|
CHAPTER IV.
OF THE VIRTUE OF HOPE, AND HOW THE VIRGIN OUR LADY EXERCISED
IT.
The virtue of hope naturally follows upon that of faith,
since it is ordained as its complement. For if the Most High instills in us the
divine light of faith, and if He wishes us, without regard to differences of
position and of age, to come into the infallible knowledge of the Godhead and of
his mysteries and promises, it is for no other reason than that each one of us,
knowing Him as our last end and object, and learning of the means of arriving at
it, may engender within himself the vehement desire to reach that goal. This
desire, which naturally carries with it the inclination to attain this highest
Good, is called hope and is infused into our will or natural appetite in
Baptism. For it belongs to the proper activity of the will to strive after
eternal felicity as its greatest good and blessing, to make use of divine grace
for obtaining it and for overcoming the difficulties which will occur in its
pursuit.
How excellent the virtue of hope is, may be learned from the
fact that its ultimate object is God himself, our highest Good. Although it
perceives and seeks Him as something that is absent, yet at the same time it
seeks Him also as something that is attainable through the merits of Christ and
through the proper activity of the one that hopes for it. The acts and
operations of this virtue are regulated by the light of divine faith and by the
prudent reliance on the infallible promise of the Lord. Thus hope, by means of
the reasoning powers, maintains the middle road between despair and presumption,
not permitting man to presume on his own powers for the attainment of eternal
glory or to set aside meritorious activity on his own part, nor allowing fear or
despondency to hinder Him from exerting himself toward it on account of the
Lord's promises and assurances of final success. In this security, guaranteed by
divine faith in all that pertains to these things and applied in prudent and
sound reasoning, man hopes without fear of being deceived and yet also without
presumption.
From this it can be seen that despair may arise both from a
want of believing what faith promises and also from a failure to apply to one's
own self the security of the divine promises, in which one believes, but which
one falsely supposes unattainable in one's own regard. Between these two
dangerous extremes hope directs us in the safe way, maintaining us in the
confident belief on the one hand that God will not deny to our-selves what He
has promised to all, and on the other, that the promise was not made
unconditionally and absolutely, but requires our exertion and effort to merit
its fulfillment as far as it is possible with the help of divine grace. For if
God has made man capable of the vision of eternal glory, it was not just that
any one should attain to such felicity by sinful abuse of the very faculties
with which he is to enjoy it; but that he use them in such a way as to befit the
end for which he received them. This proper use of the faculties consists in the
exercise of the virtues, which prepare man for the enjoyment of his highest
good, and in seeking it already in this life by the knowledge and love of God.
Now, in most holy Mary this virtue of hope reached the
highest degree possible both in regard to itself and in regard to all its
effects, circumstances and qualities; for the desire and the striving after the
last end, which is the vision and the fruition of God, was in Her more active
than in all other creatures; moreover this most faithful and prudent Lady did
nothing to impede these aspirations, but followed them up with all the
perfection possible in a creature. Not only did She possess the infused virtue
of faith in the promises of our Lord and its concomitant intensity of hope; but
over and above all this She enjoyed beatific vision, in which She learnt to know
by experience the infinite truth and fidelity of the Most High. And although She
did not have occasion to make use of hope, while enjoying the vision and
possession of the Divinity; nevertheless, after again resuming Her ordinary
state, She was impelled by the memory of what She had enjoyed, to hope and
strive after it with so much the greater force and avidity. Thus the longings of
the Queen of all virtues constituted a certain kind of new and particular kind
of hope.
There was another reason why the hope of the most holy Mary
excelled the hope of all the other faithful joined together: namely the
greatness of the prospective reward and glory due to this sovereign Queen, for
reward is after all the real object of hope and in Her it was to be far above
all the glory of the angels and saints; that is, proportionate to the knowledge
of this glory assured to Her in God was also her expectation and desire to
acquire it. Moreover in order that She might attain the highest summit of this
virtue, and that She might worthily hope for all that the powerful arm of God
would work in Her, She was befittingly furnished with the light of a supreme
faith and all the helps and gifts pertaining thereto, and with an especial
assistance of the Holy Ghost. What we have said of the virtue of hope in the
blessed Virgin in regard to its principal object must also be affirmed in regard
to its secondary objects, for the gifts and mysterious blessings enjoyed by this
Queen of Heaven were so great that they could not be amplified even by the arm
of the Almighty God in a mere creature. Now as the great Lady was to receive
these favors through the medium of faith and hope, these virtues were
proportionately great, and therefore the greatest that could possibly fall to
the lot of a handiwork of God.
Moreover if, as has already been said of the virtue of faith,
the Queen of heaven was endowed with an explicit knowledge and faith of all the
revealed truths and of all the mysteries and operations of the Most High, and if
the acts of hope corresponded to these acts of faith, who, except the Lord
himself could ever comprehend how many and how excellent were the acts of hope,
which the Mistress of virtues elicited, since She was aware of her own eternal
glory and felicity and of that, which was to be wrought in the rest of the
evangelical Church by the merits of her most holy Son? For the sole sake of
Mary, as we have before said of her faith, God would have created this virtue,
and for her sake He would have conferred it, as He really did, on the whole
human race.
On this account the holy Spirit calls Her the Mother of
beautiful love and holy hope (Eccli. 25, 24); for just as She became the Mother
of Christ because She furnished Him with the flesh of his body, so the holy
Spirit made Her the Mother of hope, because by her especial concurrence and
cooperation She conceived and brought forth this virtue for the faithful of the
Church. Her prerogative of being the Mother of holy hope was connected with and
consequent upon Her being the Mother of Jesus Christ our Lord, for She knew that
in her Son She would lay the foundation of all the security of our hope. On
account of these conceptions and births of the most holy Queen, She obtained a
certain dominion and sovereignty over those graces and the promises of the Most
High, which depended upon the death of Christ, her Son, for their fulfillment.
When She of her own free will gave conception and birth to the incarnate Word
She turned them all over to us and thereby gave birth to our hope. Thus was
accomplished in its legitimate sense that which the Holy Ghost said to Her:
"Thy plants are a paradise" (Cant. 4, 13); for all that came forth
from Mary, the Mother of grace, was to constitute our happiness, our paradise,
and our certain hope of being able to attain them.
The Church has a celestial and true father in Jesus Christ,
for He engendered and founded it by his merits and labors, and enriched it with
his graces, his example and his doctrines, as was to be expected from the Father
and Author of such an admirable work Therefore it was befitting that the Church
should have also a loving and kind Mother, who with sweet regalement and
caresses, and with maternal solicitude and assistance, should nurse the little
children at her breast (I. Cor. 3, 12), nourish them with tender and delicious
food as long as they cannot in their infancy bear the food of the robust and
strong. This sweet Mother was most holy Mary, who since the beginning of the
Church, when the law of grace was born in her yet tender children, began to give
forth the sweet milk of her enlightened teaching as a merciful Mother; and who
will continue to the end of the world thus to assist and intercede for
the new children, which Christ our Lord engenders every day by his merits and at
the petitions of this Mother of mercy. She it is for whom they are born, who
raises and nourishes them. She is our sweet Mother, our life and our hope, the
original of the blessings, which are ours, She is the example which we are to
imitate, She is our assurance in the pursuit of the eternal happiness, merited
by her most holy Son, She furnishes the assistance necessary for its final
attainment.
WORDS OF THE QUEEN.
Thou, my dearest, having received such great enlightenment
concerning the excellence of this virtue and the works which I practiced by its
help, shouldst work without ceasing to imitate me according to the assistance of
divine grace. Renew continually and confer within thyself the promises of the
Most High and, with unshaken confidence in their divine truthfulness, raise thy
heart to ardent desires and longings for their attainment. In this firm hope
thou canst assure thyself of arriving through the merits of my most holy Son, at
the blessed cohabitation in the celestial fatherland and at the companionship of
all those who there see in immortal glory the face of the Most High. With its
help thou canst raise thy heart above earthly things and fix thy
mind upon the immutable Good, to which thou aspirest; all visible things will
appear to thee burdensome and disagreeable, and thou wilt esteem them as vile
and contemptible; nothing wilt thou strive after except that most lovable and
delightful object of thy desires. In my soul there was an ardor of hope, such as
is possible only to those who have apprehended its object in faith and tasted it
by experience; no tongue and no words can describe or express its intensity.
Besides, in order to spur thee on still more, consider and
deplore with heartfelt sorrow the unhappiness of so many souls who are images of
God and capable of his glory, and who through their own fault are deprived of
the true hope of enjoying it. If the children of the holy Church would pause in
their vain occupations and would take time to consider and weigh the blessings
of unerring faith and hope, which separates them from darkness and which,
without their merit, distinguishes them from the followers of blind unbelief,
they would without doubt be ashamed of their torpid forgetfulness and repudiate
their vile ingratitude. But let them be undeceived, for most terrible
punishments await them; they are most detestable in the sight of God and the
saints, because they despise the blood shed by Christ for the very purpose of
gaining them these blessings. As if all were only a fiction they treat with
contempt the blessings of truth, hastening about during their whole life without
spending even one day, and many of them not even an hour, in the consideration
of their duties and of their danger. Weep, O
soul, over this lamentable evil, and according to thy power work and
pray for its extirpation through my most holy Son. Believe me that whatever
exertion and attempt thou makest toward this purpose shall be rewarded by his
Majesty.
Back
to Contents
Previous Chapter
Next
Chapter
|