CHAPTER II.
JESUS INSTRUCTS HIS MOTHER IN THE LAW OF GRACE
I have already said in former chapters, that our Lady was the
first and specially privileged Disciple of her most holy Son, chosen among all creatures
as the model of the new evangelical law and its Author, according to which He was to mould
all the saints of the new evangelical law and judge of all the results of the Redemption.
In regard to Her the incarnate Word proceeded like a most skillful artist, who understands
the art of painting and that pertains to it most thoroughly; who, throwing all powers into
one chosen work, seeks to gain from it alone renown and fame as from the full exposition
of his art. It is certain that all the holiness and glory of the saints was the result of
the love and merits of Christ: (Eph. 2, 3) but in comparison with the excellence of Mary
they seem insignificant and as it were only rough sketches; for in all the saints are
found defects (I John 1, 8). But this living image of the Onlybegotten was free from all
imperfections; and the first strokes of his pencil in Her were of greater beauty than the
last touches in the highest angels and saints. She is the model for all the perfection of
holiness and virtues of all his elect, and the utmost limit to which the love of Christ
can proceed in mere creatures. No one received any grace or glory that most holy Mary
could not receive, and She received all that others were incapable of receiving; and her
most blessed Son gave to Her all that She could receive and that He could communicate.
The multitude and variety of the saints silently enhance the Artificer
of their great sanctity, and the greatness of the highest is made more conspicuous by the
beauty of the lowest: but all of them together are a glorification of most holy Mary. For
by her incomparable holiness they are all surpassed and they all partake of so much the
greater felicity as they imitate Her, whose holiness redounds over all. If the most pure
Mary has reached the highest pinnacle in the ranks of the just, She may also on this very
account be considered as the instrument or the motive power through which the saints
themselves have reached their station. As we must judge of her excellence (even if only
from afar), by the labor which Christ the Lord applied for her formation, let us consider
what labor He spent upon Her and how much upon the whole Church. To establish and to
enrich his Church He deemed it sufficient to spend only three years in preaching,
selecting the Apostles, teaching the people, and inculcating the evangelical law by his
public life; and this was amply sufficient to accomplish the work enjoined upon Him by the
eternal Father and to justify and sanctify all the true believers. But in order to stamp
upon his most holy Mother the image of his holiness, He consumed not three years, but ten
times three years, engaging in this work with all the power of his divine love, without
ever ceasing hour after hour to add grace to grace, gifts to gifts, blessings to
blessings, and holiness to holiness. And at the end of all this He still left Her in a
state, in which He could continue to add excellence after his Ascension to his eternal
Father as I will describe in the third part. Our reason is unbalanced, our words fail at
the greatness of this incomparable Lady; for She is elect as the sun (Cant. 6, 9); and her
effulgence cannot be borne by terrestrial eyes, nor comprehended by any earthly creatures.
Christ our Redeemer began to manifest his designs in regard to his
heavenly Mother after they had come back from Egypt to Nazareth, as I have already
mentioned; from that time on He continued to follow up his purpose in his quality as
Teacher and as the divine Enlightener in all the mysteries of the Incarnation and
Redemption. After they returned from Jerusalem in his twelfth year, the great Queen had a
vision of the Divinity, not an intuitive vision, but one consisting of intellectual
images; one very exalted and full of the new influences of the Divinity and of the secrets
of the Most High. She was especially enlightened in regard to the decrees of the divine
Will concerning the law of grace, which was now established by the incarnate Word, and
concerning the power, which was given to Him in the consistory of the most blessed
Trinity. At the same time She saw for this purpose the eternal Father consigned to His Son
the seven-sealed book, of which saint John speaks (Apoc. 5, 1), and how none could be
found either in heaven or on earth, who could unseal and open it, until the Lamb broke its
seals by his Passion and Death and by his doctrines and merits. For in this figure God
wished to intimate, that the secret of this book was nothing else than the new law of the
Gospel and the Church founded upon it in this world.
Then the heavenly Queen saw in spirit that, by decree of the most
blessed Trinity, She was to be the first one to read and understand this book; that her
Onlybegotten was to open it for Her and manifest it all to Her, while She was to put it
perfectly into practice; that She was the first one, who was to accompany the Word, and
who was to occupy the first place next to Him on the way to heaven, which He had opened up
for mortals and traced out in this book. In Her, as his true Mother, was to be deposited
this new Testament. She saw how the Son of the eternal Father and of Herself accepted this
decree with great pleasure; and how his sacred humanity obeyed it with ineffable joy on
her account.
She issued from this ecstatic vision and betook Herself to her most
holy Son, prostrating Herself at his feet and saying: "My Lord, my Light and my
Teacher, behold thy unworthy Mother prepared for the fulfillment of thy wishes admit me
anew as thy disciple and servant and make use of me as the instrument of thy wisdom and
power. Execute in me thy pleasure and that of thy eternal Father." Her most holy Son
received Her with the majesty and authority of a divine Teacher and instructed Her in most
exalted mysteries. In most persuasive and powerful words He explained to Her the
profoundest meanings of the works enjoined upon Him by the eternal Father in regard to the
Redemption of man, the founding of the Church and the establishment of the new evangelical
law. He declared and reaffirmed, that in the execution of these high and hidden mysteries
She was to be his Companion and Coadjutrix, receiving and enjoying the first-fruits of
grace; and that therefore She, the most pure Lady, was to follow Him in his labors until
his death on the Cross with a magnanimous and well prepared heart in invincible and
unhesitating constancy. He added heavenly instruction such as enabled Her to prepare for
the reception of the whole evangelical Law, the understanding and practice of all its
precepts and counsels in their highest perfection. Other sacramental secrets concerning
his works in this world the Child Jesus manifested to his most blessed Mother on this
occasion. And the heavenly Lady met all his words and intentions with profound humility,
obedience, reverence, thanksgiving and most ardent love.
WORDS OF THE QUEEN
The Most High who in sheer goodness and bounty given existence
to all creatures and denies his providential care to none, faithfully supplies all souls
with light by which they can enter into the knowledge of Him and of eternal life provided
they do not of their own prevent and obscure this light by sin or give up the quest of the
kingdom of heaven. To the souls whom according to his secret judgments, He calls to his
Church, He shows himself still more liberal. For with the grace of Baptism He infuses into
them not only those virtues, which are called essentially infused and which the created
cannot merit by its own labors and efforts; but also those, which are accidentally infused
and which it can merit by its own labors and efforts. These the Lord gives freely
beforehand, in order that the soul may be more prepared zealous in the observance of his
holy Law. In other souls, in addition to the common light of faith, the Lord, in his
clemency grants supernatural gifts of knowledge and virtue for the better understanding of
the evangelical mysteries and for the more zealous practice of good works. In this kind of
gifts He has been more liberal with thee than with many generations; obliging thee thereby
to distinguish thyself in loving correspondence due to Him and to humble thyself
before Him to the very dust.
In order that thou mayest be well instructed and informed, I wish
to warn thee as a solicitous and loving Mother of the cunning of satan for the
destruction of these works of the Lord. From the very moment in which mortals begin to
have the use of their reason, each one of them is followed by many watchful and relentless
demons. For as soon as the souls are in a position to raise their thoughts to the
knowledge of their God and commence the practice of the virtues infused by Baptism, these
demons, with incredible fury and astuteness, seek to root out the divine seed; and if they
cannot succeed in this, they try to hinder its growth, and prevent it from bringing forth
fruit by engaging men in vicious, useless, or trifling things. Thus they divert their
thoughts from faith and hope and from the pursuit of other virtues, leading them to forget
that they are Christians and diverting their attention from the knowledge of God and from
the mysteries of the Redemption and of life eternal. Moreover the same enemy instills into
the parents a base neglectfulness and carnal love for their offspring; and he incites the
teachers to carelessness, so that the children find no support against evil in their
education, but become depraved and spoiled by many bad habits, losing sight of virtue and
of their good inclinations and going the way of perdition.
But the most kind Lord does not forget them in this danger and He
renews in them his holy inspirations and special helps. He supplies them with the holy
teachings of the Church by his preachers and ministers. He holds out to them the aid of
the Sacraments and many other inducements to keep them on the path of life. That those who
walk in the way of salvation are the smaller number, is due to the vice and depraved
habits imbibed in youth and nourished in childhood. For that saying of Deuteronomy is very
true: "As the days of thy youth, so also shall thy old age be" (Deut. 33, 25).
Hence the demons gain courage and increase their tyrannical influence over souls in the
early years of man's life, hoping that they will be able to induce men to commit so much
the greater and the more frequent sins in later years, the more they have succeeded in
drawing them into small insignificant faults in their childhood. By these they draw them
on to a state of blind presumption; for with each sin the soul loses more and more the
power of resistance, subjects itself to the demon, and falls under the sway of its
tyrannical enemies. The miserable yoke of wickedness is more and more firmly fastened upon
it; it is trodden underfoot by its own iniquity and urged onward under the sway of the
devil from one precipice to another, from abyss to abyss (Ps. 41, 8): a chastisement
merited by all those, that allow themselves to be overcome by evil-doing in the beginning.
By these means Lucifer has hurled into hell so great a number of souls and continues so to
hurl them every day, rising up in his pride against the Almighty. In this manner has he
been able to introduce into the world his tyrannical power, spreading among men
forgetfulness of death, judgment, heaven and hell, and casting so many nations from abyss
to abyss of darkness and bestial errors, such are contained in the heresies and false
sects of the infidels. Do thou therefore beware of this terrible danger, my daughter, and
let not the memory of the law of thy God, his precepts and commands, and the truths
of the Catholic Church and the doctrines of the Gospels ever fail in thy mind. Let not a
day pass in which thou dost not spend much time in meditating upon all these; and exhort
thy religious and all those who listen to thee the same. For thy enemy and adversary is
laboring with ceaseless vigilance to obscure thy understanding in forgetfulness of the
divine law, seeking to withdraw thy will, which is a blind faculty, from the practice of
justification. This, thou knowest, consists in acts of living faith, trustful hope, ardent
love, all coming from a contrite and humble heart (Ps. 50, 19).
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