Mary shows what good comes from wholehearted 'yes' to God, pope says

IMAGE: CNS/Paul Haring

By Cindy Wooden

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Although she was just a humble young
woman from a small town, Mary’s total “yes” to God was “the most
important ‘yes’ of history” and overturned Adam and Eve’s prideful
“no,” which unleashed sin into the world, Pope Francis said.

“With generosity and trust like Mary, may each of us
say this personal ‘yes’ to God today,” Pope Francis prayed Dec. 8 as he
recited the Angelus prayer with visitors in St. Peter’s Square on the feast of
the Immaculate Conception.

Even when they do not say “no” to God, human
beings can be experts in saying, “yes, but …” to God, the pope
said.

“To avoid saying ‘no’ outright to God, we say, ‘Sorry,
but I can’t,’ ‘Not today, but maybe tomorrow,’ ‘Tomorrow I will be better,
tomorrow I will pray, I’ll do good tomorrow,'” he said. But in responding
that way, “we close the door to what is good and evil profits.”

Nevertheless, Pope Francis said, God keeps trying to reach
out and save us. And through the “yes” of Mary, he became human,
“exactly like us except for one thing, that ‘no,’ that sin. This is why he
chose Mary, the only creature without sin, immaculate.”

In the late afternoon, the pope made his traditional visit
to a statue of Mary erected in the center of Rome, near the Spanish Steps, to
celebrate the official church recognition that Mary was conceived without sin.

Thousands of Romans and tourists crowded around the statue
where people had been laying flowers all day. Early Dec. 8, Rome firefighters with
a truck and ladder hung a wreath of white flowers from the outstretched arms of
the statue.

Pope Francis composed a prayer to Mary for the occasion and
read it, standing under the statue’s watchful eyes.

He offered special prayers for children who have been
abandoned and are exposed to exploitation, for all families who give life and
contribute to society, often in hidden ways, and especially for those who are
underemployed or unemployed.

“We need your immaculate gaze,” he told Mary, in
order to “rediscover the ability to look at people and things with respect
and recognition and without selfish interests and hypocrisy.”

“We need your immaculate heart to love unconditionally,
without any aim besides the good of the other, with simplicity and sincerity,
renouncing masks and ploys,” he said.

“We need your immaculate hands to caress with
tenderness, to touch the flesh of Jesus in our brothers and sisters who are
poor, sick, despised, to help up those who have fallen and steady those who
waver.”

“We need your immaculate feet to set out to meet those
who cannot take the first step, to walk along the paths of those who are lost,
to go and find those who are alone,” he prayed.

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Follow Wooden on Twitter: @Cindy_Wooden.

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