06/04/2026
The second Marian reflection in May was offered by Assistant Professor Anne Marie Thompson '14: "Expecting the Arrival of the Truth"
I was moved when I learned (and then started to notice) that many depictions of the Annunciation show Mary with a book. Particularly in Medieval books of hours, like this example from fifteenth-century France, Mary appears to be just interrupted from her reading as she looks up to hear the angel Gabriel’s announcement. But unlike Gabriel’s banner, on which we can clearly read “Ave maria gratia plena,” the text of Mary’s book is intentionally fuzzy and therefore symbolically resonant. The pages might be the psalms that she is praying, or the Old Testament prophecies that point to this very moment, or—perhaps most poignantly—a representation of her flesh about to conceive the Word.
It’s not surprising, I suppose, that Our Lady Seat of Wisdom is bookish. Reading is the visible manifestation of her inward posture of contemplative pondering and receptive attention. In this, Mary is a beautiful model for Catholic Studies students and faculty who, in desiring to love God with their whole heart, soul, and mind, seek the unified experience of faith and reason, spiritual life and academic work. The great philosopher of attention Simone Weil proposes that the practice of attention required by school studies bears fruit in prayer, which she defines as “the orientation of all the attention of which the soul is capable toward God.” The image of Mary with her book illustrates how reading and praying are really one thing: expecting the arrival of the Truth.
Book of Hours (Use of Paris): Annunciation, c. 1420. Follower of Boucicaut Master (French, Paris, active about 1410–25). The Cleveland Museum of Art, 1942.169.50.a.