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CatholicHockey7
Guest
These are all great questions to be working through. I’ve struggled with them myself at times (and, if I’m being honest, I still do). The best answer I can give right now is that we don’t go to Mary or the Saints to be drawn away from that personal relationship but in recognition of just how strong that relationship really is. By our Baptism we are adopted into God’s family as His children. That relationship means John the Baptist is as much my brother as Jesus (although only one saves me).I will say that many non-Catholic Christians find the idea of any mediator or advocate other than Jesus, to be pointless even if true. When they see Catholics emphasize praying to Mary and the saints the reaction is often, “okay, maybe this isn’t actually worship the same way as we’d worship God, but why should we bother to go through Mary, when we can just pray to Jesus directly?”
After all, Jesus himself gave us the Lord’s prayer, he actually encouraged us to pray to the Father himself, he didn’t say “Don’t dare pray to the Father, you’re too unworthy, you should pray to my mother instead.”
It seems that when confronted with the “why should we even bother to pray to Mary or other saints” question, many Catholics claim that, essentially, God doesn’t really care about a little sinner like you, you need to get Mary and the saints to pray for you, before He’d even pay attention to your woes. This sounds very close to advice for a small grassroots charity to hire some professional lobbyists to be sure their cause gets a hearing in Congress.
And so many non-Catholics conclude “OK, so you want us to join your Church so we can move farther away from Jesus, and not pray to God, but pray to the saint-lobbyists instead? Why in the world would we want to do THAT, why should we give up a personal relationship with Jesus and approach him through intermediaries?”
Think about the way Christians frequently ask others to pray for them. This form of mediation or “lobbying” doesn’t take away from one’s desire for a personal relationship with Christ, does it? This is the way Catholics understand proper devotion to Mary and the Saints. We are not going to them to replace Jesus, but because we desire to be closer to Jesus.
But the Church does NOT teach that adults still have a duty to obey their parents, they are not obligated to, say, go to medical school because the parents want them to, or to refuse a Priestly vocation if the parents want their son to get married and give them grandkids. It is not “corrupt” to refuse to obey parents when they ask such things.
Well as we’ve already established, all analogies, metaphors and similes fall well short of perfectly capturing Truth. (If anyone isn’t convinced of that, check out this YouTube video of St. Patrick trying to explain the Trinity.)And not even minor children have the duty to obey their parents, if they command them to sin. Now, I realize Mary would not command Jesus to sin, but that is where this human analogy falls apart.
This does make sense, but then again we get to the question, “Why should we even bother to ask Mary’s assistance, if it doesn’t change what God’s will is for us?”
Yay! Something I said made sense! Lol…The answers to that question, so far, are unconvincing to me.
The best answer I can give you as to “why bother” is it helps us to grow in our faith. For one thing, Mary always directs us back to her Son, and that’s where we’re trying to go anyways. Second, it helps us grow in humility because we are saying that while we can go to the King of Kings, we recognize our unworthiness to be in His presence and that whatever gifts we bring could never be enough. The analogy used by St. Louis de Montfort is a peasant who brings the king an apple. He gives it to the queen to present on his behalf. She cleans it and places it on a golden dish and presents it to the king.
Hopefully that helps a little. You might also want to read this blog post for another perspective.