To foster vigilance, I would like to suggest silence, for no other reason than the fact that Our Lady on Saturday is primarily Our Lady of Silence. On Saturdays, Mary does not speak; she does not put forward one of her many privileges or celebrate a special event of her life. On Saturdays Mary is simply present. She has the comfortable appeal of a familiar face and a well-thumbed book. She is on Saturdays especially the faithful companion, an integral part of the annual liturgical cast, but inconspicuous and unobtrusive, a homemaker rather than a pacemaker, humble, but casual. Content to stay in the background, she points to her child. Standing at the end of a week and wrapping it up in the folds of her mantle, she rings in the day of her Son.
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