Mary's Charity Towards Her Neighbor
Love towards God and love towards our neighbor
are commanded by the same precept: ' And this commandment we have from God,
that he who loveth God, love also his brother.' St. Thomas says that the reason
for this is, that he who loves God loves all that God loves. St. Catharine of
Genoa one day said, ' Lord, Thou willest that I should love my neighbor, and I
can love none but Thee.' God answered her in these words: ' All who love Me
love what I love.' But as there never was, and never will be, any one who loved
God as much as Mary loved Him, so there never was, and never will be, any one
who loved her neighbor as much as she did. Father Cornelius a Lapide, on these
words of the Canticles, ' King Solomon hath made him a litter, of the wood of
Libanus, . . . the midst he covered with charity for the daughters of
Jerusalem,' says, that ' this litter was Mary's womb, in which the Incarnate
Word dwelt, filling it with charity for the daughters of Jerusalem; for Christ,
who is love itself, inspired the Blessed Virgin with charity in its highest
degree, that she might succor all who had recourse to her.'
So great was Mary's
charity when on earth, that she succored the needy without even being asked, as
was the case at the marriage-feast of Cana, when she told her Son that family's
distress, ' They have no wine,' and asked Him to work a miracle. O, with what
speed did she fly when there was a question of relieving her neighbor! When she
went to the house of Elizabeth to fulfill an office of charity, ' she went into
the hill country with haste.' She could not, however, more fully display the
greatness of her charity than she did in the offering which she made of her Son
to death for our salvation.
On this subject St. Bonaventure says, ' Mary so
loved the world as to give her only-begotten Son.' Hence, St. Anselm exclaims:
' O, blessed amongst women, thy purity surpasses that of the angels, and thy
compassion that of the Saints!' ' Nor has this love of Mary for us,' says St.
Bonaventure, ' diminished now that she is in heaven, but it has increased;'
for ' now she better sees the miseries of men.' And therefore the Saint goes on
to say: ' Great was the mercy of Mary towards the wretched when she was still
in exile on earth; but far greater is it now that she reigns in heaven.'
St. Agnes
assured St. Bridget, that ' there was no one who prayed without receiving
graces through the charity of the Blessed Virgin.' Unfortunate indeed should we
be, did not Mary intercede for us! Jesus Himself, ad dressing the same Saint,
said, ' Were it not for the prayers of My Mother, there would be no hope of
mercy.' Blessed is he, says the Divine Mother, who listens to my instructions,
pays attention to my charity, and in imitation of me, exercises it himself
towards others. 'Blessed is the man that heareth me, and that watcheth daily at
my gates, and waiteth at the posts of my doors.' St. Gregory Nazianzen assures
us that ' there is nothing by which we can with greater certainty gain the
affection of Mary than by charity towards our neighbor.'
Therefore as God
exhorts us, saying, ' Be ye merciful, as your Father also is merciful,' so also
does Mary seem to say to all her children, ' Be ye merciful, as your Mother
also is merciful.' It is certain that our charity towards our neighbor will be
the measure of that which God and Mary will show us: ' Give, and it shall be
given to you. For with the same measure that you shall mete withal, it shall be
measured to you again.'
St. Methodius used to say, 'Give to the poor, and receive
paradise.' For the Apostle writes, that charity towards our neighbor renders us
happy both in this world and in the next: ' But piety is profitable to all
things, having promise of the life that now is, and of that which is to come.'
St. John Chrysostom, on the words of Proverbs, ' He that hath mercy on the poor
lendeth to the Lord,' makes a remark to the same effect, saying: ' He who
assists the needy, makes God his debtor.'
EXAMPLE
We read, in the life of
Sister Domenica del Paradiso, written by the Dominican Father
Ignatius del
Mente, that she was born of poor parents, in the village of Paradiso, near Florence.
From her very infancy she began to serve the Divine Mother. She fasted every
day in her honor, and on Saturdays gave her food, of which she deprived
herself, to the poor. Every Saturday she went into the gar den, and into the
neighboring fields, and gathered all the flowers -that she could find, and
presented them before an image of the Blessed Virgin, with the Child in her
arms, which she kept in the house. But let us now see with how many favors this
most gracious Lady recompensed the homage of her servant.
One day, when
Domenica was ten years of age, standing at the window, she saw in the street a
lady of noble mien, accompanied by a little child, and they both extended their
hands, asking for alms. She went to get some bread, when in a moment, without
the door being opened, she saw them by her side, and perceived that the child's
hands and feet and side were wounded. She therefore asked the lady who had
wounded the child. The mother answered, ' It was love.' Domenica, inflamed with
love at the sight of the beauty and modesty of the child, asked him if the
wounds pained him. His only answer was a smile.
But as they were standing near
the statue of Jesus and Mary, the lady said to Domenica, ' Tell me, my child,
what is it that makes thee crown these images with flowers?' She replied: ' It
is the love that I bear to Jesus and Mary.' ' And how much dost thou love them?' I love them as much as I can.' 'And how much canst thou love them? 'As much
as they enable me.' Continue, then,' added the lady — ' continue to love them;
for they will amply repay thy love in heaven.' The little girl then, perceiving
that a heavenly odor came forth from those wounds, asked the mother with what
ointment she anointed them, and if it could be bought. The lady answered, ' It
is bought with faith and good works.' Domenica then offered the bread. The
mother said: ' Love is the food of my son tell him that thou lovest Jesus, and
he will be satisfied.' The child at the word love seemed filled with joy, and
turning towards the little girl, asked her how much she loved Jesus. She
answered that she loved Him so much, that night and day she always thought of
Him, and sought for nothing else but to give Him as much pleasure as she
possibly could.
'It's well,' he replied; ' love Him, for love will teach thee
what to do to please Him.' The sweet odor which exhaled from those wounds then
increasing, Domenica cried out, ' O God, this odor makes me die of love! If the
odor of a child is so sweet, what must that of heaven be!'
But behold, the
scene now changed; the Mother appeared clothed as a Queen, and the Child
resplendent with beauty like the sun. He took the flowers and scattered them on
the head of Domenica, who, recognizing Jesus and Mary in those personages, was
already prostrate adoring them. Thus the vision ended. Domenica afterwards took
the habit of a Dominicaness, and died in the odor of sanctity, in the year
1553.
PRAYER
0 beloved Mother
of God, most amiable Mary! O, that as thou didst consecrate thy self to the
glory and love of God, with promptitude and without reserve, I could offer
thee, this day, the first years of my life, to devote myself without reserve to
thy service, my holy and most sweet Lady! But it is now too late to do this;
for, unfortunate creature that I am, I have lost so many years in the service
of the world and my own caprices, and have lived in almost entire forgetfulness
of thee and of God.
But it is better to begin late than not at all. Behold, O Mary, I this day present myself to thee, and I offer myself without reserve to
thy service for the long or short time that I still have to live in this world
; and in union with thee I renounce all creatures, and devote myself entirely
to the love of my Creator.
I consecrate my mind to thee, O Queen, that it may
always think of the love that thou deservest; my tongue to praise thee, my
heart to love thee. Do thou accept, O most holy Virgin, the offering which this
miserable sinner now makes thee. But since I enter thy service late, it is
reasonable that I should re double my acts of homage and love, thereby to
compensate for lost time. Do thou help my weakness with thy powerful
intercession, O Mother of Mercy, by obtaining me perseverance from thy Jesus,
and strength to be always faithful to thee until death; that thus always
serving thee in life, I may praise thee in paradise for all eternity. Amen.
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