CITY OF GOD PART II - THE INCARNATION - Book III Contents
CHAPTER 1. THE MOST HIGH BEGINS TO PREPARE IN MOST HOLY MARY THE
MYSTERY OF THE INCARNATION; THE EVENTS OF THE NINE DAYS PRECEDING THIS MYSTERY,
ESPECIALLY THE HAPPENINGS OF THE FIRST DAY.
CHAPTER II. THE LORD ON THE SECOND DAY CONTINUES HIS FAVORS IN
PREPARATION FOR THE INCARNATION OF THE WORD IN THE MOST HOLY MARY.
CHAPTER III. WHAT FAVORS THE MOST HIGH CONFERRED ON MOST HOLY MARY
ON THE THIRD DAY OF THE NOVENA BEFORE THE
INCARNATION.
CHAPTER IV. THE MOST HIGH CONTINUES HIS FAVORS TO MOST HOLY MARY
ON THE FOURTH DAY.
CHAPTER V. HIS MAJESTY MANIFESTS NEW MYSTERIES AND SACRAMENTS TOGETHER
WITH THE WORKS OF THE FIFTH DAY OF THE CREATION TO MOST HOLY MARY, AND HER HIGHNESS
CONTINUES TO PRAY FOR THE INCARNATION OF THE WORD.
CHAPTER VI. THE MOST HIGH MANIFESTS TO MARY, OUR MISTRESS,
ADDITIONAL MYSTERIES AND SHOWS HER THE WORKS 0F THE SIXTH DAY OF CREATION.
CHAPTER VII. THE MOST HIGH CELEBRATES A NEW ESPOUSAL WITH THE PRINCESS
OF HEAVEN IN ORDER TO INAUGURATE THE NUPTIALS OF THE INCARNATION. HE ADORNS HER
FOR IT.
CHAPTER VIII. OUR GREAT QUEEN, IN THE PRESENCE OF THE LORD, PLEADS
FOR THE HASTENING OF THE INCARNATION AND OF THE REDEMPTION OF MAN, AND HIS MAJESTY YIELDS TO HIS PRAYER.
CHAPTER IX. THE MOST HIGH RENEWS ALL HIS FAVORS AND BENEFITS IN THE
MOST HOLY MARY AND, AS THE ULTIMATE PREPARATION FOR THE INCARNATION, MAKES HER
SOVEREIGN AND QUEEN OF ALL THE UNIVERSE.
CHAPTER X. THE BLESSED TRINITY
SENDS THE ARCHANGEL GABRIEL AS A MESSENGER TO ANNOUNCE TO
MOST HOLY MARY THAT SHE IS CHOSEN AS THE MOTHER OF GOD.
CHAPTER XI. MARY LISTENS TO THE MESSAGE OF THE HOLY ANGEL: THE
MYSTERY OF THE INCARNATION IS ENACTED BY THE CONCEPTION OF THE ETERNAL WORD IN
HER WOMB.
CHAPTER XII. OF THE FIRST ACTS OF THE MOST HOLY SOUL OF CHRIST OUR
LORD IN THE FIRST INSTANT OF HIS CONCEPTION AND OF THE CORRESPONDING ACTS OF
HIS MOST PURE MOTHER.
CHAPTER XIII. AN EXPLANATION OF THE STATE IN WHICH MOST HOLY MARY
FOUND HERSELF AFTER THE INCARNATION OF THE DIVINE WORD IN HER VIRGINAL WOMB.
CHAPTER XIV.
OF THE ATTENTION AND CARE, WHICH
THE MOST HOLY MARY BESTOWS UPON THE FRUIT OF HER WOMB AND SOME HAPPENINGS IN REGARD
TO IT.
CHAPTER XV. MOST HOLY MARY IS INFORMED OF THE WILL OF THE LORD,
THAT SHE VISIT HOLY ELISABETH; SHE ASKS SAINT JOSEPH FOR PERMISSION TO GO, REMAINING
SILENT ABOUT ALL THAT HAD HAPPENED TO HER.
CHAPTER XVI.
THE JOURNEY OF THE MOST HOLY MARY
ON HER VISIT TO SAINT ELISABETH AND HER ENTRANCE INTO THE HOUSE OF ZACHARIAS.
CHAPTER XVII. THE SALUTATION GIVEN TO SAINT ELISABETH
BY THE QUEEN OF HEAVEN. AND THE SANCTIFICATION OF JOHN.
CHAPTER XVIII. MOST HOLY MARY ARRANGES THE ORDER OF HER DAILY EXERCISES
IN THE HOUSE OF ZACHARIAS; SOME INCIDENTS IN HER INTERCOURSE WITH SAINT ELISABETH.
CHAPTER XIX. OF SOME CONVERSATIONS, WHICH MOST HOLY MARY HELD WITH
HER ANGELS IN THE HOUSE OF SAINT ELISABETH, AND OF OTHERS, WHICH SHE HELD WITH
HER COUSIN.
CHAPTER XX. SOME SPECIAL FAVORS WHICH MOST HOLY MARY CONFERRED UPON
SEVERAL PERSONS IN THE HOUSE OF ZACHARIAS.
CHAPTER XXI. SAINT ELISABETH ASKS THE QUEEN OF HEAVEN TO ASSIST AT
HER CONFINEMENT AND IS ENLIGHTENED CONCERNING THE BIRTH OF JOHN.
CHAPTER XXII. THE BIRTH OF THE PRECURSOR OF CHRIST AND WHAT THE LADY
MARY DID ON THIS OCCASION.
CHAPTER XXIII. THE GOOD
COUNCIL AND INSTRUCTION, WHICH MOST HOLY MARY GAVE TO SAINT ELISABETH AT HER
REQUEST; SAINT JOHN IS CIRCUMCISED AND RECEIVES HIS NAME; ZACHARIAS
PROPHESIES.
CHAPTER XXIV. MOST HOLY MARY LEAVES THE HOUSE OF ZACHARIAS AND RETURNS
TO HER HOME IN NAZARETH.
CHAPTER XXV.
THE JOURNEY OF MOST HOLY MARY
FROM THE HOUSE OF ZACHARIAS TO HER HOME IN NAZARETH.
CHAPTER XXVI. THE DEMONS HOLD A MEETING IN HELL IN ORDER TO TAKE
COUNSEL AGAINST MOST HOLY MARY.
CHAPTER XXVII. THE LORD PREPARES MOST HOLY MARY TO MEET LUCIFER IN
BATTLE AND THE DRAGON BEGINS TO PERSECUTE HER.
CHAPTER XXVIII. LUCIFER WITH ALI. HIS SEVEN LEGIONS PERSISTS IN TEMPTING MOST HOLY
MARY; SHE CONQUERS THE DRAGON AND CRUSHES HIS HEAD. |
Containing the most Exquisite Preparations of the Almighty
for the Incarnation of the Word In Mary most Holy; the Circumstances Accompanying
this Mystery; the Exalted State, In which the Blessed Mother was placed; her Visit
to Saint Elisabeth and the Sanctification of the Baptist: Her Rapture to Nazareth
and a Memorable Battle of the Virgin with Lucifer. CHAPTER I.
THE MOST HIGH BEGINS TO PREPARE IN MOST HOLY MARY THE
MYSTERY OF THE INCARNATION; THE EVENTS OF THE NINE DAYS PRECEDING THIS MYSTERY,
ESPECIALLY THE HAPPENINGS OF THE FIRST DAY.
1. In order that
most faultless life might be to all an example of the highest holiness,
the Most High had placed upon our Queen and Mistress the duties of a spouse of
saint Joseph which was a position requiring more intercourse with neighbors. The heavenly Mistress, finding
self in this new estate, was filled with such exalted thoughts and sentiments
in the fulfillment of
duties, and ordered all the activities of life with such wisdom, that She was an object
of admirable emulation to the angelic spirits and an unparalleled example for
men. Few knew and
still fewer had spoken with Her; but these happy ones were so filled with that
celestial influence of Mary, that with a wonderful joy and with unwonted
flights of spirit they sought to express and manifest the light, which
illumined their hearts and which they knew came from . The most prudent Queen
was not unaware of these operations of the Most High; but neither was it yet
time, nor would most profound humility
as yet consent to their becoming known to the world. She continually besought
the Lord to hide them from men, to make all the favors of his right hand
redound solely to his praise, and to permit
to be ignored and despised by all the mortals, in as far as his infinite
goodness would not be offended thereby.
2. These prayers were accepted by her divine Spouse
with great benignity and his providence arranged all things in such a manner,
that the very light, which incited men to proclaim her greatness, at the same
time caused them to be mute. Moved by divine power, they refrained from
expressing their thoughts, inwardly praising the Lord for the light, which they
felt within themselves. Filled with marvel they suspended their judgment, and
leaving behind the creatures, they sought their Creator. Many turned from sin
at the mere sight of ; others amended their lives; all
were affected at seeing and experienced
heavenly influences in their souls. But immediately they forgot the source of
these influences; for if they could have remained in her presence, or could
have retained the memory of her image, and if God had not prevented it by a
mystery, nothing would have been able to divert their attention from and all would
have sought without wavering.
3. In such fruitful occupations and in augmenting the
gifts and graces from which all this good proceeded, our Queen, the Spouse of
Joseph, busied Herself during the six months and seventeen days, which
intervened between her espousal and the Incarnation of the Word. I cannot
pretend to refer even briefly to her great heroic acts of all the virtues,
interior and exterior, to all her deeds of charity, humility, religion, and all
her works of mercy, the alms and benefactions; for this exceeds the power of
the pen. The best I can do is to sum up and say: that the Most High found in
most holy Mary the fulfillment of all his pleasure and of his wishes, as far as
is possible in the correspondence of a creature with its Creator. By her
sanctity and merits God felt Himself as it were obliged, and, (according to our
way of speaking), compelled, to hasten his steps and extend the arms of his
Omnipotence to bring about the greatest of wonders conceivable in the world
before or after: namely the Incarnation of the Onlybegotten of the Father in
the virginal womb of this Lady.
4. In order to proceed with a dignity befitting Himself, God prepared most holy Mary in a singular manner
during the nine days immediately preceding this mystery, and allowed the river
of his Divinity to rush impetuously forth (Psalm 45, 5) to inundate this City
of God with its floods. He communicated such great graces and gifts and favors,
that I am struck dumb by the perception of what has been made known to me concerning
this miracle, and my lowliness is filled with dread at even the mention of what
I understood. For the tongue, the pen, and all the faculties of a creature fall
far below any possibility of revealing such incomprehensible sacraments.
Therefore I wish it to be understood, that all I say here is only an
insignificant shadow of the smallest part of these wonders and ineffable
prodigies, which are not at all to be encompassed by our limited words, but
only by the power divine, which I do not possess.
5. On the first day of this most blessed novena the
heavenly Princess Mary, after a slight rest, according to the example of her
father David and according to the diurnal order and arrangement laid out for
Her by the Lord, left her couch at midnight (Psalm 118, 62), and, prostrate in
the presence of the Most High, commenced her accustomed prayer and holy
exercises. The angels, who attended upon Her, spoke to
Her and said: "Spouse of our King and Lord, arise, for his Majesty calls
Thee." She raised Herself with fervent affection
and answered:
"The Lord commands the dust to raise itself from
the dust." And turning toward the countenance of the Lord, who called Her,
She added: "Most high and powerful Master, what wishest Thou to do with
me?" At these words her most holy soul was raised in spirit to a new and
higher habitation, closer to the same Lord and more remote from all earthly and
passing things.
6. She felt at once, that She
was being prepared by those illuminations and purifications, which at other
times She had experienced in some of the most exalted visions of the Divinity.
I do not dwell on them, since I have described them in the first part (Part I,
620-629). The Divinity manifested Itself not by an
intuitive, but by an abstractive vision; however so clearly, that by it She
understood more of this incomprehensible Object, than what the blessed see and
enjoy by intuition. For this vision was more exalted and more profound than the
others of that kind; since this heavenly Lady made Herself
more capable day by day and, because She made such perfect use of graces, She
disposed Herself for ever greater ones. Moreover, the repeated enlightenments
and visions of the Divinity continually enabled Her to
respond more and more befittingly to its infinite operations.
7. In this vision our Princess Mary learned most high
secrets of the Divinity and of its perfections, and especially of God's
communications ad extra in the work of creation. She saw that it originated in
the goodness and liberality of God, that creatures were not necessary for
supplementing his Divine existence, nor for his
infinite glory, since without them He was glorious through the interminable
eternities before the creation of the world. Many sacraments and secrets were
manifested to our Queen, which neither can nor should be made known to all; for
She alone was the only One (Cant. 6, 8; 7, 6), the chosen One, selected by the
highest King and Lord of creation for these delights. But as her Highness in
this vision perceived this impulse and inclination of the Divinity to
communicate Itself ad extra with a force greater than that which makes all the
elements tend toward their center, and as She was drawn within the sphere of
this divine love, She besought the eternal Father with heart aflame, that He send
his Onlybegotten into the world and give salvation to men, since in this manner
He should satisfy, and, (speaking humanly), execute the promptings of his
Divinity and its perfections.
8. These petitions of his Spouse were very sweet to
the Lord, they were the scarlet lace, with which She
bound and secured his love. And in order to put his desires into execution He
sought first to prepare the tabernacle or temple, whither He was to descend
from the bosom of the eternal Father. He resolved to furnish his beloved and
chosen Mother with a clear knowledge of all his works
ad extra, just as his Omnipotence had made them. On the first day therefore,
and in this same vision, He manifested to Her all that He had made on the first
day of the creation of the world, as it is recorded in Genesis, and She
perceived all with greater clearness and comprehension, than if She had been an
eye-witness; for She knew them first as they are in God, and then as they are
in themselves.
9. She perceived and understood, how the Lord in the
beginning (Gen. 1; 1, 5), created heaven and earth; in how far and in what way
it was void, and how the darkness was over the face of the abyss; how the
spirit of the Lord hovered over the waters and how, at the divine command,
light was made, and what was its nature; how, after the darkness was divided,
it was called night and the light day, and how thus the first day was made. She
knew the size of the earth, its longitude, latitude and depth, its caverns,
hell, limbo and purgatory with their inhabitants; the countries, climes, the
meridians and divisions of the world, and all its inhabitants and occupants.
With the same clearness She knew the inferior orbs and
the empyrean heaven; how the angels were made on the first day; She was
informed of their nature, conditions, diversity, hierarchies, offices, grades
and virtues. The rebellion of the bad angels was revealed to Her,
their fall and the occasion and the cause of that fall, though the Lord always
concealed from Her that which concerned Herself. She understood the punishment
and the effects of sin in the demons, beholding them as they are in themselves;
and at the conclusion of the first day, the Lord showed to Her, how She too was
formed of this lowly earthly material and endowed with the same nature as all
those, who return to the dust; He did not however say, that She would again
return to it; yet He gave Her such a profound knowledge of the earthly
existence, that the great Queen humiliated Herself to the abyss of nothingness;
being without fault, She debased Herself more than all the children of Adam
with all their miseries.
10. This whole vision and all its effects the Most
High arranged in such a way as to open up in the heart of Mary the deep
trenches that were required for the foundations of the edifice, which He wished
to erect in Her: namely so high a one, that it would reach up to the
substantial and hypostatic union of the human and divine nature. And as the
dignity of Mother of God was without limits and to a certain extent infinite, it
was becoming that She should be grounded in a
proportionate humility, such as would be without limits though still within the
bounds of reason itself. Attaining the summit of virtue, this blessed One among
women humiliated Herself to such an extent, that the most holy Trinity was, as
it were, fully paid and satisfied, and (according to our mode of understanding)
constrained to raise Her to the highest position and dignity possible among
creatures and nearest to the Divinity itself. In this highest benevolence his
Majesty spoke and said to Her:
11. "My Spouse and Dove, great is my desire of
redeeming man from sin and my immense kindness is as it were strained in
waiting for the time, in which I shall descend in order to repair the world;
ask Me continually during these days and with great affection for the
fulfillment of this desire. Prostrate in my royal presence let not thy
petitions and clamors cease, asking Me that the
Onlybegotten of the Father descend in reality to unite Himself with the human
nature." Whereupon the heavenly Princess responded and said: "Lord
and God eternal, whose is all the power and wisdom, whose wish none can resist
(Esther 13, 9), who shall hinder thy Omnipotence? Who shall detain the
impetuous current of thy Divinity, so that thy pleasure in
conferring this benefit upon the whole human race remain unfulfilled? If
perhaps, O my Beloved, I am a hindrance to such an immeasurable benefit, let me
perish before I impede thy pleasure; this blessing cannot depend upon the
merits of any creature; therefore, my Lord and Master, do not wait, as we might
later on merit it so much the less. The sins of men increase and the offenses
against Thee are multiplied; how shall we merit the very blessing, of which we
become daily more unworthy? In Thee thyself, my Lord, exists the last cause and
motive of our salvation; thy infinite bounty, thy numberless mercies incite
Thee, the groans of thy Prophets and of the Fathers of thy people solicit Thee,
the saints sigh after Thee, the sinners look for Thee and all of them together
call out to Thee; and if I, insignificant wormlet, on account of my
ingratitude, am not unworthy of thy merciful condescension, I venture to
beseech Thee, from the bottom of my heart, to speed thy coming and to hasten
thy Redemption for thy greater glory."
12. When the Princess of heaven had finished this
prayer, She returned to her ordinary and more natural state; but anxious to
fulfill the mandate of the Lord, She continued during that whole day her
petitions for the Incarnation of the Word and with the deepest humility She
repeated the exercises of prostrating Herself to the ground and praying in the
form of a cross. For the Holy Ghost, who governed Her,
had taught Her this posture, by which She so highly pleased the most blessed
Trinity. God saw, in the body of the future Mother of the Word, as it were the
crucified person of Christ and therefore He received this morning sacrifice of
the most pure Virgin as an advance offering of that of his most holy Son. INSTRUCTION WHICH THE QUEEN OF HEAVEN
GAVE ME.
13. My daughter, the mortals are not capable of
understanding the ineffable operations of the arm of the Omnipotent in
preparing me for the Incarnation of the eternal Word, Especially during the
nine days, which preceded this exalted sacrament was my spirit elevated and
united with the immutable being of the Divinity. I was submerged in the ocean
of his infinite perfections, participating in all those eminent and divine
effect, which are beyond all presentiment of the human
hearts. The knowledge of creatures communicated to me penetrated into their
very essence, so that it was more profound and piercing than that of all the
angelic spirits, though their knowledge of creation, on account of the beatific
vision, is altogether admirable. Moreover the images of them all were impressed
upon my mind to be used by me according as I desired.
14. What I wish of thee today is to take notice how I
used this knowledge and to imitate me according to thy power with the help of
the infused light, which thou hast received for this purpose. Profit by the
knowledge of creatures by making of them a ladder to ascend unto God thy
Creator; so that thou mayest seek in all of them their first beginning and
their last end. Let them serve thee as a mirror from which the Godhead is
reflected, reminding thee of his Omnipotence and inciting thee to the love,
which He seeks in thee. Be thou filled with wonder and praise at the greatness
and magnificence of the Creator and in his presence humiliate thyself to the dust.
Shun no difficulty or suffering in order to become meek and humble of heart.
Take notice, my dearest, that this virtue of humility was the firm foundation
of all the wonders, which the Most High wrought in me; and in order that thou
mayest esteem this virtue so much the more, remember that of all others, it is
at the same time the most precious, the most delicate and perishable; for if
thou lose it in any respect, and if thou be not humble in all things without
exception, thou wilt not be humble in anything. Remember thy earthly and corruptible
nature, and be not ignorant of the fact, that the Most High has providentially
formed man in such a way that his own existence and formation intimate and
rehearse the important lesson of humility never allowing him to be without this
salutary teaching. On this account He has not formed him of the most excellent
material, and has concealed the noblest part of his being in the sanctuary of
his interior (Exod, 30, 24), teaching him to weigh as in a balance on the one side,
the infinite and eternal existence of the Lord, and on the other, his own
ignoble material existence. Thus he is to give unto God what belongs to Him,
and to himself what belongs to his own self (Matth. 22, 21).
15. Most zealously I attended to this adjustment,
becoming an example and guide therein to all the mortals. I wish that thou also
do it in imitation of me, and that thou zealously study to acquire the
humility, which pleases the Most High and myself, who
desire thy true advancement. I wish that thy perfection be built up in the deep
trenches of thy own self-knowledge; in order that the deeper its foundations
are laid, to so much the higher and more exalted perfection may rise the edifice of thy virtue. Thus thy will shall find a
most intimate conformity with that of the Lord, who looks down from the
eminence of his throne upon the humble of the earth.
THE LORD ON THE SECOND DAY CONTINUES HIS FAVORS IN
PREPARATION FOR THE INCARNATION OF THE WORD IN THE MOST HOLY MARY.
16. In the first part of this history (Part I, 219), I
mentioned, that the most pure body of Mary was conceived and perfectly formed
within the space of seven days. The Most High wished to work this miracle, in
order that this most holy soul might not have to wait so long as the souls of
ordinary mortals. He wished it to be created and infused before the usual time,
(as it also really happened), in order that this beginning of the reparation of
the world might have some similarity to the beginning of its creation. This correspondence
again took place at the coming of the Redeemer so that, having formed the new
Adam, Christ, God might rest as one who had strained all the powers of his
Omnipotence in the greatest of his works; and that He might enjoy the most
delicious Sabbath of all his delights. And as these wonders necessitated the
intervention of the Mother of the divine Word, who was to give Him a visible
form, and as She was to unite the two extremes, man
and God, it was proper that She should bear relation to both. Her dignity was
inferior only to that of God and superior to all that was not God; to this
dignity belonged also a proportionate knowledge and understanding, as well of
the highest essence of the Divinity, as also of all the inferior creatures.
17. Following up his intention, the supreme Lord continued
the favors, by which He wished to dispose most holy Mary for the Incarnation
during nine days, as I have begun to explain. On the second day, at the same
hour of midnight, the Virgin Mary was visited in the same way as described in
the last chapter. The divine power raised Her up by
the same elevations and illuminings to prepare Her for the visions of the
Divinity. He manifested Himself again in an abstractive manner as on the first
day, and She was shown the works performed on the
second day of the creation. She learnt how and when God divided the waters
(Gen. 1, 6), some above and others below, establishing the firmament, and above
it the crystal, known also as the watery heaven. Her insight penetrated into the
greatness, order, conditions, movements and all the other qualities and
conditions of the heavens.
18. And in the most prudent Virgin this knowledge did
not lay idle, nor remain sterile; for immediately the most
clear light of the Divinity overflowed in Her, and inflamed and
emblazoned Her with admiration, praise and love of the goodness and power of
God. Being transformed as it were with a godlike excellence, She
produced heroic acts of all the virtues, entirely pleasing to his divine
Majesty. And as in the preceding first day God had made Her a participant of
his wisdom, so on this second day, He made Her in corresponding measure a
participant in the divine Omnipotence, and gave Her power over the influences
of the heavens, of the planets and elements, commanding them all to obey Her.
Thus was this great Queen raised to Sovereignty over the sea, the earth, the
elements and the celestial orbs, with all the creatures, which are contained therein.
19. This sovereignty and supreme power belonged to the
dignity of most holy Mary on account of the reason mentioned above; and besides
for two other special ones; the first: because this Lady was the privileged
Queen, exempt from the common law of sin and its consequences: therefore She
was not to be put in the same general class with the insensate sons of Adam,
against whom the Omnipotent armed the creatures (Wisd. 5, 18) for vengeance of
his injuries and for the punishment of their frenzy. For if
they had not in their disobedience turned against their Creator, neither would
the elements nor their dependencies have been disobedient toward them, nor
would they have molested them, nor turned against them the rigor and inclemency
of their activity. And if this rebellion of the creatures is a
punishment of sin, it could not justly extend itself to the most holy Mary, who
was immaculate and without fault. Nor was it just, that She
should be less privileged than the angels, who were not subject to these
consequences of sin, or deprived of the dominion over the elementary powers.
Although most holy Mary was of corporeal and terrestrial substance, yet She raised Herself above all corporeal and spiritual
creatures, and made Herself Queen and Mistress of all creation. In this,
therefore, She deserved so much the higher credit, as
it was the rarer and the more precious. More must be conceded to the Queen than
to her vassals, more to the Mistress than to the servants.
20. The second reason is, because her most holy Son
was Himself to obey this heavenly Queen and his Mother. Since He was the
Creator of the elements and of all things, it follows naturally that they
should obey Her, to whom the Creator subjected
Himself, and that they should be commanded by Her. Was not the person of Christ
himself, in so far as his human nature was concerned, to be governed by his
Mother according to the constitution and law of nature? This privilege of
sovereignty tended also greatly to enhance the virtues and merits of most holy
Mary, for thereby that which in ourselves is usually done under constraint and
against our will, was performed by Her freely and
meritoriously. This most prudent Queen did not use her sovereignty over the
elements and the creatures indiscriminately and for her own alleviation and
comfort; but She commanded the creatures not to
suspend their activities and influences in as far as they would naturally be
painful and inconvenient to Her. For in these things She
was to be like her most holy Son and suffer conjointly with Him. Her love and
humility did not permit Her to withhold and suspend
the inclemencies of the creatures in her regard, since She knew how valuable
suffering is and how estimable in the eyes of the Lord.
21. Only on some occasions, when She knew that it was
not for her benefit but necessary for her Son and Creator, the sweet Mother
restrained the force of the elements and their influences, as we shall see
farther on during her journey to Egypt and on other occasions, where She most
prudently judged it proper, that the creatures recognize their Creator and
reverence Him, or protect and serve Him in some necessity (Infr.
543, 590, 633). What mortal will not marvel at the knowledge of such a new
miracle? To see a mere earthly creature, yet One clothed with the sovereignty
and dominion of the whole creation, esteem Herself in her own eyes as the most
unworthy and insignificant of the creatures, and, in these humble sentiments,
command the wrath of the winds and all the rigors of the natural elements to
turn against Her and under obedience fulfill her command! In obeying Her,
however, these elements. full of reverence and courtesy toward such a Mistress,
yielded to her wishes, not in vengeance of the wrongs of their Creator, as they
do in regard to the rest of the children of Adam, but in order to respect her
commands.
22. In the presence of this humility of our invincible
Queen, we mortals cannot deny our most arrogant vanity and presumption, or
rather our audacity, since, seeing that on account of our insane outrages we
merit the furious rebellion of the elements and of all the harmful forces of
the universe against us, we complain of their rigor, as if their molestations
were an injury. We deprecate the rigor of the cold, we complain of the
exhaustion of heat; all painful things we abhor, and we condemn with all energy
these ministers of divine justice and seek our own comforts and delights, as if
they were to last forever and as if it were not certain that we are only
drawing therefrom a heavier punishment of our faults.
23. But returning to the consideration of the knowledge
and power given to the Princess of heaven and the other gifts preparing Her
worthily for the position of Mother of God, we can understand their excellence,
for we see in them a certain infinity or boundlessness, participating of the
Divinity, and similar to that which was afterwards possessed by the most holy
soul of Christ. For She not only knew all creatures in God, but comprehended
them in such a way as to master them and at the same time reserve capacity for
knowing many others, if there had existed more to be known. I call this
knowledge an infinity, because it seems to partake of the qualities of infinite
knowledge and because, in one and the same action of her mind and without
successive advertence, She saw and perceived the number of the heavens, their
latitude and profundity, their order, motions, qualities, their matter and
form; the elements with all their changes and accidents: all of these She knew
at the same time. The only thing the most wise Virgin
did not know was the immediate end of this knowledge until the moment of her
consent and the fulfillment of the ineffable mercy of the Most High. She
continued during these days her most fervent prayers for the coming of the
Messias, according to the command of the Lord. And He had given Her to understand that He would not tarry, as the time
destined for his arrival was at hand. INSTRUCTION WHICH THE QUEEN OF
HEAVEN GAVE ME.
24. My daughter, from what thou art going to learn of
the favors and blessings conferred upon me in preparation for the dignity of
Mother of God, I wish thee to perceive the admirable order of his wisdom in the
creation of man. Take notice, therefore, that his Creator made him out of
nothing, not in order to be a slave, but in order to be the king and the master
of all creation (Gen. 1, 26), and in order that he make use of creatures in
sovereignty, command and mastery; yet at the same time man was to recognize
himself as the image of his Maker and the work of his hand, remaining more
devoted to God and more submissive to his will than the creatures to man; for
all this was demanded by justice and reason. And in order that man might not be
without information and knowledge of the Creator and of the means of perceiving
and executing his will, He added to his natural light a greater one, more
penetrating, more limpid, more certain, more free and extensive, namely the
light of divine faith, by which man might know the existence of God and of his
perfections, and conjointly with these, his works. Furnished with this
knowledge and dominion man was established in good standing, honored and
enriched, having no excuse for not devoting himself entirely to the fulfillment
of the divine will.
25. But the foolishness of man disturbs this order and
destroys this harmony, when, being created as the lord and king of creatures,
he enslaves himself, subjecting himself to them, and degrading his dignity in
using visible things not as a prudent master, but as an unworthy vassal. For he debases himself beneath the lowest of creatures, by losing sight
of the fact that he is their superior. All this perversity arises from
the use of creatures not for the service of the Creator through well ordered
faith, but for the indulgence of the passions and the delights of the senses.
Hence also arises man's great abhorrence of those
things which are not pleasing to the senses.
26. Thou, my dearest, look faithfully toward thy
Creator and Lord and in thy soul seek to copy the image of his divine
perfections: lose not the mastery and dominion over creatures, let none of them
infringe upon thy liberty; but seek to triumph over all of them, allowing
nothing to interpose itself between thee and thy Creator. Subject thyself
gladly, not to the pleasurable in creatures, since that will obscure thy
understanding and weaken thy will, but to the adverse and the painful resulting
from their activity. Suffer this with joyous willingness, for I have done the
same in imitation of my Son, although I had the power to neutralize their
molestations and had no sins to atone for.
WHAT FAVORS THE MOST HIGH CONFERRED ON MOST HOLY MARY
ON THE THIRD DAY OF THE NOVENA BEFORE THE
INCARNATION.
27. The right arm of the Most High, which threw open
the doors of the Divinity to most holy Mary, continued to enrich and adorn at
the expense of his infinite attributes this most pure spirit and virginal body
which He had chosen as his tabernacle, as his temple, and as the holy city of
his habitation. And the heavenly Lady, engulfed in this vastness of the
Divinity, winged her flight day by day farther away from earthly things, and
transformed Herself more and more into a heavenly
being, discovering ever new sacraments in the Most High. For as He is the
infinite Object of desire, although the appetite is satiated with that which is
received, always more remains to be desired and understood. Not all the
hierarchies of the angels, nor all men together, have
attained such preferment in blessings, mysteries and sacraments as this
Princess attained, especially as regards those due to Her as Mother of the
Creator.
28. On the third day of preparation at which I have
now arrived, having again been prepared as on the first day, the Divinity
manifested Itself anew in abstractive vision. Too slow
and inadequate are our powers for understanding the increase of the gifts and
graces, which the Most High then lavished on heavenly Mary; and at this
juncture I am at a loss for words to explain even the least portion of what I
perceived. I can only express myself by saying, that the divine wisdom and
power proceeded in a manner worthy of Her, who was to be the Mother of the
Word, so as to ensure, as far as is possible for a creature, that likeness and
proportion, which was due to the divine Persons. Whoever has even a faint
understanding of the distance which lies between the two extremes, the infinite
God and the limited human creature, can comprehend so much the better, what is
necessary to bring them together and establish a proportion.
29. More and more the Queen of heaven reflected his
infinite attributes and virtues; more and more brilliantly shone forth her
beauty under the touch of the pencil of the divine Wisdom and under the colors
and lights added to it from on high. On this day She
was informed of the works of creation as they happened on the third day. She
learned when and how the waters, which were beneath the firmament, flowed
together in one place (Gen. 1, 9), disclosing the dry land, which the Lord
called earth, while He called the waters the sea. She learned in what way the
earth brought forth the fresh herbs, and all plants and fructiferous trees with
their seeds, each one according to its kind. She was taught and She
comprehended the greatness of the sea, its depth and its divisions, its
correspondence with the streams and the fountains, that take their rise from it
and flow back into it; the different plants and herbs, the flowers, trees,
roots, fruits and seeds; She perceived how all and each one of them serve for
the use of man. All this our Queen understood and
penetrated with the keenest insight more clearly, distinctly and comprehensibly
than Adam or Solomon. In comparison with Her all those
skilled in medicine in the world would appear but ignorant even after the most
thorough studies and largest experience. The most holy Mary knew all that was
hidden from sight, as Wisdom says (Wis. 7, 21); and just as She learned it
without any fiction, She also communicates it without envy. Whatever Solomon
says there in the book of Wisdom was realized in Her
with incomparable and eminent perfection.
30. On some occasions our Queen made use of this
science in order to exercise her charity toward the poor and needy, as will be
related in the sequence of this history (No. 668, 867, 868, 1048; III.
159,423). She had it under perfect control, and it was as familiar to Her as the well-trained musician is with his instrument. The
same was true of all the rest of the sciences, whenever She
found it desirable or necessary to make use of them in the service of the Most
High. For She was Mistress of all of them more
perfectly than any of the mortals who ever did excel in any art or science. She
was versed in the virtuous qualities and activities of the stones, herbs and
plants, and in Her was true what Christ our Lord
promised to the Apostles and first Christians, that poisonous draughts would
not hurt them. This privilege belonged to the Queen as a sovereign, so that neither poison or any other thing could ever injure Her or
cause Her any harm except with her permission.
31. These privileges and favors the most prudent
Princess and Lady always kept concealed, and She made no use of them for
Herself, as I have said, desiring not to be deprived of a share in the
suffering, which had been chosen by her most holy Son. Before conceiving Him
and becoming his Mother, She was inspired with divine knowledge and science
concerning the passibility of the Word made flesh. And when She
became Mother She saw and experienced this truth in her Son and Lord himself
and therefore She gave a greater license, or rather a more strict command, to
creatures to afflict Her, since She saw the results of this activity in their
own Creator. Hence, as the Most High did not wish his only and chosen Spouse to
be continually molested by the creatures, even though She
herself desired it, He often restrained them and neutralized their operations,
so that the heavenly Princess, unhindered by them, might occasionally enjoy the
delights of the most high King.
32. There is another special favor, which the most
holy Mary received for the benefit of the mortals on the third day and in that
vision of the Divinity; for during this vision God manifested to Her in a
special way the desire of his divine love to come to the aid of men and to
raise them up from all their miseries. In accordance with the knowledge of his
infinite mercy and the object for which it was conceded, the Most High gave to
Mary a certain kind of participation of his own attributes, in order that
afterwards, as the Mother and Advocate of sinners, She
might intercede for them. This participation of the most holy Mary in the love
of God and in his inclination to help Her, was so
heavenly and powerful that if from that time on the strength of the Lord had not come to her aid, She would not have been
able to bear the impetuosity of her desire to assist and save mankind. Filled
with this love and charity, She would, if necessary or
feasible, have delivered Herself an infinite number of times to the flames, to
the sword and to the most exquisite torments of death for their salvation. All
the torments, sorrows, tribulations, pains, infirmities
She would have accepted and suffered; and She would have considered them a
great delight for the salvation of sinners. Whatever all men have suffered from
the beginning of the world till this hour, and whatever they will suffer till
the end, would have been a small matter for the love of this most merciful
Mother. Let therefore mortals and sinners understand what they owe to most holy
Mary.
33. From that day on, we can say, the heavenly Lady
continued to be the Mother of kindness and great mercy, and for two reasons:
first, because from that moment She sought with an especial and anxious desire
to communicate without envy the treasures of grace, which She had comprehended
and received; and therefore such an admirable sweetness grew up in her heart,
that She was ready to communicate it to all men and to shelter them in her
heart in order to make them participants of the divine love, which there was
enkindled. Secondly, because this love of most holy Mary for
the salvation of men was one of the principal dispositions required for
conceiving the eternal Word in her virginal womb. It was eminently
befitting that She should be all mercy, kindness, piety and clemency, who was
Herself to conceive and give birth to the Word made man, since He in his mercy,
clemency and love desired to humiliate Himself to the lowliness of our nature,
and wished to be born of Her in order to suffer for men. It is said: like
begets like: just as the water partakes of the qualities of the minerals
through which it flows; and although the birth of Christ originated in the
Divinity, yet it also partook of the conditions of the Mother as far as was
possible. She therefore would not have been suitable for concurrence with the
Holy Ghost in this conception, in which only the activity of the man was
wanting, if She had not been endowed with perfections
corresponding to those of the humanity of Christ.
34. The most holy Mary issued
from this vision with ever increasing fervor, and during all the rest of the
day She occupied Herself in the prayers and petitions commanded Her by the
Lord. The heart of her Spouse was wounded with love, so that (according to our
mode of thinking) He already longed for the day and the hour when He should
rest in the arms and recline at the breast of his Beloved. INSTRUCTION WHICH THE MOST HOLY
QUEEN GAVE ME.
35. My dearest daughter, great were the favors which
the hand of the Most High showered upon me in the visions of the Divinity,
vouchsafed me during the nine days before his conception in my womb. And
although He did not manifest Himself intuitively and altogether unveiled, yet
He did it in an exalted manner and with such effects as are reserved to his
wisdom. In the remembrance of what I perceived in this vision, I rose to the
true perception of the position which God held in comparison to men and men in
comparison to God; my heart was inflamed with love and was torn with sorrow;
for I realized the immensity of his love towards mortals, and their most
ungrateful oblivion of his incomprehensible goodness. Many times would I have
died at the thought of these extremes, if God himself had not comforted and
preserved me. This sacrifice of his servant was most
pleasing to his Majesty and He accepted it with greater complacency than all
the holocausts of the old Law; for He beheld my humility and delighted in it
very much. Whenever I performed these exercises, He showed great mercy to me
and to my people.
36. These sacraments, my dearest, I manifest to thee
in order to encourage thee to imitate me, as far as is possible with thy weak
forces aided by grace. Look upon the works, which thou hast learnt of, as a
pattern and example to be closely followed. Meditate much, and weigh over and
over again as well in the light of grace as in that of reason, how exactly
mortals ought to correspond to this immense kindness of God and to his
eagerness to assist them. Compare at the same time the heartless obduracy of
the children of Adam. I wish that thy heart be softened in affectionate thankfulness
toward the Lord and melted in sorrow at these unhappy proceedings of men. I
assure thee, my. daughter, that on the day of the general adjustment, the cause
of the greatest wrath of the just Judge shall be man's most ungrateful
forgetfulness of this truth; and the confusion of men on account of this wrath
shall be such, that on that day they would of their own accord cast themselves
into the abyss of pain, if there were no ministers of divine justice to visit
this retribution upon them.
37. In order to avoid such an abominable fault and in
order to forestall such a horrible chastisement, renew in thyself the memory of
the blessings, which thou hast received at the hands of his love and infinite
clemency; and remember that God has distinguished thee in preference to the
souls of many generations. Do not make the mistake of considering these great
favors and special gifts as conferred on thee for thyself alone: they were
conferred also for the sake of thy brethren: for the divine mercy is extended
to all men. Therefore the return, which thou owest to the Lord, must be made
first for thyself and then for thy brethren. And because thou art poor, offer
up the life and merits of my most holy Son, and with them, all that I have
suffered by the forces of my love. Thus
wilt thou make thyself pleasing to God and tender some recompense for the
ingratitude of mortals. In all these things exercise thyself repeatedly many
times, remembering in the meanwhile what I thought and
felt in similar acts and exercises.
THE MOST HIGH CONTINUES HIS FAVORS TO MOST HOLY MARY
ON THE FOURTH DAY.
38. Still the favors and most exalted mysteries of the
Most High toward our Queen and Lady in preparing Her
for approaching dignity of Motherhood continued. The fourth day of this
preparation had arrived and at the same hour She was
again raised to the abstractive vision of the Divinity. But this vision was
accompanied by new effects of exalted enlightenments in this most pure Soul.
The divine power and wisdom has no bounds or limits; to his operations only our
will, or the limitation of our created nature, offers resistance. But in the
will of most holy Mary the divine power found no hindrance, for all her works
were executed with plenitude of holiness and entirely according to the pleasure
of the Lord, drawing Him on, as He himself said, and wounding his heart with
love (Cant. 4, 9). Only in so far as most holy Mary was a mere creature was the
power of the divine arm limited; but within these limits it could act without
bound or restriction, and without measure, offering Her the waters of wisdom
from the purest and most crystalline founts of the Divinity.
39. The Most High manifested to Her in this vision, by
most special enlightenments, the new Law of grace which the Redeemer of the
world was to establish, the Sacraments contained in it, the end for which He
would leave them in his new Church of the Gospel, the gifts and blessings
prepared for men, and his desire, that all should be saved and that all should
reap the fruit of the Redemption. And so great was the wisdom, which the most
holy Mary drew from these visions, wherein She was taught by the highest
Teacher and the Corrector of the wise (Wis. 7, 15), that, if by any means man
or angel could describe it, more books would have to be written of this science
of our Lady than all those which have been composed in this world concerning
all the arts and sciences, and all the inventions of men. And no wonder her
science was greater than that of all other men: for into the heart and mind of
our Princess was emptied and exhausted the ocean of the Divinity, which the
sins and the evil disposition of the creatures had confined, repressed and
circumscribed. It was concealed within its own source until the proper time,
which was no other than the hour in which She was
chosen as Mother of the Onlybegotten of the Father.
40. Joined with the sweetness of this divine science,
our Queen felt a loving, yet piercing sorrow, which this very science continued
to renew. She perceived in the Most High the ineffable treasures of grace and
blessings, which He had prepared for mortals and She
saw the weight of the Divinity as it were inclined toward the desire of seeing
all men enjoy them eternally. At the same time She saw
and considered the wicked disposition of the world, and how blindly mortals
impeded the flow of these treasures and deprived themselves of participation of
the Divinity. From this resulted a new kind of martyrdom full of grief for the
perdition of men and of the desire of remedying such lamentable loss. This caused Her to offer up
the most exalted prayers, petitions, sacrifices, humiliations and heroic acts
of love of God and of men, in order that no one, if possible, should henceforth
damn himself, and that all should recognize their Creator, and Redeemer,
confess Him, adore and love Him. All this took place in this very vision; but
as these petitions were of the same kind as those already described, I do not
expatiate on them here.
41. In conjunction therewith the Lord showed Her also the works of creation performed on the fourth day
(Gen. I, 14-17). The heavenly Princess Mary learned how and when the luminaries
of heaven were formed in the firmament for dividing day and night and for
indicating the seasons, the days and the years; how for this purpose was
created the great light of heaven, the sun, presiding as the lord of the day,
and joined with it, the moon, the lesser light, which reigns over the darkness
of the night. In like manner were formed the stars of the eighth heaven, in order
that they might gladden the night with their brilliance and preside with their
various influences over both the day and the night. She understood what was the material substance of these luminous orbs, their form,
their size, their properties, their various movements and the uniformity as
well as the inequality of the planets. She knew the number of the stars,
and all their influences exerted upon the earth, both in regard to the living
and the lifeless creatures; the effects and changes, which they cause in them
by these influences.
42. This is not in conflict with what the Prophet
says, (Psalm 146, 4), that God knows the number of the stars and has called
them by their names; for David does not thereby deny to his Majesty the liberty
of conceding to a creature that as a privilege which He possesses by nature. It
is plain, that since this knowledge is communicable and since it would
contribute to Mary's excellence, it should not be denied to Her.
Has He not conferred upon Her greater favors, and has
He not made Her the Queen of the stars and of all other creatures? And this
knowledge was as it were only a sequel of her dominion and sovereignty over the
powers, influences and movements of all the celestial orbs, since they were
commanded to obey Her as their Queen and Lady.
43. In consequence of this command, which the Lord
gave to the celestial orbs and in accordance with the dominion which most holy
Mary obtained over them, She possessed such power, that if She commanded the
stars to leave their positions in heaven, they would obey Her instantly and
would hasten to the regions which She chose to designate. The same is true of
the sun and the planets: all would pause in their course and suspend their
operations to execute the command of Mary. I have already said above (No. 21)
that sometimes her Highness made use of this sovereignty; for, as we shall see
farther on, it happened a few times in Egypt, where the rays of the sun are
exceedingly strong, that She commanded the sun to moderate its heat and not to
molest or fatigue the infant God, its Master. And the sun obeyed Her therein, causing inconvenience and suffering to Her,
because She wished it, and yet respecting the tender years of the Sun of
justice, whom She held in her arms. The same happened also with other stars,
and on a few occasions She detained the sun in its
course, as I will mention later.
44. Many other hidden sacraments the Most High
manifested to our great Queen in this vision, and what I have said and will say
of all these mysteries, leaves me dissatisfied and with a heart as it were torn
asunder: for I see, that I can say little of that which I understand and, in
proportion, I understand still less of what really did happen to the heavenly
Lady. Many of the mysteries concerning Her are reserved
for the last day, when her most holy Son shall proclaim them, since now we are
not capable of receiving their revelation. The most holy Mary issued from this
vision still more inflamed and filled with the Divinity, entirely transformed
by the knowledge of God's attributes and perfections; and her advance in
virtues kept pace with her progress in divine favors. She multiplied her
requests, her fervent sighs, and her meritorious works, in order to hasten the
Incarnation of the Word and our salvation. INSTRUCTION WHICH THE HEAVENLY QUEEN
GAVE ME.
45. My dearest daughter, I wish that thou busy thyself
much in meditating and pondering upon that which thou hast understood of my
doings and sufferings at the time, when the Most High gave me such a deep insight
into his goodness, which drew Him as with an infinite force to enrich men, and
when He showed me the want of correspondence and the dark ingratitude of the
mortals. When I turned from the consideration of this most liberal
condescension of the Most High, to the perception and understanding of the
foolish hard-heartedness of the sinners, my soul was pierced with an arrow of
mortal anguish, which remained for life. And I wish to tell thee of another
mystery: many times the Most High in order to heal the affliction and
consternation of my heart in this sorrow, sought to console me by saying:
"Accept Thou, my Spouse, the gifts, which the blind and ignorant world in
its unworthiness despises and is incapable of receiving and
understanding." With these words the Most High was accustomed to set free
the currents of his divine bounty, which rejoiced my soul more than human
powers can comprehend, or tongue explain.
46. I desire, therefore, that thou, my friend, be now
my companion in the sorrow which I suffered and which is so little noticed by
the living. In order to imitate me therein and in the effects of this most just
grief, thou must deny thyself, forget thyself entirely, and crown thy heart
with the thorns of sorrow at the behavior of mortals. Weep thou in seeing them
laugh at their eternal damnation, for such weeping is the most legitimate
occupation of the true spouses of my most holy Son. Let them seek their delight
only in the tears, which they pour out on account of their sins and those of
the ignorant world. Thus prepare thy heart in order that the Lord may make thee
a participant of his treasures; not in order to become rich, but in order that
his Majesty may fulfill his most generous love toward thee and in order that
souls may find justification. Imitate me in all that I teach thee, since thou
knowest that this is my desire in favoring thee. HIS MAJESTY MANIFESTS NEW MYSTERIES AND SACRAMENTS TOGETHER
WITH THE WORKS OF THE FIFTH DAY OF THE CREATION TO MOST HOLY MARY, AND HER HIGHNESS
CONTINUES TO PRAY FOR THE INCARNATION OF THE WORD.
47. The fifth day of the novena, which the most
blessed Trinity celebrated in the temple of most holy Mary, in order that the
eternal Word might assume human shape in Her, had
arrived. Just as in the preceding days She was
elevated to an abstractive vision of the Divinity, and, as the veil fell more
and more from the secrets of the infinite wisdom, She discovered new mysteries
also during this day. For the preparations and enlightenments emitted ever
stronger rays of light and divine graces, which flashed into her most holy soul
and emptied the treasures of infinity into her faculties, assimilating and
transforming the heavenly Lady more and more to a likeness of her God in order
to make Her worthy of being his Mother.
48. In this vision, showing Himself to Her with
ineffable signs of affection, the Most High spoke to the heavenly Queen and
manifested to Her additional secrets, saying: "My Spouse and my Dove, in
the secret of my bosom thou hast perceived the immense bounty, to which my love
for the human race inclines Me, and the treasures, which are secretly prepared
for their happiness: so powerful is this love in Me, that I wish to give them
my Onlybegotten for their instruction and salvation. Thou hast also seen
something of the small returns, of their most listless ingratitude and
contempt, in which men hold my clemency and love. Yet, although I have shown
thee part of their malice, I wish, my friend, that thou shouldst once more know
in Me, how small is the number of those who are to
know and love me as my chosen ones; and how great and extended is the number of
the ungrateful and the reprobate. The innumerable sins and abominations of
these impure and defiled men, whom I have foreseen in my infinite knowledge,
retard my bounteous mercy and have locked up the treasurehouse of my Divinity,
making the world entirely unworthy of receiving my gifts."
49. The Princess Mary, through these words of the Most
High, was instructed in the great mysteries regarding the number of the
predestined and the reprobate; and also regarding the hindrances and
impediments by which sinful men delayed the coming of the eternal Word as man into
the world. Having present before Herself the vision both of the infinite bounty
and equity of the Creator and of the measureless iniquity and malice of men,
the most prudent Mistress, inflamed by the fire of divine love, spoke to his
Majesty and said:
50. "My Lord and infinite God of wisdom and
incomprehensible sanctity, what mystery is this, which Thou hast manifested to
me? Without measure are the misdeeds of men, so that only thy wisdom can
comprehend them. But can all these and many more,
perhaps, extinguish thy bounty and love, or vie with them? No, my Lord and
Master, it must not be so; the malice of men must not detain thy mercy. I am
the most useless of all the human race; yet on its
behalf I remind Thee of thy fidelity. Infallibly true it is, that heaven and
earth will come to naught, before thy word can fail (Is. 51, 6), and it is also
true, that Thou hast many times given thy word through the holy Prophets; and
Thou hast promised them by word of mouth, a Redeemer and our salvation. How
then, my God, can these promises fail of fulfillment without conflicting with
thy infinite wisdom; or how can man be deceived without conflicting with thy
goodness? In order to induce Thee to fulfill thy promise and to secure them
eternal felicity through thy incarnate Word, I have nothing to offer on the
part of mortals nor can any creature oblige Thee; and if this blessing could be
merited, then thy infinite and bounteous clemency would not thereby be
glorified. Only through thy own Self can this obligation be imposed upon Thee,
for only in God can a sufficient reason be found for his becoming man: in Thee
alone was the reason and the motive for our creation, and therefore in Thee
alone also the reason for our reparation after our fall. Do not seek, my God
and most high King, for merits, nor for a greater motive, than thy own mercy
and the exaltation of thy holy name."
51. "It is true, my Spouse," answered the
Most High, "that on account of my goodness I bound Myself to the promise
of vesting Myself in human nature and of dwelling among them, and that no one
could merit in my sight such a promise; but the ungrateful behavior of men, so
abominable in my sight and in my justice, does not merit the execution of this
promise. For though I seek only their eternal happiness as a return of my love,
I perceive and find only obduracy, by which they are certain to waste and
despise the treasures of my grace and blessing. They will yield thorns instead
of fruit, great insults for benefits, and base ingratitude for my unbounded and
generous mercy; and the end of all these evils will be for them the privation
of my vision in eternal torments. Take notice of these truths
recorded in the secrets of my wisdom, my Friend, and weigh these great
sacraments; for to thee my heart is laid open, so that thou canst see the
justice of my proceeding."
52. It is impossible to describe the hidden secrets,
which most holy Mary then saw in the Lord; for She
perceived in Him all the creatures of the past, present and the future, and the
position of each one in creation, the good and bad actions and the final ending
of each one. If She had not been strengthened, She
could not have preserved her life under the effects and feelings caused by the
knowledge and insight into these hidden sacraments and mysteries. But as his
Majesty, in these new miracles and blessings had such high ends in view, He was
not sparing but most liberal with the beloved One, whom He had chosen as his
Mother. And as our Queen derived this science from the bosom of God itself, She participated also in the fire of his eternal Charity,
which inflamed Her with the love of God and the neighbor. Therefore, continuing
her intercession, She said:
53. "Lord and eternal God, invisible and
immortal, I confess thy justice, I magnify thy works, I
adore thy infinite Essence and hold in reverence thy judgments. My heart melts
within me with tenderest affection, when I perceive thy unlimited bounty toward
men and their dark ingratitude and grossness toward Thee. For all of them, O my
God, Thou seekest eternal life; but there are few who are thankful for this
inestimable benefit, and many who will perish by their malice. If on this
account, O my eternal Good, Thou relinquishest thy undertaking, we mortals are
lost; but while Thou, in thy divine fore-knowledge, perceivest the sins and the
malice of men who offend Thee so much, Thou also foreseest thy Onlybegotten
made man and his works of infinite price and value in thy sight; and these will
counterbalance and exceed the malice of sin beyond all comparison. Through this
Godman let thy equity be conquered and on his account give us Him now! And, in order to urge my petitions upon Thee once more in the
name of the human race, I unite myself with the spirit of this Word, already
made man in thy mind, and pray for his coming in fact and for the eternal life
of men through his hands."
54. At this prayer of most pure Mary, the eternal
Father (in our way of speaking) represented to Himself his Onlybegotten as
borne in the virginal womb of this great Queen; and He was moved by her humble
and loving petitions. His apparent hesitation was merely a device of his tender
love in order to enjoy so much the longer the voice of his Beloved, causing her
sweet lips to distil most sweet honey ( Cant. 4, 11) and her emissions to be
like those of paradise (Cant. 4, 13). And to draw out still more this loving
contention, the Lord answered Her: "My sweetest
Spouse and chosen Dove, great is that which thou askest of Me and little is
that which obliges Me on the part of men; how then shall such a singular
blessing be conferred on those unworthy ones? Leave Me, my friend, to treat
them according to their evil deserts." Our powerful and kind Advocate
responded: "No, my Master, I will not desist from my importunity; if much
I ask, I ask it of Thee, who are rich in mercies, powerful in action, true in
thy words. My father David said of Thee and of the eternal Word: "The Lord hath sworn, and He will not
repent: Thou art a priest forever according to the order of Melchisedech"
(Ps. 109, 4). Let then that Priest come, who is at the same time to be the
sacrifice for our rescue; let Him come, since Thou canst not repent of thy
promise; for Thou dost not promise in ignorance. Let me be clothed, O my sweet
love, with the strength of this Man God, which will not allow me to put a stop
to my importunity, until Thou give me thy blessing as to my father Jacob"
(Gen. 32,26).
55. In this contest (just as it once happened to
Jacob) our Lady and Queen was asked, what was her name; and She
said: "I am a daughter of Adam, formed by thy hands from the insignificant
dust." And the Most High answered: "Henceforth Thou shalt be called:
Chosen for the Mother of the Onlybegotten." But the latter part of this
name was heard only by the courtiers of heaven, while to Her
it was as yet hidden until the proper time. She therefore heard only the word
"Chosen." Having thus protracted this amorous contention according to
the disposition of his divine wisdom and as far as served to inflame the heart
of this elected One, the whole blessed Trinity gave to Mary, our most pure
Queen, the explicit promise, that They would now send into the world the
eternal Word made man. Filled with incomparable joy and exultation by this
fiat, She asked and received the benediction of the
Most High. Thus this strong Woman issued forth from the contest with God more
victorious than Jacob; for She came out rich, strong and laden with spoils, and
the One that was wounded and weakened (to speak in our way) was God himself;
for He was drawn by the love of this Lady to clothe Himself in that sacred
bridal chamber of her womb with the weakness of our passible nature. He
disguised and enveloped the strength of his Divinity, so as to conquer in
allowing Himself to be conquered, and in order to give us life by his death.
Let the mortals see and acknowledge, how most holy Mary, next to her most
blessed Son, is the cause of their salvation.
56. During this vision were also revealed to this
great Queen the works of the fifth day of the creation in the manner in which
they happened; She saw how, by the force of the divine command, were engendered
and produced in the waters beneath the firmament, the imperfect reptiles, which
creep upon the earth, the winged animals that course through the air, and the
finny tribes that glide through the watery regions. Of all these creatures She
knew the beginnings, the substance, the form and figure according to their
kinds; She knew all the species of the animals that inhabit the fields and
woods, their conditions, peculiarities, their uses and connections; She knew
the birds of heaven (for so we call the atmosphere), with the varied forms of
each kind, their ornaments, feathers, their lightness; the innumerable fishes
of the seas and the rivers, the differences between the whales, their forms,
composition and qualities, their caverns and the foods furnished them by the
sea, the ends which they serve, the use to which they can be put in the world.
And his Majesty especially commanded all these hosts of creatures to recognize
and obey most holy Mary, giving Her the power to
command all of them, as it happened on many occasions to be mentioned later on
(No. 185, 431, 636). Therewith She issued from the
trance of this day and She occupied Herself during the rest of it in the
exercises and petitions, which the Most High had pointed out to Her. INSTRUCTION WHICH THE HEAVENLY
LADY GAVE ME.
57. My daughter, the more complete knowledge of the
wonderful operations of the arm of the Almighty in raising me during the
abstractive visions of the Divinity to the dignity of Mother, is reserved for
the predestined when they shall come to know them in the heavenly Jerusalem.
There they shall understand and see them in the Lord Himself and with that
special delight and astonishment, which the angels experienced, when the Most
High revealed these things to them for his exaltation and praise. And since his
Majesty has shown Himself so lovingly generous toward thee, giving thee in
preference to all the generations of men, such great knowledge and light
concerning these so hidden sacraments, I desire, my friend, that thou signalize
thyself above all creatures in praising and magnifying his holy name for the
works of his powerful arm in my regard.
58. At the same time thou must strive, with all thy
power, to imitate me in the works, which I performed by the aid of these great
and wonderful blessings. Pray and sigh for the eternal salvation of thy
brethren, and that the name of my Son may be extolled by all and known to the
whole world. Thou must establish the habit of this kind of prayer, by a
constant resolve, founded upon firm faith and unshaken confidence, and by never
losing sight of thy misery in profound humility and self-abasement. Thus
prepared, thou must battle with the divine love for the good of thy people,
firmly convinced, that the most glorious triumphs of divine love may especially
be looked for in its dealings with the humble, who love God in uprightness.
Raise thyself above thyself and give Him thanks for the special blessings
conferred upon thee and for those conferred upon the human race. Transformed by
this divine love, thou wilt merit other gifts, both for thyself and for thy
brethren; and whenever thou findest thyself in his divine presence, do thou ask
for his benediction.
THE MOST HIGH MANIFESTS TO MARY, OUR MISTRESS,
ADDITIONAL MYSTERIES AND SHOWS HER THE WORKS 0F THE SIXTH DAY 0F CREATION.
59. While the Most High continued the proximate
preparation of our heavenly Princess for the reception of the eternal Word in
her virginal womb, She, on her part, persevered
without intermission in her fervent sighs and prayers to hasten his coming into
the world. When the night of the sixth of these days, which I have begun to
describe, had arrived, and when She had previously been elevated by still more
profound illuminations, She was again called and invited in spirit to the
abstractive vision of the Divinity. Although this happened in the same manner
as at other times, yet it was accompanied by more heavenly effects and by a
more profound insight into the attributes of the Most High. She remained nine
hours in this trance and issued from it at the third hour. Yet, although the
high vision of the essence of God ceased at that hour, the most holy Mary
continued to enjoy another kind of vision and prayer. This was indeed inferior
to the first, but in itself was most exalted and more excellent than that
experienced by any of the saints or the just. The gifts and favors so far
described partook more and more of the divine during the last days preceding
the Incarnation, without at the same time being a hindrance to the active occupations
of her married state, for here Martha had no right to complain, that Mary
forsook her in her ministrations (Luc. 10, 40).
60. Having seen God in this vision She
was immediately shown the works on the sixth day of the creation of the world.
She witnessed, as if She Herself had been present, how at the command of the
Lord the earth brought forth the living beings according to their kinds, as
Moses says (Gen. 1, 24). Holy Scripture here refers to the terrestrial animals,
which being more perfect than the fishes and birds in life and activity, are called by a name signifying the more important
part of their nature. She saw and understood all the kinds and species of
animals, which were created on this sixth day, and by what name they were
called: some, beasts of burden, because they serve and assist man, others, wild
beasts, as being more fierce and untamed; others, reptiles, because they do not
raise themselves or very little from the earth. She knew and comprehended the
qualities of all of them: their fury, their strength, the useful purposes which
they serve, and all their distinctions and singularities. Over all these She was invested with dominion and they were commanded to
obey Her. She could without opposition on their part have trodden upon asps and
basilisks, for all would have meekly borne her heel. Many times did some of
these animals show their subjection to her commands, as when, at the birth of
her most Holy Son, the ox and the ass prostrated themselves and by their
breaths warmed the infant God at the command of his blessed Mother.
61. In this plenitude of knowledge and science our
heavenly Queen understood perfectly the secret ways of God in making all
creation serve for the benefit of man, and how much man owes to his Creator on
this account. And it was most proper that She should
possess this knowledge and understanding, so that with it She might be able to
give fitting thanks for these blessings. Neither men nor angels have done so,
failing to correspond and falling short of their duty in this regard. All these
voids were filled by the Queen of all, and She
satisfied for the debt of gratitude, which we could not or would not pay.
Through Her, divine equity was duly satisfied,
considering Her as a medium between itself and the creatures. By her innocence
and gratitude She became more pleasing to his Majesty
than all the rest of the creatures. The mysterious advent of God into the world
was thus being prepared: for the last hindrance was removed by the
sanctification of Her, who was to be his Mother.
62. After seeing the creation of all the irrational
creatures, She became aware, how the most blessed Trinity, in order to complete
and perfect the world, said: “Let us make man to our image and likeness"
(Gen. 1, 26), and how by virtue of this divine decree the first man was formed
of the earth as the first parent of all the rest. She had a profound insight
into the harmonious composition of the human body and soul and of their
faculties, of the creation and infusion of the soul into the body and of its
intimate union with the body. Of the structure of the human body and all its
parts, She obtained a deep knowledge: She was informed of the number of the
bones, veins, arteries, nerves and ligatures; of the concourse of humors to
compose the befitting temperaments, the faculties of nutrition, growth and
locomotion; She learned in what manner the disturbances or changes in this
harmony caused the sicknesses, and how these can be cured. All this the most
prudent Virgin understood and comprehended without the least error, better than
all the wise men of the world and better than even the angels.
63. The Lord manifested to Her
also the happy state of original justice, in which He placed the first parents
Adam and Eve; She understood their condition, beauty and perfection of
innocence and grace, and for how short a time they persevered in it. She
perceived how they were tempted and overcome by the astuteness of the serpent
(Gen. 2, 51), and what were the consequences of their sin; and how great were the
fury and hate of the demon against the human race. At the vision of all these
things our Queen made great and heroic acts of virtue, highly pleasing to God.
She understood, that She was a daughter of these first
parents and that She descended from a nature so thankless to its Creator. In
the remembrance of this She humiliated Herself in his
divine presence, thereby wounding the heart of God and obliging Him to raise
Her above all that is created. She took it upon Herself
to weep for the first sin and for all the rest, that followed from it, as if
She Herself had been guilty of them all. Hence, even at that time, that first
sin might have been called a fortunate fault, which caused tears so precious in
the eyes of the Lord, and which earned us such sureties and pledges of our
Redemption.
64. Rendering worthy thanks to the Creator for the
magnificent work of the creation of man, She reflected
deeply on his disobedience, the seduction and deception of Eve, and She
inwardly resolved to yield that perpetual obedience, which these first parents
had refused to their Creator. So acceptable in his eyes was this subjection,
that his Majesty in the presence of the heavenly courtiers decreed the
immediate fulfillment and execution of that, which was prefigured in the history
of the king Assuerus, by whom the queen Vashti was repudiated and deprived of
royal dignity on account of disobedience, while the humble and gracious Esther
was raised to her place (Esther 7, 2).
65. There was an admirable similarity between that event
and these mysteries; for the exalted and true King, in order to show the
greatness of his powers and the treasures of his Divinity, had prepared the
great banquet of his creation, and having spread the liberal repast for all the
creatures, invited the guests, that is the human race, by the creation of its
first parents. Vashti, our mother Eve, disobeyed, failing to submit herself to
the divine command, and now amid the wonderful acclamation and jubilee of the
angels, the true Assuerus ordered the most humble Esther to be on that day
elevated to Sovereignty over all creation, this Esther being none other than
the most holy Mary, full of grace and beauty, chosen among all the daughters of
men as their Restoratrix and the Mother of his Christ.
66. In the plenitude of this mystery the Most High
infused into the heart of our Queen a new abhorrence of the demon, such as
filled Esther toward Aman (Esther 7, 10); and thus it happened, that She thrust
him from his position of superiority and command over the world. She crushed
the head of his pride, hanging him on the gallows of the Cross, where he had
hoped to destroy and conquer the Godman, but was himself chastised and overcome
by it. Toward all this the most holy Mary was instrumental, as we shall relate
in its place (Vol. III, 653). Just as the envy of the dragon against the Woman,
that is this heavenly Lady, commenced in heaven, when he saw Her clothed with
the sun (Apoc. 12, 4, Part I, 95) ; so this strife
continued until he was deprived of his tyrannous dominion. Just as the most
faithful Mardocheus was given the position of the proud Aman (Esther 6, 10); so
also was honored the most chaste and faithful Joseph, who continually urged Her to pray for the liberty of her people. This was the
constant subject of conversation between Joseph and his most pure Spouse; for
this very purpose was he raised to the summit of sanctity, and to the exalted
dignity of holding the sealing ring of the highest King (Esther 8, 2), whereby
he received authority to command the Godman himself, as is related in the
Gospel. Having experienced all these mysteries, our Queen issued from her
vision. INSTRUCTION, WHICH THE HEAVENLY
QUEEN GAVE ME.
67. Wonderful, my daughter,
was the gift of humility, which the Most High conferred upon me in the event
described by thee. And since his Majesty does not reject the prayers of those,
that dispose themselves to receive it, I desire that thou imitate me and be my
companion in the exercise of this virtue. I had no part in the sin of Adam, for
I was exempted from his disobedience; but because I partook of his nature and
by it was his daughter, I humiliated myself in my estimation to nothingness. In
the light of this example then, how far must those humiliate themselves, who
not only have had a part in the first sin, but also have committed other sins
without number? The aim and motive of this humiliation moreover, should not be
to remove the punishments of those sins, but to make restoration and recompense
for the diminution and loss of honor, which was thereby occasioned to the
Creator and Lord.
68. If a brother of thine should grievously offend thy
natural father, thou wouldst not be a loving and loyal daughter of thy father,
nor a true sister to thy brother, if thou wouldst not grieve for the offense
and weep not over his ruin as over thy own; for to the father is due reverence
and to thy brother thou owest love as to thyself. Consider then, dearest, and
examine in the proper light, how much difference there is between thy Father
who is in heaven and thy natural father, and how all of you are his children,
bound together by the strictest obligation of brethren and of servants of one
true Master. Just as thou wouldst shed tears of humiliation and confusion at
some ignominious fault of thy natural brother; so I wish that thou do it for
the sins, which the mortals commit against God, sorrowing for them in confusion
as if thou wert responsible for them thyself. That is what I did at the thought
of the disobedience of Adam and Eve and of all the evils, which ensued
therefrom to the human race. And the Most High was pleased with my charitable
interest; for most agreeable in his sight are the tears shed for the sins,
which are forgotten by those, that have committed them.
69. At the same time see thou bear ever in mind, that,
no matter how great and rare are the favors received from the Most High, thou
do not despise the danger of sin nor contemn the solicitous and humble
performance of the ordinary duties of precept and charity. For these do not
oblige thee to leave the presence of God: faith teaches thee, and inspiration
should govern thee, to bear Him with thee in all occupations and places,
quitting thyself and thy inclinations, but fulfilling in all things the will of
thy Lord and Spouse. Do not allow thyself to be led in these sentiments by the
trend of thy own inclinations, nor by that which seems to agree with thy own
interior liking and taste; for many times the greatest danger is hidden beneath
this cloak. In such doubts and hesitations let holy obedience be thy umpire and
master; through it thou canst decide securely, and thou wilt need no other
criterion for thy actions. Great victories and advances in merit are connected
with the true submission of self and subjection of our own judgments to those of
others. Thou shouldst never wish to retain for thyself the power to will or not
to will: then thou shalt sing of victories and overcome thy enemies.
THE MOST HIGH CELEBRATES A NEW ESPOUSAL WITH THE PRINCESS
OF HEAVEN IN ORDER TO INAUGURATE THE NUPTIALS OF THE INCARNATION. HE ADORNS HER
FOR IT.
70. Great are the works of the Most High, for all of
them were and are executed with the plenitude of knowledge and goodness,
ordained in equity and number (Wis. 11, 21). None of them is faulty, useless or
ineffectual, superfluous or vain; all are exquisite and magnificent, finished
and executed according to the full measure of his holy will. Such He desired
them to be, in order that He might be known and magnified in them. But in
comparison to the mystery of the Incarnation, all the works of God ad extra,
although they are in themselves great, stupendous and marvelous, more to be
admired than comprehended, are only a small spark,
issuing from the unfathomable abyss of the Divinity. This great sacrament of
vesting Himself in a passible and mortal nature is pre-eminently the great work
of his infinite power and wisdom and the one which immeasurably excels all the
other works and wonders of his powerful arm. For in this mystery, not merely a
spark of the Divinity, but that whole vast volcano of the infinite Godhead,
broke forth and communicated itself to men, uniting
Itself by an indissoluble and eternal union to our terrestrial human nature.
71. If this wonderful sacrament of the King is to be
measured only by his own vastness, it follows that the Woman, in whose womb He
was to become man, deserved to be so perfectly adorned with the plenitude of
his treasures, that no gift or grace within the range of possibility be
omitted, and all these gifts be so consummate, that nothing is wanting to them.
As all this was reasonable and altogether befitting the greatness of the
Omnipotent, He certainly fulfilled it in the most holy Mary, much better than
king Assuerus did with the gracious Esther (Esther 2, 9), when he raised her to
his magnificent throne. The Most High visited our Queen Mary with such great
favors, privileges and gifts, that the like was never even conceived in the
mind of creatures, and, when She issued forth in the
presence of the courtiers of this great King of the eternal ages (I Tim. I,
17), they recognized and exalted in Her the power of God, at the same time
understanding, that He, who chose to select a woman for his Mother, knew also
how to make her worthy of assuming that position.
72. The seventh day of this mysterious preparation for
the approaching sacrament arrived, and in the same hour as already mentioned,
the heavenly Lady was called and elevated in spirit, but with this difference,
that She was bodily raised by her holy angels to the empyrean heaven, while in
her stead one of them remained to represent Her in corporeal appearance. Placed
into this highest heaven, She saw the Divinity by
abstract vision as in other days; but always with new and more penetrating
light, piercing to new and more profound mysteries, which God according to his
free will can conceal or reveal. Presently She heard a voice proceeding from
the royal throne, which said: "Our Spouse and chosen Dove, our gracious
Friend, who hast been found pleasing in our eyes and hast been chosen among
thousands: We wish to accept thee anew as our Bride, and therefore We wish to
adorn and beautify thee in a manner worthy of our design."
73. On hearing these words the most Humble among the
humble abased and annihilated Herself in the presence
of the Most High more than can be comprehended by human power. Entirely
submissive to the divine pleasure and with entrancing modesty, She responded: "At thy feet, O Lord, lies the dust and
abject worm, ready is thy poor slave for the fulfillment of all thy pleasure in
her. Make use, O eternal Good, of this thy insignificant instrument according
to thy desire, and dispose of it with thy right hand." Presently the Most
High commanded two seraphim, of those nearest to his throne and highest in
dignity to attend on this heavenly Virgin. Accompanied by others, they
presented themselves in visible form before the throne, and there surrounded
the most holy Mary, who was more inflamed with divine love than they.
74. It was a spectacle worthy of new wonder and
jubilee for all the angelic spirits to see in this heavenly place, never
touched by other feet, a humble Maiden consecrated as their Queen and raised
to the closest proximity to God of all the created beings; to see that Woman,
whom the world ignored and held in oblivious contempt, so highly esteemed and
appreciated (Prov. 31, 10) ; to see our human nature in its first fruits
receiving the pledge of superiority over the celestial choirs and already
assuming its place among them. O what a holy and just envy must such a strange
wonder have caused in the ancient courtiers of that heavenly Jerusalem! What
thoughts rose up within them in praise of its Author! What sentiments of
humility did it awaken in them, subjecting all their high understandings to the
decrees of the divine Will! They saw that He was holy and just, who exalted the
humble, who favored human lowliness and raised it above the angelic choirs.
75. While the inhabitants of heaven were lost in their
praiseworthy admiration, the most blessed Trinity, (according to our imperfect
mode of understanding and speaking), conferred within Itself, how pleasing in
its sight was the Princess Mary, how perfectly and completely She had
corresponded with the blessings and gifts confided to Her, how adequately She
had augmented the glory of the Lord; and how free She was of any fault, defect
or hindrance, that might compromise the dignity of her predestined Motherhood
of the Word. Accordingly the three Persons of the Trinity resolved to raise
this Creature to the highest position of grace and friendship of God, such as
no creature had ever or would ever attain; and then and there They gave to Her more than to all the rest of creatures
together. The most blessed Trinity was pleased and rejoiced in seeing that the
supreme holiness of Mary was such as had been conceived and determined for Her in the divine intellect.
76. In correspondence with this holiness, and as a
completion of it, and as a testimony of the benevolence with which the Lord
wished to communicate to Her ever new influences of his Divinity, He ordained
and commanded, that most holy Mary be visibly clothed and adorned with
mysterious vestments and jewels, which should symbolize the interior graces and
privileges of a Queen and of a heavenly Spouse. Although such bridal adornment
had already been conferred upon Her before that time,
when She was presented in the temple (Part I, 436); yet now this was done under
new and wonderful conditions; for it was to serve as the immediate preparation
for the miracle of the Incarnation.
77. Presently therefore, upon the command of the Lord
the two seraphim clothed most holy Mary with a tunic or ample robe, which, as a
symbol of her purity and grace, was so exquisitely white and resplendent, that
if one single ray of the light so profusely emitted by it would flash into the
world, it would by itself give more refulgence than all the stars combined,
even if they were all suns; and in comparison with it, all the light, which is
known to us, would appear as darkness. While the seraphim vested Her, the Most High gave Her a profound understanding of the
obligation entailed thereby: namely, that She must make a befitting return to
his Majesty, by proportioning her faithful love and the exalted perfection of
her actions to that, which She had now learnt. Nevertheless, the purpose, for
which the Lord intended these blessings, that is his Incarnation through Her,
continued to be hidden to her mind. All the rest of the mysteries our Lady
understood and for all of them She humiliated Herself
with ineffable prudence, and She asked the divine assistance for corresponding
to these favors and blessings.
78. Over this robe the same seraphim placed a girdle,
as a symbol of the holy fear, which was infused into Her.
It was very rich, with jewels of extreme refulgence and beauty. At the same
time the fountain of light bursting forth from the Divinity enlightened and
illumined the heavenly Princess, so that She
understood the exalted reasons, why God should be feared by all the creatures. With
this gift of fear of the Lord She was appropriately girded, as befitted a
Creature, who was to treat and converse so familiarly with her Creator as his
Mother.
79. Presently She perceived,
that the seraphim adorned Her with most beautiful and abundant hair, held
together by a rich clasp, more brilliant than pure and polished gold. She
understood, that in this embellishment was conceded to Her
the privilege of spending her whole life in exalted and divine thoughts,
inflamed by the subtlest charity as signified by the gold. In connection with
this privilege She was established anew in the habits
of unclouded wisdom and science, exquisitely binding up the hair of exalted
thoughts by an ineffable participation in the wisdom and science of God
himself. Sandals or shoes were also given to Her, to
indicate, that all her steps and movements would be most beauteous (Cant. 7,
1), tending always to the high and holy aim of the greater glory of the Most
High. And these shoes were laced with the especial grace of anxious diligence
in doing good both before God and man (Luke 1, 39), as it happened when She
hastened to visit saint Elisabeth and saint John; and thus this Daughter of the
Prince issued most beautiful in her footsteps (Cant. 7, 1).
80. Her arms were adorned with bracelets, filling Her with magnanimity for undertaking great works in
participation of the divine magnificence; and thus She always extended them
toward courageous deeds (Prov, 31, 19). Her fingers were embellished by rings,
in order that in smaller or more inferior matters She
might act in a superior manner, exalted in aim and purpose and in all respect
making her doings grand and admirable. To this they added a necklace, set with
inestimable and brilliant jewels and containing symbols of the three most
excellent virtues of faith, hope and charity in correspondence with the three
divine Persons. Conjointly with this gift they renewed in Her
the habits of these most noble virtues, which She would especially need in the
mysteries of the Incarnation and Redemption.
81. In her ears they hung earrings of gold, filigreed
with silver (Cant. 1, 10), thus preparing her ears for the message, which She was shortly to hear from the archangel Gabriel, and at
the same time they furnished Her with knowledge in order that She might listen
attentively and give discreet and acceptable answers to the divine proposals.
Thus would the pure silver of her innocence resound in the ears of the Lord and
re-echo, in the bosom of the Divinity, those charming and sacred words: "Fiat mihi secundum verbum
tuum." "Be it done to me according to thy
word" (Luke 1, 38).
82. Then they spread over her garment inscriptions,
which at the same time served as embroidery or borders of the finest colors
mixed with gold. Some of them bore the legend: "Mary, Mother of God;"
others: "Mary, Virgin and Mother." But these inscriptions were not
intelligible to Her, nor were they explained to Her,
but their meaning was known to the holy angels. The different colors symbolized
the habits of all the virtues in the most excellent degree and their active
exercise, surpassing all that was ever practiced by the rest of the
intellectual creatures. And as a complement of all this beauty, they furnished Her as if with lotions for her face, by illuminating Her with
the light drawn from the proximity and participation of the inexhaustible Being
and perfection of God himself. For as She was destined actually and truly to
shelter within Her virginal womb the infinite perfection of God, it was
befitting, that She should have received it beforehand by grace in the highest
measure possible to a mere creature.
83. In this adornment and beauty our Princess Mary
stood before the Lord so beautiful and charming, that even the supreme King
could desire Her as Spouse (Ps. 44, 12). I do not
detain myself here in repeating what I have already said, what I will yet say
in this history about her virtues; I only say that this adornment was
accompanied by new features and effects altogether divine. All this was proper
to the infinite power and to its immense perfection and sanctity, which offer
to our comprehension ever new fields of speculation. And when there is question
of this ocean of perfection in most holy Mary, we certainly can hope only to
skirt its shores. My understanding of that which I
perceive, is always pregnant with vast fields of thought, on which I cannot
expatiate. INSTRUCTION WHICH THE MOST HOLY
QUEEN MARY GAVE ME.
84. My daughter, the work-shops and treasure-rooms of
the Most High are those of a divine Lord and omnipotent King, and therefore
without number or limit are the riches and treasures which they contain for the
endowment of his chosen brides. He can enrich innumerable others just as He has
enriched my soul, and yet infinitely more will remain. Although He will give to
no creature as much as He has conferred upon me, it is not because He is not
able or does not wish, but because no one will dispose himself for his grace as
I did. But the Almighty is most liberal with some souls and enriches them so
munificently, because they impede his gifts less, and dispose themselves better
than others.
85. I desire, my most beloved, that thou place no
obstacle to the love of thy Lord; but I wish, that thou dispose thyself for the
jewels and gifts, intended for thee in order to make thee worthy of his bridal
chamber. Remember that all the just souls receive this adornment from his
hands, though each one according to the degree of the friendship and grace,
which makes them capable of receiving them. If thou wishest to attain the
highest purity of that perfection and become worthy of standing in the presence
of thy Lord and Spouse, strive to be robust and strong in love; and thou
knowest, that this is augmented in the same degree, as mortification and self-abnegation
are practiced. Thou must deny thyself and forget all earthly things; thou must
expel all thy meanings toward thyself and toward visible things, in the divine
love solely thou must increase and advance. Wash and purify thyself in the
blood of thy Redeemer, Christ, and apply this cleansing many times by renewing
thy loving sorrow for thy sins. Thereby wilt thou find grace in his eyes and
thy beauty will be desired by Him, and all thy adornments will be full of the
greatest perfection and purity.
86. And as thou hast been so highly favored and
distinguished by the blessings of the Lord, it is just that thou, more than
many generations of men, give thanks and with incessant praises magnify Him for
what, He has condescended to do for thee. If this vice of ingratitude is so
vile and reprehensible in the creatures, who owe Him little and in their
earthliness and coarseness, forget the benefits of the Lord; greater will thy
guilt be in falling short of thy obligations. And do not deceive thyself with the pretext of being humble; for there is a
great difference between thankful humility and humble thanklessness. Remember
that the Lord very often shows great favors to the unworthy, in order to
manifest his goodness and munificence. On the contrary let no one become
inflated, but let everyone acknowledge so much the more his unworthiness, using
it as a medicine and treacle against the poison of presumption. But gratitude
will agree with this humble opinion of self, since we must acknowledge,
that every good gift comes from the Father of lights and cannot ever be merited
by creatures (James 1, 17). All have their source only in his goodness, binding
us and obliging us to grateful recognition.
OUR GREAT QUEEN, IN THE PRESENCE OF THE LORD, PLEADS
FOR THE HASTENING OF THE INCARNATION AND OF THE REDEMPTION OF MAN, AND HIS MAJESTY YIELDS TO HIS PRAYER.
87. The heavenly Princess, most holy Mary, had now
attained such fullness of grace and beauty and the heart of God was so wounded
by her tender affections and desires (Cant. 4, 9), that He was so to say
irresistibly drawn to begin his flight from the bosom of the eternal Father to
the bridal-chamber of her virginal womb and end the long delay of more than
five thousand years. Nevertheless, since this new wonder was to be executed in
the plenitude of his wisdom and equity, the Lord arranged this event in such a
way, that the Princess of the heavens Herself, being the worthy Mother of the
incarnate Word, should at the same time be also the most powerful Mediatrix of
his coming and the Redeemer of his people much more than Esther was of Israel
(Esther ch. 7 and 8). In the heart of most holy Mary
burned the flame, which God himself had enkindled, and without intermission She prayed for the salvation of the human race. However, as
yet the most humble Lady restrained Herself in
modesty, knowing that on account of the sin of Adam, the sentence of death and
of eternal privation from the vision of God had been promulgated (Gen. 3, 19).
88. A heavenly strife thus arose in the most pure
heart of Mary between her love and her humility, and, lost in these sentiments,
She repeated many times: "Oh who shall be able to
secure the salvation of my brethren! Oh who shall be able to draw from the
bosom of the eternal Father his Onlybegotten and make Him a partaker of our
mortality! Oh who shall oblige Him to give to our human nature the kiss of his
mouth, for which the bride asks Him! (Cant. 1, 1). But how can we, the
children and descendants of the malefactor, who committed the crime, ask for this
favor? How can we draw Him toward us, whom our fathers repelled? Oh my Love, if
I could but see Thee at the breasts of thy Mother, the human nature! (Cant 8,
1). Oh Light of lights, God of the true God, would that Thou descend, bending
down thy heavens (Ps. 143, 5) and shedding thy light upon those that live
sitting in darkness! (Is. 9,2). Would that Thou pacify thy Father, and, by thy
right hand that is by his Onlybegotten, hurl the proud Aman, thy enemy, the
devil, from his height! Who shall be the Mediatrix, who shall draw from the
celestial altar, as with tongs of gold (Is. 6, 6), that ember of the Divinity,
for the purification of the world, as once did the seraphim, according to the
word of the prophet Isaias !"
89. This prayer most holy Mary repeated during the
eighth day of her preparation, and at midnight, being wrapped and entranced in
the Lord, She heard his Majesty responding to Her: "My Spouse and my Dove,
come, my Chosen one, for the common law does not apply to thee (Esther 15, 13).
Thou art exempt from sin and thou art free from its effects since the moment of
thy Conception. When I gave being to thee, I turned away from thee the sceptre
of my justice and laid upon thy neck that of my great
clemency, in order that the general edict of sin might not touch thee. Come to Me, and be not dismayed in the consciousness of thy human
nature; I am He, that raises the humble, and fills with riches those that are
poor. Thou hast Me for thy Friend and my liberal
mercies shall be at thy disposal."
90. These words our Queen heard intellectually and, as
in the preceding night, She presently felt Herself raised by the holy angels
bodily to heaven, while in her stead remained one of the angels of her guard.
Again She ascended to the presence of the Most High,
so enriched by the treasures of his graces and gifts, so fortunate and
beautiful, that She singularly excited the wonder of the supernal spirits. They
broke out in praise of the Almighty, saying: "Who is this,
that ascends from the desert, overflowing with delights? (Cant. 8, 5). Who is She, that so
attracts and compels her Beloved as to bear Him with Her to the earthly
habitation? Who is She, that rises as the dawn, more
beautiful than the moon, chosen as the sun? (Cant. 6, 9).
How refulgent doth She rise from the darkness of the
earth? How is She so courageous and strong, being clothed in such fragile
nature? How does She in her strength overcome the
Almighty? And how comes it that the heavens, which are closed against the
children of Adam, are thus thrown open to this singular Woman, sprung from the
same race ?"
91. The Most High received his holy and chosen Bride,
most holy Mary, into his presence. Although this happened not in an intuitive,
but in an abstractive vision of the Divinity, it was accompanied with
incomparable favors of light and purification proceeding from the Lord himself,
such as were specially reserved for this day. For they
were so divine, that, in our way of speaking, God himself who wrought them, was
astonished and was charmed with the work of his hand. As if entranced with
love, He spoke to Her and said: "Revertere, revertere, Sulamitis,
ut intueamur te" (Return, return, O
Sulamitess, that We may behold thee). "My Spouse, my most perfect and
beloved Dove, pleasing in my sight, turn and advance toward Us, that We may
behold thee and be charmed by thy beauty. I do not regret to have created man
and I delight in his formation, since thou hast been born of him. Let my
celestial spirits see how justly I have desired and do desire to choose thee as
my Spouse and the Queen of all the creatures. Let them see what good reason I
have to rejoice in this my bridal chamber, from whence my Onlybegotten, next to
that of my own bosom, shall derive the greatest glory. Let all understand, that
if I justly repudiated Eve, the first queen of the earth, on account of her
disobedience, I now place thee and establish thee in the highest dignity,
showing my magnificence and power in dealing with thy purest humility and
self-abasement."
92. This day was for the angels a day of jubilation
and rejoicing greater than any since their creation. And when the most blessed
Trinity thus chose and appointed his Spouse and Mother of the Word for the
Queen and Lady of the creatures, the holy angels and all the celestial court of
Spirits acknowledged and received Her as their Mistress and Superior, and they
sung sweet hymns of glory in her honor and in praise of her Author. During
these hidden and admirable mysteries the heavenly Queen Mary was absorbed in
the abyss of the Divinity and in the light of his infinite perfections: and
thereby the Lord prevented Her from attending to all
that happened. Thus the sacrament of her Mothership of the Onlybegotten still
remained hidden to Her until the proper time. Never
did the Lord deal in such a manner with any nation (Ps. 147, 20), nor did He
ever show Himself so great and powerful in any creature, as on this day in most
holy Mary.
93. The Most High added yet other favors, saying to
Her with extreme condescension: "My chosen Spouse, since Thou hast found
grace in my eyes, ask of Me without restraint, what thou desirest, and I assure
thee, as the most faithful God and powerful King, that I shall not reject thy
petitions nor deny thee what thou askest." Our great Princess humiliated
Herself profoundly and relying on the promise and royal word of the Lord, and
inspired with highest confidence, She answered saying: "My Lord and
highest God, if I have found grace in thy eyes (Gen. 18, 3, 27), although I am
dust and ashes, I will speak in thy divine presence and pour out to Thee my
heart" (Ps. 61,9). Again his Majesty assured Her and commanded Her to ask in the presence of all the
heavenly court, for whatever She desired, even if it were a part of his kingdom
(Esther 5, 3). "I do not ask, O Lord, for a part of thy kingdom in my own
behalf," answered most holy Mary, "but I ask for the whole of it for
all the race of men, who are my brothers. I beseech Thee, highest and powerful
King, that according to thy immense kindness Thou send us thy Only begotten our
Redeemer, in order that He may satisfy for the sins of all the world, that thy
people may gain the freedom so much desired, and that, through the satisfaction
thus rendered to thy justice, peace may be declared among men upon (Ezech, 34, 25) earth, and that the portals of heaven,
closed by sin, may be thrown open for its inhabitants. Let all flesh see thy
salvation (Is. 52, 10); let peace and justice give each other that close
embrace and the kiss, which David asked for (Ps. 84, 11) ; let us mortals
possess a Teacher, a Guide and a Savior (Is. 30, 20), a Chief, who shall live
and dwell with us (Baruch. 3, 38). Let the day of thy promises dawn upon us, O my
God, let thy words be fulfilled, and let the Messias, expected for so many
ages, arrive. These are my anxious desires, and for this do
I breathe forth my sighs, since Thou showest to me the condescension of thy
infinite clemency."
94. The highest Lord, who wished to bind Himself by
her prayer, disposed and incited the petitions of his beloved Spouse; benignly
He inclined toward Her and answered Her with singular
clemency: "Pleasing to my Will are thy requests, and acceptable are thy
petitions: it shall be done as thou askest. I desire, my Daughter and Spouse,
what thou seekest; and as a pledge of this, I give thee my word and promise
thee, that very shortly my Onlybegotten shall descend to the earth and shall
vest Himself and unite Himself with the human nature. Thus thy acceptable
wishes shall be executed and fulfilled."
95. With this assurance and divine promise our great
Queen Princess felt new enlightenment and security in her spirit, convincing
Her, that the end of that long protracted and prolix night of sin and of the
ancient Law was approaching and that the brightness of human Redemption was
about to dawn. And because the rays of the Sun of Justice, whose dawn was soon
to arise from Her, so closely and so intensely
enveloped Her about, She became Herself the most beautiful aurora, inflamed and
refulgent as it were with the fiery clouds of the Divinity, which transformed
all things within Her. All afire with love and gratitude for the approaching
Redemption, She gave unceasing praise to the Lord both in her own name and in
that of all the mortals. In this occupation She passed
that day, after the angels had again restored Her to the earth. I must grieve
at my ignorance and shortcomings in explaining these so exalted mysteries; and
if learned men and great students cannot give an adequate explanation of these
things, how shall it be given by a poor and lowly woman? May my ignorance be
supplemented by the light of Christian charity and my presumption be atoned for by my obedience. INSTRUCTION WHICH MOST HOLY MARY,
THE QUEEN, GAVE ME.
96. My dearest daughter, how far removed is worldly wisdom
from the admirable operations of the divine power in these sacraments of the
Incarnation of the divine Word in my womb! Flesh and blood cannot reach them,
and not the angels and seraphim, though they be of the highest; nor can they
know mysteries so deeply hidden and so far above the ordinary course of grace.
Praise thou, my beloved, the Lord for them with incessant love and
thankfulness. Be thou not any longer slow in understanding the greatness of his
divine love and his readiness to benefit his friends and dear ones, whom He
desires to elevate from the dust and enrich in diverse manners. As soon as thou
hast penetrated into this truth, it will oblige thee to thank Him and incite
thee to undertake the great things, that become a most
faithful daughter and spouse.
97. And in order that thou mayest dispose thyself and
be inspired so much the more, I remind thee, that the Lord often says these
same words to his chosen ones: "Revertere, revertere, ut intueamur
te." For He
derives just as great pleasure from their deeds, as when a father rejoices in
his beloved and well-behaved son, whom he looks upon many times with great
affection; or as an artist, when he beholds with pride the perfect works of his
hands; or as a king, who inspects the rich city, which he has added to his dominions;
or as one, who is pleased with his much beloved friend. There is only this
difference: the Most High finds incomparably more delight than all these in the
souls, which He has chosen for his blessings; and in proportion as they dispose
themselves and advance in virtue, the Lord also multiplies his favors and
benefits. If the mortals, that attain to the light of faith, would enter into
this truth, they would, merely on account of this complacence of the Almighty
in their good deeds, not only preserve themselves from sin, but they would
zealously engage in great works until death and eagerly show their loving
servitude to Him, who is so liberal in rewarding, and so generous in his
favors.
98. When, on this eighth day which thou hast
described, the Lord in heaven spoke to me these words: "Revertere, revertere," asking me to turn toward Him and allow the
celestial spirits to look upon me; I was made aware, that the pleasure, which
his divine Majesty derived in beholding me, by itself exceeded all the delight
and complacency, which He ever derived from all the most saintly souls in the
height of their sanctity. In his gracious condescension He was more pleased in
me than in all the Apostles, Martyrs, Confessors, Virgins and all the rest of
the saints. And this pleasure and complacency of the Most High overflowed and
enriched my spirit with such an influx of grace and participation of the Divinity, that thou canst neither understand nor explain it
as long as thou art in the mortal flesh. But I tell thee of this hidden
mystery, in order that thou mayest bless its Author, and that, while yet thy
exile from the fatherland continues, thou dispose and exert thyself in my place
and name to extend and reach out thy hands to great things (Prov, 31, 19). Give
to the Lord the satisfaction expected of thee, and strive after it, thus
earning his blessings and soliciting them for thyself and thy neighbor with
perfect charity.
THE MOST HIGH RENEWS ALL HIS FAVORS AND BENEFITS IN THE
MOST HOLY MARY AND, AS THE ULTIMATE PREPARATION FOR THE INCARNATION, MAKES HER
SOVEREIGN AND QUEEN OF ALL THE UNIVERSE.
99. On the last day of the novena of immediate
preparation of the tabernacle (Ps. 45, 5), which He was to sanctify by his
coming, the Most High resolved to renew his wonders and multiply his tokens of
love, repeating the favors and benefits which up to this day He had conferred
upon the Princess Mary. But the Almighty chose to work in such a way, that in
drawing forth from his infinite treasures his gifts of old, He always added
thereto such as were new. All of these different kinds of wonders were
appropriate to the end He had in view: lowering his Divinity to the human
nature and raising a woman to the dignity of Mother of God. In descending to the
lowliness of man's estate, God neither could, nor needed to change his essence:
for, remaining immutable in Himself, He could unite. his Person to our nature;
but an earthly woman, in ascending to such an excellence that God should unite
with Her and become man of her substance, apparently must traverse an infinite
space and be raised so far above other creatures, as to approach God's infinite
being itself.
100. The day had then arrived, in which most holy Mary
was to reach the last stage and be placed so close to God, as to become his
Mother. In that night, at the hour of greatest silence, She
was again called by the same Lord as it had happened on the other days. The
humble and prudent Queen responded: "My heart is prepared (Ps, 107,2), my Lord and exalted Sovereign: let thy divine pleasure
be fulfilled in me." Immediately She was, as on the preceding day, borne
body and soul by the hands of her angels to the empyrean and placed in the
presence of the royal throne of the Most High; and his divine Majesty raised
Her up and seated Her at his side, assigning to Her the position and throne,
which She was to occupy forever in his presence. Next to the one reserved for
the incarnate Word, it was the highest and the most proximate to God himself;
for it excelled incomparably that of any of the other blessed, and that of all
of them together.
101. From this position She saw the Divinity by an
abstractive vision, as at other times, and his Majesty, hiding from Her the
dignity of Mother of God, manifested to Her such unusual and such high
sacraments, that on account of their sublimity and my insignificant capacities,
I cannot describe them. Again She saw in the Divinity
all things created and many other possible and future ones. The corporeal
things God manifested and made known to Her by
corporeal and sensible images, as if they had been presented to her ocular
vision. The fabric of the universe, which before this She had known in parts,
now appeared to Her in its entirety, distinctly
pictured as upon canvas, with all the creatures contained therein. She saw the
harmony, order, connection and dependence of each toward each, and of the
divine will, which had created them, governs and preserves them, each in its
place and mode of existence. Again She saw all the
heavens and the stars, the elements, and those that lived in them, purgatory,
limbo, hell and all the occupants of these caverns. Just as the position of the
Queen of creation was above all creatures and inferior only to that of God, so
also the knowledge given to Her was superior to that
of all created things being inferior only to that of the Lord.
102. While thus the heavenly Lady was lost in
admiration of what the Almighty showed to Her, and was wrapped in praise and
exaltation of the Lord, his Majesty spoke to Her and said: "My chosen
Dove, all the visible creatures, which thou beholdest, I have created and
preserved in all their variety and beauty by my Providence, solely for the love
of men. And from all the souls, which I have until now created and which are
predestined to be created unto the end, I shall choose and select the
congregation of the faithful, who shall be set apart and washed in the blood of
the Lamb in the Redemption of the world. They shall be the special fruit of his
Redemption, and they shall enjoy its blessings through the new law of grace and
the sacraments to be instituted by the Redeemer; and afterwards those that
persevere shall partake of my eternal glory and friendship. For these chosen
ones I have primarily created these wonderful works! And, if all of them would
strive to serve Me, adore and acknowledge my holy name; as far as I am
concerned, I would for each and every one of them create these great treasures
and assign all over to them as their possession.
103. "And if I had created only one being capable
of my grace and glory, I would have made it the lord and master of all
creation; for this would be a much smaller favor than to make it partaker of my
friendship and of eternal happiness. Thou, my Spouse, shalt be my chosen One and
thou hast found grace in my sight; and therefore I make thee Mistress of all
these goods and I give thee dominion and possession of them all, so that, if
thou art a faithful spouse according to my wishes, thou mayest distribute and
dispose of them according as thou desirest and according as thy intercession
shall direct; for this is the purpose, for which they are given into thy
possession." Therewith the most blessed Trinity placed a crown on the head
of our Princess Mary, consecrating Her as the sovereign
Queen of all creation. Upon it was spread and enameled the inscription: Mother
of God; but its meaning was not known to Her at this
time. The heavenly spirits, however, knew it and they were filled with
admiration at the magnificence of the Lord toward this Maiden, most fortunate
and blessed among womankind. They revered and honored Her
as their legitimate Queen and as Sovereign of all creation.
104. All these portents of love the right hand of the
Most High wrought according to the order most befitting his infinite wisdom;
for before coming down to assume flesh in the virginal womb of this Lady, it
was proper that all his courtiers should acknowledge his Mother as their Queen
and Mistress, and give Her due honor as such. It was certainly proper and just
that God should first make Her Queen before making Her Mother of the Prince of
eternities; for She that was to bear a Prince, must necessarily first be a
Queen and be acknowledged as Queen by her vassals. That the angels should know Her as Mother, was not improper, nor was there any necessity
of concealing it from them. But on the other hand it seemed due to the majesty
of the Divinity, that the tabernacle chosen for his indwelling should appear
before them prepared and adorned with all that was highest in dignity and
perfection, in nobility and magnificence to the full extent, in which it was
possible. Thus then, was She presented to the holy angels, and recognized by
them, as their honored Queen and Lady.
105. In order to put the last touch to this prodigious
work of preparing the most holy Mary, the Lord extended his powerful arm and
expressly renewed the spirit and the faculties of the great Lady, giving Her
new inclinations, habits and qualities, the greatness and excellence of which
are inexpressible in terrestrial terms. It was the finishing act and the final
retouching of the living image of God, in order to form, in it and of it, the
very shape, into which the eternal Word, the essential image of the eternal
Father (II Cor. 4; 4) and the figure of his substance (Heb. 1,3), was to be
cast. Thus the whole temple of most holy Mary, more so than that of Solomon,
was covered with the purest gold of the Divinity inside and out, (III Kings, 6,
30), so that nowhere could be seen in Her any grossness of an earthly daughter
of Adam. Her entire being was made to shine forth the Divinity; for since the
divine Word was to issue from the bosom of the eternal Father to descend to
that of Mary, He provided for the greatest possible similarity between the
Mother and the Father.
106. No words at my disposal could ever suffice to
describe as I would wish, the effects of these favors in the heart of our great
Queen and Mistress. Human thought cannot conceive them, how then can human
words express them? But what has caused the greatest wonder in me, when I
considered these things in the light given to me, is the humility of this
heavenly Woman and the mutual contest between her humility and the divine
power. Rare and astonishing prodigy of humility, to see this Maiden, most holy
Mary, though raised to the supremest dignity and holiness next to God, yet
humiliating Herself and debasing Herself below the meanest of the creatures; so
that, by the force of this humility, no thought of her being destined for the
Mothership of the Messias could find entrance into her mind! And not only this:
She did not even have a suspicion of anything great or admirable in Herself (Ps. 130, 1). Her eyes and heart were not elated; on
the contrary the higher She ascended by the operation
of the right hand of her God, so much the more lowly were her thoughts
concerning Herself. It was therefore just, that the Almighty should look upon
her humility (Luke 1,48), and that therefore all
generations should call her fortunate and blessed. INSTRUCTION WHICH THE QUEEN AND
MISTRESS OF HEAVEN GAVE ME.
107. My daughter, the soul that has only a selfish and
servile love is not a worthy spouse of the Most High, for she must not love or
fear like a slave, nor is she supposed to serve for her daily wages. Yet although
her heart must be a filial and generous love on account of the excellence and
immense goodness of her Spouse, she must nevertheless also feel herself much
bounden to Him, when she considers how rich and liberal He is; how, on account
of his love for souls, He has created such a variety of visible goods in order
that they might serve those who serve Him; and especially, when she considers
how many hidden treasures He has in readiness in the abundance of his sweetness
(Ps. 30, 20) for those that fear Him as his true children. I wish that thou
feel deeply obliged to thy Lord and Father, thy Spouse and Friend, at the
thought of the riches given to those souls, who become his dearest children.
For, as a powerful Father, He holds in readiness these great and manifold gifts
for his children, and if necessary, all of his gifts for each one of them in
particular. In the midst of such motives and incentives of love the
disaffection of men is inexcusable, and at the sight of so many blessings,
given without measure, their ingratitude is unpardonable.
108. Remember, also, my dearest, that thou wast no
foreigner, or stranger in this house of the Lord, his holy Church (Ephes, 2, 19); but thou wast made a domestic and a spouse
of Christ among the saints, favored by his gifts and by the dowry of a bride.
Since all the treasures and riches of the bridegroom belong to the legitimate
spouse, consider of how great possessions He makes thee participant and
mistress. Enjoy them all, then, as his domestic, and be zealous for his honor
as a much-favored daughter and spouse; thank Him for all these works and
benefits, as if they had all been prepared for thee alone by the Lord. Love and
reverence Him for thyself and for all thy neighbors, to whom God has been so
liberal. In all this imitate, with thy weak faculties, that
which thou hast understood of what I have done. I assure thee also, daughter,
that it will be very pleasing to me, if thou magnify and praise the Omnipotent
with fervent affection, for the favors and riches which, beyond all human
conception, the divine right hand showered upon me.
THE BLESSED TRINITY SENDS THE ARCHANGEL GABRIEL AS A
MESSENGER TO ANNOUNCE TO MOST HOLY MARY THAT SHE IS CHOSEN AS THE MOTHER OF
GOD.
109. For infinite ages had been appointed the
convenient hour and time, in which the great mystery of piety (I Tim. 3, 16),
which was approved by the Spirit, prophesied to men,
foretold to the angels, and expected in the world, was to be drawn from the
hidden recesses of the divine wisdom in order to be appropriately manifested in
the flesh. The plenitude of time (Gal. 4, 4) had arrived, that time which until
then, although filled with prophecies and promises, was nevertheless void and
empty. For it wanted the fullness of the most holy Mary, by whose will and
consent all the ages were to receive their complement, namely the eternal Word
made flesh, capable of suffering and redeeming man. Before all ages this
mystery was prearranged in such a way, that it should be fulfilled through the
mediation of this heavenly Maiden. Since now She
existed in the world the Redemption of man and the coming of the Onlybegotten
of the Father was not longer to be delayed. For now He would not need to come
and live as if by sufferance merely in tents (II Kings 7, 6) or in a strange
house; but He could enjoy a free welcome as in His temple and as in his own
house, one that had been built and enriched at his own preordained expense,
more so than the temple of Solomon at the expense of his father David (I Par.
22, 5).
110. In this predetermined time then the Most High
resolved to send his Onlybegotten Son into the world. And comparing, (according
to our way of understanding and speaking), the decrees of his eternity with the
prophecies and testimonies made to man from the beginning of the world, and all
this together with the position of sanctity to which He had raised most holy
Mary, He judged that all the circumstances were favorable for the exaltation of
his holy name, and that the execution of his eternal will and decree should be
made manifest to the angels and be commenced by them. His Majesty spoke to the
archangel Gabriel in such words or language as He was accustomed to use in
intimating his will to the holy angels. Although God usually illumines the holy
spirits by commencing with the higher angels, who in turn purify and illumine
the others in their order down to the least among them, thus making known the
revelations of the Divinity; yet on this occasion this usage was not
maintained, for the holy archangel received his message immediately from the
mouth of God.
111. At the bidding of the divine will the holy
Gabriel presented himself at the foot of the throne intent upon the immutable
essence of the Most High. His Majesty then expressly charged him with the message,
which he was to bring to the most holy Mary and instructed him in the very
words with which he was to salute and address Her.
Thus the first Author of the message was God himself, who formed the exact
words in his divine mind, and revealed them to the holy archangel for
transmission to the most pure Mary. At the same time the Lord revealed to the
holy prince Gabriel many hidden sacraments concerning the Incarnation. The
blessed Trinity commanded him to betake himself to the heavenly Maiden and announce
to Her, that the Lord had chosen Her among women to be the Mother of the
eternal Word, that She should conceive Him in her virginal womb through
operation of the Holy Ghost without injury to her virginity. In this and in all
the rest of the message, which he was to declare and manifest to this great
Queen and Mistress, the archangel was instructed by the blessed Trinity itself.
112. Thereupon his Majesty announced to all the other
angels that the time of the Redemption had come and that He had commanded it to
be brought to the world without delay; for already, in their own presence, the
most holy Mary had been prepared and adorned to be his Mother, and had been
exalted to the supreme dignity. The heavenly spirits heard the voice of their
Creator, and with incomparable joy and thanksgiving for the fulfillment of his
eternal and perfect will, they intoned new canticles of praise, repeating
therein that hymn of Sion: "Holy, holy, holy art thou, God and Lord
Sabaoth (Is. 6, 3). Just and powerful art Thou, Lord our God, who livest in the
highest (Ps. 112, 5) and lookest upon the lowly of the earth. Admirable are all
thy works, most high and exalted in thy designs."
113. The supernal prince Gabriel, obeying with
singular delight the divine command and accompanied by many thousands of most
beautiful angels in visible forms, descended from the highest heaven. The
appearance of the great prince and legate was that of a most handsome youth of
rarest beauty; his face emitted resplendent rays of light, his bearing was
grave and majestic, his advance measured, his motions composed, his words
weighty and powerful, his whole presence displayed a pleasing, kindly gravity
and more of godlike qualities than all the other angels until then seen in
visible form by the heavenly Mistress. He wore a diadem of exquisite splendor
and his vestments glowed in various colors full of refulgent beauty. Enchased
on his breast, he bore a most beautiful cross, disclosing the mystery of the
Incarnation, which He had come to announce. All these circumstances were
calculated to rivet the affectionate attention of the most prudent Queen.
114. The whole of this celestial army with their
princely leader holy Gabriel directed their flight to Nazareth, a town of the
province of Galilee, to the dwelling place of most holy Mary. This was an humble cottage and her chamber was a narrow room, bare of
all those furnishings which are wont to be used by the world in order to hide
its own meanness and want of all higher goods. The heavenly Mistress was at this
time fourteen years, six months and seventeen days of age; for her birthday
anniversary fell on the eighth of September and six months seventeen days had
passed since that date, when this greatest of all mysteries ever performed by
God in this world, was enacted in Her.
115. The bodily shape of the heavenly Queen was well proportioned
and taller than is usual with other maidens of her age; yet extremely elegant
and perfect in all its parts. Her face was rather more oblong than round,
gracious and beautiful, without leanness or grossness; its complexion clear, yet
of a slightly brownish hue; her forehead spacious yet symmetrical; her eyebrows
perfectly arched; her eyes large and serious, of incredible and ineffable beauty
and dovelike sweetness, dark in color with a mixture tending toward green; her
nose straight and well shaped; her mouth small, with red-colored lips, neither
too thin nor too thick. All the gifts of nature in Her were so symmetrical and beautiful, that
no other human being ever had the like. To look upon Her
caused feelings at the same time of joy and seriousness, love and reverential
fear. She attracted the heart and yet restrained it in sweet reverence; her
beauty impelled the tongue to sound her praise, and yet her grandeur and her overwhelming
perfections and graces hushed it to silence. In all that approached Her, She
caused divine effects not easily explained; She filled
the heart with heavenly influences and divine operations, tending toward the
Divinity.
116. Her garments were humble and poor, yet clean, of
a dark silvery hue, somewhat like the color of ashes. and
they were arranged and worn without pretense, but with the greatest modesty and
propriety. At the time when, without her noticing it, the embassy of heaven
drew nigh unto Her, She was engaged in the highest contemplation concerning the
mysteries which the Lord had renewed in Her by so many
favors during the nine preceding days. And since, as we have said above, the
Lord himself had assured Her that his Onlybegotten would soon descend to assume
human form, this great Queen was full of fervent and joyful affection in the
expectation of its execution and inflamed with humble love. She spoke in her
heart: "Is it possible that the blessed time has arrived, in which the Word
of the eternal Father is to be born and to converse with men? (Baruch 10, 38). That the world should possess Him? That men
are to see Him in the flesh? (Is. 40. 5). That his
inaccessible light is to shine forth to illumine those who sit in darkness? (Is. 9, 2). O, who shall be worthy to see and know Him ! O, who shall be allowed to kiss the earth touched by
his feet !"
117. "Rejoice, ye heavens, and console thyself, O
earth (Ps. 95, 11); let all things bless and extol Him, since already his
eternal happiness is nigh! O children of Adam, afflicted with sin, and yet
creatures of my Beloved, now shall you raise your heads and throw off the yoke
of your ancient servitude! (Is. 14,25). O, ye ancient
Forefathers and Prophets, and all ye just, that are detained in limbo and are
waiting in the bosom of Abraham, now shall you be consoled and your much
desired and long promised Redeemer shall tarry no longer! (Agg.
2, 8). Let us all magnify Him and sing to Him hymns of praise! O who
shall be the slave of Her, whom Isaias points out as his Mother (Is. 7,4); O Emmanuel, true God and Man! O key of David, who art
to unlock heaven! (Is. 22,22). O eternal Wisdom! O Lawgiver
of the new Church! Come, come to us, O Lord, and end
the captivity of thy people; let all flesh see thy salvation!" (Is. 40, 5).
118. In these petitions and aspirations, and in many
more too deep for my tongue to explain, the most holy Mary was engaged at the
hour, when the holy angel Gabriel arrived. She was most pure in soul, most
perfect in body, most noble in her sentiments, most exalted in sanctity, full
of grace and so deified and pleasing in the sight of God, that She was fit to be his Mother and an instrument adapted for
drawing Him from the bosom of the Father to her virginal womb. She was the
powerful means of our Redemption and to Her we owe it
on many accounts. And therefore it is just, that all generations and nations
shall bless and forever extol Her (Luke 1, 48). What happened at the entrance
of the heavenly embassy, I will relate in the following chapter.
119. I wish only to state here a fact worthy of
admiration, that for the reception of the message of the archangel and for the
execution of the exalted mystery, which was to be wrought in the heavenly Lady
by her consent, his Majesty left Her without any other aid than the resources
of her common human nature and those furnished Her by the faculties and virtues
of her ordinary condition, such as have been described in the first part of
this history (Part I, 674-714). The Most High disposed it thus, because this
mystery was to be enacted as a sacrament of faith conjointly with hope and
charity. And therefore the Lord provided Her with no
special aid, leaving Her to her belief and hope in his divine promises. Thus
prepared She experienced what I shall try to relate in
my inadequate and limited terms. The greatness of these sacraments makes my
ability to explain them appear so much the more insufficient. INSTRUCTION OF THE QUEEN OF HEAVEN.
My daughter, with special affection I manifest to thee
now my will and desire that thou make thyself worthy of the intimate and
familiar converse with God, and that for this purpose thou dispose thyself
with great zeal and solicitude, weeping over thy sins, and forgetting and
rejecting all the visible things, so that thou have no thought henceforth for
any other thing outside of God. Therefore thou must begin to practice all that
I have taught thee until now, and whatever I will yet teach thee in the balance
of this history. I will accompany thee and guide thee on the course with which
thou must maintain in this familiar intercourse and in regard to the favors,
which thou receivest through his condescension, entertaining Him in thy heart
by means of the faith, light and grace given to thee. If thou dost not first conform
to this my admonition, and prepare thyself accordingly, thou wilt not reach the
fulfillment of thy desires, nor shall I reap the fruit of my instructions,
which I give to thee as thy Teacher.
121. Since thou has found, without any merit of thine,
the hidden treasure and the precious pearl of my teachings and instruction
(Matth. 13, 44), despise all other things, in order to possess and secure for
thyself this prize of inestimable value; for with it thou shalt receive all
other goods and thou wilt make thyself worthy of the intimate friendship of the
Lord and of his perpetual indwelling in your heart. In exchange for this great
blessing, I desire that thou die to all earthly things and that thou offer the
thankful love of an entirely purified will. In imitation of me be thou so
humble, that as far as thou art concerned, thou be persuaded and convinced of
thy entire worthlessness and incapability, not meriting to be considered even
as a slave of the servants of Christ.
122. Remember, I was far from imagining, that the Most
High had designed me for the dignity of Mother of God; and this was my state of
mind although He had already promised his speedy coming into the world and
although He had commanded me to desire after Him with such great affection, that
on the day before the execution of this mystery I thought I would die and my
heart would burst with loving sighs, if the divine Providence had not comforted
me. He dilated my spirit with the firm hope, that the Onlybegotten of the
eternal Father would descend from heaven without delay; yet on the other hand,
my humility inclined me to fear, lest my presence in the world might perhaps
retard his coming. Contemplate then, my beloved, this secret of my breast, and
what an example it is for thee and for all the mortals. And since it is
difficult for thee to understand and describe such high wisdom, look upon me in
the Lord, in order that by his divine light, thou mayest meditate and
comprehend the perfection of my actions; follow me by imitating me, and walk in
my footsteps.
MARY LISTENS TO THE MESSAGE OF THE HOLY ANGEL: THE
MYSTERY OF THE INCARNATION IS ENACTED BY THE CONCEPTION OF THE ETERNAL WORD IN
HER WOMB.
123. I wish to confess before heaven and earth and its
inhabitants, and in the presence of the Creator of the universe and the eternal
God, that in setting myself to write of the profound mystery of the
Incarnation, my feeble strength deserts me, my tongue is struck mute, my
discourse is silenced, my faculties are benumbed, my understanding is eclipsed
and overwhelmed by the divine light, which guides and instructs me. In it all
is perceived without error and without any deviousness; I see my insignificance
and I am made aware of the emptiness of words and the insufficiency of human
terms for doing justice to my concepts of this sacrament, which comprehends at
one and the same time God himself and the greatest and most wonderful work of
his Omnipotence. I see in this mystery the divine and admirable harmony of his
infinite providence and wisdom, with which from all eternity He has ordained
and prearranged it, and by which He directed all creation toward its
fulfillment. All his works and all his creatures were only well adjusted means
of advancing toward this apex of his aims, the condescension of a God in
assuming human nature.
124. I saw that the eternal Word had awaited and
chosen, as the most opportune time and hour for his descent from the bosom of
the Father, the midnight of mortal perversion (Wis. 18, 14), when the whole
posterity of Adam was buried and absorbed in the sleep of forgetfulness and
ignorance of their true God, and when there was no one to open his mouth in
confessing and blessing Him, except some chosen souls among his people. All the
rest of the world was lost in silent darkness, having passed a protracted night
of five thousand and about two hundred years. Age had succeeded age, and
generations followed upon generations, each one in the time predestined and
decreed by the eternal Wisdom, each also having an opportunity to know and find
Him, its Creator; for all had Him so nigh to them, that He gave them life,
movement and existence within their own selves (Acts 17, 28). But as the clear day of his inaccessible. light
had not arrived, though some of the mortals, like the blind, came nigh to Him
and touched Him in his creatures, yet they did not attain to the Divinity (Rom.
1, 23) and in failing to recognize Him, they cast themselves upon the sensible
and most vile things of the earth.
125. The day then had arrived in which the Most High,
setting aside the long ages of this dark ignorance, resolved to manifest
Himself to men and begin the Redemption of the human race by assuming their
nature in the womb of most holy Mary, now prepared for this event. In order to
be able to describe what was revealed concerning this event to me, it is
necessary to make mention of some hidden sacraments connected with the descent
of the Onlybegotten from the bosom of the Father. I assume as firmly
established what the holy faith teaches in regard to the divine Persons, that
although there is a real personal distinction between the three Persons, yet
there is no inequality in wisdom, omnipotence or other attributes, just as
little as there is in the divine nature; and just as They are equal in dignity
and infinite perfection, so They are also equal in these operations ad extra,
which proceed from God himself for the production of some creature or temporal
object. these operations are indivisibly wrought by three divine Persons; for
not one Person alone produces them, but all Three in so far as They are one and
the same God, possessing one and the same wisdom, one and the same
understanding and will. Thus what the Son knows and wishes,
that also the Father knows and wishes; and so also the Holy Ghost knows and
wishes whatever is known and willed by the Father and the Son.
126. In this indivisibility of action the three
Persons wrought and executed, by one and the same act, the mystery of the
Incarnation, although only the person of the Son accepted for Himself the
nature of man, uniting it to Himself hypostatically. Therefore we say that the
Son was sent by the eternal Father, from whose intelligence He proceeds, and
that the Father sent Him by the intervening operations of the Holy Ghost. As it
was the Person of the Son which came to be made man, this same Person before
descending from the heavens and the bosom of the Father, in the name of that
same humanity to be received by Him, made a conditional request, that, on
account of his foreseen merits, his salvation and satisfaction of the divine
justice for sins be extended to the whole human race. He desired the fiat or
ratification of the most blessed will of the Father, who sent Him, for the
acceptance of this Redemption by means of his most holy works and his passion,
and through the mysteries, which He was to enact in the new Church and in the
law of grace.
127. The eternal Father accepted this petition and the
foreseen merits of the Word; He conceded all that was proposed and asked for
the mortals, and He himself confirmed the elect and predestined souls as the
inheritance and possession of Christ forever. Hence, Christ himself, our Lord,
through saint John says that He has not lost nor has allowed to perish, those
whom the Father had given him (John 18,9). In another
place it is said: that no one shall snatch his sheep from his
hands nor from those of his Father (John 17, 12). The same would hold
good of all those that are born, if they would avail themselves of the
Redemption, which, as it is sufficient, should also be efficacious for all and
in all; since his divine mercy desired to exclude no one, if only all of them
would make themselves capable of receiving its benefits through the Redeemer.
128. All this, according to our way of understanding, happened
in heaven at the throne of the most blessed Trinity as a prelude to the fiat of
the most holy Mary, of which I will presently speak. At the moment, in which
the Onlybegotten of the Father descended to her virginal womb, all the heavens
and the creatures were set in commotion. On account of the inseparable union of
the divine Persons, the Three of Them descended with the Word, though the Word
alone was to become incarnate. And with the Lord their God, all the hosts of
the celestial army, issued from heaven, full of invincible strength and
splendor. Although it was not necessary to prepare the way, since the Divinity
fills the universe, is present in all places and cannot be impeded by anything;
nevertheless all the eleven material heavens showed deference to their Creator,
and, together with the inferior elements, opened up and parted as it were, for
his passage; the stars shone with greater brilliancy, the moon and sun with the
planets hastened their course in the service of their Maker, anxious to witness
the greatest of his wonderful works.
129. Mortals did not perceive this commotion and
renewal of all the creatures; both because it happened during the night, as
well as because the Lord wished it to be known only to the angels. These with
new wonder praised Him, knowing these profound and venerable mysteries to be
hidden from men. For they knew that men were far removed from
understanding these wonderful benefits, so admirable even in the eyes of
angelic spirits. To these angelic spirits alone was at that time
assigned the duty of giving glory, praise and reverence for these benefits to
their Maker. However, in the hearts of some of the just the Most High infused
at that hour a new feeling and affection of extraordinary joy of which they
became conscious. They conceived new and grand ideas concerning the Lord; some
of them were inspired and began to confer within themselves, whether this new
sensation, which they felt, was not the effect of the coming of the Messias in
order to redeem the world; but all this remained concealed, for each one
thought, that he alone had experienced this renewal of his interior.
130. In the other creatures
there was a like renovation and change. The birds moved about with new songs
and joyousness; the plants and trees gave forth more fruit and fragrance; and
in like proportion all the rest of the creatures received and felt some kind of
vivifying change. But among those that received the greatest share, were the
Fathers and Saints in limbo, whither the archangel Michael was sent with the
glad message, in order to console them and cause in them the fullness of
jubilee and praise. Only for hell it was a cause of new consternation and
grief; for at the descent of the eternal Word from on high, the demons felt an
impetuous force of the divine power, which came upon them like the waves of the
sea and buried all of them in the deepest caverns of their darkness without
leaving them any strength of resistance or recovery. When by divine permission
they were again able to rise, they poured forth upon the world and hastened
about to discover what strange happening had thus undone them. However,
although they held several conferences among themselves, they were unable to
find the cause. The divine Power
concealed from them the sacrament of the Incarnation and the manner in which
most holy Mary conceived the incarnate Word (No. 326). Not until the death of
Christ on the cross did they arrive at the certainty, that He was God and true
man, as we shalt there relate.
131. In order that the mystery of the Most High might
be fulfilled, the holy archangel Gabriel, in the shape described in the
preceding chapter and accompanied by innumerable angels in visible human forms
and resplendent with incomparable beauty, entered into the chamber, where most
holy Mary was praying. It was on a Thursday at six o'clock in the evening and
at the approach of night. The great modesty and restraint of the Princess of
heaven did not permit Her to look at him more than was
necessary to recognize him as an angel of the Lord. Recognizing him as such,
She, in her usual humility, wished to do him reverence; the holy prince would
not allow it; on the contrary he himself bowed profoundly as before his Queen
and Mistress, in whom he adored the heavenly mysteries of his Creator. At the
same time he understood that from that day on the ancient times and the custom
of old whereby men should worship angels, as Abraham had done (Gen. 28, 2),
were changed. For as human nature was raised to the dignity of God himself in
the person of the Word, men now held the position of adopted children, of
companions and brethren of the angels, as the angel said to Evangelist Saint
John, when he refused to be worshipped (Apoc, 19, 10).
132. The holy archangel saluted our and his Queen and
said: "Ave gratia plena, Dominus tecum, benedicta tu in
mulieribus" (Luke 1, 28). Hearing
this new salutation of the angel, this most humble of all creatures was
disturbed, but not confused in mind (Luke 1, 29). This disturbance arose from
two causes: first, from her humility, for She thought Herself the lowest of the
creatures and thus in her humility, was taken unawares at hearing Herself
saluted and called the "Blessed among women;" secondly, when She
heard this salute and began to consider within Herself how She should receive
it, She was interiorly made to understand by the Lord, that He chose Her for
his Mother, and this caused a still greater perturbance, having such a humble
opinion of Herself. On account of this perturbance the angel proceeded to explain
to Her the decree of the Lord, saying: "Do
not fear, Mary, for thou hast found grace before the Lord (Luke 1, 30); behold
thou shalt conceive a Son in thy womb, and thou shalt give birth to Him, and
thou shalt name Him Jesus; He shall be great, and He shall be called Son of the
Most High," and the rest as recorded of the holy archangel.
133. Our most prudent and humble Queen alone, among
all the creatures, was sufficiently intelligent and magnanimous to estimate at
its true value such a new and unheard of sacrament; and in proportion as She
realized its greatness, so She was also moved with admiration. But She raised
her humble heart to the Lord, who could not refuse Her any petition, and in the
secret of her spirit She asked new light and assistance by which to govern
Herself in such an arduous transaction; for, as we have said in the preceding
chapter, the Most High, in order to permit Her to act in this mystery solely in
faith, hope and charity, left Her in the common state and suspended all other kinds
of favors and interior elevations, which She so frequently or continually
enjoyed. In this disposition She replied and said to holy Gabriel, what is
written in saint Luke: "How shall this happen,
that I conceive and bear; since I know not, nor can know, man?" At the
same time She interiorly represented to the Lord the
vow of chastity, which She had made and the espousal, which his Majesty had
celebrated with Her.
134. The holy prince Gabriel replied (Luke 1, 24) : "Lady, it is easy for the divine power to make Thee a
Mother without the co-operation of man; the Holy Spirit shall remain with Thee
by a new presence and the virtue of the Most High shall overshadow Thee, so that
the Holy of holies can be born of Thee, who shall himself be called the Son of
God. And behold, thy cousin Elisabeth has likewise conceived a son in her
sterile years and this is the sixth month of her conception; for nothing is
impossible with God. He that can make her conceive, who was sterile, can bring
it about, that Thou, Lady, be his Mother, still preserving thy virginity and
enhancing thy purity. To the Son whom Thou shalt bear, God will give the throne
of his father David and his reign shall be everlasting in the house of Jacob.
Thou art not ignorant, O Lady, of the prophecy of Isaias (Is. 7, 14), that a
Virgin shall conceive and shall bear a son, whose name shall be Emmanuel, God
with us. This prophecy is infallible and it shall be fulfilled in thy person.
Thou knowest also of the great mystery of the bush, which Moses saw burning
without its being consumed by the fire (Exod, 3, 2). This signified that the two
natures, divine and human, are to be united in such a manner, that the latter is
not consumed by the divine, and that the Mother of the Messias shall conceive
and give birth without violation of her virginal purity. Remember also, Lady,
the promise of the eternal God to the Patriarch Abraham, that, after the
captivity of his posterity for four generations, they should return to this
land; the mysterious signification of which was, that in this, the fourth
generation, (In the autograph manuscript Mary of Agreda explains this fourth
generation as follows: "The mystery of this fourth generation is that there are
four generations: first that of Adam without a father or mother; second, that of
Eve without a mother; third, of our own, from a father and mother; fourth, that
of our Lord Jesus Christ, from a Mother without a father.
The incarnate
God is to rescue the whole race of Adam through thy cooperation from the
oppression of the devil (Gen. 15, 16). And the ladder, which Jacob saw in his
sleep (Gen. 28, 12), was an express figure of the royal way, which the eternal
Word was to open up and by which the mortals are to ascend to heaven and the
angels to descend to earth. To this earth the Onlybegotten of the Father shall
lower Himself in order to converse with men and communicate to them the
treasures of his Divinity, imparting to them his virtues and his immutable and
eternal perfections."
135. With these and many other words the ambassador of
heaven instructed the most holy Mary, in order that, by the remembrance of the
ancient promises and prophecies of holy Writ, by the reliance and trust in them
and in the infinite power of the Most High, She might overcome her hesitancy at
the heavenly message. But as the Lady herself exceeded the angels in wisdom,
prudence and in all sanctity, She withheld her answer, in order to be able to
give it in accordance with the divine will and that it might be worthy of the
greatest of all the mysteries and sacraments of the divine power. She reflected
that upon her answer depended the pledge of the most blessed Trinity, the
fulfillment of his promises and prophecies, the most pleasing and acceptable of
all sacrifices, the opening of the gates of paradise, the victory and triumph
over hell, the Redemption of all the human race, the satisfaction of the divine
justice, the foundation of the new law of grace, the glorification of men, the
rejoicing of the angels, and whatever was connected with the Incarnation of the
Onlybegotten of the Father and his assuming the form of servant in her virginal
womb (Philip 2, 7).
136. A great wonder, indeed, and worthy of our
admiration, that all these mysteries and whatever others they included, should
be intrusted by the Almighty to an
humble Maiden and made dependent upon her fiat. But befittingly and securely He
left them to the wise and strong decision of this courageous Woman (Prov. 31,
11), since She would consider them with such
magnanimity and nobility, that perforce his confidence in Her was not
misplaced. The operations, which proceed within the divine Essence, depend not
on the co-operation of creatures, for they have no part in them and God could
not expect such co-operations for executing the works ad intra; but in the
works ad extra and such as were contingent, among which that of becoming man
was the most exalted, He could not proceed without the co-operation of most
holy Mary and without her free consent. For He wished to reach this acme of all
the works outside Himself in Her and through Her and
He wished that we should owe this benefit to this Mother of wisdom and our
Reparatrix.
137. Therefore this great Lady considered and
inspected profoundly this spacious field of the dignity of Mother of God (Prov,
21, 11) in order to purchase it by her fiat; She
clothed Herself in fortitude more than human, and She tasted and saw how
profitable was this enterprise and commerce with the Divinity. She comprehended
the ways of his hidden benevolence and adorned Herself
with fortitude and beauty. And having conferred with Herself and with the
heavenly messenger Gabriel about the grandeur of these high and divine
sacraments, and finding Herself in excellent condition to receive the message
sent to Her, her purest soul was absorbed and elevated in admiration, reverence
and highest intensity of divine love. By the intensity of
these movements and supernal affections, her
most pure heart, as it were by natural consequence, was
contracted and compressed with such force, that it distilled three drops of her
most pure blood, and these, finding their way to the natural place for the act
of conception, were formed by the power of the divine and holy Spirit, into the
body of Christ our Lord. Thus the matter, from which the most holy humanity of
the Word for our Redemption is composed, was furnished and administered by the
most pure heart of Mary and through the sheer force of her true love. At the
same moment, with a humility never sufficiently to be extolled, inclining
slightly her head and joining her hands, She pronounced these words, which were
the beginning of our salvation:
"Fiat mihi secundum verbum tuum" (Luke 1, 31).
138. At the pronouncing of this "fiat," so
sweet to the hearing of God and so fortunate for us, in one instant, four
things happened. First, the most holy body of Christ our Lord was formed from
the three drops of blood furnished by the heart of most holy Mary. Secondly,
the most holy soul of the same Lord was created, just as the other souls.
Thirdly, the soul and the body united in order to compose his perfect humanity.
Fourthly, the Divinity united Itself in the Person of the Word with the
humanity, which together became one composite being in hypostatical union; and
thus was formed Christ true God and Man, our Lord and Redeemer. This happened
in springtime on the twenty-fifth of March, at break or dawning of the day, in
the same hour, in which our first father Adam was made and in the year of the
creation of the world 5199, which agrees also with the count of the Roman
Church in her Martyrology under the guidance of the Holy Ghost. This reckoning
is the true and certain one, as was told me, when I inquired at command of my
superiors. Conformable to this the world was created in the month of March,
which corresponds to the beginning of creation. And as the works of the Most
High are perfect and complete (Deut. 32, 4), the plants and trees come forth
from the hands of his Majesty bearing fruit, and they would have borne them
continually without intermission, if sin had not changed the whole nature, as I
will expressly relate in another treatise, if it is the will of the Lord; now
however I will not detain myself therewith, since it does not pertain to our
subject.
139. In the same instant, in which the Almighty celebrated
the nuptials of the hypostatic union in the womb of most holy Mary, the
heavenly Lady was elevated to the beatific vision and the Divinity manifested Itself to Her clearly and intuitively. She saw most high
sacraments, of which I will speak in the next chapter. The mysteries of the
inscriptions, with which She was adorned and which the angels exhibited as
related in the seventh chapter (No. 82, also Part I, 207, 363-4), were made
clear to Her each in particular. The divine Child
began to grow in the natural manner in the recess of the womb, being nourished
by the substance and the blood of its most holy Mother, just as other men; yet
it was more free and exempt from the imperfections, to which other children of
Adam are subject in that place and period. For from some of these, namely those
that are accidental and unnecessary to the substance of the act of generation,
being merely effects of sin, the Empress of heaven was free. She was also free
from the superfluities caused by sin, which in other women are common and
happen naturally in the formation, sustenance and growth of their children. For
the necessary matter, which is proper to the infected nature of the descendants
of Eve and which was wanting in Her, was supplied and
administered in Her by the exercise of heroic acts of virtue and especially by
charity. By the fervor of her soul and her loving affections the blood and
humors of her body were changed and thereby divine Providence provided for the
sustenance of the divine Child. Thus in a natural manner the humanity of our
Redeemer was nourished, while his Divinity was recreated and pleased with her
heroic virtues. Most holy Mary furnished to the Holy Ghost, for the formation
of this body, pure and limpid blood, free from sin and all its tendencies. And
whatever impure and imperfect matter is supplied by other mothers for the
growth of their children was administered by the Queen of heaven most pure and
delicate in substance. For it was built up and supplied by the power of her
loving affections and her other virtues. In a like manner was purified whatever
served as food for the heavenly Queen. For, as She
knew that her nourishment was at the same time to sustain and nourish the Son
of God, She partook of it with such heroic acts of virtue, that the angelic
spirits wondered how such common human actions could be connected with such
supernal heights of merit and perfection in the sight of God.
140. The heavenly Lady was thus established in such
high privileges in her position as Mother of God, that
those which I have already mentioned and which I shall yet mention, convey not
even the smallest idea of her excellence, and my tongue cannot describe it.
For, neither is it possible to conceive it by the understanding, nor can the
most learned, nor the most wise of men find adequate
terms to express it. The humble, who are proficient in
the art of divine love, become aware of it by infused light and by the interior
taste and feeling, by which such sacraments are perceived. Not only was most
holy Mary become a heaven ,a temple and dwelling place of the most holy
Trinity, transformed thereto, elevated and made godlike by the special and
unheard of operation of the Divinity in her most pure womb; but her humble
cottage and her poor little oratory was consecrated by the Divinity as a new
sanctuary of God. The heavenly spirits, who as witnesses of this marvelous
transformation were present to contemplate it, magnified the Almighty with
ineffable praise and jubilee; in union with this most happy Mother, they blessed
Him in his name and in the name of the human race, which was ignorant of this
the greatest of his benefits and mercies. INSTRUCTION OF THE MOST HOLY
QUEEN MARY.
141. My daughter, thou art filled with astonishment at
seeing, by means of new light, the mystery of the humiliation of the Divinity
in uniting Himself with the human nature in the womb of a poor maiden such as I
was. I wish, however, my dearest, that thou turn thy attention toward thyself
and consider, how God humiliated Himself, and came into my womb, not only for
myself alone, but for thee as well. The Lord is infinite in his mercy and his
love has no limit, and thus He attends and esteems and assists every soul who
receives Him, and He rejoices in it, as if He had created it alone, and as if
He had been made man for it alone. Therefore with all the affection of thy soul
thou must, as it were, consider thyself as being thyself in person bound to
render the full measure of thanks of all the world for
his coming; and for his coming to redeem all. And if, with a lively faith thou
art convinced and confessest, that the same God who, infinite in his attributes
and eternal in his majesty, lowered Himself to assume human flesh in my womb,
seeks also thee, calls thee, rejoices thee, caresses thee, and thinks of thee
alone, as if thou wert his only creature (Gal. 2, 20) ;
think well and reflect to what his admirable condescension obliges thee.
Convert this admiration into living acts of faith and love; for, that He
condescends to come to thee, thou owest entirely to the goodness of the King
and Savior, since thou thyself couldst never find Him nor attain Him.
142. Considering merely that which this Lord can give
thee outside of Himself, it will appear to thee grand, even when thou
perceivest it only by a mere human intelligence and affection. It is certainly
true that any gift from such an eminent and supreme King is worthy of all
estimation. But when thou beginst to consider and know by divine light, that
this gift is God Himself and that He makes Thee partaker of his Divinity, when
thou wilt understand, that without thy God and without his coming, all creation
would be as nothing and despicable in thy sight; thou wouldst want to enjoy
thyself and find rest only in the consciousness of possessing such a God, so
loving, so amiable, so powerful, sweet and affluent; who, being such a great
and infinite God, humiliates Himself to thy lowliness in order to raise thee
from the dust and enrich thy poverty, performing toward thee the duties of a
Shepherd, of a Father, a Spouse and most faithful Friend.
143. Attend, therefore, my daughter, in the secret of
thy heart to all the consequences of these truths. Ponder and confer within
thyself about this sweetest love of the great King for thee; how faithful He is
in his gifts and caresses, in his favors, in the works confided to thee, in the
enlightenment of thy interior, instructing thee by divine science in the
infinite greatness of his Being, in his admirable works and most hidden
mysteries, in universal truth and in the nothingness of visible existence. This
science is the first beginning and principle, the basis and foundation of the
knowledge which I have given thee in order that thou mayest attain to the decorum
and magnanimity, with which thou art to treat the favors and benefits of this
thy Lord and God, thy true blessedness, thy treasure, thy light and thy Guide.
Look upon Him as upon the infinite God, loving, yet terrible. Listen, my
dearest, to my words, to my teachings and discipline, for therein are contained
the peace and the enlightenment of thy soul.
OF THE FIRST ACTS OF THE MOST HOLY SOUL OF CHRIST OUR
LORD IN THE FIRST INSTANT OF HIS CONCEPTION AND OF THE CORRESPONDING ACTS OF
HIS MOST PURE MOTHER.
144. In order to understand what were the first acts
of the most holy Soul of Christ our Lord, we must refer to that which has been
said in the preceding chapter (No. 138), namely, that all that substantially
belonged to this divine mystery, the formation of the body, the creation and
the infusion of the soul, and the union of the individual humanity with the
person of the Word, happened and was completed in one act or instant; so that
we cannot say that in any moment of time Christ our highest Good was only man.
For from the first instant He was man and true God; as soon as his humanity
arrived at being man, He was also God; therefore He could not at any time be
called a mere man, not for one instant; but from the very beginning He was
Godman or Mangod. And as the active exercise of the faculties is co-existent
with operative essences, therefore the most holy soul of Christ our Lord, in
the same instant in which the Incarnation took place,
was beatified by intuitive vision and love. According to our way of speaking,
the powers of his intellect and will immediately united with the Divinity
itself. For his human essence joined the Divinity in one instant by hypostatic
union, and thus his human faculties in their most perfect activity were united
with the essence of God himself, so that both in essence and in operation He
was entirely deified.
145. The wonder about this sacrament is that so much
glory, yea, the greatness of the immense Divinity, was enclosed within such a
small compass, not larger than the body of a bee, or not greater than a small
almond. For the dimension of the most holy body of Christ was not any greater
than that at the instant when the conception and hypostatic union took place.
Moreover in this small compass was included the highest glory as well as the
capability for suffering; for the humanity was at the same time glorified and
also passible, it was both a Comprehensor and a Viator, possessing heaven
though yet on his pilgrimage to heaven. God, however, in his infinite power and
wisdom, could thus contract Himself and enclose his infinite Deity within the
sphere of a body thus minute by a new and admirable mode of existence, without
in the least ceasing to be God. By the same Omnipotence He provided that this
most holy soul of Christ, in its superior faculties and in its most noble
operations, should be in the state of glory and enjoying beatitude; while all
this immense glory was at the same time compressed, as it were, into the
superior parts of his soul, suspending the effects and gifts of glory, that
would otherwise naturally have communicated themselves to his body. On this
account He could be at the same time a viator, subject to suffering, enabling
Him to procure our salvation by means of his Cross, Passion and Death.
146. In order to be fully equipped for these and for
whatever the most holy humanity was to perform, all the habits, natural to his
faculties and necessary for their activity and operation both as Comprehensor
and as Viator, were infused into it at the moment of his conception, Thus He
was furnished with the infused science of the blessed; with the sanctifying
grace and the gifts of the Holy Ghost, which according to Isaias rested upon
the Christ (Is. 11, 2). He possessed all the virtues, except faith and hope; for these are incompatible with the beatific vision
and possession, and were wanting in Him; likewise were wanting in the Holy of
the holy ones, all other virtues, which presuppose any imperfection; since He
could not sin, nor was deceit found in his mouth (I Pet. 2, 22). The dignity
and excellence of his science and grace, the virtues and perfections of Christ
our Lord need not be mentioned here, for that is taught by the sacred doctors
and masters of theology in a profuse manner. For me it is sufficient to state
that all this was as perfect as was possible to the divine power and that it
cannot be encompassed by human understanding. For the most holy soul of Christ
drank from the very fountain of the Divinity (Ps. 35, 10) and could do so
without limit or retrenchment, as David says (Ps, 109, 7). Therefore He must
have been possessed of the plenitude of all virtues and perfections.
147. Thus adorned and deified by the Divinity and its
gifts, the most holy soul of Christ our Lord proceeded in its operations in the
following order: immediately it began to see and know the Divinity intuitively
as It is in Itself and as It is united to his most holy humanity, loving It
with the highest beatific love and perceiving the inferiority of the human
nature in comparison with the essence of God. The soul of Christ humiliated
itself profoundly, and in this humility it gave thanks to the immutable being
of God for having created it and for the benefit of the hypostatic union, by
which, though remaining human, it was raised to the essence of God. It also recognized that his most holy humanity
was made capable of suffering, and was adapted for attaining the end of the
Redemption. In this knowledge it offered itself as the Redeemer in sacrifice
for the human race (Ps. 39, 8), accepting the state of suffering and giving
thanks in his own name and in the name of mankind to the eternal Father. He
recognized the composition of his most holy humanity, the substance of which it
was made, and how most holy Mary by the force of her charity and of her heroic
virtues, furnished its substance. He took possession of this holy tabernacle
and dwelling; rejoicing in its most exquisite beauty, and, well pleased,
reserved as his own property the soul of this most perfect and most pure
Creature for all eternity. He praised the eternal Father for having created Her and endowed Her with such vast graces and gifts; for
having exempted Her and freed Her from the common law of sin, as his Daughter,
while all the other descendants of Adam have incurred its guilt (Rom. S, 18).
He prayed for the most pure Lady and for saint Joseph,
asking eternal salvation for them. All these acts, and many others, were most
exalted and proceeded from Him as true God and Man.
Not taking into account those that pertain to the beatific vision and love,
these acts and each one by itself, were of such merit that they alone would
have sufficed to redeem infinite worlds, if such could exist.
148. Even the act of obedience alone, by which the
most holy humanity of the Word subjected itself to suffering and prevented the
glory of his soul from being communicated to his body, was abundantly
sufficient for our salvation. But although this sufficed for our salvation,
nothing would satisfy his immense love for men except the full limit of
effective love (John 13, 1); for this was the purpose of his life, that He
should consume it in demonstrations and tokens of such intense love, that
neither the understanding of men nor of angels was able to comprehend it. And
if in the first instant of his entrance into the world He enriched it so immeasurably,
what treasures, what riches of merits must He have stored up for it, when He
left it by his Passion and Death on the cross after thirty-three years of labor
and activity all divine! O immense love! O charity without limit! O mercy
without measure! O most generous kindness! And, on the
other hand, O ingratitude and base forgetfulness of mortals in the face of such
unheard of and such vast benefaction! What would have become of us without
Him? How much less could we do for this our Redeemer and Lord, even if He had
conferred on us but small favors, while now we are scarcely moved and obliged
by his doing for us all that He could? If we do not wish to treat as a Redeemer
Him, who has given us eternal life and liberty, let us at least hear Him as our
Teacher, let us follow Him as our Leader, as our
guiding light, which shows us the way to our true happiness.
149. This Lord and Master did not work for Himself,
nor did He preempt his soul, nor gain this augmentation of grace, for Himself,
but entirely for us. He had no need of all this, nor could He receive an
increase of grace or glory, since He was filled with them (John 1, 14), as saint John says; for He was the Onlybegotten of the Father
at the same time that He was man. In this He had no equal, nor could He have an
imitator. All the saints and mere creatures gained merits for themselves and
labored for reward; the love of Christ alone was without self interest and
altogether for us. And if He wished to enter and go through the school of
bodily experience of this life (Luke 2, 52), it was in order to teach us and
enrich us by his obedience (Heb. 5, 8), while He turned over to us his infinite
merits and his example, in order that we might be wisely instructed in the art
of loving. For this is not learned perfectly by affection and desire, unless it
is truly and effectively practiced in deeds. I do not enlarge upon the
mysteries of the most holy life of Christ our Lord, on account of my
incapacity, and I refer to the Gospels, selecting only that which will seem
necessary for the heavenly history of his Mother, our Lady. For the lives of
this Son and his most holy Mother are so intimately connected and intertwined
with each other, that I cannot avoid making references to the Gospels and
besides add other facts, which are not mentioned by them concerning the Lord
and which were not necessary in their narratives for the first ages of the
Catholic Church.
150. These operations of Christ our Lord in the first
instant of his conception were followed, in another essential instant, by the
beatific vision of the Divinity, which we have mentioned in the preceding
chapter (No. 139) ; for in one instant of time many instants of essence can
take place. In this vision the heavenly Lady perceived with clearness and distinction
the mystery of the hypostatic union of the divine and the human natures in the
person of the eternal Word, and the most holy Trinity confirmed Her in the title and the rights of Mother of God. This in
all rigor of truth She was, since She was the natural
Mother of a Son, who was eternal God with the same certainty and truth as He
was man. Although this great Lady did not directly cooperate in the union of
the Divinity with the humanity, She did not on this account lose her right to
be called the Mother of the true God; for She concurred by administering the
material and by exerting her faculties, as far as it pertained to a true
Mother; and to a greater extent than to ordinary mothers, since in Her the
conception and the generation took place without the aid of a man. Just as in
other generations the agents, which bring them about in the natural course, are
called father and mother, each furnishing that which is necessary, without
however concurring directly in the creation of the soul, nor in its infusion
into the body of the child; so also, and with greater reason, most holy Mary
must be called, and did call Herself, Mother of God; for She alone concurred in
the generation of Christ, true God and Man, as a Mother, to the exclusion of
any other natural cause; and only through this concurrence of Mary in the
generation, Christ, the Man-God, was born.
151. The Virgin Mother of Christ also understood in
this vision the future mysteries of the life and death of her sweetest Son and
of the Redemption of the human race, together with those of the new law of the
Gospel, which was to be established in connection therewith. To Her were also manifested other great and profound secrets,
which were made known to none other of the saints. The most prudent Queen, seeing
Herself thus in the immediate presence of the Deity and furnished with the
plenitude of divine gifts and science as became the Mother of the Word, lost in
humility and love, adored the Lord in his infinite essence, and without delay
also in its union with the most holy humanity. She gave Him thanks for having
favored Her with the dignity of Mother of God and for
the favors done to the whole human race. She gave thanks and glory also for all
the mortals. She offered Herself as an acceptable sacrifice in his service, in
the rearing up and nourishing of her sweetest Son, ready to assist and
co-operate (as far as on her part it would be possible), in the work of the
Redemption; and the holy Trinity accepted and appointed Her as the Coadjutrix
in this sacrament. She asked for new graces and divine light for this purpose
and for directing Herself in the worthy ministration
of Her office as Mother of the incarnate Word, that She might treat Him with
the veneration and magnanimity due to God himself. She offered to her holiest
Son all the children of Adam yet to be born and the saints of limbo; and in the
name of all and of Herself She performed many acts of heroic virtue and asked
for great favors, which however I will not stop to mention, as I have already
done in regard to others on different occasions. For from these it can easily
be conjectured what petitions this heavenly Queen made on this occasion, which
so far excelled all the other fortunate and happy days of her previous life.
152. But She was especially
persistent and fervent in her prayer to obtain guidance of the Almighty for the
worthy fulfillment of her office as Mother of the Onlybegotten of the Father.
For this, before all other graces, Her humble heart urged Her to desire, and
this was especially the subject of her solicitude, that She might be guided in
all her actions as becomes the Mother of God. The Almighty answered Her: "My Dove, do not fear, for I will assist thee and
guide thee, directing thee in all things necessary for the service of my Onlybegotten
Son." With this promise She came to Herself and issued from her ecstasy,
in which all that I have said had happened, and which was the most wonderful
She ever had. Restored to her faculties, her first action was to prostrate Herself on the earth and adore her holiest Son, God and Man,
conceived in her virginal womb; for this She had not yet done with her external
and bodily senses and faculties. Nothing that She
could do in the service of her Creator, did this most prudent Mother leave
undone. From that time on She was conscious of feeling
new and divine effects in her holiest soul and in her exterior and interior
faculties. And although the whole tenor of her life had been most noble both as
regards her body as her soul; yet on this day of the incarnation of the Word it
rose to still greater nobility of spirit and was made more godlike by still
higher reaches of grace and indescribable gifts.
153. But let no one think that the purest Mother was
thus favored and so closely united with the humanity and Divinity of her
holiest Son, only in order to continue to enjoy spiritual delights and
pleasures, free from suffering and pain. Not so, for in closest possible
imitation of her sweetest Son, this Lady lived to share both joy and sorrow
with Him; the memory of what She had so vividly been
taught concerning the labors and the death of her holiest Son, was like a sword
piercing her heart. This sorrow was proportionate to the knowledge and love,
which such a Mother had of such a Son, and which his presence and intercourse
so continually recalled to her mind. Although the whole life of Christ and of
his most holy Mother was a continued martyrdom and suffering like that of the
cross, and was filled with incessant pain and labors; yet in the most pure and
loving heart of the heavenly Queen there was also this special feature of
suffering, that to her inward sight as a most loving Mother, the passion,
torments, ignominies and death of her Son were forever present. And by this
continued sorrow of thirty-three years She took upon
Herself the long vigil of our Redemption and during all this time this
sacrament was concealed in her bosom without companionship or alleviation from
any creatures.
154. With this loving sorrow, full of the sweetest
anguish, She often looked upon her holiest Son both before and after his birth,
and speaking to Him from her innermost heart, She would repeat these words:
"Lord and God of my soul, most sweet Son of my womb, why hast Thou given
me the position as Mother and yet connected with it the sorrowful thought of
losing Thee, leaving me an orphan, bereft of thy desirable company? Scarcely
art Thou put in possession of a body for thy earthly life, when Thou art
notified of the sentence of a sorrowful death for the rescue of men. The first
of thy actions is one of superabundant merit in satisfaction for his sins. O would
that the justice of the eternal Father were thereby
satisfied and thy sufferings and death fall upon me! From my body and blood
Thou hast composed thine own, without which it would not be possible for Thee
to suffer, since Thou art the immutable and immortal God. If therefore I have
furnished Thee the instrument or the matter of thy sufferings, let me too
suffer with Thee the same death. O inhuman sin, how, being so cruel and the
cause of so much evil, couldst thou nevertheless be so fortunate, that thy
Repairer should be One, who on account of his infinite Goodness, can make thee
a "happy fault!" O my sweetest Son and my love, who shall be thy
guard, who shall defend Thee from thy enemies? O would that it were the will of
the Father, that I guard Thee and save Thee from
death, or die in thy company, and that Thou never leave mine! But that which
happened to the patriarch Abraham, shall not now take place (Gen. 22, 11); for
the predestined decree shall be executed. Let the
will of the Lord be fulfilled." These loving sighs were many times
repeated by our Queen, as I shall say farther on, and the eternal Father
accepted them as an agreeable sacrifice, while they were the sweetest diversion
of her most holy Son. INSTRUCTION WHICH OUR QUEEN AND
LADY GAVE ME.
155. My daughter, since thou hast, by faith and divine
light, arrived at a knowledge of the grandeur of God and of his ineffable
condescension in coming down from heaven for thee and for all the mortals, let
not this benefit be for thee idle and fruitless. Adore the essence of God with
profound reverence, and praise Him for what thou knowest of his goodness.
Receive not light and grace in vain (II Cor. 6, 1) ; and study the encouraging
example given by my most holy Son and myself in imitation of Him, as thou hast
come to be instructed in it; for as He was the true God, and I his Mother (for
in so far as He was man his most holy humanity was created), let us humiliate
ourselves in the remembrance of our lowly human nature and confess the
greatness of the Divinity, greater than any creature can comprehend. Do this
especially when thou receivest the same Lord in the holy Sacrament. In this
admirable Sacrament my most holy Son with Divinity and humanity comes to thee
and remains with thee in a new and incomprehensible way. His great
condescension is manifest, though it is little taken
notice of and respected by mortals, nor does it find the return due to such
love.
156. Let then thy acknowledgment be accompanied with
as much humility, reverence and worship as is possible to thy combined powers
and faculties; for though they be exerted to the utmost limit, they will always
fall short of what thou owest to God and of what He deserves. And in order that
thou mayest as far as possible make up for thy deficiencies, offer up that,
which my most holy Son and I have done; unite thy spirit and thy affections in
union with the Church triumphant and militant, offering at the same time thy life
as a sacrifice and praying that all nations may know, confess and adore their
true God who became man for all. Thank Him for the benefits, which He has
conferred and confers on all, whether they know Him or not, whether they
confess or repudiate Him. Above all I ask of thee, my dearest, to do that which
is most acceptable to the Lord and most pleasing to me; that thou grieve, and
in sweet affection mourn over the gross ignorance and dangerous tardiness of
the sons of men; over the ingratitude also of the children of the Church, who,
having received the light of the divine faith, yet live in such interior
forgetfulness of the works and benefits of the Incarnation, yea, of God
himself, and so much so, that they seem to differ from infidels only in some
ceremonies and exterior worship. They perform these without spirit or
heartiness, many times offending and provoking the divine justice which they
should placate.
157. Through this ignorance and torpidity it happens
that they are not prepared to receive and acquire the true science of the Most
High. They bring upon themselves the loss of the divine light and they deserve
to be left in the heavy darkness, making themselves more unworthy than the
infidels themselves and entailing upon themselves an incomparably greater
chastisement. Mourn over such great damage of thy neighbors and pray for help
from the bottom of thy heart. And in order that thou mayest put away from thy
own self such formidable dangers, do not undervalue the favors and benefits,
which thou receivest, nor, even under pretense of humility, belittle or forget
them. Remember and consider how distant was the journey, which the grace of the
Most High has made in order to call thee (Ps. 18, 7). Ponder in thy mind, how
it has waited upon thee and consoled thee, assured thee in thy doubts, quieted
thee in thy fears, ignored and pardoned thy faults, multiplied favors, caresses
and blessings. I assure thee, my daughter, that thou must confess in thy heart,
that the Most High has not done such things with any other generation; thou of
thyself canst do nothing; thou art poor and more useless than others. Let then
thy thanks be greater than that of all the creatures.
AN EXPLANATION OF THE STATE IN WHICH MOST HOLY MARY
FOUND HERSELF AFTER THE INCARNATION OF THE DIVINE WORD IN HER VIRGINAL WOMB.
158. The deeper I begin to understand the divine
effects and conditions which were caused by the conception of the eternal Word
in the Queen of heaven, the more am I involved in the difficulties of
describing this event. For I find myself immersed in exalted and complicated
mysteries, while my intellect and my power of expression are entirely
insufficient for encompassing what is presented to me. Nevertheless my soul
experiences such great sweetness and such delight in spite of this deficiency,
that I cannot bring myself to repent entirely of my undertaking; at the same
time obedience animates me and also compels me to overcome the hardships, which
in a weak and womanly mind would be insuperable, if the assurance and
encouragement coming from this source would not assist me. This is true
especially of this chapter, in which I am to treat of the gifts of glory
enjoyed by the blessed in heaven. Taking their prerogatives as models I will
try to describe the state of the heavenly Empress Mary after becoming the
Mother of God.
159. For this purpose I will speak of the blessed from
two points of view: of their own perfection and of their relation to God. As
regards the latter, the Divinity is made clear and manifest to them with all
its perfections and attributes. This is called the object of their beatitude,
their glory, the substantial joy, the ultimate end, wherein the whole creature
finds its adequate end and rest. On the part of the saints there are the
beatific operations of vision and love, and of others necessarily connected
with that most happy state, which neither the eyes have seen, nor ears have
heard, nor can enter into the thoughts of men (Is. 64, 4; I Cor. 2, 29). Among
the gifts and prerogatives of this glory of the saints, some are called
endowments freely given as to a spouse entering upon the spiritual matrimony,
which is consummated in the joys of the eternal felicity. Just as the earthly
spouse acquires possession and dominion of her endowments and enjoys in common
with her husband the use of them, so also in glory these gifts are made to the
saints as their own, while their use is common both to them, in as far as they
themselves rejoice in them, and to God, in as far as He is glorified in them by
the saints. And these ineffable gifts are more or less excellent according to
the merits and the dignities of each. But they are not given to those, who are
not of the same nature as the Spouse, namely Christ our Lord; hence only to
men, not to angels. For the incarnate Word has not entered
into any espousals with the angels, (Heb.2, 16) as He
has done with men, by uniting Himself with them in that great sacrament
mentioned by the Apostle, (Eph. 5, 32), in Christ and in the Church.
Since, however, the Bridegroom Christ, as man, is composed of body and soul,
just like the rest of men, therefore both body and soul are to be glorified in
his presence and the gifts of glory are both for the body and the soul. Three
of these gifts pertain to the soul and they are called vision, comprehension
and fruition; and four pertain to the body: clearness, impassibility, subtility and agility, and these are properly the effects
of intuitive vision overflowing from the glory of the soul.
160. In all these gifts our Queen Mary participated to
a certain extent already in this life; especially after the Incarnation of the
Word in her virginal womb. It is true that these gifts are given to the saints
as comprehensors, being pledges and dowries of the eternal and imperishable felicity, and as it were securities for the unchangeableness
of their state. On that account they are not conferred upon those still on the
way to heaven. But upon holy Mary these gifts were conferred as a viator; hence
not as on a comprehensor, not permanently, but from time to time and step by
step, and with a certain difference, as we shall explain. In order that the
appropriateness of this rare blessing in the sovereign Queen may be the better
understood, let that, which I have said in the seventh and following chapters
before the Incarnation, be remembered; for there the preparation and espousal
with which the Most High favored his most blessed Mother in accordance with her
dignity, are explained. On the day in which the divine Lord assumed human
nature in her virginal womb, this spiritual marriage, as far as the heavenly
Lady is concerned, was consummated by that most exalted and exquisite beatific
vision, which, as we have said, was then vouchsafed to Her. But for the other
faithful the Incarnation was as it were an espousal, which is to be consummated
in their heavenly fatherland (Osea 2, 19).
161. Our great Queen possessed another prerequisite
for these privileges: She was exempt from all stain of original and actual sin
and was confirmed in grace by actual impeccability. Thus She was capable of
celebrating this marriage in the name of the Church militant and to make
promises in the name of all its members (Eph, 5, 32) ;
for in this matter, as She was the Mother of the Savior, his foreseen merits
found their application through Her. By her transient vision of the glory of
the Divinity, She became the accepted surety for all the children of Adam, that this same reward will not be denied to any of
those, who shall use the grace of their Redeemer to merit it. The divine
incarnate Word certainly was highly pleased to find, that his most burning love
and his infinite merits should immediately bear fruit in Her,
who at the same time was his Mother, his first Spouse and the bridal chamber of
his Divinity; and that his rewards should fall upon One, in whom there was no
hindrance. By conferring these privileges and favors upon his most holy Mother,
Christ our Salvation, indulged and partly satiated his love for Her and in Her,
for all the mortals; too long a delay did it seem to the divine love, to wait
thirty-three years until He should manifest his Divinity to his own Mother.
Although He had shown Her this favor at other times,
as related in the first part (No. 382, 429), yet on this occasion of his
Incarnation He did it in a more excellent manner; one which corresponded with
the glory of his most holy soul. However, all this in
Her was not permanent, but renewed from moment to
moment with the flow of time, in as far as was compatible with the ordinary
state of pilgrimage.
162. Conformably to this, God, on the day in which
most holy Mary assumed the position of Mother of the eternal Word by conceiving
Him in Her womb, invested us with a right to our Redemption, founded upon the
espousal of the human nature with Himself. In the
consummation of this spiritual marriage by the beatification of the most holy
Mary and the conferring upon Her the gifts of glory, the same reward was also
promised to us, if we should make ourselves worthy of it through the merits of
his most holy Son, our Redeemer. But so far did the Lord raise his Mother above
all the glory of the saints in the blessings of this day, that all the angels
and men, even in their highest reaches of beatific vision and love, cannot
attain to that which the heavenly Queen then attained; the same must also be
said of the gifts of glory, which overflowed from the soul to her body; for all
of them corresponded with her innocence, holiness and merits, and these again
correspond with that highest of all dignities possible to a creature: that of
being the Mother of her Creator.
163. Coming now to these gifts in particular, the
first gift to her soul was the clear and beatific vision, which corresponds to
the obscure knowledge of faith in the viators, This vision was given to the
most holy Mary at the times and in the manner already explained and to be
explained later. Besides these intuitive visions, She
had many other abstractive ones of the Divinity, of the kind mentioned above.
Although all these were transient, yet they left in her mind most exquisite and
various images furnishing Her with such a clear and
exalted knowledge of the Divinity, that no words can be found to express it. In
this our Lady was singularly privileged before all other creatures, and thus She possessed the permanent effects of the gifts of glory as
far as compatible with her position as viator. When at times the Lord hid
himself from Her, suspending the use of these images
for certain high ends, She made use of infused faith, which in Her was
superexcellent and most efficacious. In such manner, one way or the other, her
soul never lost sight of that divine Object, nor wandered from It even for a moment. However, during the nine months in
which She bore in her womb the incarnate Word, She
enjoyed even greater visions and gifts of the Divinity.
164. The second of these gifts is comprehension,
possession or apprehension. This consists in the attainment of the end,
corresponding to the virtue of hope, whereby we seek after the final Object in
order to possess It without danger of ever losing It.
This possession and comprehension in most holy Mary corresponded to the visions
mentioned; because seeing the Divinity, She possessed It. Whenever She depended
on faith alone, hope was in Her more firm and secure than in any other
creature; and more than this; for, as the security of possession in the
creature is founded to a great extent upon sanctity and impeccability, our
heavenly Lady on this account was so privileged, that the firmness and security
of her possession of God, although She was a pilgrim, equaled in certain
respects the firmness and security of the blessed. For on
account of her stainless and unimpeachable sanctity She was assured of never
losing, God; although the cause of this security in Her as Viatrix
was not the same as in the glorified saints. During the months of her
pregnancy She enjoyed this possession of God in
various ways by special and wonderful graces, through which the Most High
manifested Himself and united Himself to her most pure Soul.
165. The third gift is fruition, which corresponds to
charity, since charity does not cease but is perfected in glory (I Cor. 13, 8) ; for fruition consists in loving the highest Good
possessed by us. This is the charity of heaven, that, just as God is known and
possessed as He is in "Himself, so also He is loved for his own sake.
True, even now, while we are yet viators, we love Him for his own sake; but
there is a great difference. Now we love him in desire and we know Him not as
He is in Himself, but as He is represented to us by incongruous images or by
enigmas (I Cor. 13, 12; John 3, 2) ; therefore our
love is not perfected, nor do we rest in it, or find the plenitude of delight
therein, though there is much to incite us. But in the clear vision and possession
we shall see Him as He is in Himself and we shall see Him through Himself, not
through enigmas; thus we shall love Him as He should be loved and as far as we
can love Him respectively; our love will be perfected and the fruition of Him
will be satiated, without leaving anything to be desired.
166. Most holy Mary participated in this fruition more
abundantly than in any other; for even though her most ardent love might, in a
certain respect, have been inferior to that of the blessed whenever She was
without the clear vision of the Divinity, yet it was superior in many other
points of excellence, even while remaining in the lower state. No one ever
possessed the divine science in the same degree as this Lady, and by it She understood how God is to be loved for Himself. This
science was perfected by the memory of what She had
seen and enjoyed higher in degree than the angels. And as her love was
nourished by this knowledge of God, it necessarily exceeded that of the blessed
in all that did not pertain to immediate fruition and unchangeableness as to
increase or augmentation. On account of her profound humility the Lord
condescended to an arrangement, whereby She could act
as a Viatrix remaining in a holy fear of displeasing
her Beloved. This burning love was of the most perfect kind and tended entirely
toward God himself; it caused in Her ineffable joy and
delight, proportioned to the excellence of her love.
167. In regard to the gifts of the body, redounding
from the gifts of glory, and other gifts of the soul constituting the
accidental part of the glory of the blessed, I will say, that they serve for
the perfection of the glorious bodies in the activity of their senses and
motive powers. By them the bodies are assimilated to the soul and throw off the
impediments of their earthly grossness, enabling them to obey the wishes of the
souls, which in that most happy state cannot be imperfect or opposed to the
will of God. The senses require two gifts: one to refine the reception of
sensible images, and this is perfected by the gift of clearness; the other, to
repel all activity or passivity hurtful and destructive of the body, and this
is done by the gift of impassibility. Two other gifts are required in order to
perfect the power of motion: one, in order to overcome the resistance or
impediment of gravity, furnished by the gift of agility; the other, in order to
overcome the resistance of other bodies, furnished by the gift of subtlety.
With these gifts the body becomes glorious, clear, incorruptible, agile and
subtle.
168. In all these privileges our great Queen and Lady
participated during her mortal life. The gift of clearness disposes the body to
receive the light and at the same time to give it forth, doing away with
earthly opaqueness and obscurity and making it more transparent than clearest
crystal. Whenever most holy Mary enjoyed the clear and beatific vision, her
virginal body participated in this privilege in a measure beyond all human
calculation. The after-effects of this purity and clearness would have been
most wonderful and astounding, if they could have been made perceptible to the
senses. Sometimes they were noticeable in her most beautiful face, as I will
say later on, especially in the third part; yet they were not known or
perceived by all who conversed with Her, for the Lord interposed a curtain or
veil, in order that they might not always or indiscriminately be manifested.
But in many respects She herself enjoyed the
advantages of this gift, though it was disguised, suspended or hidden to the
gaze of others; She for instance was not inconvenienced by earthly opaqueness,
as the rest of men.
169. Saint Elisabeth perceived something of this
clearness, when at the sight of Mary she exclaimed: "And whence is this to
me, that the Mother of my Lord should come to
me?" (Luke 1, 43). The world was not capable of
perceiving this sacrament of the King (Tob. 12, 7),
nor was it opportune to manifest it at that time. Yet to a certain extent her
face was always more bright and lustrous than that of other creatures. Also in
other respects it exhibited qualities altogether above the natural order of
other bodies, which produced in Her a most delicate
and spiritualized complexion, like that of an animated crystal. This presented
to the touch not the asperity natural to the flesh, but the softness as it were
of the purest and the finest silk, so that I cannot find any other comparison
to make myself understood. Yet all this should not appear strange in the Mother
of God; for She bore Him in her womb and She had seen
Him often, even face to face. For the Israelites could not look upon Moses face
to face, nor bear the splendor, which shone forth from him after his
communication with the Lord upon the mountain (Exod. 34, 29), though it was
much inferior to that vouchsafed to most holy Mary. There is no doubt, that if
God had not by a special providence withheld and hidden the splendor in reality
due to the countenance and the body of his most pure Mother, it would have
brightened the world more than a thousand suns combined. None of the mortals
could, by natural power, have sustained its brilliancy; since, even thus
restrained and concealed, it was sufficient to cause in them the same effects,
which saint Dionysius the Areopagite experienced in looking upon Her and which he describes in his letter to Paul.
170. Impassibility produces in the glorified body such
a condition, that no agent, except God himself, can by any activity or
influence, change or disturb it, no matter how powerful this activity may be.
Our Queen participated in this gift in two ways: first, in regard to the
temperament and humors of the body. She possessed these in such a delicate
measure and proportion, that She could not contract or suffer any infirmities,
nor was She subject to any other human hardships which arise from the
inequality of the four humors, being in this regard as it were almost
impassible. Secondly, in regard to the dominion and commanding power, which She
had over all the creatures, as mentioned above, (No. 13, 18,43,
56,60) ; for none of them had power to act contrary to her will and consent. We
can add still another participation of impassibility: the assistance of the
divine power in proportion to her innocence. For, if it is said, that the first
parents in paradise could not suffer a violent death as long as they persevered
in original justice, it must not be understood to mean that they enjoyed this
privilege by intrinsic or inherent powers (for if a lance would have wounded
them they could die), but they enjoyed it through the assistance of the Lord,
who would always prevent them from being wounded. If then the first parents
possessed this privilege and could transmit it to their descendants as their
servants and vassals, it was due, by a much better title, to the innocence of
the sovereign Mary; and so in truth was She endowed
with it.
171. Our most humble Queen made no use of these privileges, for She renounced them in imitation of
her most holy Son and in order to labor and gain merits for our benefit; in
spite of them She, wished to suffer and She really suffered more than the
martyrs. Human intellect cannot weigh correctly the greatness of these labors.
We shall speak of them throughout this heavenly history, leaving much more
untold, for common language and words cannot encompass them. But I must advert
to two things: first, that the sufferings of our Queen bore no relation to any
sins of her own, for She had none to atone for; and therefore She suffered none
of the bitterness, which is mixed with pains endured in the memory and
consciousness of our own guilt of sins committed. Secondly: that in her
sufferings She was divinely sustained in accordance with the ardors of her
love, for She could not naturally endure so much sufferings, as her love called
for, or as much as, on account of this very love, the Lord allowed Her to
endure.
172. Subtility is a gift,
which takes away from the glorified body the density or grossness natural to
quantitative matter and which enables it to penetrate other bodies and to
occupy the same place with them. The subtilized bodies of the blessed therefore
are endowed with qualities peculiar to the spirit and can without difficulty
penetrate the quantitative matter of other bodies. Without dividing or
separating them it can occupy the same place. Thus our Lord's body, coming
forth from the grave (Matth. 28, 2) and entering the closed doors (John 20,
19), penetrated the material enclosing these places. Most holy Mary
participated in this gift not only while She enjoyed
the beatific visions, but also otherwise according to her will and desire, as
happened many times in her life in her bodily appearances to some persons, of
which we shall yet relate; for in all these She made use of her gift of
subtlety penetrating other bodies.
173. The last gift of the body enables the glorified
body to move from place to place instantly and without the impediment of
terrene gravity, in the manner of pure spirits, which move by their own
volition. Mary most holy possessed a continual and wonderful participation in
this agility, especially as a direct result of the divine visions. She did not
feel in her body the force of weight and gravity; therefore She
could walk without feeling the inconvenience usual to that kind of exercise;
She could move about with instantaneous speed, without feeling any shock or
fatigue as we would feel. All this belonged naturally to the quality and
condition of her body, so spiritualized and well-formed. During the time of her
pregnancy She felt even less the weight of her body;
although, in order to bear her share of labors, She allowed hardships to
produce their effect. She was so admirable and perfect in the possession and
use of these privileges, that I find myself wanting in words to express all
that has been made manifest to me concerning them; for it exceeds all that I
have said or am able to say.
174. Queen of heaven and my Mistress, since Thou hast
condescended to adopt me as thy daughter, thy word will remain a pledge, that
Thou wilt be my Guide and Teacher. Relying on this promise I presume to propose
a difficulty, in which I find myself: How does it come, my Mother and Lady, that thy most blessed soul, after it had enjoyed the
clear intuition of God according to the disposition of his Majesty, did not
remain in the state of blessedness? And why can we not say, that Thou didst
remain in this state of beatitude, since there was no sin nor any other
obstacle to this state in Thee, according to the dignity and sanctity revealed
to me by the supernatural light? ANSWER AND EXPLANATION OF OUR
QUEEN AND LADY.
175. My dearest daughter, thou doubtest as one that
loves me and askest as one not knowing. Consider then, that the perpetuity and
durability of blessedness and felicity is destined for the saints, since their
happiness is to be entirely perfect; if it would last only for some time, it
would be wanting in the completeness and adequacy necessary for constituting it
as the highest and most perfect happiness. At the same time it is incompatible
with the common law and ordinary course, that the creature be glorified and at
the same time be subject to sufferings, even though it be
without sin. If this law did not hold good with my most holy Son (John 1, 18),
it was because He was at the same time God and man and it was not befitting that
his most holy soul, being hypostatic ally united with the Divinity, should be
without the beatific vision; and as He was at the same time Redeemer of the
human race, He could not suffer nor pay the debt of sin, that is pain, if He
had not possessed a body capable of suffering. But I was a mere creature, and
therefore I could have no claim to the vision, which' to Him was due as a God.
Moreover I could not be said to have permanently enjoyed the state of
blessedness, because it was conceded to me from one time to another. Under
these conditions I was capable of suffering at one time and enjoying
blessedness at another; moreover it was more usual for me to suffer and to gain
merits, than to be blessed, since I belonged to the viators and not to the
comprehensors.
176. Justly the Most High has ordained, that the
blessedness of eternal life should not be enjoyed in this mortal existence
(Exod, 33, 20), and that immortality should be reached by passing through
existence in a mortal body and by gaining merits in a state of suffering, such
as is the present life of men (Rom. 6, 23). Although death in all the sons of
Adam was the stipend and punishment of sin (Rom. 6, 23), and therefore death
and all the other effects and chastisements had no rights in me, who had not
sinned; yet the Most High ordained, that I also, in imitation of my most holy
Son, should enter into felicity and eternal life by the death of the body (Luke
24, 26). There was nothing incongruous in this for me, but it afforded me many
advantages, allowing me to follow the royal way of all men and gain many merits
and great glory by suffering and dying. Another advantage resulted therefrom
for men, for they saw that my most holy Son and I myself, who was his Mother,
were truly human as they themselves, since we proved to them our mortality.
Thereby the example, which we left them became much
more efficacious and they would be induced to imitate the life, which we led
and which redounded so much to the greater glory and exaltation of my Son and
Lord, and of myself. All this would have come to nought, if the visions of the
Divinity had been continuous in me. However, after I conceived the eternal
Word, the benefits and favors were more frequent and greater, since I was then
brought into close connection with Him. This is my answer to thy questions. No
matter how much thou hast meditated and labored in manifesting the privileges
and their effects enjoyed by me in mortal life, thou wilt never be able to
comprehend all that the powerful arm of the Omnipotent wrought in me. And much
less canst thou describe in human words what thou hast understood.
177. Now attend to the instruction, which I will give
thee regarding the preceding chapters. If I was the model to be imitated in the
way I responded to the coming of God into the soul and into the world by
showing due reverence, worship, humility, and thankful love, it follows, that
if thou, (and in the same way the rest of the souls), art solicitous in
imitating me, the Most High will come and produce the same effects in thee as
in myself; though they may be not so great and efficacious. For if the
creature, as soon as it obtains the use of reason, begins to advance toward the
Lord as it should, directing its footsteps in the path of life and salvation,
his Most High Majesty will issue forth to meet it, (Wis. 6, 15), being
beforehand with his favors and communications; for to Him it seems a long time
to wait for the end of the pilgrimage in order to manifest Himself to his
friends.
178. Thus it happens, that by means of faith, hope and
charity, and by the worthy reception of the Sacraments, many divine effects,
wrought by his condescension, are communicated to the souls. Some are
communicated according to the ordinary course of grace and others according to a more supernatural and wonderful order; and each one will
be more or less conformable to the disposition of the soul and to the ends
intended by the Lord, which are not known at present. And if the souls do not
place any obstacle on their part, He will be just as liberal with them as with
those who dispose themselves, giving them greater light and knowledge of his
immutable being, and by a divine and exceedingly sweet infusion of grace,
transforming them into a likeness of Himself and communicating to them many of
the privileges of the beatified. For after He is found He allows Himself to be
taken possession of and enjoyed by that hidden embrace, which the Spouse felt,
when She said: "I will hold Him and not dismiss Him" (Cant. 3, 4). Of
this possession and of his presence the Lord himself will give many token and
pledges, in order that the soul may possess Him in peace like the blessed,
although always only for a limited time. So liberal as this will God, our
Master and Lord, be in rewarding the objects of his love for the labors
accepted by them for his sake and fearlessly undertaken to gain possession of
Him.
179. In this sweet violence of love the creature
begins to withdraw from and die to all earthly things; and that is why love is
called strong as death. From this death arises a new spiritual life, which
makes the soul capable of receiving new participations of the blessed and their
gifts; for it enjoys more frequently the overshadowing of the Most High and the
fruits of the highest Good, which it loves. These mysterious influences cause a
sort of overflow into the interior and animal parts of the creature, producing
a certain transparency and purifying it from the effects of the spiritual
darknesses; it makes it courageous and as it were indifferent to suffering, ready
to meet and endure all that is adverse to the inclinations of the flesh. With a
certain subtle thirst it begins to seek after all the difficulty and violence
incident to the attainment of the kingdom of heaven (Matth. 11, 12); it becomes
alert and unhindered by earthly grossness, so that many times the body itself
begins to feel this lightness in regard to its own self; the labors, which
before seemed burdensome, become easy. Of all these effects thou hast knowledge
and experience, my daughter, and I have described and rehearsed them for thee,
in order that thou mayest dispose thyself and labor so much the more earnestly;
so that the divine activity and power of the Most High, in working out his
pleasure in thee, may find thee well disposed and free from resistance and
hindrance. OF THE ATTENTION AND CARE, WHICH
THE MOST HOLY MARY BESTOWS UPON THE FRUIT OF HER WOMB AND SOME HAPPENINGS IN REGARD
TO IT.
180. As soon as our Lady and Queen issued from the
trance, in which She had conceived the eternal
incarnate Word, She prostrated Herself upon the earth and adored Him in her
womb, as I have already said in the twelfth chapter (No. 152). This adoration She continued all her life, commencing it at midnight every
day and repeating these genuflexions three hundred times, until the same hour
of the following night, and oftener, whenever She had opportunity; in this She
was even more diligent during the nine months of her divine pregnancy. In order
to comply entirely with the new duties consequent upon the guarding of this
Treasure of the eternal Father in the virginal bridal chamber, She directed all her attention toward frequent and fervent
prayer. She was solicitous in sending up many and reiterated petitions to be
able worthily to preserve the heavenly Treasure confided to Her.
Accordingly She dedicated anew to the Lord her soul
and all her faculties, practicing all virtues in a heroic and supreme degree,
so that She caused new astonishment in the angels. She also consecrated and
offered up all the motions of her body to the worship and service of the infant
Godman within Her. Whether She ate, slept, labored or
rested, She did it all for the nourishment and conservation of her sweetest
Son, and in all these actions She was inflamed more and more with divine love.
181. On the day following the Incarnation, the
thousand guardian angels which attended upon most holy Mary, appeared in
corporeal form and with profound humility adored their incarnate King in the
womb of the Mother. Her also they acknowledged anew as their Queen and Mistress
and rendered Her due homage and reverence, saying:
"Now, O Lady, Thou art the true Ark of the testament (Deut. 10, 5), since
Thou containest the Lawgiver himself and preservest the Manna of heaven (Heg. 9, 4), which is our true bread.
Receive, O Queen, our congratulations on account of thy dignity and happiness,
for which we also thank the Most High; since He has befittingly chosen Thee for
his Mother and his tabernacle. We offer anew to Thee our homage and service,
and wish to obey Thee as vassals and servants of the supreme and omnipotent
King, whose Mother Thou art." These protestations and homages of the holy
angels excited in the Mother of wisdom incomparable sentiments of humility,
gratitude and love of God. For in this most prudent heart, where all things
were weighed with the scales of the sanctuary according to their true value and
weight, this reverence and acknowledgment of the angelic spirits proclaiming Her as their Queen, was held in high esteem. Although it was
a greater thing to see Herself the Mother of the King
and Lord of all creation, yet all her blessings and dignities were made more
evident by these demonstrations and homages of the holy angels.
182. The angels rendered this homage as executors and
ministers of the will of the Most High. When their Queen and our Lady was
alone, all of them attended upon Her in corporeal form, and they assisted Her
in her outward actions and occupations; and when She was engaged in manual
labor, they administered to Her what was needed. Whenever She
happened to eat alone in the absence of saint Joseph, they waited upon Her at
her poor table and at her humble meals. Everywhere they followed Her and formed an escort, and helped Her in the services
rendered to saint Joseph. Amid all these favors and obsequious attendance the
heavenly Lady did not forget to ask permission from the Master of masters for
all her operations and undertakings and to implore his direction and
assistance. So exact and so well governed were all her exercises according to
the plenitude of perfection, that the Lord alone could
comprehend and properly weigh them.
183. Besides the ordinary guidance during the time in
which She carried in her most holy womb the incarnate
Word, She felt his divine presence in diverse ways, all admirable and most
sweet. Sometimes He showed Himself to Her by
abstractive vision, as mentioned above. At other times She
saw and beheld Him as He was now present in the virginal temple, united
hypostatically with the human nature. At other times the most holy humanity was
manifested to Her, as if in a crystalline monstrance, composed of her own
maternal womb and purest body; this kind of vision afforded special consolation
and delight to the great Queen. At other times She perceived how the glory of
his most holy soul overflowed into the body of the divine Child, communicating
to It some of the effects of its own blessedness and glory and how the clarity
and light of the natural body of her Son passed over in a wonderfully sweet
ineffable and divine manner into Herself as Mother. This favor transformed Her entirely into another kind of being, inflaming her heart
and causing in Her such effects as no created capacity can explain. Let the
intellect of the highest seraphim extend and dilate as much as it may, it would
nevertheless find itself overwhelmed by this glory (Prov. 25, 27) ; for the entire being of the heavenly Queen was an
intellectual and animated heaven, and in Her was summarized the divine glory
and greatness, in a measure that even the vast confines of the heavens
themselves could not encompass.
184. These and other prerogatives alternated and
succeeded each other in accordance with the exercises of the divine Mother, and
such variety as suited the different kinds of work which She
performed. All her doings, whether spiritual or manual or otherwise of the
body, served her God or benefited her neighbors, being undertaken and
accomplished by this prudent Maiden to produce a harmony admirable and most
sweet before the Lord, and wonderful to the angelic spirits. And when, by the
disposition of the Most High, the Mistress of the world returned to a more
natural state, She suffered mortal agony, caused by the force and violence of
her love; for to Her could in truth be applied what Solomon says in the name of
the Spouse: "Stay me with flowers, compass me about with apples"
(Cant. 2, 5) ; and thus it would happen, that by the piercing wounds of these
sweet arrows of love She was brought near to the ending of her life. But in
this necessity the powerful arm of the Most High was wont to strengthen Her in a supernatural manner.
185. Sometimes, in order to afford Her
sensible relief, innumerable birds would come to visit Her by the command of
the Lord. As if they were endowed with intellect, they would salute Her by their lively movements, and dividing into harmonious
choirs, would furnish Her with sweetest music, and they would wait for her
blessing before again dispersing. This happened in a special manner soon after She had conceived the divine Word, as if they wished to
congratulate Her on her dignity in imitation of the angels. The Mistress of all
creatures on that day spoke to the different kinds of birds and commanded them
to remain and praise with Her the Creator, in thanksgiving for the creation,
and for the existence and beauty given to them and to sing his praises for
their conservation. Immediately they obeyed Her as
their Mistress and anew they began to form choirs, singing in sweetest harmony
and bowed low to the ground to worship their Creator and honor the Mother, who
bore Him in her womb. They were accustomed to bring flowers to Her in their beaks and place them into her hands, waiting
until She should command them to sing or to be silent according to her wishes.
It also happened that in bad weather some birds would come and seek the
protection of the heavenly Lady, and She took them in
and nourished them, in her admirable innocence glorifying the Creator of all
things.
186. And our weak ignorance must not be estranged at
these wonders, for, though the incidents might be called small, the purposes of
the Most High are great and venerable in all his works; and also the works of
our most prudent Queen were great, no matter of what kind they might have been.
And who is so presumptuous as to ignore the importance of knowing how much of
God's essence and perfections are manifest in the existence of all the
creatures? How important it is to seek Him and find Him, to bless Him and
magnify Him in all his creatures, as admirable, powerful, generous and holy?
Why should it not be our duty to imitate Mary, who overlooked no time, place or
occasion, to attain this object? And how also shall our ungrateful
forgetfulness, not be confounded, and our hardness of heart not be softened?
How can our listless heart fail to be aroused, when we see ourselves
reprehended and urged for very shame to thankfulness by the irrational
creatures? Merely for the slight participation of the Divinity that consists in
bare existence, they proclaim his praises without intermission; whereas we men,
who are made to the image and likeness of God, furnished with the powers of
knowing Him and enjoying Him eternally, forget Him so far as not even to know
Him, and instead of serving Him, offend Him! Thus it comes that in no wise can
men be preferred to the brute animals, since they have become worse than the
brutes (Ps. 48, 13). INSTRUCTION GIVEN BY OUR MOST
HOLY QUEEN AND LADY.
187. My daughter, thou hast received my instruction
until now in order to desire and strive after the heavenly science, which I
wish thee so earnestly to acquire and which shall teach thee to understand
profoundly, what decorous reverence is due to God. I remind thee once more,
that this science is very hard to learn and little coveted by men on account of
their ignorance; for thence, to their great loss, it arises that, in conversing
with the Most High or rendering Him service or worship, they fail to form a
worthy concept of his infinite greatness, and to free themselves from the
darksome images of their earthly occupations, which make them torpid and
carnal, unworthy and unfit for the magnificent intercourse with the supernal
Deity. And this ill-bred coarseness entails another
disorder: namely, that whenever they converse with their neighbors, they do it
without order, measure or discretion, become entangled in their outward
actions, and losing the memory and presence of their Creator in the excitement
of their passions, are completely entangled in what is earthly.
188. I desire therefore, my dearest, that thou By from this danger and learn the science, of the immutable
being and infinite attributes of God. In such a way must thou study Him and
unite thyself to Him, that no created being will come
between thy soul and the true and highest Good. At all times and in all places,
occupations and operations thou must keep Him in sight, without releasing Him
from the intimate embrace of thy heart (Cant. 3, 4). Therefore I command thee
to treat Him with a magnanimous heart, with decorum and reverence, with deep
felt fear of the soul. And whatever pertains to his divine worship, I desire
that thou handle with all attention and care. Above all in order to enter into
his presence by prayer and petitions, free thyself from all sensible and
earthly images. And since human frailty cannot always remain constant in the
force of love, nor always experience the sweet violence of its movements on
account of its earthly nature, thou shouldst seek other assistance, such as
will help thee toward the same end of finding thy God. Such help, for instance,
is afforded by his praise in the beauty of the heavens and of the stars, in the
variety of the plants, in the pleasant vista of the fields, in the forces of
the elements, and especially in the exalted nature of the angels and in the
glory of his saints.
189. But bear continually in mind especially this
particular caution, not to seek any earthly alleviation in any event or in any
labor which thou art to undergo, nor to indulge in any diversion coming from
human creatures; and especially not in those coming from men, for an account of
thy naturally weak and yielding character, so much adverse to giving pain, thou
placest thyself in danger of exceeding and overstepping the limit of what is
allowed or just, following, more than is proper for the religious spouses of my
most holy Son, thy sensible likings. The risks of this negligence all the human
creatures incur; for if full reins are given to frail human nature, it will not
give heed to reason, not to the true light of the Spirit; but, forgetting them
entirely, it will blindly follow the impulse of its passions and pleasures.
Against this general danger is provided the enclosure and retirement of the
souls consecrated to my Son and Lord, in order to cut off the root of those unhappy
and disgraceful occasions for those religious, who would willingly seek them
and entangle themselves in them. Thy recreations, my dearest, and those of thy
sister religious, must be free from such danger and deadly poison. Seek always
those, which thou shalt find in the secret of thy breast and in the chamber of
thy Beloved, who is faithful in consoling the sorrowful and in assisting the
afflicted.
MOST HOLY MARY IS INFORMED OF THE WILL OF THE LORD,
THAT SHE VISIT HOLY ELISABETH; SHE ASKS SAINT JOSEPH FOR PERMISSION TO GO, REMAINING
SILENT ABOUT ALL THAT HAD HAPPENED TO HER.
190. By the words of the heavenly messenger, the
archangel Gabriel, most holy Mary had been informed,
that her cousin Elisabeth (who was held to be sterile) had conceived a son and
that She was already in the sixth month of her pregnancy. Afterwards, in one of
the intellectual visions, the Most High revealed to Her, that in a miraculous
birth, Elisabeth would bring forth a son, who would be great before the Lord
(Luke 1, 15) ; a Prophet and the Forerunner of the
incarnate Word; also other great mysteries of the holiness and of the
personality of saint John were revealed to Her. On this same occasion and on
others the heavenly Queen was informed, that it would be agreeable and pleasing
to the Lord, if She would visit her cousin, in order that as well Elisabeth as
also the child in her womb might be sanctified by the presence of their
Redeemer; for his Majesty was anxious to communicate the benefits of his coming
into the world and his merits to his Precursor, in order to make of him as it
were the well seasoned first fruit of his Redemption.
191. At the news of this sacramental mystery the most
prudent Virgin, with admirable jubilee of spirit, rendered thanks to the Lord
for such great condescension and favor vouchsafed to the soul of the Precursor
and Prophet and to his mother Elisabeth. Signifying her readiness to fulfill
the divine pleasure, She spoke to his Majesty and
said: "Most high Lord, beginning and cause of all good, let thy name be
eternally glorified, acknowledged and praised by all the nations. I, the least
of thy creatures, give thee humble thanks for the liberal kindness, which thou
wishest to show to thy servant Elisabeth and to the son of her womb. If it is according
to the promptings of thy condescension, that I serve thee in this work, I stand
prepared, my Lord, to obey eagerly thy divine mandates." The Most High
answered Her: "My Dove and my Beloved, elect among creatures, truly I say
to thee, that on account of thy intercession and thy love I will, as a Father
and most liberal God, take care of thy cousin Elisabeth and of the son, who is
to be born of her: I will choose him as my Prophet and as the Precursor of the
Word, which is made man in thee; I will look upon them as belonging to thee and intimately connected with thyself. Therefore I wish,
that my and thy Onlybegotten go to see the mother, in order to free the son
from the chains of the first sin and in order that, before the common and
ordinary time decreed for other men, his voice and praise may sound up to my
ears (Cant. 2, 14), and that the mysteries of the Incarnation and Redemption
may be revealed to his sanctified soul. Therefore I wish thee to visit
Elisabeth; for We three Persons of the blessed Trinity have chosen her son for
great deeds conformable to our pleasure."
192. To this command of the Lord the most obedient
Mother responded: "Thou knowest, my Lord and God, that all the desires of
my heart seek but thy divine pleasure and that I wish to fulfill diligently
whatever Thou commandest to thy humble servant. Allow me, my God, to ask
permission from my husband Joseph and that I make this journey according to his
will and direction. And in order that I may not diverge from what is thy
pleasure, do Thou govern me during that journey in all my actions, direct my
footsteps to the greater glory of thy name (Ps. 118, 113). Accept therefore the
sacrifice, which I bring in going out in public and in leaving my cherished
retirement. I wish to offer more than my desires, God and King of my soul, I
hope to be made able to suffer all that will conduce to thy greater service and
pleasure purely for thy love, so that the longings of my soul may not remain
entirely unfulfilled."
193. When our great Queen came out of this vision, She called upon the thousand angels of her guard, who
appeared to Her in bodily forms, and told them of the command of the Most High.
She asked them to assist Her with careful solicitude
in this journey, to teach Her how to fulfill all the commands according to the
greater pleasure of the Lord, to defend Her and guard Her from dangers so that
She might conduct Herself in all things during that
journey in the most perfect manner. The holy princes, with wonderful devotion,
offered to obey and serve Her. In the same manner the
Mistress of all prudence and humility was wont to act also on other occasions.
For though She was Herself more wise and more perfect in her deeds than the
angels, yet because She was yet in the state of pilgrimage and endowed with a
nature lower than that of the angels, She was always solicitous to attain the
plenitude of perfection by consulting and asking for the aid of her guardian
angels, though they were her inferiors in sanctity. Under their direction, as
also by the promptings of the holy Spirit, all her
human actions were well disposed and well ordered. The heavenly spirits obeyed Her with alacrity and punctuality, such as was proper to
their nature and due to their Queen and Lady. They held sweet intercourse and delightful
colloquy with Her, and alternately with Her they sang
highest songs of praise and adoration of the Most High. At other times they
conversed about the supernal mysteries of the incarnate Word, the hypostatic
union, the sacrament of the Redemption, the triumphs to be celebrated by Him,
the fruits and blessings accruing there from to mortals. It would necessitate
lengthening out this work too much, if I were to write all that has been
revealed to me about these conversations.
194. The humble Spouse proceeded immediately to ask
the consent of saint Joseph for executing the mandate of the Most High, and, in
her consummate prudence, She said nothing of these happenings, but simply spoke
to him these words: "My lord and spouse, by the divine light it was made
known to me, that through condescension of the Most High the prayer of my
cousin Elisabeth, the wife of Zacharias, has been heard; she has conceived a
son, though she was sterile. Since she has obtained this singular blessing, I
hope that through God's infinite bounty, her Son will
greatly please and glorify the Lord. I think that on this occasion I am under
obligation to visit her and converse with her on certain things for her
consolation and spiritual encouragement. If this is according to thy liking, my
master, I will perform it with thy permission, for I am entirely subject to thy
will and pleasure. Consider then what is best for me and command what I am to
do."
195. This prudent silence of the most holy Mary, so
full of humble subjection, was very agreeable to the Lord; for She showed Herself thereby worthy and capable of receiving
the deposit of the great sacraments of the King (Tob.
12, 7). Therefore, and on account or the confidence in his fidelity with which
She proceeded, his Majesty disposed the most pure heart of saint Joseph, giving
him his divine light to act conformably to his will. This is the reward of the
humble, who ask for counsel: that they will find it with certainty and security
(Eccli, 32, 29). It is also the peculiar prerogative of a holy and discreet
zeal to be able to give prudent advice to those that ask. Full of this holy
counsel saint Joseph answered our Queen: "Thou knowest already, my Lady
and Spouse, that my utmost desires are to serve Thee with all diligence and
attention; for I am bound to have this confidence in thy great virtue, that
Thou wilt not incline toward anything, which is not according to the greater
pleasure and glory of the Most High; and this is my belief also in regard to
this journey. Lest thy making this journey alone and without the company of thy
husband cause surprise I will gladly go with Thee and attend to thy wants on
the way. Do Thou appoint the day on which we shall depart together."
196. The most holy Mary
thanked her prudent spouse Joseph for his loving solicitude and for his
attentive cooperation with the will of God in whatever he knew to be for his
service and honor. They both concluded to depart immediately on their visit to
the house of saint Elisabeth (Luke 1, 39), and prepared without delay the
provisions, which consisted merely in a little fruit, bread and a few fishes,
procured by saint Joseph. In addition to these he borrowed an
humble beast of burden, in order to carry their provisions and his Spouse, the
Queen of all creation. Forthwith they departed from Nazareth for Judea; the
journey itself I will describe in the following chapter. On leaving their poor
dwelling the great Mistress of the world knelt at the feet of her spouse Joseph
and asked his blessing in order to begin the journey in the name of the Lord.
The saint was abashed at the rare humility of his Spouse, with which He had
already been impressed by experience on so many other occasions. He hesitated
giving Her his benediction; but the meek and sweet
persistence of the most holy Mary overcame his objections and he blessed Her in
the name of the Most High. The heavenly Lady raised her eyes and her heart to
God, in order to direct her first steps toward the fulfillment of the divine
pleasure and willingly bearing along in her womb the Onlybegotten of the Father
and her own, for the sanctification of John in that of his mother Elisabeth.
INSTRUCTION WHICH THE HEAVENLY QUEEN
AND LADY GAVE ME.
197. My dearest daughter, many times I have confided
and manifested to thee the love burning within my bosom: for I wish that it
should be ardently re-enkindled within thy own, and that thou profit from the
instruction, which I give thee. Happy is the soul, to which the Most High
manifests his holy and perfect will; but more happy and blessed is he, who puts
into execution, what he has learned. In many ways God shows to mortals the
highways and pathways of eternal life: by the Gospels and the holy Scriptures,
by the Sacraments and the laws of the holy Church, by the writings and examples
of the saints, and especially, by the obedience due to the guidings of its
ministers, of whom his Majesty said: "Whoever hears you, hears Me;"
for obeying them is the same as obeying the Lord himself. Whenever by any of
these means thou hast come to the knowledge of the will of God, I desire thee
to assume the wings of humility and obedience, and, as if in ethereal flight or
like the quickest sunbeam, hasten to execute it and thereby fulfill the divine
pleasure.
198. Besides these means of instruction, the Most High
has still others in order to direct the soul; namely, He intimates his perfect
will to them in a supernatural manner, and reveals to them many sacraments.
This kind of instruction is of many and different degrees; not all of them are
common or ordinary to all souls; for the Lord dispenses his light in measure
and weight (Wis. 11, 21). Sometimes He speaks to the heart and the interior
feelings in commands; at others, in correction, advising or instructing:
sometimes He moves the heart to ask Him; at other times He proposes clearly
what He desires, in order that the soul may be moved to fulfill it; again He
manifests, as in a clear mirror, great mysteries, in order that they may be
seen and recognized by the intellect and loved by the will. But this great and
infinite Good is always sweet in commanding, powerful in giving the necessary
help for obedience, just in his commands, quick in disposing circumstances so
that He can be obeyed, notwithstanding all the impediments which hinder the
fulfillment of his most holy will.
199. In receiving this divine light, my daughter, I
wish to see thee very attentive, and very quick and diligent in following it up
in deed. In order to hear this most delicate and spiritual voice of the Lord it
is necessary, that the faculties of the soul be purged from earthly grossness
and that the creature live entirely according to the spirit; for the animal man
does not perceive the elevated things of the Divinity (I Cor. 2, 14). Be
attentive then to his secrets (Is. 24, 16) and forget all that is of the
outside; listen, my daughter, and incline thy ear; free thyself from all
visible things (Ps. 44, 11). And in order that thou mayest be diligent,
cultivate love; for love is a fire, which does not have its effect until the
material is prepared; therefore let thy heart always be disposed and prepared.
Whenever the Most High bids thee or communicates to thee anything for the
welfare of souls, or especially for their eternal salvation, devote
thyself to it entirely; for they are bought at the inestimable price of the
blood of the Lamb and of divine love. Do not allow thyself to be hindered in
this matter by thy own lowliness and bashfulness; but overcome the fear which
restrains thee, for if thou thyself art of small value and usefulness, the Most
High is rich (I Pet. 1, 18), powerful, great, and by Himself performs all
things (Rom 10, 12). Thy promptness and affection will not go without its
reward, although I wish thee rather to be moved entirely by the pleasure of thy
Lord. THE JOURNEY OF THE MOST HOLY MARY
ON HER VISIT TO SAINT ELISABETH AND HER ENTRANCE INTO THE HOUSE OF ZACHARIAS.
200. "And Mary rising up in those days,"
says the sacred text, "went into the hill country with haste, into a city
of Judea" (Luke 1, 39). This rising up of our heavenly Queen signified not
only her exterior preparations and setting out from Nazareth on her journey,
but it referred to the movement of her spirit and to the divine impulse and
command which directed Her to arise interiorly from the humble retirement,
which She had chosen in her humility. She arose as it were from the feet of the
Most High, whose will and pleasure She eagerly sought
to fulfill, like the lowliest handmaid, who according to the word of David (Ps.
122, 2) keeps her eyes fixed upon the hands of her Mistress, awaiting her
commands. Arising at the bidding of the Lord She lovingly hastened to
accomplish his most holy will, in procuring without delay the sanctification of
the Precursor of the incarnate Word, who was yet held prisoner in the womb of
Elisabeth by the bonds of original sin. This was the purpose and object of this
journey. Therefore the Princess of heaven arose and proceeded in diligent
haste, as mentioned by the Evangelist saint Luke.
201. Leaving behind then the house of her father and
forgetting her people (Ps. 44, 11), the most chaste
spouses, Mary and Joseph, pursued their way to the house of Zacharias in
mountainous Judea. It was twenty six leagues distant from Nazareth, and the
greater part of the way was very rough and broken, unfit for such a delicate
and tender Maiden. All the convenience at their disposal for the arduous
undertaking was a humble beast, on which She began and
pursued her journey. Although it was intended solely for her comfort and
service, yet Mary, the most humble and unpretentious of all creatures, many
times dismounted and asked her spouse saint Joseph to
share with Her this commodity and to lighten the difficulties of the way by
making use of the beast. Her discreet spouse never accepted this offer; and in
order to yield somewhat to the solicitations of the heavenly Lady, he permitted
her now and then to walk with him part of the way, whenever it seemed to him
that her delicate strength could sustain the exertion without too great fatigue.
But soon he would again ask Her, with great modesty
and reverence, to accept of this slight alleviation and the celestial Queen
would then obey and again proceed on her way seated in the saddle.
202. Thus alleviating their fatigue by humble and
courteous contentions, the most holy Mary and saint
Joseph continued on their journey, making good use of each single moment. They
proceeded alone, without accompaniment of any human creatures; but all the
thousand angels, which were set to guard the couch of Solomon, the most holy
Mary, attended upon them (Cant. 3, 7). Although the angels accompanied them in
corporeal form, serving their great Queen and her most holy Son in her womb,
they were visible only to Mary. In the company of the angels and of saint Joseph, the Mother of grace journeyed along, filling
the fields and the mountains with the sweetest fragrance of her presence and
with the divine praises, in which She unceasingly occupied Herself. Sometimes She conversed with the angels and, alternately with them,
sang divine canticles concerning the different mysteries of the Divinity and
the works of Creation and of the Incarnation. Thus ever anew the pure heart of
the immaculate Lady was inflamed by the ardors of divine love. In all this her
spouse saint Joseph contributed his share by maintaining a discreet silence,
and by allowing his beloved Spouse to pursue the flights of her spirit; for,
lost in highest contemplation, he was favored with some understanding of what
was passing within her soul.
203. At other times the two would converse with each
other and speak about the salvation of souls and the mercies of the Lord, of
the coming of the Redeemer, of the prophecies given to the ancient Fathers
concerning Him, and of other mysteries and sacraments of the Most High.
Something happened on the way, which caused great wonder in her holy spouse
Joseph: he loved his Spouse most tenderly with a chaste and holy love, such as
had been ordained in Him by the special grace and dispensation of the divine
love itself (Cant. 2, 4); in addition to this privilege (which was certainly
not a small one) the saint was naturally of a most noble and courteous
disposition, and his manners were most pleasing and charming; all this produced
in him a most discreet and loving solicitude, which was yet increased by the
great holiness, which he had seen from the beginning in his Spouse and which
was ordained by heaven as the immediate object of all his privileges. Therefore
the saint anxiously attended upon most holy Mary and asked her many times,
whether She was tired or fatigued, and in what he could serve Her on the
journey. But as the Queen of heaven already carried within
the virginal chamber the divine fire of the incarnate Word, holy Joseph,
without fathoming the real cause, experienced in his soul new reactions,
proceeding from the words and conversations of his beloved Spouse. He
felt himself so inflamed by divine love and imbued with such exalted knowledge
of the mysteries touched upon in their conversations, that he was entirely
renewed and spiritualized by this burning interior light. The farther they
proceeded and the more they conversed about these heavenly things, so much the
stronger these affections grew, and he became aware, that it was the words of
his Spouse, which thus filled his heart with love and inflamed his will with
divine ardor.
204. So great were these new sensations, that the
prudent Joseph could not help but pay the greatest attention to them. Although
he knew that all this came to him through the mediation of most holy Mary, and
although it was a wonderful consolation to him, that She
was the cause, he meditated upon it without curiosity, and, on account of his
great modesty, he did not dare to ask Her any questions. The Lord having
ordained it thus, for it was not yet time, that he
should know the sacrament of the King, which was already completed in her
virginal womb. The heavenly Princess beheld the interior of her spouse, knowing
all that passed within his soul; and in her prudence She
reflected how it would naturally be unavoidable, that he should come to know of
her pregnancy; for there would be no possibility of concealing it from her most
beloved and chaste spouse. The great Lady did not know at the time, how God
would arrange this matter; yet, although She had not received any' intimation
or command to conceal this mystery, her heavenly prudence and discretion taught
Her that it would be proper to conceal it as a great sacrament, greater than
all other mysteries. Therefore She kept it secret,
saying not a word about it to her husband, neither after the message of the
angel, nor during this journey, nor later on, during the anxieties occasioned
to saint Joseph at becoming aware of her pregnancy.
205. O admirable discretion and prudence more than
human! The great Queen resigned Herself entirely to the divine Providence,
hoping that God would arrange all things; yet She felt anxiety and pain, at the
thought of what her husband might think, and of her inability to do anything in
order to dissipate his anxiety. This anxiety was increased by the attentive
care and service, lavished by him upon Her with so
much love and affection; since his faithful services certainly deserved a
corresponding return on her part as far as was prudently possible. Therefore,
in loving solicitude and in pursuance of her desires to solve this coming
difficulty, She prayed to the Lord, asking Him to
grant his divine assistance and guidance to saint Joseph, when it should
arrive. In this state of suspense, in which She found
Herself, her Highness performed great and heroic acts of faith, hope and
charity, of prudence, humility, patience and fortitude, imbuing all her
activity with the plenitude of holiness and reaching in all things the summit
of perfection.
206. This journey was the first pilgrimage begun by
the divine Word, four days after He had entered the world; for his most ardent
love would not suffer any longer delay or procrastination in enkindling the
fire, which He came to scatter in the world (Luke 12, 49), and in beginning his
justification of mortals with his Precursor. This haste He communicated also to
his holy Mother, in order that She might arise without
delay and fly on her visit to Elisabeth (Luke 1, 39). The most heavenly Lady on
this occasion served as the coach of the true Solomon; but much more richly
adorned and more elegant, as Solomon himself infers in the canticles (Cant. 3,
9). Therefore this journey was glorious and occasioned great joy to the
Onlybegotten of the Father. For He traveled at his ease in
the virginal chamber of his Mother, enjoying the sweet tokens of her love.
At the time She alone was the archive of this
Treasure, the secretary of so great a sacrament, and She adored Him, blessed
and admired Him, spoke and listened to Him, and answered Him; She reverenced
Him and thanked Him for Herself and for all the human race, much more than all
the men and the angels together.
207. In the course of the journey, which lasted four
days, the two holy pilgrims, Mary and Joseph, exercised not only the virtues which
were interior and had God for their immediate object, but also many other
outward acts of charity toward their neighbors; for Mary could not remain idle
at the sight of want. They did not find the same hospitable treatment at all
the inns of the road; for some of the innkeepers, being more
rude, treated them with slight consideration in accordance with their
natural disposition; others received them with true love inspired by divine
grace. But the Mother of mercy denied to no one such help as She could administer;
and therefore, whenever She could decently do so, She hastened to visit and
hunt up the poor, infirm and afflicted, helping them and consoling them, and
curing their sicknesses. I will not stop to relate all that happened on the
way, but will only mention the good fortune of a poor sick girl, whom our great
Queen found in passing through a town on the first day of her journey. She was
moved to tenderest compassion at the sight of her grievous illness; and, making
use of her power as Mistress of the creatures, She
commanded the fever to leave the maiden and the humors to recompose and reduce
themselves to their natural state and condition. At this command and at the
sweet presence of the purest Mother, the sick maiden was suddenly freed and
healed from her pains of body and benefited in soul; so that afterwards She
lived more and more perfectly and attained the state of sanctity; for the image
of the Authoress of her happiness remained stamped within her memory and her
heart was enkindled with a great love toward the heavenly Lady, although She
never again saw Her, nor was the miracle ever made public.
208. Having pursued their journey four days, the most
holy Mary and her spouse arrived at the town of Juda, where Zachary and
Elisabeth then lived. This was the special and proper name of the place, where
the parents of saint John lived for a while, and therefore the Evangelist saint
Luke specifies it, calling it Juda, although the commentators have commonly
believed that this was not the name of the town in which Elisabeth and
Zacharias lived, but simply the name of the province, which was called Juda or
Judea; just as for the same reason the mountains south of Jerusalem were called
the mountains of Judea. But it was expressly revealed to me that the town was
called Juda and that the Evangelist calls it by its proper name; although the
learned expositors have understood by this name of Juda the province, in which
that town was situated. This confusion arose from the fact that some years
after the death of Christ the town Juda was destroyed, and, as the commentators
found no trace of such a town, they inferred that saint Luke meant the province
and not a town; thus the great differences of opinion in regard to the place,
where most holy Mary visited Elisabeth, are easily explained.
209. As holy obedience has enjoined upon me the duty
of clearing up these doubts, on account of the strange inconsistency in the
sayings of learned men, I will also add to what I have already said, that the
house in which the visitation took place was built upon the very spot on which
now the faithful pilgrims, who travel to or live in the holy Land, venerate the
divine mysteries transacted during the visit. Although the town of Juda itself,
where the house of Zacharias stood is ruined, the Lord did not permit the
memory of the venerable locality in which those great mysteries transpired, and
which were hallowed by the footsteps of most holy Mary, of Christ our Lord, and
of the Baptist as well as of his holy parents, to be blotted out and effaced
from the memory of men. Therefore it was by divine influence, that the ancient
Christians built up those churches and restored the holy places, in order to
preserve by the agency of divine light the traditional truth and to renew the memory
of the admirable sacraments. Thus we ourselves, the faithful of our times, can
enjoy the blessing of venerating and worshipping the sacred localities,
proclaiming and confessing our Catholic faith in the works of our Redemption.
210. For the better understanding of these things let
it be remembered that after the demon had become aware on Calvary that Christ
our Lord was God and the Redeemer of men, he sought with incredible fury to
blot out the remembrance of Him from the land of the living, as Jeremias says
(Jer. 11, 19) ; and the same is to be said of the
memory of his most holy Mother. Thus he managed to have the most holy Cross
hidden and buried under ground and to have it delivered as spoil of war to the
Persians; and in the same way he procured the ruin and obliteration of many
holy places. On this account the holy angels carried back and forth so many
times the venerable and holy house of Loretto; for the same dragon who pursued
the heavenly Lady (Apoc. 12, 13), had already excited the minds of the
inhabitants of that land to tear down and raze to the ground that most sacred
oratory, which had been the workshop of the Most High in the mystery of the
Incarnation. The same astute hatred of the enemy urged him to blot out the town
of Juda, aided partly by the negligence of the inhabitants, who gradually died
off, partly also by untoward events and happenings. Yet the Lord did not allow
all traces of the house of Zachary to be effaced or obliterated, on account of
the sacraments, which were there enacted.
211. This town was distant from Nazareth, as I have
said, twenty-six leagues, and about two leagues from Jerusalem, and it was
situated in that part of the Judean mountains, where the stream Sorec takes its
rise. After the birth of saint John and the return of
the most holy Mary and her spouse Joseph to Nazareth, saint Elisabeth received
a divine revelation that a great calamity and slaughter impended over the
infants of Bethlehem and its vicinity. And though this revelation was
indeterminate and unclear, it nevertheless induced the mother of saint John to
betake herself with Zacharias, her husband, to Hebron, which was eight leagues
more or less from Jerusalem; for they were rich and noble, and they had
dwellings not only in Juda and Hebron, but they had houses and possessions also
in other places. When the most holy Mary and Joseph were on their way flying
from Herod to Egypt (Matth. 2, 14) after the birth of the Word and some months
after the birth of saint John, saint Elisabeth and
Zacharias were in Hebron. Zacharias died four months after our Lord was born,
which was ten months after the birth of his son John. It seems to me I have now
sufficiently solved this doubt, and it ought to be evident that the house of
the Visitation was neither in Jerusalem, nor in Bethlehem, nor in Hebron, but
in the town called Juda. I saw that this is the true explanation, which was
made known to me by divine light together with the other mysteries of this
heavenly history; afterwards, when I was constrained by obedience to ask about
this matter, a holy angel again made the same declaration to me.
212. It was at this city of Juda and at the house of
Zacharias that most holy Mary and Joseph arrived. In order to announce their
visit, saint Joseph hastened ahead of Mary and calling
out saluted the inmates of the house, saying: "The Lord be with you and
fill your souls with divine grace." Elisabeth was already forewarned, for
the Lord himself had informed her in a vision that Mary of Nazareth had
departed to visit her. She had also in this vision been made aware that the
heavenly Lady was most pleasing in the eyes of the Most High; while the mystery
of her being the Mother of God was not revealed to her until the moment, when
they both saluted each other in private. But saint Elisabeth immediately issued
forth with a few of her family, in order to welcome most holy Mary, who, as the
more humble and younger in years, hastened to salute her cousin, saying:
"The Lord be with you, my dearest cousin," and Elisabeth answered:
"The same Lord reward you for having come in order to afford me this
pleasure." With these words they entered the house of Zacharias and what
happened I will relate in the following chapter.
INSTRUCTION WHICH OUR QUEEN AND LADY
GAVE ME.
213. My daughter, whenever the creature holds in
proper esteem the good works and the services, which the Lord commands for his
glory, it will feel within itself great facility of operation, great sweetness
in undertaking them, and a readiness and alacrity in continuing and pursuing
them. These different feelings then give testimony of their being truly useful
and commanded by God. But the soul cannot experience these affections, if it is
not altogether devoted to. the Lord, keeping its gaze
fixed upon his divine pleasure, hearing of it with joy, executing it with
alacrity and forgetting its own inclination and conveniences. The soul must be
like the faithful servant, who seeks to do only the will of his master and not
his own. This is the manner of obeying, which is fruitful and which is due from
an the creatures to their God and much more from an
the religious, who explicitly promise this kind of obedience. In order that
thou, my dearest, mayest attain to it perfectly, remember with what esteem
David in many places speaks of the precepts (Ps. 118), of the sayings and of
the justifications of the Lord; and remember the effects, which they caused in
that Prophet and even now in the souls. He says that they make the infants wise
(Ps. 18, 8), rejoice the heart of men (Ps. 18, 9), that they enlighten the eyes
of the soul, so that they become a most brilliant light for its footsteps (Ps.
118, l05) that they are more sweet than honey (Ps. 18, 11), more desirable and
more estimable than the most precious stones. This promptitude and subjection
to the divine will and to his laws made David so conformable to the heart of
God. These are the kind of souls his Majesty seeks for his servants and friends
(I Kings 13, 14, Acts 13, 22).
214. Attend therefore, my daughter, with a solicitude to the works of virtue and perfection, which
thou knowest to be desirable in the eyes of the Lord. Despise none of them nor
withdraw from any of them and cease not to exercise them, no matter how
violently thy inclinations and thy weakness should oppose their exercise. Trust
in the Lord and proceed to put them into execution, and soon his power will
overcome all difficulties. Soon thou wilt also know by happy experience how
light is the burden and how sweet is the yoke of the Lord (Matth. 11, 13). He
did not deceive us when He spoke those words, as might be argued by the tepid
and the negligent, who in their torpidity and distrust,
tacitly repudiate the truth of this statement. I wish also that thou, in order
to imitate me in this perfection, take notice of the favor, which the divine
condescension vouchsafed me in furnishing me with a most sweet love and
affection for the creatures as participators in the divine goodness and
existence. In this love I sought to console, alleviate and enliven all the
souls; and by a natural compassion I procured all spiritual and corporeal goods
for them; to none of them, no matter how great sinners they might have been,
did I wish any evil; on the contrary I was urged by the great compassion of my
tender heart to procure for them eternal salvation. From this also arose my
anxiety concerning the grief, which was to grow out of my pregnancy to my
spouse saint Joseph; for to him lowed more than to all
other creatures. Tender compassion filled my heart, especially for the
suffering and the infirm, and I tried to obtain some relief for all. In these
virtues then I wish that thou, making use of the knowledge of them given to
thee, most prudently imitate me. THE SALUTATION GIVEN TO SAINT ELISABETH
BY THE QUEEN OF HEAVEN. AND THE SANCTIFICATION OF JOHN.
215. When the most holy Mother Mary arrived at the
house of Zacharias, the Precursor of Christ had completed the sixth month of
his conception in the womb of saint Elisabeth. The
body of the child John had already attained a state of great natural
perfection; much greater than that of other children, on
account of the miracle of his conception by a sterile mother and on account of
the intention of the Most High to make him the depositary of greater sanctity
than other men (Matth. 11, 11). Yet at that time his soul was yet filled with
the darkness of sin, which he had contracted in the same way as the other
children of Adam, the first and common father of the human race; and as,
according to the universal and general law, mortals cannot receive the light of
grace before they have issued forth to the light of the sun (Rom. 5, 7) ; so,
after the first, the original sin contracted by our nature, the womb of the
mother must serve as a dungeon or prison for all of us, who have laden upon ourselves
this guilt of our father and head, Adam. Christ our Lord resolved to anticipate
this great blessing in his Prophet and Precursor by conferring the light of his
grace and justification upon him six months after his conception by saint
Elisabeth, in order that he might be as well in holiness, as he was in his
office of Precursor and Baptist.
216. After the first salutation of Elisabeth by the
most holy Mary, the two cousins retired, as I have said at the end of the
preceding chapter. And immediately the Mother of grace saluted anew her cousin
saying:
"May God save thee, my dearest cousin, and may
his divine light communicate to thee grace and life" (Luke 1, 40). At the
sound of most holy Mary's voice, saint Elisabeth was
filled by the Holy Ghost and so enlightened interiorly, that in one instant she
perceived the most exalted mysteries and sacraments. These emotions, and those
that at the same time were felt by the child John in the womb of his mother,
were caused by the presence of the Word made flesh in the bridal chamber of
Mary's womb, for, making use of the voice of Mary as his instrument, He, as
Redeemer, began from that place to use the power given to Him by the eternal
Father for the salvation and justification of the souls. And
since He now operated as man, though as yet of the diminutive size of one
conceived eight days before, He assumed, in admirable humility, the form and
posture of one praying and beseeching the Father. He asked in earnest
prayer for the justification of his future Precursor and obtained it at the
hands of the blessed Trinity.
217. Saint John was the third one for whom our
Redeemer made special petition since his presence in the womb of his mother.
His Mother was the first for whom He gave thanks and prayed to the Father; next
in order was her spouse, saint Joseph, for whom the incarnate Word offered up
his prayers, as we have said in the twelfth chapter; and the third one was the
Precursor saint John, whom the Lord mentioned by name in his prayers to the
Father. Such was the great good fortune and privilege of saint
John, that Christ our Lord presented to the eternal Father the merits of his
Passion and Death to be endured for men; and in view thereof He requested the
sanctification of this soul. He appointed and set apart this child as one who
is to be born holy as his Precursor and as a witness of his coming into the
world (John I, 7); as one who was to prepare the hearts of his people in order
that they might recognize and receive Him as the Messias. He ordained that for
such an exalted ministry the Precursor should receive all the graces, gifts and
favors which are befitting and proportionate to his office. All this the Father granted just as the Onlybegotten had
requested it of Him.
218. This happened before the most holy Mary had put
her salutation into words. At the pronunciation of the words mentioned above,
God looked upon the child in the womb of saint
Elisabeth, and gave it perfect use of reason, enlightening it with his divine
light, in order that he might prepare himself by foreknowledge for the
blessings which he was to receive. Together with this preparation he was
sanctified from original sin, made an adopted son of God, and filled with the
most abundant graces of the Holy Ghost and with the plenitude of all his gifts;
his faculties were sanctified, subjected and subordinated to reason, thus
verifying in himself what the archangel Gabriel had said to Zacharias; that His
son would be filled with the Holy Ghost from the womb of his mother (Luke 1,
17). At the same time the fortunate child, looking through the walls of the
maternal womb as through clear glass upon the incarnate Word, and assuming a
kneeling posture, adored his Redeemer and Creator, whom he beheld in most holy
Mary as if enclosed in a chamber made of the purest crystal. This was the
movement of jubilation, which was felt by his mother Elisabeth as coming from
the infant in her womb (Luke 1, 44). Many other acts of virtue the child John
performed during this interview, exercising faith, hope, charity, worship,
gratitude, humility, devotion and all the other virtues possible to him there.
From that moment he began to merit and grow in
sanctity, without ever losing it and without ever ceasing to exercise it with
all the vigor of grace.
219. Saint Elisabeth was instructed at the same time
in the mystery of the Incarnation, the sanctification of her own son and the
sacramental purpose of this new wonder. She also became aware of the virginal
purity and of the dignity of the most holy Mary. On this occasion, the heavenly
Queen, being absorbed in the vision of the Divinity and of the mysteries
operated by it through her most holy Son, became entirely godlike, filled with
the clear light of the divine gifts which She participated; and thus filled
with majesty saint Elisabeth saw Her. She saw the Word made man as through a
most pure and clear glass in the virginal chamber, lying
as it were on a couch of burning and enlivened crystal. The efficacious
instrument of all these wonderful effects was the voice of most holy Mary, as
powerful as it was sweet in the hearing of the Lord. All this force was as it
were only an outflow of that which was contained in those powerful words:
"Fiat
mihi secundum verbum tuum," by which
She had drawn the eternal Word from the bosom of the
Father down to her soul and into her womb.
220. Filled with admiration at what She saw and heard
in regard to these divine mysteries, saint Elisabeth was wrapt in the joy of
the Holy Ghost; and, looking upon the Queen of the world and what was contained
in Her, she burst forth in loud voice of praise, pronouncing the words reported
to us by saint Luke: "Blessed are
Thou among women and blessed is the fruit of thy womb. And whence is this to me, that the Mother of my Lord should come to me? For behold
as soon as the voice of thy salutation sounded in my ears, the infant in my
womb leaped for joy, and blessed art Thou, that has believed, because those
things shall be accomplished, that were spoken to Thee by the Lord." In
these prophetic words saint Elisabeth rehearsed the noble privileges of most
holy Mary, perceiving by the divine light what the power of the Lord had done
in Her, what He now performed, and what He was to
accomplish through Her in time to come. All this also the child John perceived
and understood, while listening to the words of his mother; for she was
enlightened for the purpose of his sanctification, and since he could not from
his place in the womb bless and thank her by word of mouth, she, both for
herself and for her son, extolled the most holy Mary as being the instrument of
their good fortune.
221. These words of praise, pronounced by saint
Elisabeth were referred by the Mother of wisdom and humility to the Creator;
and in the sweetest and softest voice She intoned the Magnificat as recorded by
saint Luke (Ch. 1,46-55).
222. Just as
saint Elisabeth was the first one who heard this sweet canticle from the mouth
of most holy Mary, so she was also the first one who understood it and, by
means of her infused knowledge, commented upon it. She penetrated some of the
great mysteries, which its Authoress expressed therein in so few sentences. The
soul of most holy Mary magnified the Lord for the excellence of his infinite
Essence; to Him She referred and yielded all glory and praise (I Tim. 1, 17),
both for the beginning and the accomplishment of her works. She knew and
confessed that in God alone every creature should glory and rejoice, since He
alone is their entire happiness and salvation (II Cor. 10, 17). She confessed also
the equity and magnificence of the Most High in attending to the humble and in
conferring upon them his abundant spirit of divine love (Ps. 137, 6). She saw
how worthy of mortals it is to perceive, understand and ponder the gifts that
were conferred on the humility of Her, whom all nations were to call blessed,
and how all the humble ones, each one according to his degree, could share the
same good fortune. By one word also She expressed all the mercies, benefits and
blessings, which the Almighty showered upon Her in his holy and wonderful name;
for She calls them altogether "great things" since there was nothing
small about anything that referred to this great Queen and Lady.
223. And as the mercies of the Most High overflowed
from Mary's plenitude to the whole human race, and as She was the portal of
heaven, through which they issued and continue to issue, and through which we
are to enter into the participation of the Divinity; therefore She confessed,
that the mercy of the Lord in regard to Her is spread out over all the
generations, communicating itself to them that fear Him. And just as the
infinite mercies raise up the humble and seek out those that fear God; so also
the powerful arm of divine justice scatters and destroys those who are proud in
the mind of their heart, and hurls them from their thrones in order to set in
their place the poor and lowly. This justice of the Lord was exercised in
wonderful splendor and glory upon the chief of all the proud, Lucifer and his
followers, when the almighty arm of God scattered and hurled them (because they
themselves precipitated themselves) from their exalted seats which befitted
their angelic natures and their graces, and which they occupied according to
the original (Isaias 14; Apoc. 12) decree of the divine love. For by it He
intended that all should be blessed (I Tim. 2, 4) while they, in trying to
ascend in their vain pride to positions, which they neither could attain nor
should aspire to, on the contrary cast themselves from those which they occupied
(Isaias 14, 13). In their arrogance they were found opposed to the just and
inscrutable judgments of the Lord, which scattered and cast down the proud
angel and all his followers (Apoc. 12, 8). In their place were installed the
humble of heart through the mediation of most holy Mary, the Mother and the
treasure house of his ancient mercies.
224. For the same reason this divine Lady says and
proclaims that God enriches the needy, filling them with the abundance of his
treasures of grace and glory; and those that are rich in their own estimation
and presumptuous arrogance, and those who satisfy their heart with the false
goods, which the world esteems as riches and happiness, the Most High has
banished and does banish from his presence, because they are void of the truth,
which cannot enter into hearts filled and occupied with falsehood and deceit.
He received his servants and his children, the people of Israel, remembering
his mercies in order to teach them, wherein prudence, truth and understanding
(Bar. 3, 14), wherein free and abundant life and nourishment, wherein the light
of the eyes and peace consists. He taught them the way of prudence and the
hidden paths of wisdom and discipline, which is concealed from the princes of
the gentiles, and is not known to the powerful, who
dominate over the beasts of the earth and entertain themselves and play with
the birds of the air and heap up treasures of gold and silver. Nor can the sons
of Agar and the inhabitants of Ternan, who are the
wise and the proudly prudent of this world, ever attain this wisdom. But to
those that are sons of the light (Galat. 3, 7), and
who are sons of Abraham by faith, hope and obedience, the Most High distributes
it; for in this manner has it been promised to his posterity and his spiritual
children, made secure by the blessed and happy Fruit of the virginal womb of
the most holy Mary.
225. Saint Elisabeth looking upon Mary the Queen of
creation understood these hidden mysteries; and not only those, which I am able
to express here, did this fortunate matron understand, but many more and
greater sacraments, which my understanding cannot comprehend; nor do I wish to
dilate upon all that have been shown to me, lest I unduly extend this history.
But the sweet discourses and conversations, which these two holy and discreet
ladies held with each other, reminded me of the two seraphim, which Isaias saw
above the throne of the Most High, repeating the divine and always new
canticle: Holy, holy, etc., while they covered their head with one pair of wings,
their feet with another, flew with the third pair (Isaias 6, 2). It is certain
that the inflamed love of these two holy women exceeded that of all the
seraphim, and Mary by Herself loved more than they all together. They were
consumed in the flame of divine love, extending the two wings of their hearts
in order to manifest to each other their love and in order to soar into the
most exalted intelligence of the mysteries of the Most High. With two more
wings of rarest knowledge they covered their faces; because both of them
discussed and contemplated the sacrament of the King (Tob.
12, 7), guarding its secrets within themselves all their lives; also because
they restrained their discourse and subjected it to their devoted faith,
without giving scope to proud inquisitiveness. They also covered the feet of
the Lord and their own with the third pair of seraphic wings, because they were
lowered and annihilated in their own humble estimation of themselves at the
sight of such great Majesty. Moreover since most holy Mary enclosed within her
virginal womb the God of majesty himself, we can with reason and with literal
truth say, that She covered the seat where the Lord
sat enthroned.
226. When it was time to come forth from their
retirement, saint Elisabeth offered herself and her
whole family and all her house for the service of the Queen of heaven. She
asked Her to accept, as a quiet retreat, the room
which she herself was accustomed to use for her prayers, and which was much
retired and accommodated to that purpose. The heavenly Princess accepted the
chamber with humble thanks, and made use of it for recollecting Herself and sleeping therein, and no one ever entered it,
except the two cousins. As for the rest She offered to
serve and assist Elisabeth as a handmaid, for She said, that this was the
purpose of visiting her and consoling her. O what friendship is so true, so
sweet and inseparable, as that which is formed by the great bond of the divine
love! How admirable is the Lord in manifesting this great sacrament of the
Incarnation to three women before He would make it known to anyone else in the
human race! For the first was saint Anne, as I have said in its place; the
second one was her Daughter and the Mother of the Word, most holy Mary; the
third one was saint Elisabeth, and conjointly with Her, her son, for he being
yet in the womb of his mother, cannot be considered as distinct from her. Thus
"the foolishness of God is wiser than men," as saint
Paul says.
227. The most holy Mary and Elisabeth came forth from
their retirement at nightfall, having passed a long time together; and the
Queen saw Zacharias standing before Her in his muteness, and She asked him for
his blessing as from a priest of the Lord, which the saint also gave to Her.
Yet, although She tenderly pitied him for his
affliction, She did not exert her power to cure him, because She knew the
mysterious occasion of his dumbness; yet She offered a prayer for him. Saint
Elisabeth, who already knew the good fortune of the most
chaste spouse Joseph, although he himself as yet was not aware of it,
entertained and served him with great reverence and highest esteem. After
staying three days in the house of Zacharias, however, he asked permission of
his heavenly Spouse Mary to return to Nazareth and leave Her
in the company of saint Elisabeth in order to assist her in her pregnancy. The
holy husband left them with the understanding that he was to return in order to
accompany the Queen home as soon as they should give him notice; saint
Elisabeth offered him some presents to take home with him; but he would take
only a small part of them, yielding only to their earnest solicitations, for
this man of God was not only a lover of poverty, but was possessed of a
magnanimous and noble heart. Therewith he pursued his way back to Nazareth,
taking along with him the little beast of burden, which they had brought with
them. At home, in the absence of his Spouse, he was served by a neighboring
woman and cousin of his, who, also when most holy Mary was at home, was wont to
come and go on the necessary errands outside of the house. INSTRUCTION WHICH THE QUEEN AND
LADY GAVE ME.
228. My daughter, in order that thy heart may be ever
more and more inflamed with the desire of gaining the grace and friendship of
God, I wish very much that thou grow in the knowledge of the dignity,
excellence and happiness of a soul, that has been endowed with this privilege;
however, remember that it is so admirable and of so great a value that thou
canst not comprehend it, even if I would explain it to thee; and much less
canst thou express it in words. Look upon the Lord and contemplate Him by means
of the divine light, which thou receivest, and then thou wilt understand that
the Lord performs a greater work in justifying a soul than in having created
all the orbs of heaven and the whole earth with all the beauty and perfection
contained within them. And if on account of the wonders which creatures are
able in part to perceive in these works by the senses, they are impressed with
the greatness and power of God, what would they say and think if they could see
with the eyes of their soul the preciousness and beauty of grace in so many
creatures, who are capable of receiving them?
229. There are no terms of human language equal to the
task of expressing what participations and perfections of God are contained in
sanctifying grace. It is little to say that it is more pure and spotless than
the snow; more refulgent than the sun; more precious than gold or precious
stones, more charming, more amiable and pleasing than all the most delightful
feasts and entertainments, and more beautiful than all that in its entirety can
be imagined or desired by the creatures. Take notice also of the ugliness of
sin, in order that by the opposite thou mayest come to so much the better
understanding of the beauty of grace; for neither darknesses, nor rottenness,
nor the most horrible, the most dreadful, nor the
foulest of creatures can ever be compared to sin and to its ugliness. The
martyrs and saints understood much of this mystery (Heb. 11, 36), who in order
to secure the beauty of grace and preserve themselves from the ruin of sin, did
not fear fire, nor wild beasts, nor the sword, nor torments, nor prisons,
ignominies, pains, afflictions, nor death itself, nor prolonged and perpetual
suffering; for to escape all these must be counted for little or nothing, and
must scarcely be thought of in comparison with one degree of grace, which souls
may attain, even though they be the most abject of the whole world. All this the
men, who esteem and seek after the fugitive and apparent beauty of creatures,
are ignorant of; and whatever does not present to them this deceitful beauty,
is for them vile and contemptible.
230. Thou perceivest therefore something of the
greatness of the blessing, which the incarnate Word conferred upon his
Precursor in the womb of his mother; and because saint
John recognized it, he leaped for joy and exultation in the womb of his mother.
Thou wilt also see what thou thyself must do and suffer in order to attain this
happiness, and in order not to lose, or in the least impair this most precious
beauty by any fault, nor retard its consummation by any imperfection, no matter
how small. I wish that in imitation of my cousin Elisabeth, thou do not enter
into any friendship with any human creatures, except those, with whom thou
canst and shouldst converse about the works of the Most High and of his
mysteries, and with whom thou canst learn to pursue the true path of his divine
pleasure. Although thou art engaged in important undertakings and works, do not
forget or omit thy spiritual exercises and the strictness of a perfect life;
for this must not only be preserved and watched over, when all things go
smoothly, but also under the greatest adversity, difficulty and labor; for
imperfect human nature takes occasion of the slightest circumstance to relax
its vigilance.
MOST HOLY MARY ARRANGES THE ORDER OF HER DAILY EXERCISES
IN THE HOUSE OF ZACHARIAS; SOME INCIDENTS IN HER INTERCOURSE WITH SAINT ELISABETH.
231. When the Precursor John had been sanctified and
saint Elisabeth, his mother, had been endowed with such great gifts and
blessings, and when thus the principal object of Mary's visit was fulfilled,
the great Queen proceeded to arrange her daily life in the house of Zacharias;
for her occupations could not be uniformly the same as those She was accustomed
to in her own house. In order to direct her desire by the guidance of the Holy
Ghost She retired and placed Herself in the presence of the Most High, asking
Him as usual to guide Her and direct Her in that which She was to do during her
stay in the house of his servants Elisabeth and Zacharias; so that She might in
all things be pleasing to Him and fulfill entirely his pleasure. The Lord heard
Her petition and answered Her saying: "My Spouse
and my Dove, I will direct all thy actions and I will direct thy footsteps in
the fulfillment of my service and pleasure, and I will make known to thee the
day on which I wish thee to return to thy home. In the meanwhile remain in the
house of my servant Elisabeth and converse with her. As for the rest, continue
thy exercises and prayers, especially for the salvation of men, and pray also,
that I withhold my justice in dealing with their incessant offenses against my
bounty. Conjointly with thy prayers thou shalt offer to Me
the Lamb without spot (1 Pet. 1, 19) which thou bearest in thy womb and which
takes away the sins of the world (John 1, 291). Let these now be thy
occupations."
232. In conformity with this instruction and new
mandate of the Most High, the Princess of heaven ordered all her occupations in
the house of her cousin Elisabeth. She rose up at midnight in accordance with
her former custom, spending the hours in the continued contemplation of the divine
mysteries and giving to waking and sleep the time,
which most perfectly and exactly agreed with the natural state and conditions
of her body. In labor and repose She continued to
receive new favors, illuminations, exaltation and caresses of the Lord. During
these three months She had many visions of the
Divinity, mostly abstractive in kind. More frequent still were the visions of
the most holy humanity of the Word in its hypostatic union; for her virginal
womb, in which She bore Him, served Her as her continual
altar and sanctuary. She beheld the daily growth of that sacred body. By this
experience and by the sacraments, which every day were made manifest to Her in the boundless fields of the divine power and essence,
the spirit of this exalted Lady expanded to vast proportions. Many times would She have been consumed and have died by the violence of her
affections, if She had not been strengthened by the power of the Lord. To these
occupations, which were concealed from all, She added
those, which the service and consolation of her cousin Elisabeth demanded,
although She did not apply one moment more to them, than charity required.
These fulfilled, She turned immediately to her
solitude and recollection, where she could pour out the more freely her spirit
before the Lord.
233. Not less solicitous was She
to occupy Herself interiorly, while She was engaged for many hours in manual
occupations. And in all this the Precursor was so fortunate that the great
Queen, with her own hands, sewed and prepared the swaddling clothes and
coverlets in which he was to be wrapped and reared; for his mother Elisabeth,
in her maternal solicitude and attention, had secured for saint John this good
fortune, humbly asking this favor of the heavenly Queen. Mary with incredible love
and subjection complied with her request in order to exercise Herself in obedience to her cousin, whom She wished to serve
as the lowest handmaid; for in humility and obedience most holy Mary always
surpassed all men. Although saint Elisabeth sought to
anticipate Her in much that belonged to her service, yet, in her rare prudence
and wisdom, Mary knew how to forestall her cousin, always gaining the triumph
of humility.
234. In this regard a great and sweet competition
arose between the two cousins, which was very pleasing to the Most High and
wonderful in the sight of the angels; for saint Elisabeth was very solicitous
and attentive in serving our Lady and great Queen, and in commanding also the
same service to be rendered Her by all the inmates of the house. But She, who
was the Teacher of virtues, most holy Mary, being still more attentive and
eager to serve, met and diverted the anxieties of her cousin, saying: "My
dear cousin, I find my consolation in being commanded and in obeying during all
my life; it is not good that thy love should deprive me of the comfort I feel
therein; since I am the younger one, it is proper that I serve not only thee,
as my mother, but all in thy house; deal with me as with thy servant as long as
I am in thy company." Saint Elisabeth answered: "My beloved Lady, it
beseems much more that I obey Thee and that Thou command and direct me in all
things; and this I ask of thee with greater justice. For if Thou, the Mistress,
wishest to exercise humility, I on my part owe worship and reverence to my God
and Lord, whom Thou bearest in thy virginal womb, and I know that thy dignity
is worthy of all honor and reverence." And the most prudent Virgin
rejoined: "My Son and Lord did not choose me for his Mother, in order that
I receive reverence as mistress; for his kingdom is not of this world (Joan 18,
36), nor did He come into it in order to be served; but to serve (Matth. 20, 28), and to suffer, and to teach obedience and humility to
mortals (Matth. 11, 29), condemning fastidiousness and pride. Since
therefore his Majesty teaches me this and the Highest calls Himself the
ignominy of men (Ps, 21, 22), how can I, who am his slave and do not merit the
company of creatures, consent that thou serve me, who art formed according to
his image and likeness?" (Gen. 1, 27).
235. Saint Elisabeth still insisted and said: "My
Mistress and Protectress, this is true for those, who do not know the sacrament
which is enclosed in Thee. But I, who have without merit been informed by the
Lord, will be very blamable in his eyes, if I do not give Him in Thee the
veneration which is due to Him as God, and to Thee as his Mother; for it is
just that I serve Both, as a slave serves his
masters." To this the most holy Mary answered: "My dear sister, this
reverence which thou owest and desirest to give, is due to the Lord, whom I
bear within my womb, for He is the true and highest Good and our Redeemer. But
as far as I am concerned, who am a mere creature and among creatures only a
poor worm, look upon me as I am in myself, although thou shouldst adore the
Creator, who chose my poor self as his dwelling. By his divine enlightenment
thou shalt give unto God, what is due to Him, and allow me to perform that
which pertains to me, namely to serve and to be below all. This I ask of Thee
for my consolation and in the name of the Lord, whom I bear within me."
236. In such blessed and happy contentions most holy
Mary and her cousin Elisabeth passed some of their time. But the divine
prudence of our Queen caused in Her such an alertness and ingenuity in matters
concerning humility and obedience, that She never
failed to find means and ways of obeying and of being commanded. However,
during all the time in which She stayed with saint
Elisabeth, all this was done in such a way that both according to their
condition treated with the highest respect the sacrament of the King which had
been entrusted to their knowledge, and which was deposited in the most holy
Mary. This high respect in Mary was such as befitted the Mother and the Mistress
of all virtue and grace, and in Elisabeth, such as was worthy of the prudent
matron, so highly enlightened by the holy Spirit. By
this light she wisely directed her behavior in regard to the Mother of God,
yielding to her wishes and obeying Her in whatever she
could, and at the same time reverencing her dignity, and in it, her Creator. In
her inmost heart she made the intention that if she were obliged to give any
command to the Mother of God, she would do it only in order to obey and satisfy
her wishes; and whenever she did it, she asked permission and pardon of the
Lord, at the same time never ordering anything by direct command, but always by
request; and she would use greater earnestness only in such things as were
conducive to Mary's convenience, as for instance, that She take some sleep or
nourishment. She also asked Mary to make a few articles for her with her own
hands; Mary complied, but saint Elisabeth never made
use of them, except to preserve them with the greatest veneration.
237. In this way most holy Mary put into practice the
doctrine of the eternal Word who humiliated Himself so far, that, being the
form of the eternal Father, the figure of his substance, true God of the true
God, He nevertheless assumed the form and condition of a servant (Heb. I, 3, Philip 2, 6, 7). This Lady was the Mother of God,
Queen of all creation, superior in excellence and dignity to all creatures, and
yet She remained the humble servant of the least of them; and never would She
accept homage and service as if due to Her, nor did She ever exalt Herself, or
fail to judge of Herself in the most humble manner. What shall we now say of
our most execrable presumption and pride? Since, full of the abomination of
sin, we are so senseless as to claim for ourselves
with dreadful insanity the homage and veneration of all the world? And if this
is denied us, we quickly lose the little sense which our passions have left us.
This whole heavenly history bears the stamp of humility, and is a condemnation
of our pride. And since it is not my office to teach or correct, but to be
taught and to be corrected, I beseech and pray all the faithful children of
light to place this example before their eyes for our humiliation.
238. It would not have been difficult for the Lord to
preserve his most holy Mother from such extreme lowliness and from the
occasions in which She embraced it; He could have exalted Her before creatures,
ordaining that She be renowned, honored and respected by all; just as He knew
how to procure homage and renown for others as Assuerus did for Mardocheus.
Perhaps, if this had been left to the judgment of men, they would have so
managed that a Woman more holy than an the hierarchies of heaven, and who bore
in her womb the Creator of the angels and of the heavens, should be surrounded
by a continual guard of honor, withdrawn from the gaze of men and receiving the
homage of all the world; it would have seemed to them unworthy of Her to engage
in humble and servile occupations, or not to have all things done only at her
command, or to refuse homage, or not to exercise fullest authority. So narrow
is human wisdom, if that can be called wisdom, which is so limited. But such
fallacy cannot creep into the true science of the saints, which is communicated
to them by the infinite wisdom of the Creator, and which esteems at their just
weight and price these honors without confounding the values of the creatures.
The Most High would have denied his beloved Mother much and benefited Her little, if He had deprived and withdrawn from Her the
occasion of exercising the profoundest humility and had instead exposed Her to
the exterior applause of men. It would also be a great loss to the world to be
without this school of humility and this example for the humiliation and
confusion of its pride.
239. From the time of her receiving the Lord as her
Guest in her house, though yet in the womb of the Virgin Mother, the holy
Elisabeth was much favored by God. By the continued conversation and the
familiar intercourse with the heavenly Queen in proportion as she grew in the
knowledge and understanding of the mysteries of the Incarnation, this great
matron advanced in all manner of sanctity, as one who draws it from its very
fountain. A few times She merited to see most holy
Mary during her prayers, ravished and raised from the ground and altogether
filled with divine splendor and beauty, so that she could not have looked upon
her face, nor remain alive in her presence, if she had not been strengthened by
divine power. On these occasions, and
at others whenever she could be witness of them without attracting the
attention of most holy Mary, she prostrated herself and knelt in her presence,
and adored the incarnate Word in the virginal temple of the most holy Mother.
All the mysteries which became known to her by the divine light and by the
intercourse with the great Queen, saint Elisabeth sealed up in her bosom, being
a most faithful depositary and prudent secretary of that which was confided to
her. Only with her son John and with Zacharias, during the short time in which
he lived after the birth of his son, saint Elisabeth conversed to some extent
concerning those sacraments which had become known to all. But in all this she
acted as a courageous, wise and very holy woman. INSTRUCTION WHICH THE QUEEN MOST
HOLY MARY GAVE ME.
240. My daughter, the favors of the Most High and the
knowledge of his divine mysteries, in the attentive souls, engender a kind of
love and esteem of humility, which raises them up with a strong and sweet
force, like that which causes fire to ascend, like the gravity which causes a
stone to fall, each of them striving to reach its own and natural sphere. This
is done by the true light, which places the creature in the possession of a
clear knowledge of its own self and attributes the graces to the proper source,
whence all perfect things come (James 1, 17); and thus it brings all things
into correct balance. And this is the most proper order of right reason which
overthrows and as it were exerts violence against the false presumption of mortals. On
account of this presumption of pride the heart, wherein it lives, cannot strive
after contempt, nor bear it, nor can it suffer a superior over itself, and is
offended even at equals; it violently opposes all in order to place itself alone
above all fellow creatures. But the humble heart is abased in proportion to the
benefits it received, and in its interior quietly grows a desire or an ardent
hunger for self-abasement and for the last place; it is violently disturbed in
not finding itself esteemed as the inferior of all and in being deprived of
humiliation.
241. In me, my dearest, thou wilt find exhibited the
practical application of this doctrine; since none of the favors and blessings,
which the right hand of the Most High lavished upon me, were insignificant. Yet
never was my heart inflated with presumption above itself (Ps. 110, 1), nor did
it ever know anything else than to desire to be abased and occupy the last
place among all creatures. The imitation of this I desire especially of thee;
let thy ambition be to take the last place, to live in subjection to all
others; abased and considered as useless, in the presence of the Lord and of
men, thou must judge thyself as less than the dust of the earth itself. Thou
canst not deny, that in no generation has anyone been
more favored than thou, and no one has merited these favors less than thou. How
then wilt thou make any return for this great debt of gratitude if thou dost
not humiliate thyself below all others and more than all the sons of Adam; and
if thou dost not awaken within thyself exalted and loving sentiments concerning
humility? It is good to obey the prelates and instructors, therefore do it
always. But I desire that thou go much farther, and that thou obey the most
insignificant of thy fellow beings in all that is not sinful, and in such a
way, as if thou wert obeying the highest of thy superiors; and I desire that in
this matter thou be very earnest, as I was during my earthly life.
242. Thou must, however, be circumspect in regard to
the obedience to thy inferiors, so that they may not, knowing of thy
anxiousness to obey in all things, seek to induce thee to obey in things
unseemly and unbecoming. Thou canst do much good by giving them the good and
orderly example of obedience, without causing them to lose any of their
subjection and without derogating from thy authority as their superioress. If any
disagreeable accident or injury should happen, which affects thee alone, accept
it gladly, without so much as moving thy lips in self defense, or making any
complaints. Whatever is an injury to God do thou reprehend without mixing up
any of thy own grievances with those of his Majesty; for thou shouldst never
find any cause for self defense, but always be ready to defend the honor of
God. But neither in the one nor the other, allow thyself
to be moved by disorderly anger and passion. I wish also, that thou use great
prudence in hiding and concealing the favors of the Lord, for the sacrament of
the King is not to be lightly manifested (Tob. 12,
7), nor are carnal men capable or worthy of the mysteries of the Holy Ghost (I
Cor. 2, 14). In all things imitate and follow me, since thou wishest to be my
beloved daughter; this thou wilt attain by obeying me and thou wilt induce the
Almighty to strengthen and direct thy footsteps to that which I desire to
accomplish in thee. Do not resist Him, but dispose and prepare thy heart
sweetly and quickly to obey his light and grace. Let grace not be void in thee
(II Cor. 6, 1), but labor diligently and let thy actions be performed in all
perfection.
OF SOME CONVERSATIONS, WHICH MOST HOLY MARY HELD WITH
HER ANGELS IN THE HOUSE OF SAINT ELISABETH, AND OF OTHERS, WHICH SHE HELD WITH
HER COUSIN.
243. The plenitude of the wisdom and grace of most
holy Mary, being of such immense capacity, could not remain idle at any point
of time, nor in any place or occasion. For it gave forth the plenitude of all
perfection; active at all times and seasons to the fullest extent of duty and
possibility, without ever falling short of the holiest and the most excellent
in virtue. And as in all places She acted the part of a pilgrim on earth and of
an inhabitant of heaven, and as She herself was the intellectual and most
glorious heaven, the living temple, in which God himself had made his
habitation; so She also carried with Her her own
oratory and sanctuary and in this respect there was for Her no difference
between her own house and that of her cousin saint Elisabeth, nor could any
other place, time or occupation be a hindrance to Her in this regard. She was
placed above all things and without any outside claim She
incessantly devoted Herself to the influence of the love, which was continually
in her sight. Yet at the same time She conversed with
the creatures at opportune times and treated with them according as occasion
required, giving as much attention to them, as the most prudent Mistress could
fittingly spare for each in particular. And as her most frequent conversings during the three months, in which She remained
in the house of Zacharias, were with saint Elisabeth and with the holy angels
of her guard, I shall relate in this chapter something of that which formed the
subject of her conferences with them, and also mention other things, which
happened in her intercourse with the saint.
244. When She was left alone
and free to Herself our heavenly Princess passed many hours ravished and
elevated in divine contemplations and visions. Sometimes during these trances,
sometimes outside of them, She was accustomed to
converse with her angels about the sacraments and mysteries of her interior
love. One day, soon after She had arrived at the house of Zacharias, She spoke
to them in the following manner: "Heavenly spirits, my guardians and
companions, ambassadors of the Most High and luminaries of his Divinity, come
and strengthen my heart, which is captured and wounded by his divine love; for
it is afflicted with its own limitations in that it cannot properly respond to
the obligations which are known to it and which dictate its desires. Come, ye
supernal princes, and praise with me the admirable name of the Lord and let us
magnify his holy judgments and operations. Help this poor little worm to praise
its Maker, who condescends kindly to look upon its insignificance. Let us talk
of the wonders of my Spouse; let us discuss the beauty of my Lord, of my
beloved Son! Let my heart find relief in uniting its
inmost aspirations to your own, my friends and companions; for you do know the
secrets of my Treasure, which the Lord has deposited within me in the
narrowness of so fragile and constrained a vase. Great are these sacraments and
admirable these mysteries; and I contemplate them with sweet affection, but
their supernal greatness overwhelms me, the profundity and the greatness of my
love overpowers me even while they inflame my heart. In the ardor of my soul I
cannot rest satisfied and I find no repose; for my desires surpass all that I
can accomplish and my obligations are greater than my desires; I am
dissatisfied with myself, because I do not exert myself as much as I desire,
because I do not desire to accomplish as much as I should, and because I find
myself continually falling short and vanquished by the greatness of the returns
which are due. Ye heavenly seraphim, listen to my
loving anxieties; I am fallen sick with love (Cant 2, 5). Open to me your
bosoms, whence the beauty of my God is flashed forth, in order that the
splendors of his light and the visions of his loveliness may replenish the
life, which wastes away in his love."
245. "Mother of our Creator and our
Mistress," answered the holy angels, "Thou possessest truly the
Almighty and our highest Good. Since Thou hast Him so closely bound to Thee and
art his true Spouse and Mother, rejoice in Him and keep Him with Thee for all
eternity. Thou art the Spouse and the Mother of the God of love, and as in Thee
is the only cause and fountain of life, no one shall live with Him as Thou, our
Queen and Mistress. But do not seek to find repose in a love so inflamed; for
thy state and condition of a pilgrim do not permit thy love to attain the
repose of perfect consummation, nor will it cease to aspire to new and greater
increase of merit and triumph. Thy obligations surpass without comparison those
of all the nations; but they are to increase and grow continually; never will
thy so vastly inflamed love equal its Object, since It is eternal and infinite
and without measure in its perfection; Thou shalt always be happily vanquished
by its greatness; for no one can comprehend It; only He himself comprehends
Himself and loves Himself in the measure, in which He deserves to be loved.
Eternally, o Lady, shalt Thou find in Him more to desire and more to love,
since that is required by the essence of his greatness and of our beatitude."
246. In these colloquies and conferences the fire of
divine love was more and more enkindled in the heart of most holy Mary; in Her
was exactly fulfilled the command of the Lord (Levit.
6, 12), that in his tabernacle and on his altar should burn continually the
fire of the holocaust and that the priest of the ancient law should see to its
perpetual nourishment and maintenance. This precept was executed to the letter
in the most holy Mary, for in Her were jointly contained the altar and the new
Highpriest, Christ our Lord, who nourished and augmented its flame day by day,
by administering new material in favors, blessings, graces and communications
of his Divinity; while the exalted Lady on her part, contributed her ceaseless
exertions, which were ineffably enhanced in value by the continual flow of the
graces and sanctity of the Lord. From the moment in which this Lady entered
into the world, this conflagration of his divine love took its rise, in order
never to be extinguished on this altar through all the eternities of God
himself. For as lasting as this eternity and as continuous was and will be the
fire of this living sanctuary.
247. At other times She spoke
and conversed with the holy angels, when they appeared to Her in human forms,
as I have said in several places. Most frequently this conversation turned
about the mystery of the incarnate Word; and in this She
manifested so profound a knowledge in citing the holy Scriptures and the
Prophets that She caused wonder even in the angels. On one occasion in speaking
to them of these venerable sacraments, She said: "My lords, servants of
the Most High and his friends, my heart is pierced and torn by arrows of grief,
when I meditate on what the sacred Scriptures say of my most holy Son or what
Isaias and Jeremias wrote (Gen. 22, 2; Isai. 33, 2; Jerem. 11, 18) concerning the most
bitter pains and torments in store for Him. Solomon says (Wis. 2, 20),
that they shall condemn Him to a most ignominious death and the Prophets always
speak in weighty and superlative terms of his Passion and Death, which all are
to be fulfilled in Him. O were it the will of his Majesty that I live at that
time in order to offer myself to die instead of the Author of my life! My soul
is sorely afflicted in the consideration of these infallible truths and that my
God and my Lord should come forth from my womb only in order to suffer. O who
will guard Him and defend Him against his enemies! O tell me, ye heavenly
princes, by what services or by what means can I induce the eternal Father to
divert the rigor of his justice upon me, in order that the Innocent, who cannot
have any guilt upon Him, may be freed from punishment? Well do I know that in
order to satisfy the infinite God for the offenses of men, the satisfaction of
the incarnate God is required; but by his first act my most holy Son has
merited more than all the human race can lose or demerit by its offenses. Since
this is sufficient, tell me, is it not possible that I die in order to relieve
Him from his death and torments? My humble desires will not be annoying to my
God, and my anxieties will not be displeasing to Him. Yet, what am I saying? And to what lengths do sorrow and love drive me, since I
must be subject in all things to the divine will and its perfect
fulfillment?"
248. Such and like colloquy the most holy Mary held
with her angels, especially during the time of her pregnancy. The holy spirits
met all her anxieties and comforted her with great reverence, consoling Her by
renewing the memory of the very sacraments, which She already knew and by
reminding Her of the reasonableness and propriety of the death of Christ for
the salvation of the human race, for the conquest of the demons and spoliation
of their power, for the glory of the eternal Father and the exaltation of the
most holy and highest Lord his Son (Tim. 2, 14). So great and exalted were the
mysteries touched upon in these discourses of the Queen with the holy angels,
that neither can the human tongue describe, nor our
capacity comprehend them in this life. When we shall enjoy the Lord we shall
see what we cannot at present conceive. From this little which I have said, our
piety can help us to draw conclusions in regard to others much greater.
249. Saint Elisabeth was likewise much versed and
enlightened in the divine Scriptures, and much more so since the Visitation;
and therefore our Queen conversed with Her concerning these heavenly mysteries,
which were known and understood by the matron, instructing and enlightening her
by heavenly teachings; for through her intercession Elisabeth was enriched with
many blessings and gifts of heaven. Many times she wondered at the profound
wisdom of the Mother of God, and blessed Her over and
over again, saying: "Blessed art Thou, my Mistress and Mother of my Lord,
among all womankind (Luke 1, 42); and may the nations know and magnify thy
dignity. Most fortunate art Thou on account of the rich Treasure, which Thou
bearest in thy virginal womb. I tender to Thee my humble and most affectionate
congratulations for the joy with which thy spirit shall be filled, when Thou
shalt hold in thy arms the Son of justice and nurse Him at thy virginal breasts.
Remember me thy servant, O Lady, in that hour and offer my heart in sacrifice
to thy most holy Son, my true and incarnate God. O who shall merit to serve
Thee from now on and attend upon Thee! But if I am unworthy of this good
fortune, may I enjoy that of being borne in thy heart; for I fear (not without
cause) that mine will be torn asunder, when I must part from Thee." Many
other sentiments of sweetest and most tender love saint Elisabeth uttered in
her personal intercourse with the most holy Mary; and the most prudent Lady
consoled her, strengthened and enlivened her by her divinely efficacious
reasonings. These so exalted and heavenly dealings of Mary were diversified by
many other acts of humility and self-abasement in serving not only her cousin
Elisabeth, but also the servants of her house. Whenever She
could find an occasion, She swept the house of her relative, and always her
oratory at regular times; and with the servants She washed the dishes, and
performed other acts of profound humility. Let no one think it strange that I
particularize in these small matters; for the greatness of our Queen has made
them of importance for our instruction and in order that knowing of them, our
pride may vanish and our vileness may come to shame. When saint
Elisabeth learnt of the humble services, performed by the Mother of piety, She
was deeply moved and tried to prevent them; and therefore the heavenly Lady
concealed them from her cousin wherever it was possible.
250. O Queen and Mistress of heaven and earth, my
Protectress and Advocate, although Thou art the Teacher of all sanctity and
perfection, lost in astonishment at thy humility, I dare, O my Mother, to ask
Thee: how was it possible that, knowing of the Onlybegotten of the Father
within thy virginal womb, and wishing in all things to conduct Thyself as his
Mother, thy greatness should abase itself to such lowliness, as sweeping the
floor and similar occupations; since, according to our notions, Thou couldst,
on account of the reverence due to thy most holy Son, easily have excused
Thyself without failing against the duties of thy most perfect Motherhood. My
desire is, O Lady, to understand how thy Majesty was governed in this matter.
ANSWER AND INSTRUCTION OF THE QUEEN
OF HEAVEN.
251. My daughter, in order to solve thy difficulty
more explicitly than as already noted down in the foregoing chapter, thou must
remember that no occupation or exterior act pertaining to virtue, no matter how
lowly it may be, can, if it is well-ordered, impede the worship, reverence and
exaltation of the Creator of all things; for these acts of virtue do not
exclude one another; but they are all compatible with one another in the
creature, and much more in me, who lived in the continual presence of the
highest Good without ever losing It out of sight by exterior activity. Labored
and remembered God in all my actions, referring them all to his greater glory;
and the Lord himself, who orders and creates all things, despises none of them,
nor is He offended, or irritated by their smallness. The soul that loves Him, is not disconcerted by any of these little things in
his divine presence; for it seeks and finds Him as the beginning and the end of
all creatures. And because terrestrial creatures cannot exist without these
humble performances and without others that are inseparable from our lowly
condition and the preservation of our nature, it is necessary to understand
this doctrine well, in order that we may be governed by it. For
if we engage in these thoughts and occupations without reference to their
Creator, they will cause many and great interruptions in the practice of virtue
and in our merits, as well as in the right use of interior advantages.
Our whole life will be blameworthy and full of reprehensible defects, little
removed from the earthliness of creatures.
252. According to this doctrine thou must so regulate
thy terrestrial occupations, whatever they may be, that thou do not lose thy
time, which can never be recovered. Whether thou eat, labor, rest, sleep, or
watch, in all times and places, and in all occupations, adore, reverence and
look upon thy great and powerful Lord, who fills all things and conserves all things
(I Cor. 10, 3; Matth. 11, 29). I wish also that thou pay special attention to
that which moved and incited me most to perform all acts of humility; namely,
the thought that my divine Son came in the guise of humility in order to teach
the world this virtue in word and example, to inculcate the hate of vanity and
pride and rooting out its seed sown by Lucifer among mortals in the first sin.
His Majesty gave me such a deep knowledge of how much He is pleased with this
virtue, that in order to be allowed to perform only one of the acts mentioned
by thee, such as sweeping the floor or kissing the feet of the poor, I would
have been ready to suffer the greatest torments of the world. Thou wilt never
find words to express the love for humility which I had, nor to describe its
excellence and nobility. In the Lord thou wilt know and understand what thou
canst not describe in words.
253. But write this doctrine in thy heart and observe
it as the rule of thy life; continue to exercise thyself in the contempt of all
things belonging to human vanity, and esteem them as odious and execrable in
the eyes of the Most High. But in connection with this humility of thy life,
let thy thoughts always be of the noblest and thy conversation in heaven and
with the angelic spirits (Philip 3, 20) ; deal with them and converse with them
in order to obtain new light concerning the Divinity and the mysteries of
Christ my most holy Son. With creatures let thy intercourse be such as will
continually increase thy fervor and serve thee as
means of advancing and profiting by means of humility and divine love. In thy
own mind assume the lowest place beneath all creatures, so that when the
occasion and the time of exercising the acts of humility arrive, thou mayest be
found prompt and willing to exercise them. Only then wilt thou be the mistress
of the passions, if first thou hast acknowledged thyself in thy heart as the
least and weakest and most useless of all the creatures.
SOME SPECIAL FAVORS WHICH MOST HOLY MARY CONFERRED UPON
SEVERAL PERSONS IN THE HOUSE OF ZACHARIAS.
254. It is a well known quality of love to be active
as the fire in works of kindness, wherever it finds occasion; and this is
especially true of the fire of spiritual love; for it will reach out in search
of material, as soon as this falls short. The Master has taught lovers of God
so many ways and methods of pursuing virtue, that there is no need of remaining
idle. And as love is not blind nor insane, it knows
well the qualities of the noble object it aims at. Its only concern is that not
all men love it properly; and thus it seeks to communicate this love without
strife or envy. We know that the love of all the other saints, though most
fervent and holy, appears limited in comparison with that of most holy Mary.
Yet if their love is admirable and powerful, inciting them to vast works of
zeal for souls, what immense works then must not the love this great Queen have
accomplished for the benefit of her fellowmen, since She was the Mother of the
divine love (Eccli, 24, 24), and since She carried with her the true and living
fire that was to enkindle the world? (Luke 12, 49).
Let all the mortals learn from this heavenly history how much they owe to the
love of this Lady. Although it will be impossible to notice all the particular
instances of the benefits conferred on the souls by Her, nevertheless, in order
that from some of them, many more may be inferred, I will relate a few that our
Queen conferred while in the house of her cousin Elisabeth.
255. One of the servants in that house was of perverse
inclination, restless, subject to anger, and accustomed to swear and curse.
With all these vices and disorders, she still knew how to make herself
agreeable to her masters, but at the same time she was so given over to the
power of the demon that this tyrant could easily induce her to throw herself
into all sorts of miseries and mistakes. For fourteen years many devils
surrounded and accompanied her without intermission in order to make certain
the capture of her soul. Only when this woman came into the presence of the
Mistress of heaven, most holy Mary, these enemies withdrew; for, as I have said
in other places, the virtue issuing from our Queen tormented them, and
especially during that time when She carried within her virginal repository the
powerful God and Lord of all virtues. As on the one hand this woman was freed
from her cruel exactors, being released from the evil influences of their
company, and as on the other hand she experienced within her the beneficial effects
of the sweet vision and intercourse of the Queen, she began to be much
attracted and moved toward Mary and she sought to be in her presence and
offered to serve Her with much affection, striving to pass all the time
possible with Her and watching Her with reverence; for among her distorted
inclinations she had also a good one, which was a natural kindness and
compassion for the needy and the humble, so that she was naturally drawn toward
them and ready to do them good.
256. The heavenly Princess, who saw and knew all the
inclinations of this woman, the state of her conscience, the danger of her soul
and the malice of the demons against her, turned upon her an eye of mercy and
watched her with the love of a mother. Although her Majesty knew that the company
and the interference of the demons was a just punishment for the sins of this
woman, yet She interceded for her and obtained for her
pardon, remedy and salvation. She commanded the demons, in virtue of the
authority conceded to Her, to leave this creature and
not dare to disturb her or molest her thenceforth. As they could not resist the
sway of our great Queen, they yielded and fled in highest consternation, not
knowing how to account for such power of the most holy Mary. They conferred
about it in astonishment and indignation, saying: "Who'
is this Woman, that exerts such dominion over us?
Whence does such strange power come, which enables Her
to perform all that She wishes?" The demons therefore conceived new wrath
and indignation against Her, who had crushed their
heads (Gen. 3, 15). The happy woman, however, was snatched from their claws.
Mary admonished her, corrected her, and taught her the way of salvation, and
changed her into a woman of kind and meek disposition. She persevered therein
during all her life, being well aware, that all this had come to her through
the hands of our Queen; although she did not know nor penetrate into the
mystery of her dignity, she remained humbly thankful and lived a holy life.
257. Not in a better state than this servant was
another woman living in the neighborhood of the house of Zacharias, who as a
neighbor was wont to come and listen to the conversation of the family of saint Elisabeth. She lived a licentious life, far from
honorable, and when she heard of the arrival of our great Queen in that town,
of her modesty and retirement, she spoke of Her
lightly and with some curiosity: "Who is this Stranger, that has come as a
guest of our neighbors, and who gives Herself such holy and recollected
airs?" In the vain and inquisitive desire of spying out novelty, as is
customary with such kind of people, she managed to get sight of the heavenly
Lady and scrutinized her dress and her countenance. Her intention was
impertinent and presumptuous; but far different the effect: for having
succeeded in scrutinizing most holy Mary, she left with a wounded heart: the
presence and the sight of the Queen transformed her into a new woman. Her
inclinations were altogether changed, and without knowing by what efficacious
influence the change came about, she felt its power and began to shed abundant
floods of tears in deep felt sorrow for her sins. Merely on account of having
fixed her attentive gaze in curiosity upon the Mother of virginal purity, this
happy woman received in return the love of chastity and was freed from the
sensual habits and inclinations of her former life. In that very hour she
sorrowfully retired to weep over her wicked life. Whenever later on she desired
to converse with the Mother of grace, her Highness, in order to confirm her,
permitted it. For as Mary knew what had happened and as She bore within Her the
origin of grace, the Sanctifier and Justifier by whose power She fulfilled her
office of Advocate of sinners She received her with maternal kindness, admonished
and instructed her in virtue, dismissing her strengthened and confirmed for perseverance
in her new life.
258. In this manner our great Lady performed many
works and caused many admirable conversions in a great number of souls;
although it was done in silence and hidden to all. The whole family of saint
Elisabeth and Zacharias were sanctified by her intercourse and conversation,
Those who were just, experienced new increase of gifts and favors; those that
were not, She justified and enlightened by her intercession; all of them were
captured by reverential love of Her so completely, that each one strove to obey
Her and acknowledge Her as mother, as protectress and as a consolation in all
their necessities. The mere privilege of seeing Her,
without any words, was sufficient to produce all these effects; yet She was
careful not to omit whatever seemed necessary to obtain this end. As She penetrated the secrets of all hearts and knew the state
of each one's conscience, She knew how to apply the opportune medicine.
Sometimes, not always, the Lord manifested to Her the
final end of those She met: informing Her, which were chosen and which were
reprobate, predestined for happiness or foreknown as damned. At sight of both
one and the other her heart broke forth in admirable flashes of most perfect
virtue: for when She knew of any that were just and
predestined, She bestowed upon them many blessings, which She also does now in
heaven, and the Lord looked with favor upon her beneficence. Exerting
incredible and prayerful diligence She asked Him to
preserve them in his grace and friendship. Whenever She
saw anyone in sin, She asked from the bottom of her heart for his justification
and ordinarily She also obtained it. But if it happened to be one of the
reprobate, She wept bitterly and humiliated Herself in the presence of the Most
High for the loss of that image and work of the Divinity; She redoubled her
heartfelt prayers, offerings and humiliations in order that no others might
damn themselves, and her whole being was one flame of divine love, which never
rested nor reposed in accomplishing great things. INSTRUCTION WHICH THE HEAVENLY
QUEEN AND LADY GAVE ME.
259. My dearest daughter, within two limits, as if
within two extremes, all the harmony of thy powers and wishes must move. They
are: to preserve thyself in the grace and friendship of God, and to seek the
same good fortune for others. In this let all thy life and activity be
consumed. For such high purpose I wish that thou spare no labor, beseeching the
Lord and offering thyself in sacrifice unto death, accepting actually all that
is opportune and possible. Although, in order to solicit the good of souls,
thou need not make any great ado before creatures, since that is not
appropriate to thy sex; yet thou must seek and prudently apply all the hidden means, that are most efficacious within thy knowledge. If
thou wilt be my daughter and a spouse of my most holy Son, consider that the
possessions of our house are the rational creatures, which He acquired as a
rich prize at the cost of his life (I Cor. 6, 20) and of his blood; for through
their own disobedience they were lost to Him (Gen. 3, 6), after He had created
and selected them for Himself.
260. Hence whenever the Lord sends to thee, or throws
in thy way, a needy soul and makes thee aware of its state, labor faithfully to
assist it. Pray and weep with heartfelt and fervent love, that God may furnish
the remedy for such great and dangerous evil, and do not neglect any means,
divine or human, as far as thou art concerned, in order to obtain the salvation
of eternal life for the soul entrusted to thee. By means of the prudence and
moderation which I have taught thee, thou must not grow weary in admonishing,
nor in praying for that which will benefit that soul; and in all secrecy
continue thy labor in its behalf. Likewise I wish, that whenever it is
necessary, thou command the demons in the powerful name of the Almighty and my
own, to depart and leave in peace the souls oppressed by them; and as all this
is to be done in secret, thou canst in all propriety animate and encourage
thyself to this kind of work. Remember that the Lord has placed thee, and will
place thee in a position to exercise this doctrine. Do not forget it, nor fail
in understanding, how much thou art bounden to his
Majesty to use care and solicitude in extending the possessions of thy Father's
house. Do not rest until thou accustom thyself to do this with all diligence
(Phil. 4, 13). Fear not, for thou canst do all in Him that strengthens thee;
and his power will strengthen thy arm to do great things (Prov. 31,27).
SAINT ELISABETH ASKS THE QUEEN OF HEAVEN TO ASSIST AT
HER CONFINEMENT AND IS ENLIGHTENED CONCERNING THE BIRTH OF JOHN.
261. Already two months had passed since the coming of
the Princess of heaven into the house of holy Elisabeth; and the discreet
matron was even now filled with grief at the thought of the departure and of
the absence of the Mistress of the world. She dreaded the loss of so great a
blessing as her presence was, and with reason, since she knew, that it could
not come within the range of human merits; in her holy humility she scrutinized
her heart, fearing lest any fault of hers might be the cause of the setting of
that beautiful moon and of the Sun of justice within the virginal Womb.
Sometimes She wept and sighed in private, because she
could find no means of prolonging their stay, which had shed much clear light
of grace in her soul. She asked the Lord with many tears to inspire her Cousin,
the most holy Lady Mary, not to forsake her; at least, not to withdraw so soon
her sweet company. She served Her with great reverence
and solicitude and studied to oblige Her. It is no wonder, that so saintly,
attentive and prudent a woman should ask for that which even the angels coveted.
For in addition to the divine light, which she had received from the Holy Ghost
concerning the supreme dignity and sanctity of the Virgin Mother, she had the
personal experience of her most sweet intercourse and conversation, and all
this combined had ravished her heart, so that without divine aid, she could not
have survived the parting, after once having known and conversed with the
blessed Lady.
262. In order to find some consolation, saint
Elisabeth resolved to open her heart to the heavenly Lady, who was, however,
not ignorant of her sorrow; and she said to Her in great submission and
humility: "Cousin, dear Lady, on account of the respect and consideration,
with which I am bound to serve Thee, I have not until now dared to speak of my
desire and of the sorrow in my heart; give me now the permission to relieve it
by making them known. The Lord has condescended in his mercy to send Thee
hither, in order that I might have the unmerited blessing of conversing with
Thee and of knowing the mysteries, which his divine Providence has entrusted to
Thee, my Mistress. Unworthy I am to praise Him eternally for this favor (Dan.
3, 53). Thou art the living temple of his glory, the ark of the Testament,
containing the Manna, which is the food of the angels (Heb. 9, 4). Thou art the
tablet of the true law, written in his own Being (Ps. 77,25).
I appreciate in my lowliness how rich his Majesty has made me, that without my
merit I should entertain in my own house the Treasure of heaven and Her, whom He has chosen as his Mother among all women. I
justly fear that I displease Thee and the Fruit of thy womb by my sins, and
that therefore thou wilt forsake thy slave, withdrawing the great blessing,
which I now enjoy. Possibly, if it be thy pleasure, I might have the happiness
of serving Thee and remaining with Thee all the rest of my life. If it is a
hardship for Thee to return to thy dwelling, it will be most convenient for
Thee to stay in my house. I f Thou wilt call thy holy spouse Joseph and live
with him here as my masters, I will serve you with affectionate readiness of
heart. Although I do not merit what I ask, I beseech Thee-not to despise my
humble petition, since the Lord can surpass by his mercies all my merits and
desires."
263. The most holy Mary heard
with sweetest complacency the petition of her cousin Elisabeth and answered
her: "Dearest friend of my soul, thy holy wishes are acceptable in the
eyes of the Most High. I also thank thee from my heart; but in all our
undertakings and resolves it is necessary that we conform to the divine will
and entirely subject ourselves to it. Although this is the duty of all
creatures, thou knowest, that it is my duty before all others, since by the
power of his arm He has raised me from the dust and in boundless love has looked
upon me (Luke 1,53). All my words and movements must
be guided by the divine will of my Lord and Son and I must not desire anything
except what is according to his pleasure. Let us present to his Majesty thy
desires, and whatever He in his goodness shall ordain, that let us execute. I
must also obey my spouse Joseph, for without his order and consent, I can
neither decide upon my occupations, nor upon my dwellingplace;
it is just, my dearest, that we obey our superiors."
264. Saint Elisabeth yielded to the persuasive words
of the Princess of heaven and answered with humble submission: "My Lady, I
am ready to obey thy will and revere thy teaching. I wish only once more to
commend to Thee my sincere affection and heartfelt devotion to thy service. If
my wishes cannot be fulfilled and are contrary to the will of God, I desire at
least, if possible, that Thou, my Queen, do not forsake me until my son shall
come forth to the light; in order that, just as within my womb he has adored
and recognized his Redeemer in thy own, so he may enjoy his divine presence and
enlightenment before any other creature and that he may receive thy blessing
for the first advances in life (Prov. 16, 9) by the presence of Him, who is to
direct his footsteps. And do Thou, the Mother of grace, present Him to the
Creator and obtain from his goodness the perseverance in that grace, which he
received at the sound of thy sweetest voice, when it carne to my unworthy ears.
Let me behold my child in thy arms, where the God, who made and preserves
heaven and earth, is likewise to rest (Is. 42, 5). Let not thy maternal
kindness be strained or diminished by my sins; deny not this consolation to me,
nor to my son this great happiness, which as a mother I ask and unworthily
desire for him."
265. Most holy Mary did not wish to refuse and She promised to pray the Lord for the fulfillment of this
request of her cousin, asking her at the same time to unite her prayers with
hers in order to know his most holy will. Accordingly the two mothers of the
two most holy Sons born into the world betook themselves to the oratory of the
heavenly Princess and presented their petitions to the Most High. Most pure
Mary fell into an ecstasy, wherein She was enlightened
anew concerning the mysterious life and the dignity of the Precursor and
concerning his work in preparing the hearts of men for the reception of their
Redeemer and Teacher, and She made known to saint Elisabeth these sacraments in
as far as it was proper. She was informed of the great sanctity of her saintly
cousin, also, that she had only a short while to live and that Zacharias would
die before her. The kind Mother lovingly besought the Lord to assist her at her
death and to fulfill her wishes in regard to her son. In regard to the other
fond desires, the most prudent Virgin made no request, for in her heavenly
wisdom She immediately saw, that to live always in the house of her cousin was
not advisable, nor according to the will of the Most High.
266. To these petitions his Majesty answered: "My
Spouse and my Dove, it is my pleasure that thou assist and console my servant
Elisabeth at her childbirth, which is to be very soon; for there are only eight
days left before that event. After her son shall be circumcised, thou shalt
return to thy home with thy spouse Joseph. After his birth thou shalt offer to Me my servant John in pleasing sacrifice; and continue, my
Beloved, to pray to Me for the salvation of souls." Saint Elisabeth united
her prayers with those of the Queen of heaven and earth, beseeching the Lord to
command his Mother and Spouse not to forsake her during her confinement. During
this prayer the Lord revealed to her, that her confinement was close at hand,
and informed her also of many other things for her relief and consolation in
her anxiety.
267. Most holy Mary issued from her trance and, having
finished their prayer, the two mothers conferred upon the nearness of the
confinement of saint Elisabeth as made known to them
by the Lord; and anxious to make sure of her good fortune, the holy matron
asked our Queen:
"My Lady, pray tell me, whether I shall have the
happiness of thy assistance at my impending confinement?" Her majesty
answered: "My beloved cousin, the Most High has heard our prayers and
deigned to command me to assist on that occasion. This I will do, not only
remaining till then, but also until the circumcision of thy child, which will
take place in fifteen days." At this resolve of the most holy Mary the joy
of her cousin was renewed; she acknowledged this great favor in humble thankfulness
to the Lord and to the holy Queen. Thus rejoiced and enlivened by mutual
conferences, the holy matron began to prepare for the birth of her son and for
the departure of her exalted Cousin. INSTRUCTION GIVEN TO ME BY THE HEAVENLY
QUEEN AND LADY MARY.
268. My daughter, whenever our desires arise from
loving affection and are accompanied by a good intention, the Most High is not
offended at our making them known, as long as it is done with submission and
resignation to the dispositions of his divine Providence. When the soul
presents itself before the Lord with such sentiments, He looks upon it as a
Father and grants to it what is proper, withholds what is improper or does not
conduce to its true welfare. The desire of my cousin to remain with me all her
life arose from a pious and praiseworthy zeal; but it was not in harmony with
the plans of the Most High, by which He had already arranged the conduct,
travels and events of my life. Though the Lord denied her this request He was
not displeased, but granted her whatever would not hinder the decrees of his
infinite wisdom and whatever would benefit her or her son John. On account of
the love shown toward me by the mother and son, and on account of my
intercession, the Almighty enriched them with many blessings and favors. For to
ask Him with upright intention and through my mediation, is always the most
efficacious means of moving his Majesty.
269. I wish that thou offer up all thy petitions and
prayers in the name of my most holy Son and my own; and be assured without
doubt, that they will be heard, if they are joined with the upright intention
of pleasing God. Look upon me with loving affection as thy Mother, thy refuge
and thy help; trust thyself to my devoted love, and remember, my dearest, that
my desire for thy greater good urges me to teach thee the means of obtaining
great blessings and favors of divine grace at the most liberal hands of God. Do
not make thyself unfit for them, nor hinder them by thy timidity. And if thou
wishest to induce me to love thee as my much beloved daughter, rouse thyself to
a fulfillment of what I tell thee and manifest to thee. Toward this direct thy
careful efforts, resting satisfied only when thou hast labored hard to put my
teachings into practice.
THE BIRTH OF THE PRECURSOR OF CHRIST AND WHAT THE LADY
MARY DID ON THIS OCCASION.
270. The hour for the rising of the morning star,
which was to precede the clear Sun of justice and
announce the wished-for day of the law of grace, had arrived (John 5, 35). The
time was suitable to the Most High for the appearance of his Prophet in the
world; and greater than a prophet was John, who pointing out with his finger
the Lamb (John 1, 29), was to prepare mankind for the salvation and
sanctification of the world. Before issuing from the maternal womb the Lord
revealed to the blessed child the hour in which he was to commence his mortal
career among men. The child had the perfect use of his reason, and of the
divine science infused by the presence of the incarnate Word. He therefore knew
that he was to arrive at the port of a cursed and dangerous land, and to walk
upon a world full of evils and snares, where many are overtaken by ruin and
perdition.
271. On this account the great child was as it were in
a state of suspense and doubt: for on the one hand, nature having nourished his
body to that state of perfection, which is proper to birth, he recognized and
felt, in addition to the express will of God, the compelling forces of nature
which urged him to leave the retreat of the maternal womb. On the other hand he
contemplated the dangerous risks of mortal life. Thus he hesitated between the
fear of danger and the desire to obey. And he debated within himself: "If
I meet this danger of losing God, whither shall it lead me? How can I safely
converse with men, of whom so many are enveloped in
darkness and wander from the path of life? I am in the obscurity of my mother's
womb, but I must leave it for a more dangerous darkness. I was imprisoned here,
since I received the light of reason; but more must I dread the unrestrained
freedom of mortals. But let me, o Lord, fulfill thy will and enter the world;
for to execute it is always best. To know that my life and my faculties shall
be consumed in thy service, highest King, will make it easier for me to come
forth to the light and begin life. Bestow, O Lord, thy blessing for my passage
into the world."
272. By this prayer the Precursor of Christ merited
new graces and blessings at his birth. The fortunate child knew by the indwelling
of God in his mind, that he was sent to perform great things and was assured of
the necessary help. Before describing this most happy birth, I will try to
explain the scriptural dates concerning it. It must be remembered, that the
miraculous pregnancy of saint Elisabeth lasted nine
days less than nine months. For on account of the fecundity miraculously
restored to a barren woman, the fruit conceived matured for parturition in this
shorter time. When the angel Gabriel announced to most holy Mary, that her
cousin was in the sixth month of her pregnancy, it must be understood to mean,
that eight or nine days were still wanting for the completion of the sixth
month. I have also said in chapter sixteen that the heavenly Lady departed on
the fourth day after the incarnation of the Word for her visit to saint Elisabeth. Saint Luke does not say, that most holy
Mary departed immediately, but "in those days," and though She went "in haste," yet she consumed four days on
her journey, as said in the same chapter (No. 207).
273. I likewise reminded the reader, that when the
Evangelist says, that holy Mary remained about three months in the house of saint Elisabeth, there were only two or three days missing;
for in all respects the Evangelist was exact in his words. Accordingly most
holy Mary, our Lady, was present not only at the confinement of saint Elisabeth and at the birth of John, but also at the
naming and circumcision of saint John, as I will now show. Counting eight days
after the incarnation of the Word, our Lady arrived at the house of Elisabeth
on the evening of the second of April, if we reckon according to our solar
months; adding thereto three months less two days, we have the first of July,
the eighth day of the birth of saint John, and early next day most holy Mary departed on her return to
Nazareth. Saint Luke mentions the return of our Queen before he speaks of the
birth of saint John, although this happened before She
returned. The sacred text anticipates the mention of the journey, in order to
have done with it, and not to interrupt the thread of the narrative of the
Precursor's birth. This is what I was told to write down in explanation of the
text.
274. Her time approaching, saint
Elisabeth felt the child in motion as if he wanted to place himself on his
feet; but he was merely following the ordinary course of nature and the
dictates of obedience. Some moderate pains overtook the mother and she informed
the Princess Mary. But she did not call Her to be
present at the birth, because reverence for the dignity of Mary and for the
Fruit within her womb, prudently withheld her from asking, what might not seem
befitting. Nor was the great Mistress in the same room, but She sent her the
coverings and swaddling-clothes, which She had made for the fortunate child.
Presently thereafter he was born, very perfect and complete in shape, and by
the freedom from impure matter showed signs of the purity of his soul. He was
wrapped in the coverings sent by Mary, which therefore had already been great
and venerable relics. Shortly after, when saint
Elisabeth had composed herself, most holy Mary, at the command of the Lord,
issued from her oratory, in order to pay her visit to the mother and child and
give them her blessing.
275. At the request of his mother the Queen received in her arms
the new-born child and offered him as a new oblation to the eternal Father and his Majesty, well pleased, accepted it as the first-fruits of the
Incarnation and of the divine decrees. The most blessed child, full of the Holy
Ghost, acknowledged his sovereign Queen, showing Her
not only interior, but outward reverence by a secret inclination of his head,
and again he adored the divine Word, which was manifested to him in her womb by
an especial light. And as he also was aware, that he was privileged before all
men, the grateful child performed acts of fervent thanksgiving, humility, love
and reverence of God and of his Virgin Mother. The heavenly Queen, in offering
him to the eternal Father, pronounced this prayer for him: "Highest Lord
and Father, all holy and powerful, accept in thy honor this offering and
seasonable fruit of thy most holy Son and my Lord. He is sanctified by the
Onlybegotten and rescued from the effects of sin and from the power of thy
ancient enemies. Receive this morning's sacrifice, and infuse into this child
the blessings of thy holy Spirit, in order that he may
be a faithful minister to Thee and to thy Onlybegotten." This prayer of
our Queen was efficacious in all respects, and She
perceived how the Lord enriched this child, chosen as his Precursor; and She
also felt within Herself the effects of these admirable blessings.
276. While the Queen of the Universe held the infant
in her arms, She was for a short time secretly wrapt in sweetest ecstasy;
during it She offered up this prayer for the child, holding it close to the
same breast where the Onlybegotten of the Eternal and her own was soon to rest.
This was the singular prerogative of the great Precursor, granted to none among
the saints. Therefore it is not surprising, that the angel called him great in
the eyes of the Lord; for before he was born, the Lord visited and sanctified
him, and being born, he was placed on the throne of grace; he was embraced by
the arms, which were to enfold the incarnate Word God, and thereby excited in
the sweetest Mother of God the entrancing desire of holding within them the Son
of the Most High, filling Her with delightful affections for his Precursor, the
new-born child. Saint Elisabeth, being divinely informed of these sacraments,
beheld her wonderful child in the arms of Her, who was
his Mother in a more exalted sense than she herself, she being his mother only,
as to his natural being, while most holy Mary held that position as to his
existence in the order of grace. All this caused a most sweet tie of affection
between the most blessed women and in the child, who likewise was enlightened
in regard to these mysteries. By the motions of his tender body he manifested
the joy of his spirit, clinging to the heavenly Lady and seeking to attract her
caresses and to remain with Her. The sweetest Lady
fondled him, but with such majestic moderation, that She did not kiss him, as
his age: would have permitted; for She preserved her
most chaste lips intact for her most holy Son. Nor did She
look intently into his face, directing all her intention to the holiness of his
soul. So great was the prudence and modesty of the great Queen of heaven in the
use of her eyes, that She would scarcely have known him by sight.
277. When the birth of John became known, all the
relations and acquaintances, as saint Luke says, gathered to congratulate saint
Zacharias and Elisabeth, for his house was rich, noble and honored in the whole
province and their piety attracted the hearts of all that knew them. Having
known them so many years without children and being aware of the sterility and
advanced age of Elisabeth, all were stirred to amazement and joyful wonder, and
they looked upon the birth of the child rather as a miracle than as a natural
event. The holy priest Zacharias remained mute and unable to manifest his joy
by word of mouth; for the hour of his miraculous cure had not arrived. But,
freed of his incredulity, he showed his joy in other ways and he was full of
affectionate gratitude and praise for the rare blessing, which he had now
witnessed with his own eyes. His behavior we shall describe in the next
chapter. INSTRUCTION WHICH THE QUEEN OF
HEAVEN GAVE ME.
278. My dearest daughter, do not be surprised, that my
servant John feared and hesitated to come into the world. Life can never be
loved by the ignorant devotee of the world in the same degree, as the wise, in
divine science, abhor and fear its dangers. This science was eminently
possessed by the Precursor of my most holy Son; hence knowing of the loss which
threatened, he feared the risk. But, since he that knows and dreads the
treacherous seas of this world, sails so much the more securely over their
unfathomed depths, it served him in good stead for entering securely into the
world. The fortunate child began his career with such disgust and abhorrence of
all earthly things, that his horror never abated. He
made no peace with the flesh (Mark 6, 17), nor partook of its poison, nor
allowed vanity to enter his senses nor obstruct his eyes; in abhorrence of the
world and of worldly things, he gave his life for justice. The citizen of the
true Jerusalem cannot be in peace or in alliance with Babylon; nor is it
possible to enjoy at the same time the grace of the Most High and the
friendship of his declared enemies; for no one can serve two hostile masters,
nor can light and darkness, Christ and Beliel,
harmonize (Matth. 4, 4).
279. Guard thyself, my dearest, against those living
in darkness and the lovers of the world more than against fire; for the wisdom
of the sons of this world is carnal and diabolical, and their ways lead to
death. In order to walk the way of truth, even at the cost of the natural life,
it is necessary to preserve the peace of the soul. Three dwelling-places I
point out for thee to live in, from which thou must never intentionally come
forth. If at any time the Lord should bid thee to relieve the necessities of
thy fellow creatures, I desire that thou do not lose this refuge. Act as one
who lives in a castle surrounded by enemies, and who perchance must go to the
gate to transact necessary business. He acts with such wariness, that he will
pay more attention to safeguard his retreat and shield himself,
than to transact business with others, being always on the watch and on guard
against danger. So must thou live, if thou wishest to live securely; for doubt
not, that enemies more cruel and poisonous than asps and basilisks surround
thee.
280. Thy habitations shall be the Divinity of the Most
High, the humanity of my most holy Son, and thy own interior. In the Divinity
thou must live like the pearl in its shell, or like the fish in the sea,
allowing thy desires and affections to roam in its infinite spaces. The most
holy humanity shall be the wall, which defends thee; and his bosom shall be the
place of thy rest, and under his wings shalt thou find refreshment (Ps. 16, 8).
Thy own interior shall afford thee peaceful delight through the testimony of a
good conscience (Cor. 2, 12), and it will, if thou keep it pure, familiarize
thee with the sweet and friendly intercourse of thy Spouse. In order that thou
mayest be aided therein by retirement of the body, I desire that thou remain
secluded in thy choir or in thy cell, leaving it only, when obedience or
charity make it inevitable. I will tell thee a secret: there are demons, whom Lucifer has expressly ordered to watch for the
religious, who come forth from their retirement, in order to beset them and
engage them in battle and cause their fall. The demons do not easily go into
the cells, because there they do not find the occasions afforded by
conversations and the use of the senses, wherein they ordinarily capture and
devour their prey like ravenous wolves. They are tormented by the retirement
and recollection of religious, knowing that they are foiled in their attempts,
as long as they cannot entice them into human discourse.
281. It is also certain that ordinarily the demons
have no power over souls, unless they gain entrance by some venial or mortal
fault. Mortal sin gives them a sort of direct right over those who commit it;
while venial sin weakens the strength of the soul and invites their attacks.
Imperfections diminish the merit and the progress of virtue, and encourage the
enemy. Whenever the astute serpent notices that the soul bears with its own
levity and forgets about its danger, it blinds it and seeks to instill its
deadly poison. The enemy then entices the soul like a little heedless bird,
until it falls into one of the many snares from which there seems to be no
escape.
282. Admire then, my daughter, what thou hast learned
by divine enlightenment and weep in deepest sorrow over the ruin of so many
souls absorbed in such dangerous tepidity. They live in the obscurity of their
passions and depraved inclinations, forgetful of the danger, unmoved by their
losses, and heedless of their dealings. Instead of fearing and avoiding the
occasions of evil, they encounter and seek for them in blind ignorance. In
senseless fury they follow their pleasures, place no restraint on their
passionate desires, and care not where they walk, even if to the most dangerous
precipices. They are surrounded by innumerable enemies, who pursue them with
diabolical treachery, unceasing vigilance, unquenchable wrath and restless
diligence. What wonder then, that from such extremes, or rather from such
unequal combat, irreparable defeats should arise among the mortals? And that,
since the number of fools is infinite, the number of the reprobate should also
be uncountable, and that the demon should be inflated by his triumphs in the
perdition of so many men? May the eternal God preserve thee from such a
misfortune; and do thou weep and deplore that of thy brethren, continually
asking for their salvation as far as is possible.
THE GOOD COUNCIL AND INSTRUCTION, WHICH MOST HOLY MARY
GAVE TO SAINT ELISABETH AT HER REQUEST; SAINT JOHN IS CIRCUMCISED AND RECEIVES
HIS NAME; ZACHARIAS PROPHESIES.
283. After the birth of the Precursor of Christ the
return of most holy Mary was unavoidable; and although the prudent Elisabeth
had found consolation in resigning herself to the divine will, she could not
restrain her desire of securing for herself the good counsel and instruction of
the Mother of wisdom. Therefore She spoke to Her and
said: "My Mistress and Mother of the Creator, I know, that Thou art
preparing to leave me and that I am to be deprived of thy loving intercourse,
help and protection. I beseech Thee, my Cousin,
furnish me with some good counsel, which will help me to conform all my actions
to the greater pleasure of the Most High. In thy virginal womb Thou bearest
Him, who is the Corrector of the wise and the fountain of light (Wis. 7, 15);
through Him Thou canst communicate it to all. Let some of the rays, which
illumine thy purest soul fall upon thy servant, in order that I may be
enlightened in the paths of justice, until I arrive at the vision of the God of
gods in Sion." (Ps. 22, 3.)
284. These words of saint
Elisabeth moved the most holy Mary to tender compassion and She spoke words
that served her cousin as celestial guidance for the rest of her life. This, She said, would be of short duration; but the Most High
would take care of her child, and She herself had prayed for him to the
Almighty. Although it is not possible to record all the sweet words of counsel,
which the heavenly Lady spoke to saint Elisabeth before her departure, I will
write down some of them, as far as I have understood them and as far as they
can be reproduced by our insufficient language. Most holy Mary said: "My
beloved cousin, the Lord has selected Thee for the fulfillment of most exalted
mysteries. He has condescended to enlighten thee concerning them and wishes, that I should open to thee my heart. Thy name is
written within it for remembrance before his Majesty. I wilt not forget the
devoted kindness with which thou hast treated me, the most useless of
creatures; and from my most holy Son and Lord I hope thou shalt receive a
plentiful reward."
285. "Keep thy mind and spirit fixed on high and
by the light of divine grace preserve the vision of the unchangeable and
infinite being of God and the remembrance of his immense goodness, which moved
Him to create out of nothing all the intellectual creatures in order to bestow
upon them his glory and his gifts of grace. The extreme mercy of the Most High,
in favoring us more than all other creatures with his knowledge and light,
ought to incite us to make up by our thankfulness for the blind ingratitude of
mortals, who are so far removed from acknowledging and praising their Creator.
This shall be our task, that we keep our hearts free and unhindered in our
advance toward the last end. Therefore, my beloved, I charge thee to keep it
unhampered and unburdened of all earthly things, free from even such as pertain
to thy possessions, in order that, void of earthly hindrances, it may attend to
the divine calls. Hope in the coming of the Lord (Luke 12, 36), so that when He
arrives, thou mayest answer his call joyfully and not with convulsive violence
at the thought of leaving thy body and all earthly things. Now, while it is
time to suffer and earn the crown, let us gain merit and hasten to be united
intimately with our true and highest God."
286. "As long as thy husband Zacharias lives,
seek to love, serve and obey him with especial earnestness. Look upon thy
miraculous child as a continual sacrifice to his Creator; in God and for God
thou canst love him as a mother; for he shall be a great Prophet, and in the
spirit of Elias he shall defend the honor of the Most High and exalt his name.
My most holy Son, who has chosen him for his Precursor and for the harbinger of his coming, will favor him
with the special gifts of his right hand (Matth. 11, 9) and make him great and
wonderful among the nations, manifesting to the world his great sanctity."
287. "See that the holy name of thy God and the
Lord of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob be honored and reverenced by all thy house and
family (Tob. 4). Above all be anxiously careful to
relieve the needs of the poor, as far as is possible; enrich them with the
temporal goods so lavishly given to thee by thy God; 'show a like generosity to
the needy, knowing that these earthly goods are more theirs than yours, since
we are the children of the heavenly Father to whom all things belong. It is not
proper, that the child of a rich father should live in superfluity, while his
brethren live in poverty and need. In this thou canst make thyself especially
pleasing to the Good of undying mercy. Continue in thy former practices and
follow out thy plans of still greater charity, since Zacharias has given this
work into thy hands. With his permission thou canst be generous. Confirm thy
hopes in all the tasks imposed upon thee by the Lord, and with thy fellow
beings practice kindness, humility and patience in the joy of thy soul, although
some of them will give thee occasion to increase thy crown of merit. Bless God
eternally for having manifested to thee his exalted mysteries and pray for the
salvation of souls with unabated love and zeal. Pray also for me, that his
Majesty may govern and guide me worthily to preserve the sacrament confided by
his goodness to so lowly and poor a servant as I am. Send for my husband in
order that I may have his company while returning to Nazareth. In the meanwhile
prepare for the circumcision of thy child and call him John; for this name was
given to him according to an unchangeable decree of the Most High."
288. These counsels of most holy Mary together with
other words of eternal life produced in the heart of saint
Elisabeth such divine affections, that for a time, she was lost in the exalted
teachings and sentiments of these heavenly doctrines and made mute by the force
of the spiritual light infused into her. For the Lord, by means of the living
words of his most pure Mother, enlivened and renewed the heart of his servant.
When the flow of her tears had moderated, she answered: "My Mistress and
Queen of the universe, speech fails me in alternate sorrow and consolation.
Hear Thou the words of my inmost heart, which my tongue cannot express. My affections
shall witness, what my lips leave unspoken. May the Lord, who is the enricher of our poverty, return to Thee the favor Thou
showest me. I beseech Thee, who art the fountain of
all my help and the source of all my blessings, to obtain for me the grace to
fulfill thy counsels and to bear the great sorrow of losing thy company."
289. Then they bespoke the arrangements for the
circumcision of the child, for the time appointed by the law was approaching.
Complying with the custom observed among the Jews, especially among the more
distinguished, many relatives and other acquaintances of the house of Zacharias
began to gather, in order to resolve upon the name to be given to the child;
for, in addition to the ordinary preparations and consultations concerning the
name to be given to a son, the high position of Zacharias and Elisabeth and the
news of the miraculous fecundity of the mother naturally suggested the
existence of some great mystery to the minds of all their relations. Zacharias
was still dumb, and therefore it was necessary that saint Elisableth
should preside at this meeting. Over and above the high esteem which she
inspired, she now exhibited such evident signs of the exalted renewal and
sanctification of her soul, which resulted from the knowledge of the mysteries
and from the intercourse with the Queen of heaven, that all her relatives and
friends noticed the change. For even in her countenance she exhibited a kind of
effulgence which made her mysteriously attractive and was the reflection of the
Divinity, in whose presence she lived.
290. At this meeting was present also the heavenly
Lady Mary, for Elisabeth had earnestly besought Her,
and had even compelled Her by a sort of reverent and humble command. The great
Lady obeyed, but She begged the Most High not to make
known any of her great privileges, lest She draw upon Herself the applause or
veneration of others. The desire of the most Humble among the humble was
granted. And as the world persists in ignoring those who fail to use
ostentation, nobody took particular notice of Her
except saint Elisabeth, who looked upon Her with outward and inward reverence
and who knew, that on Her depended the success of this consultation. As is
recorded in the Gospel of saint Luke, some of those present in the meeting
suggested that the infant be named after his father: but the prudent mother,
seconded by the most holy Mary, said: "My son must be named John."
Her relatives objected, that none of their family bore
that name; for the names of illustrious forefathers were always held in great
esteem, and were preferred in order to incite their bearers to the imitation of
ancestral virtues. Saint Elisabeth again expressed herself to the effect, that
the child should be called John.
291. The relatives then appealed by signs to
Zacharias, who, being unable to speak, asked for a pen and declared his will by
writing upon the tablet: "Johannes
est nomen ejus."
"John is his name." At the same time most holy Mary, making use of
her power over all nature, commanded the dumbness to leave him, his tongue to
be loosened, as the moment had arrived when it should bless the Lord. At this
heavenly command he found himself freed from his affliction, and, to the
astonishment and fear of all present, he began to speak, as narrated by the
Evangelist. What I say here is not adverse to the Gospel narrative; for,
although it is there related, that the angel foretold Zacharias that he should
remain mute until his message should be fulfilled, yet God, when He reveals any
decree of his will, absolutely unfailing as they are, does not always reveal
the means or the manner of their fulfillment, foreseen by Him in his infinite
foreknowledge. Thus the archangel announced to Zacharias the punishment of his
unbelief, but he did not tell him that he should be freed from it by the
intercession of most holy Mary, although this also had been foreseen and
decreed.
292. Therefore, just as the voice of our Lady Mary was
the instrument for the sanctification of the child John and his mother, so her
secret mandate and her intercession had the effect of loosening the tongue of
Zacharias, filling him with the holy Spirit and the gift of prophecy. Hence he
broke forth in the words (Luke 1, 68-79) :
293. In the divine canticle of the Benedictus
Zacharias embodied all of the highest mysteries, which the ancient prophets had
foretold in a more profuse manner concerning the Divinity, Humanity and the
Redemption of Christ, and in these few words he
embraces many great sacraments. He also understood them by the grace and light,
which filled his spirit, and which raised him up in the sight of all that had
come to attend the circumcision of his son; for all of them were witnesses to
the solving of his tongue and to his divine prophecies. I will hardly be able
to give an explanation of the deep meaning of these prophecies, such as they
had in the mind of that holy priest.
294. "Blessed be the Lord God of Israel," he
says, knowing that the Most High could have saved his people and given them
eternal salvation merely by desiring it or speaking one word, but He exerted
not only his power, but showed also his immense goodness and mercy, the Son of
the eternal Father himself coming down to visit his people and to become their
Brother in the human nature; their Teacher by his example and doctrine, their
Redeemer by his life, passion and death of the Cross. At these words Zacharias
understood the union of the two natures in the person of the Word and in
heavenly clearness he saw this mystery realized in the virginal bridal-chamber
of the most holy Mary. He understood also the exaltation of the Humanity by the
triumph of the Godman, in earning the salvation of the human race according to
the promises made to David and his ancestors (II Kings 7, 12; Ps. 131, 11). He
understood that the same promise had been made to the whole world by the
prophecies of the Saints and Patriarchs from the beginning. For from the first
creation God commenced to direct the course of nature and grace toward his
coming into the world, and to ordain all his works since the time of Adam
toward this same blessed end.
295. He understood that the Most High in this manner
provided for us the means of obtaining grace and eternal life lost by our
enemies in their pride and stubborn disobedience, which hurled them into hell;
and the seats which would have been theirs, if they had been obedient, were
reserved for the obedient among the mortals. He saw however since then the
enmity which the serpent had conceived against God was now turned against men,
because we were decreed and enshrined in the eternal mind according to his
divine will (Apocalypse 12, 17); how Adam and Eve, our first parents, having
fallen from his friendship and grace, were not given over to chastisement, like
the rebellious angels, but were raised to a state of hope (Wisdom 10, 2); and
that, in order to assure their descendants of his mercy, God provided the
prophecies and figures of the old Testament, which were to be fulfilled in the
coming of the Redeemer and Savior. To make this promise still more certain it
was made to Abraham under an oath, affirming that he would be the father of all
his people and of all the children of the faith (Gen. 22, 16). Assured of this
stupendous and vast blessing, namely that of receiving his own Son made man, we
may serve God free from the fear of our enemies; for by our adoption and
regeneration they are already overcome and subdued through our Redeemer (Gal.
4, 5).
296. In order that we may understand what the Word has
earned for us in restoring to us this liberty in the service of God, he says:
that He has renewed the world in sanctity and justice, and founded the new law
of grace for all the days of this world, and for the time of life given to each
of the children of the Church. In it they not only can, but they should live in
holiness and justice. And as Zacharias saw in his son John the beginning of all
these sacraments, he turns to him and congratulates him, because of the dignity
and sanctity of his office, saying: And thou, child, shalt be called a prophet
of the Most High; for thou shalt go before his face, namely his Divinity, and
prepare his ways by spreading the light of his coming, and giving notice to the
people of the Jews concerning eternal life, which is Christ our Lord, the
promised Messias (Mark 1, 41). Thus might they dispose themselves by the
baptism of penance for the remission of their sins and become convinced that
the Messias has come to take away not only their sins, but those of the whole
world (John 1, 29); since it is through his mercy and on account of his merits
(Tit. 3, 5) that He visits us, by descending from the bosom of the eternal
Father and by being born as man. He it was that brought light to those who had
lost the truth for so many ages, who were sitting in darkness and in the
shadows of death. He it was who by his own example taught us to direct our
steps toward the true peace, which we were awaiting.
297. Much more clearly than I can explain, Zacharias
perceived these mysteries in their plenitude and depth, and expressed them in
his prophecies. Some of those present were likewise enlightened, becoming aware
that the time of the Messias and of the fulfillment of the ancient prophecies
was at hand. Full of astonishment at these unexpected wonders and prodigies,
they exclaimed:
298. Queen of the universe, I admire the wonderful
works wrought through thy intervention by the arm of the Lord in his servants
Elisabeth, John and Zacharias. At the same time I reflect on the different
courses pursued by divine Providence and on thy rare discretion. Thy most sweet
voice served the son and the mother as an instrument of sanctification, filling
them with the Holy Ghost, and this remained hidden; then again thy secret
prayer and command solved the tongue of Zacharias, and this was manifested to
all the bystanders, revealing the effects of God's grace in the holy priest. I
cannot find the reason for this diversity, and therefore I make known to Thee
my ignorance, so that Thou mayest instruct me as my Teacher. ANSWER AND INSTRUCTION OF THE
QUEEN OF THE WORLD.
299. For two reasons, my daughter, the divine effects
wrought through me by my Son in saint John and
Elisabeth were concealed, while those in Zacharias were manifest. First,
because Elisabeth spoke out clearly in praise of the incarnate Word and of me;
yet at the time it was not proper that either this mystery or my dignity should
be openly known; the coming of the Messias was to be manifested by other more
appropriate means. Secondly, not all hearts were so well prepared as that of
Elisabeth for receiving such precious and unprecedented seed of divine
knowledge, nor would they have welcomed such sacramental revelation with due
reverence. On the other hand it was more becoming that Zacharias in his
priestly dignity should proclaim what was then to be made known; for the
beginnings of the heavenly light would be accepted more readily from him than
from saint Elisabeth, especially while he was present. That
which she said, was reserved to bring forth its effects in due time. Although the words of God have their own inherent force; yet the
more sweet and acceptable manner of communicating with the ignorant and the
unskilled in divine mysteries is by means of the priest.
300. Likewise it was proper that the dignity and honor
of the priesthood should receive its due; for the Most High holds the priests
in such esteem, that if He finds them in the right disposition, He exalts them
and fills them with his Spirit in order that the world may venerate them as his
chosen and anointed ones. Moreover the wonders of the Lord run less risk in
priests, even when they are more openly revealed to
them. If they live up to their dignity, their works in comparison with those of
the other creatures, are like those of the angels and
of the seraphim. Their countenance should be resplendent, like that of Moses,
when he came forth from converse with the Lord (Exod. 34,29).
At least they should deal with the rest of men in such a manner that they be
honored and revered as next to God. I desire that thou understand, my dearest,
that the Most High is greatly incensed against the world in this matter: as
well against the priests as against laymen. Against the priests because,
forgetting their exalted dignity, they debase themselves by a contemptible,
degraded and scandalous life, giving bad example to the world by mixing up with
it to the neglect of their sanctification. And against the laymen, because they
act with a foolhardy presumption toward the anointed of the Lord whom, though
of imperfect and blameworthy lives, they ought to honor and revere as taking
the place or Christ, my most holy Son, on earth.
301. On account of this reverence due to the
priesthood my behavior toward saint Zacharias was
different from that toward Elisabeth. For, although the Lord wished, that I
should be the instrument, by which the gifts of the holy Spirit should be
communicated to both; yet I saluted Elisabeth in such a manner, that I at the
same time showed a certain authority, exerting my power over the original sin
of her son; for at my words this sin was forgiven him, and both mother and son
were filled with the Holy Ghost. As I had not contracted original sin and was
exempt from it, I possessed dominion over it on this occasion: I commanded as
the Mistress, who had triumphed over it by the help of the Lord (Gen. 3, 5),
and who was no slave of it, as all the sons of Adam, who sinned in him (Rom. 5,
12). Therefore the Lord desired that, in order to free John from the slavery
and chains of sin, I should command over it as one who never was subject to its
bondage. I did not salute Zacharias in this authoritative way, but I prayed for
him, observing the reverence and decorum due to his dignity and my modesty. I
would not have commanded the tongue of the priest to be loosened, not even
mentally and secretly, if the Most High had not enjoined it upon me, intimating
at the same time, that the defect of speech hardly suited his office, for a
priest should stand ready to serve and praise the Almighty with all his powers.
In regard to the respect due to priests I will tell thee more on another
occasion; let this suffice at present for the solution of thy doubt.
302. But from my instruction today learn especially to
seek direction in the way of virtue and of eternal life in all thy intercourse
with men, be they above or below thee in dignity. Imitate therein me and my
cousin Elisabeth, with due discretion asking all to direct thee and guide thee;
for in return for such humility the Lord will provide thee with secure counsel
and divine light for exercising thy discreet and sincere love of virtue. Drive
away, or do not allow thyself to be influenced by even the least breath of
flattery and avoid the conversations which expose thee to it; for such
deceitful pleasure darkens the light and perverts the unsuspecting mind. The
Lord is so jealous of the souls especially beloved by Him, that He will
immediately turn away from them if they find pleasure in the praises of men and
seek to recompense themselves by their flatteries; since by this levity they
become unworthy of his favors. It is not possible to unite in a soul the
adulations of the world and the caresses of the Most High. For these latter are
sincere, holy, pure, and lasting: they humiliate, cleanse, pacify and illumine
the heart; while on the other hand the flatteries of creatures are vain,
fleeting, deceitful, impure and false, issuing from the mouths of those who are
all liars (Ps. 115, 11); and whatever is deceitful is a work of the enemy.
303. Thy Spouse, my dearest daughter, does not wish
thy ears to be enthralled by deceitful earthly talk, nor contaminated by the
flatteries of the world. Therefore I desire that thou keep them closed and well
guarded against all these poisonous influences. If thy Lord is pleased to speak
to thy heart the words of eternal life, it is proper that thou thyself be deaf
and lifeless to all that is earthly. All else should
be to thee a deadly torment in comparison with the caresses of his love.
Remember that thou owest Him the perfection of thy love, and that all hell will
combine against thee, in order to ensnare thee by thy natural tenderness to be
sweet and loving toward creatures, and less grateful to the eternal God. Watch
over thyself, and see that thou resist this unfaithfulness, trusting in thy
beloved Master and Spouse.
MOST HOLY MARY LEAVES THE HOUSE OF ZACHARIAS AND RETURNS
TO HER HOME IN NAZARETH.
304. At the call of Elisabeth, the most fortunate of
husbands, saint Joseph, had come in order to attend
most holy Mary on her return to her home in Nazareth. On arriving at the house
of Zacharias he had been welcomed with indescribable reverence and devotion by
saint Elisabeth and Zacharias; for now also the holy priest knew that he was
the guardian of the sacramental treasures of heaven, though this was yet
unknown to the great patriarch saint Joseph himself. His heavenly Spouse
received him in modest and discreet jubilation, and, kneeling before him, She, as usual, besought his blessing, and also his pardon,
for having failed to serve him for nearly three months during her attendance
upon her cousin Elisabeth. Though She had been guilty
of no fault, not even of an imperfection in thus devotedly fulfilling the will
of God in conformity with the wishes of her spouse, yet, by this courteous and
endearing act of humility, She wanted to repay her husband for the want of her
consoling companionship. The holy Joseph answered that as he now again saw Her, and again enjoyed her delightful presence, he was
relieved of the pain caused by her absence. In the course of a few days they
announced the day of their departure.
305. Thereupon the princess Mary took leave of the
priest Zacharias. As he had already been enlightened by the Lord concerning her
dignity, he addressed Her with the greatest reverence
as the living sanctuary of the Divinity and humanity of the eternal Word.
"My Mistress," he said, "praise and bless eternally thy Maker,
who in his infinite mercy has chosen Thee among all his creatures as his
Mother, as the sole Keeper of all his great blessings and sacraments. Be
mindful of me, thy servant, before thy Lord and God, that He may lead me in
peace through this exile to the security of the eternal peace which we hope
for, and that through thee I may merit the vision of his Divinity, which is the
glory of the saints. Remember also, O Lady, my house and family, and especially
my Son John, and pray to the Most High for thy people."
306. The great Lady knelt before him and in profound
humility asked him to bless Her. This Zacharias
hesitated to do and instead asked Her to give him her
blessing. But nothing could overcome the humility of Her
who was the Teacher of that virtue and of all holiness; and therefore She importuned
the priest for his blessing until he yielded to the impulse of the divine
light. In the words of holy Scripture, he said to Her:
"The right arm of the almighty and true God assist Thee always, and
deliver Thee from all evil (Ps. 120, 7). Possess thou the grace of His
unfailing protection, and be filled with the dew of heaven and with the fruits
of the earth, and let Him give Thee abundance of bread and wine (Gen. 27, 28) ; let the nations serve Thee and let the generations
worship Thee, since Thou art the tabernacle of God (Eccl. 24, 12); be Thou the
Mistress of thy brethren, and let the sons of thy mother kneel in thy presence.
Those that praise and bless Thee shall be honored and blessed; and those that
bless and extol Thee not shall be cursed. In Thee let all nations know their
God (Judith 13, 31), and through Thee let the name of the most high God of
Jacob be glorified."
307. In return for this prophetic blessing, most holy
Mary kissed the hand of the priest and asked him to forgive Her
the faults committed in his house. The saintly old man was much moved by these
parting words of the most pure and amiable of creatures, and ever thereafter
bore hidden within him the memory of the mysteries revealed to him concerning
the most holy Mary. Only once, when he was present at a meeting of the priests
in the temple, who were congratulating him on account of the birth of his son
and the restoration of his speech, he was moved by the excess of his joy and he
answered them: "I believe firmly that the Most High has visited us and has
already sent us the promised Messias, who will redeem his people." But he
spoke no further of what he really knew of the mystery. The holy priest Simeon,
however, who was present and heard these words, was seized with great joy of
spirit and by divine impulse exclaimed: "Let not, O Lord God of Israel,
thy servant depart from this valley of misery before
he has seen thy salvation and the Redeemer of his people." To this prayer
he afterwards alluded when, at the presentation of infant
God in the temple, He received Him into his arms, as we shall see later on.
Until that event took place he desired more and more ardently to see the
incarnate Word.
308. Leaving Zacharias in tears, Mary betook Herself to her cousin Elisabeth. As She was a cousin of
Mary, of a tender heart, and as She had enjoyed so many days of sweet
intercourse, and had received so many favors of the Mother of grace, she was
almost overcome with grief at the mere thought of now losing the source whence
so many blessings had flown and were yet to flow, if she could only retain it.
Hence, when the time for taking leave of the Mistress of heaven and earth
finally arrived her heart was torn with sorrow, and she could say only a few
words amid her copious tears and sighs revealing her inmost soul. The serene
Queen, being superior to all inordinate movements of the natural passions, in
affable modesty spoke to Elisabeth: "My beloved cousin, do not grieve so
much over my departure, since the charity of the Most High, in whom I truly
love thee, knows no distance of time or place. In Him I behold thee, and I keep
thee in my mind; and thou also wilt find me in that same presence. Short is the
time of our bodily separation, since all the days of human life are so fleeting
(Job 14, 5), and if we gain the victory over our enemies we shall very soon see
ourselves and enjoy ourselves in the celestial Jerusalem, where there is no
sorrow, no weeping, no separation (Apoc, 21, 4). In the meanwhile thou wilt
find all blessings in the Lord and also me thou wilt find and possess in Him.
He will remain in thy heart and console thee." Our most prudent Queen said
no more to allay the grief of saint Elisabeth; instead
She knelt down at her feet and asked her blessing, and her pardon for what
might have been disagreeable in her intercourse with her; nor would Mary yield
to the protests of Elisabeth until her petition was granted. Elisabeth then
insisted on her part and asked the blessing of the heavenly Lady in return, and
not wishing to deny her this consolation, most holy Mary complied.
309. The Queen visited also the child John, received
him in her arms and bestowed upon him many mysterious blessings. The wonderful
infant by divine dispensation spoke to the Virgin, although in a low and
infantile voice: "Thou art the Mother of God himself, the Queen of all
creation, the Keeper of the ineffable Treasure of heaven, my help and
protection: grant me, thy servant, thy blessing, and may thy intercession and
favor never fail me." Three times he kissed the hand of the Queen of
heaven; likewise he adored the incarnate Word in her virginal Womb, and asked
Him for his benediction and grace. The infant God manifested his pleasure and
benevolence toward his Precursor, while the most happy
Mother Mary beheld and understood all that was passing. In all things She acted with the plenitude of divine science, venerating
all these mysteries according to their proper import; for She responded with a
magnanimous heart to all the works of his divine wisdom (II Mach. 2, 9).
310. The whole household of Zacharias had been
sanctified by the presence of most holy Mary and of the incarnate Word in her
womb; all its inmates had been edified by her example, instructed by her
conversations and teachings, and sweetly affected by her intercourse and modest
behavior. While She had drawn toward Herself all the
hearts of that happy family, She also merited and obtained for them from her
most holy Son the plenitude of celestial gifts. Holy Joseph was held in high
veneration by Zacharias, Elisabeth and John; for they had come to know his high
dignity before he himself was yet aware of it. The blessed Patriarch, happy in
his Treasure, the full value of which as yet he did not know, took leave of all
and departed for Nazareth: what happened on the way I will narrate in the
following chapter. But before they began their journey
most holy Mary, on bended knees, besought saint Joseph to bless Her, as She was
accustomed to do on such occasions, and after She had received his blessing,
they betook themselves on their journey. INSTRUCTION BY THE MOST HOLY QUEEN
MARY.
311. My daughter, the happy souls which God has chosen
for his intimate friendship and perfection must keep themselves in continual
readiness and peace, in order to perform all that his Majesty may ordain
without hesitation or delay. That is what I did when the Most High commanded me
to leave the beloved retreat of my house and betake myself to Elisabeth;
likewise, when he ordered me to return. I obeyed in all these things with
joyful alacrity; and although I had received so many benefits from Elisabeth
and her family and so many tokens of love and friendship, as thou hast seen,
yet, knowing the will of the Lord, I set aside all obligation and my own
inclination and followed them only so far as was strictly demanded by charity
and compassion, and in so far as the promptest obedience to the divine command
permitted.
312. My dearest daughter, how wilt thou not hasten to
obtain this true and perfect resignation as soon as thou knowest its vast value! How pleasing it is in the eyes of the Lord, and how profitable for thy soul! Labor then to attain it in imitation of me, as I have already so
often invited thee and urged thee. The greatest hindrances toward its
attainment are the leanings and special likings to earthly things; for these
make the soul unworthy of the caresses of the Lord and of knowing fully his
will. And even if the soul knows his will, the base love of unworthy things
will keep the soul from fulfilling it; for on account of its inclinations, it
will be wanting in the ready and joyful obedience required by the Lord. Take
notice of this danger, my daughter, and do not allow any particular affection
to enter into thy heart, for I wish that thou be well versed and perfect in
this art of divine love, and that thy obedience be that of an angel, and thy
love that of a seraphim. Thus show thyself in all thy actions, for to this my
love urges thee, and thus art thou taught by the knowledge and light imparted
to thee.
313. I do not say that thou must do away with all
sensible feeling, for that is not naturally possible to the creature; but
whenever thou meetest adverse happenings, or when thou art deprived of what is
useful, necessary or agreeable thou must bear it with joyful resignation and
give praise to the Lord, because his will is being fulfilled in thy regard. By
seeking only his pleasure, and considering all else as of passing moment, thou
wilt gain a quick and easy victory over thyself, and thou wilt seek all
occasions to humiliate thyself under the mighty hand of the Lord (I Pet. 5, 6).
I also exhort thee to imitate me in my esteem and veneration of the priests,
and that thou always ask their blessing before speaking to them and in leaving
them. Do this also in regard to the Most High before beginning any work. Toward
thy superiors always show thyself devoted and submissive. If any married women
come to seek thy advice, exhort them to be obedient to their husbands (Tit. 5,
2), peacefully subjecting themselves, living retired in their houses and
carefully fulfilling their obligations toward their families. Tell them not to
give themselves up entirely to their occupations, nor to lose themselves in
their daily cares on pretext of necessity; for much more must be trusted to the
goodness and liberality of God than to one's own immoderate bustle and
activity. In whatever happened to me in my condition, thou wilt find true
instruction and example; and my whole life will be an example of perfection for
the guidance of souls, and therefore I will not need to give thee further
direction THE JOURNEY OF MOST HOLY MARY
FROM THE HOUSE OF ZACHARIAS TO HER HOME IN NAZARETH.
314. Returning from the town of Juda to Nazareth the
most holy Mary, the living tabernacle of God, pursued her way through the
mountains of Judea in the company of her most faithful spouse saint Joseph. Although the Evangelists do not make mention
of any haste in this journey homeward, such as is recorded by saint Luke and
occasioned by the special mystery connected with it, yet the great Princess
made also this return journey with great expediency, on account of the events
which awaited Her at home. All the journeys of this heavenly Lady were a
mystical counterpart of her spiritual and interior advances. For She was the
true tabernacle of the Lord, which was to find no definite resting-place in
this mortal pilgrimage (I Par. 17, 5); on the contrary, progressing daily from
one stage to another and to higher condition of wisdom and grace, She
continually pushed forward on her pilgrimage to the promised land (Numb. 7,
89); and She bore continually with Her on her journey the true propitiatory,
whence She drew ceaseless increase of her gifts and acquired for us eternal
salvation.
315. The great Queen and saint
Joseph again consumed four days in their return journey, as they had done on
their coming. On the way they maintained the same divine conversations, and
they experienced events similar to those already mentioned in chapter
sixteenth. In the ordinary practices of humility, in which they vied with each
other, our Queen always came out victorious, except when saint
Joseph called obedience to his aid; because She considered obedience the
greater humility. As She was already in her third month of pregnancy, She was
more attentive and careful in her journey; not that her pregnancy caused her
any difficulties, for it was on the contrary a most sweet alleviation of any
hardships. But this careful and prudent Mother was filled with the
consciousness of her Treasure; for She beheld day by
day the natural growth of the body of her most holy Son in her virginal womb.
Notwithstanding the ease and lightness of her pregnancy, She nevertheless was
subject to the exertion and the fatigue of the journey; for the sovereign Lady
made no use of her privileges to diminish her sufferings, but She gave free
scope to the fatigues and inconveniences of travel in order to be in all things
our teacher and the faithful image of her most holy Son.
316. As the divine Fruit of her womb was naturally of
the most perfect growth, and as She was Herself of the
most comely and well-proportioned shape without any defect whatever, it was
natural that her condition should become noticeable, and She knew that it would
be impossible to conceal it much longer from her husband. Already She began to look upon him with greater tenderness and
compassion in view of the shock which his love would feel on noticing her
condition. Gladly would She have turned it aside if
She had known that such was the will of God. But the Lord gave Her no intimation of his will in these anxious thoughts; for
He had ordained that the event should come about in such a way as to increase
his glory and the merits both of saint Joseph and of the Virgin Mother.
Nevertheless the great Lady besought his Majesty to fill the heart of her
spouse with patience and wisdom, and to assist him with grace, that he might
act in this conjuncture according to the divine pleasure. For
She was convinced that it would occasion him great grief to see her pregnant.
317. In the course of the journey the Mistress of the
world performed some wonderful works, although always in secret. It happened
that when they arrived at a place not far from Jerusalem some people from
another town came to the same hostelry. They brought with them a young woman
seeking a cure for her sickness in the larger and more populous city. She was
known to be very sick, but no one knew what was her sickness or the cause of
it. This woman had lived a very virtuous life. On this account the enemy, who
knew her character and her advanced virtues, began to direct his attacks
especially against her, as he always does against the friends of God, since he
considers them his own enemies. He caused her to commit some sins and, in order
to force her from one abyss into another, he tempted
her with despondent thoughts and disorderly grief at her fall. Having thus
upset her judgment this dragon found entrance into her body, and now he, with
many other demons, had possession of her. I have already said in the first part
that the infernal dragon, when he saw in heaven the woman clothed with the sun
(Apoc. 12, 1), conceived a great wrath against all virtuous women. Of her
progeny are all those that follow Mary, as may be judged from that same chapter
of the Apocalypse. On this account he exerted all his arrogance and tyranny in
the possession of the body and soul of this afflicted woman.
318. The heavenly Princess saw her in the tavern and
knew of her affliction, which was unknown to the others. Moved by her motherly
pity, She begged her most holy Son to give health of
body and soul to the unfortunate woman. Perceiving that the divine will was
inclined to mercy, She used her power as Queen and
commanded the demons instantly to leave this creature never to return. Moreover,
She banished them to the infernal depths, their lawful
and appropriate dwelling. This command of our great Queen and Lady was not
given vocally, but mentally, in such a way as to be perceptible to the impure
spirits. It was so powerful that Lucifer and his companions hastened to leave
that body and hurl themselves into the infernal darkness. The fortunate woman
was freed and seized with wonder at the unhoped-for delivery; and in her inmost
heart she was drawn toward the most pure and holy Lady. She looked upon Her with an especial veneration and love, thereby deserving
two other favors. One was that she was filled with a most sincere sorrow for
her sins; the other, that the evil effects or traces of the demoniacal
possession under which she had suffered were effaced. She was aware that the
mysterious Stranger, whom she had so fortunately met on her way
was concerned in the heavenly blessing. She therefore spoke to Her, and our Queen answered with words that went straight to
the heart; She exhorted her to perseverance and also merited it for her during
the rest of her life. Her companions likewise recognized the miracle; but they
attributed it to their promise of bringing her to the temple of Jerusalem and
of offering some gift for her. This promise they fulfilled, praising God, but
remaining ignorant of the source of their good fortune.
319. Vast and furious was the wrath of Lucifer when he
found himself and his demons dispossessed and cast out from their abode by the
mere word of this woman Mary. Full of wrathful astonishment, he exclaimed: "Who is this weak Woman,
that commands us and oppresses us with so much power? What new surprise
is this, and how can my pride stand it? We must hold a council and see how we
can unite to destroy Her." Since I will say more
of their doings in the next chapter, I leave them to their wrathful designs.
Our pilgrims in the meanwhile came to another tavern, the master of which was a
man of bad habits and character; and as a beginning of his happiness, God
ordained that he should receive most holy Mary and Joseph with a good will and
marks of kindness. He showed them more courtesy and good services than he was
accustomed to show to others. In order to return his hospitality with still
greater kindness the great Queen, who knew the sad state of his interior,
prayed for him, justifying his soul and causing him to change his life. Her
prayers had also the effect of adding to his worldly possession, for on account
of the small favor done to his heavenly guests, God increased them from that
time on. Many more miracles the Mother of grace wrought in this journey, for
all her doings were divine (Cant. 4, 13), and all who were of proper
disposition were sanctified by meeting Her. They finished their journey at
Nazareth, where the Princess of heaven set her house in order and cleaned it
with the assistance of her holy angels, for they vied with Her
in humility and were anxious to serve and honor Her by taking part in these
humble occupations. The holy Joseph applied himself to his ordinary daily work,
providing for the sustenance of the Queen; and his trusting heart was not
deceived in Her (Prov, 31, 11). She girded Herself
with new strength for the mysteries which She awaited, and She put forth her
hands to valiant deeds, enjoying in her soul the undimmed vision of the
Treasure of her womb and, connected with it, incomparable delights and
blessings. Thus She continued to gain vast merits and
made Herself unspeakably pleasing to God. INSTRUCTION WHICH THE QUEEN OF HEAVEN
GAVE ME.
320. My daughter, the faithful souls and children of
the Church, who know God, must make no distinction of time, place or occasions
in the practice of faith and the other virtues connected with it. For God is
present in all things and fills them with his infinite being (Jer. 23, 24), and
in all places and circumstances faith will enable them to see and adore Him in
spirit and in truth (John 4, 22). Just as preservation follows upon creation,
and as breathing follows upon life, and just as there is no intermission in the
breathing, nourishment and growth of man until the end is reached: so the
rational creature, after having been regenerated by faith of grace, must never
interrupt the course of the spiritual life, continually pursuing works of life
by faith, hope and charity in all places and at all time (James 2, 26). On
account of their forgetfulness and carelessness, the children of men, and
especially the members of the Church, possess the life of faith as if they had
lost it, allowing it to die for want of charity. These are the ones who have
received in vain this their new soul, as David says,
because they neglect it as if they had never obtained it (Psalm 23, 4).
321. I desire, my dearest, that thy spiritual life be
just as continual as thy natural life. Thou must continue to lead a life such
as is required by the grace and gifts of the Most High, believing and hoping in
the Lord, loving, praising and adoring Him in spirit and in truth, no matter
what changes there may be in time, occupation or place, He is in all things and
He wishes to be loved and served by all rational creatures. I therefore charge
thee that whenever souls come to thee full of this forgetfulness of their
faults, and harassed by the demons, thou pray for them with lively faith and
confidence. If the Lord does not always fulfill what thou desirest and what
they ask, He will follow his own secret counsel, and thou wilt have pleased Him
by having acted as a true spouse and daughter. If thou faithfully followest my instructions, I assure thee that He will
confer upon thee many special privileges for the benefit of souls. Consider
what I did at the sight of souls displeasing to the Lord, and how zealously I
worked for all, and for some in particular. To imitate and oblige me, do thou
likewise work and pray for those whose interior becomes known to thee through
the Lord or through other means; admonish them with prudence, humility and
resignation; for the Almighty does not desire thee to proceed noisily, nor that
the results of thy labors be always manifest, but that they remain hidden. In
this He conforms Himself to thy naturally retiring disposition and to thy
desires, and He seeks what is most secure for thee. And, although thou must
pray for all souls, yet thou must pray more earnestly for those whom the divine
will points out to thee.
THE DEMONS HOLD A MEETING IN HELL IN ORDER TO TAKE
COUNSEL AGAINST MOST HOLY MARY.
322. At the instant of the incarnation of the Word, as
I said in chapter eleventh (140), Lucifer and all hell felt the power of the
right arm of the Almighty which hurled them to the deepest of the infernal
caverns. There they remained overwhelmed for some days, until the Lord in his
admirable providence allowed them to come forth from this captivity, the cause
of which they did not know. The great dragon then arose and scoured the earth,
spying everywhere for new developments to which he might attribute the rout
which he and all his satellites had experienced. This search the proud prince
of darkness would not trust entirely to his companions, but he himself issued
forth in their company to course about upon the globe, seeking with the most
cunning malice to find what he wanted. He spent in this search three months and
finally returned to hell just as ignorant of the true cause as when he had come
forth. For the great mysteries of heaven were not
intelligible to him at that time, because the darkness of his malice did not
permit him either to rejoice in their wonderful effects or to glorify and bless
their Author. This was reserved to us men, for whom Redemption was
inaugurated.
323. The enemy of God was very much confused and
aggrieved, without knowing how to account for it. In order to discuss the
matter, he called together all the infernal hosts, without excusing or permitting
a single one of the demons to be absent. In this convention, from a place of
vantage, he addressed the meeting in this manner: "You well know, my
subjects, with what great anxiety I, ever since God has cast us out from his
dwelling and deprived us of our might, have sought to avenge myself and tried
to destroy the power of the Almighty. Although I cannot do anything to injure
Him, I have spared no time or exertion in extending my dominion over men whom
He loves. By my own strength I have peopled my reign (Job 41, 25) and many
nations and tribes obey and follow me (Luke 4, 6). Day by day I draw toward
myself innumerable souls, depriving them of the knowledge and possession of
God, in order that they may not enjoy the happiness which we have lost. I ensnare
them to these eternal pains which we suffer, since they will follow my
teachings and guidance: on them I will wreak the vengeance which I have
conceived against their Creator. But all this appears of small consequence to
me in the face of the sudden overthrow which we have experienced; for an attack
so powerful and ruinous has not happened to us since we were hurled from
heaven. I must acknowledge that as well your as my
power has met a serious shock. This new and extraordinary defeat must have some
new cause, and our weakness, I fear, is the beginning of our ruin."
324. "This matter will require renewed diligence,
for my fury is unquenchable and my vengeance remains insatiable. I have scoured
the whole earth, observed all its inhabitants with great care, and yet I have
found nothing notable. I have watched and persecuted all the virtuous and
perfect women who are of the race of Her whom we saw
in heaven, and whom I expected to meet among them. But I find no sign of her
having as yet been born; for I do not find one who possesses the marks of Her who is to be the Mother of the Messias. A Maiden whom I
feared on account of her great virtues, and whom I persecuted in the temple, is
already married; and therefore She can not be the one
we look for, since Isaiah says She is to be a Virgin (Is. 7, 14). Nevertheless
I fear and detest this Maiden, since such a virtuous Woman might give birth to
the Mother of the Messias or to some great prophet. To this hour I have not
been able to overcome Her in anything, and of Her life
I understand less than of that of others. She has always valiantly resisted me,
as She eludes my memory; or remembering Her, I cannot
approach Her. I have not yet been able to decide whether these difficulties in
regard to Her are miraculous, or arise from my
forgetfulness, or whether they are simply the consequences of the contempt in
which I hold such an insignificant Maiden. But I will consider this matter; for
recently we could not resist the power of her command, by which we were dispossessed
of our right to dwell in those persons from whom She
drove us. This certainly requires satisfaction, and She
merits my wrath solely on account of what She has shown Herself to be on these
occasions. I resolve to persecute Her and overcome
Her, and do you yourselves assist me in this enterprise with all your strength
and malice; and those who will distinguish themselves in this conquest shall
receive great rewards at my hands."
325. The whole infernal rabble, which had listened
attentively to Lucifer, praised and approved his intentions, and they told him
not to worry over this Woman, for She would easily be
overcome and he should not be without his triumphs over Her, since his power
was so great and ruled all the world (John 14, 30). Then they set about
discussing the means of entrapping most holy Mary, supposing Her
to be a woman of distinguished and remarkable virtue and holiness, but not the
Mother of the incarnate Word; for at that time, as I have said, the demons were
ignorant of the hidden sacrament connected with Her. Accordingly Lucifer and
his companions in malice immediately entered upon a mighty conflict with the
heavenly Princess, thus making it possible for Her to
crush the head of the infernal dragon many times (Gen. 3, 15). Yet, though this
was a great battle, and one of the most remarkable conflicts of her life, She fought another one later on after the Ascension of her
most holy Son into heaven. Of this I will speak in the third part of this
history. It was very remarkable, because Lucifer at that time already knew Her as the Mother of God. Saint John speaks of it in the
twelfth chapter of the Apocalypse, as I will explain in its place.
326. In dispensing the mysteries of the Incarnation
the providence of the Most High was most admirable, and so it is even yet in
the government of the Catholic Church. There is no doubt that it is befitting
the strong and sweet providence of God to hide many things from the demons,
which are better unknown to them; as well because they are unworthy of knowing
the sacred mysteries (for the reason given above in number 318), as also
because the divine power becomes more manifest in keeping the demons in
subjection. But it is especially necessary that they remain in ignorance in
order that the works of God in the Church and his sacraments may take their
course in greater peace; also in order that the unmeasured wrath of the demons
may be more effectively curbed by not allowing them to proceed according to
their malice. Although the Almighty could always repress and restrain the
devils by force, yet He proceeds in this matter according to what is most
appropriate to his infinite goodness. On this account the Lord concealed from
these enemies the dignity of the most holy Mary and the wonderful manner of her
pregnancy, as well as her virginal integrity before and after the birth; and He
concealed it still more effectively by giving her a husband. Likewise they were
uncertain of the Divinity of Christ our Lord until the moment of his Death;
only then they saw that they had been deceived and misled in regard to many
mysteries of the Redemption. Instead of inciting the Jews to inflict upon Him
the most cruel death, they would have sought to
prevent it, and they would have tried to retard our Redemption by making known
to the world that Christ is the true God. Therefore, when saint
Peter confessed Him as such, Christ forbade him and the rest of the Apostles to
make it known to anybody (Matth. 16, 20). Although, on account of the miracles
He wrought and the exorcisms which He performed (Luke 8,28), they almost began
to suspect Him to be the Messias, and called Him Son of God; yet his Majesty
would not allow them to publish it about. Nor did they call Him so with certain
conviction. For their suspicions subsided when they saw our
Lord despised and fatigued: they could never penetrate the mystery of the
Savior's humility and their inflated pride kept them in darkness.
327. Since Lucifer then did not know the dignity of
Mary the Mother of God at the time of this persecution, fierce as it was, it
was not so terrible as the one She suffered later on,
when He knew who She was. If in this present occasion he had known that She was
the One whom he had seen in heaven clothed with the sun and (Apoc. 12, 1) that
She was to crush his head (Gen. 3, 15), he would have been lashed into
devouring fury and consumed in fiery wrath. If they were so fearfully enraged
at the mere thought of her sanctity and perfection, it is certain, that, had
they known her greatness, they would, as far as would be allowed them, have
disturbed the whole universe, in order to make an end of Her. However, since
they on the one hand were ignorant of the mysteries of the heavenly Lady and
other hand felt the effects of her extreme virtue and sanctity, they were on this
occasion thrown into confusion and doubt, asking each other: who this Woman
could be, against whom they saw their power dwindle into insignificance? And
whether perhaps She was not the one who was to hold
first place among creatures?
328. Others judged that She could not possibly be the
Mother of the Messias, for whom men were waiting; for besides having a husband,
She with her husband belonged to the poorest, humblest, and the most
insignificant people in this world: they had wrought no public miracles or
prodigies, nor had they attracted the esteem or reverence of any of their
fellowmen. As Lucifer and his associates are so proud, they could not persuade
themselves that such extreme humility and self-debasement can consort with the
dignity of Mother of God. Lucifer thought that God in his power would not
choose for Himself what the devil had considered unworthy of his own dignity,
which he knew was beneath that of the Almighty. In short, he was deceived by
his own arrogance and giddy pride, for these are the
vices which are most apt to darken the intellect and to drag the will to ruin.
On this account Solomon says, that their own malice has made them blind (Sap.
2, 21), in order that they might not know that the eternal Word was to make use
of such means in order to destroy the arrogance and haughtiness of the dragon.
For his thoughts were distant from those of the Almighty farther than the earth
is distant from heaven (Is. 55, 9). He thought that God would come from heaven
into the world with great show of strength and opposition, humiliating by his
power the proud princes and monarchs, which the demon had filled with his own
arrogance; and so well had he succeeded, that many, who reigned before the time
of Christ, were inflated with such pride and presumption, as to have lost their
common sense and to have forgotten that they were mortal and earthly. Lucifer
judged of all these things according to his own vanity and according to his own
method of proceeding against the works of the Lord.
329. But the infinite Wisdom took measures beyond all
the calculations of Lucifer: for He came to conquer him not only by his
Omnipotence, but by humility, meekness, obedience and poverty, which are the
weapons of his warfare (II Cor. 10, 4); far from Him are the empty show and
vanity maintained by the riches of the world. He came disguised and hidden in
the outward appearance of lowliness; He chose a poor Mother. All that the world
values, He came to despise, teaching the true science of life in word and
example. Thus the devil found himself deceived and
overcome by the very things that were most repugnant and unbearable to him.
330. In ignorance of all these mysteries Lucifer spent
some days in spying out and reconnoitering the natural condition of most holy
Mary, her character, temperament, inclinations, the tranquility, evenness and
considerateness of her conduct; but the enemy could discover no flaw. Seeing
the perfection and sweetness of all that concerned Her,
and that She was like an impregnable wall, he returned to his demons and laid
before them the great difficulty of tempting Her. All of them projected mighty
plans of attack, encouraging each other in trying to solve the difficulties. Of
the execution of these designs, of the glorious triumphs of the heavenly Princess
over all her enemies, and of the foiling of all their damned and malicious
counsels, I will speak in the following chapter.
INSTRUCTION VOUCHSAFED ME BY THE QUEEN OF HEAVEN, THE
MOST HOLY MARY.
331. My daughter, I wish that thou be very cautious
and watchful in regard to the ignorance and darkness, by which the demon
commonly ensnares mortals and makes them forget their eternal salvation and the
continual danger of its loss through his persecutions. Men are lost in
forgetful rest and sleep, as if there were no vigilant and powerful enemies.
This dreadful carelessness arises from two causes: on the one hand men are so
taken up with their earthly and sensible being (I Cor. 2, 14), that they do not
feel any other evils except those concerning the animal nature in them; all
that is interior is harmless in their estimation. On the other hand, since the
princes of darkness are invisible and unperceived by any of the senses (Ephes, 6, 12) and since carnal men neither touch, nor feel,
nor see them, they forget the fear of them. Yet for this very reason they ought
to be more attentive and careful, since invisible enemies are more cunning and
adroit in injuring us by their treachery. So much the more certain is the
danger, the more concealed it is, and so much the more deadly are the wounds,
the less they are felt and recognized.
332. Listen, my daughter, to most important truths
concerning eternal life. Attend to my counsels, follow my instructions and
receive my warnings; for if thou pass them by unheeded, I will cease to speak
to thee. Hear what thou hast not until now known of the disposition of these
enemies. I wish to make known to thee that no intellect, nor any tongue of man
or angels can describe the wrath and fury which Lucifer and his demons
entertain against mortals just because they are images of God and because they
are capable of enjoying Him for all eternity. The Lord alone can comprehend the
wicked malice of these proud and rebellious spirits against his holy name and
against his worship. If these foes were not restrained by his almighty arm they
would in one moment destroy the world; they would like famishing lions, like
wild beasts and fierce dragons, dispatch all mankind and tear them to pieces.
Now however the most kind Father of all mercies wards off and curbs their wrath
and He bears his little children in his arms in order that they may not fall a
prey to these hellish wolves.
333. Consider then, as seriously as thou canst,
whether anything deserves greater pity, than to see so many men misled into
danger and made forgetful of it; how some of them cast themselves into it on
account of their lightheartedness, some of them for trivial reasons, others for
a short and instantaneous pleasure, others through negligence, and yet others
on account of their inordinate appetites, tearing themselves away from the
places of refuge, in which the Almighty has placed them, to fall into the hands
of such cruel and furious enemies; and not only to feel their fury for an hour,
a day, a month, a year, but to suffer indescribable and unmeasured
torments for all eternity. Thou shouldst be filled with fear and wonder, my
daughter, to see such horrible and dreadful foolishness among the impenitent
mortals and to see even the faithful, who have come to know and confess all
this by faith, so far lose their understanding and allow themselves to be so
insanely blinded by the devil that they neither regard nor avoid this danger.
334. In order that thou mayest fear it and preserve
thyself the better, remember that this dragon knows thee and lurks about thee
ever since the hour of thy creation and entrance into this world. Night and day
he restlessly prowls about seeking some chance of capturing thee as a prize. He
observes thy natural inclinations and also the gifts of the Lord, in order to
combat thee with thy own weapons. He charges other demons with thy ruin and
promises reward to those that are more diligent in securing it. They weigh thy
actions carefully, watch thy footsteps, and work zealously to lay snares for thee
in all thy undertakings. I desire thee to meditate on these truths in the Lord,
who will show thee whither they lead; compare them afterwards with thy own
experience and thou wilt understand, whether thou hast any occasion for sleep
in the midst for such dangers. Although this watchfulness is important for all
the woman-born, it is more necessary to thee than to others for especial
reasons: and if I do not mention them all to thee now, do not doubt, that thou must live with great vigilance and caution.
It suffices to remind thee of thy soft and yielding nature, which thy enemies
will strive to make use of for thy destruction.
THE LORD PREPARES MOST HOLY MARY TO MEET LUCIFER IN
BATTLE AND THE DRAGON BEGINS TO PERSECUTE HER.
335. The eternal Word, already made man in the womb of
Mary the Virgin, and possessing Her as his Mother, was aware of the designs of
Lucifer, not only through the uncreated knowledge of his Godhead, but also by
the created knowledge of his humanity. He prepared the defense of his
tabernacle, which was more estimable in his sight than all the rest of the
creatures. In order to clothe the invincible Lady with new strength against the
foolhardy daring of the treacherous dragon and his hosts, the most holy
humanity of Christ, rose up as it were in an attitude of defense in the
virginal chamber of Mary in order to meet and offer battle to the princes of
darkness. In this position He prayed to the Father and asked Him to renew his
favors and graces in Mary, in order that She might with added strength crush
the head of the ancient serpent, that this Woman might humiliate and overcome
him, frustrate his designs and all his powers, and that She come forth
triumphant and victorious over hell to the glory and praise of God and of his virginal
Mother.
336. The prayer of Christ our Lord was punctually
fulfilled in the most blessed Trinity. Then, in an indescribable manner, her
most holy Son was shown to Mary in her virginal womb. In this vision the
plenitude of graces and unspeakable gifts were vouchsafed to Her.
Illumined anew with additional light of wisdom She
recognized the highest and most hidden mysteries impossible to describe. She
understood especially that Lucifer had prepared vast designs of pride against
the glory of the Lord; and that his arrogance rose up to drink the pure waters
of Jordan (Job 40, 18). The Most High, informing Her
of these things, said to Her:
"My Spouse and my Dove, the infernal dragon
thirsts with such wrath against my holy name and all those that adore it, that
he wishes to drag toward him all without exception and with daring presumption
he tries to blot out my name from the land of the living. I wish thee, my
Beloved, to come to the defense of my cause and of my holy name, by giving
battle to the cruel enemy; and I will be with thee in battle, since I am in thy
virginal womb. I wish that thou confound and destroy the enemies before I
appear in the world; for they are convinced that the Redemption of the world is
nigh and therefore they desire to gain over and ruin all souls without
exception, before the world is redeemed. I trust this victory to thy fidelity
and love. Do thou battle in my name, just as I in thee, against this dragon and
ancient serpent" (Apoc. 12, 9).
337. These words of the Lord and the knowledge of
these secrets so moved the heart of the heavenly Mother, that
I cannot find expression for that which then happened. When She understood,
that her most holy Son wished Her to defend the honor of the Most High, She was
so inflamed with divine love and filled with such invincible fortitude, that,
if each one of the demons would have been an entire hell and filled with the
fury of all its inmates, they altogether would have been only like a few weak
ants, compared to the incomparable strength of this our valiant Leader. All of
them She would have vanquished and destroyed by the
smallest part of her virtues and of her zeal for the honor and glory of the
Lord. And her divine Protector and Helper ordained this glorious triumph of his
most holy Mother over hell, in order that the arrogance of his enemies might no
longer lord it over us nor rest assured of being able to destroy the world. But
He wished to hasten its Redemption and put us mortals under obligation not only
to the inestimable love of his most holy Son, but also to Mary, our heavenly
Defender and Reparatrix, She was to issue forth to battle, stop his progress,
vanquish and suppress him, placing mankind on a proper footing for the
reception of their Redeemer.
338. O sons of men, dull and
slow of heart! How is it that you do not heed such admirable blessings? Who is
man, that Thou shouldst honor and favor Him thus (Ps. 8, 5), O most high King!
Thy own Mother and our Mistress Thou sendest out to
labor and combat in our defense! Who ever heard of
similar happenings? Who has ever shown such force and ingenuity of love? Where
is our intellect? Who has deprived us of the use of reason? What hardness of
heart is this? What has drawn us into such vile ingratitude? What shameful
conduct of men, who, while they claim to love and honor Her
so much, are guilty of such low and infamous ingratitude as to forget such an
obligation? The true nobility and honor of the sons of Adam would rather seem
to consist in thanking Her incessantly and sacrificing
their lives in gratitude!
339. The obedient Mother, offering Herself to battle
with Lucifer for the honor of her most holy Son, of the holy Trinity and our
own, answered Him that had commanded Her, saying: "My Lord and highest
Good, from whom I have received my being and all the grace and light which I
possess: to Thee I belong entirely, and Thou, Lord, hast condescended to be my
Son. Do with thy servant, what shall be to thy greater glory and pleasure. For
if Thou art in me, and I in Thee, who shall be powerful enough to resist thy
will? I shall be the instrument of thy almighty arm: give me thy strength and
come with me, and let us go forth to battle against the dragon with all his
followers." In the meanwhile Lucifer issued from the meeting, now filled with
such hateful spite against Her, that he considered the
perdition of all the other souls as of small consequence. If we could know the
fury of satan as it is in reality, we would understand
better what God says to holy Job, that he counts steel as straw and bronze as
rotten wood (Job 41, 18). Such was the wrath of the dragon against most holy
Mary; and such it is even now against the souls; for if he esteemed the most
holy, the invincible and most strong Woman to be no more than a dried up leaf,
what will he do to sinners, who like empty and decaying reeds do not withstand
him? (Ephes. 6, 16). Living
faith alone and humility of heart are the double armor which enable
them to procure glorious victory.
340. In order to begin his battle Lucifer brought with him the
seven legions with their seven principal leaders whom
after the fall from heaven he had appointed to tempt men to the seven capital
sins (Apoc. 12). Each of these seven squadrons he charged with the duty of
exerting their utmost strength against the immaculate Princess. The invincible
Lady was occupied in prayer, when the Lord permitted the first legion of devils
to begin the battle by tempting Her to the sin of
pride, to which special work they had been appointed. They sought to approach
the heavenly Queen by trying to cause changes in her natural passions and
inclinations, for this is the ordinary way in which the demons find access to
other mortals; and they thought that She was infected
in the same way as other men with passions disordered by sin. They could not
however come as close to Her as they wished, for they
were repelled by the fragrance of her virtues and holiness, which tormented
them more than the fire which consumes them. In spite of this obstacle and
although the very sight of most holy Mary pierced them with raging torments,
they nevertheless ignored their pains and lashed themselves into furious and
ungovernable wrath in their obstinate endeavors to approach nearer to Her and
exert upon Her their cursed and damnable influence.
341. The most holy Mary, who
was alone and left only to her natural forces, stood prepared for the assault
of those countless demons; yet She by Herself was as formidable and terrible
(Cant. 6, 3) to them as many armies in battle array. They presented themselves before
Her (Ps. 118, 85) in the most horrid masks and with wicked lies. But the
sovereign Queen, teaching us how to conquer, did not change her position nor
was moved interiorly or exteriorly, nor did She show
any emotion of fear in her countenance. She took no notice of them, nor
attended to them any more than if they had been the weakest ants. She despised
them with an invincible and magnanimous heart; for this kind of battle, as it
is a battle of virtues, is not accompanied by the extremes of noise and excitement,
but is fought in all tranquillity, in outward and inward peace and modesty.
Just as little could She be moved by the passions and
the appetites; for these were not in subservience to the devil in our Queen. In
Her they were all swayed by reason, and this again was
subject to God, since none of her faculties had been cast into disorder by the
first sin, as in the rest of the children of Adam. Therefore the arrows of
these enemies, as David says, were like those of little children (Ps. 63, 8),
and their armories were like those which were without ammunition. Only to themselves were they harmful, for their weakness only
brought upon them confusion. Although they were not aware of the
innocence and the original justice of most holy Mary and therefore did not
understand that She was not to be injured by the
common temptations; yet by the Majesty of her bearing and her constancy they
could conjecture their ill-success and how She despised them. Their efforts
were not of the least avail; for, as says the Apostle in the Apocalypse (Apoc.
12, 18) and as I have mentioned in the first part (1-129), the earth helped the
Woman, who was clothed with the sun, when the dragon opened upon Her the flood
of his impetuous temptations; meaning thereby, that the earthly body of this
Lady had not been vitiated in its faculties and passions, as those of others,
who had been touched by sin.
342. The demons then assumed corporeal shapes of the
most horrible and dreadful kind; and they began to emit fearful howls, roaring
with terrible voices, pretending to rush upon Her and threatening destruction;
they shook the earth and the house, striving also by other furious assaults to
frighten and disturb the Princess of the world; so that at least in this, or in
making Her desist from prayer they might seem
victorious. But the invincible and magnanimous heart of most holy Mary was not
disturbed, nor moved in the least. It must be remembered, that in order to
enter upon this battle, the Lord left Her entirely to
the resources of her own faith and virtue. He suspended the effects of the
other favors and privileges, which She was wont to
enjoy at other times. The Most High wished it so, in order that the triumph of
his Mother might be more glorious and honorable; besides this there were the
other reasons, which God has in allowing the souls to be tempted in this
manner. His judgments are unsearchable and unknowable (Rom. 11, 33). At times
the great Lady would repeat: "Who is like unto God, that
lives in the highest and looks upon the humble in heaven and on earth?" (Ps. 112, 5). By these words She
routed the hosts that opposed Her.
343. Then these hungry wolves laid aside their
terrible shapes: they assumed sheeps' clothing,
transforming themselves into angels of light, resplendent and beautiful.
Approaching the heavenly Lady, they said: "Thou hast conquered, Thou hast
conquered, we come to attend on Thee and reward thy fortitude and invincible
courage." Surrounding Her, they protested their
friendship in flattering and deceitful terms. But the most prudent Lady
withdrew within Herself, suspended all the activity of her senses and, raising
Herself above Herself (Thren. 3, 28) by means of the
infused virtues, adored the Lord in spirit and in truth (J no. 4, 23).
Despising all the snares of these evil tongues and their deceitful lies, She spoke to her most holy Son: "My Lord and Master,
Light of light and my Strength, in thy help alone do I place all my confidence
and the exaltation of thy holy name. All those that speak otherwise I abjure,
abhor and detest." But the doers of evil persevered in their insane
attempts against the Mother of knowledge and continued to extol beyond the
skies Her, who had humiliated Herself beneath the
lowest of creatures. They protested that they wished to exalt Her above all women and confer upon Her an exquisite favor:
they would select Her in the name of the Lord for the Mother of the Messias,
and they assured Her that her holiness would be greater than that of the
Patriarchs and Prophets.
344. Lucifer himself was the author of this new plot
and his malice is here made known for a warning to other souls. But it was
ridiculous to offer to Mary, the Queen of heaven, a dignity already her own.
They themselves were ensnared and deceived, not only in offering what they
neither knew nor were able to give, but also in being ignorant of the sacrament
of the King so intimately connected with the most blessed Woman, whom they
persecuted. Nevertheless the iniquity of the dragon was great, because he knew
that he could not fulfill what he promised. He tried to spy out whether perhaps
our blessed Lady held that dignity, or whether She
would give him some signs, by which he could conjecture it. Most holy Mary was
aware of this double-dealing of Lucifer, and admirably met it with a quiet
firmness. She answered the deceitful flatteries by quietly continuing her
prayer and adoring the Lord. Prostrated upon the floor She
humiliated Herself, confessing Herself as the most despicable of creatures, more
despicable than the dust under her feet. By this humble prayer and prostration She cut off the presumptuous pride of Lucifer as long as
this temptation lasted. As for the rest which happened, the cunning of the
demons, their cruelty and lying deceits on this occasion, it seemed to me, that
I should not relate all, nor that I should expatiate on all that has been shown
to me; let this much suffice for our instruction; for not all can be trusted to
the ignorance of weak and earthly creatures.
345. Dismayed and routed, the first host of enemies
retired and gave way to the second. These were to tempt Her,
who was the most poor of human kind, to the sin of
avarice. They offered to Her great riches, gold, silver, and most precious gems
and in order that these might not seem empty promises, thy placed before Her a
great quantity of these riches, although they were only apparent; for they
thought that they could exert greater influence on her will by actually
presenting these objects before Her. They accompanied this offer with many
deceitful words and told Her that God had sent Her all
this for distribution among the poor. When they saw that all this had no effect
upon Her, they changed their tactics and urged, that
since She was so holy, it was a great wrong that She should remain so poor. It
was more reasonable that She possess these riches, than that they remain in the
hands of wicked sinners, for this would be an injustice and a disarrangement of
the divine Providence that the just be visited with poverty, while God's wicked
enemies abound in riches and affluence.
346. In vain the net is spread before the eyes of the
bird in its flight, says the wise man. This was true of all the temptations of
our sovereign Queen; but the malice of the serpent was much more preposterous
in regard to this temptation of avarice, for this Phoenix of poverty was so far
removed from the earth, and winged her flight so far above that of even the
seraphim, that such a vile and contemptible snare was entirely in vain. The
most prudent Lady, although She possessed divine
wisdom, never undertook to argue with these enemies, as in truth nobody should;
for they battle against the manifest truth and will not admit defeat, even when
they must acknowledge its effects. The most holy Mary made use of some words of
the holy Scriptures and repeated them with serene
humility. On this occasion She selected the words of the 118th Psalm: "Haereditate acquisivi
testimonia tua in aeternum," "I
have acquired for my heritage and for my riches the keeping of thy testimonies
and thy laws, my Lord" (Ps. 118, 112). She made use of many other
passages, gratefully praising and blessing the Most High, because He had
created and preserved Her without her merits. In this
most wise manner She rejected and overcame the second
temptation, to the confusion and torment of these agents of iniquity.
347. Then advanced the third legion, led on by the
prince of impurity who assails the weakness of the flesh. These made so much
the greater efforts, because they foresaw more clearly the improbability of
success; and in truth they gained less than all the others, if one may speak of
more or less in these different temptations of the Virgin Mary. They tried to
suggest to Her vile images and to produce before her
eyes unspeakable monstrosities. But all their efforts vanished in midair; for
the most pure Virgin, as soon as She had recognized
the first signs of this vice, withdrew entirely within Herself and suspended
all the activity of her senses. Thus not even the shadow of a suggestion or
indecent image could enter her thoughts, since none of her faculties were in
action. With the most ardent longing She renewed many
times her vow of chastity in the presence of the Lord, and She merited more on
this occasion than all the virgins that ever existed or will exist in this
world. The Almighty furnished Her with such virtue, that in comparison the
sudden expulsion of the cannon ball from the cannon, is but a poor image of the
force with which these enemies were repelled from the presence of most holy
Mary when they sought to touch her purity by their temptations.
348. The fourth legion undertook to test her meekness
and patience, seeking to move this mildest Dove to anger. This temptation was
most annoying, for the demons overturned the whole house: they broke and
shattered everything contained therein, and in such a manner as to cause the
greatest amount of annoyance to the most meek Lady;
but her holy angels soon repaired all the damage. Foiled in this attempt, the
demons assumed the shapes of some women known to the serenest Princess. They
flew at Her with greater wrath and fury than if they
had been real women; they added outrageous insults, dared to threaten Her, and
took possession of things most necessary. But all these were only despicable
tricks in the eyes of Her that knew them; for none of
their pranks and assaults escaped the penetration of the most holy Mary. She
disregarded them altogether and despised them entirely, without giving any
signs of being moved or influenced by them. The demons then chose a real woman
of a disposition adapted to their purposes, whom they influenced by diabolical
art against the Princess of heaven. For this purpose one of the demons assumed
the shape of an acquaintance of this Woman and began to tell her that this
Mary, the wife of Joseph, had slandered her in her presence and had accused her
of many gross faults, which this demon invented for the occasion.
349. The deceived woman, who was naturally very much
inclined to anger, hastened furiously to our meekest Lamb and hurled at Her the
vilest accusations and insults. She, however, allowing the angry woman to pour
out her wrath gradually began to speak to her in words so humble and sweet,
that She changed her entirely, appeased and softened
her heart. When She had thus brought her about, She
consoled and admonished her against the wiles of the devil. As this woman was
poor, Mary added some alms and dismissed her in peace. Thus also this attempt
was foiled, just as were many others, by which Lucifer tried to irritate our
meekest Dove and bring her into discredit. The Most High always defended the
honor of his most holy Mother, making use of her own perfection in virtue and
of her prudence and humility, so that the devil could never succeed in harming her
good name in the least. She always acted so prudently and with so much meekness
and wisdom, that the multitude of the hellish attempts were
totally ineffectual. The tranquility and meekness of the sovereign Lady during
these temptations of the dragon caused the admiration of the angels. Even the
demons were full of astonishment, (though of a different kind), at seeing such
behavior in a mere creature and that a woman; for never had they seen the like.
350. The fifth legion followed with temptations to gluttony.
Although the ancient serpent did not bid our Queen to turn stones into bread
(Matth. 4, 3) as he afterwards presumed to do with her most holy Son (for he
had not seen Her do such great wonders, since they had been withheld from his
know ledge), yet he tempted Her like the first woman with the pleasures of the
taste (Gen. 1). They placed before Her a great feast,
in order to incite and mislead her appetite by outward allurance; they tried to
influence the humors of her body, so as to cause in Her a counterfeit hunger
and they used other means to attract her attention to what they were offering.
But all their labor was in vain and without effect; for from all these material
and earthly things the noble heart of our Princess was as far removed as heaven
is from earth. Just as little did She use her senses
in order to enjoy the pleasures of taste, yea She never even took notice of
them; for in all things She had set Herself to counteract what our first mother
Eve had done. Eve incautiously and heedlessly had looked upon the beauty of the
tree of knowledge and upon its sweet fruit, and then had reached out her hand
to eat, thus beginning our woe. Not so most holy Mary, who withdrew and locked
up her senses, although She was in no such danger as
Eve. Our first mother was overcome for our perdition, while our Queen conquered
for our rescue and salvation.
351. Much dismayed by the discomfitures of the
preceding hosts, the spirits of envy approached. Though they could not estimate
the full perfection of the deeds of the Mother of sanctity, they nevertheless
felt her invincible strength. They had seen Her so
unmovable that they almost despaired of enticing Her to any of their wicked
purposes. Nevertheless the insatiate hatred of the dragon and his inmeasurable pride would not yield; they laid new plots in
order to provoke the Lady most beloved of the Lord and of men to envy in others
what She Herself possessed and even what She abhorred
as useless and dangerous. They drew up a long list of natural blessings possessed
by others and denied to Her. And as they thought that
supernatural gifts would move Her more, they mentioned
great spiritual favors and blessings, which the Almighty had conferred upon
others and not upon Her. But how could these lying representations move Her, who was the Mother of all the graces and gifts of
heaven? For the blessings of all the creatures taken together were less than her single privilege of being the Mother of
the Author of grace. Precisely because his Majesty had so favored Her and
because the fire of his charity burned within Her, She ardently desired, that
the hand of the Most High enrich and favor her fellowmen so much the more. How
then could envy find room, where charity abounded? (I Cor. 13,4).
But the fierce enemies would not desist. They pictured to the Queen the
apparent happiness of those, who in their riches and good fortune, considered
themselves happy and exalted in this world. They induced several persons to
approach most holy Mary and describe to Her the
consolation of being rich and well to do. As if this deceitful happiness of
mortals had not been condemned so often in holy
Scriptures (Ps. 48), and as if contempt of riches had not been the very science
and doctrine, which the Queen of heaven and her most holy Son had come to
exemplify in their lives for the benefit of the whole world!
352. Those persons, who came to our heavenly Mother,
were exhorted by Her to use the temporal goods and
riches well and to give thanks for them to the Author of all good. She Herself fulfilled this duty, making up for the habitual
ingratitude of men. Although the most humble Lady judged Herself
unworthy of the least of blessings of the Most High; yet Her own sanctity and
exalted dignity in point of fact gave witness to the words of holy Scriptures
saying in her name; "With me are glorious riches and justice. For my fruit
is better than gold and precious stone" (Prov. 8, 18). "In me is all
grace of the way and the truth, in me is all hope of life and of virtue"
(Eccli. 24, 25). In this exalted excellence of virtue She
conquered all her enemies, astonishing and confusing them by this new
experience. For they were made to feel that where they had
exerted their greatest force and their deepest cunning, they gained least and
experienced the greatest repulse.
353. Nevertheless the demons stubbornly persisted and
proceeded with the seventh temptation, which was that of idleness. They sought
to cause in Her a corporeal indisposition, or a
feeling of weakness and fatigue, accompanied by dejection of spirit. This is a
trick of satan little known and under its cover the
sin of laziness causes much ruin among souls and prevents much progress in
virtue. They suggested moreover that She postpone some
exercises on account of weariness in order to be able to perform them so much
the better after having rested. This too is one among many other tricks of satan, and we do not often discover it or know what to do
against it. They also sought maliciously to hinder the most holy Lady in some
exercises by means of human creatures, whom they sent to visit Her at
unseasonable times, trying to impede the performance of some of her holy
exercises and occupations at the time and hour set for them. But all these
delusions were detected by the most prudent and alert Princess. She evaded them
by her wise precautions, without permitting the enemy to succeed in any of them
and acting in all things up to the standard of the most exquisite perfection.
Her enemies were obliged to desist, hopelessly foiled and repulsed. Lucifer was
full of rage against his companions and against himself. But in their fury and
insane pride, they resolved to make one more general assault upon Mary, as I
will relate in the following chapter. INSTRUCTION GIVEN TO ME BY THE
MOST HOLY QUEEN MARY.
354. My daughter, although thou hast only very briefly
summed up my lengthy battle against temptations, I wish that from what thou
hast written and from what thou knowest otherwise concerning these things, thou
learn the manner of resisting and overcoming the powers of hell. The surest way
of fighting the demon is to despise him, looking upon him as the enemy of the
Most High, who has lost all fear of God and all hope of good; who in his
stubbornness has deprived himself of all means of recovery and is without sorrow
for his wickedness, Relying on this indubitable truth thou shouldst show
thyself far superior to him, exalted and unflinching in thy thoughts, and treat
him as a contemner of the honor and worship of his God. Knowing that thou art
defending so just a cause, do not let thy courage sink; but resist and
counteract him with great strength and valor in all his attempts, as if thou
wert fighting at the side of the Lord himself; for there is no doubt that his
Majesty assists all those that enter loyally into his battles. Thou art truly
in good hope and in the way of eternal life glory, as long as thou laborest
faithfully for thy Lord and God.
355. Remember then, that the demons detest and
abominate that which thou desirest and lovest, namely the honor of God and thy
eternal felicity; and that they are striving to deprive thee of that which they
cannot restore to themselves. God has reprobated the demon, while He offers to
thee his grace, his virtues and his strength in order to overcome his and thy
enemy and to procure for thee the happy end of eternal peace; only thou must
work faithfully and keep the commandments of the Lord. The arrogance of the
dragon is great (Is. 16,6), yet his weakness is
greater; and he does not represent more than a weak atom in the face of the
divine power. Yet as his cunning and malice far exceed that of mortals (Job 41,
21), it is not advisable to allow the soul to bandy words with him, whether he
is present invisibly or visibly; for from his darksome mind, as from a smoking
furnace, issue the shadows of confusion, obscuring the judgments of mortals; if
they listen to him, he will fill their minds with deceits and darkness, so that
they will neither recognize the truth and the beauty of virtue, nor the
vileness of his poisonous falsehoods. Thus the souls will be made unable to
distinguish the precious from the worthless, life from death, truth from error
(Jer. 15, 19), and they easily fall into the clutches of this fierce and wicked
dragon.
356. In temptation let it be thy invariable course not
to attend to anything which he proposes, not to listen, not to argue with him
concerning aught. If thou canst withdraw and place thyself at a distance, so as
not to perceive or recognize his wicked attempts, so
much the more secure thou wilt be for thus looking upon him only at a distance.
The demon always seeks to prepare the way for his deceits,
especially in souls which he fears will resist his entrance unless he can thus
facilitate his approach. He is accustomed to begin by causing sorrow or dejection
of heart, or he makes use of other trickery or snares, by which he diverts or
withdraws the soul from the love of the Lord; then he comes with his poison,
concealed in the golden cup in order to diminish the horror of the soul. As
soon as thou noticest in thyself any of these signs,
(for thou hast thy experience, obedience and instructions for a guide), I wish
that with the wings of the dove thou direct thy flight to the high refuge of
the Almighty (Ps. 54, 7), calling upon Him for aid and proffering the merits of
my most holy Son. To me also shouldst thou fly for protection as I am thy
Mother and Teacher, and to thy devoted angels, and to all the rest of thy
advocates in the Lord. Quickly close up thy senses and
consider thyself as dead to them, or as a soul already belonging to the other
life, whither the jurisdiction and the exacting tyranny of the serpent does not
reach. Occupy thyself so much the more earnestly in the exercise of the virtue
contrary to the vice to which he tempts thee, and especially in acts of faith,
hope and love, which dispel cowardice and doubt, and weaken the influence of
discouragement and fear in the human heart.
357. The arguments for overcoming Lucifer thou must
seek in God alone; and do not disclose them to your enemy, lest he meet thee
with fallacies and confusing pretense. Besides knowing it to be dangerous,
esteem it as unworthy of thee to argue with him openly, or to pay particular
attention to him, who is not only the enemy of thy Beloved but also of thee.
Show thyself superior to him and highmindedly apply thyself to the practice of all virtues. Be content with this
treasure and withdraw thyself; for the most skillful
battle of the sons of God consists in flying farthest from evil. The devil is
proud and is deeply hurt by contempt; in the presumption of his arrogance and
vanity he desires above all the attention of men. On this account he is so
persistent in pursuing us step by step; for in his deceitfulness he cannot rely
upon the force of truth, but on his persistent counterfeiting of the good and
the true. As long as this slave of wickedness is not despised, he never
believes himself discovered and he continues, like an importunate fly, to buzz
about the spot tainted by the greatest corruption.
358. Not less warily must thou conduct thyself, when
thy enemy makes use of other creatures for thy destruction. This he does in two
ways: either leading them on to immoderate love, or to undue dislike or hatred.
As soon as thou noticest a disorderly affection in
those with whom thou conversest, observe the same
precaution as in flying from the demon; yet with this difference, that while
thou hatest him as thy enemy, thou consider the
others as God's creatures to whom thou must not deny the consideration due to
them on account of his Majesty. But in as far as withdrawing from them is concerned, act as if they were thy enemies; for in regard to
the service, which the Lord requires of thee and in regard to thy present
condition, it is the devil who operates in these persons toward separating thee
from thy God and from thy duty. If on the other hand they hate and persecute
thee, answer them with meekness and love, praying for them with intimate
affection of thy heart (Matth. 5,44). If it should be
necessary, soothe the wrath of thy persecutors with sweet words, and undeceive
those who are led astray by false reports. Do this not in order to excuse
thyself, but in order to pacify thy brothers and for their inward and outward
peace; thus thou wilt at one and the same time conquer
thyself and those who hate thee. In order to be well practiced in this way of
acting it is necessary to cut off the very roots of the capital sins, to tear
them out, and to die to the movements of the appetites. For in these appetites
the seven capital vices to which the devil leads men,
are rooted, and in these disorderly and undisciplined passions he sows the
germs of the seven sins. LUCIFER WITH ALI. HIS SEVEN LEGIONS PERSISTS IN TEMPTING MOST HOLY
MARY; SHE CONQUERS THE DRAGON AND CRUSHES HIS HEAD.
359. Even if the prince of darkness and wickedness had
now retreated, his exorbitant pride would have been sufficiently discomfited
and humiliated by the victories, which had been gained by the Queen of heaven.
But as, even if vanquished, he continues to rise up against God with insatiate
malice, he did not acknowledge his defeat (Ps, 73, 23). Finding himself
conquered, and conquered so completely by an apparently insignificant and weak
Woman, though he and his hosts had overcome so many valiant men and high-minded
women, his fury raged onward, though in smothered flames of wrath. God had
permitted the enemies to become aware of the pregnancy of the most holy Mary,
though leaving them under the impression, that it was entirely a natural
process; for the Divinity of the Child and other mysteries connected with It always remained hidden to these enemies. Hence they
persuaded themselves that this was not the promised Messias, since they held
this Child to be a man like the rest of the human race. This error also
confirmed them in the mistake that most holy Mary was not the Mother of the
Word (Gen. 3, 15): Both of whom were to crush the head of the dragon. Yet they
were persuaded that of a Woman so valiant and victorious, some man of
distinguished sanctity would be born. The great dragon, convinced of this,
conceived against the fruit of the most holy Mary that vast fury mentioned in
the twelfth chapter of the Apocalypse and referred to in this history, and he
awaited the birth of her Son in order to devour Him.
360. Whenever Lucifer directed his looks toward this
Child enclosed in the womb of the most holy Mary, he felt a mysterious power
oppressing him. Although his presence seemed to cause only a certain weakening
and deadening of his strength; yet this was sufficient to enrage him and to
make him seek by all means the destruction of this suspicious Child and of his
victorious Mother. Assuming the most fearful shapes of fiercest bulls and
terrible dragons or of other monsters, he sought to approach Her
without ever being able to succeed. He rushed upon Her,
but found himself repulsed, without knowing by whom or how. He struggled like a
wild beast in chains and gave forth awe-inspiring howls, which, if God had not
prevented their being heard, would have terrified the world and would have
frightened many men to death. He shot forth from his mouth fire and fumes of
sulphur mixed with poisonous spittle. All this the
heavenly Princess Mary saw and heard, without being moved more than if She saw
a gnat. He caused disturbances in the air, upon the earth, or in her house,
disarranging and overthrowing it in all its parts; but most holy Mary still
remained unmoved, retaining her inward and outward tranquillity and peace and
showing Herself invincibly superior to all his
attempts.
361. Lucifer, finding himself thus vanquished, opened
his most impure mouth and set in motion his lying and defiled tongue. He
loosened the floodgates of his malice and spouted forth in the presence of the
heavenly Empress all the heresies and infernal falsehoods of the sects, which
he and his associates spread through the world. For after they had been hurled
from heaven and after they were informed that the divine Word was to assume
human flesh in order to be the Chief of a race, which He would replenish with
graces and celestial teachings, the dragon resolved to concoct falsehoods and
heresies, in opposition to all the truths concerning the knowledge, love and
worship of the Most High. In this occupation the demons consumed many years before
the coming of Christ, the Lord of the world; and all this poisonous deceit
Lucifer, the ancient serpent, had stored up within himself. Now he poured it
out in the presence of the Mother of truth and purity; hoping to infect Her by all the falsehoods, which He had conceived against
the truth of God up to that day.
362. They are not fit to be described here, even less
so than some of the temptations indicated in the last chapter; for it would be
dangerous not only for the weak souls, but even the strongest must fear the
pestilential breath of Lucifer, who on this occasion exhaled all his deceitful
malice. According to what I saw, I believe doubtlessly, that there was no
error, idolatry or heresy known to have existed in the world to this day, which
this dragon did not vomit forth in the hearing of the sovereign Mary. Therefore
the Church can truly congratulate Mary on account of her victories, affirming
of Her, that She by Herself has smothered and
extinguished all the heresies of the whole world (Office B. V. M.). Thus in
truth our victorious Sulamite, armed with her virtues advanced like an army in
battle array (Cant. 7, 1) to confound, overwhelm and destroy the infernal
hosts. All their falsehoods, and each one in particular, She
refuted, contradicting, detesting and anathematizing all of them with
invincible faith and sublime constancy. She proclaimed the various truths
opposed to his falsehoods, magnifying the Lord by means of them as true, just
and holy. She broke out into songs of praise, in which his virtues and
doctrines were extolled as true, holy, immaculate and altogether praiseworthy.
In fervent prayer She besought the Lord to humiliate
the arrogance of the demons by preventing them from spreading so freely their
poisonous errors through the world, and asking Him to diminish the influence of
the false teachings, which they had already sowed and which they were yet
allowed to sow among men.
363. On account of this victory of the great Queen and
on account of her prayers, I perceived that the Most High in justice set
narrower bounds to the demons, so that they would not be able to scatter the
seeds of error as much as they intended and as much as the sins of men would
merit. Although their sins are the cause of so many heresies and sects unto this
day, yet they would have caused many more, if most holy Mary had not crushed
the head of the dragon by such great victories, by her prayers and petitions. I
have been informed of a great mystery, which affords us consolation in this
conflict of the holy Church against her wicked enemies. Namely, on account of
this triumph of most holy Mary and on account of another, which She gained over
the demons after the Ascension of our Lord (Part III, 528), the Almighty, in
reward of her battles, decreed, that through her intercession and virtue all
the heresies and sects of the world against the holy Church were to be
destroyed and extinguished. The time appointed for this blessing was not made
known to me; probably, the fulfillment of this decree is dependent upon some
tacit and unknown condition. Yet I am sure, that if the Catholic princes and
their subjects would seek to please this great Queen of heaven and betake
themselves to her intercession as being their especial Patroness and
Protectress, and if they would direct all their influence and riches, all their
power and sovereignty toward the exaltation of the faith and the honor of God
and of purest Mary (for this may perhaps be the condition imposed), they would
be as it were the instruments, by which the infidels would be refuted and
vanquished, the sects and errors infesting the world would be repressed, and
splendid and magnificent victories would be gained for the Catholic truth.
364. Before the birth of Christ our Redeemer it seemed
to Lucifer (as was intimated in the foregoing chapter) that his coming was
retarded by the sins of the world. In order to prevent his coming altogether he
sought to increase this hindrance by multiplying the aberrations and crimes of
mortals. This iniquitous pride of the devil the Lord confounded by the
magnificent triumphs of his most holy Mother. After the Birth and the Death of
the Redeemer, the malicious dragon sought to hinder and divert the fruits of
his blood and redemption. For this purpose he began to sow and spread the errors,
which after the times of the Apostles have afflicted and do now afflict the
Church. The victory over this infernal malice was likewise left by Christ in
the hands of his most holy Mother: for She alone could merit, and did merit,
such a victory. Through Her idolatry was extinguished by the preaching of the
Gospel; through Her were brought to naught the ancient sects of Arius,
Nestorius and Pelagius and of others; She it was that instigated the zeal and
solicitude of kings, princes, fathers, and doctors of the holy Church. Hence,
how can it be doubted, if the Catholic princes, both of the Church and of the
state, would use the proper diligence, aiding as it were this heavenly Lady,
that She on her part would not fail to help them, conferring upon them happiness
in this life and in the next, and cutting down all the heresies of the world?
For this very purpose the Lord has so enriched so greatly as well the Church as
the Catholic reigns and monarchies. If it were not for this purpose, it were better that they remain poor. It was not proper that
all the results of the Gospel should be obtained through miracles, but through
natural means, obtainable by the proper application of riches. But it is not
for me to judge whether they fulfill this obligation or not. I have only to
report what the Lord himself has made known to me: that those who hold the
titles of honor and sovereignty conferred by the Church, without coming to her
aid and defense and without applying their riches toward preventing the waste
of the blood of Christ our Savior, are usurpers and unjust possessors of those
titles: for in this very thing should the difference between Christian and
infidel princes consist.
365. Coming back to my subject, I say that the Most
High, in his infinite foresight, well knew the iniquity of the dragon, and that
in the pursuit of his wrath against the Church he would bring to disorder many
of the faithful, striking down the stars of the heaven of the militant church,
namely the faithful, and thus seeking to rouse still more the divine justice
and diminish the fruits of the Redemption. The highest Lord in immense kindness
resolved to meet this danger that threatened the world. In order that He might
be moved in this by so much the greater equity and for the greater glory of his
name, He arranged that the most holy Mary should oblige Him to give this help.
She alone was worthy of the privileges, gifts and prerogatives by which She was
to overcome the world; and this most eminent Lady alone was capable of such an
enterprise as to draw toward Her the heart of God by her holiness, purity,
merits and prayers. For the greater exaltation of the divine power He wished it
to be known through all the eternities that He had conquered Lucifer and all
his followers through means of a mere Creature and a Woman, just as the devil
had cast down the whole human race by another woman, and that there was none
other to whom this salvation of the Church and whole world could be worthily
credited. On account of these and other reasons apparent to us in faith, the
Almighty gave into the hands of our victorious Chieftainess the sword for
cutting off the head of the infernal dragon; a power never to be diminished in
Her, and with which She defends and assists the militant Church according to
the labors and necessities of coming centuries.
366. While Lucifer with his infernal legions in
visible forms persisted in his unhappy attempts, the most serene Mary never
looked upon them nor paid any attention to them, although by the permission of
God She heard the uproar. Since the hearing cannot be so easily stopped as the
sight, She took precaution, lest what She heard should
enter her imagination or interior faculties. Nor did She
deign to speak to them otherwise than to command them to stop their blasphemies.
And this command was so powerful that it forced the demons to press their
mouths to the earth, while She in the meanwhile sang
great canticles of praise and glory in honor of the Most High. This intercourse
of her Majesty with God and her profession of the divine truths, was likewise
so oppressive and painful to them that they began to attack each other like
ravenous wolves, or like rabid dogs; every action of the Empress Mary was for
them a burning shaft, and everyone of her words a flame of fire more dreadful
than hell itself. This is not an exaggeration for the
dragon and his followers really strove to fly and escape from the presence of
most holy Mary; while the Lord, in order to enhance the triumph of his Mother
and Spouse and confound entirely the pride of Lucifer, detained them by a
secret force. His Majesty permitted and ordained that the demons themselves
should humiliate themselves so far as to ask the heavenly Lady to command them
to go and be driven from her presence, which they had sought. Accordingly She commanded them to return to the infernal regions. There
they lay prostrate for a time, while the great Vanquisher Mary remained
absorbed in divine praise and thanksgiving.
367. When by the permission of the Lord Lucifer rose
from his defeat, he returned to the conflict, selecting for his instrument some
of the neighbors of the holy spouses, and sowing among them and their wives the
hellish seed of discord concerning temporal interests. For this purpose the
demon took the shape of a woman known to them all and telling them that they
should not disagree among themselves, since the source of all their differences
was none other than Mary, the wife of Joseph. The woman, whose shape the demon
took, held the esteem and regard of all these persons, and therefore her words
were so much the more weighty. Although the Lord did
not allow the good name of his most holy Mother to suffer in any important
point, yet He permitted, that for her greater glory and merit, all these
deceived persons should give Her an opportunity of
exercising her patience on this occasion. They betook themselves in a body to
the house of saint Joseph and in his presence they called forth most holy Mary
and spoke very harshly to Her, accusing Her of disturbing their homes and their
peace. This event was painful to the most innocent Lady, on account of the
worry occasioned to saint Joseph, who had already noticed the increase of her
virginal womb, and who, as She had perceived, was already troubled by the
thoughts beginning to arise in his heart. Nevertheless, in her prudence and
wisdom, She sought to meet this disturbance with
humility, and overcome it by patience and lively faith. She did not defend Herself, nor fall back on the faultlessness of her conduct;
on the contrary, She humiliated Herself and begged Her ill-informed neighbors
to pardon Her, if in anything She had offended them. With sweet and wise words She enlightened and pacified them, making them understand
that none of them had committed any offense against the others. Satisfied by
her explanations and edified by the humility of her answer, they peacefully
withdrew to their houses, while the demon fled, not being able to endure such
great sanctity and heavenly wisdom.
368. Saint Joseph remained somewhat pensive and sad,
and he began to give way to conjecture, as I will relate in the following
chapters (Nos. 375 to 394). The demon, although he was ignorant of the chief
cause of the troubled thoughts of saint Joseph, wished to profit by the
occasion ( for he allows none to escape him), in order
to disquiet him still more. But doubting whether his dissatisfaction did not
arise from a certain disgust at his poverty and his lowly habitation, the demon
hesitated between two different courses. On the one hand he suggested a feeling
of restlessness to saint Joseph, irritating and
disgusting him against his poverty; and on the other hand he tried to persuade
him that Mary, his Spouse, devoted too much time to her meditations and
prayers, and led a too negligent and leisurely life, instead of exerting
Herself to improve their poor circumstances. But saint
Joseph, upright and magnanimous of heart, readily despised and rejected such
considerations. The solicitude with which he was secretly filled in regard to
the pregnancy of his Spouse easily smothered all other anxieties. The Lord,
leaving him in the beginning to these anxious thoughts, freed him from the
temptations of the demon through the intercession of the most holy Mary. For She was very attentive to all that passed within the heart
of her most faithful spouse. She therefore besought her most holy Son to
relieve him of these assaults, and to be satisfied with the service which he
rendered to God in enduring the sorrow of seeing Her pregnant.
369. The Most High ordained that the Princess of
heaven should still farther prolong this great battle with Lucifer. He
permitted him and all his legions in one general assault to strain all their
forces and exert all their malice, so that the demons might find themselves
entirely crushed and vanquished. The heavenly Lady was to achieve the greatest
triumph that ever was gained, or could be gained, over hell by a mere creature.
These legions of wickedness arrived in all their
hellish array to present themselves before the heavenly Queen, and with
indescribable fury. Uniting all the scheming plots, of which they had until now
availed themselves separately, and adding what little they could, they advanced
to make a universal onslaught. But I will not detain myself in describing it
specially, as nearly all can be understood from what has been described in the
two preceding chapters. She met them all and awaited their fearful onslaught
with the same tranquillity, high-mindedness and serenity, as if She had been in the position of the highest choirs of the
angels seated on their secure and unassailable thrones. No strange or improper
emotion could disturb the serenity of her heavenly interior, although the
menacing terrors, illusions and falsehoods of all hell
were poured forth in torrents by the dragon against this strong and unconquered
Woman, most holy Mary.
370. While She thus in the midst of this conflict
exercised heroic acts of all the virtues against her enemies, She was made
aware of the adorable decree of the Most High, that She should humiliate and
crush the pride of the dragon by her great dignity as Mother of God. Rising up
in ardent and invincible valor, She turned toward the
demons and spoke to them: "Who is like unto God, who dwells on high?"
And repeating these words, She added: "Prince of darkness, author of sin
and death, in the name of the Most High I command thee to become mute, and with
thy legions to cast thyself into the infernal caverns, where thy place is
appointed to thee, and whence thou shalt not come forth until the promised
Messias shall vanquish thee and crush thee, or until He otherwise permit."
The heavenly Empress shone forth in the light and splendor of heaven; and, as
the proud dragon made a pretence of resisting Her
command, She directed upon him the full force of her power. His resistance drew
upon him. so much the greater pain, humiliation and
torment, since such he thereby merited before all the other demons. Together
they fell into the abyss and remained fixed in its lowest caverns, as had
happened to them at the time of the Incarnation, and as I will describe further
on at the temptation and at the death of Christ our Lord (No. 130, 999, 1421).
And when this dragon afterwards engaged in his last battle with this Queen,
which is described in the third part of this history (Part III, 452 seq.), this
heavenly Lady vanquished him so completely that through Her
and her most holy Son his head was entirely crushed. In that final battle his
strength was so weakened and ruined that if human creatures do not deliver
themselves into the hands of his malice they can very easily resist and
overcome him with the divine grace.
371. Then the Lord himself appeared to his most holy
Mother, and in reward of her glorious victories He communicated to Her new gifts and privileges; Her thousand guardian angels
visibly presented themselves with innumerable hosts of others, and sang to Her
new canticles of praise in honor of the Most High and of Herself. And with
celestial concord of sweet and audible voices they sang of Her, that which the
holy Church figuratively sings of the triumph of Judith: "Thou art all
beautiful, Mary our Lady, and there is no stain of sin in Thee; Thou art the
glory of the heavenly Jerusalem; Thou art the honor of the people of God; Thou art
She, who magnifies his name, the Advocate of sinners, who defendest them
against their proud enemy ! O Mary! Thou are full of grace and of all
perfection." The heavenly Lady was filled with glad jubilee, praising the
Author of all good and acknowledging Him as the source of all She possessed. Whereupon She began
to pay more particular attention to the well-being of her spouse, as I shall
relate in the following chapter of the fourth book. INSTRUCTION WHICH OUR QUEEN AND
MISTRESS GAVE ME.
372. My daughter, the silence which the soul should
maintain when the invisible enemies advance with their specious reasonings,
should not prevent it from imposing silence upon them in the name of the Most
High, and from commanding them to leave its presence in confusion. Therefore I
desire this to be thy prudent behavior when they assault thee; for there is no
other defense so powerful against the dragon than to be conscious of the power
which we possess as children of God, and to use the advantage which this
confidence gives us by exercising our dominion and superiority over the
infernal spirits (Matth. 6, 9). For the whole aim of Lucifer, after he had
fallen from heaven, consists in enticing souls from their Creator and in sowing
the seed of discord, by which he hopes to separate from the heavenly Father his
adopted children, and the spouses of Christ from their Bridegroom. Whenever he
perceives that a soul is united with his Creator and in living communion with
its head Christ, he tries to surpass himself in his furious attempts at
persecuting it; his envy arouses the utmost exertion of his deceitfulness and
malice for its destruction. But as soon as he sees that he cannot succeed in
his attempts, because the soul takes refuge in the unfailing and unassailable
protection of the Most High, he weakens in his attempts and begins to writhe in
exquisite torments. If the soul, thus strengthened with the authority of God's
truth, despises and casts him out, there is no creeping worm or ant so weak as that giant of iniquitous pride.
373. By this most true doctrine thou must comfort and
strengthen thyself, when, according to the decree of the Almighty, thou meetest
tribulations and art surrounded by the sorrows of death in temptations such as
I have suffered. For they afford thy Spouse the best occasion of verifying thy
fidelity by experience. Therefore love must not be satisfied merely with mere
protestations of affection without looking for more valuable fruit; for the
desire which costs nothing is not a sufficient proof of love in a soul, nor of its proper esteem of the good which it pretends to
hold dear and love. If thou wishest to give a satisfactory proof of thy love to
thy Spouse, show thyself invincible in thy trust in Him also then when thou
findest thyself most afflicted and forsaken by human aid; confide in the Lord
thy God, and hope in Him, if necessary, against hope (Rom. 4, 18). For He does not slumber, nor does He sleep, who calls Himself the
protection of Israel (Ps, 120, 4). In due time He will command the waves
and the wind, and restore tranquillity (Matth. 8,26).
374. Thou must be much more wary, my daughter, in the
beginning of the temptations; for there is then greater danger lest the soul,
yielding to the concupiscent or the irascible passions, by which the light of
reason is obscured and darkened, allow itself to be thrown into confusion. As
soon as the demon notices such a state of mind he will raise a whirlwind of
dust in the faculties. His fierceness is so immeasurable and implacable that it
will then increase in fury. He will add flame to flame, thinking that the soul
has no one to defend and rescue it from his hands (Ps. 120, 11). With the force
of his temptations increases also the danger of failing in the necessary
resistance, since the soul has commenced to yield in the very beginning. All
this I make known to thee, in order that thou mayest fear the danger of being
remiss in guarding against the first approaches of the demon. Do not incur it
in what is so important. Thou shouldst continue in the even tenor of thy duties
in every temptation; keeping up the sweet and devout union with the Lord and
preserving thy prudent and loving intercourse with thy neighbors, thou shouldst
forestall by prayer and by restraint of thy feelings the disorder which the
enemy seeks to bring about in thy soul. |