Catholics United for the Faith
 
 

Mary: A Supermodel Among Us

In our image-laden society, it’s difficult to ignore the super-sculpted figures plastered on magazine covers and appearing in advertisements. In the spiritual realm, too, there are set before us models. The best examples, of course, are the saints. And unlike airbrushed models, who can offer only empty promises, the saints can lead us to eternal happiness.

Consider the “supermodel” of them all—Mary, our Mother, who is the model of the Church. Exalted above all humanity, she carries the titles of Queen of Heaven, Ark of the Covenant, Immaculate Conception, Mystical Rose. Countless saints and shepherds have exhorted us to call on her motherly care and to follow her example as the disciple of Christ par excellence.

Mary’s example can transform our everyday experiences. By reflecting on the many graces and virtues that make Mary the “supermodel” of the Christian life, we are led to recognize and appreciate her exalted position as Queen of Heaven. Far from being unattainable, this “supermodel” has a vested interest in helping us reach eternal happiness. She truly is a “supermodel among us,” touching our lives with the graces of her Son and interceding for our salvation.

Below are links to articles in which two women describe how personal experiences have led them to deeper devotion to the Blessed Mother:

A Woman for All Vocations—Author Donna-Marie Cooper O’Boyle reflects on the virtues of Mary that women in any vocation can emulate.

My Sister’s Pietà—How a family tragedy brought one college senior face-to-face with Mary’s faithful suffering in the Pietà.

 

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From Our Founder

The last directive of our Savior was to go and teach what He had taught. Today that teaching is being distorted or forgotten or scorned. We at CUF believe that, historically, all the great good works of Christians have been a fruit of the faith; we believe that the decline of the faith opens the way to man’s inhumanity to man; we think that one cannot hope for an apple without an apple tree, and that one cannot hope for peace and unity and mutual help without the true faith.

H. Lyman Stebbins
March 21, 1969