of our Lady surely speaks louder and 
more clearly than the most gifted orators among 
us. At the Annunciation the angel Gabriel begins 
with, “Ave, gratia plena; Dominus tecum; 
benedicta tu in mulieribus” (Luke 1:28). What 
follows is Mary’s troubled, fearful gaze but no 
spoken words. Scripture says she thought within 
herself trying to determine what was going on 
(cf. Luke 1:29). She was using her inner gift. 
Most of us would likely scream out of fear or 
frantically call for help; or the bold among us 
would directly ask: “Who are you and what do you 
want?” But that gaze of Mary spoke eloquently 
enough to the angel Gabriel, questioning the 
reason for his visit, that without any verbal 
response from Mary, he was able to continue to explain his mission.

Contemplatives are listeners, waiting to hear the 
gentle whisper that speaks not to the ears but to 
the heart. After Gabriel had said everything he 
was sent by God to say, I’ve often wondered how 
long was the pause before Mary gave to God, to 
Gabriel, to the souls imprisoned by death, and to 
the world her fiat. Many things must have been 
going through her mind; and at the top of that 
list was surely the possibility of being stoned 
for being with Child. It is then that her gaze 
turned inward and she could see the hidden God 
and then fearlessly and with love say yes to what God had called her to do.

In the Magnificat, Mary verbally extols the 
beauty of her interior life. She has a soul that 
proclaims the greatness of her Lord and a spirit 
that rejoices in God her Savior (cf. Luke 
1:46-47). Perhaps by the Holy Spirit she verbally 
declares this not for Elizabeth's sake, but for 
the sake of her centuries of children who are 
unable to see her gaze of two-thousand years ago. 
And perhaps it was that same gaze of two-thousand 
years ago, unseen by us, which prompted her to 
tell us: “Do whatever He tells you” (John 2:5).

Our Lady is silent at the most agonizing time of 
her life. One can only imagine the interior 
battle that is waged between deep human sorrow 
and an unshakeable trust in God. This is her Son 
and her God she watches on the Cross. She 
experiences deep sorrow as a Mother for her Son 
and yet remains silent in order to hear every 
word spoken from her God as He hangs on that 
Cross. Such a tremendous gift of silence and contemplation!

On the day of Pentecost, after that very dramatic 
scene of heavy wind, tongues of fire, speaking in 
diverse tongues and the bewilderment of the 
various nationalities who witnessed it, and then 
finally some of the onlookers who accuse the 
apostles of having too much wine to drink, our 
Lady, who was present, never speaks. Perhaps that 
gaze of hers this time was aimed at Peter. Peter 
could easily have said to Mary: “Blessed Mother, 
you have much more experience with the Holy 
Spirit than I, He is your Spouse; perhaps you 
should speak to the people.” Of course, there is 
no such conversation recorded in the Acts of the 
Apostles and perhaps it was Mary’s gaze at Peter 
which spoke to him saying: "Peter, my Son 
appointed you His Vicar. This is the birth of His 
Church. Your flock is waiting to hear from you.” 
And as Scripture records, it was Peter who stood 
up and addressed the people. (cf. Acts, chapter 1).

O the power of her gaze, the depths of her 
silence and contemplation! How can we not go to 
the school of Mary! Is there anyone among us who 
wouldn’t have wanted to witness our Blessed 
Mother’s first Eucharist, or even any which 
followed? To see one of the apostles’ standing 
before our Lady, holding up the Eucharistic Host 
before her eyes and saying: “The Body of Christ.” 
What was that gaze like? What was happening to 
her interiorly after receiving Holy Communion?

Saint John Chrysostom says that, “Silence is a 
fiery chariot which takes us up to heaven. O 
silence, … the ladder of Paradise, the way to the 
Kingdom of Jesus Christ, destroying all that can 
disturb us: how sweet is your yoke, and how delectable.”

Saint Bernard adds: “Silence is the mother of the 
virtues, and their faithful guardian. It is… the 
strength of the soul … the mark of the wise, the 
practice of the angels and the daily exercise of the contemplative.”

“Words dissipate the mind,” says Saint John of 
the Cross, “silence fosters a spirit of 
recollection and gives the soul strength to go to 
God. Our Lord teaches that he who loves to hold 
converse with men has but little time for God.”

Finally, Dom Rouvier states: “You see what the 
saints have thought of silence. Be quite certain 
that silence is the father of devotion, the 
teacher of the interior life, the joy of the 
heart, the source of all prayer, the perfection 
of solitude, and the gate of Paradise" (Le Mois de Marie).

Our Blessed Lady knew of all these attributes of 
silence, and then some. Most likely, Mary spent 
her remaining years in silence and contemplation, 
communing with her Son and her God.
Posted by Jeffrey S. J. Allan at 
<http://secret-harbor.blogspot.com/2009/05/silence-of-lambs-mother.html>13:01


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