CHAPTER V.
OF THE VIRTUE OF CHARITY IN THE MOST HOLY
MARY, OUR LADY.
The most excellent virtue of charity is the mistress, the queen, the
mother, the life and beauty of all the other virtues; charity governs, moves and directs
them to their ultimate and true end, charity leads them on to their ultimate perfection,
preserves them and makes them grow, enlightens them and beautifies them, gives them life
and efficacy. If the other virtues confer each their measure of perfection on creatures,
charity gives them perfection itself and brings them to their full complement. Without
charity all is of small value, obscure, languid, lifeless and unprofitable, not being
endowed either with the essence or the appurtenances of true vitality. Charity is kind,
patient, meek, without emulation, without envy, without offensiveness, desires not to
acquire, but readily distributes all, is the cause of all good and consents not to evil;
as far as it is concerned (I Cor. 13, 4) it is the fullest participation in the true and
ultimate Good. 0 Virtue of virtues and greatest treasure of heaven! Thou alone hast the
key of paradise! Thou art the dawn of eternal light, the sun of eternity's day, the fire
which purifies, the wine which inebriates with new delights, the nectar which rejoices,
the sweetness which satiates without surceasing, the chamber of rest for the soul, a bond
so intimate that it makes us one with God (John 17, 21), with the same bond that unites
the eternal Father to the Son, and Both to the holy Spirit.
On account of the nobility of this most excellent of all virtues, our
God and Lord, according to the Gospel of St. John, wished to honor Himself or wished to
honor it, by calling Himself Charity (I John 4, 15). There are many reasons why the
Catholic Church attributes the divine perfections of omnipotence to the Father; of wisdom
to the Son, and of love to the Holy Ghost. For the Father is the beginning, the Son is
engendered of the Father through the divine intelligence, and the Holy Ghost proceeds from
Both through the will. But the name of Charity and the perfection which it implies is
attributed to the Lord himself without distinction of Persons, since the Evangelist says
indiscriminately: "God is charity." This virtue in the Lord has the distinction
of being the terminus or end of all his operations ad intra and ad extra. For
on the one hand all the divine processions (which are the operations of the Godhead with
Himself or ad intra), terminate in the reciprocal union and love of the three
divine Persons, and thus they constitute an indissoluble bond of unity over and above the
indivisibility of the divine Essence, proper to it as being one and the same God. On the
other hand the works ad extra, namely the creatures, are an off-spring of divine
charity and are ordained towards it, so that, issuing from that immense sea of divine
bounty, they also return by charity and love to the source from whence they sprang. It is
peculiar to the virtue of charity in opposition to all the other virtues and gifts, that
it is a perfect participation of a divine virtue; it is born of one source, is directed
back to the same, and is more adapted to that eternal source than all other virtues. If we
call God our hope, our patience, or our wisdom, it is because we receive them from his
hand, and not because these perfections are in God as they exist in ourselves. But we call
God our charity, not only because we receive it from the Lord, and because He communicates
it to us, but because He himself is essential charity, and the overflow of this divine
perfection, which we represent to ourselves as a form and attribute of his Divinity,
redounds in our souls, transforming it more perfectly and abundantly than any other
virtue.
This is in part the nature of Charity in its divine original, God.
Outside of God himself, however, we will find it in the fullest perfection possible to a
mere creature in none other than most holy Mary, and in Her we find the model after which
we are more immediately to copy our own charity. It is evident that the light proceeding
from the uncreated Sun of charity, where it is contained without limit or circumscription,
communicates itself to all creatures even the most remote according to an order and
measurement adjusted in proportion to the proximity or distance of each from the divine
source. And this order manifests the fullness and perfection of the divine Providence; for
without it, this Providence would show a certain defect, confusedness and discord in the
creatures as far as the participation of his goodness and love is concerned. The first
place after God himself, in the distribution of divine Charity, was due to that Soul and
that Person, who was at the same time uncreated God and created man; for the highest grace
and participation of love naturally was to be found where existed the closest and most
intimate union with God, as it existed and as it will exist forever in Christ our Lord.
The second place is due to his most holy Mother Mary, in whom charity
and divine love found its resting place in an especial manner. For, according to our way
of apprehending, the uncreated Charity could not be quieted until It should find a
creature to which It could communicate Itself in such great plenitude, that the love and
affection of the whole human race should in its entirety be reproduced in that Creature
alone. It was intended that this chosen Creature should in Herself be endowed with the
gifts of charity, without the shortcomings and defects common to the rest of mortals
infected with sin, so that She by Herself would be able to supply the balance of creation
and make for it the greatest possible return of love. Mary alone was chosen among all
creatures to imitate the Sun of justice in charity (I Cant. 4, 9), and faithfully to copy
this virtue from its Original. She by Herself knew how to love more ardently and perfectly
than all the rest of creatures combined, to love God entirely for his own sake, purely,
intensely and without defect, and also loving creatures for God's sake and in a manner
similar to Him. She alone adequately followed the impulse of charity and her generous
inclination of loving the highest Good as highest Good, without any side intentions; and
of loving the creatures on account of their participation in God, without the thought of a
return or reward of her love. And in perfect imitation of the uncreated Charity, Mary by
her charity was able and knew how to love in such a way as to make better that which is
loved; for by her love She made better heaven and earth and all things that exist outside
of God.
If the charity of this great Lady were put in the balance with that of
all the men and angels, hers would outweigh theirs by far; for She by Herself exceeded
them all in her knowledge of the essence and qualities of the divine Charity and
consequently only Mary knew how to imitate It with adequate perfection and above all the
powers of intellectual creatures. In this excess of love and charity She repaid and
satisfied the debt of infinite love due to the Lord from creatures, as far as He could
demand a return of them, for their return was not to he infinite in value, that being
impossible. Just as the love and the charity of the most holy soul of Jesus Christ was in
its greatness proportionate to the hypostatic union, so the love of Mary was great in
proportion to the excellence conferred upon Her by the eternal Father, when He appointed
Her as the one, who as Mother was to conceive and bear his Son for the salvation of the
world.
Thence we understand that all the gifts and the blessings of creatures
depend in some manner on the love and charity of the blessed Virgin toward God. In Her
alone it was possible that divine Charity could exist in this world in its highest and
ultimate perfection. She paid the whole debt of charity at a time when all men were unable
to pay or even to understand the greatness of their debt. She, by her most perfect
charity, obliged the eternal Father to sacrifice his most holy Son for Herself and in
Redemption of the whole world; for if Mary had loved less and if her charity had been
defective, the proper preparation for his Incarnation would have been wanting. But as soon
as any creature was found, which resembled God so closely as She, it was, so to say, but a
natural consequence that He should descend to Her as He did.
All this is the meaning of the words of the Holy Ghost when He calls
Mary the mother of beautiful love (Eccli. 24, 24), as has already been explained
correspondingly in regard to hope. These words to Mary signify: Mary is the Mother of Him,
who is our sweetest love, Jesus, our Lord and Redeemer, who became the most beautiful
among men by a divine, infinite and uncreated beauty, and by a human nature which was to
be without guilt or blemish and to which no beauty of grace that could be communicated by
the Divinity, was wanting (I Pet. 2, 22). She is also the Mother of beautiful love, for
She alone engendered in her soul the perfect love and charity and the most beautiful
affection. All the rest of the creatures combined could not attain the beauty and
faultlessness of her Charity for theirs was not worthy to be called absolutely beautiful.
She is the Mother of our love; for She drew it toward the earth for us; She cultivated it
for us; She taught us to know and practice it; there is no other creature in heaven or on
earth that could be such a teacher of this beautiful love for men or angels. Therefore all
the saints are but rays of this Sun. and streamlets flowing from this ocean; so much the
better will they know how to love, the more they participate in this love and charity of
most holy Mary, and in as far as they succeed in imitating and copying it more exactly.
The sources of this charity and love of our princess Mary were her
profound knowledge and wisdom, derived as well from her infused faith and hope, as also
from the gifts of science, intellect and wisdom given to Her by the Holy Ghost; but the
greatest of all the sources of her love were the intuitive and abstractive visions of the
Divinity. Through all these mediums She reached the highest knowledge of the uncreated
Charity drank of it at its very fountain, and as She thus learned, how God was to be loved
for his own sake and the creature for the sake of God, also how to practice and execute
this love with the most intense and fervent desire. Moreover, as the power of God found no
impediment or hindrance, no inadvertence, ignorance or imperfection, nor any tardiness of
the will in this Queen, it could operate in Her according to his pleasure. This was not
possible in other creatures, since in none of them it found the same disposition as in
most holy Mary.
In Her was the fulfillment of that great natural and divine precept:
"Thou shalt love thy God with thy whole heart, and with thy whole soul, and with thy
whole strength." Mary alone satisfied this obligation and debt for all men, which in
this life and before seeing God they neither knew nor could ever fulfill entirely. This
Lady fulfilled it more perfectly during her pilgrimage than the saints even in the state
of beatitude. Moreover She also satisfied the intentions of God in regard to this precept,
namely that it remain not unfruitful and as it were frustrated on the part of wayfaring
men; for most holy Mary by Herself sanctified and fulfilled it entirely for all of them,
supplying by her charity all that was wanting in the fulfillment of this precept among
men. And probably if God had not foreknown that Mary our Queen would be among the number
of the mortals, He would not have given this command in this form. But on Her account He
was pleased to give it; to Her we owe not only this command of perfect charity, but also
the adequate fulfillment of it among men.
0 most sweet and most beautiful Mother of beautiful love and charity!
Let all the nations know Thee, let all generations bless Thee, and let all the creatures
magnify and praise Thee! Thou alone art the perfect One, the beloved One, the chosen
Mother of uncreated Charity. It formed Thee and selected Thee to shine like the sun in thy
most beautiful and most perfect love (Cant. 6, 9)! Let all us miserable children of Eve
approach this sun in order to be enlightened and inflamed. Let us approach this Mother in
order to be born again in love. Let us approach this Teacher in order to be taught the
love, affection and charity which is without defect. Love is a disposition which is
pleased and satisfied with the thing loved. Affection is a selection and separation of the
beloved from other of the same kind, and charity implied in addition to these, a high
appreciation and esteem for the goodness of the beloved. All this we will learn from the
Mother of true love, who is called by that name precisely because her love possesses all
these qualities. In Her we learn to love God for his own sake, resting satisfied in Him
with all our heart; to give Him a separate place in all our love from all that is not God,
for loving Him, together with other things, only diminishes our love of God. We learn to
appreciate Him and esteem Him above gold and above all precious things, for in comparison
with Him all precious things are of no value, all beauty is ugliness, and all that is
great and estimable in carnal eyes, becomes contemptible and valueless. Of the effects of
this love of the most holy Mary, this whole history treats and of them heaven and earth
are full. Therefore I will not stay to describe more particularly what no human tongue,
nor words of men or angels can convey.
WORDS OF THE QUEEN.
My daughter, if I desire in maternal affection, that thou follow me and
imitate me in all the other virtues, then more especially do I make known and declare to
thee my desire to see thee follow me in the virtue of charity, for this is the end and the
crowning glory of all other virtues. I desire that thou exert thy utmost powers to copy in
thy soul, with the greatest perfection, all that thou hast learnt of my charity. Light up
the lamp of thy faith and reason in order to find this drachm of infinite value, and after
thou hast (Luke 15, 8) found it, forget and despise all that is earthly and corruptible.
In thy own mind consider again and again, ponder and take heed of the infinite reasons and
causes that make God lovable above all other things. In order that thou mayest be sure
that thou lovest Him perfectly and truly, search within thyself for the following signs
and effects of that love; whether thy thought and meditation dwell continually on God,
whether his commands and counsel find in thee no repugnance or remissness, whether thou
fearest to offend Him, whether thou seekest immediately to appease Him after having
offended Him, whether thou grievest to see Him offended and rejoicest to see Him served by
all creatures, whether thou desirest and art delighted to speak continually of his love;
see whether thou delightest in the memory of his presence, whether thou grievest at thy
forgetfulness of Him and at his absence from thee, whether thou lovest what He loves, and
abhorrest what He abhors, whether thou seekest to draw all men towards his friendship and
grace, whether thou prayest with confidence; see whether thou receivest with gratitude his
benefits, whether thou dost not waste them but rather turnst them to good account for his
honor and glory, whether thou strivest to extinguish in thyself all the movements of the
passions, which retard thee or hinder thee in thy loving aspirations and in thy works of
virtue.
The right order of this virtue is to love God above all the creatures,
then to love oneself, and him who is nearest to oneself, namely, our neighbor. God must be
loved with the whole understanding, without deceit, with the whole will, without reserve
or division, with the whole mind, without forgetfulness, without diminution, without
negligence or remissness. The motive of charity in loving God is none else than God
Himself; for He must be loved for his own sake, being the highest Good and most perfect
goodness and holiness. Loving God for such motives causes the creature to love
itself and the neighbor and itself; for both belong to one and the same God, from whom
they derive their origin, their life and activity. He that loves God truly for Himself
will also love all that is of God and all that in some way participates in his goodness.
Therefore charity looks upon the neighbor as a work and a participation of God and makes
no distinction between friend or enemy. Charity looks only upon that which is of God and
which pertains to Him in others, no matter whether the neighbor is friendly or hostile, a
benefactor or a persecutor. It attends only to the difference in the participation of the
divine and infinite goodness and according to this standard it loves all in God and for
God.
Back to Contents
Previous Chapter
Next Chapter
|
|