The Annunciation
One
The First Marian Doctrine
One of the distinctive features of Catholicism is how much we celebrate and venerate Mary. The fact that we’re praying the rosary right now, saying “Hail Mary,” “Holy Mary,” over and over, like a mantra, shows how important she is to us. Many other Christians, and even non-Christians, say, “Why do you make such a big deal out of Mary? Why is she so central to the understanding and the practice of your faith?”
There are probably a lot of ways to answer the question of what makes Mary so important to us. But probably the most fundamental answer to that question, and the answer the Church gave in the very beginnings of Christianity, is that Mary is our New Eve.
Two
Scripture
Scripture is very clear that we humans originally got into this mess of sin and suffering because of a man named Adam. Scripture is also very clear that we get out of this mess only through the New Adam, Jesus Christ. But of course, there wasn’t just an original Adam who led humanity to death. There was an original Eve. And there isn’t just a new Adam who brings us to life; there’s a new Eve.
Look at the parallels between Mary and Eve: A fallen angel comes to the first Eve and says, “If you want, you can make man to be like God.” The angel Gabriel comes to the New Eve and says, “If you want, you can make God to be like man.” The first Eve says yes to the bad angel, and she gives the forbidden fruit, the instrument of damnation, to the first Adam. The New Eve says yes to the good angel, and she gives human flesh, the instrument of salvation, to the New Adam.
Jesus at Cana and then again at Calvary, calls Mary “Woman,” because God had said to the Serpent, in front of Eve, I will put enmity between you and the woman. The first woman was the partner of the first man. The new woman, Mary, was the partner of the new man in salvation. The first Eve miraculously came from the body of the first Adam without sexual intercourse; the new Adam miraculously came from the body of the first Eve without sexual intercourse.
If Adam and Eve are both in some way responsible for our fall, then Jesus and Mary, the New Adam and the New Eve, are together responsible for our salvation.
Three
Patristic Sources
As we can see, this connection between Mary and Eve is present in Scripture, and the Fathers of the Church recognized it very early on in the history of Christianity. For example, St. Justin Martyr draws a parallel between Eve and Mary to highlight Mary’s role with Jesus in salvation. St. Ireneaus calls Mary “the cause of salvation for herself and for the whole human race.”
He said that “The knot of Eve’s disobedience was untied by Mary’s obedience,” and that “As the human race was bound to death because of a virgin, so it was set free from death by a Virgin.”
St. Jerome summarized the New Eve theology by saying, “Death through Eve, life through Mary.” And St. Ephraim the Syrian, when he’s meditating on Symeon’s prophecy that Mary’s heart would be pierced, comments that by her pain at Calvary, “Mary removed the sword that protected Paradise because of Eve.”
Again, if Mary is the New Eve, which she clearly is, then just as Eve was a cooperator with Adam in our downfall, Mary is a cooperator with Jesus in our restoration to God’s grace. The logic is pretty straightforward, and the saints of the Church recognized it right away.
Four
All Our Lady’s Other Roles
There’s a sense in which the Church first clearly recognized Mary’s role as the New Eve and then clarified other truths about her. For instance, as we’ve already said, one of the main ways she’s the New Eve is by giving birth to the New Adam, and so equipping Him for the work of Salvation. That’s why she’s Mother of God. And she is a perpetual virgin, so that, not limiting herself to her natural family, she can become spiritual mother to all Christians, as Eve was the natural mother to all humanity.
Mary is immaculately conceived. The first Eve started her life without the stain of sin, and the New Eve should begin the same way. If Mary’s job was to fight sin and Satan alongside her Son, then she should be free of any fallenness that might compromise her mission. No part of her, at any time, should be affected by Satan.
Mary is assumed into Heaven. The First Eve was the first woman to taste death because of her sin. It is fitting that the New Eve be the first woman to taste the glories of resurrected bodily life as a reward for her faithfulness.
But most importantly, Mary as the New Eve clarifies why Mary is so important to us now. Christ, the New Adam, won salvation for us during His life on earth, but He still works tirelessly in Heaven to bring us all to the fullness of salvation. Mary, His partner on Earth and in Heaven, works at His side.
Five
Our Mother
The most important title of Mary is Our Mother! Eve is called the mother of all the living because all human beings descend from her. Mary is the New Eve because she is the Spiritual Mother of All People. The Catechism states that Jesus is Mary's only son, but her spiritual motherhood extends to all men whom indeed he came to save, "The Son whom she brought forth is he whom God placed as the first-born among many brethren, that is, the faithful in whose generation and formation she co-operates with a mother's love."
Mary is the Mother of All People because her spiritual motherhood extends to all those Christ came to save, that means everyone! Jesus proclaimed this from the Cross when He said, “Behold your Mother!” Therefore, the Most Important title of Mary is Mother! When men on a battlefield are dying, they cry out for their mothers. Well, the world is dying. The world needs its mother. They need someone to introduce them to their mother.