S
sdegutis
Guest
I’m also quite new to Catholicism, only being a Catholic for less than a year now, and a Protestant for a year or so before that. So I can empathize in confusion over Marian devotion.Hello, I’m new here and will really only be on to ask questions regarding Catholic faith. I’m working my way slowly into Catholicism and trying to understand certain aspects of Catholic spirituality.
One that continues to trip me up even though I’ve been given good explanations is Marian devotion. I understand her significance as the mother of God (thus making her our mother too) and as a stainless human, and how it is beneficial to us to pray to her that she pray for us. That said, however, a friend of mine allowed me to borrow his copy of Louis De Montfort’s “The Secret of Mary” and reading it leaves me very confused and frustrated.
Louis, having been a primary influence, if not the primary influence, in the Church’s current Mariology, seems to take Marian devotion to an exceeding level and while he occasionally reminds the reader that this is really about communion with Christ, it seems to me that he really is strictly devoted to Mary and simply uses Christ as a means of not sounding heretical.
At least, that’s my current understanding. I am very uneducated in this area of Catholic spirituality and I was brought up to essentially always address Christ directly, as I strongly believe he is the medium and not that there is some medium between Him and us. I seems to me that Louis De Montfort very much treats Mary like she is the only true way to Christ that our lives ought to be about Mary all the time, but this seems to me to be very unsound.
If someone could clear this up for me and at the same time offer me a deeper understanding of how Marian devotion is truly an essential element in our spirituality, I would greatly appreciate it. I must honestly say that I wasn’t merely frustrated, but outright furious reading some parts of the book. But I don’t know who’s right, I have only how I’ve been raised and how I’ve reasoned my spirituality.
And I should clarify that on a personal level, I have a hard time imagining being able to engage in Marian devotion and at the same time have my mind ultimately turned toward Christ. I’ve prayed the Rosary on a few occasions and even though I intended to contemplate the mysteries, I found it almost impossible while reciting the Hail Maries
Lately I’ve been reading True Devotion to Mary, another book by St. Montfort. Late last year I read Secret of the Rosary by this same author and was very put off by many of his analogies and examples, and considered them to be unhealthy for me as a beginning Catholic since they often held what seemed like heretical points of view, although I took for granted that it wasn’t heretical since it carried the Nihil Obstat and Imprimatur, and I was just an infant needing milk and trying to chew on meat.
Now, after having a much clearer understanding of many essential Catholic teachings of salvation, I decided to try this book, True Devotion to Mary, because I see the merit in asking our Blessed Mother to pray for us, and honoring her as Jesus honored her and still does in Heaven. So far I’ve only read the first chapter of this book, which I struggled to find a copy somewhere online which you could read, to no avail. It’s very enlightening on the principles backing this idea of devotion to Mary. I’ll try to summarize a few of his points, which helped me to not take offense at this doctrine, as best as I can remember them.
First of all, because of Mary’s excellence in virtues, especially humility, along with some other reasons in that chapter which I’ve forgotten, God chose to reward her. And since she only ever wills what God wills, it was no danger to allow her reward to be one of a certain degree of freedom and control, such as dispensing graces. And since she had a superabundance of graces due to her complete sinlessness, it seemed fitting for God to grant her every grace in Heaven, and not only that but also to be the distributor of all God’s graces to anyone on earth. It’s as if God had said, “Mary, because of your profound humility, and because you only will what I will, I want you to distribute my graces to all humankind however you see fit; they will only pass through your humble hands.” There’s more in this first chapter alone that very much set my mind at ease and allowed me to take no more offense at Montfort’s doctrines on Mary, and I recommend reading it. In fact it’s inspired me to move on the the second chapter (I just finished the first chapter last night).
Edit: I found a copy online of what appears to be if not the entire book True Devotion to Mary then at least a significant portion of it.