The King shall greatly desire thy beauty, for He
is the Lord thy God, and Him they shall
adore (Psalm xliv. 12)
Mary from the first moment of her existence
offered herself to God as an entire and an unblemished
holocaust. From the instant when she
was conceived Immaculate the burden of her continual
song was this: "I live; not I, but God Who
lives in me." O glorious child, who was thus from
the first a participator of the Divine Nature!
But she was not content with this mere offering
of her heart. She must in outward act consecrate
herself to God. As soon as her tiny feet
could walk, she was brought to the Temple by her
holy parents, Joachim and Anna. With what an
ecstasy of delight she must have entered into the
Temple, crying out, "How lovely are Thy tabernacles,
O Lord of hosts; my soul longeth and
fainteth for the courts of the Lord" (Psalm lxxxiii.
1, 2). Have I any of the same desire to consecrate
my life to God?
Mary knew that God is not to be found in
the midst of the tumult and confusion of distracting
cares, but that it is in silence and in solitude
that He speaks to the heart (Osee ii. 14). She was
teaching us to give, in some quiet retreat, now and
again, our thoughts and our heart to God and God
alone.
Mary, it was thy lowliness,
Well pleasing to the Lord,
That made thee worthy to become
The Mother of the Word.