Brothers and sisters: Christ has been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep. The doctrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary is a teaching that, although solemnly proclaimed by the teaching office of the Church, arose from the collective faith of Christians. The doctrine of the Assumption taches that the Blessed Mary was taken up body and soul into the glory of heaven at the end of her earthly life. My question for us to reflect upon today as we celebrate this feast is this: WHAT IS IT THAT WE CELEBRATE AND WHY DO WE CELEBRATE IT? What is in it for us as members of a faith community, and as God’s sons and daughters? The decades leading to the declaration of the doctrine of the Assumption of our Lady were filled with intrigues, wars, and death. The latter half of the 19th century witnessed the death of thousands of people in the American Civil War and the Franco-Prussian War. By mid 20th century, there had already been two World Wars which culminated in the use of atomic weaponry. To many people, the world was coming to an end. There was just too much death and destruction to even have a slight hope for the continuity of the human race. Amidst this despair, the Church took the front seat in restoring hope by teaching that death was not the end. To teach that Mary was assumed into heaven after her earthly life was to say that Mary triumphed over death. As the new Eve and new mother of the human race, Mary’s triumph over death marked the beginning of the triumph of the human race over the forces of death. What we celebrate today is the fulfillment of God’s promises, the fulfillment of our life of faith, the fulfillment of the mysteries of faith of which we are part. In the opening prayer, we asked to be enabled to see heaven as our final goal, and to come to share in our Lady’s glory - the glory of being raised body and soul to heaven. We thus have a reason to join our Lady in her song of praise for in what happened to her, we have a foretaste of the ultimate redemptive act of God. The assumption of our Lady makes real our Christian belief that the death of our earthly bodies is not the end. Beyond our physical death there is life. St. Paul reminds us that Jesus had already destroyed death in his death and resurrection. Jesus’ rising from the dead opened the door to the raising of our own bodies. Jesus’ rising from the dead was the first, but not the last, and what we celebrate today confirms that. The raising of Mary to the glory of heaven is an assurance that we too have been raised with her son to the glory of heaven. When we call our Lady blessed, dear brothers and sisters, let us keep in mind that we are speaking of ourselves too - each one of us. We too are recipients of that immense love which God reserved in a unique and unrepeatable way to our Lady. Let us look to the glorification of our Lady with hope for it opens us to faith, to a future full of joy.