Virgin and Child with Souls in Purgatory, GIORDANO,
Luca
- (1650)
|
MARY
DELIVERS HER CLIENTS FROM HELL
It is impossible for a client of Mary, who is
faithful in honoring and recommending himself to her, to be lost. When we say that it is impossible for a client of Mary to be lost, we
must not be understood as speaking of those clients who take advantage of this
devotion, that they may sin more freely.
And, therefore, those who
disapprove of the great praises bestowed on the clemency of this most Blessed
Virgin, because it causes the wicked to take advantage of it, to sin with
greater freedom, do so without foundation, for such presumptive people deserve
chastisement, and not mercy, for their rash confidence. It is, therefore, to be
understood of those clients who, with a sincere desire to amend, are faithful
in honoring and recommending themselves to the Mother of God. It is, I say,
morally impossible that such as these should be lost. St. Anselm says, 'that as
it is impossible for one who is not devout to Mary, and consequently not
protected by her, to be saved, so is it impossible for one who recommends
himself to her, and consequently is be loved by her, to be lost.' Many others
declare the same thing, such as blessed Albert, who says, that 'All those who
are not thy servants, O Mary, will perish' And St. Bonaventure: 'He who
neglects the service of the Blessed Virgin will die in his sins.' Again, 'He
who does not invoke thee, O Lady, will never get to Heaven.' And, on the 99th
psalm, the Saint even says, 'that not only those from whom Mary turns her face
will not be saved, but that there will be no hope of their salvation.' Before
him, St. Ignatius the martyr said, 'that
it was impossible for any sinner to be saved without the help and favor of the
most Blessed Virgin; because those who are not saved by the justice of God
are, with in finite mercy, saved by the intercession of Mary.' Some doubt as to
whether this passage is truly of St. Ignatius; but, at all events, as Father
Crasset remarks, it was adopted by St. John Chrysostom. It is also repeated by
the venerable Raymond Jordano. And in the same sense does the Church apply to
Mary the words of Proverbs: 'All that hate me, love death:' that is, all who do
not love me, love eternal death. For, as Richard of St. Lawrence says — on the
words of the same book, ' She is like the merchant's ship' — ' All those who
are out of this ship will be lost in the sea of the world.' Even the heretical
(Ecolampadius) looked upon little devotion to the Mother of God as a certain
mark of reprobation: and therefore he said, ' Far be it from me ever to turn
from Mary.' But, on the other hand, Mary says in the words applied to her by
the Church, 'He that hearkeneth to me shall not
be confounded;' that is to say, he who listeneth
to what I say shall not be lost. On which St. Bonaventure says, ' 0 Lady,
he who honors thee will be far from damnation.' And this will still be the
case, St. Hilary observes, even should the person, during the past time, have
greatly offended God. 'However great a sinner he may have been,' says the
saint, ' if he shows himself devout to Mary he will never perish.'
For this reason the devil does his utmost
with sinners, in order that after they have lost the grace of God, they may
also lose devotion to Mary. The
devil, also, is not satisfied with a soul turning out Jesus Christ unless it
also turns out His Mother. Otherwise he fears that the Mother will again,
by her intercession, bring back her Son. 'And
his fears are well grounded,' says the learned Paciucchelli; 'for he who is
faithful in serving the Mother of God will soon receive God Himself by the
means of Mary.' St. Ephrem then was right in calling devotion to our Blessed
Lady 'a Divine charter,' our safe guard from hell. The same saint also calls
the Divine Mother 'the only hope of those who are in despair.' That which St.
Bernard says is certainly true, 'that neither the power nor the will to save us
can be wanting to Mary:' the power cannot be wanting, for it is impossible that
her prayers should not be heard, as St. Antoninus says, 'It is impossible that
a Mother of God should pray in vain;' and St. Bernard says the same thing;
'that her requests can never be refused, but that she obtains whatever she
wills:' the will to save us cannot be wanting, for Mary is our Mother, and
desires our salvation more than we can desire it ourselves. Since then this is
the case, how can it be possible for a client of Mary to be lost? He may be a
sinner, but if he recommends himself to this good Mother, with perseverance and
purpose of amendment, she will undertake
to obtain him light to abandon his wicked state, sorrow for his sins,
perseverance in virtue, and, finally, a good death. And what mother would not
deliver her son from death if it only depended on her asking the favor to
obtain it from the judge? And can we think that Mary, who loves her clients
with a Mother's most tender love, will not deliver her child from eternal death
when she can do it so easily? 'O, how many would have remained obstinate in
sin, and have been eternally lost,' says Thomas a Kempis, ' if Mary had not interposed
with her Son, that He might show them mercy!' 'What, then, will be our lot, 0
tender Mother,' let us ask with St. Germanus, ' who are sinners, but desire to
change, and have recourse to thee, who art the life of Christians?' St. Anselm
says, 'that he will not be lost for whom thou once prayest.' O, pray then for
us, and we shall be preserved from hell.
EXAMPLE
In the year 1604, in a city of
Flanders, there were two young men, students; but who, instead of attending to
their studies, gave themselves up to a life of debauchery. One night they were
both in a house with an evil companion, when one of them, named Richard,
returned home, leaving his companion there. After he got home, and had begun to
undress, he remembered he had not that day said some 'Hail Marys' that he was
in the habit of reciting. Feeling very sleepy he was loth to say them; he did
himself violence, and repeated them, though without devotion, and half asleep.
He then laid down, and had fallen into a sound slumber, when he was suddenly
roused by a violent knocking at the door, and without its opening he saw his
companion, deformed and hideous, standing before him. 'Who art thou? he cried
out. ‘What! dost thou not know me? 'Ah! yes, but how thou art changed; thou
seemest to me a devil.' 'Truly,' he exclaimed, 'poor unfortunate creature that
I am, I am damned, and how! When I was leaving that wicked house a devil came
and strangled me: my body is in the street, and my soul in hell; and thou must
know,' added he, 'that the same fate awaited thee had not the Blessed Virgin,
preserved thee in consideration of that little act of homage of the "Hail
Mary." Fortunate art thou if only thou knowest how to take advantage of
this warning sent thee by the Mother of God!' With these words he opened his
mantle, and showing the flames and serpents by which he was tormented, he
disappeared. Richard immediately burst into sobs and tears, and casting himself
prostrate on the ground, he returned thanks to Mary, his protectress; and,
whilst thinking how to change his life, he heard the bell of the Franciscan monastery
ringing for matins. 'Ah! It is there,' says he, 'that God calls me to do
penance.' He went straight off to the convent, and implored the fathers to
admit him. But they were hardly willing to do so, knowing his wicked life; but
he, sobbing bitterly, told all that had taken place; and two fathers being sent
to the street, and having found the strangled body, which was as black as a
coal, they admitted him. From that time forward Richard led a most exemplary
life, and, at length, went to preach the gospel in the Indies; and thence to
Japan, where he had the happiness of
giving his life for Jesus Christ, being burnt alive for the Faith.
PRAYER
O Mary, my most dear Mother, in
what an abyss of evils should I not now be, if thou hadst not so many times
delivered me with thy compassionate hand! How many years ago should I not have
been in hell, hadst thou not saved me by thy powerful prayers! My grievous sins
already drove me there; Divine justice had already condemned me; the devils
already longed to execute the sentence; and thou didst fly to my aid, and save
me without being even called or asked. And what return can I make to thee, 0 my
beloved protectress, for so many favors, and for such love! Thou also didst
overcome the hardness of my heart, and didst draw me to thy love, and to
confidence in thee. And into how many other evils should I not have fallen, if
with thy compassionate hand thou hadst not so often helped me in the dangers
into which I was on the point of falling! Continue, O my hope, to preserve me
from hell, and from the sins into which I may still fall. Never allow me to
have this misfortune — to curse thee in hell. My beloved Lady, I love thee. Can
thy goodness ever endure to see a servant of thine that loves thee lost? Ah,
then, obtain that I may never more be ungrateful to thee and to my God, who,
for the love of thee, has granted me so many graces. 0 Mary, tell me, shall I
be lost! Yes, if I abandon thee. But is this possible? Can I ever forget the
love thou hast borne me? Thou, after God, art the love of my soul. I can no
longer trust myself to live without loving thee. O most beautiful, most holy,
most amiable, sweetest creature in the world, I rejoice in thy happiness, I
love thee, and I hope always to love thee both in time and in eternity. Amen.
Twenty-Ninth Day - Month of Our Lady
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