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CHAPTER II.
SERMON OF THE APOSTLES. MARY'S CARE FOR THE CONVERTS.
On account of the visible and open signs, by which the Holy
Ghost descended upon the Apostles, the whole city of Jerusalem with its
inhabitants was stirred to wonder. When the news of the astounding events at the
house of the Cenacle spread about, the multitude of the people gathered in
crowds to know more of the happenings (Acts 2, 6). On that day was being
celebrated one of the paschs or feasts of the Jews; and as well on this account,
as on account of the special dispensation of heaven, the city was crowded with
foreigners and strangers from all parts of the world. For to them the Most High
wished to manifest the wonders of the first preaching and spreading of the new
law of grace, which the incarnate Word, our Redeemer and Master, had ordained
for the salvation of men.
The sacred Apostles, who were filled with charity by the
plenitude of the gifts of the Holy Ghost and who knew that all Jerusalem was
gathering at the doors of the Cenacle, asked permission of their Mistress and
Queen to go forth and preach to them; in order that such great graces might not
even for a moment fail to redound to the benefit of souls and to new
glory of their Author. They all left the house of the Cenacle and, placing
themselves before the multitudes, began to preach the mysteries of the faith and
of eternal life. Though until then they had been so shy and seclusive, they now
stepped forth with unhesitating boldness and poured forth burning words, that
like a flashing fire penetrated to the souls of their hearers.
This miracle, that all the men of so many different tongues
then assembled in Jerusalem should hear the Apostles in their own language,
joined to the doctrine which they preached, caused great astonishment. Yet I
wish to remark, that though all the Apostles, on account of the plenitude of
science and of gifts gratuitously received, were able to speak in the languages
of all nations, because that was necessary for the preaching of the Gospel, yet
on that occasion they all spoke the language of Palestine. Using only this idiom
they were understood by all the different nationalities there present, as if
they had spoken in the several idioms. This miracle the Lord wrought at the time
in order that they might be understood and believed by those different nations,
and in order that saint Peter might not be obliged to repeat in the different
languages of those present, what he preached to them concerning the mysteries of
faith. He preached only once and all heard and understood him, each in his
own language, and so it happened also with the other Apostles. For if each one
had spoken in the language of those who heard them, and which they knew as their
mother tongue, it would have been necessary for them to repeat what they said at
least seven or eight times according to the different nationalities mentioned by
saint Luke (Acts 2, 9). This would have consumed a longer time than is
intimated by the sacred text, and it would have caused great confusion
and trouble to repeat the same doctrines over and over again or to speak so many
languages on one occasion; nor would the miracle be so intelligible to us as the
one mentioned.
The people who heard the Apostles did not understand the
miracle, although they wondered at hearing each their own idiom. What saint Luke
says about their speaking different languages, must be understood as meaning,
that the Apostles were then and there able to understand them, as I shall
mention later on (Acts 2, 4), because on that day, those that came to the
Cenacle understood them all speaking in their own language. But this miracle and
wonderment caused in their hearers different effects and opinions, according to
the dispositions of each one. Those that listened piously received deep
understanding of the Divinity and of the Redemption of man, now so eloquently
and fervently propounded to them. They were moved eagerly to desire the
knowledge of the truth; by the divine light they were filled with compunction
and sorrow for their sins and with desire of divine mercy and forgiveness. With
tears in their eyes they cried out to the Apostles and asked what they must do
to gain eternal life. Others, who hardened their hearts, altogether untouched by
the divine truths preached by them, became indignant at the Apostles, and
instead of yielding to them, called them innovators and adventurers. Many of the
Jews, more impious in their perfidy and envy, inveighed against the Apostles,
saying they were drunk and insane (Acts 2, 13). Among these were some of those
who had again come to their senses after having fallen to the ground at the
thunder caused by the coming of the Holy Ghost;
The three thousand, who were converted by the first sermon of
saint Peter, were from all the nations then gathered in Jerusalem, so that
forthwith all nations, without excluding any, might partake of the fruits of the
Redemption, all might be gathered to the Church, and all might experience the
grace of the Holy Spirit; for the holy Church was to be composed of all nations
and tribes. Many were Jews, who had followed Christ our Savior with kindly
feelings and witnessed his sufferings and Death with compassion, as I said
above. Some also of those, who had concurred in his Passion were converted,
though these were few, because many would not alter their disposition; for, if
they had done so, all of them would have been admitted to mercy and received
pardon for their error. After their preaching the Apostles retired that evening
within the Cenacle, in order to give an account to the Mother of mercy, the
purest Mary. With them also entered a great number of the new children of the
Church, in order that they might come to know and venerate the Mother of mercy.
But the great Queen of the angels was ignorant of nothing
that had happened; for from her retreat She had heard the preaching of the
Apostles and She knew the secret hearts and thoughts of all the hearers. The
tenderest Mother remained prostrate with her face upon the ground during the
whole time, tearfully praying for the conversion of all that subjected
themselves to the faith of the Savior, and for all the rest, if they should
consent to cooperate with the helps and the graces of the Lord. In order to help
the Apostles in their great work of beginning to preach, and the bystanders in
properly listening to them, the most holy Mary sent many of her
accompanying angels with holy inspirations, encouraging the sacred Apostles and
giving them strength to inquire and to manifest more explicitly the hidden
mysteries of the humanity and Divinity of Christ our Redeemer. The angels
fulfilled all the commands of their Queen, while She Herself exercised her own
power and gifts according to the circumstances of the occasion. When the
Apostles came to Her with those copious first-fruits of their preaching and of
the Holy Ghost, She received them with incredible joy and sweetness and with the
most loving kindness of a true Mother.
The Apostle saint Peter spoke to the recently converted and
said to them: "My brethren, and servants of the Most High, this is the
Mother of our Redeemer and Master, Jesus Christ, whose faith you have received
in acknowledging Him as true God and man. She has given Him the human form,
conceiving Him in her womb, and She bore Him, remaining a Virgin before, during
and after his birth. Receive Her as your Mother, our Refuge and Intercessor, for
through Her you and we shall receive light, direction, and release from our sins
and miseries." At these words of the Apostle and at the sight of most holy
Mary these new adherents of the faith were filled with admirable light
and consolation; for this privilege of conferring great interior blessings and
of giving light to those who looked upon Her with pious veneration, was renewed
and extended in Her time when She was at the right hand of her divine Son in
heaven. As all of those faithful partook of these blessings in the presence of
their Queen, they prostrated themselves at her feet and with tears besought her
assistance and blessing. But the humble and prudent Queen evaded this latter,
because of the presence of the Apostles, who were priests, and of saint Peter,
the Vicar of Christ. Then this Apostle said to Her "Lady, do not refuse to
these faithful what they piously ask for the consolation their souls." The
blessed Mary obeyed the head of the Church and in humble serenity of a Queen She
gave her blessing to the newly converted.
The love which filled their hearts made them desire to hear
from their heavenly Mother some words of consolation; yet their humility and
reverence prevented them from asking for this favor. As they perceived how
obediently She had yielded to saint Peter, they turned to him and begged him to
ask Her not to send them away without some word of encouragement. Saint Peter
though he considered this favor very proper for the souls who had been born
again to Christ by his preaching and that of the other Apostles, nevertheless,
aware that the Mother of Wisdom knew well what was to be done, presumed to say
no more than these words; "Lady, listen to the petitions of thy servants
and children." Then the great Lady obeyed and said to the converts:
"My dearest brethren in the Lord, give thanks and praise with your whole
hearts to the Almighty God, because from among all men He has called and drawn
you to the sure path of eternal life in the knowledge of the holy faith you have
received. Be firm in your confession of it from all your hearts and in hearing
and believing all that the law of grace contains as preached and ordained by its
true Teacher Jesus, my Son and your Redeemer. Be eager to hear and obey his
Apostles, who teach and instruct you, so that you may be signed and marked
by Baptism in the character of children of the Most High. I offer myself as your
handmaid to assist you in all that serves toward your consolation, and I shall
ask Him to look upon you as a kind Father and to manifest to you the true joy of
his countenance, communicating to you also his grace."
By this sweetest of exhortations those new Children of the
Church were filled with consolation, light, veneration and admiration of what
they saw of the Mistress of the world; asking again for her blessing, they for
that day left her presence, renewed and replete with the wonderful gifts of the
Most High. The Apostles and disciples from that day on continued without
intermission their preaching and their miracles, and through the entire octave
they instructed not only the three thousand, who had been converted on Pentecost
day, but multitudes of others, who day by day accepted the faith. Since they
came from all parts of the world, they conversed and spoke with each one in his
own language; for as I have said above, they spoke in various languages from
that time on. This grace was given not only to the Apostles, although it
was more complete and noticeable in them; also the disciples and all the
one hundred and twenty, who were in the Cenacle at the time, and also the holy
women, who received the Holy Ghost, were thus favored. This was really necessary
at the time on account of the great multitudes, who came to the faith. Although
all the men and many of the women came to the Apostles, yet many, after having
heard them, went to Magdalen and her companions, who catechized,
instructed and converted them and others that came at the report of the miracles
they performed. For this gift was also conferred on the women, who, by the
imposition of hands, cured all the sicknesses, gave sight to the blind, tongue
to the mute, motion to the lame, and life to many of the dead. These and other
wonders were principally wrought by the Apostles, nevertheless both their
miracles and those of the women excited the wonder and astonishment of all
Jerusalem; so that nothing else was talked about except the prodigies and the
preaching of the Apostles of Jesus, of his disciples, and followers of his
doctrine.
This was the happy beginning and the golden age of the
evangelical Church, where the rushing of the stream rejoiced the city of
God (Ps. 45, 5) and the current of grace and the gifts of the Holy Ghost
fertilized this new paradise recently planted by the hands of the Savior Jesus,
while in its midst stood the tree of life, most holy Mary. Then was faith alive,
hope firm, charity ardent, sincerity pure, humility true, justice most
equitable, when the faithful neither knew avarice nor followed vanity, when they
trod under foot vain pomp, were free from covetousness, pride, ambition, which
later prevailed among the professors of the faith, who while confessing
themselves followers of Christ, denied Him in their works.
It will be possible in this third part to describe only a
minute portion of the wonderful and great works accomplished by the mighty Queen
in the primitive Church; but from those which I will describe, and from her life
in this world after the Ascension, much can be inferred. For She did not rest or
lose one moment or occasion of conferring some singular favor either upon
the whole Church or some of its members. For She consumed Herself either in
praying and beseeching her divine Son, without ever experiencing a refusal; or
in exhorting, instructing, counseling, and, as Treasurer and Dispenser of
the divine favors, distributing graces in diverse manners among the
children of the Gospel. Among the hidden mysteries, which were made known to me
concerning this power of the blessed Mary, was also this, that in those first
ages, during which She lived in the holy Church, the number of the damned was
proportionately very small; and that, comparatively, in those few years a
greater number were saved than in many succeeding ages.
I acknowledge, that, if the lapse of time had decreased the
power, the charity and clemency of that highest Sovereign, the good fortune of
those living in that happy time might cause a holy envy in those living by the
light of faith in our more protracted and less favored times. It is true we have
not the happiness of seeing Her, conversing with Her and listening to Her with
bodily senses; and in this respect those first children of the Church were more
fortunate. But let us all remember, that in the heavenly knowledge and charity
of this most loving Mother we were all present to Her, also during those times
(Vol. III, 78); for She saw and knew us all in the order and succession in which
we were be born in the Church; and She prayed and interceded for us no less than
for those who lived in her times. Nor is She at present less powerful in heaven,
than She was then upon earth; nor less our Mother, than of those first children;
and She held us as her own, just as well them. But alas! that our faith and our
fervor and devotion should be so very different! Not She has changed, nor is her
love less ardent, nor would we experience less of her intercession and
protection, if in troubled times we would hasten to her with the same sentiments
of humility and fervor, asking for her prayers and trustfully relying upon Her
for help, as was the case with those devoted Christians in the first beginning.
Without a doubt the whole Catholic Church would then immediately experience the
same assistance of the Queen throughout the whole world.
Many of those new faithful, highly impressed with her
greatness by their conversation with the heavenly Mistress, returned to present
to Her jewels and the richest gifts; especially the women despoiled themselves
of fineries to lay them at her feet. But She would receive or permit none of
these gifts. When it seemed to her appropriate not to refuse entirely, She
secretly inspired the minds of the givers to bring them to the Apostles, in
order that they might be equitably and justly distributed in charity among the
most poor and needy of the faithful. But the humble Mother gratefully
acknowledged them as if they had been given to Her. The poor and the sick
She received with ineffable kindness, and many of them she cured of inveterate
and long-standing infirmities. Through the hands of saint John She supplied many
secret wants, never omitting the least point of virtue. As the Apostles and
disciples were engaged all day in preaching the faith and in converting those
that came, the great Queen busied Herself in preparing their food and attending
to their comfort; and at stated times She served the priests on her knees and
with incredible humility and reverence asked to kiss their hands. This She
observed especially with the Apostles, knowing and beholding their souls
confirmed in grace, endowed with all that the Holy Ghost had wrought in them and
exalted by their dignity of being the highpriests and the founders of the Church
(Eph. 2, 20). Sometimes She saw them clothed in great splendor, which elicited
from Her increased reverence and veneration.
WORDS OF THE QUEEN.
My daughter, in what thou hast come to know of the events
related in this chapter, thou wilt find a great deal that points to the mystery
of the predestination of souls. Be convinced that, since the Redemption was so
overflowing and copious, it was sufficient for the salvation of all men (Rom. 5,
20). The divine truth was made known to all, whoever heard its preaching or who
saw the effects of the coming of the Godman into the world. Besides the outward
preaching and knowledge of the remedy, all received interior inspirations and
helps in order to seek and accept the means. You are surprised that, in spite of
all this, only three thousand were converted by the first sermon of the Apostle
among all that great multitude then in Jerusalem. It should cause a greater
surprise that in our times so few are converted to the way of eternal life, as
the Gospel is more widespread, its preaching is frequent, its ministers
numerous, the light of the Church clearer and the knowledge of the divine
mysteries more definite. With all this men are blinder, the hearts more
hardened, pride more inflated, avarice more bold, and all the vices are
practiced without fear of God and without consideration.
In this most perverse and unhappy state mortals cannot
complain of the most high and equitable providence of the Lord, who offers to
all and every one his fatherly mercy, and points out to them both the way of
life and the way of death; so that if any man hardens his heart, God can permit
it in strictest justice. The reprobate will have none but themselves to blame,
if afterwards, when there is no more time, they shall be uselessly dismayed with
what in opportune time they could and should have known. If in the short and
transient life, which is given to them in order to merit the eternal, they close
their eyes and ears to the truth and to the light, and if they listen to the
demon, giving themselves up to all the promptings of his malice; if they thus
abuse the goodness and clemency of the Lord, what can they then allege as their
excuse? If they do not know how to pardon an injury and for the slightest
offense meditate the direst vengeance; if, for the sake of increasing their
property, they pervert the entire order of reason and of natural brotherhood; if
for a passing delight they forget the eternal pains, and if, in addition to all
this, they despise the warnings, helps and admonitions sent to them by God to
inspire them with the fear of perdition and induce them to avoid it, how shall
they afterwards find fault with the divine clemency? Let then mortals, who have
sinned against God, undeceive themselves: without penance there shall be no
grace, without reform no pardon, without pardon no glory. But just as these are
not conceded to those that are unworthy, so they are also never denied to those
that are worthy; nor is ever the mercy of God withheld from any one who seeks to
obtain it.
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