When someone told Christ that his mother was around, Christ
asked, “Who is my mother?” That retort was not meant to disparage Our
Lady. Not at all! On the contrary, it was meant to define who his
mother is and who can be part of the family God. It is when one does
the will of God. It was actually a praise to Mary. (cfr. Mt 12,46-50)
Mary’s total submission to the will of God was manifested
when she told the Archangel Gabriel who announced to her that she was
chosen to be the mother of the Son of God with her “Fiat,” “Be it done
to me according to your word.
Mary’s “Fiat” is the perfect model of how our will ought to
be conformed to God’s will. We have to be reminded that by the very
nature of our will, the very seat of our freedom, our will is supposed
to be in synch with the will of its Creator. It just cannot be by
itself, turning and moving purely by its own.
It is meant to be engaged with the will of God, its creator
and lawgiver. It is the very power we have been given by God that
enables us to unite ourselves with God in the most intimate way. All
the other aspects of our life—physical, biological, chemical, etc.—are
also governed by God-given laws but, by themselves, they cannot bring
us into intimate union with God, unless moved by our will that
animated by God’s grace.
We cannot expropriate our will to be simply our own. We are
meant only to be stewards of it, not its owner nor its designer,
creator and lawgiver. It has to submit itself to the will of God,
otherwise it would be working without proper foundation and purpose.
Mary’s “Fiat” should be an all-time motto for us, a guiding
principle in our whole life. The submission of our will to God’s will
is never a diminution of our freedom. On the contrary, it is the
enhancement of our freedom. It is where we can have our true freedom
and true joy. We have to say “Fiat” also to God’s will to allow Christ
to be conceived and born in our life. We are meant to be “another
Christ,” patterned after him.
We need to be more aware of this fundamental need of ours to
conform our will to the will of God. Very often, we behave like
spoiled brats who do not yet realize the importance of this need. We
have to correct this tendency.
We have to train ourselves in the art of deepening our sense
of obedience to God’s will, basing it on our faith, hope and love of
God and others, and making it intelligent, truly voluntary, prompt and
cheerful.
That’s when we can be truly children of God, his image and
likeness, sharers of his divine life. That’s when we become members of
God’s family. This is a basic truth that we need to spread around more
widely and abidingly, since it is steadily and even systematically
forgotten and, nowadays, even contradicted in many instances.
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