#mary magdalen

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The Penitent Magdalen, Georges de La Tour, c. 1640, oil on canvas

The Penitent Magdalen, Georges de La Tour, c. 1640, oil on canvas


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St. Mary Magdalene, El Greco

Yesterday was the feast of St. Mary Magdalene, one of my all-time favorite human beings. I rediscovered this beautiful excerpt from an Easter homily of Pope Benedict’s and had to share it, if only because it dovetails so nicely with yesterday’s post. If you haven’t encountered Christ in a concrete way in your life, ask for that grace! It is only in the encounter with Him that we can truly begin to trust in His love. St. Mary Magdalene, teach us the love of Christ! 

Every Christian relieves the experience of Mary Magdalene.  It involves an encounter which changes our lives: the encounter with a unique man who lets us experience all God’s goodness and truth, who frees us from evil not in a superficial and fleeting way, but sets us free radically, heals us completely and restores our dignity. This is why Mary Magdalene calls Jesus “my hope”: he was the one who allowed her to be reborn, who gave her a new future, a life of goodness and freedom from evil. “Christ my hope” means that all my yearnings for goodness find in him a real possibility of fulfillment: with him I can hope for a life that is good, full, and eternal, for God himself has drawn near to us, even sharing our humanity.  

But Mary Magdalene, like the other disciples, was to see Jesus rejected by the leaders of the people, arrested, scourged, condemned to death and crucified.  It must have been unbearable to see Goodness in person subjected to human malice, truth derided by falsehood, mercy abused by vengeance.  With Jesus’ death, the hope of all those who had put their trust in him seemed doomed. But that faith never completely failed: especially in the heart of the Virgin Mary, Jesus’ Mother, its flame burned even in the dark of night.  In this world, hope cannot avoid confronting the harshness of evil. It is not thwarted by the wall of death alone, but even more by the barbs of envy and pride, falsehood and violence.  Jesus passed through this mortal mesh in order to open a path to the kingdom of life.  For a moment Jesus seemed vanquished: darkness had invaded the land, the silence of God was complete, hope a seemingly empty word.  

     And lo, on the dawn of the day after the Sabbath, the tomb is found empty.  Jesus then shows himself to Mary Magdalene, to the other women, to his disciples.  Faith is born anew, more alive and strong than ever, now invincible since it is based on a decisive experience…

     If Jesus is risen, then–and only then–has something truly new happened, something that changes the state of humanity and the world.  Then he, Jesus, is someone in whom we can put absolute trust; we can put our trust not only in his message but in Jesus himself, for the Risen One does not belong to the past, but is present today, alive.  

–Pope Benedict XVI

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