Prologue To The Mirror of the Blessed Virgin Mary
There
is no doubt, as Saint Jerome remarks, that whatever is worthily said of Our
Blessed Mother redounds wholly to the praise and glory of God. Therefore, for
the honor and glory of Our Lord Jesus Christ, and ardently desiring to produce
a work which will tend to the praise of His most glorious Mother, I have judged
it fitting to take for the subject-matter of my treatise the most sweet
Salutation of this Blessed Mother. But I acknowledge my utter insufficiency for
such an undertaking. First, because of the sublimity of the subject; secondly,
because of the slenderness of my knowledge; thirdly, because of the aridity of
my speech, and, finally, because of the unworthiness of my life, and the
supreme glory and praiseworthiness of the person whose praises I wish to sing.
For
who is there who would not deem that subject incomprehensible of which Saint
Jerome does not hesitate to speak as follows: “That which nature possesseth
not, which custom useth not, which eclipseth reason, which the mind of man is
unable to compass, which maketh the heavens tremble, and striketh dumb the
earth, which amazeth every inhabitant of Heaven, all this was divinely
announced by Gabriel to Mary, and was fulfilled in Christ.” Therefore I confess
myself unworthy to speak of such and so great a heroine. Again I say, how could
my slender knowledge and my dull mind suffice to conceive praises worthy of
Mary, when the illuminated mind of an Anselm faileth in presence of the task?
For he saith: “My tongue faileth, Lady, for my mind is insufficient. Lady, all
that is within me burns that I may render thee thanks for thy so great
benefits. But I am unable to conceive worthy praise, and am ashamed to put
forth that which is unworthy.”
Saint Augustine, addressing Mary, says: “What shall I, so poor in talent, say of thee, when whatever I may say of thee is less praise than thy dignity deserves?”
Again,
how can my untrained tongue, my arid powers of interpretation not fail in the praises
of Mary, when Augustine, that most eloquent of men, says: “What shall we, so
little, so feeble, say in praise of Mary, when, if all our members were turned
into tongues, no one of us would suffice to praise her?”
Again,
if praise in the mouth of a sinner is unbecoming (Eccli. XV, 9), how shall I, a
miserable sinner, a man of most unworthy life–how shall I dare to proclaim the
praises of Mary, when I hear Jerome, a man of such great worth, hesitate ? For
he saith: “I fear and tremble, all the while that I long to fulfill your
expectations, lest I should prove to be an unworthy panegyrist. For there is in
me neither sanctity nor eloquence, worthily to praise the Blessed and glorious
Virgin.”
And
again: “Why should I add to the sea a small cup of water? Why a stone to a
mountain? And as Mary has already been so adequately praised by the tongues of men
and angels, what can our puny efforts, and especially my own, add to these ?”
Finally,
Saint Jerome, speaking of Mary, says: “If I am to speak the truth, whatever can
be expressed in human words is less than the praise given by Heaven; for Mary
has been excellently preached and praised by divine and angelic heralds,
foretold by prophets, fore-shadowed by patriarchs, in types and figures, set
forth and described by Evangelists, worthily and officially saluted by Angels.”
Having
diligently weighed all these things, pious reader, I must beg your forgiveness
for whatever insufficiency, whatever want of skill appears in this writing of
mine. How shall I, so inefficient, succeed in a task before which Mary’s unique
and zealous panegyrist, Saint Bernard, quailed ? For he saith: “There is
nothing which gives me greater delight than to preach on the glory of the
Virgin Mother.” And giving his reasons for this delight, he continues: “For all
men honor, embrace, and receive her with the great affection and devotion that
is fitting, yet whatever is said of one so unspeakably sublime, by the very
fact of its being put into words, is less worthy, less pleasing, less
acceptable.”
Yet
Saint Jerome encourages and consoles me, saying: “Although none can be found
who is worthy to praise her, yet let not even the sinner desist from glorifying
her with all his might.”
And
Saint Augustine, speaking of the manner in which the Son of God bestowed upon
His Mother the gift of fecundity, yet took not away her integrity by being born
of her, among other things says: “We who are so insignificant, cannot suffice
to speak of so great a gift of God; and yet we are compelled to utter her
praises, lest, by being silent, we should appear ungrateful. And certainly,
that poor widow who made an offering so pleasing to God with her two brass
mites, should not have withheld that offering because she could not give more;
yea, rather by giving what she could, she pleased God exceedingly.”
Hence
it is that I, so poor in talent, and equally devoid of knowledge and eloquence,
have presumed to offer to so great a Queen this poor script of mine, that in
it, so to speak, as in a dim mirror, the simpler lovers of this great Queen
should in some imperfect manner perceive who and how great she is. And because
this treatise is, as it were, a kind of mirror which reflects the life, grace,
and glory of Mary, it is not unfittingly termed the Mirror of Mary. Oh, do
thou, therefore, my most kind Lady and Mother, graciously accept this small
gift offered to thee by thy poor lover! For with this puny gift, with this
small work on thine own Salutation, I salute thee. On bended knee, with bowed
head, with heart and lips, I salute thee, I wish thee blessing. Hail Mary, etc.
Taken from the Mirror of the Blessed Virgin Mary, by Saint Bonaventure
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