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Mary's Charity Towards God
by Saint Alphonsus de Liguori
This article, taken from The Glories of Mary, by Saint Alphonsus,
is about the Immaculate Heart of Mary. At Fatima God has encouraged us to love
much more the Immaculate Heart of Mary and to make reparation to Her. By
reflecting Our Lady's great love for God and for us we will better understand
the need to make reparation to the Immaculate Heart of Mary. May we by reading
this article come to be inflamed with much greater love for the Blessed Virgin.
May we all cry out with Jacinta of Fatima, "I love the Immaculate Heart of Mary
so much."
St. Anselm says that "wherever there is the greatest purity,
there is also the greatest charity." The more a heart is pure, and empty of
itself, the greater is the fullness of its love towards God. The most holy
Mary, because She was all humility, and had nothing of self in Her, was filled
with divine love, so that "Her love towards God surpassed that of all men and
angels," as St. Bernardine writes. Therefore St. Francis de Sales with reason
called Her "the Queen of love."
God has indeed given men the precept to love Him with their
whole heart, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with thy whole heart; but,
as St. Thomas declares, "this commandment will be fully and perfectly fulfilled
by men only in Heaven, and not on earth, where it is only fulfilled
imperfectly." On this subject, Blessed Albert the Great remarks, that, in a
certain sense, it would have been unbecoming had God given a precept that was
never to have been perfectly fulfilled. But this would have been the case had
not the divine Mother perfectly fulfilled it. The saint says, "Either someone
fulfilled this precept, or no one; if anyone, it must have been the Most
Blessed Virgin." Richard of St. Victor confirms this opinion, saying, "The
Mother of our Emmanuel practiced virtues in their very highest perfection. Who
has ever fulfilled as She did that first commandment, Thou shalt love the
Lord thy God with thy whole heart? In Her, divine love was so ardent that
no defect of any kind could have access to Her." "Divine love," says St.
Bernard, "so penetrated and filled the soul of Mary, that no part of Her was
left untouched; so that She loved with Her whole heart, with Her whole soul,
with Her whole strength, and was full of grace." Therefore Mary could well say,
My Beloved has given Himself all to Me, and I have given Myself all to Him:
My Beloved to Me, and I to Him. "Ah! well might even the Seraphim," says
Richard, "have descended from Heaven to learn, in the heart of Mary, how to
love God."
Heart of Mary - Furnace of Divine Love
God, who is love, came on earth to enkindle in the hearts of all
the flame of His divine love; but in no heart did He enkindle so much as in
that of His Mother; for Her heart was entirely pure from all earthly
affections, and fully prepared to burn with this blessed flame. Thus St.
Sophronius says that "divine love so inflamed Her, that nothing earthly could
enter Her affections; She was always burning with this heavenly flame, and, so
to say, inebriated with it." Hence the heart of Mary became all fire and
flames, as we read of Her in the sacred Canticles: The lamps thereof are
fire and flame; fire burning within through love, as St. Anselm explains
it; and flames shining without by the example She gave to all in the practice
of virtues. When Mary, then, was in this world, and bore Jesus in Her arms, She
could well be called, "fire carrying fire"; and with far more reason than a
woman spoken of by Hippocrates, who was thus called because she carried fire in
her hand. Yes, for St. Ildephonsus said, that "the Holy Ghost heated, inflamed,
and melted Mary with love, as fire does iron; so that the flame of this Holy
Spirit was seen, and nothing was felt but the fire of the love of God." St.
Thomas of Villanova says, that the bush seen by Moses, which burnt without
being consumed, was a real symbol of Mary's heart. Therefore with reason, says
St. Bernard, was She seen by St. John clothed with the sun: and there
appeared a great wonder in heaven, a woman clothed with the sun; "for,"
continues the saint, "She was so closely united to God by love, and penetrated
so deeply the abyss of divine wisdom, that, without a personal union with God,
it would seem impossible for a creature to have a closer union with Him."
Hence St. Bernardine of Sienna asserts that the most holy Virgin
was never tempted by hell; for, he says: "As flies are driven away by a great
fire, so were the evil spirits driven away by Her ardent love; so much so, that
they did not even dare approach Her." Richard of St. Victor also says, that
"the Blessed Virgin was terrible to the princes of darkness, so that they did
not presume to tempt or approach Her; for the fire of Her charity deterred
them." Mary Herself revealed to St. Bridget, that in this world She never had
any thought, desire, or joy, but in and for God: "I thought," she said, "of
nothing but God, nothing pleased Me but God"; so that Her blessed soul being in
the almost continual contemplation of God whilst on earth, the acts of love
which She formed were innumerable, as Father Suarez writes: "The acts of
perfect charity formed by the Blessed Virgin in this life were without number;
for nearly the whole of Her life was spent in contemplation, and in that state
She constantly repeated acts of love." But a remark of Bernardine de Bustis
pleases me still more: he says that Mary did not so much repeat acts of love as
other saints do, but that Her whole life was one continued act of it; for, by a
special privilege, She always actually loved God. As a royal eagle has always
kept Her eyes fixed on the divine Sun of Justice: "that," as St. Peter Damian
says, "the duties of active life did not prevent Her from loving, and love did
not prevent Her from attending to those duties." Therefore St. Germanus says,
that the altar of propitiation, on which the fire was never extinguished day or
night, was a type of Mary.
Her Heart Loved God at All Times
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Mary's Immaculate Heart wounded and took captive the Heart of God. |
Nor was sleep an obstacle to Mary's love for God; since, as St.
Augustine asserts, "the dreams, when sleeping, of our first parents, in their
state of innocence, were as happy as their lives when waking"; and if such a
privilege were granted them, it certainly cannot be denied that it was also
granted to the divine Mother, as Suarez, the Abbot Rupert, and St. Bernardine
fully admit. St. Ambrose is also of this opinion; for speaking of Mary, he
says, "while Her body rested, Her soul watched," verifying in Herself the words
of the wise man: Her lamp shall not be put out in the night. Yes, for
while Her blessed body took its necessary repose in gentle sleep, "Her soul,"
says St. Bernardine, "freely tended towards God; so much so, that She was then
wrapped in more perfect contemplation than any other person ever was when
awake." Therefore could She well say with the Spouse in the Canticles, I
sleep, and My heart watches. "As happy in sleep as awaking," as Suarez
says. St. Bernardine asserts, that as long as Mary lived in this world She was
continually loving God: "The mind of the Blessed Virgin was always wrapped in
the ardor of love." The saint moreover adds, "that She never did anything that
the divine Wisdom did not show Her to be pleasing to Him; and that She loved
God as much as She thought He was to be loved by Her."
Indeed, according to Blessed Albert the Great, we can well say
that Mary was filled with so great charity, that greater was not possible in
any pure creature on earth. Hence St. Thomas of Villanova affirms, that by Her
ardent charity the Blessed Virgin became so beautiful, and so enamored of Her
God, that, captivated as it were by Her love, He descended into Her womb and
became man. Wherefore St. Bernardine exclaims, "Behold the power of the Virgin
Mother: She wounded and took captive the heart of God."
But since Mary loves God so much, there can be nothing that She
so much requires of Her clients as that they also should love Him to their
utmost. This precisely She one day told Blessed Angela of Foligno after
Communion, saying, "Angela, be thou blessed by My Son, and endeavor to love Him
as much as thou canst." She also said to St. Bridget, "Daughter, if thou
desirest to bind Me to thee, love My Son." Mary desires nothing more than to
see Her Beloved, who is God, loved. Novarinus asks why the Blessed Virgin, with
the Spouse in the Canticles, begged the angels to make the great love She bore
Him known to Our Lord, saying, I adjure you, O daughters of Jerusalem, if
you find My beloved, that you tell Him that I languish with love. Did not
God know how much She loved Him? "Why did She seek to show the wound to Her
Beloved, since He it was who had inflicted it?" The same author answers, that
the divine Mother thereby wished to make Her love known to us, not to God; that
as She was Herself wounded, so might She also be enabled to wound us with
divine love. And "because Mary was all on fire with the love of God, all who
love and approach Her are inflamed by Her with this same love; for She renders
them like unto Herself." For this reason St. Catharine of Siena called Mary
"the bearer of fire," the bearer of the flames of divine love. If we also
desire to burn with these blessed flames, let us endeavor always to draw nearer
to our Mother by our prayers and the affections of our souls.
Ah, Mary, Thou Queen of love, of all creatures the most amiable,
the most beloved, and the most loving, as St. Francis de Sales addressed Thee -
my own sweet Mother, Thou wast always and in all things inflamed with love
towards God; deign, then, to bestow at least a spark of it on me. Thou didst
pray Thy Son for the spouses whose wine had failed: They have no wine. And wilt
Thou not pray for us, in whom the love of God, whom we are under such
obligations to love, is wanting? Say also, "They have no love," and
obtain us this love. This is the only grace for which we ask. O Mother, by the
love Thou bearest to Jesus, graciously hear and pray for us. Amen.
Mary's Charity Towards Her Neighbor
Love towards God and love towards our neighbors 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.
Mary's Charity Towards Us
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"My Immaculate Heart will be your refuge and the way that leads you to God." |
Father Cornelius à 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 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 grace through the charity of the
Blessed Virgin." Unfortunate, indeed, should we be, did not Mary intercede for
us! Jesus Himself, addressing the same saint, said "Were it not for the prayers
of My Mother, there would be no hope of mercy."
To Obtain Mary's Affection Love Thy Neighbor
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 these 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."
O Mother of Mercy, Thou art full of charity for all; forget not
my miseries; Thou seest them full well. Recommend me to God, who denies Thee
nothing. Obtain for me the grace to imitate Thee in holy charity, as well
towards God as towards my neighbor. Amen.
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