II
– Freedom Of Mary From The Threefold Woe Of Actual Sin, From The Threefold Woe
Of Original Misery, And From The Threefold Woe Of Eternal Punishment
We
must consider that the “vae” or woe, from which she is entirely immune, is
threefold. There is the woe of guilt, misery, and hell. There is the woe of
actual sin, of original misery, and the woe of the punishment or pain of hell.
Of these three woes we may not unfitly understand what we read in the
Apocalypse. “I heard,” says John, “the voice of one eagle flying through the
midst of heaven, and saying with a loud voice, Woe, woe, woe to the inhabitants
of the earth!” Behold how each of these woes is multiplied by three, so that
all together we have nine woes, against which Ave is rightly said to Mary. For
there are three faults, three miseries, three hells in this woe, for the
absence of which Mary is rightly saluted by the Ave.
First,
the woe of guilt is threefold, i. e., the woe of the guilt of the heart, of the
guilt of the lips, and of the guilt of deeds. On account of these three woes it
may be said: “Woe, woe, woe to the inhabitants of the earth!” Woe, therefore,
to sinners because of the guilt of the heart, as it is said in Isaias: “Woe to
you who are of a deep heart, that ye hide counsel from the Lord.” Woe, indeed,
to those who are of a deep heart unto evil, for the deep hearts of evil-doers
are haunts of the devils, and sepulchers full of the filth of vice. Woe,
therefore, to them, as is said in Saint Matthew: “Woe to you, Scribes and
Pharisees, hypocrites, who are like to whited sepulchers, which appear
outwardly to men fair, but within are full of dead men’s bones, and of all
abominations.” Oh, how far from this woe was the most innocent heart of Mary,
as Saint Bernard says: “Mary had no fault of her own, and far from her most
innocent heart was repentance.” Of what could the heart of Mary repent when she
had never admitted into it anything worthy of penance ? Therefore, her pure
heart was not the haunt of the devil, nor the sepulcher of vice. Rather, it was
a garden and a paradise of the Holy Ghost, according to that word of the
Canticle of Canticles: “A garden enclosed is my Sister, my Spouse.”–”A garden,”
says Saint Jerome, “a garden of delights, in which were planted the seeds of
all virtues, and the perfume of virtue.” Because Mary was far from this woe of
guilt, therefore it is rightly said to her: Ave.
Again,
woe to sinners because of the guilt of the lips, as it is said in Isaias: “Woe
to you who call evil good, and good evil.” Woe to these, woe to all who sin by
the lips, as is said in the Psalms: “The poison of asps is under their lips.”
Oh, how far from this woe was the most innocent mouth of Mary! Therefore
Blessed Ambrose says: “There was nothing evil in the eyes of Mary; nothing
prolix in her words, nothing forward in her deeds.” On the lips of Mary there
was nothing of the gall and poison of the devil, but the honey and milk of the
Holy Ghost, according to the word of the Canticles: “Thy lips are as the
dropping honeycomb, my Spouse; honey and milk are under thy tongue.” Had not
Mary on her lips this most pure milk when she uttered that most chaste word:
“Behold the handmaid of the Lord”? Because the woe of the guilt of the lips was
so entirely absent from Mary, therefore is she rightly saluted with Ave.
Again,
there is woe to sinners because of the guilt of their deeds, as it is said in
Ecclesiasticus (II, 14): “Woe to the double heart and the wicked lips, and to
the hands that do evil.” Woe to the double heart, for the guilt of the heart;
woe to the wicked lips, for the guilt of the lips; woe to the hands that do
evil, for the guilt of their deeds. Oh, how far removed from such a woe was
every deed of Mary and the whole of her life! Therefore Saint Bernard saith:
“It behoved the Queen of Virgins, by a singular privilege of sanctity, to lead
a life entirely free from sin, that while she ministered to the Destroyer of
death and sin, she should obtain the gift of life and justice for all.”
Note
that never did she contract the least stain either in thought, word, or deed,
so that the Lord could truly say to her: “Thou art all fair, O my beloved, and
there is no spot in thee.” So, therefore, the most innocent and holy Mary was
without woe in thought, word, and deed, and therefore is it said to her, Ave.
Secondly,
we must consider that Mary was not only free from the threefold woe of actual
guilt, but also from the threefold woe of original misery, i.e., from the
misery of them that are born, from the misery of them that bring forth, and
from the misery of them that die.
The
woe of the misery of being born is the woe of the weakness of concupiscence;
the woe of them that bring forth is the woe of the pains of travail; the woe of
the dying is the misery of being reduced to dust and ashes. Because of these
three woes is it said to the inhabitants of the earth: “Woe, woe, woe to the
inhabitants of the earth!” The woe of those who are born is the woe of the fuel
of sin which is born in us, by which, according to our original corruption, we
are so weak unto good and so prone to evil; so that each one is born with the
“fomes peccati,” and by this is weak and wounded, and can truly say with Jeremias:
“Woe is me for my destruction, my wound is very grievous. But I said, truly
this is my own evil, and I will bear it” (Jer. X, 19.) But alas! not only is
there in those that are born weakness and misery, inclining them, when adults,
to actual sin; but also the woe of stain and of guilt, bringing them even as
little infants under the wrath of God. Therefore the Apostle saith: “All are
born children of wrath” (Eph. II, 3.) Oh, how far from this woe of them that
are born was the most holy Nativity of Mary, who was not only free from
original sin, but also from the fuel of misery, in so far as it leads to sin,
for she was conceived without stain. Because the Nativity of Mary was so far
removed from this woe, she is saluted by Ave.
Again,
the misery of them that bring forth is that original curse pronounced against
Eve, “Thou shalt bring forth children in sorrow” (Gen. III, 16.) On account of
this woe it may be said to all who bring forth what the Lord said to some
amongst them: “Woe to them that are with child and bring forth in those days”
(Matt. XXIV, 19.) Oh, how far from this woe was Mary when she conceived and
brought forth, as Saint Augustine testifies, saying: “Oh, how blessed is that
Mother who without stain conceived Purity, and without pain brought forth
Healing.” Because she was so far from this woe of them that bring forth,
therefore is Mary saluted with Ave.
Again,
the misery of them that die is the woe of dissolution into dust, which was
imposed upon man when it was said to the sinner: “Dust thou art, and unto dust
thou shalt return” (Gen. III, 19.) Hence of those that are born and those that
die, can be said that word of Ecclesiasticus: “Woe to you, ungodly men, who
have forsaken the law of the most high Lord, and if you be born, you shall be born
in malediction: and if you die, in malediction shall be your portion” (Eccli.
XLI, 11f.)
Certainly
both just and unjust are born under the curse of concupiscence, and in danger
of being reduced to dust; yet to the impious alone is this curse particularly
addressed, for their concupiscence is more deadly and their dissolution into
dust more odious; and to the wicked their evil inclinations are more hurtful,
and the remembrance of their future dissolution is more bitter, than to the
just. Oh, how far from this dissolution was the body of Mary, as we universally
believe. For this body was the most holy Ark of God, to which corruption was
unbecoming, but which, according to the likeness of her Son, should rise again,
before any taint of corruption could infect it. Whence it is both of the Son
and the Mother that the Prophet saith: “Arise, O Lord, into Thy rest, Thou and
the Ark of Thy sanctification” (Ps. CXXXI, 8.) This Ark was made of
incorruptible wood, because the flesh of Mary never became corrupted. Therefore
Saint Augustine well says: “The heavens were more worthy to preserve so
glorious a treasure than the earth, and rightly incorruptibility followed on
integrity, and not any dissolution or corruption.” As Mary was entirely free
from the misery of them that are born, so also was she from the woe of the
dying, and rightly is she saluted by Ave.
Thirdly,
we have to consider that Mary was not only immune from the threefold woe of
actual guilt, and from the threefold woe of original sin; but also from the threefold
pain of hell. This threefold woe consists in the greatness, the multitude, and
the duration of the punishments.
Woe,
therefore, to the damned and to those who will be damned, because of the
greatness, the multitude, and the duration of their torments! “Woe, woe, woe to
the inhabitants of the earth!” First, there is the greatness of the torments,
as Ezechiel saith: “Woe to the bloody city, of which I will make a great
bonfire” (Ezech. XXIV, 9.) The bloody city is the multitude of the impious, of whom
there will be an immense bonfire made in the great conflagration of the damned.
Oh, how far removed from this woe of greatness of torment was the greatness of
the grace and glory of Mary, for whom, instead of the grievous torments of
hell, was prepared by God so great a glory in Heaven, and as she was great and
garbed in merit, so is she great in her reward. She herself is that great
throne of which it is said: “King Solomon also made a great throne of ivory” (3
Kings X, 8.) Mary is the Throne of Solomon, great in grace and glory. Saint
Bernard well says: “As much more grace than others as Mary obtained on earth,
so great a degree of singular glory did she gain in Heaven.” Rightly,
therefore, is it said to her, Ave. There is also the multitude of the pains of
hell. Isaias says: “Woe to their souls, for evil things are rendered to them”
(Is. III, 9.) He says, evil things, in the plural, because there are many, yea,
infinite evils rendered to evil-doers in hell. But to Mary, in
contradistinction to the many evils prepared for the damned in hell, God hath
prepared many good things in Heaven. No angel, no saint, can equal her in the
multitude and accumulation of heavenly good things, as the Book of Proverbs
says: “Many daughters have gathered together riches, thou hast surpassed them
all.” If we understand these daughters to be human souls or angelic
intelligences, has she not surpassed the riches of the virgins, of the
confessors, of the martyrs, of the Apostles, of the prophets, of the
patriarchs, and of the angels, when she herself is the first-fruit of the
virgins, the mirror of confessors, the rose of martyrs, the ruler of Apostles,
the oracle of prophets, the daughter of patriarchs, the queen of angels? What
is wanting to her of the riches of all these? Saint Jerome says: “If you look
diligently at Mary, there is nothing of virtue, nothing of beauty, nothing of
splendor or glory which does not shine in her.”
Now
the pains of hell consist also in their perpetuity. In the Epistle of Saint
Jude it is said: “Woe to them, for they have gone in the way of Cain and after
the error of Balaam, and have perished in the contradiction of Core.” And a
little further on: “to whom the storm of darkness is preserved forever” (Jude
XI, 12.) Note that he says, forever, and think how great is the duration of
these pains and of the darkness which will have no end. But against this
eternal darkness in hell the Lord has prepared for Mary eternal light in
Heaven, so that, as the sinful soul, the throne of the devil, will be miraculously
dark forever, Mary, the Mediatrix, the throne of Christ, will be marvelously
luminous forever according to the Psalm: “Her throne is as the sun in my sight,
and as the moon perfect for ever” (Ps. LXXXVIII, 38.)
Thus,
therefore, as the Most Blessed Virgin Mary was free from the. threefold woe of
hell, yea, from all the nine woes, rightly is it said to her, Ave. Let every
one of us salute her with Ave, and let us petition her that, through her own
sweet Ave, she will pray that we may all be delivered from every woe by our
Lord Jesus Christ, her Son.
Taken from the Mirror of
the Blessed Virgin Mary, by Saint Bonaventure
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