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Good_Fella
Guest
Mary is our spiritual mother and the Queen Mother of the Church: the New Davidic Kingdom of the New Covenant. Kindly reflect on the following passages: Psalm 49,5; 1Kings 2 17-20; 15,13; 2 Chronicles 22,10; Neh 2,6; John 2,3, 7; 19, 25-26; Rev. 12,17.Mary is never referred to as the mother of the church by any writer of Scripture. Its not even implied.
The psalmist tells us that the Queen stands at the right hand of God. The role of the Queen is important in God’s kingdom. Mary, the Queen of Heaven stands at the right hand of the Son of God. In the Old Testament Davidic kingdom, the king does not refuse his mother. Jesus is the new Davidic King, and he does not refuse the requests of his mother, Mary, the Queen. In the OT Davidic kingdom, the queen intercedes on behalf of the king’s followers and his brethren (kin). She is the Queen Mother of all the king’s subjects, the ‘Gebirah’. Likewise, Mary is our eternal Gebirah in the new Davidic Kingdom - the Church: God’s people of the New Covenant and the kingdom of heaven. In the OT Davidic kingdom, the king bows down to his mother and she sits at his right hand where he has set a throne for her next to his. As children of the New Covenant, and brethren of our Lord, the King of kings, we should imitate our King by paying the same homage to his mother as he does. By honouring Mary, our Queen Mother, we honour her Son, the King. The Queen Mother is a powerful and influential position in the David kingdom. In 1 King 15, 13 the Queen Mother is removed from office, prefiguring the perfection of the Davidic kingdom with the reign of Christ the King whose mother Mary resumes the office of the Queen Mother eternally, with divine warranty.
Jesus did make Mary the mother of us all when he said to John: “Behold your mother.” This was immediately after, while dying on the cross, he “first” said to Mary: “Woman, behold your son.” John is not addressed by his given name, but refererred to as a “son”. The generic address signifies that John stands for all of our Lord’s brethren and all of humanity. And notice that Jesus calls Mary by the more generic term “woman” instead of the more specific generic term “mother”. The term “woman” harkens back to Genesis 3, 15 where Eve is addressed as “woman”. One can surely perceive, as John and the Church Fathers did, that Jesus has given the Church and all of humanity a new spiritual mother as opposed to our ancestral biological mother. Mary became the New Eve and mother of us all as soon as Jesus gave up his spirit on the Cross. Revelation 12 confirms the significance of John’s Gospel in light of Genesis 3: The “woman’s” (Mary’s) offspring are those who follow Jesus. Mary is our mother, for we are her offspring in Jesus Christ, our Lord and brethren, whom she gave birth to. As our mother, she tells all her offspring in Christ to do his will. At the wedding feast in Cana she tells the servants, who prefigure us, to “do whatever he tells you.” And it is at the wedding feast where Mary significantly and visibly exercises her office as Queen Mother by interceding on behalf of the guests, thereby prompting Jesus to begin his ministry by performing his first miracle. Jesus heeded his mother’s request, just as the king of the Davidic kingdom bowed to the wishes of his mother. Most Protestants are offended by the thought of Jesus heeding the requests of his mother, who is merely a human creature. But that is because they fail to keep in mind that Jesus is equally both God and man. They practically put our Lord’s human nature in a dark closet and lock the door.
The evangelist John clearly identified Mary with the Gebirah, and so he wrote about the wedding feast in Cana. And what he wrote in Scripture expressed the traditional belief about Mary in his church. Scripture comes from Tradition! :yup: The deposit of faith is both Scripture and Tradition. As long as non-Catholics maintain that Scripture is the sole medium of divine revelation, they will never preceive and accept the fullness of divine truth. :nope: Scripture does not explicitly and definitively say :“Mary is the Queen Mother of the Church and the New Eve.” But Mary’s office and role in the kingdom of heaven is certainly implied. The implications in the Old Testament are so strong that John had to express and hand down what he and his church understood at the time. The Church Fathers carried on and developed these biblical themes perceived and presented by the apostle.
Pax vobiscum
Good Fella