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CHAPTER III.
OF THE VIRTUE OF FAITH AND HOW MOST HOLY MARY PRACTICED IT.
On account of this beauty and harmony regarding the habits of
virtue, the soul of the most holy Mary was so enlightened, ennobled and entirely
bent on the highest Good and last End of all creation; so alert, prompt,
efficient and joyful in the practice of virtue, that, if it were possible for
our weak insight to penetrate into the interior of her sacred soul, we would
there find a more wonderful beauty than that of all creatures combined and
inferior only to that of God himself. All the perfection of creatures were in
purest Mary as if in their own sphere and center, and all virtues reached in Her
the highest perfection, so that in no manner could it ever be said of Her this
or that is wanting in order to make Her altogether beautiful and perfect.
Besides the infused virtues, She possessed all the acquired ones, which She
augmented by practice and exercise. In other souls, one single act cannot be
called virtue, because many repeated acts are necessary to constitute virtue;
but in the most holy Mary each act was so efficacious, intense and consummate,
that each one was superior to the virtues of all the other creatures.
Accordingly, as her acts of virtue were so frequent and did not fall short in
the least point of the highest degree of perfection, how incomparably excellent
were not the habits of virtue, which the heavenly Mistress attained by her
personal exertion? The end for which something is done is that which makes an
act virtuous as being well done. In Mary, our Mistress, this end was God
himself, highest possible end of all activity; for She did nothing through which
She was not certain to advance the greater glory and pleasure of the Lord and
She looked upon this as the motive and ultimate end of all her actions.
The infused virtues are divided into two classes. To the
first belong only those, that have God himself for their immediate object;
therefore they are called theological virtues, being faith, hope, and charity.
To the second class belong all those other virtues, which have as their
proximate object some means or some honorable good, which advances the soul
toward its last end, namely God. These are called the moral virtues, because
they are intimately connected with established customs, and, although they are
many in number, they can be reduced to four, which are called the cardinal
virtues: prudence justice, fortitude and temperance. Of all these virtues and
their different species I will say farther on as much as I can in order that I
may make clear, how all of them and each one in particular adorned the faculties
of the most holy Mary. At present I only mention in general, that none of them
was wanting in Her and that she possessed all in the most perfect manner;
moreover they were supplemented by the gifts of the Holy Ghost, the fruits of
the Spirit, and the Beatitudes. God did not fail to infuse into Her from the
first moment of her Conception, all of the graces and gifts conducive to the
highest beauty of the human soul and faculties; and this was true of the will as
well as of the understanding, so that She had as well the knowledge as the habit
of the sciences. In order to say it all in one word all the good, which the Most
High could give Her as the Mother of his Son and as a mere creature, He
conferred upon Her in the most exalted degree. In addition to all this her
virtues continually augmented: the infused virtues, because She added to them by
her own merits, and the acquired virtues, because She nurtured and multiplied
them by the intensity of her meritorious acts.
In few words the holy Elizabeth described the greatness of
the faith of most holy Mary, when, as reported to us by the evangelist Luke, She
exclaimed: "Blessed art thou for having believed, because the words and
promises of the Lord shall be fulfilled in Thee" (Luke 1, 45). The faith of
this great Lady must be estimated from the greatness of her good fortune and
beatitude, and from her ineffable dignity.
The faith of the most holy Mary was an image of the whole
creation and an open prodigy of the divine power, for in Her the virtue of faith
existed in the highest and the most perfect degree possible; in a certain manner
and to a great extent, it made up for the want of faith in men. The Most High
has given this excellent virtue to mortals so that, in spite of the carnal and
mortal nature, they might have the knowledge of the Divinity and of his
mysteries and admirable works: a knowledge so certain and infallibly secure,
that it is like seeing Him face to face, and like the vision of the blessed
angels in heaven. The same object and the same truth, which they see openly, we
perceive obscured under the veil of faith.
One glance at the world will make us understand, how many
nations, reigns and provinces, since the beginning of the world, have lost their
claims to this great blessing of the faith, so little understood by the
thankless mortals: how many have unhappily flung it aside, after the Lord had
conferred it on them in his generous mercy, and how many of the faithful, having
without their merit received the gift of faith, neglect and despise it, letting
it lie idle and unproductive for the last end to which it is to direct
and guide them. It was befitting therefore, that the divine equity should have
some recompense for such lamentable loss, and that such an incomparable benefit
should find an adequate and proportionate return, as far as is possible from
creatures; it was befitting that there should be found at least one Creature, in
whom the virtue of faith should come to its fullest perfection, as an example
and rule for the rest.
All this was found in the great faith of the most holy Mary
and on account of Her and for Her alone, if there had been no other creature in
the world, it would have been most proper, that God should contrive and create
the excellent virtue of faith; for according to our way of understanding, Mary
by Herself was a sufficient pledge to the divine Providence, that He would find
a proper return on the part of man, and that the object of this faith would not
be frustrated by the want of correspondence among mortals. The faith of this
sovereign Queen was to make recompense for their default and She was to copy the
divine prototype of this virtue in its highest perfection. All the other
faithful can measure and gauge themselves by the faith of this Mistress; for
they will be more or less faithful, the more or less they approach the
perfection of her incomparable faith. Therefore She was set as Teacher and
example of all the believing, including the Patriarchs, Prophets, Apostles and
Martyrs and all that have believed or will believe in the Christian doctrines to
the end of the world.
The intelligent love, with which She explicitly believed all
the divine truths, cannot be expressed in words, without misrepresenting its
intensity. The most holy Mary knew all that She believed and believed all that
She knew; for the infused theological knowledge of the credibility of faith's
mysteries, and the understanding of this credibility, existed in the wisest
Virgin Mother in the highest degree possible in a mere creature. Her knowledge
was kept in a constant actuality, and by means of her memory, like that of an
angel, She never forgot, that which once She had learnt. This gift and faculty
of the understanding She kept in constant operation in order to exercise her
deep faith; only at times, as already said, God suspended faith by other acts of
the mind. Except that She was not yet a comprehensor, nothing was wanting in
regard to her intelligence of the matters of faith and in regard to the clear
knowledge of the Divinity. In this regard She held a position far above that of
all the wayfarers and She by Herself constituted a class of such high degrees,
as cannot be attained by any other wayfarer to heaven.
And if the most holy Mary, while She exercised the acts of
faith and hope was in what might be called her most ordinary and therefore the
lowest degree of activity, and if in that state She excelled all the angels and
saints in merits by her faith and love, what must we say of the excellence of
her acts, her merits and her affections, during the time in which She was
exalted by the divine power to the blessed state of highest intuitive vision and
clear knowledge of the Divinity? If this is beyond the comprehension of the
angelic mind, how can an earthly creature ever hope to find words to describe
it? I therefore can only express the mere wish, that all mortals might come to a
knowledge of the precious value of faith, by leaving it from this heavenly
Original, in whom faith attained its ultimate perfection and where it completely
fulfilled the end for which it was created. Let the infidels, the heretics, the
pagans and idolaters approach this Mistress of faith, most holy Mary, in order
to be enlightened in their falsehoods and darksome errors and in Order to find
the sure way toward the last end of their being. Let also Catholics approach and
learn to understand the copious rewards of this virtue; let them ask the Lord
with the Apostles to, increase their faith (Luke 7, 5). Not that they ever can
reach the faith of most holy Mary, but let them ask for the desire to imitate
Her and follow Her, for by her faith She teaches us, and by her merits She helps
us to obtain this virtue.
Saint Paul calls the patriarch Abraham the father of all the
faithful (Rom. 6, 11), because he first received the promise, hoping against
hope (Rom. 4, 18); He wishes to extol the excellence of the Patriarch's faith
because he believed the promise of the Lord, that Sarah, his wife, would bear
him a son though she was sterile, and, according to the laws of nature,
incapable of conception; moreover, in offering his son as a sacrifice at God's
command, he relinquished at the same time the prospect of the countless
offspring, which the Lord had promised to him. This all, and many other sayings
and promises of the Lord were made impossible of fulfillment according to the
laws of nature, yet Abraham believed, that the divine power could execute them
in a supernatural manner. Therefore he merited to be called the Father of all
the believers and to receive the seal of his faith which justified him, namely
circumcision.
But our supereminent Lady, Mary, possesses much greater
rights and titles to be called the Mother of faith and of all the faithful. In
her hand is hoisted the standard and ensign of faith for all the believers in
the law of grace. First indeed, according to the order of time, was the
Patriarch and consequently he was ordained to be the father and head of the
Hebrew people: great was his belief in the promises concerning Christ our Lord
and in the works of the Most High. Nevertheless incomparably more admirable was
the faith of Mary in all these regards and She excels him in dignity. Greater
difficulty and incongruity was there that a virgin should Conceive and bring
forth, than that an aged and sterile woman should bear fruit; and the patriarch
Abraham was not so certain of the sacrifice of Isaac, as Mary was of the
inevitable sacrifice of her most holy Son. She is the One, who perfectly
believed and hoped in all the mysteries, and She shows to the whole Church, how
it must believe in the Most High and in the works of his Redemption. Having thus
understood the faith of Mary our Queen, we must admit Her to be the Mother of
the faithful and the prototype of the Catholic faith and of holy hope. And in
order to conclude this chapter, I will add, that Christ, our Redeemer and
Teacher, as He was a comprehensor and as his most holy soul enjoyed the highest
glory and the beatific vision, had no necessity or occasion for faith, nor could
He in his own actions give us an example of this virtue. But what the Lord could
not do in his own Person, He did in the person of his most holy Mother,
constituting Her as the Foundress, the Mother and the example of faith in his
evangelical Church. And thus on the day of universal accounting this
sovereign Mistress and Queen shall in an especial manner assist her most holy
Son in the judgment of those, who, in spite of such an example, have not
believed during their stay on earth.
WORDS OF THE QUEEN
My daughter, the inestimable treasure of the virtue of divine
faith is hidden to those mortals who have only carnal and earthly eyes; for they
do not know how to appreciate and esteem a gift and blessing of such
incomparable value. Consider, my dearest, what the world was without faith and
what it would be today if my Son and Lord would not preserve faith. How many men
whom the world has celebrated as great, powerful and wise have precipitated
themselves, on account of the want of light of faith, from the darkness of their
unbelief into most abominable sins, and thence into the eternal darkness of
hell! How many kingdoms and provinces, being blind themselves, follow these
still more blind leaders until they together fall into the abyss of eternal
pains! And they are followed by the bad Christians, who having received the
grace and blessing of faith, live as if they had it not in their hearts.
Do not forget, my dear friend, to be thankful for this
precious jewel which the Lord has given thee as a dower and a wedding gift of
thy espousal with Him, in order to draw thee to the bridal chamber of his holy
Church and afterwards to have intercourse with Him in the eternal beatitude.
Continually exercise this virtue of faith, for it places thee near to thy last
end, after which thou strivest, and brings thee near to the object of thy
desires and thy love. Faith teaches the sure way of eternal salvation, faith is
the light that shines in the darkness of this mortal life and pilgrimage; it
leads men securely to the possession of the fatherland to which they are
wayfaring, if they do not allow it to die out by infidelity and sinfulness.
Faith enlivens the other virtues and serves as a nourishment of the just man and
a support in his labors. Faith confounds and fills with fear the infidels and
the lax Christians in their negligence; for it convinces them in this world of
their sin and threatens punishment in the life to come. Faith is powerful to do
all things, for nothing is impossible to the believer; faith makes all things
attainable and possible. Faith illumines and ennobles the understanding of man,
since it directs him in the darkness of his natural ignorance, not to stray from
the way, and it elevates him above himself so that he sees and understands with
infallible certainty what is far above his powers and assures him of it no less
than if he saw it clearly before him. He is thus freed from the gross and vile
narrow-mindedness of those who will believe only what they can experience by
their own limited natural powers, not considering that the soul, as long as it
lives in the prison of this corruptible body, is very much circumscribed and
limited in its sphere of action by the knowledge drawn from the coarse activity
of the senses. Appreciate, therefore, my daughter, this priceless treasure of
the Catholic faith given thee by God, watch over it and practice it in great
esteem and reverence.
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