The
Secret of Mary
By
Saint Louis DeMontfort
1.
Here is a secret, chosen soul, which the most High God taught me himself.
I have not found it in any book, ancient or modern.
Inspired by the Holy Spirit, I am confiding it to you, with these
conditions:
(1)
That you share it only with people who deserve to know it because they
are prayerful, give alms to the poor, do penance, suffer persecution, are
unworldly, and work seriously for the salvation of souls.
(2)
That you use this secret to become holy and worthy of heaven, for the
more you make use of it the more benefit you will derive from it.
Under no circumstances must you let this secret make you idle and
inactive. It would then become harmful and lead to your ruin.
(3)
That you thank God every day of your life for the grace he has given you
in letting you know a secret that you do not deserve to know.
As
you go on using this secret in the ordinary actions of your life, you will soon
come to understand its extraordinary value. At the beginning however, your
understanding of it will be clouded. It may not at first seem fitting to you. It
is lofty and mysterious. Only the truly chosen of God are able to understand how
important this secret really is. Your unconscious love of self may prove to be
an obstacle.
2.
Before you read any further, kneel down and devoutly say a prayer. Ask
God to help you understand and appreciate this secret given by him.
As I have not much time for writing and you have little time for reading,
I will be brief in what I have to say.
NECESSITY OF HAVING A
TRUE DEVOTION TO MARY
THE
GRACE OF GOD IS ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY
3.
Chosen soul, living image of God and redeemed by the precious blood of
Jesus Christ, God wants you to become holy like him in this life and glorious
like him in the next.
It
is certain that growth in the holiness of God is your vocation.
All your thoughts, words, actions, everything you suffer or undertake
must lead you towards that end. Otherwise
you are resisting God in not doing the work for which he created you and for
which he is even now keeping you in being.
What a marvelous transformation is possible!
Dust into light, uncleanness into purity, sinfulness into holiness,
creature into Creator, man into God! A
marvelous work, I repeat, so difficult in itself, and even impossible for a mere
creature to bring about, for only God can accomplish it by giving his grace
abundantly and in an extraordinary manner.
The very creation of the universe is not as great an achievement as this.
4.
Chosen soul, how will you bring this about?
What steps will you take to reach the high level to which God is calling
you? The means of holiness and
salvation are known to everybody, since they are found in the gospel; the
masters of the spiritual life have explained them; the saints have practiced
them and shown how essential they are for those who wish to be saved and attain
perfection. These means are sincere
humility, unceasing prayer, complete self-denial, abandonment to divine
Providence, and obedience to the will of God.
5.
The grace and help of God are absolutely necessary for us to practice all
these, but we are sure that grace will be given to all, though not in the same
measure. I say “not in the same
measure”, because God does not give his graces in equal measure to everyone,
although in his infinite goodness he always gives sufficient grace to each. A person who corresponds to great graces performs great
works, and one who corresponds to lesser graces performs lesser works.
The value and high standard of our actions corresponds to the value and
perfection of the grace given by God and responded to by the faithful soul.
No one can contest these principles.
TO
FIND THE GREATEST GRACES OF GOD, WE MUST FIND MARY
6
It all comes to this. We must discover a simple means to obtain the
greatest graces from God, which are needed to become truly holy.
It is precisely how to do this that I wish to teach you. You must first
discover the secret of Mary if you would obtain the greatest graces from God.
7.
Let me explain:
(1)
Mary alone found grace with God for herself and for every individual
person. No patriarch or prophet, or
any other holy person of the Old Law ever found this grace.
It
was given to her as a special privilege because she was chosen from the
foundation of the world to be the mother of God.
8.
(2) It was Mary who gave existence and life to the author of all grace,
and because of this she is called the “Mother of Grace”.
9.
(3) God the Father, from whom, as from its essential source, every
perfect gift and every grace come down to us, gave her every grace when he gave
her his Son. Thus, as St. Bernard
says, the will of God is manifested to her in Jesus and with Jesus.
10.
(4) God chose her to be the treasurer, the administrator and the
dispenser of all his graces, so that all his graces and gifts pass through her
hands. Such is the power that she
has received from him that, according to St. Bernardino, she gives the graces of
the eternal Father, the virtues of Jesus Christ, and the gifts of the Holy
Spirit to whom she wills, as and when she wills, and as much as she wills.
11.
(5) As in the natural life a child must have a father and a mother, so in
the supernatural life of grace a true child of the Church must have God for his
Father and Mary for his mother. If
he prides himself on having God for his Father but does not give to Mary the
tender affection of a true child, he is an impostor and his father is the devil.
12.
(6) Since Mary produced the head of the elect, Jesus Christ, she must
also produce the members of that head, that is, all true Christians.
A mother does not conceive a head without members, nor members without a
head. If anyone, then, wishes to
become a member of Jesus Christ, and consequently be filled with grace and
truth, he must be formed in Mary through the grace of Jesus Christ, which she
possesses with a fullness enabling her to communicate it abundantly to true
members of Jesus Christ, her true children.
13.
(7) The Holy Spirit espoused Mary and produced his greatest work, the
incarnate Word, in her, by her and through her.
He has never disowned her and so he continues to produce every day, in a
mysterious but very real manner, the souls of the elect in her and through her.
14.
(8) Mary received from God a unique dominion over souls enabling her to
nourish them and make them more and more godlike.
St. Augustine went so far as to say that even in this world all the elect
are enclosed in the womb of Mary, and that their real birthday is when this good
mother brings them forth to eternal life. Consequently,
just as an infant draws all its nourishment from its mother, who gives according
to its needs, so the elect draw their spiritual nourishment and all their
strength from Mary.
15.
(9) It was to Mary that God the Father said, “Dwell in Jacob”, that
is, dwell in my elect who are typified by Jacob.
It was to Mary that God the Son said, “My dear Mother, your inheritance
is in Israel”, that is, in the elect. It
was to Mary that the Holy Spirit said, ”Place your roots in my elect”.
Whoever, then, is of the chosen and predestinate will have the Blessed
Virgin living within him, and he will let her plant in his very soul the roots
of every virtue, but especially deep humility and ardent charity.
16.
(10) Mary is called by St. Augustine, and is indeed, the “living mold
of God”. In her alone the God-man
was formed in his human nature without losing any feature of the Godhead.
In her alone, by the grace of Jesus Christ, man is made godlike as far as
human nature is capable of it. A sculptor can make a statue or a life-like model
in two ways: (i) By using his skill, strength, experience and good tools to
produce a statue out of hard, shapeless matter; (ii) By making a cast of it in a
mold. The first way is long and
involved and open to all sorts of accidents.
It only needs a faulty stroke of the chisel or hammer to ruin the whole
work. The second is quick, easy,
straightforward, almost effortless and inexpensive, but the mold must be perfect
and true to life and the material must be easy to handle and offer no
resistance.
17.
Mary is the great mold of God, fashioned by the Holy Spirit to give human
nature to a Man who is God by the hypostatic union, and to fashion through grace
men who are like to God. No godly
feature is missing from this mold. Everyone
who casts himself into it and allows himself to be molded will acquire every
feature of Jesus Christ, true God, with little pain or effort, as befits his
weak human condition. He will take
on a faithful likeness to Jesus with no possibility of distortion, for the devil
has never had and never will have any access to Mary, the holy and immaculate
Virgin, in whom there is not the least suspicion of a stain of sin.
18.
Dear friend, what a difference there is between a soul brought up in the
ordinary way to resemble Jesus Christ by people who, like sculptors, rely on
their own skill and industry, and a soul thoroughly tractable, entirely
detached, most ready to be molded in her by the working of the Holy Spirit.
What blemishes and defects, what shadows and distortions, what natural
and human imperfections are found in the first soul, and what a faithful and
divine likeness to Jesus is found in the second!
19.
There is not and there will never be, either in God’s creation or in
his mind, a creature in whom he is so honored as in the most Blessed Virgin
Mary, not excepting even the saints, the cherubim or the highest seraphim in
heaven.
Mary
is God’s garden of Paradise, his own unspeakable world, into which his Son
entered to do wonderful things, to tend it and to take his delight in it.
He created a world for the wayfarer, that is, the one we are living in. He created a second world - Paradise - for the Blessed.
He created a third for himself, which he named Mary.
She is a world unknown to most mortals here on earth.
Even the angels and saints in heaven find her incomprehensible, and are
lost in admiration of a God who is so exalted and so far above them, so distant
from them, and so enclosed in Mary, his chosen world, that they exclaim:
“Holy, holy, holy” unceasingly.
20.
Happy, indeed sublimely happy, is the person to whom the Holy Spirit
reveals the secret of Mary, thus imparting to him true knowledge of her.
Happy the person to whom the Holy Spirit opens this enclosed garden for
him to enter, and to whom the Holy Spirit gives access to this sealed fountain
where he can draw water and drink deep draughts of the living waters of grace.
That person will find only grace and no creature in the most lovable
Virgin Mary. But he will find that the infinitely holy and exalted God is
at the same time infinitely solicitous for him and understands his weaknesses.
Since God is everywhere, he can be found everywhere, even in hell.
But there is no place where God can be more present to his creature and
more sympathetic to human weakness than in Mary. It was indeed for this very purpose that he came down from
heaven. Everywhere else he is the
Bread of the strong and the Bread of angels, but living in Mary he is the Bread
of children.
21.
Let us not imagine, then, as some misguided teachers do, that Mary being
simply a creature would be a hindrance to union with the Creator.
Far from it, for it is no longer Mary who lives but Jesus Christ himself,
God alone, who lives in her. Her
transformation into God far surpasses that experienced by St. Paul and other
saints, more than heaven surpasses the earth.
Mary
was created only for God, and it is unthinkable that she should reserve even one
soul for herself. On the contrary she leads every soul to God and to union with
him. Mary is the wonderful echo of
God. The more a person joins
himself to her, the more effectively she unites him to God. When we say “Mary”, she re-echoes “God”.
When,
like St. Elizabeth, we call her blessed, she gives the honor to God.
If those misguided ones who were so sadly led astray by the devil, even
in their prayer-life, had known how to discover Mary, and Jesus through her, and
God through Jesus, they would not have had such terrible falls.
The saints tell us that when we have once found Mary, and through Mary
Jesus, and through Jesus God the Father, then we have discovered every good.
When we say “every good”, we except nothing.
“Every good” includes every grace, continuous friendship with God,
every protection against the enemies of God, possession of truth to counter
every falsehood, endless benefits and unfailing headway against the hazards we
meet on the way to salvation, and finally every consolation and joy amid the
bitter afflictions of life.
22.
This does not mean that one who has discovered Mary through a genuine
devotion is exempt from crosses and sufferings.
Far from it! One is tried
even more than others are, because Mary, as Mother of the living, gives to all
her children splinters of the tree of life, which is the Cross of Jesus.
But while meting out crosses to them she gives the grace to bear them
with patience, and even with joy. In
this way, the crosses she sends to those who trust themselves to her are rather
like sweetmeats, i.e. “sweetened” crosses rather than “bitter” ones.
If from time to time they do taste the bitterness of the chalice from
which we must drink to become proven friends of God, the consolation and joy
which their Mother sends in the wake of their sorrows creates in them a strong
desire to carry even heavier and still more bitter crosses.
A TRUE DEVOTION TO THE
BLESSED VIRGIN IS INDISPENSABLE
23.
The difficulty, then, is how to arrive at the true knowledge of the most
holy Virgin and so find grace in abundance through her.
God, as the absolute Master, can give directly what he ordinarily
dispenses only through Mary, and it would be rash to deny that he sometimes does
so. However, St. Thomas assures us
that, following the order established by his divine Wisdom, God ordinarily
imparts his graces to men through Mary. Therefore,
if we wish to go to him, seeking union with him, we must use the same means that
he used in coming down from heaven to assume our human nature and to impart his
graces to us. That means was a
complete dependence on Mary his Mother, which is true devotion to her.
WHAT PERFECT DEVOTION
TO MARY CONSISTS IN
Some true devotions to
the Blessed Virgin Mary:
24.
There are indeed several true devotions to our Lady.
I do not intend to discuss those that are false.
25.
The first consists in fulfilling the duties of our Christian state,
avoiding all mortal sin, performing our actions for God more through love than
through fear, praying to our Lady occasionally, and honoring her as the Mother
of God, but without our devotion to her being exceptional.
26.
The second consists in entertaining for our Lady deeper feelings of
esteem and love, of confidence and veneration.
This devotion inspires us to join the confraternities of the Holy Rosary
and the Scapular, to say the five or fifteen decades of the Rosary, to venerate
our Lady’s pictures and shrines, to make her known to others, and to enroll in
her sodalities. This devotion, in
keeping us from sin, is good, holy and praiseworthy, but it is not as perfect as
the third, nor as effective in detaching us from creatures, or in practicing
that self-denial necessary for union with Jesus Christ.
27.
The third devotion to our Lady is one which is unknown to many and
practiced by very few. This is the
one I am about to present to you.
THE PERFECT PRACTICE
OF TRUE DEVOTION TO MARY
What
it consists in:
28.
Chosen soul, this devotion consists in a total surrender of one’s whole
self in order to become the absolute possession, and the perfect instrument of
the Blessed Virgin Mary. It is a total abandonment of ones own self, and all
that one possesses, both materially and spiritually, so that one may become the
total possession and property of the Blessed Virgin Mary. It requires the spirit
of a trusting, obedient child. It requires the heart a perfect servant. But even
more, it requires the willingness to become as
it were a slave of love for her. We must totally give up all that we would
call our own, and willingly consecrate and dedicate ourselves to the Blessed
Virgin Mary as slaves of love. This secret requires that for the rest of our
lives we perform all of our actions as slaves of love for Mary. In the future we
serve Almighty God by doing everything for Mary, with Mary, in Mary, and through
Mary.
29.
We should choose a special feast-day on which to give ourselves totally
to her. Then, willingly and lovingly and under no constraint, we consecrate and
sacrifice to her unreservedly our body and soul.
We give to her our material possessions, such as our house, our family,
and our income. Most especially we offer even the inner possessions of our soul,
namely, our merits, graces, virtues and atonement’s. We give her the value of
all of our good actions, so that she may dispose of them to the greatest glory
of God and the salvation of souls.
30.
Notice that in this devotion we sacrifice to Jesus through Mary all that
is most dear to us, that is, the right to dispose of ourselves, of the value of
our prayers and alms, of our acts of self-denial and atonements. We even give
her full possession of any heavenly glory we might attain in this life, so that
nothing that we might call our own remains. We become her full possession and
property in time and in eternity. In fact, we even beg her – implore her –
to take us as her own possession. To even hope that Mary might call us “her
own” for all eternity is an honor that we do not deserve, nor could we ever
deserve. How fortunate is the soul, which Mary actually receives as her own!
.
Knowing what most special honor it actually is to truly become the
possession of the Most Blessed Virgin; we still approach her with absolute
confidence. We leave to her the right to dispose of all the value of our
prayers, sacrifices, and good deeds. So that, after having done so and without
going so far as making a vow, we cease to claim merit for any good deed we might
do. Our Lady now may use our good deeds either to bring relief or deliverance to
a soul in purgatory, or perhaps to provide a special grace to bring a conversion
to a poor sinner. We do not bury our talent, so that we may return it to the
master when he asks for it back. No, we have given it to the wisest banker, who
will return it to him with interest. For us, this is the wisest investment we
can make: and God will reward us for being wise stewards.
31.
By this devotion we place our merits in the hands of our Lady, but only
that she may preserve, increase and embellish them, since merit for increase of
grace and glory cannot be handed over to any other person.
But we give to her all our prayers and good works, inasmuch as they have
intercessory and atonement value, for her to distribute and apply to whom she
pleases. If, after having thus
consecrated ourselves to our Lady, we wish to help a soul in purgatory, rescue a
sinner, or assist a friend by a prayer, an alms, an act of self-denial or an act
of self-sacrifice, we must humbly request it of our Lady, abiding always by her
decision, which of course remains unknown to us.
We can be fully convinced that the value of our actions, being dispensed
by that same hand which God himself uses to distribute his gifts and graces to
us, cannot fail to be applied for his greatest glory.
32.
I have said that this devotion consists in adopting the status of a slave
with regard to Mary. We must
remember that there are three kinds of slavery. There is, first, slavery based
on nature. All men, good and bad alike, are slaves of God in this sense. The
second is a slavery of compulsion. The
devils and the damned are slaves of God in this second sense.
The
third is a slavery of love and free choice.
This is the kind chosen by one who consecrates himself to God through
Mary, and this is the most perfect way for us human beings to give ourselves to
God, our Creator.
33.
Note that there is a vast difference between a servant and a slave.
A servant claims wages for his services, but a slave can claim no reward.
A servant is free to leave his employer when he likes and serves him only
for a time, but a slave belongs to his master for life and has no right to leave
him. A servant does not give his employer a right of life and
death over him, but a slave is so totally committed that his master can put him
to death without fearing any action by the law.
It
is easy to see, then, that no dependence is so absolute as that of a person who
is a slave by compulsion. Strictly
speaking, no man should be dependent to this extent on anyone except his
Creator. We therefore do not find
this kind of slavery among Christians, but only among Muslims and pagans.
34.
But happy, very happy indeed, will the generous person be who, prompted
by love, consecrates himself entirely to Jesus through Mary as their slave,
after having shaken off by baptism the tyrannical slavery of the devil.
The excellence of this
practice of devotion
35.
I would need much more enlightenment from heaven to describe adequately
the surpassing merit of this devotional practice.
I shall limit myself to these few remarks:
1.
In giving ourselves to Jesus through Mary’s hands, we imitate God the
Father, who gave us his only Son through Mary, and who imparts his graces to us
only through Mary. Likewise we
imitate God the Son, who by giving us his example for us to follow, inspires us
to go to him using the same means he used in coming to us, that is, through
Mary. Again, we imitate the Holy
Spirit, who bestows his graces and gifts upon us through Mary. “Is it not fitting,” remarks St. Bernard, “that grace
should return to its author by the same channel that conveyed it to us?”
36.
2. In going to Jesus through Mary, we are really paying honor to our
Lord, for we are showing that, because of our sins, we are unworthy to approach
his infinite holiness directly on our own.
We are showing that we need Mary, his holy Mother, to be our advocate and
mediatrix with him who is our Mediator. We
are going to Jesus as Mediator and Brother, and at the same time humbling
ourselves before him who is our God and our Judge.
In short, we are practicing humility, something that always gladdens the
heart of God.
37.
3. Consecrating ourselves in this way to Jesus through Mary implies
placing our good deeds in Mary’s hands. Now,
although these deeds may appear good to us, they are often defective, and not
worthy to be considered and accepted by God, before whom even the stars lack
brightness.
Let
us pray, then, to our dear Mother and Queen that having accepted our poor
present, she may purify it, sanctify it, beautify it, and so make it worthy of
God. Any good our soul could
produce is of less value to God our Father, in winning his friendship and favor,
than a worm-eaten apple would be in the sight of a king, when presented by a
poor peasant to his royal master as payment for the rent of his farm.
But what would the peasant do if he were wise and if he enjoyed the
esteem of the queen? Would he not
present his apple first to her, and would she not, out of kindness to the poor
man and out of respect for the king, remove from the apple all that was maggoty
and spoilt, place it on a golden dish, and surround it with flowers?
Could the king then refuse the apple?
Would he not accept it most willingly from the hands of his queen who
showed such loving concern for that poor man?
“If you wish to present something to God, no matter how small it may
be,” says St. Bernard, “place it in the hands of Mary to ensure its certain
acceptance.”
38.
Dear God, how everything we do comes to so very little!
But
let us adopt this devotion and place everything in Mary’s hands.
When we have given her all we possibly can, emptying ourselves completely
to do her honor, she far surpasses our generosity and gives us very much for
very little. She enriches us with
her own merits and virtues. She
places our gift on the golden dish of her charity and clothes us, as Rebecca
clothed Jacob, in the beautiful garments of her first-born and only Son, Jesus
Christ, which are his merits, and which are at her disposal.
Thus, as her servants and slaves, stripping ourselves of everything to do
her honor, we are clad by her in double garments - namely, the garments,
adornments, perfumes, merits and virtues of Jesus and Mary.
These are imparted to the soul of the slave who has emptied himself and
is resolved to remain in that state.
39.
4. Giving ourselves in this way to our Lady is a practice of charity
towards our neighbor of the highest possible degree, because in making ourselves
over to Mary, we give her all that we hold most dear and we let her dispose of
it as she wishes in favor of the living and the dead.
40.
5. In adopting this devotion, we put our graces, merits and virtues into
safe keeping by making Mary the depository of them.
It is as if we said to her, ”See, my dear Mother, here is the good that
I have done through the grace of your dear Son.
I am not capable of keeping it, because of my weakness and inconstancy,
and also because so many wicked enemies are assailing me day and night.
Alas, every day we see cedars of Lebanon fall into the mire, and eagles,
which had soared towards the sun, become birds of darkness, a thousand of the
just falling to the left and ten thousand to the right.
But, most powerful Queen, hold me fast lest I fall.
Keep a guard on all my possessions lest I be robbed of them.
I entrust all I have to you, for I know well who you are, and that is why
I confide myself entirely to you. You
are faithful to God and man, and you will not suffer anything I entrust to you
to perish. You are powerful, and
nothing can harm you or rob you of anything you hold.”
“When
you follow Mary you will not go astray; when you pray to her, you will not
despair; when your mind is on her, you will not wander; when she holds you up,
you will not fall; when she protects you, you will have no fear; when she guides
you, you will feel no fatigue; when she is on your side, you will arrive safely
home” (Saint Bernard). And again,
“She keeps her Son from striking us; she prevents the devil from harming us;
she preserves virtue in us; she prevents our merits from being lost and our
graces from receding.” These
words of St. Bernard explain in substance all that I have said.
Had I but this one motive to impel me to choose this devotion, namely,
that of keeping me in the grace of God and increasing that grace in me, my heart
would burn with longing for it.
41.
This devotion makes the soul truly free by imbuing it with the liberty of
the children of God. Since we lower ourselves willingly to a state of slavery out
of love for Mary, our dear Mother, she out of gratitude opens wide our hearts
enabling us to walk with giant strides in the way of God’s commandments.
She delivers our souls from weariness, sadness and scruples.
It was this devotion that our Lord taught to Mother Agnes de Langeac, a
religious who died in the odor of sanctity, as a sure way of being freed from
the severe suffering and confusion of mind that afflicted her.
“Make yourself,” she said, “my Mother’s slave and wear her little
chain.” She did so, and from that
time onwards her troubles ceased.
42.
To prove that this devotion is authoritatively sanctioned, we need only
recall the bulls of the popes and the pastoral letters of bishops recommending
it, as well as the indulgences accorded to it, the confraternities founded to
promote it, and the examples of many saints and illustrious people who have
practiced it. But I do not see any
necessity to record them here.
3.
The interior constituents of this consecration and its spirit
43.
I have already said that this devotion consists in performing all our
actions with Mary, in Mary, through Mary, and for Mary.
44.
It is not enough to give ourselves just once as a slave to Jesus through
Mary; nor is it enough to renew that consecration once a month or once a week.
That alone would make it just a passing devotion and would not raise the
soul to the level of holiness which it is capable of reaching.
It is easy to enroll in a confraternity; easy to undertake this devotion,
and say every day the few vocal prayers prescribed.
The chief difficulty is to enter into its spirit, which requires an
interior dependence on Mary, and effectively becoming her slave and the slave of
Jesus through her. I have met many
people who with admirable zeal have set about practicing exteriorly this holy
slavery of Jesus and Mary, but I have met only a few who have caught its
interior spirit, and fewer still who have persevered in it.
45.
The essential practice of this devotion is to perform all our actions
with Mary. This means that we must
take her as the accomplished model for all we have to do.
46.
Before undertaking anything, we must forget self and abandon our own
views. We must consider ourselves
as a mere nothing before God, as being personally incapable of doing anything
supernaturally worthwhile or anything conducive to our salvation.
We must have habitual recourse to our Lady, becoming one with her and
adopting her intentions, even though they are unknown to us. Through Mary we must adopt the intentions of Jesus.
In other words, we must become an instrument in Mary’s hands for her to
act in us and do with us what she pleases, for the greater glory of her Son; and
through Jesus for the greater glory of the Father.
In this way, we pursue our interior life and make spiritual progress only
in dependence on Mary.
47.
2. We must always act in Mary, that is to say, we must gradually acquire
the habit of recollecting ourselves interiorly and so form within us an idea or
a spiritual image of Mary. She must
become, as it were, an Oratory for the soul where we offer up our prayers to God
without fear of being ignored. She
will be as a Tower of David for us where we can seek safety from all our
enemies. She will be a burning lamp
lighting up our inmost soul and inflaming us with love for God. She will be a sacred place of repose where we can contemplate
God in her company. Finally Mary
will be the only means we will use in going to God, and she will become our
intercessor for everything we need. When
we pray we will pray in Mary. When
we receive Jesus in Holy Communion we will place him in Mary for him to take his
delight in her. If we do anything
at all, it will be in Mary, and in this way Mary will help us to forget self
everywhere and in all things.
48.
3. We must never go to our Lord except through Mary, using her
intercession and good standing with him. We
must never be without her when praying to Jesus.
49.
4. We must perform all our actions for Mary, which means that as slaves
of this noble Queen we will work only for her, promoting her interests and her
high renown, and making this the first aim in all our acts, while the glory of
God will always be our final end. In
everything we must renounce self-love because more often than not, without our
being aware of it, selfishness sets itself up as the end of all we work for.
We should often repeat from the depths of our heart: “Dear Mother, it
is to please you that I go here or there, that I do this or that, that I suffer
this pain or this injury.”
50.
Beware, chosen soul, of thinking that it is more perfect to direct your
work and intention straight to Jesus or straight to God.
Without Mary, your work and your intention will be of little value. But if you go to God through Mary, your work will become
Mary’s work, and consequently will be most noble and most worthy of God.
51.
Again, beware of doing violence to yourself, endeavoring to experience
pleasure in your prayers and good deeds. Pray
and act always with something of that pure faith which Mary showed when on
earth, and which she will share with you as time goes on.
Poor little slave, let your sovereign Queen enjoy the clear sight of God,
the raptures, delights, satisfactions and riches of heaven.
Content yourself with a pure faith, which is accompanied by repugnance,
distractions, weariness and dryness. Let
your prayer be: “To whatever Mary my Queen does in heaven, I say Amen, so be
it.” We cannot do better than
this for the time being.
52.
Should you not savor immediately the sweet presence of the Blessed Virgin
within you, take great care not to torment yourself.
For this is a grace not given to everyone, and even when God in his great
mercy favors a soul with this grace, it remains none the less very easy to lose
it, except when the soul has become permanently aware of it through the habit of
recollection. But should this
misfortune happen to you, go back calmly to your sovereign Queen and make amends
to her.
The effects that this
devotion produces in a faithful soul
53
Experience will teach you much more about this devotion than I can tell
you, but if you remain faithful to the little I have taught you, you will
acquire a great richness of grace that will surprise you and fill you with
delight.
54.
Let us set to work, then, dear soul, through perseverance in the living
of this devotion, in order that Mary’s soul may glorify the Lord in us and her
spirit be within us to rejoice in God her Savior.
Let us not think that there was more glory and happiness in dwelling in
Abraham’s bosom - which is another name for Paradise - than in dwelling in the
bosom of Mary where God has set up his throne. (Abbot Guerric)
55.
This devotion faithfully practiced produces countless happy effects in
the soul. The most important of
them is that it establishes, even here on earth, Mary’s life in the soul, so
that it is no longer the soul that lives, but Mary who lives in it.
In a manner of speaking, Mary’s soul becomes identified with the soul
of her servant. Indeed when by an
unspeakable but real grace Mary most holy becomes Queen of a soul, she works
untold wonders in it. She is a
great wonder-worker especially in the interior of souls.
She works there in secret, unsuspected by the soul, as knowledge of it
might destroy the beauty of her work.
56.
As Mary is everywhere the fruitful Virgin, she produces in the depths of
the soul where she dwells a purity of heart and body, a singleness of intention
and purpose, and a fruitfulness in good works.
Do not think, dear soul, that Mary, the most faithful of all God’s
creatures, who went as far as to give birth to a God-man, remains idle in a
docile soul. She causes Jesus to live continuously in that soul and that
soul to live in continuous union with Jesus.
If Jesus is equally the fruit of Mary for each individual soul as for all
souls in general, he is even more especially her fruit and her masterpiece in
the soul where she is present.
57.
To sum up, Mary becomes all things for the soul that wishes to serve
Jesus Christ. She enlightens his
mind with her pure faith. She
deepens his heart with her humility. She
enlarges and inflames his heart with her charity, makes it pure with her purity,
makes it noble and great through her motherly care.
But why dwell any longer on this? Experience
alone will teach us the wonders wrought by Mary in the soul, wonders so great
that the wise and the proud, and even a great number of devout people find it
hard to credit them.
58.
As it was through Mary that God came into the world the first time in a
state of self-abasement and privation, may we not say that it will be again
through Mary that he will come the second time?
For does not the whole Church expect him to come and reign over all the
earth and to judge the living and the dead?
No one knows how and when this will come to pass, but we do know that
God, whose thoughts are further from ours than heaven is from earth, will come
at a time and in a manner least expected, even by the most scholarly of men and
those most versed in Holy Scripture, which gives no clear guidance on this
subject.
59.
We are given reason to believe that, towards the end of time and perhaps
sooner than we expect, God will raise up great men filled with the Holy Spirit
and imbued with the spirit of Mary. Through
them Mary, Queen most powerful, will work great wonders in the world, destroying
sin and setting up the kingdom of Jesus her Son upon the ruins of the corrupt
kingdom of the world. These holy
men will accomplish this by means of the devotion of which I only trace the main
outlines and which suffers from my incompetence.
Exterior practices
60.
Besides interior practices, which we have just mentioned, this devotion
has certain exterior practices that must not be omitted or neglected.
Consecration
and its renewal
61.
The first is to choose a special feast-day to consecrate ourselves
through Mary to Jesus, whose slaves we are making ourselves.
This is an occasion for receiving Holy Communion and spending the day in
prayer. At least once a year on the
same day, we should renew the act of consecration.
Offering
of a tribute in submission to the Blessed Virgin
62.
The second is to give our Lady every year on that same day some little
tribute as a token of our servitude and dependence.
This has always been the customary homage paid by slaves to their master.
This tribute could consist of an act of self-denial or alms, or a
pilgrimage, or a few prayers. St.
Peter Damian tells us that his brother, Blessed Marino, used to give himself the
discipline in public on the same day every year before the altar of our Lady.
This kind of zeal is not required, nor would we counsel it.
But what little we give to our Lady we should at least offer with a heart
that is humble and grateful.
A
Special Celebration of the Feast of the Annunciation
63.
The third practice is to celebrate every year with special fervor the
feast of the Annunciation of our Lord. This
is the distinctive feast of this devotion and was chosen so that we might honor
and imitate that dependence which the eternal Word accepted on this day out of
love for us.
The
Saying of the Little Crown and the Magnificat
64.
The fourth practice is to say every day, without the obligation of sin,
the prayer entitled “The Little Crown of the Blessed Virgin”, which
comprises three Our Fathers and twelve Hail Marys, and to say frequently the
Magnificat, which is the only hymn composed by our Lady.
In the Magnificat we thank God for favoring us in the past, and we beg
further blessings from him in the future. One
special time when we should not fail to say it is during thanksgiving after Holy
Communion. A person so scholarly as
Gerson informs us that our Lady herself used to recite it in thanksgiving after
Holy Communion.
The
wearing of a medal, preferably the Miraculous Medal, or a blessed chain.
65.
The fifth is the wearing of a blessed Medal around the neck. The
Miraculous Medal given to St. Catherine Laboure, also called the Medal of the
Immaculate Conception, is most perfect for this purpose because Our Lady
promised the greatest graces to those who would wear it. It is the first
sacramental of the Church to have received extraordinary promises of grace from
heaven. Also, all the privileges and promises of the Brown Scapular have been
commuted to the Miraculous Medal by the Holy See if wearing the cloth Scapular
is difficult or impractical. (If it is possible, the cloth Brown Scapular should
also be worn, for it is the primary symbol of one’s consecration to the
Immaculate Heart of Mary. One should be properly enrolled in the Confraternity
of the Brown Scapular by a Priest using the Book of Blessings to gain its full
merits and indulgences.)The other external signs, like wearing the Miraculous
Medal, or the wearing of a blessed chain on the arm, on the foot, or about the
body, symbolizes the zeal of one who sincerely practices this devotion.
Strictly speaking, these practices could be omitted without affecting the
essential nature of the devotion, but it would be foolish to despise the graces
offered to those who will wear these powerful sacramentals, which are themselves
sources of grace.
66.
Here are the reasons for wearing these external signs:
(1)
It signifies that we desire to be free from the chains of original and
actual sin, which held us in bondage.
(2)
By it we show our esteem for the cords and bonds of love with which our
Lord let himself be bound that we might be truly free.
(3)
As these bonds are bonds of love, they remind us that we should do
nothing except under the influence of love.
(4)
Finally, wearing an external sign, such as the Miraculous Medal, recalls
to us constantly that we are dependent on Jesus and Mary. People who have become
slaves of Jesus and Mary value these external signs so much that they are
unhappy if they are not permitted to wear them publicly.
External
signs, like the Brown Scapular and the Miraculous Medal are more valuable and
more glorious than the necklaces of gold and precious stones worn by emperors,
because they are the illustrious insignia of Jesus and Mary. Not only to they
signify the bonds uniting us to them, but as holy sacramentals the greatest
graces and protections are given to those wear them.
It
should be noted that if the chains worn about the body, other than the neck, are
not of silver, they should for convenience’ sake at least be made of iron.
If
one chooses to wear them, they should never be laid aside at any time so that
they may be with us even to the Day of Judgment.
Great will be the joy, glory and triumph of the faithful slave on that
day when, at the sound of the trumpet, his bones rise from the earth still bound
by such medals or chains of holy bondage, which to all appearance will not have
decayed. This thought alone should
convince a devout servant of Our Lady never to take off his medal, or chain,
however inconvenient it might be.
SUPPLEMENT
PRAYER TO JESUS
Most loving Jesus, permit me to express my heartfelt gratitude to you for
your kindness in giving me to your holy Mother through the devotion of holy
bondage, and so making her my advocate to plead with your Majesty on my behalf,
and make up for all that I lack through my inadequacy.
Alas,
O Lord, I am so wretched that without my dear Mother I would certainly be lost.
Yes, I always need Mary when I am approaching you.
I need her to calm your indignation at the many offenses I have committed
every day. I need her to save me
from the just sentence of eternal punishment I have deservedly incurred.
I need her to turn to you, speak to you, pray to you, approach you and
please you. I need her to help me
save my soul and the souls of others. In
a word, I need her so that I may always do your holy will and seek your greater
glory in everything I do.
Would
that I could publish throughout the whole world the mercy which you have shown
to me! Would that the whole world
could know that without Mary I would now be doomed!
If only I could offer adequate thanks for such a great benefit as Mary!
She is within me. What a
precious possession and what a consolation for me! Should I not in return be all hers? If I were not, how ungrateful would I be!
My dear Savior, send me death rather than I should be guilty of such a
lapse, for I would rather die than not belong to Mary.
Like
St. John the Evangelist at the foot of the Cross, I have taken her times without
number as my total good and as often have I given myself to her.
But if I have not done so as perfectly as you, dear Jesus would wish, I
now do so according to your desire. If
you still see in my soul or body anything that does not belong to this noble
Queen, please pluck it out and cast it far from me, because anything of mine
which does not belong to Mary is unworthy of you.
67.
Holy Spirit, grant me all these graces.
Implant in my soul the tree of true life, which is Mary.
Foster it and cultivate it so that it grows and blossoms and brings forth
the fruit of life in abundance. Holy
Spirit, give me a great love and longing for Mary, your exalted spouse.
Give me a great trust in her maternal heart and a continuous access to
her compassion, so that with her you may truly form Jesus, great and powerful,
in me until I attain the fullness of his perfect age.
Amen.
CONSECRATION TO MARY
68.
Hail, Mary, most beloved daughter of the eternal Father; hail, Mary, most
admirable mother of the Son; hail, Mary, most faithful spouse of the Holy
Spirit; hail, Mary, Mother most dear, Lady most lovable, Queen most powerful!
Hail, Mary, my joy, my glory, my heart and soul.
You are all mine through God’s mercy, but I am all yours in justice.
Yet I do not belong sufficiently to you, and so once again, as a slave
who always belongs to his master, I give myself wholly to you, reserving nothing
for myself or for others.
If
you still see anything in me that has not been given to you, please take it now.
Make yourself completely owner of all my capabilities. Destroy in me everything that is displeasing to God.
Uproot it and bring it to nothing. Implant
in me all that you deem to be good; improve it and make it increase in me.
May
the light of your faith dispel the darkness of my mind!
May your deep humility take the place of my pride.
May your heavenly contemplation put an end to the distractions of my
wandering imagination. May your
continuous vision of God fill my memory with his presence.
May the burning love of your heart inflame the coldness of mine.
May your virtues take the place of my sins.
May your merits be my adornment and make up for my unworthiness before
God. Finally, most dearly beloved
Mother, grant, if it be possible, that I may have no other spirit but yours to
know Jesus and his divine will. May
I have no soul but yours to praise and glorify the Lord.
May I have no heart but yours to love God purely and ardently as you love
him.
69.
I do not ask for visions or revelations, for sensible devotion or even
spiritual pleasures. It is your
privilege to see God clearly in perpetual light.
It is your privilege to savor the delights of heaven where nothing is
without sweetness. It is your
privilege to triumph gloriously in heaven at the right hand of your Son without
further humiliation, and to command angels, men, and demons, without resistance
on their part. It is your privilege
to dispose at your own choice of all the good gifts of God without any
exception.
Such,
most holy Mary, is the excellent portion that the Lord has given you, and which
will never be taken from you, and which gives me great joy.
As for my portion here on earth, I wish only to have a share in yours,
that is, to have simple faith without seeing or tasting, to suffer joyfully
without the consolation of men, to die daily to myself without flinching, to
work gallantly for you even until death without any self-interest, as the most
worthless of your slaves. The only
grace I beg you in your kindness to obtain for me is that every day and moment
of my life I may say this threefold Amen:
Amen,
so be it, to all you did upon earth; Amen, so be it, to all you are doing now in
heaven; Amen, so be it, to all you are doing in my soul.
In that way, you and you alone will fully glorify Jesus in me during all
my life and throughout eternity. Amen.
In
other words,
HOW BEST TO CAUSE MARY
TO LIVE AND REIGN IN OUR SOULS
A.
The holy
slavery of love.
The Tree of Life
70.
Have you understood with the help of the Holy Spirit what I have tried to
explain in the preceding pages? If
so, be thankful to God. It is a
secret of which very few people are aware.
If you have discovered this treasure in the field of Mary, this pearl of
great price, you should sell all you have to purchase it.
You must offer yourself to Mary, happily lose yourself in her, only to
find God in her.
If
the Holy Spirit has planted in your soul the true Tree of Life, which is the
devotion that I have just explained, you should see carefully to its
cultivation, so that it will yield its fruit in due season.
This devotion is like the mustard seed of the Gospel, which is indeed the
smallest of all seeds, but nevertheless it grows into a big plant, shooting up
so high that the birds of the air, that is, the elect, come and make their nest
in its branches. They repose there,
shaded from the heat of the sun, and safely hidden from beasts of prey.
B.
How to cultivate it.
Here
is the best way, chosen soul, to cultivate it:
71.
(1) This tree, once planted in a docile heart, requires fresh air and no
human support. Being of heavenly origin, it must be uninfluenced by any
creature, since a creature might hinder it from rising up towards God who
created it. Hence you must not rely
on your own endeavors or your natural talents or your personal standing or the
guidance of men. You must resort to
Mary, relying solely on her help.
72.
(2) The person in whose soul this tree has taken root must, like a good
gardener, watch over it and protect it. For
this tree, having life and capable of producing the fruit of life, should be
raised and tended with enduring care and attention of soul.
A soul that desires to be holy will make this its chief aim and
occupation.
73.
Whatever is likely to choke the tree or in the course of time prevent its
yielding fruit, such as thorns and thistles, must be cut away and rooted out.
This means that by self-denial and self-discipline you must sedulously
cut short and even give up all empty pleasures and useless dealings with other
creatures. In other words, you must
crucify the flesh, keep a guard over the tongue, and mortify the bodily senses.
74.
(3) You must guard against grubs doing harm to the tree.
These
parasites are love of self and love of comfort, and they eat away the green
foliage of the Tree and frustrate the fair hope it offered of yielding good
fruit; for love of self is incompatible with love of Mary.
75.
(4) You must not allow this tree to be damaged by destructive animals,
that is, by sins, for they may cause its death simply by their contact.
They must not be allowed even to breathe upon the Tree, because their
mere breath, that is, venial sins, which are most dangerous when we do not
trouble ourselves about them.
76.
(5) It is also necessary to water this Tree regularly with your
Communions, Masses and other public and private prayers.
Otherwise it will not continue bearing fruit.
77.
(6) Yet you need not be alarmed when the winds blow and shake this tree,
for it must happen that the storm-winds of temptation will threaten to bring it
down, and snow and frost tend to smother it.
By this we mean that this devotion to our Blessed Lady will surely be
called into question and attacked. But
as long as we continue steadfastly in tending it, we have nothing to fear.
C.
Its lasting fruit: Jesus Christ
77.
Chosen soul, provided you thus carefully cultivate the Tree of Life,
which has been freshly planted in your soul by the Holy Spirit, I can assure you
that in a short time it will grow so tall that the birds of the air will make
their home in it. It will become such a good tree that it will yield in due
season the sweet and adorable Fruit of honor and grace, which is Jesus, who has
always been and will always be the only fruit of Mary.
Happy
is that soul in which Mary, the Tree of Life is planted.
Happier still is the soul in which she has been able to grow and blossom.
Happier again is the soul in which she brings forth her fruit.
But happiest of all is the soul that savors the sweetness of Mary’s
fruit and preserves it up till death and then beyond to all eternity.
Amen.
“Let
him who possesses it, hold fast to it.”