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CHAPTER III
THE LAST SUPPER.
Christ had partaken of the prescribed supper with his
disciples reclining on the floor around a table, which was elevated from it
little more than the distance of six or seven fingers; for such was the custom
of the Jews. But after the washing of the feet He ordered another, higher table
to be prepared, such as we now use for our meals. By this arrangement He wished
to put an end to the legal suppers and to the lower and figurative law and
establish the new Supper of the law of grace. From that time on He wished the
sacred mysteries to be performed on the tables or altars, which are in use in
the Catholic Church. The table was covered with a very rich cloth and upon it
was placed a plate or salver and a large cup in the form of a chalice, capacious
enough to hold the wine. All this was done in pursuance of the will of Christ
our Savior, who by his divine power and wisdom directed all these particulars.
The master of the house was inspired to offer these rich vessels, which were
made of what seemed a precious stone like emerald. The Apostles often used it
afterwards in consecrating, whenever the occasion permitted it. The Lord seated
himself at this table with the Apostles and some of the other disciples, and
then ordered some unleavened bread to be placed on the table and some wine to be
brought, of which He took sufficient to prepare the chalice.
Then the Master of life spoke words of most endearing love to
his Apostles, and, though his sayings were wont to penetrate to the inmost heart
at all times, yet on this occasion they were like the flames of a great fire of
charity, which consumed the souls of his hearers. He manifested to them anew the
most exalted mysteries of his Divinity, humanity and of the works of the
Redemption. He enjoined upon them peace and charity, of which He was now to
leave a pledge in the mysteries about to be celebrated. He reminded them, that
in loving one another, they would be loved by the eternal Father with the same
love in which He was beloved. He gave them an understanding of the fulfillment
of this promise having chosen them to found the new Church and the law of grace.
He renewed in them the light concerning the supreme dignity, excellence and
prerogatives of his most pure Virgin Mother.
Thereupon Christ our Lord took into his venerable hands the
bread, which lay upon the plate, and interiorly asked the permission and
co-operation of the eternal Father, that now and ever afterwards in virtue of
the words about to be uttered by Him, and later to be repeated in his holy
Church, He should really and truly become present in the host, Himself to yield
obedience to these sacred words. While making this petition He raised his eyes
toward heaven with an expression of such sublime majesty, that He inspired the
Apostles, the angels and his Virgin Mother with new and deepest reverence. Then
He pronounced the words of consecration over the bread, changing its substance
into the substance of his true body and immediately thereupon He uttered the
words of consecration also over the wine, changing it into his true blood. As an
answer to the these words of consecration was heard the voice of the eternal
Father, saying: "This is my beloved Son, in whom I delight, and shall take
my delight to the end of the world; and He shall be with men during all the time
of their banishment." In like manner was this confirmed by the Holy Ghost.
The most sacred humanity of Christ, in the Person of the Word, gave tokens of
profoundest veneration to the Divinity contained in the Sacrament of his body
and blood. The Virgin Mother, in her retreat prostrated Herself on the ground
and adored her Son in the blessed Sacrament with incomparable reverence. Then
also the angels of her guard, all the angels of heaven, and among them likewise
the souls of Enoch and Elias, in their own name and in the name of the
Patriarchs and Prophets of the old law, fell down in adoration of their Lord in
the holy Sacrament.
All the Apostles and disciples, who, with the exception of
the traitor, believed in this holy Sacrament, adored it with great humility and
reverence according to each one's disposition. The great high priest Christ
raised up his own consecrated body and blood in order that all who were present
at this first Mass might adore it in a special manner, as they also did. During
this elevation his most pure Mother, saint John, Enoch and Elias, were favored
with an especial insight into the mystery of his presence in the sacred species.
They understood more profoundly, how, in the species of the bread, was contained
his body and in those of the wine, his blood; how in both, on account of the
inseparable union of his soul with his body and blood, was present the living
and true Christ; how with the Person of the Word, was also therein united the
Person of the Father and of the Holy Ghost; and how therefore, on account of the
inseparable existence and union of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, the holy
Eucharist contained the perfect humanity of the Lord with the three divine
Persons of the Godhead. All this was understood most profoundly by the heavenly
Lady and by the others according to their degree. They understood also the
efficacy of the words of the consecration, now endowed with such divine virtue,
that as soon as they are pronounced with the intention of doing what Christ did
at that time, by any priest since that time over the proper material, they would
change the bread into his body and the wine into his blood, leaving the
accidents to subsist in a new way and without their proper subject. They saw,
that this change would take place so certainly and infallibly that heaven and
earth would sooner fall to pieces, than that the effect of these words of
consecration, when pronounced in the proper manner by the sacerdotal minister of
Christ, should ever fail.
The heavenly Queen understood also by a special vision how
the most sacred body of Christ is hidden beneath the accidents of bread and wine
without change in them or alteration of the sacred humanity; for neither can the
Body be the subject of the accidents, nor can the accidents be the form of the
body. The accidents retain the same extension and qualities as before, and each
of their parts retain the same position after the host has been consecrated; and
the sacred body is present in an invisible form, also retaining the same size
without intermingling of parts. It remains in the whole host, and all of it in
every particle of the host, without being strained by the host, or the host by
the body. For neither is the extension of his body correlative with the
accidental species, nor do they depend upon the sacred body for their existence.
They therefore have a totally different mode of existence and the body
interpenetrates the accidents without hindrance.
Still greater was my admiration when Jesus our God, having
raised the most holy Sacrament, as I said before, for their adoration, divided
it by his own sacred hands, first partook of it himself as being the First and
chief of all the priests. Recognizing himself, as man, inferior to the Divinity,
which He was now to receive in this his own consecrated body and blood. He
humiliated and, as it were, with a trembling of the inferior part of his being,
shrank within Himself before that Divinity, thereby not only teaching us the
reverence with which holy Communion is to be received ; but also showing us what
was his sorrow at the temerity and presumption of many men during the reception
and handling of this exalted and sublime Sacrament. The effects of holy
Communion in the body of Christ were altogether miraculous and divine; for
during a short space of time the gifts of glory flowed over in his body just as
on mount Tabor, though the effects of this transfiguration were manifest only to
his blessed Mother, and partly also to John, Enoch and Elias. This was the last
consolation He permitted his humanity to enjoy as to its inferior part during
his earthly life, and from that moment until his Death He rejected all such
alleviation. The Virgin Mother, by a special vision, also understood how Christ
her divine Son received Himself in the blessed Sacrament and what was the manner
of its presence in his divine Heart. All this caused inestimable affection in
our Queen and Lady.
While receiving his own body and blood Christ our Lord
composed a canticle of praise to the eternal Father and offered Himself in the
blessed Sacrament as a sacrifice for the salvation of man. He took another
particle of the consecrated bread and handed it to the archangel Gabriel who
brought and communicated it to the most holy Mary. By having such a privilege
conferred on one of their number, the holy angels considered themselves
sufficiently recompensed for being excluded from the sacerdotal dignity and for
yielding it to man. The privilege of merely having even one of their number hold
the sacramental body of their Lord and true God filled them with a new and
immense joy. In abundant tears of consolation the great Queen awaited holy
Communion. When saint Gabriel with innumerable other angels approached, She
received it, the first after her Son, imitating his self-abasement, reverence
and holy fear. The most blessed Sacrament was deposited in the breast and above
the heart of the most holy Virgin Mother, as in the most legitimate shrine and
tabernacle of the Most High. There the ineffable sacrament of the holy Eucharist
remained deposited from that hour until after the Resurrection, when saint Peter
said the first Mass and consecrated anew, as I shall relate in its place.
After having thus favored the heavenly Princess, our Savior
distributed the sacramental bread to the Apostles (Luke 22, 17), commanding them
to divide it among themselves and partake of it. By this commandment He
conferred upon them the sacerdotal dignity and they began to exercise it by
giving Communion each to Himself. This they did with the greatest reverence,
shedding copious tears and adoring the body and blood of our Lord, whom they
were receiving. They were established in the power of the priesthood, as being
founders of the holy Church and enjoying the distinction of priority over all
others (Ephes. 2, 20). Then saint Peter, at the command of Christ the Lord,
administered two of the particles of holy Communion to the two patriarchs, Enoch
and Elias. This holy Communion so rejoiced these two holy men, that they were
encouraged anew in their hope of the beatific vision, which for them was to be
deferred for so many ages, and they were strengthened to live on in this hope
until the end of the world. Having given most fervent and humble thanks to the
Almighty for this blessing, they were brought back to their abiding-place by the
hands of the holy angels. The Lord desired to work this miracle in order to
pledge Himself to include the ancient natural and written laws in the benefits
of the Incarnation, Redemption and general resurrection; since all these
mysteries were contained in the most holy Eucharist. By thus communicating
Himself to the two men, Enoch and Elias, who were still in their mortal flesh,
these blessings were extended over the human race such as it existed under the
natural and the written laws, while all the succeeding generations were to be
included in the new law of grace, the Apostles at the head. This was all well
understood by Enoch and Elias, and, returning to the midst of their
contemporaries, they gave thanks their and our Redeemer for this mysterious
blessing.
WORDS OF THE QUEEN.
O my daughter! Would that the believers in the Catholic faith
opened their hardened and stony hearts in order to attain to a true
understanding of the sacred and mysterious blessing of the holy Eucharist! If
they would only detach themselves, root out and reject their earthly
inclinations, and, restraining their passions, apply themselves with living
faith to study by the divine light their great happiness in thus possessing
their eternal God in the holy Sacrament and in being able, by its reception and
constant intercourse, to participate in the effects of this heavenly manna! If
they would only worthily esteem this precious gift, begin to taste its
sweetness, and share in the hidden power of their omnipotent God! Then nothing
would ever be wanting to them in their exile. In this, the happy age of the law
of grace, mortals have no reason to complain of their weakness and their
passions; since in this bread of heaven they have at hand strength and health.
It matters not that they are tempted and persecuted by the demon; for by receiving
this Sacrament frequently they are enabled to overcome him gloriously.
The faithful are themselves to blame for all their poverty and labors, since
they pay no attention to this divine mystery, nor avail themselves of the divine
powers, thus placed at their disposal by my most holy Son. I tell thee truly, my
dearest, that Lucifer and his demons have such a fear of the most holy
Eucharist, that to approach it, causes them more torments than to remain in hell
itself. Although they do enter churches in order to tempt souls, they enter them
with aversion, forcing themselves to endure cruel pains in the hope of
destroying a soul and drawing it into sin, especially in the holy places and in
the presence of the holy Eucharist. Their wrath against the Lord and against the
souls alone could induce them to expose themselves to the torment of his real
sacramental presence.
Whenever He is carried through the streets they usually fly
and disperse in all haste; and they would not dare to approach those that
accompany Him, if by their long experience they did not know, that they will
induce some to forget the reverence due to their Lord. Therefore they make
special efforts to tempt the faithful in the churches; for they know what great
injury they can thereby do to the Lord himself, who in his
sacramental love is there waiting to sanctify men and to receive the return of
his sweetest and untiring love. Hence thou canst also understand the strength of
those who prepare themselves to partake of this bread of the angels and how the
demons fear the souls, who receive the Lord worthily and devoutly and who strive
to preserve themselves in this purity until the next Communion. But there are
few who live with this intention, and the enemy is ceaselessly alert in striving
to throw them back into their forgetfulness, distraction and indifference, so
that he may not be obliged to encounter such powerful weapons in the hands of
men. Write this admonition in thy heart; and since without thy merit the
Almighty has ordained, that thou receive holy Communion daily, seek by all
possible means to preserve thyself in the good dispositions from one Communion
to the other. It is the will of the Lord and my own, that with this sword thou
fight the battles of the Almighty in the name of the holy Church against the
invisible enemies. For in our days they are heaping affliction and sorrow upon
the mistress of nations, while there is none to console her or to take it to
heart (Thren. 1, 10). Do thou thyself weep for the same reason and let thy heart
be torn in sorrow. But while the omnipotent and just Judge who is so greatly
incensed against the Catholics for having outraged his justice by their
unmeasurable and continual transgressions even under the aegis of their grand
faith, none are found to consider and weigh the fearful damage, nor to
approach the easy remedy of receiving the holy Eucharist with a contrite and
humble heart; nor does any one ask for my intercession.
Though all the children of the Church largely incur this
fault, yet more to be blamed are the unworthy and wicked priests; for by the
irreverence with which they treat the blessed Sacrament the other Catholics have
been drawn to undervalue it. If the people see their priests approach the divine
mysteries with holy fear and trembling, they learn to treat and receive their
God in like manner. Those that so honor Him shall shine in heaven like the sun
among the stars; for the glory of my divine Son's humanity will redound in a
special measure in those who have behaved well toward Him in the blessed
Sacrament and have received Him with all reverence; whereas this
will not happen to those who have not frequented this holy table with devotion.
Moreover the devout will bear on their breast, where they have so often harbored
the holy Eucharist, most beautiful and resplendent inscriptions, showing that
they were most worthy tabernacles of the holy Sacrament. This will be a great
accidental reward for them and a source of jubilation and admiration for the
holy angels and the rest of the blessed. They will also enjoy the special favor
of being able to penetrate deeper into the mystery of the presence of the Lord
in the sacrament and to understand all the rest of the wonders hidden therein.
This will be such a privilege, that it alone would suffice for their eternal
happiness, even if there were no other enjoyment in heaven. Moreover the
essential glory of those, who have worthily and devoutly received the holy
Eucharist, will in several respects exceed the glory of many martyrs who have
not received the body and blood of the Lord.
I wish thee also to hear, my dearest daughter from my own
mouth, what were my sentiments when in mortal life I was about to receive
holy Communion. In order that thou mayest better understand what I say, reflect
on all I have commanded thee to write about my gifts, merits and labors in life.
I was preserved from original sin and, at the instant of my Conception, received
the knowledge and vision of the Divinity, as thou hast often recorded. I knew
more than all saints; I surpassed the highest seraphim in love; I never
committed any fault; I constantly practiced all the virtues in a heroic degree
and in the least of them I was greater than all the saints in their highest
perfection; the intention and object of my actions were most exalted and my
habits and gifts were noble without measure; I imitated my most holy Son most
closely; I labored faithfully; I suffered with eagerness and co-operated with
the doings of the Lord exactly as was becoming to me; I ceased not to exercise
my love and gain new supereminent merits of grace. Yet I thought myself to have
been fully repaid by being allowed to receive Him even once in the holy
Eucharist; yea, I did not consider myself worthy of this one favor. Reflect then
what should be thy sentiments, and those of the rest of the children of Adam, on
being admitted to the reception of this admirable Sacrament. And if for the
greatest of saints one holy Communion is a superabundant reward, what must the
priests and the faithful think, when they are allowed to receive it so
frequently? Open thy eyes in the deep darkness and blindness which overwhelm men
around thee, and raise them up to the divine brightness in order to understand
these mysteries. Look upon all thy works as insufficient, all thy sufferings as
most insignificant, all thy thanksgiving as falling far short of what thou owest
for such an exquisite blessing as that of possessing in the holy Church, Christ
my divine Son, present in the holy Sacrament in order to enrich all the
faithful. If thou hast not wherewith to show thy thanks for this and the other
blessings which thou receivest, at least humiliate thyself to the dust and
remain prostrate upon it; confess thyself unworthy in all the sincerity of thy
heart. Magnify the Most High, bless and praise Him, preserving thyself at all
times worthy to receive Him and to suffer many martyrdoms in return for such a
favor.
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