| MARY IS THE VIRGIN MOTHER OF GOD |       
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                From the very beginning, the Church has recognized the virginal         motherhood of Mary, who conceived by the power of the         Holy Spirit 
1. In the Constitution Lumen gentium, the Council states that         "joined to Christ the head and in communion with all his saints,         the faithful must in the first place reverence the memory 'of the         glorious ever Virgin Mary, Mother of our God and Lord Jesus         Christ'" (n. 52). The conciliar Constitution uses these terms from         the Roman Canon of the Mass, thereby stressing how faith in the divine         motherhood of Mary has been present in Christian thought since the first         centuries. 
 
In the newborn Church Mary is remembered with the title "Mother         of Jesus". It is Luke himself who gives her this title in the Acts         of the Apostles, a title that corresponds moreover to what is said         in the Gospels: "Is this not ... the son of Mary?", the         residents of Nazareth wonder according to the Evangelist Mark's account         (6:3); "Isn't Mary known to be his mother?", is the question         recorded by Matthew (13:55). 
          
The motherhood of Mary also concerns the Church 
          
2. In the disciples' eyes, as they gathered after the Ascension, the         title "Mother of Jesus" acquires its full meaning. For them,         Mary is a person unique in her kind: she received the singular grace of         giving birth to the Saviour of humanity; she lived for a long while at         his side; and on Calvary she was called by the Crucified One to exercise         a "new motherhood" in relation to the beloved disciple and,         through him, to the whole Church. 
For these who believe in Jesus and follow him, "Mother of         Jesus" is a title of honour and veneration, and will forever remain         such in the faith and life of the Church. In a particular way, by this         title Christians mean to say that one cannot refer to Jesus' origins         without acknowledging the role of the woman who gave him birth in the         Spirit according to his human nature. Her maternal role also involves         the birth and growth of the Church. In recalling the place of Mary in         Jesus' life, the faithful discover each day her efficacious presence in         their own spiritual journey. 
 
3. From the beginning, the Church has acknowledged the virginal         motherhood of Mary. As the infancy Gospels enable us to grasp, the first         Christian continuities themselves gathered together Mary's recollections         about the mysterious circumstances of the Saviour's conception and         birth. In particular, the Annunciation account responds to the         disciples' desire to have the deepest knowledge of the events connected         with the beginnings of the risen Christ's earthly life. In the last         analysis, Mary is at the origin of the revelation about the mystery of         the virginal conception by the work of the Holy Spirit. 
 
This truth, showing Jesus' divine origin, was immediately grasped by         the first Christians for its important significance and included among         the key affirmations of their faith. Son of Joseph according to the law,         Jesus in fact, by an extraordinary intervention of the Holy Spirit, was         in his humanity only the son of Mary, since he was born without the         intervention of man. 
 
Mary's virginity thus acquires a unique value and casts new light on         the birth of Jesus and on the mystery of his sonship, since the virginal         generation is the sign that Jesus has God himself as his Father. 
 
Acknowledged and proclaimed by the faith of the Fathers, the virginal         motherhood can never be separated from the identity of Jesus, true God         and true man, as "born of the Virgin Mary", as we profess in         the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed. Mary is the only Virgin who is also         a Mother. The extraordinary co-presence of these two gifts in the person         of the maiden of Nazareth has led Christians to call Mary simply         "the Virgin", even when they celebrate her motherhood. 
 
The virginity of Mary thus initiates in the Christian community the         spread of the virginal life embraced by all who are called to it by the         Lord. This special vocation, which reaches its apex in Christ's example,         represents immeasurable spiritual wealth for the Church in every age,         which finds in Mary her inspiration and model 
          
'Mother of God' was expression of popular piety 
          
4 The assertion: "Jesus was born of the Virgin Mary"         already implies in this event a transcendent mystery, which can find its         most complete expression only in the truth of Jesus' divine sonship. The         truth of Mary's divine motherhood is closely tied to this central         statement of the Christian faith: she is indeed the Mother of the         Incarnate Word, in whom is "God from God ... true God from me         God". 
 
The title "Mother of God", already attested by Matthew in         the equivalent expression "Mother of Emmanuel", God-with-us         (cf. Mt 1.23), was explicitly attributed to Mary only after a reflection         that embraced about two centuries. It is third-century Christians in         Egypt who begin to invoke Mary as "Theotókos", Mother of God. 
 
With this title, which is broadly echoed in the devotion of the         Christian people, Mary is seen in the true dimension of her motherhood:         she is the Mother of God's Son, whom she virginally begot according to         his human nature and raised him with her motherly love, thus         contributing to the human growth of the dime person who came to         transform the destiny of mankind. 
 
5. In a highly significant way, the most ancient prayer to Mary         ("Sub tuum praesidium...", "We fly to thy         patronage...") contains the invocation: "Theotókos, Mother of         God". This title did not originally come from the reflection of         theologians, but from an intuition of faith of the Christian people.         Those who acknowledge Jesus as God address Mary as the Mother of God and         hope to obtain her powerful aid in the trials of life. 
 
The Council of Ephesus in 431 defined the dogma of the divine         motherhood, officially attributing to Mary the title "Theotókos"         in reference to the one person of Christ, true God and true man. 
 
The three expressions which the Church has used down the centuries to         describe her faith in the motherhood of Mary: "Mother of         Jesus", "Virgin Mother" and "Mother of God",         thus show that Mary's motherhood is intimately linked with the mystery         of the Incarnation. They are affirmations of doctrine, connected as well         with popular piety, which help define the very identity of Christ. |  
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