>I hear it more as the quarterback making a very long pass in desperation, maybe aimed at someone, but in a kind of play that's unlikely to succeed. And of course, the "Hail Mary" reference is the idea that he's praying as he does so. (Some important Christian prayer begins "Hail Mary, full of grace," I believe.)
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Yes, it does.
The prayer has nothing to do with a desperate person seeking help, but that's OK.
It was already one of the most frequently used prayers by Catholics like me, but Bing Crosby made the prayer one of the most popular in the language- its original Latin version - with his enormously popular hymn - Franz Schubert's Ave Maria.
Anyone who does not go overboard- deserves to.
Malcolm Forbes, Sr.