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The Necessity of the Intercession of the
Blessed Virgin Mary for our Salvation
Taken from The Glories of Mary by St.
Alphonsus de Liguori
That it is not
only lawful but useful to invoke and pray to the saints, and more especially to
the Queen of saints, the most holy and ever blessed Virgin Mary, in order that
they may obtain for us divine grace, is an article of faith.
It has been
defined by general Councils, against heretics who condemned it as injurious to
Jesus Christ, Who is our only mediator.
But if a Jeremias
after his death prayed for Jerusalem;1 if the ancients of the
Apocalypse presented the prayers of the saints to God;2 if a St.
Peter promises his disciples that after his death he will be mindful of
them;3 if a holy Stephen prays for his persecutors;4 if a
St. Paul prays for his companions;5 if, in fine, the saints can pray
for us, why cannot we beseech the saints to intercede for us? St. Paul
recommends himself to the prayers of his disciples: Brethren, pray for
us.6
St. James exhorts
us to pray, one for another: Pray one for another, that you may be
saved.7 Then we can do the same.
No one denies that
Jesus Christ is our only mediator of justice, and that He by His merits has
obtained our reconciliation with God. But, on the other hand, it is impious to
assert that God is not pleased to grant graces at the intercession of His
saints, and more especially of Mary His Mother, whom Jesus desires so much to
see loved and honored by all.
Who can pretend
that the honor bestowed on a mother does not redound to the honor of the son?
The glory of children are their fathers.8 Whence St. Bernard
says, "Let us not imagine that we obscure the glory of the Son by the great
praise we lavish on the Mother; for the more She is honored, the greater is the
glory of Her Son.
"There can be no
doubt," says the saint, "that whatever we say in praise of the Mother is
equally in praise of the Son."9 And St. Ildephonsus also says, "That
which is given to the Mother redounds to the Son; the honor given to the Queen
is honor bestowed on the King."10
There can be
no doubt that by the merits of Jesus, Mary was made the mediatress of our
salvation; not indeed a mediatress of justice, but of grace and intercession;
as St. Bonaventure expressly calls Her "Mary, the most faithful mediatress of
our salvation."11
And St. Laurence
Justinian asks, "How can She be otherwise than full of grace, Who has been made
the ladder to paradise, the gate of Heaven, the most true mediatress between
God and man?"12
Hence the learned
Suarez justly remarks, that if we implore Our Blessed Lady to obtain us a
favor, it is not because we distrust the divine mercy, but rather that we fear
our own unworthiness and the absence of proper dispositions; and we recommend
ourselves to Mary, that Her dignity may supply for our lowliness. He says that
we apply to Mary "in order that the dignity of the intercessor may supply for
our misery. Hence, to invoke the aid of the most Blessed Virgin is not
diffidence in the divine mercy, but dread of our own
unworthiness."13
That it is most
useful and holy to have recourse to the intercession of Mary can only be
doubted by those who have not faith. But that which we intend to prove here is,
that the intercession of Mary is even necessary to salvation; we say necessary
not absolutely, but morally.
This necessity
proceeds from the will itself of God, that all graces that He dispenses should
pass through the hands of Mary, according to the opinion of St. Bernard, and
which we may now with safety call the general opinion of theologians and
learned men. The author of the Reign of Mary positively asserts that
such is the case. It is maintained by Vega, Mendoza, Paciucchelli, Segneri,
Poiré, Crasset, and by innumerable other learned authors.
Even Father
Natalis Alexander, who always uses so much reserve in his propositions, says
that it is the will of God that we should expect all graces through the
intercession of Mary. I will give his own words: "God wills that we should
obtain all good things that we hope for from Him through the powerful
intercession of the Virgin Mother, and we shall obtain them whenever (as we are
in duty bound) we invoke Her."14 In confirmation of this, he quotes
the following celebrated passage of St. Bernard: "Such is God's will, that we
should have all through Mary."15
Father Contenson
is also of the same opinion, for, explaining the words addressed by Our Lord on
the cross to St. John: Behold thy Mother,16 he remarks
"that it is the same thing as if He had said:
"As no one
can be saved except through the merits of My sufferings and death, so no one
will be a partaker of the blood then shed otherwise than through the prayer of
My Mother. He alone is a son of My sorrows who has Mary for his
Mother."
"My wounds are
ever-flowing fountains of grace; but their streams will reach no one but by the
channel of Mary. In vain will he invoke Me as a Father who has not venerated
Mary as a Mother. And thou, My disciple John, if thou lovest Me, love Her; for
thou wilt be beloved by Me in proportion to thy love for Her."17
This proposition
(that all that we receive from Our Lord comes through Mary) does not exactly
please a certain modern writer, who, although in other respects he speaks of
true and false devotion with much learning and piety, yet when he treats of
devotion towards the divine Mother he seems to begrudge Her that glory which
was given Her without scruple by a St. Germanus, a St. Anselm, a St. John
Damascene, a St. Bonaventure, a St. Antoninus, a St. Bernardine, the Venerable
Abbot of Celles, and so many other learned men, who had no difficulty in
affirming that the intercession of Mary is not only useful, but necessary.
The same author
says that the proposition that God grants no grace otherwise than through Mary,
is hyperbolical and exaggerated, having dropped from the lips of some saints in
the heat of fervor, but which, correctly speaking, is only to be understood as
meaning that through Mary we received Jesus Christ, by whose merits we obtain
all graces; for he adds, "To believe that God can grant us no graces without
the intercession of Mary, would be contrary to faith and the doctrine of St.
Paul, who says that we acknowledge but one God and one Mediator of God and
men, the man Christ Jesus."18
But with his
leave, and going upon his own admissions, mediation of justice by way of merit
is one thing, and mediation by grace by way of prayer is another. And again, it
is one thing to say that God cannot, and another that He will not, grant graces
without the intercession of Mary. We willingly admit that God is the source of
every good, and the absolute master of all graces; and that Mary is only a pure
creature, Who receives whatever She obtains as a pure favor from God.
But who can ever
deny that it is most reasonable and proper to assert that God, in order to
exalt this great creature, who more than all others honored and loved Him
during Her life, and Whom, moreover, He had chosen to be the Mother of His Son,
our common Redeemer, wills that all graces that are granted to those whom He
has redeemed should pass through and be dispensed by the hands of Mary?
We most readily
admit that Jesus Christ is the only Mediator of justice, according to the
distinction just made, and that by His merits He obtains for us all graces and
salvation; but we say that Mary is the mediatress of grace; and that receiving
all She obtains through Jesus Christ, and because She prays and asks for it in
the name of Jesus Christ, yet all the same whatever graces we receive, they
come to us through Her intercession.
There is certainly
nothing contrary to faith in this, but the reverse. It is quite in accordance
with the sentiments of the Church, which, in Her public and approved prayers,
teaches us continually to have recourse to this divine Mother, and to invoke
Her as the "health of the weak, the refuge of sinners, the help of Christians,
and as our life and hope."19
In the Office
appointed to be said on the feasts of Mary, this same holy Church, applying the
words of Ecclesiasticus to this Blessed Virgin, gives us to understand that in
Her we find all hope. In Me is all hope of life and of
virtue!20 In Mary is every grace, In Me is all grace of the
way and of the truth.21 In Mary, finally, we shall find life and
eternal salvation: Who finds Me finds life, and draws salvation from the
Lord.22 And elsewhere: They that work by Me shall not sin;
they that explain Me shall have everlasting life.23And surely
such expressions as these sufficiently prove that we require the intercession
of Mary.
Moreover, we are
confirmed in this opinion by so many theologians and Fathers, of whom it is
certainly incorrect to say, as the above-named author does, that, in exalting
Mary, they spoke hyperbolically and allowed great exaggerations to fall from
their lips. To exaggerate and speak hyperbolically is to exceed the limits of
truth; and surely we cannot say that saints who were animated by the Spirit of
God, which is Truth Itself, spoke thus.
If I may be
allowed to make a short digression, and give my own sentiment, it is, that when
an opinion tends in any way to the honor of the most Blessed Virgin, when it
has some foundation, and is not repugnant to the faith, nor to the decrees of
the Church, nor to truth, the refusal to hold it, or to oppose it because the
reverse may be true, shows little devotion to the Mother of God.
Of the number of
such as these I do not choose to be, nor do I wish my reader to be so, but
rather of the number of those who fully and firmly believe all that can without
error be believed of the greatness of Mary, according to the Abbot Rupert, who,
amongst the acts of homage most pleasing to this good Mother, places that of
firmly believing all that redounds to Her honor.24
If there was
nothing else to take away our fear of exceeding in the praises of Mary, St.
Augustine25 should suffice; for he declares that whatever we may say
in praise of Mary is little in comparison with that which She deserves, on
account of Her dignity as Mother of God; and, moreover, the Church says, in the
Mass appointed for Her festivals, "Thou art happy, O sacred Virgin Mary,
and most worthy of all praise."26
But let us return
to the point, and examine what the saints say on the subject. St. Bernard says
"that God has filled Mary with all graces, so that men may receive by Her
means, as by a channel, every good thing that comes to them." He says that "She
is a full aqueduct, that others may receive of Her plenitude."27
On this the saint
makes the following significant remark: "Before the birth of the Blessed
Virgin, a constant flow of graces was wanting, because this aqueduct did not
exist."28 But now that Mary has been given to the world, Heavenly
graces constantly flow through Her on all.
The devil,
like Holofernes, who, in order to gain possession of the city of Bethulia,
ordered the aqueducts to be destroyed, exerts himself to his utmost to destroy
devotion to the Mother of God in souls; for if this channel of grace is closed,
he easily gains possession of them.
And here,
continues the same St. Bernard, "See, O souls, with what tender devotion Our
Lord wills that we should honor our Queen, by always having recourse to Her
protection; and by relying on it; for in Mary He has placed the plenitude of
every good, so that henceforward we may know and acknowledge that whatever
hope, grace, or other advantage we possess, all comes from the hand of
Mary."29 St. Antoninus says the same thing: "All graces that have
ever been bestowed on men, all came through Mary."30 And on this
account She is called the moon, according to the following remark of St.
Bonaventure: "As the moon, which stands between the sun and the earth,
transmits to this latter whatever it receives from the former, so does Mary
pour out upon us who are in this world the Heavenly graces that She receives
from the divine sun of justice."31
Again, the holy
Church calls Her "the happy gate of Heaven";32 for as the same St.
Bernard remarks: "As every mandate of grace that is sent by a king passes
through the palace-gates, so does every grace that comes from Heaven to the
world pass through the hands of Mary."33 St. Bonaventure says that
Mary is called: "the gate of Heaven, because no one can enter that blessed
kingdom without passing through Her." 34
An ancient author,
probably St. Sophronius, in a sermon on the Assumption, published with the
works of St. Jerome, says "that the plenitude of grace which is in Jesus Christ
came into Mary, though in a different way";35 meaning that it is Our
Lord, as in the head, from which the vital spirits (that is, divine help to
obtain eternal salvation) flow into us, who are the members of His mystical
body; and that the same plenitude is in Mary, as in the neck, through which
these vital spirits pass to the members.
The same idea is
confirmed by St. Bernardine of Sienna, who explains it more clearly, saying,
"that all graces of the spiritual life that descend from Christ, their
head, to the faithful, who are His mystical body, are transmitted through the
instrumentality of Mary."36
The same St.
Bernardine endeavors to assign a reason for this when he says, "as God was
pleased to dwell in the womb of this holy Virgin, She acquired, so to speak, a
kind of jurisdiction over all graces; for when Jesus Christ issued forth from
Her most sacred womb, all the streams of divine gifts flowed from Her as from a
celestial ocean."37
Elsewhere,
repeating the same idea in more distinct terms, he asserts that "from the
moment that this Virgin Mother conceived the divine Word in Her womb, She
acquired a special jurisdiction, so to say, over all the gifts of the Holy
Ghost, so that no creature has since received any grace from God otherwise than
through the hands of Mary."38
Another author, in
a commentary on a passage of Jeremias, in which the prophet, speaking of the
Incarnation of the Eternal Word, and of Mary His Mother, says that a woman
shall compass a man,39 remarks, that "as no line can be drawn
from the center of a circle without passing by the circumference, so no grace
proceeds from Jesus, Who is the center of every good thing, without passing by
Mary, Who compassed Him when She received Him into Her womb."40
St. Bernardine
says that for this reason, "all gifts, all virtues, and all graces are
dispensed by the hands of Mary to whomsoever, when, and as She
pleases."41
Richard of St.
Laurence also asserts "that God wills that whatever good things He bestows on
His creatures should pass through the hands of Mary."42 And
therefore the Venerable Abbot of Celles exhorts all to have recourse to "this
treasury of graces" (for so he calls Her); for the world and the whole human
race have to receive every good that can be hoped for through Her alone.
"Address yourselves to the Blessed Virgin," he says; "for by Her, and in Her,
and with Her, and from Her, the world receives, and is to receive, every
good."43
It must now be
evident to all that when these saints and authors tell us in such terms that
all graces come to us through Mary, they do not simply mean to say that we
"received Jesus Christ, the source of every good, through Mary," as the
before-named writer pretends; but that they assure us that God, Who gave
us Jesus Christ, wills that all graces that have been, that are, and will be
dispensed to men to the end of the world through the merits of Christ, should
be dispensed by the hands and through the intercession of
Mary.
And thus Father
Suarez concludes, that it is the sentiment of the universal Church, "that the
intercession and prayers of Mary are, above those of all others, not only
useful, but necessary."44 Necessary, in accordance with what we have
already said, not with an absolute necessity; for the mediation of Jesus Christ
alone is absolutely necessary; but with a moral necessity; for the Church
believes with St. Bernard, that God has determined that no grace shall be
granted otherwise than by the hands of Mary.
"God wills," says
the saint, "that we should have nothing that has not passed through the hands
of Mary";45 and before St. Bernard, St. Ildephonsus asserted the
same thing, addressing the Blessed Virgin in the following terms: "O Mary, God
has decided on committing all good gifts that He has provided for men to Thy
hands, and therefore He has intrusted all treasures and riches of grace to
Thee."46
And therefore St.
Peter Damian remarks, "that God would not become man without the consent of
Mary; in the first place, that we might feel ourselves under great obligations
to Her; and in the second, that we might understand that the salvation of all
is left to the care of this Blessed Virgin."47
In Isaias we read:
"And there shall come forth a rod out of the root of Jesse, and a flower shall
rise up out of his root; and the spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him." (Isa.
11:1-2). By these words Isaias prophesies that a virgin, Mary, would be born
from the offspring of Jesse and from Her would rise a flower, the Incarnate
Word. Meditating on this prophecy, St. Bonaventure utters these beautiful
words: "Whoever wishes to obtain the grace of the Holy Spirit should seek the
flower on the stem. For through the stem we come to the flower and through the
flower to the Spirit." In other words, let everyone seek Jesus through Mary.
Having found Jesus through Mary, we will come to the Spirit of God through
Jesus.
In the tenth
chapter of the same work he adds: "And if you wish to possess the flower, bend
down by your prayers, the stem which bears this flower." That is the way you
will get possession of the blossom.
In his sermon on
the Epiphany, the Seraphic Doctor, commenting on the words of St. Matthew:
"They found the child, with Mary His Mother,"50
reminds us, that if we wish to find Jesus we must go to
Mary.51 We may, then, conclude, that in vain shall we seek for
Jesus, unless we endeavor to find Him with Mary.52 And so St.
Ildephonsus says, "I desire to be the servant of the Son; but because no one
will ever be so without serving the Mother, for this reason I desire the
servitude of Mary."53
EXAMPLE
A young
nobleman who was on a sea-voyage began to read an obscene book, in which he
took much pleasure. A religious noticed this, and said to him: "Are you
disposed to make a present to Our Blessed Lady?" The young man replied that he
was. "Well," the other answered, "I wish that, for the love of the most holy
Virgin, you would give up that book, and throw it into the sea."
"Here it is,
Father," said the young man. "No," replied the religious, "you must yourself
make Mary this present." He did so; and no sooner had he returned to Genoa, his
native place, than the Mother of God so inflamed his heart with divine love
that he entered a religious Order.54
Prayer
O my soul, see
what a sure hope of salvation and eternal life Our Lord has given thee, by
having in His mercy inspired thee with confidence in the patronage of His
Mother; and this, notwithstanding that so many times by thy sins thou hast
merited His displeasure and hell. Thank thy God, and thank thy protectress
Mary, Who has condescended to take thee under Her mantle; for of this thou
mayest be well convinced, after the many graces that thou hast received by Her
means.
O yes, I do thank
Thee, my most loving Mother, for all Thou hast done for me who am deserving of
hell. And from how many dangers hast Thou not delivered me, O Queen!
How many
inspirations and mercies hast Thou not obtained for me from God! What service,
what honor, have I ever rendered Thee, that Thou shouldst do so much for me? I
know that it is Thy sole goodness that has impelled Thee. Ah, too little would
it be in comparison with all that I owe Thee, did I shed my blood and give my
life for Thee; for Thou hast delivered me from eternal death; Thou hast enabled
me, as I hope, to recover divine grace; to Thee, in fine, I owe all I have.
My most amiable
Lady, I, poor wretch that I am, can make Thee no return but that of always
loving and praising Thee. Ah, disdain not to accept the tender affection of a
poor sinner, who is inflamed with love for Thy goodness.
If my heart is
unworthy to love Thee, because it is impure and filled with earthly affections,
it is Thou who must change it. Ah, change it, then. Bind me to my God, and bind
me so that I may never more have it in my power to separate myself from His
love. Thou askest of me that I should love Thy God, and I ask of Thee that Thou
shouldst obtain this love for me, to love Him always; this is all that I
desire. Amen.
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Mural painted on the wall of our Philippine
Office by a local artist volunteer as a backdrop for the beautiful statue of
Our Lady of Fatima, presented to the manager of the office, Mr. Caloy Bernardo,
by his family. |
Footnotes:
1. 2 Mach. 15:14.
2. Apoc. v. 8.
3. 2 Pet. 1:15.
4. Acts. 7:59.
5. Acts. 27:24; Eph. 2:16;
Phil. 1:4; Col. 1:3.
6. "Orate pro nobis." I Thess.
5:25.
7. "Orate pro invice, ut salvemini."
James. 5:16.
8. "Gloria filiorum, patres eorum."
Prov. 17:6.
9. "Non est dubium, quidquid in laudibus
Matris proferimus, ad Filium pertinere." De Laud. V. M. hom.
4.
10. "Redundat ad Filium, quod impenditur
Matri; transit honor in Regem, qui defertur in famulatum Reginæ."
De Virginit. S. M. c. 12.
11. "Maria, fidelissima Mediatrix nostrae
salutis." Spec. B. V. M. lect. 9.
12. "Quomodo non est plena gratia quæ
effecta est paradisi Scala; cli Janua, Dei et hominum verissima
Mediatrix?" S. in Ann, B.M.
13. "Ut dignitas intercessoris suppleat
inopiam nostram; unde Virginem interpellare, non est de divina misericordia
diffidere, sed de propria indignitate timere." De Inc. p. 2. d.
23. s. 3.
14. "Deus vult ut omnia bona ab ipso
exspectemus, potentissima Virginis Matris intercessione cum eam, ut par est,
invocamus impetranda." Ep. 50 in calce Theol.
15. "Sic est voluntas ejus, qui totum nos
habere voluit per Mariam." De Aquæd.
16. "Ecce mater tua." John,
19:27.
17. "Quasi diceret: Nullus sanguinis illius
particeps erit, nisi intercessione Matris meæ. Vulnera gratiarum fontes
sunt; sed ad nullos derivabuntur rivi, nisi per Marianum canalem. Joannes
discipule, tantum a me amaberis, quantum eam amaveris." Theol. mentis
et cord. t. 2, 1.10, d. 4, c. 1.
18. 1 Tim. 2:5.
19. "Salus infirmorum, Refugium
peccatorum, Auxilium Christianorum, Vita, Spes nostra."
20. "In me omnis spes vitæ et
virtutis." Ecclus. 24:25.
21. "In me gratia omnis viæ et
veritatis." Ib.
22. "Qui me invenerit, inveniet vitam, et
hauriet salutem a Domino." Prov. 8:35.
23. "Qui operantur in me, non peccabunt. Qui
elucidant me, vitam æternam habebunt." Ecclus. 24:30, 31.
24. "Ejus magnalia firmiter
credere."
25. Serm. 208, E. B.
App.
26. "Felix namque es, sacra Virgo Maria, et
omni laude dignissima; quia ex te ortus est Sol justitiæ. Christus Deus
noster." M. Vot. a Nat. Resp. 7.
27. "Plenus Aquæductus, ut accipiant
cæteri de ejus plenitudine."
28. "Ideo tanto tempore humano generi fluenta
gratiæ defuerunt, quia necdum intercederet is Aquæductus."
De Aquæd.
29. "Intuemini quanto devotionis affectu a
nobis eam voluerit honorari, qui totius boni plenitudinem posuit in Maria; ut
proinde, si quid spei in nobis est, si quid gratiæ, si quid salutis, ab
ea noverimus redundare." De Aquæd.
30. "Per eam exivit de clis, quidquid
gratiæ venit in mundum." p. 4, tit. 15, c. 20, § 12.
31. "Quia, sicut luna inter corpora
clestia et terrena est media, et, quod ab illis accipit, ad inferiora
refundit; sic et Virgo Regia inter nos et Deum est media, et gratiam ipsa nobis
refundit." Spann. Polyanth. Litt. . M. t. 6.
32. "Felix cli porta."
33. "Nulla gratia venit de clo ad
terram, nisi transeat per manus Mariæ." Apud S. Bernardin. Pro
Fest. V. M. s. 5, c. 8.
34. "Nullus potest clum intrare, nisi
per Mariam transeat, tamquam per portam." In Luc. I.
35. "In Christo fuit plenitudo gratiæ,
sicut in Capite influente; in Maria, sicut in collo transfundente."
36. "Per Virginem, a Capite Christo, vitales
gratiæ in ejus Corpus mysticum transfunduntur."
37. "Cum tota natura divina intra Virginis
uterum exstiterit, non timeo dicere quod in omnes gratiarum effluxus quamdam
jurisdictionem habuerit hæc Virgo, de cujus utero, quasi de quodam
Divinitatis oceano, flumina emanant omnium gratiarum."
38. "A tempore a quo Virgo Mater concepit in
utero Verbum Dei, quandam, ut sic dicam, jurisdictionem obtinuit in omni
Spiritus Sancti processione temporali; ita quod nulla creatura aliquam a Deo
obtinuit gratiam, nisi secundum ipsius piæ Matris dispensationem."
Pro Festo V. M. s. 5. c. 8.
39. Jer. 31:22.
40. Crasset, Vér. Dév.
p. i, tr. i, q 5. § 2.
41. "Ideo omnia dona, virtutes et
gratiæ, quibus vult quando vult, quomodo vult, per manus ipsius
dispensantur." Pro Fest. V. M. s. 5, c. 8.
42. "Deus, quidquid boni dat creaturis
suis, per manus Matris Virginis vult transire." De
Laud. B. M. 1. 2, p. 3.
43. "Accede ad Virginem, quia per ipsam,
mundus habiturus est omne bonum." Cont. de V. M. in
prol.
44. "Sentit Ecclesia Virginis intercessionem
esse utilem ac necessariam." D Inc. p. 2, d. 23. s.
3
45. "Nihil nos Deus habere voluit, quod per
Mariæ manus non transiret." In Vig. Nat. D. s.
3.
46. "Omnia bona quæ illic summa
Majestas decrevit facere, tuis manibus voluit commendare: commissi quippe sunt
tibi thesauri ... et ornamenta gratiarum." In Cor. Virg. c.
15.
47. Paciucch. in Ps. 86.
exc. I.
48. "Egredietur Virga de radice Jesse, et
Flos de radice ejus ascendet; et requiescet super eum Spiritus Domini."
Is. 11:1.
49. "Quicumque Spiritus Sancti gratiam
adipisci desiderat, Florern in Virga quærat: per Virgam enim ad Florem,
per Florem ad Spiritum, pervenimus. Si hunc Florem habere desideras,
Virgam Floris precibus flectas." Spec. B. M. V, lect. 6,
12.
50. "Invenerunt puerum cum Maria, Matre
ejuss." Matth. 2:2.
51. "Si ergo hunc puerum vis invenire,
ad Mariam accede."
52. "Nunquam invenitur Christus, nisi cum
Maria, nisi per Mariam. Frustra gitur quærit, qui cum Maria invenire non
quærit." Spann. Polyanth. litt. M. t. 6.
53. "Ut sim servus FiIii, servitutem appeto
Genitricis." De Virginit. Mar. c. 12.
54. Nadasi, Ann. Mar. S.J. 1606.
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