The palace which the supreme King of kings and
the Lord of lords had chosen for entertaining his eternal and incarnate Son in this world
was a most poor and insignificant hut or cave, to which most holy Mary and Joseph betook
themselves after they had been denied all hospitality and the most ordinary kindness by
their fellow-men, as I have described in the foregoing chapter. This place was held in
such contempt that though the town of Bethlehem was full of strangers in want of
night-shelter, none would demean or degrade himself so as to make use of it for a lodging;
for there was none who deemed it suitable or desirable for such a purpose, except the
Teachers of humility and poverty, Christ our Savior and his purest Mother. On this account
the wisdom of the eternal Father had reserved it for Them consecrating it in all its
bareness, loneliness and poverty as the first temple of light (Malachy 4, 2, Ps. 111, 4)
and as the house of the true Sun of justice, which was to arise for the upright of heart
from the resplendent Aurora Mary, turning the night of sin into the daylight of grace.
Most holy Mary and saint Joseph entered the lodging thus provided for
them and by the effulgence of the ten thousand angels of their guard they could easily
ascertain its poverty and loneliness, which they esteemed as favors and welcomed with
tears of consolation and joy. Without delay the two holy travelers fell on their knees and
praised the Lord, giving Him thanks for his benefit, which they knew had been provided by
his wisdom for his own hidden designs. Of this mystery the heavenly Princess Mary had a
better insight; for as soon as She sanctified the interior of the cave by her sacred
footsteps She felt a fullness of joy which entirely elevated and vivified Her. She
besought the Lord to bless with a liberal hand all the inhabitants of the neighboring
city, because by rejecting Her they had given occasion to the vast favors, which She
awaited in this neglected cavern. It was formed entirely of the bare and coarse rocks,
without any natural beauty or artificial adornment; a place intended merely for the
shelter of animals; yet the eternal Father had selected it for the shelter and
dwelling-place of his own Son.
The angelic spirits, who like a celestial militia guarded their Queen
and Mistress, formed themselves into cohorts in the manner of court guards in a royal
palace. They showed themselves in their visible forms also to saint Joseph; for on this
occasion it was befitting that he should enjoy such a favor, on the one hand in order to
assuage his sorrow by allowing him to behold this poor lodging thus beautified and adorned
by their celestial presence, and on the other, in order to enliven and encourage him for
the events which the Lord intended to bring about during that night, and in this forsaken
place. The great Queen and Empress, who was already informed of the mystery to be
transacted here, set about cleaning with her own hands the cave, which was so soon to
serve as a royal throne and sacred mercy-seat; for neither did She want to miss this
occasion for exercising her humility, nor would She deprive her onlybegotten Son of the
worship and reverence implied by this preparation and cleansing of his temple.
Saint Joseph, mindful of the majesty of his heavenly Spouse (which, it
seemed to him, She was forgetting in her ardent longing for humiliation), besought Her not
to deprive Him of this work, which he considered as his alone; and he hastened to set
about cleaning the floor and the corners of the cave, although the humble Queen continued
to assist him therein. As the angels were then present in visible forms, they were
(according to our mode of speaking) abashed at such eagerness for humiliation, and they
speedily emulated with each other to join in this work; or rather, in order to say it more
succinctly, in the shortest time possible they had cleansed and set in order that cave,
filling it with holy fragrance. Saint Joseph started a fire with the material which he had
brought for that purpose. As it was very cold, they sat at the fire in order to get warm.
They partook of the food which they had brought, and they ate this, their frugal
supper, with incomparable joy of their souls. The Queen of heaven was so absorbed and
taken up with the thought of the impending mystery of her divine delivery, that She would
not have partaken of food if She had not been urged thereto by obedience to her spouse.
After their supper they gave thanks to the Lord as was their custom.
Having spent a short time in this prayer and conferring about the mysteries of the
incarnate Word, the most prudent Virgin felt the approach of the most blessed Birth. She
requested her spouse saint Joseph to betake himself to rest and sleep as the night was
already far advanced. The man of God yielded to the request of his Spouse and urged Her to
do the same; and for this purpose he arranged and prepared a sort of couch with the
articles of wear in their possession, making use of a crib or manger, that had been left
by the shepherds for their animals. Leaving most holy Mary in the portion of the
cave thus furnished, saint Joseph retired to a corner of the entrance, where he began to
pray. He was immediately visited by the divine Spirit and felt a most sweet and
extraordinary influence, by which he was wrapt and elevated into an ecstasy. In it was
shown him all that passed during that night in this blessed cave; for he did not return to
consciousness until his heavenly Spouse called him. Such was the sleep which saint Joseph
enjoyed in that night, more exalted and blessed than that of Adam in paradise (Gen. 21,
2).
The Queen of all creatures was called from her resting-place by a loud
voice of the Most High, which strongly and sweetly raised Her above all created things and
caused Her to feel new effects of divine power; for this was one of the most singular and
admirable ecstasies of her most holy life. Immediately also She was filled with new
enlightenment and divine influences, such as I have described in other places, until She
reached the clear vision of the Divinity. The veil fell and She saw intuitively the
Godhead itself in such glory and plenitude of insight, as all the capacity of men and
angels could not describe or fully understand. All the knowledge of the Divinity and
humanity of her most holy Son, which She had ever received in former visions was renewed
and, moreover, other secrets of the inexhaustible archives of the bosom of God were
revealed to Her. I have not ideas or words sufficient and adequate for expressing what I
have been allowed to see of these sacraments by the divine light; and their abundance and
multiplicity convince me of the poverty and want of proper expression in created language.
The Most High announced to his Virgin Mother, that the time of his
coming into the world had arrived and what would be the manner in which this was now to be
fulfilled and executed. The most prudent Lady perceived in this vision the purpose and
exalted scope of these wonderful mysteries and sacraments, as well in so far as related to
the Lord himself as also in so far as they concerned creatures, for whose benefit they had
been primarily decreed. She prostrated Herself before the throne of his Divinity and gave
Him glory, magnificence, thanks and praise for Herself and for all creatures, such as was
befitting the ineffable mercy and condescension of his divine love. At the same time She
asked of the divine Majesty new light and grace in order to be able worthily to undertake
the service and worship and the rearing up of the Word made flesh, whom She was to bear in
Her arms and nourish with her virginal milk. This petition the heavenly Mother brought
forward with the profoundest humility, as one who understood the greatness of this new
sacrament. She held Herself unworthy of the office of rearing up and conversing as a
Mother with a God incarnate of which even the highest seraphim are incapable. Prudently
and humbly did the Mother of wisdom ponder and weigh this matter. And because She humbled
Herself to the dust and acknowledged her nothingness in the presence of the Almighty,
therefore his Majesty raised Her up and confirmed anew upon Her the title of Mother of
God. He commanded Her to exercise this office and ministry of a legitimate and true
Mother of Himself; that She should treat Him as the Son of the eternal Father and at the
same time the Son of her womb. All this could be easily entrusted to such a Mother, in
whom was contained an excellence that words cannot express.
The most holy Mary remained in this ecstasy and beatific vision for
over an hour immediately preceding her divine delivery. At the moment when She issued from
it and regained the use of her senses She felt and saw that the body of the infant God
began to move in her virginal womb; how, releasing and freeing Himself from the place
which in the course of nature He had occupied for nine months, He now prepared to issue
forth from that sacred bridal chamber. This movement not only did not cause any pain or
hardship, as happens with the other daughters of Adam and Eve in their childbirths; but
filled Her with incomparable joy and delight, causing in her soul and in her virginal body
such exalted and divine effects that they exceed all thoughts of men. Her body became so
spiritualized with the beauty of heaven that She seemed no more a human and earthly
creature. Her countenance emitted rays of light, like a sun incarnadined, and shone in
indescribable earnestness and majesty, all inflamed with fervent love. She was kneeling in
the manger, her eyes raised to heaven, her hands joined and folded at her breast, her soul
wrapped in the Divinity and She herself was entirely deified. In this position, and at the
end of the heavenly rapture, the most exalted Lady gave to the world the Onlybegotten of
the Father and her own, our Savior Jesus, true God and man, at the hour of midnight, on a
Sunday, in the year of the creation of the world five thousand one hundred and ninety-nine
(5199), which is the date given in the Roman Church, and which date has been manifested to
me as the true and certain one.
At the end of the beatific rapture and vision of the Mother ever
Virgin, which I have described above, was born the Sun of Justice, the Onlybegotten of the
eternal Father and of Mary most pure, beautiful, refulgent and immaculate, leaving Her
untouched in her virginal integrity and purity and making Her more godlike and forever
sacred; for He did not divide, but penetrated the virginal chamber as the rays of the sun
penetrate the crystal shrine, lighting it up in prismatic beauty.
The infant God therefore was brought forth from the virginal chamber
unencumbered by any corporeal material substance foreign to Himself. But He came forth
glorious and transfigured for the divine infinite wisdom decreed and ordained that the
glory of his most holy soul should in his Birth overflow and communicate itself to his
body, participating in the gifts of glory in the same way as happened afterwards in his
Transfiguration on mount Tabor in the presence of the Apostles (Matth. 17, 2). This
miracle was not necessary in order to penetrate the virginal enclosure and to leave
unimpaired the virginal integrity; for without this Transfiguration God could have brought
this about by other miracles. Thus say the holy doctors, who see no other miracle in this
Birth than that the Child was born without impairing the virginity of the Mother. It was
the will of God that the most b1essed Virgin should look upon the body of her Son, the
God-man, for this first time in a glorified state for two reasons. The one was in order
that by this divine vision the most prudent Mother should conceive the highest reverence
for the Majesty of Him whom She was to treat as her Son, the true God-man. Although She
was already informed of his two-fold nature, the Lord nevertheless ordained that by ocular
demonstration She be filled with new graces, corresponding to the greatness of her most
holy Son, which was thus manifested to Her in a visible manner. The second reason was to
reward by this wonder the fidelity and holiness of the divine Mother; for her most pure
and chaste eyes, that had turned away from all earthly things for love of her most holy
Son, were to see Him at his very Birth in this glory and thus be rejoiced and rewarded for
her loyalty and beautiful love.
The sacred evangelist Luke tells us that the Mother Virgin, having
brought forth her firstbegotten Son, wrapped Him in swathing clothes and placed Him in a
manger. He does not say that She received Him in her arms from her virginal womb; for this
did not pertain to the purpose of his narrative. But the two sovereign princes, saint
Michael and saint Gabriel, were the assistants of the Virgin on this occasion. They stood
by at proper distance in human corporeal forms at the moment when the incarnate Word,
penetrating the virginal chamber by divine power, issued forth to the light, and they
received Him in their hands with ineffable reverence. In the same manner as a priest
exhibits the sacred host to the people for adoration, so these two celestial ministers
presented to the divine Mother her glorious and refulgent Son. All this happened in a
short space of time. In the same moment in which the holy angels thus presented the divine
Child to his Mother, both Son and Mother looked upon each other, and in this look, She
wounded with love the sweet Infant and was at the same time exalted and transformed in
Him. From the arms of the holy princes the Prince of all the heavens spoke to his holy
Mother: "Mother, become like unto Me, since on this day, for the human
existence, which thou hast today given Me, I will give thee another more exalted existence
in grace, assimilating thy existence as a mere creature to the likeness of Me, who am God
and Man." The most prudent Mother answered : "Trahe me post Te, curremus in
odorem unguentorum tuorum" (Cant. 1, 3). Raise me, elevate me, Lord, and I will run
after Thee in the odor of thy ointments. In the same way many of the hidden mysteries of
the Canticles were fulfilled; and other sayings which passed between the infant God and
the Virgin Mother had been recorded in that book of songs, as for instance: "My
Beloved to me, and I to Him, and his desire is toward me" (Cant. 2, 16).
"Behold thou art beautiful, my friend, and thy eyes are dove's eyes. Behold, my
beloved, for thou art beautiful"; and many other sacramental words which to mention
would unduly prolong this chapter.
The words, which most holy Mary heard from the mouth of her most holy
Son, served to make Her understand at the same time the interior acts of his holiest soul
united with the Divinity; in order that by imitating them She might become like unto Him.
This was one of the greatest blessings, which the most faithful and fortunate Mother
received at the hands of her Son, the true God and man, not only because it was continued
from that day on through all her life, but because it furnished Her the means of copying
his own divine life as faithfully as was possible to a mere creature. At the same time the
heavenly Lady perceived and felt the presence of the most holy Trinity, and She heard the
voice of the eternal Father saying: "This is my beloved Son, in whom I am greatly
pleased and delighted" (Matth. 17, 5). The most prudent Mother made entirely god-like
in the overflow of so many sacraments, answered: "Eternal Father and exalted God,
Lord and Creator of the universe, give me anew thy permission and benediction to receive
in my arms the Desired of nations (Agg. 2, 8); and teach me to fulfill as thy unworthy
Mother and lowly slave, thy holy will." Immediately She heard a voice, which said:
"Receive thy Onlybegotten Son, imitate Him and rear Him; and remember, that thou must
sacrifice Him when I shall demand it of thee." The divine Mother answered:
"Behold the creature of thy hands, adorn me with thy grace so that thy Son and my God
receive me for his slave; and if Thou wilt come to my aid with thy Omnipotence, I shall be
faithful in his service; and do Thou count it no presumption in thy insignificant
creature, that she bear in her arms and nourish at her breast her own Lord and
Creator."
After this interchange of Words, so full of mysteries, the divine Child
suspended the miracle of his transfiguration, or rather He inaugurated the other miracle,
that of suspending the effects of glory in his most holy body, confining them solely to
his soul; and He now assumed the appearance of one capable of suffering. In this form the
most pure Mother now saw Him and, still remaining in a kneeling position and adoring Him
with profound humility and reverence, She received him in her arms from the hands of the
holy angels. And when She saw Him in her arms, She spoke to Him and said: "My
sweetest Love and light of my eyes and being of my soul, Thou hast arrived in good hour
into this world as the Sun of justice (Malach. 4, 2), in order to disperse the darkness of
sin and death! True God of the true God, save thy servants and let all flesh see him, who
shall draw upon it salvation (Is. 9, 2). Receive me thy servant as thy slave and supply my
deficiency, in order that I may properly serve Thee. Make me, my Son, such as Thou
desirest me to be in thy service." Then the most prudent Mother turned toward the
eternal Father to offer up to Him his Onlybegotten, saying: "Exalted Creator of all
the Universe, here is the altar and the sacrifice acceptable in thy eyes (Malachy 3, 4).
From this hour on, O Lord, look upon the human race with mercy and inasmuch as we have
deserved thy anger, it is now time that Thou be appeased in thy Son and mine. Let thy
justice now come to rest, and let thy mercy be exalted; for on this account the Word has
clothed itself in the semblance of sinful flesh (Rom. 8, 3), and became a Brother of
mortals and sinners (Philip 2, 7). In this title I recognize them as brothers and I
intercede for them from my inmost soul. Thou, Lord, hast made me the Mother of thy
Onlybegotten without my merit, since this dignity is above all merit of a creature; but I
partly owe to men the occasion of this incomparable good fortune since it is on their
account that I am the Mother of the Word made man and Redeemer of them all. I will not
deny them my love, or remit my care and watchfulness for their salvation. Receive, eternal
God, my wishes and petitions for that which is according to thy pleasure and good
will."
The Mother of mercy turned also toward all mortals and addressed them,
saying: "Be consoled ye afflicted and rejoice ye disconsolate, be raised up ye
fallen, come to rest ye uneasy. Let the just be gladdened and the saints be rejoiced; let
the heavenly spirits break out in new jubilee, let the Prophets and Patriarchs of limbo
draw new hope, and let all the generations praise and magnify the Lord, who renews his
wonders. Come, come ye poor; approach ye little ones, without fear, for in my arms I bear
the Lion made a lamb, the Almighty, become weak, the Invincible subdued. Come to draw
life, hasten to obtain salvation, approach to gain eternal rest, since
I have all this for all, and it will be given to you freely and communicated to you
without envy. Do not be slow and heavy of heart, ye sons of men; and Thou, O sweetest joy
of my soul, give me permission to receive from Thee that kiss desired by all creatures.
Therewith the most blessed Mother applied her most chaste and heavenly lips in order to
receive the loving caresses of the divine Child, who on his part, as her true Son, had
desired them from Her.
Holding Him in Her arms She thus served as the altar and the sanctuary,
where the ten thousand angels adored in visible human forms their Creator incarnate. And
as the most blessed Trinity assisted in an especial manner at the birth of the Word,
heaven was as it were emptied of its inhabitants, for the whole heavenly court had betaken
itself to that blessed cave of Bethlehem and was adoring the Creator in his garb and habit
of a pilgrim (Phil. 2, 7). And in their concert of praise the holy angels intoned the new
canticle: "Gloria in excelsis Deo, et in terra pax hominibus bonae voluntatis"
(Luke 2, 14). In sweetest and sonorous harmony they repeated it, transfixed in wonder at
the new miracles then being fulfilled and at the unspeakable prudence, grace, humility and
beauty of that tender Maiden of fifteen years, who had become the worthy Trustee and
Minister of such vast and magnificent sacraments.
It was now time to call saint Joseph, the faithful spouse of the most
discreet and attentive Lady. As I have said above he was wrapped in ecstasy, in which he
was informed by divine revelation of all the mysteries of this sacred Birth during this
night. But it was becoming that he should see, and, before all other mortals, should in
his corporeal faculties and senses be present and experience, adore and reverence the Word
made flesh; for he of all others had been chosen to act as the faithful warden of this
great sacrament. At the desire of his heavenly Spouse he issued from his ecstasy and, on
being restored to consciousness, the first sight of his eyes was the divine Child in the
arms of the Virgin Mother reclining against her sacred countenance and breast. There he
adored Him in profoundest humility and in tears of joy. He kissed his feet in great joy
and admiration, which no doubt would have taken away and destroyed life in him, if divine
power had not preserved it; and he certainly would have lost all the use of his senses, if
the occasion had permitted. When saint Joseph had begun to adore the Child, the most
prudent Mother asked leave of her Son to arise (for until then She had remained on her
knees) and, while saint Joseph handed Her the wrappings and swaddling-clothes, which She
had brought, She clothed Him with incomparable reverence, devotion and tenderness. Having
thus swathed and clothed Him, his Mother, with heavenly wisdom, laid Him in the crib, as
related by saint Luke (Luke 2, 7). For this purpose She had arranged some straw and hay
upon a stone in order to prepare for the God-Man his first resting-place upon earth next
to that which He had found in her arms. According to divine ordainment an ox from the
neighboring fields ran up in great haste and, entering the cave, joined the beast of
burden brought by the Queen. The blessed Mother commanded them, with what show of
reverence was possible to them to acknowledge and adore their Creator. The humble animals
obeyed their Mistress and prostrated themselves before the Child, warming Him with their
breath and rendering Him the service refused by men. And thus the God made man was placed
between two animals, wrapped in swaddling-clothes and wonderfully fulfilling the prophecy,
that "the ox knoweth his owner, and the ass his master's crib; but Israel hath not
known me, and my people hath not understood." (Is. 13.)
WORDS OF THE QUEEN.
My daughter, if men would keep their heart disengaged and if they would
rightly and worthily consider this great sacrament of the kindness of the Most high
towards men, it would be a powerful means of conducting them in the pathway of life and
subjecting them to the love of their Creator and Redeemer. For as men are capable of
reasoning, if they would only make use of their freedom to treat this sacrament with the
reverence due to its greatness, who would be so hardened as not to be moved to tenderness
at the sight of their God become man, humiliated in poverty, despised, unknown, entering
the world in a cave, lying in a manger surrounded by brute animals, protected only by a
poverty-stricken Mother, and cast off by the foolish arrogance of the world? Who will dare
to love the vanity and pride, which was openly abhorred and condemned by the Creator of
heaven and earth in his conduct? No one can despise the humility, poverty and indigence,
which the Lord loved and chose for Himself as the very means of teaching the way of
eternal life. Few there are, who stop to consider this truth and example: and on account
of this vile ingratitude only the few will reap the fruit of these great sacraments.
But if the condescension of my most holy Son was so great as to bestow
so liberally upon thee his light and knowledge concerning these vast blessings, ponder
well how much thou art bound to co-operate with this light. In order that thou mayest
correspond to this obligation, I remind and exhort thee to forget all that is of earth and
lose it out of thy sight; that thou seek nothing, or engage thyself with nothing except
what can help thee to withdraw and detach thee from the world and its inhabitants
so that, with a heart freed from all terrestrial affection, thou dispose thyself to
celebrate in it the mysteries of the poverty, humility and divine love of the incarnate
God. Learn from my example the reverence, fear and respect, with which thou must treat
Him, remembering how I acted, when I held Him in my arms; follow my example, whenever thou
receivest Him in thy heart in the venerable sacrament of the holy Eucharist, wherein is
contained the same God-Man, who was born of my womb. In this holy Sacrament thou receivest
Him and possessest Him just as really, and He remains in thee just as actually, as I
possessed Him and conversed with Him, although in another manner.
I desire that thou go even to extremes in this holy reverence and fear;
and I wish that thou take notice and be convinced, that in entering into thy heart in the
holy Sacrament, thy God exhorts thee in the same words, which thou hast recorded as spoken
to me: become like unto Me. His coming down from heaven onto the earth, his being born in
humility and poverty, his living and dying in it, giving such rare example of the contempt
of the world and its deceits; the knowledge, which thou hast received concerning his
conduct and which thou hast penetrated so deeply by divine intelligence: all these things
should be for thee like living voices, which thou must heed and inscribe into the interior
of thy heart. These privileges have all been granted to thee in order that thou discreetly
use the common blessings to their fullest extent, and in order that thou mayest
understand, how thankful thou must be to my most holy Son and Lord, and how thou
shouldst strive to make as great a return for his goodness, as if He had come from heaven
to redeem thee alone and as if He had instituted all his wonders and doctrines in the holy
Church for none else than thee (Gal. 7, 12).
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