Hail, full of grace!
My dear brothers and sisters, we are gathered today, on this great solemnity of the feast of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary to reflect precisely on these words of the angel Gabriel to Our Lady: “Hail, full of grace!”
We are here to celebrate these momentous words because from the moment of Her conception, Mary – our Blessed Mother, was free from the stain of original sin. To quote from Ineffabilis Deus, the proclamation of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception which was pronounced by Pope Blessed Pius IX in the year 1854:
Mary, the most holy Mother of God, by virtue of the foreseen merits of Christ, our Lord and Redeemer, was never subject to original sin, but was completely preserved from the original taint, and hence she was redeemed in a manner more sublime.
It is because she is without stain of original sin that, like Christians since the birth of the Church, we can sing:
Tota pulchra es Maria et macula originalis non est in te
You are most beautiful Maria and the stain of original sin is not in you
But as with all things Catholic, the mysteries of our faith are not only about Our Lord, His Blessed Mother, or just His angels and saints. It is also about us. So, what is it that the Immaculate Conception tell us about the human being? What is the message of the Immaculata today?
The most obvious lesson, of course, is that of dignity. The God bearer, the Theotokos, had to be so dignified, that sin could not have ever touched her. This is the dignity to which God the Father calls us as well; to be immaculate! In fact, this was the dignity for which we were intended! As we hear St. Paul teach us today:
he chose us in him, before the foundation of the world,
to be holy and without blemish before him
Remember that Eve was created immaculate. At her creation, Eve, our first mother, bore no stain of sin. It was because of her choice, and that of her husband Adam, that we today suffer the stain of sin. Nevertheless, through the passion, death and resurrection of His Son, God the Father enables us to ascend to the dignity he afforded at conception of Our Lady, and continues to afford Her, to be immaculate bodies in heaven, without the stain of sin.
The second lesson of the Immaculata is that of humility. Recall the words of Our Blessed Mother in response to the angel:
“Behold the handmaid of the Lord; be it unto me according to thy word.” (Lk 1:38)
Invitation to this dignity of immaculateness does not mean that we are equal to Our Blessed Mother. Living, as we do, following the French Revolution and in the era of democracy, we seem to think that equality is divine, and hierarchy unacceptable. We must remember, however, that there is – and will always be – a hierarchy in heaven. We are not now, nor ever will be, equal to Our Blessed Mother, just as Our Lady is not equal to Her Son.
Let us listen again to the words of St. Paul to the Ephesians:
Blessed be the God and Father of
our Lord Jesus Christ,
who has blessed us in Christ
with every spiritual blessing in the heavens
Our Lady was one of these spiritual blessings. It was, to repeat the words of Blessed Pius IX ,
by virtue of the foreseen merits of Christ… [that Our Lady] was never subject to original sin, but …completely preserved from the original taint.
In other words, it was through the future merits of Her Son, foreseen by God the Father, that Our Lady could be full of grace.
And Maria continues to be the vessel through which the grace gushing from the Sacred Heart of Jesus drips down into our lives. She intercedes for us constantly in the court of heaven, so that our prayers may be answered.
My dear brothers and sisters, you must be scandalized to hear me preaching in favour of hierarchy. But I invite you to consider that to preach hierarchy is not to preach against dignity. To preach, “know your place”, is not to suggest that you should not reach for the stars, not aim for greatness. Rather, it is to preach, know how you go about this exercise in magnifying the Lord. Do so in a manner that imitates Our Lady’s dignity, which is to be without sin. You are called to this greatness, and you are aided by the sacraments of Our Lord, and the powerful intercession of His Mother. Aim therefore for greatness, but without succumbing to sin of desire, envy, jealousy, malice.
In her prayer, the Magnificat, the Immaculata, proclaims:
Our Lord lifts up the lowly and brings down the mighty.
What is clear is that Our Lord is not opposed to social mobility. However, in the larger scheme of things social mobility is not as important as the mobility – no, nobility! – that he afforded through the miracle of the Immaculate Conception. The mobility, the nobility, that ensured that human nature, which had willingly and knowingly sundered itself from the divine, could now be raised back up to heaven through the cooperation of Her who knew no sin. Let us, therefore, dear brothers and sisters, on this great feast day, dedicate ourselves to lives of impeccability so that we may be worthy of the heavenly blessings that have been given to us.
O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee.
Ó Maria, concebida sem pecado, rogai por nós que recorremos a vós
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit; Amen.
(A version of this homily was first preached to the faithful at the Igreja da N.S. da Conceicão, Pangim, on 8 Dec 2025.)
(Image reference: The Immaculate Conception, Francisco de Zurbarán, 1628 – 1630, Museo del Prado.)


