On St. Mary, Virgin – 2024

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Mary (mother of Jesus) – who heeded God’s call “to set out on a mission of charity…”

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Last Thursday, August 15, was the Feast Day of St. Mary the Virgin, in the Episcopal Church and others. See 2014’s St. Mary, Mother, and Mary (mother of Jesus) – Wikipedia:

She is identified [as] the mother of Jesus through divine intervention. Christians hold her son Jesus to be Christ (i.e., the messiah) and God the Son Incarnate. Mary (Maryam) also has a revered position in Islam, where a whole chapter of the Qur’an is devoted to her, also describing the birth of Jesus. . .  [She] is considered by millions to be the most meritorious saint of the Church. Christians of the Catholic Church[,] Anglican Communion, and Lutheran churches believe that Mary … is the Mother of God and the Theotokos, literally “Bearer of God.”

But looking back five years, to 2019, I talked about her special day in St. Mary, “Virgin,” and more on Jerusalem. The post talked about a three-week pilgrimage to Israel in May that year, and especially about my second full day in Jerusalem. And brought back lots of memories:

For starters, we arrived Saturday night [May 11] and the driver from St. George’s College [and Pilgrim Guest House] got us quickly through the dreaded Israeli security at Ben Gurion airport [in Tel Aviv]. But then had a tough time finding my lodging on Al-Isfahani Street [in Jerusalem]. Later, after settling in my new room, at 4:10 that morning I heard what I took to be an explosion. It was actually a cannon, marking the start of another day of Ramadan(The idea is to give people a chance to eat and drink before the all-day fast.)

That Sunday I wandered Jaffa Street and found a great place to eat, the BeerBazaar, but I’m getting ahead of myself. I was part of a group of 20 people from our local church, rounded out by another 20 pilgrims from around the world. We were there for the Palestine of Jesus course, “a 14-day study pilgrimage focusing on the Scriptures, sites, and landscapes associated with Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection.” (Plus some days before the course exploring Jerusalem on my own, then a day or two getting up to Tel Aviv and exploring it before heading home.) 

So what the heck does that 2019 pilgrimage to Jerusalem have to do with Mary’s August 15 feast day? Just that Kenneth Clark for one spoke of her as “supreme protectress of civilisation … the human mother in whom everyone could recognize qualities of warmth and love and approachability.” And that she represents an “ideal of beauty and mediator between man and God.” Such that beginning in the 12th century Europeans from all walks of life cooperated in building the cathedrals that were her “earthly abode.” So for that brief time in history, “All hearts were united and each man forgave his enemies.” In plain words, Mary [is] the Model of Charity.

But I didn’t see a whole lot of charity during our visit to Bethlehem on the afternoon of Thursday, May 16, 2019. We ended the day at the Wall of Separation, also called the “Israeli West Bank barrier.” And in an ironic twist, the Wall in Bethlehem passes right by the “Walled Off Hotel.” See Banksy′s hotel with ′the world′s worst view′ opens in Bethlehem, which said this:

“With a play on words on the luxury Waldorf Astoria chain, this place is called the Walled Off Hotel, because it was built almost immediately next to Israel’s separation wall in the Palestinian-ruled city where Jesus Christ was born.”

Which of course was Bethlehem, where Jesus was born and from which “God’s love, mercy, righteousness, holiness, compassion, and glory” were expressed in Him. But seeing “that Wall” in Bethlehem I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. And who knew it could get worse?

Later that night I did some reflecting on the day’s events, and especially the last visit. “I was tempted to conclude that the road to both freedom and spiritual enlightenment seems to be littered with dumbasses along the way. But hey, that wouldn’t be Christian.” Which I suppose is another way of saying that both Jesus and His mother Mary have been working overtime in the years since 2019, and that they could use a lot of help from us down here!

In the meantime in September of 2019 I could look forward to my visit to Portugal. And this year have I have another pilgrimage to look ahead to – to get all “Jesus-upped” – back to Spain and the Camino Finisterre. Which leads me to echo what I said after that May 16, 2019 visit:

Hopefully I won’t find any “Walls of Separation…” 

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wallsep1
The Wall of Separation, right by the “Walled Off Hotel…”

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The upper image is courtesy of Mary (mother of Jesus) – Wikipedia. See also Mary’s spring in Ein Kerem – BibleWalks.com, and Ein Karem – Wikipedia, about more cheerful places we visited in Israel. Another note:  In Renaissance paintings especially, Mary is portrayed wearing blue, a tradition going back to Byzantine Empire, to about 500 A.D., “where blue was ‘the colour of an empress.’” Another explanation is that in in Medieval and Renaissance Europe:

[T]he blue pigment was derived from the rock lapis lazuli, a stone imported from Afghanistan of greater value than gold.  Beyond a painter’s retainer, patrons were expected to purchase any gold or lapis lazuli to be used in the painting.  Hence, it was an expression of devotion and glorification to swathe the Virgin in gowns of blue.

The Book of Common Prayer reference: The “corporate-mystical” prayer is on page 339, the post-communion prayer for Holy Eucharist, Rite I.

“Feast days” are designated days on the liturgical (church) calendar “set aside to commemorate events, saints, or doctrines that are important in the life of the Church. These can range from Solemnities, which are the highest-ranking feast days like Easter and Christmas, to optional memorials that celebrate lesser-known saints.” Feast Days: Celebrating the Church’s Calendar.

For this post I borrowed from On St. Mary, Mother (2014), and 2019’s St. Mary, “Virgin,” and more on Jerusalem. (That post noted that the Walled Off hotel “included a bar, where I enjoyed another Taybeh Palestinian beer.”) See also St. Mary, 2020 – and “Walls of Separation,” On the Annunciation (2022) – and Mary “shrinking back,” and last year’s Mary’s Visitation and Jefferson’s Monster – 2023. (Also from 2019, On my first full day in Jerusalem.) 

Re: Kenneth Clark, the noted British art historian, museum director, and broadcaster. He created the 1969 TV seriesCivilisation The references herein are from the book version, at pages 58 and 175.) I cited Clark’s take on pilgrim journeys in the March 2019 post, “On to Jerusalem!”

The full “charity” link is Mary as the Model of Charity – Benedict XVI – Crossroads.

Re: The visit to Portugal. The full link is Just got back – Portuguese Camino! And for more on the upcoming trip to Spain see The Transfiguration – 2024.

Re: “To get all ‘Jesus-upped.'” What my non-religious brother said of my planned trip to Israel.

I took the photograph at the end of the main text. 

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