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CHAPTER III.
THE JOURNEY TO BETHLEHEM.
It had been decreed by the immutable will of Providence that
the Onlybegotten of the Father should be born in the town of Bethlehem (Mich. 5,
2), and accordingly it had been foretold by the Saints and Prophets of
foregone ages (Jerem. 10, 9); for the decrees of the absolute will of God are
infallible, and since nothing can resist them (Esther 13, 9), sooner would
heaven and earth pass away than that they fail of accomplishment (Matth. 24,
35). The fulfillment of this immutable decree the Lord secured by means of an
edict of Caesar Augustus for the whole Roman empire, ordering the registration
or enumeration of all the world, as saint Luke says (Luke 2, 1). The Roman
empire at that time embraced the greater part of what was then known of the
earth and therefore they called themselves masters of the world, ignoring all
the other nations. The object of this census was to make all the inhabitants
acknowledge themselves as vassals of the emperor, and to pay a certain tax to
their temporal lord; for this registration every one was to go to his native
city in order to be inscribed. This edict was also proclaimed in Nazareth and
came to the hearing of saint Joseph while he was on some errand. He returned to
his house in sorrowful consternation and informed his heavenly Spouse of the
news which had spread about concerning the edict. The most prudent Virgin
answered: "Let not this edict of our temporal ruler cause thee any concern,
my master and spouse, for all that happens to us is ordained by the Lord and
King of heaven and earth; and in all events his Providence will assist and
direct us (Eccli. 22, 28). Let us resign ourselves into his hands and we shall
not be disappointed."
Most holy Mary was capable of being entrusted with all the
mysteries of her most holy Son and She knew of the prophecies and their
fulfillment; hence, also, that the Onlybegotten of the Father and her own was to
be born in Bethlehem, a Stranger and an Unknown. But She said nothing of this to
saint Joseph; for without being commissioned by the Lord She would reveal none
of his secrets. All that She was not commanded to reveal She concealed with
admirable prudence, notwithstanding her desire of consoling her most faithful
and holy spouse. She wished to entrust Herself to his direction and arrangement
without acting the part of those who are wise in their own conceit, as Wisdom
warns us (Prov. 3, 7). They therefore conferred with each other about the course
to be pursued; for already the pregnancy of the heavenly Lady was far advanced
and her parturition was approaching. Saint Joseph said: "Queen of heaven
and earth and my Mistress, if Thou hast no order to the contrary from the
Almighty, it seems to me necessary that I go alone. Yet, although this order
refers only to the heads of families, I dare not leave Thee without assistance,
nor could I live without Thee, nor would I have a moment's peace away from Thee;
for my heart could not come to any rest without seeing Thee.
They at the same time resolved upon the day of their
departure, and Joseph diligently searched in the town of Nazareth for some beast
of burden to bear the Mistress of the world. He could not easily find one
because so many people were going to different towns in order to fulfill the
requirements of the edict of the emperor. But after much anxious inquiry saint
Joseph found an unpretentious little beast which, if we can call such creatures
fortunate, was the most fortunate of all the irrational animals; since it was
privileged not only to bear the Queen of all creation and the blessed fruit of
her womb, the King of kings and the Lord of lords, but afterwards to be present
at his Birth (Jsaias 1, 3); and since it gave to its Creator the homage denied
to Him by men, as I shall relate (No. 485). They provided the articles for the
journey, which would last five days. The outfit of the heavenly travelers was
the same as that which they had provided for their previous journey to the house
of Zacharias on their visit to Elisabeth. They carried with them bread, fruit
and some fishes, which ordinarily composed their nourishment. As the most
prudent Virgin was enlightened regarding their protracted absence, She made use
of prudent concealment in taking along the linens and clothes necessary for her
heavenly delivery, for She wished to dispose all things according to the exalted
intents of the Lord and in preparation for the events which She expected. Their
house they left in charge of some neighbor until they should return.
The most pure Mary and the glorious saint Joseph departed
from Nazareth for Bethlehem alone, poor and humble in the eyes of the world.
None of the mortals thought more of them than what was warranted by their
poverty and humility. But O the wonderful sacraments of the Most High, hidden to
the proud, and unpenetrated by the wisdom of the flesh! They did not walk alone,
poor or despised, but prosperous, rich and in magnificence. They were most
worthy of the immense love of the eternal Father and most estimable in his eyes.
They carried with them the Treasure of heaven, the Deity itself. The whole court
of the celestial ministers venerated them. All the inanimate beings recognized
the living and true Ark of the Testament (Josue 3, 16) more readily than the
waters of the Jordan recognized its type and shadow, when they courteously laid
open and free the path for its passage and for those that followed it. They were
accompanied by the ten thousand angels, which as mentioned (No. 450), were
appointed by God himself as the servants of her Majesty during that whole
journey. These heavenly squadrons marched along as their retinue in human forms
visible to the heavenly Lady, more refulgent than so many suns. She herself
walked in their midst better guarded and defended than the bed of Solomon,
surrounded by the sixty valiant ones of Israel, girded with their swords (Cant.
3, 7). Besides these ten thousand angels there were many others, who descended
from heaven as messengers of the eternal Father to his Onlybegotten made man in
his most holy Mother, and who ascended from earth as their ambassadors with
messages and treaties from them to the heavenly Father.
With these wonderful favors and delights, however, the Lord
joined some hardships and inconveniences which the divine Mother encountered on
the way. For the concourse of people in the taverns, occasioned by the imperial
edict, was very disagreeable and annoying to the modest and retiring
Virgin-Mother and her spouse. On account of their poverty and timid
retirement they were treated with less hospitality and consideration than
others, especially the well-to-do; for the world judges and usually confers its
favors according to outward appearance and according to personal influence. Our
holy pilgrims were obliged repeatedly to listen to sharp reprimands in the
taverns, at which they arrived tired out by their journey, and in some of them
they were refused admittance as worthless and despicable people. Several times
they assigned to the Mistress of heaven and earth some corner of the hallway;
while at others She did not fare even so well, being obliged to retire with her
husband to places still more humble and unbecoming in the estimation of the
world. But in whatever places She tarried, how contemptible soever it might be
considered, the courtiers of heaven established their court around their supreme
King and sovereign Queen. Immediately they surrounded and enclosed them like an
impenetrable wall, securing the bridal chamber of Solomon against the terrors of
the night. Her most faithful spouse Joseph, seeing the Mistress of heaven so
well guarded by the angelic hosts, betook himself to rest and sleep; for to this
She urged him on account of the hardships of travel. She, however, continued her
celestial colloquies with the ten thousand angels of her retinue.
Thus variously and wonderfully assisted, our travelers
arrived at the town of Bethlehem at four o'clock of the fifth day, a Saturday.
As it was at the time of the winter solstice, the sun was already sinking and
the night was falling. They entered the town, and wandered through many streets
in search of a lodging-house or inn for staying over night. They knocked at the
doors of their acquaintances and nearer family relations; but they were admitted
nowhere and in many places they met with harsh words and insults. The most
modest Queen followed her spouse through the crowds of people, while he went
from house to house and from door to door. Although She knew that the hearts and
the houses of men were to be closed to them, and although to expose her state at
her age to the public gaze was more painful to her modesty than to their failure
to procure a night-lodging, She nevertheless wished to obey saint Joseph and
suffer this indignity and unmerited shame. While wandering through the streets
they passed the office of the public registry and they inscribed their names and
paid the fiscal tribute in order to comply with the edict and not be obliged to
return. They continued their search, betaking themselves to other houses. But
having already applied at more than fifty different places, they found
themselves rejected and sent away from them all. The heavenly spirits were
filled with astonishment at these exalted mysteries of the Most High, which
manifested the patience and meekness of his Virgin Mother and the unfeeling
hardness of men. At the same time they blessed the Almighty in his works and
hidden sacraments, since from that day on He began to exalt and honor poverty
and humility among men.
It was nine o'clock at night when the most faithful Joseph,
full of bitter and heartrending sorrow, returned to his most prudent Spouse and
said: "My sweetest Lady, my heart is broken with sorrow at the thought of
not only not being able to shelter Thee as Thou deservest and as I desire, but
in not being able to offer Thee even any kind of protection from the weather, or
a place of rest, a thing rarely or never denied to the most poor and despised in
the world. No doubt heaven, in thus allowing the hearts of men to be so unmoved
as to refuse us a night-lodging conceals some mystery. I now remember, Lady,
that outside the city walls there is a cave, which serves as a shelter for
shepherds and their flocks. Let us seek it out; perhaps it is unoccupied, and we
may there expect some assistance from heaven, since we receive none from men on
earth." The most prudent Virgin answered: "My spouse and my master,
let not thy kindest heart be afflicted because the ardent wishes which the love
of thy Lord excites in thee cannot be fulfilled. Since I bear Him in my womb,
let us, I beseech thee, give thanks for having disposed events in this way. The
place of which thou speakest shall be most satisfactory to me. Let thy tears of
sorrow be turned into tears of joy, and let us lovingly embrace poverty, which
is the inestimable and precious treasure of my most holy Son. He came from
heaven in order to seek it, let us then afford Him an occasion to practice it in
the joy of our souls; certainly I cannot be better delighted than to see thee
procure it for me. Let us go gladly wherever the Lord shall guide us." The
holy angels accompanied the heavenly pair, brilliantly lighting up the way, and
when they arrived at the city gate they saw that the cave was forsaken and
unoccupied. Full of heavenly consolation, they thanked the Lord for this favor,
and then happened what I shall relate in the following chapter.
WORDS OF THE QUEEN.
My dearest daughter, if thou art of a meek and docile heart,
these mysteries which thou hast written about and hast understood, will stir
within thee sweet sentiments of love and affection toward the Author of such
great wonders. I wish that, bearing them in mind, thou from this day on embrace
with new and great esteem the contempt and neglect of the world. And tell me,
dearest, if, in exchange for this forgetfulness and scorn of the world, God look
upon thee with eyes of sweetest love, why shouldst thou not buy so cheaply what
is worth an infinite price? What can the world give thee, even when it esteems
thee and exalts thee most ? And what dost thou lose, if thou despise it? Is its
favor not all vanity and deceit (Ps. 4, 3)? Is it not all a fleeting and
momentary shadow, which eludes the grasp of those that haste after it? Hence, if
thou hadst all worldly advantage in thy possession, what great feat would it be
to despise it as of no value? Consider how little thou dost in rejecting all of
it for the love of God, for mine and that of the holy angels. And if the world
does not neglect thee as much as thou shouldst desire, do thou on thy own behalf
despise it, in order to remain free and unhampered to enjoy to the full extent
the highest Good with the plenitude of his most delightful love and intercourse.
My most holy Son is such a faithful Lover of souls that He
hast set me as the teacher and living example of the love of humility and true
contempt of worldly vanity and pride. He ordained also for his own glory as well
as for my sake that I, his Servant and Mother, should be left without shelter
and be turned away by mortals, in order that afterwards his beloved souls might
be so much the more readily induced to offer Him a welcome, thus obliging Him,
by an artifice of love, to come and remain with them. He also sought destitution
and poverty, not because He had any need of them for bringing the practice of
virtues to the highest perfection, but in order to teach mortals the shortest
and surest way for reaching the heights of divine love and union with God.
Thou knowest well, my dearest, that thou hast been
incessantly instructed and exhorted by divine enlightenment to forget the
terrestrial and visible and gird thyself with foritude (Prov. 31, 17), to raise
thyself to the imitation of me, copying in thyself, according to thy capacity,
the works and virtues manifested to thee in my life. This is the very first
purpose of the knowledge which thou receivest in writing this history thou hast
in me a perfect model, and by it thou canst arrange the converse and conduct of
thy life in the same manner as I arranged mine in imitation of my sweetest Son.
The dread with which this command to imitate me has inspired thee as a being
above thy strength, thou must moderate and thou must encourage thyself by the
words of my most holy Son in the Gospel of saint Matthew: "Be ye perfect as
my heavenly Father is perfect" (Matth. 5, 8). This command of the Most High
imposed upon his holy Church is not impossible of fulfillment, and, if his
faithful children on their part dispose themselves properly, He will deny to
none of them the grace of attaining this resemblance to the heavenly Father. All
this my most holy Son has merited for them. But the degrading forgetfulness and
neglect of men hinder them from maturing within themselves the fruits of his
Redemption.
Of thee particularly I expect this perfection, and I invite
thee to it by the sweet law of love which accompanies my instruction. Ponder and
scrutinize, by the divine light, the obligation under which I place thee, and
labor to correspond with it like a faithful and anxious child. Let no difficulty
or hardship disturb thee, nor deter thee from any virtuous exercise, no matter
how hard it may be. Nor be content with striving after the love of God and
salvation of thyself alone; if thou wouldst be perfect in imitating me and
fulfilling all that the Gospel teaches, thou must work for the salvation of
other souls and the exaltation of the holy name of my Son, making thyself an
instrument in his powerful hands for the accomplishment of mighty works to
advance his pleasure and glory.
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