Mary in The Carmelite Tradition - by Sr. Catherine

Essay written by Catherine Williams as part of the Carmelite Certificate run by the Carmelite Institute of Britain and Ireland.

What has been distinctive about Carmelite devotion to Mary over the Centuries?

Discuss the relevance of Mary in EITHER a particular culture or society in the past OR in your own time and place.

Introduction

This essay will explore distinctive elements regarding Carmelite devotion which have endured

over the centuries and also how both Mary and these elements are relevant in my own time

and place. This essay will explore several features of Carmelite devotion: Mary the Most

Pure Virgin, Mary as our Model, and Mary as Mother and Sister.  Each of these aspects will

also explore the relevance of Mary in relation to the Community of Our Lady of Walsingham,

or COLW, a new order based in Norfolk, England.  COLW is, “Rooted in the Carmelite tradition,

and living in the freedom of Mary’s Fiat,” and I will draw on their Statutes, Vow Formula and

Book of Life; to show how they are rooted in this traditional understanding of Mary from a

Carmelite perspective and the relevance of Mary within this community.

Mary as Most Pure Virgin

A distinctive feature of Carmelite devotion to Mary has been the emphasis on her as ‘ Most

Pure Virgin,’ a title often used by the Carmelites when speaking of her.  This began, “In the

century and a half before the Solemn Commemoration of Our Lady of Mount Carmel was

established….the main feast was the Annunciation, seen at that time especially Marian…

[which] gradually from the focus on the Annunciation a deep appreciation of the purity of

Mary arose.”  So a great reverence and respect for Mary as the ‘Most Pure,’ came to be within

the Carmelite Order. We can also see this emphasis on the purity of Mary reflected in the

Carmelite’s choice of habit, for, “In this period Carmelites reflected on the colour white,

associated with purity: their white cloak was a symbol of their commitment to single-

mindedness and chastity  after the example of Mary Ever Virgin.”  It was something,

clearly, of great importance to the Carmelites then for them to model even their habit in

honour of this characteristic of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

What was especially distinctive about this devotion to the purity of Mary from the Carmelite

perspective was, “not primarily in terms of chastity...but it looked above all to Mary’s

undivided heart which belonged totally to God.”  It was this singleness of purpose and

commitment to God which the Carmelites valued most for, “The Carmelite contemplative

vocation demands, as a condition, purity of heart can be seen as most perfectly embodied

in Mary.”  The emphasis or focus here, “is not purity in the rather narrow sense of chastity

or virginity, but an utter purity of heart seen in her unqualified fiat, her total ‘yes’ to God

in pronouncing herself the slave of the Lord...the Most Pure Virgin is the Virgin of undivided

heart.” It is this being totally given over and surrendered to God in each moment as Mary

was, not ruled by fleeting thoughts or feelings, not living for anything, or anyone else other

than God.  Chastity is certainly an important aspect of the consecrated life but the Carmelite’s

possessed a distinctive focus on this ‘undivided heart,’ of our Blessed Mother, a heart devoted

to God alone and that is what makes the carmelite devotion to Mary as Most Pure Virgin

distinctive. 

Mary as Most Pure Virgin for COLW

For COLW, this concept of her as Most Pure Virgin is of great relevance and importance;

as stated in the communities’ Book of Life: “Mary, in her virginal faith and complete

surrender to the Holy Spirit working within her from the first moment of her existence,

is the prototype of what every Christian must become.” In this, is what we are called to be:

people who can say ‘yes’ to the promptings of the Holy Spirit in each and every moment. 

The externals are important, but, “more important for Colwelians is the interior transformation

of the heart.”  The formation for COLW is not so much about theology or religious life,

but rather this freeing of the heart so we can better know ourselves and our motivations and

live the values of religious life, thus coming to a true knowledge of how, “Mary is our vocational

model as one who responded with total generosity and allowed God to do with her all that

he wanted.”  This means that we desire to, each day, give our ‘fiat’ as Mary did with a heart

increasingly undivided, focused on God alone.​

In a manner similar to the Carmelites, COLW has modelled it’s habit to reflect Mary, “As

contemplatives we have chosen to wear one that reflects the community’s Marian emphasis

with its colour (blue and white) and with the scapular, an item traditionally worn by Carmelites.”

However, as with the Carmelites, “The habit as an external sign is important for its symbolic

value but far more important for Colwelians is the interior transformation of the heart.” 

Again, it is this connection between, “the Most Pure Virgin to the characteristic Carmelite

way of understanding the interior life,” that is, having this, “state of interior integrity that excludes

all sin and distance from God and makes the person conform to the divine will,” in imitation

of Mary, “the one who was totally available for union with God.”  Therefore, we can see that this

idea of Mary as Most Pure Virgin is of great relevance, particularly in the sense of having a heart

free for and dedicated to God alone.

 Mary as Mother and Sister of the Carmelites

Another distinctive feature of Marian devotion to Our Lady within the Carmelite Order has

been seeing her as Mother and as Sister, “Carmelite spirituality inherited the traditional

acceptation of Mary not only as Mother of Jesus, but also our Mother too.”   Whilst the idea

is not exclusive to the Carmelites, “Mary’s care was seen in terms of her being Mother of

Carmel.  The idea of Mary as Mother of all Christians….was now taken up with particular

warmth by Carmlites.”  It was an idea enthusiastically assimilated into the Order and

occupies a special place in their lives.  It is a title loved by many, but, “It was perhaps the

Carmelites who most developed the title up to the Reformation and beyond.”  An example

of the Carmelite devotion to the idea of Mary as Mother would be  how, “a particular place

in the daily life of Carmel was the Ave maris stella which is perhaps from the 9th century,”

along with the Salve Regina and others, “All of these stress Mary’s motherhood.”  Furthermore,

“A favourite title...was Mater et Decor Carmeli “Mother and Beauty of Carmel.”

Thus from this, the Carmelites were, “led to reflect on themselves as Mary’s brothers, and Mary

as their Sister,”  and she became, “honoured among them as…’Mother of Carmel,’ also as

‘Sister,’ in the faith.” In the early Carmelite tradition it was seen, “as a great honour that Mary

was their sister.  It was later seen as giving a new intimacy to the relationship between Mary

and Carmelites.”  A good way of seeing this relationship between Mary and the Carmelites is

thinking of her, “as an elder sister who is caring about and for the younger members of the

family; the elder sister keeps an eye out for danger, she is more experienced and wise.”  

So this idea of Mary as our sister evokes a sense of her being there as one who guides and

protects, one who has already undertaken the journey but also journeys with us.  With all of

this, it is important to remember that Mary always leads back to God, “so that all one’s thoughts

and affections terminate both in her and in God, and the person can forget neither the loving

Mother nor God.”  We can therefore see how Mary as Mother and Sister of the Carmelites

is a distinctive feature of their expression of Marian devotion. 

Mary as Mother and Sister of COLW

Mary as Mother and Sister is an important aspect of Mary for members of COLW for, “Mary

is the inspiration behind COLW, the Mother of our community and that is why she needs to find

her place, her home in us, individually and communally.”  COLW sees Mary as the Mother of

the Community, “She is the mother who helps us to grow healthily, facing and overcoming

problems, rendering us free for making definitive choices; the mother who teaches us to be

fruitful, to be open to life and to bear the fruits of goodness, joy and hope, and to give life

to others, both physical and spiritual.”  This title is of great importance to us, we see in Mary

Our Mother, the one who teaches, helps and guides us on many levels, “We are aware that our

consecration has origin, develops and bears fruit through Mary, with Mary and in Mary,

our mother, sister, teacher and model of discipleship.”  It is from Mary’s maternity that we

better learn to give our ‘yes’ to the will of the Father for, “When Jesus says that his mother,

brothers, and sisters are those who do the will of his Father in heaven we have a glimpse into

the totality of Mary’s self-giving. It was not bearing Christ in the flesh that made her blessed.

The source of her deepest maternity lay in her surrender to the Father’s will.” “The goal of

true devotion to Our Lady is to become: ‘Another Mother of God: God must be conceived also

in us and by us be offered to the world.” 

In a similar fashion to the Carmelites throughout the centuries, members of COLW also see

Mary as their sister, the, “Sister who wants to help us to carry our crosses.”  As noted with the

Carmelites, she is there as one who guides us with her wisdom, having walked this path of faith

and obedience before us, “a sister...who stands beside us and who once walked, like us, in faith

- on a pilgrim’s journey of prayer.” It is a constant sense of Mary journeying with each member

of the community in their joys and sorrows and leading us into ever deeper union with the Father,

“the more we enter into the mystery of her union with the Trinity, the more this union will be

reflected in our own relationships.”

Mary as the Model for Carmelites

Another distinctive feature of Carmelite devotion to Mary over the centuries is seeing her as a

model in the fullest sense of the word, “As the woman whose heart is filled with the Spirit, she

is model.” So the one for Carmelites to imitate in many different ways. But this devotion does

not stop just at this, for, “Carmelite Marian devotion will always tend to go beyond knowing about

Mary to the more profound knowing Mary.”  It is something which takes place at a deeper level,

a seeking to have a union with Mary, a deep unity with her, and rather than just imitating her

virtues or some aspects of her life, as good as this, for, “What is here involved is a move from

imitation to identification to communion in an ever-deeper relationship with Mary, so that we

walk with her in a pilgrimage of faith, hope, obedience and love.”  It is this deeper relationship

we are called to have, to unite ourselves with Mary and so with her Son, Jesus Christ.

Mary is also a model for the Carmelites on a practical level, Baconthorpe makes comparisons

between aspects of the Carmelite life and that of Mary’s, for example, “The Carmelite is to remain

in or near his cell praying, Mary prayed many hours a day.  The Rule requires silence, Mary speaks

no more than four times in the Gospels...the prior is to serve others; Mary stayed with Elizabeth

and so forth.” Furthermore, “One of the most important aspects of Carmelite spirituality is to

live in God’s presence, here and now, and Mary is the model of this life in the constant presence

of our loving God.”  So Mary is not just a model for the Carmelites by way of virtues, but also

by the way in which she lived her life, drawn upon in a particularly distinctive way by the

Carmelites.

Mary as Our Model for COLWelians

Probably the most important aspect of relationship with Mary as members of COLW is seeing

her as model in several key ways. “Mary is our vocational model as one who responded with

total generosity and allowed God to do with her all that he wanted,” so we strive to imitate Mary

as perfectly as we are able, by the grace of God, so as to respond generously and whole-heartedly

to God, surrendering more and more to his will, for “even if we cannot be an answer to God in

the same measure as Mary, we can grow in our abandonment to God and learn to respond to

His invitations more and more.”  As with the Carmelites, COLW also seeks to imitate Mary

in a practical way, “In imitation of Mary, who ‘treasured all these things and pondered them in

her heart,’ we cultivate a spirit of prayer in our houses in order to enter ever-more deeply into

the mystery of our vocation and to respond to it with ever-greater freedom.”

But as noted when discussing this aspect in the context of the Carmelite Order, it is not just a

case of seeing Mary as a role model, but something even more.   “By life and death in Mary

and for Mary we more perfectly live and die in God and for God,” it is cultivating a union with

Mary as stated in COLW’s Vow Formula: “In union with Mary I resolve to live the call to the

fullness of life and love as outlined in the statutes of the community.”  There is a uniting of

ourselves with Mary, something that is beyond a vague imitation, it is something much deeper. 

Mary guides us and leads us the more we draw close to her and the deeper we allow ourselves

to be drawn into her mystery, “Mary, the model of the acceptance of grace by humankind, leads

those in formation to conversion to the Word of God and to living this reality.” It is striving to

more and more perfectly model our lives on hers, something of great importance in the world

today which desperately needs models of authentic holiness and sanctity.  And by having Mary

as our model in this we can more perfectly show God to the world by the way in which we live. 

Conclusion

This essay has explored several distinctive features of Carmelite devotion to Mary which have

evolved and endured throughout the centuries.  It has shown how these features are not abstract

or irrelevant concepts but has great relevance in the here and now using the Community of

Our Lady of Walsingham as an example of this, a community which sees Mary as model,

the Most Pure Virgin, Mother and Sister.  

Bibliography

Books

Arborelius, Anders OCD Carmelite Spirituality. Alabama: EWTN Publishing, 2020.

Boaga, Emanuele O.Carm The Lady of the Place. Rome: Edizioni Carmelitane,  2001.

Community of Our Lady of Walsingham, The Book of Life.  England: Community of

Our Lady of Walsingham, 2021.

Community of Our Lady of Walsingham, The Statutes. 2017.

Community of Our Lady of Walsingham The Vow Formula. 2017.

McCaffrey, James The Carmelite Charism. Dublin: Veritas, 2004.

Welch, John O.Carm The Carmelite Way. United States of America: Gracewing, 1996.

Websites

CIBI H03: Figures of Inspiration: Mary and Elijah, “Units 5 & 6” CIBI

accessed November 29th. 2021 http://moodle.cibi.ie/.

CIBI H03: Figures of Inspiration: Mary and Elijah “Units 11 & 12” CIBI

accessed November 29th. 2021 http://moodle.cibi.ie/.

 


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