Regarding
Devotion to Mary
1. It was through the most holy Virgin Mary that
Jesus came into the world, and it is also through her that He has to reign in
the world.
2. Mary was singularly hidden during her life.
It is on this account that the Holy Ghost and the Church call her Alma
Mater-----"Mother secret and hidden." (Antiphon to the Blessed Virgin
for Advent.) Her humility was so profound that she had no inclination on earth
more powerful or more constant than that of hiding herself, from herself as
well as from every creature, so as to be known to God only.
3. He heard her prayers when she begged to be
hidden, to be humbled and to be treated as in all respects poor and of no
account. He took pleasure in hiding her from all human creatures, in her
Conception, in her birth, in her life, in her mysteries, and in her Assumption.
Even her parents did not know her, and the Angels often asked one another:
"Who is that?" (Cant. 3:6; 8:5) because the Most high either had
hidden her from them, or if He did reveal anything, it was nothing compared to
what He kept undisclosed.
4. God the Father consented that she should work
no miracle, at least no public one, during her life, although He had given her
the power to do so. God the Son consented that she should hardly ever speak,
though He had communicated His wisdom to her. God the Holy Ghost, though she
was His faithful spouse, consented that His Apostles and His evangelists should
speak very little of her, and no more than was necessary to make Jesus Christ
known.
5. Mary is the excellent masterpiece of the Most High, the knowledge and possession of which He has reserved to Himself. Mary is the admirable Mother of the Son, Who took pleasure in humbling and concealing her during her life in order to favor her humility, calling her by the name of "woman" (John 2:4; 19:26), as if she were a stranger, although in His heart He esteemed and loved her above all Angels and men. Mary is the "sealed fountain" (Cant. 4:12), the faithful spouse of the Holy Ghost, to whom He alone has entrance. Mary is the sanctuary, and the repose of the Holy Trinity, where God dwells more Divinely than in any other place in the universe, not excepting His dwelling between Cherubim and Seraphim. Nor is any creature, no matter how pure, allowed to enter into that sanctuary, except by a great and special privilege.
6. I say with the Saints, the divine Mary
(divine, not in nature, but divine as in the phrase, "divine
Motherhood") is the terrestrial paradise of the New Adam, where He was
made flesh by the operation of the Holy Ghost, in order to work there
incomprehensible marvels. She is the grand and divine world of God, where there
are beauties and treasures unspeakable. She is the magnificence of the Most
High, where He hid, as in her bosom, His only Son, and in Him all that is most
excellent and most precious. Oh what grand and hidden things that mighty God
has wrought in this admirable creature, as she herself had to acknowledge, in
spite of her profound humility: "He that is mighty hath done great things
to me." (Luke 1:49) The world knows them not, because it is both incapable
and unworthy of such knowledge.
7. The Saints have said admirable things of this
holy city of God; and, as they themselves avow, they were never more eloquent
and more content when they spoke of her. Yet. after all they have said, they
cry out that the height of her merits, which she has raised up to the throne of
the Divinity, cannot be fully seen; that the breadth of her charity, which is
broader than the earth, is in truth immeasurable; that the length of her power,
which she exercises even over God Himself, is incomprehensible; and finally,
that the depth of her humility, and of all her virtues and graces, is any abyss
which can never be sounded. O height incomprehensible! O breadth unspeakable! O
length immeasurable! O abyss impenetrable!
8. Every day, from one end of the earth to the
other, in the highest heights of the heavens and in the profoundest depths of
the abysses, everything preaches, everything publishes, the admirable Mary! The
nine choirs of Angels, men of all ages, sexes, conditions and religions, the
good and the bad, nay, even the devils themselves, willingly or unwillingly,
are compelled by the force of truth to call her "Blessed." St.
Bonaventure tells us that all the Angels in Heaven cry out incessantly to her:
"Holy, holy, holy Mary, Mother of God and Virgin"; (Psalt. majus
B.V., Hymn. instar Ambrosiani.) and that they offer to her, millions and
millions of times a day, the Angelical Salutation, Ave Maria,
prostrating themselves before her, and begging of her in her graciousness to
honor them with some of her commands. Even St. Michael, as St. Augustine says,
although the prince of the heavenly court, is the most zealous in honoring her
and causing her to be honored, and is always anxiously awaiting the honor of
going at her bidding to render service to some one of her servants. (Quoted by
St. Bonaventure, Speculum B.V., lect. III, no. 5.)
9. The whole earth is full of her glory,
especially among Christians, by whom she is taken as the protectress of many
kingdoms, provinces, dioceses and cities. Many cathedrals are consecrated to
God under her name. There is not a church without an altar in her honor (St. de
Montfort writes before the desacralization of Vatican II and the sacking of the
churches and many of the altars therein.-----The Web Master), not a country nor
a canton where there are not some miraculous images where all sorts of evils
are cured and all sorts of gifts obtained. Who can count the confraternities
and congregations in her honor? How many religious orders have been founded in
her name and under her protection? How many members in these confraternities,
and how many religious men and women in all these orders, who publish her
praises and confess her mercies! There is not a little child who, as it lisps
the Hail Mary, does not praise her. There is scarcely a sinner who, even in his
obduracy, has not some spark of confidence in her. Nay, the very devils in Hell
respect her while they fear her.
10. After that, we must cry out with the Saints:
"De Maria numquam satis"-----"Of Mary there is never
enough." We have not yet praised, exalted, honored, loved and served Mary
as we ought. She deserves still more praise, still more respect, still more
love, and still more service.
11. After that, we must say with the Holy Ghost:
"All the glory of the King's daughter is within." (Ps. 44:14) The
outward glory which Heaven and earth rival each other in laying at her feet is
as nothing in comparison with that which she receives within from the Creator
and which is not known by creatures, who in their littleness are unable to
penetrate the secret of the secrets of the King.
12. After that, we must cry out with the
Apostle, "Eye has not seen, nor ear heard, nor man's heart
comprehended" (1 Cor. 2:9) the beauties, the grandeurs, the excellences of
Mary-----the miracle of the miracles of grace (St. John Damascene, Oratio
Ia de Nativ. B.V.), of nature and glory. "If you wish to comprehend
the Mother," says a Saint, "comprehend the Son; for she is the worthy
Mother of God." "Here let every tongue be mute." (St. Eucherius)
13. It is with a particular joy that my heart has dictated what I
have just written, in order to show that Mary has been up to this time unknown
(insufficiently known), and that this is one of the reasons that Jesus Christ
is not known as He ought to be. If the, as is certain, the knowledge and the
kingdom of Jesus Christ are to come into the world, they will be but a
necessary consequence of the knowledge and the kingdom of the most holy Virgin
Mary, who brought Him into the world for the first time, and will make His
second advent full of splendor.
taken from True Devotion to Mary
by Saint Louis de Montfort
Image Credit Waiting for the Word
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