
by Pope Benedict XVI.
Mary teaches us how to pray. It is she who shows us how to open our minds and our hearts to the power of the Holy Spirit, who comes to us so as to be brought to the whole world.
We need (times) of silence and recollection to place ourselves in her school, so that she might teach us how to live from faith, how to grow in faith, how to remain in contact with the mystery of God in the ordinary, everyday events of our lives.
"Faith is contact with the mystery of God," said Pope John Paul II (Redemptoris Mater, n. 17), because "to believe means to abandon oneself to the truth of the Word of the living God, knowing and humbly recognizing how unsearchable are his judgments and how inscrutable his ways" (ibid. n. 14).
Faith is the gift, given to us in baptism, which makes our encounter with God possible.
God is hidden in mystery. To claim to understand him would mean to want to confine him within our thinking and knowing and consequently to lose him irremediably.
With faith, however, we can open up a way through concepts, even theological concepts, and can "touch" the living God.
And God, once touched, immediately gives us his power. When we abandon ourselves to the living God, when in humility of mind, we have recourse to him, a kind of hidden stream of divine life pervades us.
How important it is to believe in the power of faith, in its capacity to establish a close bond with the living God!
We must give great attention to the development of our faith, so that it truly pervades all our attitudes, thoughts, actions, and intentions.
Faith has a place, not only in our state of soul and religious experiences, but above all in thought and action, in everyday work, in the struggle against ourselves, in community life, in our apostolates, (and in our families), because it ensures that our life is pervaded by the power of God himself. Faith can always bring us back to God even when our sin leads us astray.
In the Upper Room the apostles did not know what awaited them. They were afraid and worried about their own future. They continued to marvel at the death and Resurrection of Jesus and were in anguish at being left on their own after his Ascension into heaven.
Mary, she who believed in the fulfillment of the Lord’s words, (cf. Lk 1:45), in prayer alongside the apostles, taught perseverance in the faith. By her own attitude she convinced them that the Holy Spirit in his wisdom knew well the path on which he was leading them, and that consequently they could place their confidence in God, giving themselves to him unreservedly, with their talents, their limitations and their future.
Praised be Jesus Christ.
—Excerpted from a talk to men and women religious, seminarians, and representatives of ecclesial movements, at the shrine in Czestochowa, Poland, May 26, 2006.
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