{36} MARY
        is called the Gate of Heaven, because it was through her that our
        Lord passed from heaven to earth. The Prophet Ezechiel, prophesying of
        Mary, says, "the gate shall be closed, it shall not be opened, and no
        man shall pass through it, since the Lord God of Israel has entered
        through it—and it shall be closed for the Prince, the Prince Himself
        shall sit in it."
Now this is fulfilled, not only
        in our Lord having taken flesh from her, and being her Son, but,
        moreover, in that she had a place in the economy of Redemption; it is
        fulfilled in her spirit and will, as well as in her body. Eve had a part
        in the fall of man, though it was Adam who was our representative, and
        whose sin made us sinners. It was Eve who began, and who tempted Adam.
        Scripture says: "The woman saw that the tree was good to eat, and fair
        to the eyes, and delightful to behold; and she took of {37} the fruit
        thereof, and did eat, and gave to her husband, and he did eat." It was
        fitting then in God's mercy that, as the woman began the destruction
        of the world, so woman should also begin its recovery, and that,
        as Eve opened the way for the fatal deed of the first Adam, so Mary
        should open the way for the great achievement of the second Adam, even
        our Lord Jesus Christ, who came to save the world by dying on the cross
        for it. Hence Mary is called by the holy Fathers a second and a better
        Eve, as having taken that first step in the salvation of mankind which
        Eve took in its ruin.
How, and when, did Mary take
        part, and the initial part, in the world's restoration? It was when the
        Angel Gabriel came to her to announce to her the great dignity which was
        to be her portion. St. Paul bids us "present our bodies to God as a
        reasonable service." We must not only pray with our lips, and fast, and
        do outward penance, and be chaste in our bodies; but we must be
        obedient, and pure in our minds. And so, as regards the Blessed Virgin,
        it was God's will that she should undertake willingly and with full
        understanding to be the Mother of our Lord, and not to be a mere
        passive instrument whose maternity would have no merit and no reward.
        The higher our gifts, the heavier our duties. It was no light lot to be
        so intimately near to the Redeemer of men, as she experienced afterwards
        when she suffered with him. Therefore, weighing well the Angel's words
        before giving her answer to them—first she asked whether so great an
        office would be a forfeiture of that Virginity which she had vowed. When
        the Angel told her no, then, with the full consent of a {38} full heart,
        full of God's love to her and her own lowliness, she said, "Behold the
        handmaid of the Lord; be it done unto me according to thy word." It was
        by this consent that she became the Gate of Heaven.

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