REFLECTIONS ON THE MYSTERIES OF THE ROSARY
Based on the homilies of Don Fabio Rosini on the Sunday readings,
broadcast each week on Vatican Radio
(Please note that these reflections were not written
by Don Fabio, but were inspired by his homilies)
Each mystery of the Rosary is
accompanied by a number of reflections. Any one of these may be sufficient to
help you reflect on the entire decade.
The Glorious Mysteries
First Mystery: The Resurrection
1. In
everything that we do we must live Easter. We must go beyond the here and now
and follow Jesus towards the Father. Easter is a call to action, a call to
follow Jesus beyond the absurdities and preoccupations of this life and to
focus our existence on heavenly things. It is a call to leave behind the things
that belong to the phase of death, a call to stop making absolutes out of
ourselves and the things that we possess. In every moment of our lives we must
undergo the growth and evolution towards the Father that is Easter.
2. How
we are fixated with passing material things, the praise and esteem of others!
The resurrection is a call to look beyond all these transitory things that will
pass. In every moment of our lives we must undergo the growth and evolution
towards the Father that is Easter. Jesus asks Mary Magdalen not to cling to him
because “I must go to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God”. Just
as Jesus is passionately directed towards heavenly things, so must we.
3. There
is perfect continuity between the crucifixion of Jesus and his resurrection. By
our sins Jesus was crucified. He submitted himself to death out of
unconditional love for us. His resurrection is the perfect continuation of this
saving work. Out of love for us God raises Jesus to life – and all of us with
him! Am I preoccupied by my sinfulness? Do I think that they put an obstacle
between me and God? But look at how Jesus has loved me to the point of death!
He has borne those very sins that preoccupy me! In his resurrection he has
transformed those dark aspects of me into light! If I am inclined to think that
sin and death have ultimate finality, then let me contemplate the empty tomb.
The emptiness of this tomb shows that sin and death have disappeared. The love
of God has the final say and it is an eternal one.
4. Like
the Apostles, we are all locked in inner rooms behind barriers of fear. This
fear is at the background of all our sinful activity. Our obsession with our
own preservation drives us to engage in activity that is harmful to others and
ultimately to ourselves. How do we escape from this closed room of sin and
fear? We are not capable of escaping using our own methods. Self-analysis and
psychological techniques can only take us so far. The forgiveness of sins is
something that only the Lord can do. In the Gospel, Jesus appears in the closed
room and says "Peace with you!" He shows them his wounds of love and
commands them to bring his pardon to others. We too need to have Jesus in
our midst. We must look to him, listen to his word, and welcome him
wholeheartedly into our inner enclave of sin and fear.
5. Before
his Passion, Jesus purifies the temple, overturning the moneychangers’ tables. The
real temple that is to be purified is the heart of man. There is no Passover
without the Red Sea that saves the new man and destroys the old man; there
is no Easter without chasing away the money-changer, the consumer-mentality,
the greed and possessiveness that are present in our hearts. Easter is a time
in which we are drawn to new life, and this process requires the loss and the
purification of that which obstructs life. Jesus has a burning zeal to purify
our hearts of the things that obstruct life. He wishes us to rid our hearts of
those things that are incompatible with Easter. There cannot be new life unless
the old life is left behind. The human being, who loves material things,
destroys the temple of God. But in God this temple can be
rebuilt and resurrected.
Second Mystery: The Ascension
1. At
the end of Jesus' earthly journey, during which he overcame the power of sin
and death, he ascends into heaven and sits at the right hand of the Father. But
this should not be understood as some kind of detachment from earthly
affairs. The "right hand" of the Father refers to the power of
God. To be seated at God's right hand means to be the one who exercises the
power of God. The throne on which Jesus sits is not a place of rest but the place
from which he accomplishes the saving work of God. Jesus ascends therefore, not
to rest, but to become Lord, invested in power, working through history and
guiding history. With this authority, and through the Church, Jesus confirms
with signs the word that is preached by the apostles. That which we celebrate
in the Ascension of the Lord is fundamentally the power of Jesus Christ. In the
name of the Lord Jesus, from now on, the Church will be able to perform
marvellous acts.
2. The
Ascension is one of the articles of the Creed and has immense significance for
each one of us personally. All of our actions are directed towards goals. That
is the sort of creatures that we are. But if the goals are false or illusory,
then our lives are chaotic and meaningless. The Ascension of Jesus makes our
true final goal crystal clear! Jesus is fully human and the Ascension tells us
that his (and our) final goal is to be with the Father in heaven. How many
false objectives pull us this way and that! We have wrong goals for our bodies,
our intellects, our possessions and our relationships. The end result is that
our lives are bland and without substance, or are chaotic and tragic. We are
like sailors in a wild and desolate sea. We need a point of reference to orient
our lives, and that point of reference is God the Father! All of our actions should
be directed by a simple criterion: “Is this choice something that is compatible
with heaven? Is this something that leads me to heaven?” The things of this
world must never become ends in themselves. All of us are called to eternity!
3. Sometimes
we ask ourselves where the world is going, how it will all end. We wonder what
our mission in life is. Our task is to place our feet in the shoes that God has
assigned for us and walk the simple path that he has opened before us. But what
is our mission exactly? Should we seek to defend the image of the Church? Are
we to attack the errors found in other philosophies/spiritualities? No, our
mission is not to defeat other people by the force of our intellectual argument
but to generate new life in them. We generate new life in others by proclaiming
a word that will help them to embark on a relationship with God. How wonderful
is the dignity that the Lord gives us! He permits us to share in his divine
work of generating new life! The Lord did not say “Go out to the whole world
and organise intellectual conferences”. Our mission is to go out and generate
new children for God, children in the faith.
Third Mystery: The Descent of the Holy Spirit
1. To
help us on the way to the Father, Jesus bequeaths us with a precious gift, a
new garment that descends on us from high. This garment is the Holy Spirit.
After the Fall, Adam and Eve dressed themselves with leaves, the things of the
earth. We all cover ourselves with the things of the earth! We dress ourselves
with our successes, the way we look, our talents, our public image. These are
just ways to cover the vulnerability and poverty that all of us feel. When we
are clothed with the Holy Spirit, by contrast, we are clothed with the
knowledge that God loves us and that everything is taken care of by his
wonderful providence.
2. Where
do we receive this new garment of the Holy Spirit? After the Ascension the
disciples gathered continually to praise God. We must do the same. It is in the
liturgical gatherings of the Church that we encounter God, listening to his
word and receiving the power of Jesus through the sacraments. Gradually, step
by step, slowly but surely, bit by bit, we are “clothed with power from on
high”. Then we begin to live as children of God, leaving all things to his
providence.
3. The
term “Paraclete” signifies the one who stands close to us and gives us counsel.
In order to have the Holy Spirit close to us, we must adhere to the words of
Jesus. This is the kind of relationship that the Lord wants to have with us! If
we love someone, we cherish and contemplate their words. How can we say we love
Jesus if we do not treasure and esteem his words, bringing them to fruition in
our lives? Once we adhere to the words of Jesus, then God, through the gift of
the Holy Spirit, comes to dwell with us. In the Old Testament God was present
in the Temple. Now, through the Holy Spirit, he wishes to take up residence in
our hearts, in the profoundest core of our being. But how can God dwell in
our hearts if we are not adhering to his words and cherishing them?
4. The
book of Acts tells us how the Holy Spirit descended in the form of tongues of
fire and the disciples were driven out on the street to preach the good news.
Their preaching was understood by people from different parts of the world, as
if each listener was hearing the words in his own language. Our ability to
communicate with others is enabled when we stop talking about ourselves and
start talking about the salvific action of God. The greatest barrier to
communication is the fact that our discourse is largely in the service of our
own egos. Once we stop trying to attract attention to ourselves, once we stop
seeking the admiration of others, then we develop the capacity to speak in a
way that will be readily welcomed by our listeners.
5. "When
the Spirit of truth comes, he will lead you to the complete truth, since he
will not be speaking from himself, and he will tell you of the things that are
to come". It is interesting that the complete truth is learned by
following someone who does not speak of himself. He who speaks of himself has a
different kind of spirit, the spirit of pride and self-conceit. The spirit of
love, the spirit of God, speaks of Christ and speaks of the Father. He who is
truly free is able to give the gift of life to others, but the spirit of evil
is a consumer of life, who wishes us all to become consumers as well,
bottomless pits that seek affirmation, reward, compensation, material
possessions. The Holy Spirit, by contrast, teaches us to speak of the other, to
speak of Christ and to speak of God.
6. Maybe
sometimes we wonder why the gift of the Spirit seems to be absent from our
lives. We hear of Spirit-filled people doing wonderful things and we ask
ourselves why that is not the case with us. Scripture emphasizes that the
Spirit is received only after one has first welcomed the word of God.
In the Gospel of John Jesus says, “If you love me you will keep my
commandments; I will ask the Father and he will send you another Advocate to be
with you forever.” How wonderful it would be to have this Advocate! But He comes
to us gradually and only when we welcome the word of God. The question then is
how do we welcome the word that the Lord is addressing to us? We must
contemplate on this matter and discern the ways in which God is speaking to us
in our lives.
Fourth Mystery: The Assumption of our Lady into Heaven
1 The
Lord prepared Our Lady for sanctity from the first moment of her conception.
Her Assumption is God’s seal on the holiness of her life. He calls each one of
us to sanctity as well, and he has done so from our conception. In every moment
of our lives, he provides the grace that has the potential to lead us to purity
and wholeness. Our Lady responded to all of those graces. May we too learn to
respond with the same generosity.
2. Mary
was called to fulfil a mission, and she did it so perfectly that she became the
first-fruits of the saving power of the resurrection. Each one of us is also
called to fulfil a wonderful mission, the unique and personal mission that the Lord
has entrusted to each one of us. The Lord has prepared us for this mission all her lives. To discover and accept it, we must become like Mary and say "Let it be done onto me according to your word".
3. We
are called to be pure and faithful followers of the Lord. But too often we
follow the corrupt ways of the flesh, seeking our own advancement in the eyes
of others, filled with pride and ambition, pursuing our own projects at the
expense of the projects of the Lord. Mary’s Assumption is the confirmation that
she followed Jesus perfectly in all things.
Fifth Mystery: The Coronation of Our Lady as Queen of Heaven
1. To
be crowned a monarch is usually to be bestowed with great honour and glory, but
the honour of heaven is so different to the honour of this world! Our Lady’s
coronation does not derive from her exalted birth right but because of her
humble submission to the word of God: “Let what you have said be done onto me”.
2. Mary
is crowned with glory because she shares in the glory of Christ, which is the
Cross. The glory of Jesus is not the glory associated with the praise and
recognition of the masses; it consists in emptying himself completely for
others. Mary too emptied herself for God and the nascent Church, and she too
shares in Christ’s glory.
3. Mary
is crowned Queen of heaven despite the fact that she never once left her native
land, despite her lowly education, and despite the fact that she never consorted
with the rich and powerful of this world. She is a humble girl who lived a life
of simplicity and poverty, bearing her only child in a shed used for animals.
But she stands exalted above all peoples and all times because of the perfect
manner in which she followed the Lord.
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