Sunday, September 3, 2017

Power and Sweetness of the Holy Name of Jesus – Selected Writings and Prayers

Selected from the Writings of St. Alphonsus Maria

JESUS OUR SAVIOUR.

Consider that the Infant Jesus, eight days after His Birth, showed Himself even then to be our Saviour, by shedding His divine Blood for us in the Circumcision, and taking the Name of Saviour. O most merciful Infant God, I give Thee thanks, and I beseech Thee by the pain which Thou didst feel, and by the Blood which Thou didst shed in Thy Circumcision, to grant me the grace and the power to tear out of my heart all earthly affections.

I.

Behold how the Eternal Father, having sent His Son to suffer and die for us, wills that on this day He should be circumcised, and should begin to shed His Divine Blood, which He has to shed for the last time on the day of His death upon the Cross in a sea of contumely and sorrow. And wherefore? In order that this innocent Son should thus pay the penalties which we have deserved. The Holy Church exclaims: “O admirable condescension of divine pity towards us! O inestimable love of charity! To redeem, the slave Thou hast delivered Thy Son to death!”

O Eternal God, who could ever have bestowed upon us this infinite gift but Thou Who art infinite goodness and infinite love. O my God, if in giving me Thy Son, Thou hast given me the dearest treasure Thou hast, it is right that I should give myself entirely to Thee. Yes, my God, I give Thee my whole self; do Thou accept of me, and permit me not to leave Thee again.

II.

Behold, on the other hand, the Divine Son, Who, humble, and full of love towards us, embraces the bitter death destined for Him in order to save us sinners from eternal death, and willingly begins on this day to make satisfaction for us to the divine justice with the price His Blood. He humbled himself, says the Apostle, becoming obedient unto death, even to the death of cross.—(Phil. ii., 8). Thou, therefore, O my Jesus, accepted death for my love; what, then, shall I do? Shall I continue to offend Thee by my sins? No, Redeemer, I will no longer be ungrateful to Thee. I am sorry from my heart that I have caused Thee so much bitterness in times past. I love Thee, O infinite Goodness, and for the future I will never cease to love Thee.

Our Redeemer has said: Greater love than this no hath, that a man lay down his life for his friends.—(St. John xv., 13). Thou, O my Jesus, as St. Paul tells us, hast shown greater love than this toward us, by giving Thy life for us who were enemies. Behold one of them, O Lord, at Thy feet. How many times have I, a miserable sinner, renounced Thy friendship because I would not obey Thee! I now see the evil I have done; pardon me, Jesus, for I could wish to die of sorrow. I now love with my whole soul, and I desire nothing else but to love Thee and to please Thee. O Mary, Mother of God my Mother, pray to Jesus for me.

THE NAME OF JESUS CONSOLES.

This great Name of Jesus was not given by man, but by God Himself; “The Name of Jesus,” says St. Bernard, “was preordained by God.” It was a new Name: A new name which the mouth of the Lord shall name.—(Is. lxii., 2). A new Name which God could give only to Him Whom He destined to be the Saviour of the world. A new and an eternal Name; because, as our salvation was decreed from all eternity, so from all eternity was this Name given to the Redeemer. Nevertheless this Name was only bestowed on Jesus Christ in this world on the day of His Circumcision: And after eight days were accomplished that the child should be circumcised, his name was called Jesus. The Eternal Father wished at that time to reward the humility of His Son by giving Him so honourable a Name. Yes, while Jesus humbles Himself, submitting in His Circumcision to be branded with the mark of a sinner, it is just that His Father should honour Him by giving Him a Name that exceeds the dignity and sublimity of any other name: God hath given him a name that is above all names.—(Phil. ii., 9). And He commands that this Name should be adored by the Angels, by men, and by devils: That in the name of Jesus every knee should bow of those that are in heaven, on earth, and under the earth.—(Ibid. ii., 10). If, then, all creatures are to adore this great Name, still more ought we sinners to adore it, since it was in our behalf that this Name of Jesus, which signifies Saviour, was given to Him; and for this end also He came down from Heaven, namely, to save sinners: “For us men and for our salvation He came down from Heaven, and was made Man.” We ought to adore Him, and at the same time to thank God Who has given Him this Name for our good; for it is this Name that consoles us, defends us, and makes us burn with love.

The Name of Jesus consoles us; for when we invoke Jesus, we find relief in all our afflictions. When we have recourse to Jesus, He wishes to console us because He loves us; and He can do so, because He is not only Man, but He is also the Omnipotent God; otherwise He could not properly have this great Name of Saviour. The Name of Jesus signifies that the bearer of it is of infinite power, infinite wisdom and infinite love; so that if Jesus Christ had not united in Himself all these perfections, He could not have saved us: “If any one of these,” says St. Bernard, “had been wanting, Thou couldst not call Thyself Saviour.” Thus, when speaking of the Circumcision, the Saint says: “He was circumcised as being the son of Abraham, He was called Jesus as being the Son of God.” He is branded as man with the mark of sin, having taken upon Himself the burden of atoning for sin; and from His very Infancy He began to satisfy for the crimes of men, by suffering and shedding His Blood.

The Name of Jesus is said by the Holy Spirit to be as oil poured out: Thy name is as oil poured out.—(Cant. i., 2) And so indeed it is, says St. Bernard; for as oil serves for light, for food, and for medicine, so especially is the Name of Jesus is light: “it is a light when preached.” And how was it, says the Saint, that the light of Faith shone forth so suddenly in the world that in a short time so many Gentile nations knew the true God, and became His followers, if it was not through hearing the Name of Jesus preached? “Whence, think you, shone forth in the whole world, so bright and so sudden, the light of Faith, except from the preaching of the Name of Jesus?” Through this Name we have been happily made sons of the true light, that is, sons of the Holy Church; since we were so fortunate as to be born ml bosom of the true Church, in Christian and Catholic kingdoms—a grace which has not been granted to greater part of men, who are born amongst idolaters, Mahometans, or heretics.

Further, the Name of Jesus is a food that nourishes our souls. “The thought of it is nourishment.” This Name gives strength to find peace and consolation even in the midst of the miseries and persecutions of this world. The holy Apostles rejoiced when they were ill-treated, and reviled, being comforted by the Name of Jesus: They went from the presence of the council rejoicing that were counted worthy to suffer for the name of Jesus.(Acts. V., 41).

It is light, it is food, and it is also medicine to those who invoke it: “When pronounced, it soothes and anoints.” The holy Abbot says: “At the rising of the light of this Name, the clouds disperse, and calm returns.” If the soul of any one is afflicted and in trouble, let him pronounce the Name of Jesus, and immediately the tempest will cease and peace will return. Does any one fall into sin? Does he run in despair into the snares of death? Let him invoke the Name of Life, and will his life not be renewed? He shall immediately be encouraged to hope for pardon, by calling on Jesus, Who was, destined by the Father to be our Saviour, and obtain pardon for sinners. Euthymius says that if when Judas was tempted to despair, he had invoked the Name of Jesus, he would not have given way to temptation: “If he had invoked that Name, he would not have perished.” Therefore, he adds, no sinner can perish through despair, however abandoned he may be, who invokes the Holy Name, which is one of hope and salvation: “Despair is far off where His Name is invoked.”

But sinners leave off invoking this saving Name, because they do not wish to be cured of their infirmities. Jesus Christ is ready to heal all our wounds; but if people cherish their wounds, and will not be healed, how can Jesus Christ heal them? The Venerable Sister Mary of Jesus Crucified, a Sicilian nun, once saw the Saviour, as it seemed, in a hospital, going round with medicines in His hands, to cure the sick people who were there; but these miserable people, instead of thanking Him and begging Him to come to them, drove Him away. So do many sinners, after they have of their own free will poisoned their souls with sins, refuse the gift of health, that is, the grace offered them by Jesus Christ, and thus remain lost through their infirmities.

But, on the other hand, what fear can that sinner have who has recourse to Jesus Christ, since Jesus offers Himself to obtain our pardon from His Father, He having paid by His death the penalty due to us? St. Laurence Justinian says: “He Who had been offended, appointed Himself as Intercessor, and Himself paid what was owing to God.” Therefore, adds the Saint, “if thou art bound down by sickness, if sorrows weary thee, if thou art trembling with fear, invoke the Name of Jesus.” O poor man, whoever thou art, if thou art weighed down by infirmity or by grief and fear, call on Jesus, and He will console thee. It is enough that we pray to the Father in His Name, and all we ask will be granted to us. This is the promise of Jesus Himself, which He repeated many times, and which cannot fail: If you ask the Father anything in my name, He will give it to you.—(Jo. xvi. 23). Whatsoever you shall ask of the Father in My name that will I do.—(Jo. xiv., 13).

Selected from the Writings of Saint Alphonsus Maria

HIS NAME WAS CALLED JESUS.
(Gospel, Luke ii., 21).

The Name of Jesus is a divine Name, announced Mary on the part of God by St. Gabriel: and thou shalt call His name Jesus.—(Luke, i., 31). For that reason it was called a name above all names.—(Phil. ii., 9). And it was also called a Name in which alone salvation is found: whereby we must be saved.—(Acts iv., 12). This great Name is likened by the Holy Spirit unto oil: Thy name is as oil poured out.—(Cant. i., 2). For this reason, says St. Bernard, that as oil is light, food, and medicine, so the Name of Jesus is light to the mind, food to the heart, and medicine to the soul.

It is light to the mind. By this Name the world was converted from the darkness of idolatry to the light of Faith. We who have been born in these regions, where before the coming of Christ our ancestors were Gentiles, should all have been in the same condition had not the Messias come to enlighten us. How thankful ought we not, then, to be to Jesus Christ for the gift of Faith! And what would have become of us if we had been in Asia, in Africa, in America, or in the midst of heretics and schismatics? He who believes not is lost: He that believeth not shall be condemned.—(St. Mark xvi., 16) And thus probably we also should have been lost.

O Jesus, Thou Who didst make the power of Thy Name to shine forth to deliver us from the servitude of sin, and the slavery of the devil, deign now and always to preserve our souls from all unworthy subjection. O Jesus all powerful, if the eyes of our souls had not been opened and enlightened by the light of Faith which Thou hast taught us by Thy own mouth, how should we ever have been able to know Thy divine mysteries! Without Thy aid we should always have been buried in the darkness of ignorance and the shadow of death. May thanks be ever given to our sweet Jesus Who has had compassion on us, and, in opening the gates of Heaven to us, has made us heirs of His Eternal Kingdom.

II.

The Name of Jesus is also food that nourishes our hearts; yes, because this Name reminds us of what Jesus has done to save us. Hence this Name consoles us in tribulation, gives us strength to walk along the way of salvation, supplies us with courage in difficulties, and inflames us with love for our Redeemer, when we remember what He has suffered for our salvation.

Lastly, this Name is medicine to the soul, because it renders it strong against the temptations of our enemies. The devils tremble and fly at the invocations of this Holy Name, according to the words of the Apostle: That at the name of Jesus every knee shall bow, of those that are in heaven, on earth, and under the earth.—(Phil. ii., 10). He who in temptation calls upon Jesus shall not fall, and shall be saved: Praising, I will call upon the Lord; and I will be saved from my enemies.—(Ps. xvii., 4). And who was ever lost who when he was tempted invoked Jesus? He alone is lost who does not invoke His aid, or who, whilst the temptation continues, ceases to invoke Him. Oh, that I had always called upon Thee, my Jesus; for then I should never have been conquered by the devil! I have miserably lost Thy grace, because in temptation I have neglected to call Thee to my assistance. But now I hope for all things through Thy Holy Name. Write, therefore, O my Saviour, write upon my poor heart Thy most powerful Name of Jesus, so that, by having it always in my heart by loving Thee, I may have it always on my lips by invoking Thee, in all the temptations that hell prepares for me to induce me to again become its slave, and to separate myself from Thee. In Thy Name I shall find every good. If I am afflicted, it will console me when I think how much more afflicted Thou hast been than I am, and all for the love of me. If I am disheartened on account of my sins, it will give me courage when I remember that Thou camest into the world to save sinners. If I am tempted, Thy Holy Name will give me strength, when I consider that Thou canst help me more than hell can cast me down; finally, if I feel cold in Thy love, Thy Name will give me fervour, by reminding me of the love that Thou bearest me. I love Thee, my Jesus! To Thee do I give all my heart, O my Jesus! Thee alone will I love! Thee will I invoke as often as I possibly can. I will die with Thy Name upon my lips; a Name of hope, a Name of salvation, a Name of love. O Mary, if thou lovest me, this is the grace I beg of thee to obtain for me—the grace constantly to invoke thy name and that of thy Son; obtain for me that these most sweet Names may be the breath of soul, and that I may repeat them constantly during life, in order to repeat them with my last breath. Jesus and Mary, help me; Jesus and Mary, I love You; Jesus and Mary I recommend my soul to You.

THE NAME OF JESUS A NAME OF GLADNESS.

The Name of Jesus was given to the Incarnate Word not by men, but by God Himself. And thou shalt call his name Jesus. It is the Name of our Saviour, a Name of Gladness, a Name of Hope, a Name of Love. Thy Name, then, O Jesus, will always be my defense, my comfort, a fire to keep me always burning with Thy love.

I.

Consider that the Holy Name of Jesus is not a Name invented by man, but it comes from God, Who wished it to be made known by the Archangel Gabriel, as St. Luke testifies: His name was called Jesus . . . by the angel — (St. Luke ii.,21). St. Bernard also says that this Name is not a simple figure of things, or a shadow without reality. Jesus is a Name that expresses perfectly the hypostatic union of the Divine nature and the human nature. The world could not have been saved by God, for God could not suffer, nor by a mere man, because man is limited and finite. This is the reason why the Holy Name Jesus, which signifies the same as Saviour, as the Angel declares, has been given to the Son of God, made Man through Mary, to show that it was both as God and Man He accomplished the redemption of mankind by delivering men from the slavery of sin. In short, Jesus is a Name that comprises Infinity, Eternity, Immensity, Wisdom, Justice, Mercy, and all the adorable Perfections of God. What happiness for us to be reconciled with the Eternal Father through the merits of this divine Mediator Who of His - infinite goodness paid our debt in His precious Blood! Adorable Jesus! if Thou hadst sacrificed Thyself to deliver Thy people from the hands of their enemies in order to acquire an eternal Name, it would be but fair that this Name should surpass and eclipse every other name, even that of the Seraphim, as St. Paul says: Being, made so much, better than the angels, as he hath inherited a more excellent name than they.—(Heb. i., 4). And if the Eternal Father has wished that this Name should be that of His Son, mayest Thou grant that, having experienced on earth its happy effects, we may arrive at the complete happiness of Heaven to praise Thee and to bless Thee for all eternity.

II.

The Name of Jesus is a Name of Gladness, a Name of Hope, a Name of Love. It is a Name of Gladness because if the remembrance of past transgressions afflicts us, this Name comforts us in the remembrance that the Son of God became Man for this purpose—to make Himself our Saviour. In fact, as soon as the Name of Jesus passes from the heart to the tongue, by the light of the divine Name darkness is dispersed, the mind is calmed the heart is strengthened, the faculties brighten up, and everything returns to life. There is no name in the world equal to the Name of Jesus in sweetness “Nothing is sweeter to chant,” says St. Bernard “nothing more agreeable to hear, nothing more charming to think of, than the Name of Jesus, the Son of God.”

Oh, how happy shall we be if in all our trials, in all occasions of sorrow, we take care to invoke the glorious Name of Jesus, and while invoking it with our lips to consecrate our hearts to Jesus! It is a Name of Hope, because he that prays to the Eternal Father in the Name of Jesus may hope for every good he asks for. If you ask the Father anything in my name he will give it to you.—(St. John. xvi., 23).

It is a Name of Love. It is a sign that represents to us how much God has done for the love of us. The Name of Jesus brings to our remembrance all the suffering which Jesus endured for us in life and in death. Therefore a devout writer exclaims: “O Jesus, how much I cost Thee to be Jesus—that is, my Saviour!”

O sweet Jesus, our Love and our Hope! Do Thou write Thy Name on my poor heart and on my tongue, in order that when I am tempted to sin, I may resist by invoking Thee; so that if I am tempted to despair I may trust in Thy merits; and that if I feel myself tepid in loving Thee, Thy Name may inflame my heart at the recollection of how much Thou hast loved me.

Thy Name, then, will always be my defense, my comfort, and the fire that shall always keep me inflamed with Thy love. Make me, therefore, always to call Thee my Jesus and to live and die with Thy Holy Name on my lips saying even with my last breath: “I love Thee, my Jesus; my Jesus, I love Thee.” O Mary, my Queen, make me when I am dying invoke thee continually, together with thy Son Jesus.

THE NAME OF JESUS OUR DEFENCE.

The Name of Jesus defends us. Yes, it defends us against all the deceits and assaults of our enemies. For this reason the Messias was called God the Mighty—(Is. ix., 6); and His Name was called by the Wise Man a strong tower: The name of the Lord is a strong tower—(Prov. xviii., 10); that we may know that he who avails himself of this powerful Name will not fear all the assaults of hell. St. Paul writes thus: Christ humbled himself, becoming obedient unto death, even to the death of the cross.—(Phil. ii., 8). Jesus Christ during His life humbled Himself in obeying His Father, even to die on the Cross; which is as much as to say, as St. Anselm remarks, He humbled Himself so much that He could humble Himself no more; and therefore His divine Father, as a reward for the humility and obedience of His Son, raised Him to such a sublime dignity that there could be no higher: God hath given him a name which is above all names; that in the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of those that are in heaven, on earth and under the earth.—(Phil. ii., 9, 10). God gave Him a Name which is so great and powerful that it is venerated in Heaven, on earth, and in hell. A Name powerful in Heaven, because it can obtain all graces for us; powerful on earth, because it can save all who invoke it with devotion; powerful in hell, because this Name makes all the devils tremble. These rebel angels tremble at the sound of this most Sacred Name, because they remember that Jesus Christ was the Mighty One Who destroyed the dominion and power they formerly had over man. They tremble, says St. Peter Chrysologus, because at this Name they have to adore the whole majesty of God “In this Name the whole majesty of God is adored.” Our Saviour Himself said that through this powerful Name His disciples should cast out devils. In my name they shall cast out devils.(St. Mark xvi., 17). And in fact, the Church in her Exorcisms always makes use of this Name in driving out the infernal spirits from those who are possessed. And priests who are assisting persons dying call to their aid the Name of Jesus, to deliver them from the assaults of hell, which at that last moment are so terrible.

In the Life of St. Bernardine of Sienna, we see how many sinners the Saint converted, how many abuses he put an end to, and how many cities he sanctified, by trying, when he preached, to induce the people to invoke the Name of Jesus. St. Peter says that there is no other Name given to us by which we can find salvation but the ever blessed Name of Jesus: For there is no other name under heaven given to men whereby we must be save (Acts iv., 12). Jesus is He Who has not only saved us, but continually preserves us from the danger of sin by His merits, each time we invoke Him with confidence: Whatsoever you shall ask the Father in my name, that will I do.—(St. John xiv., 13).

In temptations, then, I repeat with St. Laurence Justinian, “whether you are tempted by the devil are attacked by men, invoke the Name of Jesus.” If the devils and men torment you and urge you to sin call on Jesus, and you will be delivered; and if temptations do not cease to persecute you, continue to invoke Jesus, and you will never fall. Those who practice this devotion have experienced that they keep themselves safe, and that they always come off victorious.

Let us always add the holy Name of Mary, which likewise terrible to hell, and we shall always be secure. “This short prayer—Jesus and Mary—is easy to remember,” says Thomas a Kempis, “and powerful to protect; is strong enough to deliver us from all the assaults of enemies.”

THE NAME OF OUR SAVIOUR A NAME OF GREAT POWER

Consider that the Name Jesus signifies Saviour; and St. Peter—(Acts iv., 12)—assures us that the Eternal Father has not given to men any other Name by which they may be saved amidst the snares of this deceitful world, than the adorable Name of Jesus. It is this Name that makes the truth of Faith shine everywhere, and that calls all men from the abyss of darkness to the adorable light of the Gospel. It is by virtue of this adorable Name that the Apostle gave light to the blind, made the lame walk, healed the sick, raised the dead to life, and filled the whole world with wonder. And if the Angel at first announced that Jesus would bring life into the world by delivering it from the cruel slavery into which Adam had plunged it, this good Saviour confirmed this promise Himself when He declared that He had come so that His sheep might have life, and might have it more abundantly.—(St. John. x., 10). By virtue of His Name we see idolatry overthrown, to the great confusion of pagan princes and priests, who did all in their power to uphold it.

O amiable and Holy Name of Jesus, may the Seraphim of Heaven give Thee suitable thanks for me, and never cease to praise Thee by ever repeating that Thou dost merit all glory, all honour, and all power. My sweet Saviour, I hope to obtain, by virtue of Thy Name, the salvation of my body and soul; I hope that with this glorious Name in my heart and on my lips, victorious over the world and the flesh, I shall have the happiness to sing Thy praises and to bless the august Trinity for ever and ever.

II.

Consider also the efficacy of the adorable Name of Jesus in making our prayers pleasing to God, and in obtaining all that we ask of Him. This Name opens for us the way to arrive promptly at the feet of the Most High and to have our prayers heard at once. The Gospel attests that the prayers of Jesus Himself have always been heard by virtue of His great Name, and that He authorizes us to say, when speaking to God: “ Our Father, Who art in Heaven.” In consideration of the Name of Jesus, God looks with a favourable eye upon our petition. For this reason Jesus exhorted the Apostles, and exhorts us all, that we should ask of the Father in His Name, in order to be sure that we shall obtain what we seek: If you ask the Father anything in my name, he will give it to you.—(St. John. xvi., 23). It is enough for Him to hear the petition, and He will bestow upon us the favours that have been asked of Him in the Name of His Beloved Son, with Whom He is well pleased, and Who, in order to satisfy His offended justice has shown Himself obedient even unto death.

We should, then, know how to profit by the efficacious power of the Holy Name of Jesus; being sure that our prayers will be heard, we should often, every hour of the day, repeat our prayers to the Eternal Father, and we shall advance in perfection on the road of the divine precepts, until we attain the happiness of seeing and possessing Him for all eternity in Heaven.

O Sweet Jesus, our Love and our Hope, since Thou hast deigned to assume mortal flesh, in order to open to us the gate of mercy, and to render our prayers efficacious by virtue of Thy glorious Name, grant that our prayers for the grace of perseverance may be heard, so that faithful to the Divine law to the end of our lives, we may, with Thy Holy Name on our lips, pass from this valley of tears to the glory of Paradise.

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JMJ
U.I.O.G.D.
Ave Maria!
Jesus, Mary, Joseph, we love Thee, save souls.
O God come to our assistance. Jesus, Mary, Joseph please make haste to help us!
+ + + Jesus, Mary, Joseph + + +

From the book - Sermons of the Cure of Ars – St. John Mary Vianney

THE GLORY AND THE POWER OF THE HOLY NAME.

He humbled Himself, becoming obedient unto death, even the death of the Cross. For which cause God also hath exalted Him, and hath given Him a name which is above all names.”—Phil. ii. 8-9.

Dearly beloved in the Lord! On this Sunday we celebrate in an especial manner the festival in honor of the Holy Name of Jesus, that Name which is, for every Christian, the noblest and dearest, the holiest and the most consoling. By honoring and loving the Name of our Saviour, we show our respect and love for Him who bears this blessed Name. In this sense we honor and praise the names of the Saints whose memory will never die, but will always be honored by God and men; we think with joy of their exalted and heroic virtues, their living and steadfast faith, their self-sacrificing love for their neighbor, their untiring zeal to help their fellow men to that true happiness and salvation which comes from God alone—yes, truly the names of the Saints, and, above all, that of the Queen of Saints, and the names of all God’s elect, are dear to us, and we pronounce them with reverence and love; indeed, it would be a sin not to do so.

But there is a Name which is above all other names, a Name which we must always pronounce with the greatest reverence, with the most blissful happiness and the tenderest love; and that is the Name of Jesus. And why do we all cherish in our hearts so profound a respect, such love and devotion for this Most Holy Name? First—On account of its glory and excellence, and then (second) because of its wonderful power and abundance of grace.

Let us make this the subject of our meditation in the Name of Jesus: “Who humbled Himself, becoming obedient unto death, even the death of the Cross. Wherefore God also hath exalted Him, and hath given Him a name which is above every name.”

1.—Beloved in the Lord! No one is able to explain the great mystery revealed on earth by Christ, the Incarnate Son of God. According to the expression of St. Paul, the Apostle, in his letter to the Colossians, this mystery, which the Apostle says is Christ Himself, has been hidden from all eternity in God. When in the fullness of time it was revealed, it received a name which showed us distinctly, in the light of faith, the great and wonderful signification of the Incarnation of the Son of God and our redemption. God, the Eternal Father, wished to choose the name Himself which His well-beloved Son should bear upon earth, and He announced this name to the world by an angel from Heaven. For, commissioned by God, and sent by Him, the archangel Gabriel brought the message to the Blessed Virgin Mary: “Behold, thou wilt conceive in thy womb and bear a Son, and His name shall be called Jesus.” And the angel said to Joseph: “Joseph, son of David, fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife, for that which is conceived in Her is of the Holy Ghost. And She shall bring forth a Son, and thou shalt call His name Jesus, for He shall save His people from their sins” (St. Matthew 1: 20-21).

And, again, as we have heard on the Feast of the Circumcision of Our Lord: “And after eight days were accomplished that the Child should be circumcised His name was called Jesus, which was called by the angel before He was conceived in the womb” (St. Luke 2: 21).

The name of Jesus, therefore, was not given to our Saviour by man or angel, but by God Himself. This most holy Name was from all eternity hidden with the mystery of the Incarnation in the bosom, in the heart, of the Father, and descended at the same time with the fulfillment of this mystery from Heaven, so that we men might express in a worthy manner our respect and our gratitude for what the Son of God, in His human nature, out of His incomprehensible love for us, had done and suffered for our salvation. “Thou shalt call His name Jesus, for He shall save His people from their sins” (St. Matthew 1: 21); but not only His chosen people, but all mankind, as the Apostle St. John says, so as to bring together all the dispersed children of God, to be made one here upon earth and one in Heaven. “Jesus Christ,” says this same Apostle, “is the propitiation for our sins; and not for ours only, but also for those of the whole world” (I. St. John 2: 2). As St. Paul says, Christ Jesus is the only Mediator between God and man. The name of Jesus means, therefore, Saviour, Redeemer and Mediator, and reminds us of all that the Son of God accomplished here upon earth to redeem us and to make us eternally happy. It reminds us of His entire earthly life, from His birth, until His death, of all the steps that He took, of the miracles that He worked, of all the sick that He cured, of all the dead that He raised to life, of the sinners whom He forgave, of the Sacraments which He left in His Church—in a word, of everything which the Incarnate Son of God did, and still does, not only to render us happy here upon earth, but also to make us happy and to bless us for all eternity. The name of Jesus is, therefore, for us the dearest and the most glorious name.

Our Saviour merited this name for Himself. It is the name of honor, which belongs to the Son of God, who died upon the Cross to save the fallen world. This name is the reward, the price of victory, which He received from His Heavenly Father; the praise and the renown which He will receive forevermore from the grateful Christian world. This is taught and proclaimed to us, by the great Apostle of the people, in the most thrilling words, when he says of Christ: “He humbled Himself, becoming obedient unto death, even the death of the Cross. Wherefore God also hath exalted Him, and hath given Him a name which is above every name, that in the name of Jesus every knee should bow of those that are in heaven, on earth and under the earth; and that every tongue should confess that the Lord Jesus Christ is in the glory of God the Father.”

And, behold, as it was said, so it has come to pass. The name of Jesus was placed over the head of the crucified Saviour on Golgotha; Jesus Nazarenus, Rex Judaeorum (Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews), but now it shines over heaven and earth, to the glory of God the Son. All the angels and saints in heaven pronounce this glorious Name with indescribable jubilation and rapture. All the faithful on earth praise the Name of their greatest Benefactor with the most profound reverence and intense gratitude. The suffering souls in purgatory sigh with ardent longings as often as they think of this Holy Name, and their desire is to praise and glorify this Holy Name with all the elect in heaven. Who amongst us would dare to utter this Most Holy Name with indifference or without circumspectness? No, O Jesus, how could we possibly be guilty of such an offense against Thee! With the most profound reverence, and ardent love, we will forevermore preserve Thy Glorious Name in our hearts, and give utterance to it with our tongues. And we will also call upon it with the most complete confidence.

II.—For this reason, beloved Christians, listen to a few words on the wonderful power of the Name of Jesus. In the first place, it is the Saviour Himself who assures us of the wonderful power of His divine Name, for He says of those who believe in Him: They shall cast out devils in My Name, they shall speak new tongues, they shall pick up snakes, and if they drink anything poisonous, it shall not harm them. They shall lay their hands upon the sick and heal them.”

Of the power of His Name, Jesus says, further, that every prayer offered up in His Name shall be heard. “Amen, amen, I say unto you, if you ask the Father anything in My Name, He will grant it unto you. Hitherto you have not asked for anything in My Name, but pray, so that you may receive, that your joy may be perfect.”

Holy Scripture and the traditions of our Holy Church teach us the innumerable times that the Lord has kept this His promise, and how powerful and full of blessing is His Holy Name.

Peter and John, in the early days of the Church, went up into the Temple to pray. A man who had been lame from his birth was sitting at the door of the Temple, which was called “the beautiful,” and he begged an alms of the Apostles. Peter felt himself possessed of treasures which surpassed all the wealth of this earth, and, fortified by our Saviour’s promises, he spoke to the lame man: “Look at us!” The latter did so, in the hope of receiving something from them. But Peter said to him, “I have neither gold nor silver, but what I have that I will give thee: In the Name of Jesus Christ, the Nazarene, arise and walk!” And the lame man jumped up and went with them into the Temple to praise God.

St. Paul had arrived at Philippi, the capital of Macedonia. He went through the streets of the city toward a house of prayer. On the way he was met by a servant girl, who was possessed by an evil spirit. The Holy Apostle took pity upon the unfortunate girl, and, confiding in the Lord’s promises, said to the evil spirit: “I command thee, in the Name of Jesus Christ, depart out of her!” And the devil immediately departed out of her.

A goblet full of poison was handed to the Apostle St. John; he uttered the Name of Jesus over it, and the poison did not harm him.

Endowed with the power of the Holy Name, the Apostles went out to convert the world. Not only did they work numberless miracles, but, also, those who believed in their words performed miracles in the Name of Jesus. At the sound of this Divine Name, the temples of the pagans collapsed. Before it the spirits of darkness fled. Through this victorious Name the teachings of Jesus were disseminated over the face of the earth. In this Name the Church carries on her divine mission every day until the end of the world; in it she teaches, prays, blesses and consecrates. But, my dear Christians, each and every one of us can experience in ourselves the wonderful power and effects of this consoling Name. Yes, O Christian soul, if you call upon the Name of Jesus with devotion, you will most certainly obtain all things necessary for your salvation. This Most Blessed Name will give you advice in difficulties, courage in dangers, fortitude and strength in temptations, perseverance in good, consolation and joy, in trouble and suffering. When the Apostles of the Lord were scourged at Jerusalem, they rejoiced that they were accounted worthy to suffer ignominy for the Name of Jesus.

The more devoutly we reverence and call upon the Name of Jesus, the more will our Saviour show a tender and perceptible love toward us. “My Jesus,” says St. Augustine, “so soon as I begin to utter Thy Name, I perceive an unearthly sweetness in my mouth, and an amazing change of heart.” “The Name of Jesus,” says St. Bernard, “is as honey in the mouth, a sweet sound in the ears, and a joy to the heart.” How sweet and consoling is the Name of Jesus, in all the pains and sufferings of this changeable life, but it is sweetest of all at the hour of death. With the Name of Jesus on their lips, the Saints of God breathed forth their souls. Jesus was their last prayer, their last sigh. “Lord Jesus, receive my soul!” This is how St. Stephen prayed when they were stoning him to death, and so he died in the Lord. “Jesus, my love!” sighed the holy martyr Ignatius, Bishop of Antioch, as they led him to his death, to be torn asunder by the wild beasts. When they ordered him to deny the Name of Jesus, he replied, quietly and firmly: “I will never cease to utter His Name. And if you could prevent me from pronouncing it with my mouth, you could not efface it from my heart.” Confessing the Most Holy Name of Jesus, and whilst pronouncing the same most fervently, the holy Bishop died the glorious death of a martyr.

Grant to us, also, O Jesus, that Thy ever-blessed Name may be to us as long as we live, and especially at the hour of our death, our consolation and our hope, and in heaven our eternal joy and blessedness. Amen. REV. H. N., D.D.



From the 1957 Raccolta -


I.

An Invocation of the Holy Name of Jesus


The faithful who devoutly invoke the holy Name of Jesus may gain:
An indulgence of 300 days
A plenary indulgence on the usual conditions, when they repeat this invocation daily for a whole month;
A plenary indulgence at the hour of death, if they have been accustomed to invoke the holy Name frequently during life, provided that, after confession and Communion, or at least an act of contrition, they devoutly invoke the Holy Name of Jesus with their lips if possible, otherwise in their hearts, and accept death with resignations from the hand of God as the wages of sin.

II.

Litany of the Most Holy Name of Jesus


Indulgence of 7 years.
A plenary indulgence once a month on the usual conditions for the daily and devout recitation (hereinafter referred to as "the usual conditions") of this litany.

LITANY OF THE HOLY NAME OF JESUS

Lord, have mercy on us.
Christ, have mercy on us.
Lord, have mercy on us.
Jesus, hear us.
Jesus, graciously hear us.
God the Father of Heaven,
Have mercy on us.
God the Son, Redeemer of the world,
Have mercy on us.
God the Holy Spirit,
Have mercy on us.
Holy Trinity, one God,
Have mercy on us.
Jesus, Son of the living God, Have mercy on us.
Jesus, splendor of the Father, Have mercy on us.
Jesus, brightness of eternal light,
Jesus, King of glory,
Jesus, sun of justice,
Jesus, Son of the Virgin Mary,
Jesus, most amiable,
Jesus, most admirable,
Jesus, the mighty God,
Jesus, Father of the world to come,
Jesus, angel of great counsel,
Jesus, most powerful,
Jesus, most patient,
Jesus, most obedient,
Jesus, meek and humble of heart,
Jesus, lover of chastity,
Jesus, lover of us,
Jesus, God of peace,
Jesus, author of life,
Jesus, example of virtues,
Jesus, zealous lover of souls,
Jesus, our God,
Jesus, our refuge,
Jesus, father of the poor,
Jesus, treasure of the faithful,
Jesus, good Shepherd,
Jesus, true light,
Jesus, eternal wisdom,
Jesus, infinite goodness,
Jesus, our way and our life,
Jesus, joy of Angels,
Jesus, King of the Patriarchs,
Jesus, Master of the Apostles,
Jesus, teacher of the Evangelists,
Jesus, strength of Martyrs,
Jesus, light of Confessors,
Jesus, purity of Virgins,
Jesus, crown of Saints,

Be merciful, spare us, O Jesus.
Be merciful, graciously hear us, O Jesus.

From all evil, deliver us, O Jesus.
From all sin, deliver us, O Jesus.
From Your wrath,
From the snares of the devil,
From the spirit of fornication,
From everlasting death,
From the neglect of Your inspirations,
By the mystery of Your holy Incarnation,
By Your Nativity,
By Your Infancy,
By Your most divine Life,
By Your labors,
By Your agony and passion,
By Your cross and dereliction,
By Your sufferings,
By Your death and burial,
By Your Resurrection,
By Your Ascension,
By Your institution of the most Holy Eucharist,
By Your joys,
By Your glory,

Lamb of God, who takest away the sins of the world, spare us, O Jesus.
Lamb of God, who takest away the sins of the world, graciously hear us, O Jesus.
Lamb of God, who takest away the sins of the world, have mercy on us, O Jesus.

Jesus, hear us.
Jesus, graciously hear us.

Let us pray.

O Lord Jesus Christ, You have said, "Ask and you shall receive, seek, and you shall find, knock, and it shall be opened to you." Grant, we beg of You, to us who ask it, the gift of Your most divine love, that we may ever love You with our whole heart, in word and deed, and never cease praising You.

Give us, O Lord, as much a lasting fear as a lasting love of Your Holy Name, for You, who live and are King for ever and ever, never fail to govern those whom You have solidly established in Your love. R. Amen.

III.
Hymns

Jesu, dulcis memoria (Jesus, the very thought of Thee)

Jesus, the very thought of Thee
With sweetness fills the breast!
Yet sweeter far Thy face to see
And in Thy Presence rest.
No voice can sing, no heart can frame,
Nor can the memory find,
A sweeter sound than Jesus’ Name,
The Savior of mankind.

O hope of every contrite heart!
O joy of all the meek!
To those who fall, how kind Thou art!
How good to those who seek!

But what to those who find? Ah! this
Nor tongue nor pen can show
The love of Jesus, what it is,
None but His loved ones know.

Jesus! our only hope be Thou,
As Thou our prize shalt be;
In Thee be all our glory now,
And through eternity. Amen.

Indulgence of 5 years
(A plenary - the usual conditions)

Jesu decus angelicum (O Jesus, Thou the beauty art)

O JESUS, Thou the beauty art
of Angel worlds above!
Thy name is music to the heart,
enchanting it with love!

Celestial sweetness unalloyed!
who eat Thee hunger still,
who drink of Thee still feel a void
which naught but Thou canst fill!

O my sweet Jesus! hear the sighs
which unto Thee I send!
to Thee my inmost spirit cries
my being’s hope and end!

Stay with us, Lord, and with Thy light
illume the soul’s abyss;
scatter the darkness of our night
and fill the world with bliss.

O Jesu! spotless Virgin flower!
our life and joy! to Thee
be praise, beatitude and power,
through all eternity! Amen.

Indulgence of 5 years
(A plenary - the usual conditions)

Jesu, Rex Admirabilis (Jesus, Admirable King)

O JESUS, King most wonderful!
Thou Conqueror renowned!
Thou Sweetness most ineffable!
in whom all joys are found!

When once Thou visitest the heart,
then truth begins to shine;
then earthly vanities depart;
then kindles love divine.

O Jesu! Light of all below!
Thou font of life and fire!
surpassing all the joys we know,
and all we can desire.

May every heart confess Thy name,
and ever Thee adore;
and seeking Thee, itself inflame
to seek Thee more and more.

Thee may our tongues for ever bless;
Thee may we love alone;
and ever in out lives express
the image of Thine own. Amen.

Indulgence of 5 years
(A plenary - the usual conditions)

IV.

DEVOUT PRACTICES


The faithful who during the MONTH OF JANUARY perform some special act of devotion in honor of the Holy Name of Jesus are granted:
An indulgence of 7 years once on any day of the month;
A plenary indulgence - on the usual conditions - if this act of devotion is repeated daily or the entire month.
~~~~~~
The faithful who recite five times the doxology Glory be the Father together with the ejaculation:
Blessed be the most holy Name of Jesus without end!
may gain:
An indulgence of 300 days
†IHS†
The faithful who, after Confession and Communion, visit some church or oratory, public or even semi-public, on the Feast of the Most Holy Name of Jesus, and pray for the intentions of the Sovereign Pontiff may gain: A PLENARY INDULGENCE

V.

Prayers to the Holy Name of Jesus

O GOOD JESU, according to Thy great mercy, have mercy on me. O most merciful Jesus, by that Precious Blood which Thou didst will to shed for sinners, I beseech Thee to wash away all mine iniquities and look graciously upon me, a poor and unworthy sinner, as I call upon Thy holy Name. Therefore, O Jesus, do Thou save me for Thy holy Name’s sake.

(An indulgence of 500 days)

O God, who didst appoint Thine only-begotten Son to be the Saviour of mankind and didst command His name to be called Jesus; mercifully grant that we may enjoy the vision of Him in heaven, whose holy Name we venerate on earth. Through the same Christ our Lord. Amen.

(An indulgence of 5 years
A plenary indulgence once a month on the usual conditions if this prayer is said devoutly every day)

Related article:
https://against-all-heresies-and-errors.blogspot.com/2017/06/The-Wonders-of-the-Holy-Name-Jesus.html

Thursday, August 31, 2017

Quotes & Life of Fr. Paul of Moll (Francis Luyckx 1824-1896): A Benedictine Priest and Miracle Worker

Father Paul of Moll (https://archive.org/details/TheVeryRevFatherPaulOfMoll), Belgium (Francis Luyckx 1824-1896), a Benedictine priest, received from God some very extraordinary mystical graces during his lifetime, after being miraculously cured of a grave illness at the time he was ordained a priest. He worked many miracles, especially through the use of the medal of St. Benedict, the founder of the religious order that he belonged to.

Quotes by Fr. Paul of Moll (Francis Luyckx 1824-1896)

-To a servant girl in Antwerp Father Paul said,
“Before eating, sleeping, opening or closing a door or any other action, always have the intention of doing all for the love of Jesus. In this way you will continually reap a rich harvest for heaven.”

-Very early one morning, Father Paul seeing a peasant who had come a long distance through a snowstorm to hear Mass in the church at Steenbrugge, said to him: “If you could see the immense merits which your courage has procured for you, you would be astonished, and you might yet increase them in a incredible measure, by saying, ‘All for the love of Jesus.’”

“God will not ask, ‘Have you done much?’ but, ‘have you worked for the love of God?’ Quantity is not sufficient, it is quality that is necessary.”

-One day Father Paul was seen with a large wound on his forehead. He explained that it was the effect of a blow which the devil had given him.

-“When a demon suggests a bad thought, It is easy to resist the temptation; but if one does not immediately repel it, a second demon comes at once to help the first. Afterwards, in proportion as resistance is delayed, still other demons come and combine their efforts, and when one has to battle against seven devils all at once, it is very difficult not to succumb.”

-A lady acquaintance from Knesselaere paid a visit to Father Paul and found him very ill, his head, and left arm and leg were much swollen. Father Paul explained the cause of his condition in these terms: -
“I had great pains in my head and suffered so intensely from them that I complained to Jesus. He replied to me, ‘How insignificant your sufferings are, compared with the martyrdom I suffered, when crowned with thorns!’
“Then I asked Him that I might experience the pain of only one of those thorns and, at the same instant, the torture became so great that I fainted.”

“God is infinitely good and wise. He shows His goodness towards you by sending you crosses. The more bitter your pains, the more meritorious they are. Every cross is a blessing from Heaven, a blessing which surpasses all the suffering of the world. If one were able to understand the full value of crosses, it would be a terrible torment to be deprived of them.”

“If one could understand the value of an act of love for God in suffering, one would experience the greatest grief at being obliged to pass a single moment without being able to make this meritorious act. Happy is he who, in suffering, makes acts of love!

-“When making the Way of the Cross, try to have compassion for the sufferings of Christ; for all those who took part in His sorrows became saints as, for example, Simon of Cyrene, Veronica, the good thief, the holy women and so many others.”

A young girl inquired if the misfortunes that befell her family were divine punishments. “No,” replied Father Paul, “they are trials which the good God sends in order to make you a little more like Him.” Thereupon the girl asked what would come of her. “An angel in Heaven,” he said.

-Father Paul related one of his visions to a person from Knesselaere in the following manner:-
“The Blessed Virgin appeared to me, holding the Divine Infant in her arms; he was crying bitterly and did not cease to complain. I asked Mary what was the cause of the sorrows of the little Jesus, and she replied, ‘It is because priests do not remind the faithful sufficiently of the love of God for man, and of the passion of our Savior.’
“Thereupon I promised to treat of these two subjects in my next sermon, and immediately the sadness of the Infant Jesus was changed into great joy. He threw His little arms round the neck of His Mother, and embraced her tenderly.”

-“Jesus of infinite love, I feel pity for You, for every blow, every wound, every drop of blood.”

-“Oh love, oh infinite love of Jesus, I ask You for a heart to love You more and more; to love only You!”

-An unnatural Mother, as she advanced in years, having become blind, begged Father Paul to restore her sight. The Rev. Father held a small mirror before the woman’s eyes and asked her, “Do you see now?” Oh yes,” she replied, “and oh, what a beautiful little angel.”
“Is it not the child which you killed when you were young? You must bear your misfortune in expiation of your crime.”
And she again became blind for Father Paul invariably refused to intercede in behalf of those whose affliction was the effect of sin.

-A Nun happened to be in the Benedictine church of the abbey, and saw a woman lamenting and entreating Father Paul to come to her assistance; but he abruptly turned away from her. The religious Sister was greatly affected so she followed Father Paul and ventured to ask why he acted so strangely. He replied, “It is indeed very sad, but in her youth she destroyed her child, she is now suffering the penalty of her crime, and I cannot help her.

-A poor girl in Antwerp who had become blind, desired to obtain her recovery through Father Paul; but having no funds for the journey to Termonde, she applied to a young lady of Antwerp who was well known for her works of charity. The lady was kind enough to accompany the girl to Termonde. Great, however, was her astonishment, when she heard Father Paul say to the blind girl, “Suffer your affliction in expiation of your crime; for you put your new-born infant to death.”

-A sick woman came and asked Father Paul to cure her. She had brought a friend with her. The Rev. Father prescribed a novena and gave her the assurance of a cure. Then turning to the other woman, he asked her if she were not ill. “No,” she said, “I come only to accompany my friend.”
“Nevertheless, you are very sick,” and she replied “Father, I am not sick, I feel fine.”
“It is your soul that is sick,” said Father Paul, “it is as is as black as soot.”
“Why” the woman asked.
“Did you not drown your child?”
“Oh, no! I never did such a thing!”
“Certainly you did so, eleven years ago, at such place (indicating the exact spot) and you never confessed your crime.” The unnatural mother burst into tears and then made her confession to Father Paul.

-From a letter to the Mother Superior of a convent: “It is by love that one can overcome Almighty God; He is so sensitive to love that He can refuse us nothing.”

-“Imagine all the love of one hundred thousand mothers for their children. It is nothing in comparison with the infinite love of God.”

-“The perfections of God are infinite. In Heaven the saints will see the divine perfections succeed each other without ceasing: every moment a new perfection will be revealed to them, and so it will be through all eternity.”

-“Man finds his greatest consolation in faithfully keeping the commandments of God and the holy Church, and in having a great devotion to Mary.”

-“The more a man loves God, the more beautiful he grows in the eyes of God.”

-“God being infinite love, we can always love Him more and more.”

-“God is astonishing in His love. The more we love Him, the more He loves us. He pays us back in tenfold love, the love which we have for Him.”

-Father Paul once said to a person in Antwerp,
“I never cease saying, O love! O great love! O infinite love of God! If men knew how pleasing this is to God, they would repeat it without ceasing; several persons have become saints in this way.”

-“Ask Jesus everything in the name of his infinite love, but especially remembering his crown of thorns.”

“If it were permitted to one of the elect to live again in this world, he would submit with joy to all the sufferings that men have ever endured here below, in order to add to his merits that which he would acquire by the recital of one Ave Maria.”

This last quote is supported by an anecdote taken from ‘The Secret of the Rosary’ by St. Louis de Montfort:

Blessed Alan also relates that a nun who had always had a great devotion to the Rosary appeared after her death to one of her sisters in religion and said to her, “If I were able to return in my body to have the chance of saying just a single Hail Mary, even without great fervour, I would gladly go through the sufferings that I had during my last illness all over again, in order to gain the merit of this prayer.”[*] It is to be noted that she had been bed-ridden and suffered agonizing pains for several years before she died.

[*]Related articles:
https://against-all-heresies-and-errors.blogspot.com/2017/07/the-seven-sorrows-of-mary-devotion.html
https://against-all-heresies-and-errors.blogspot.com/2017/07/devotion-to-seven-sorrows-of-mary-prayer-card.html
https://against-all-heresies-and-errors.blogspot.com/2017/05/heaven-opened-by-the-practice-of-the-three-hail-marys.html

ADDENDUM

Say often during the day: “All that I shall do today, or tonight, I shall do for the love of God, so that all my actions may be actions of love. I unite myself today, or tonight, with all the acts of love made to God, both in heaven and on earth.”

Say quite often during the day, when you commence to do something, were it only moving a chair, opening or shutting a door, or any other action, “For love of Thee, Jesus and Mary.” When you have to suffer anything say, “I want to suffer it for the love of Jesus and Mary, just as Jesus and Mary has suffered all for love of me.”

Related article:
https://against-all-heresies-and-errors.blogspot.com/2017/05/how-to-become-saint-how-to-love-god-etc.html

Fr. Paul of Moll advices us to say these short but fervent prayers everyday:

“Unite yourself often with God through love, at your morning and evening prayer, and say, ‘I shall do everything for the love of God that all my actions may be acts of love.’ Ask for that love through the intercession of Mary. Suffer and endure everything for the love of Jesus, as Jesus has suffered everything for love of us.
“I wish you an ardent love for God, it is the richest and most beautiful treasure you can wish or desire. All other treasures will disappear like smoke; but the treasure of love shall remain forever in heaven.
“Ask God for this beautiful treasure, for it must come from Him; men cannot procure it for you. For this reason often ask God for a heart of love that you may love Him ever more and more, and like a child of love. Add to your morning and evening prayers, “All that I shall do today, or tonight, I shall do for the love of God, so that all my actions may be actions of love. I unite myself today, or tonight, with all the acts of love made to God, both in heaven and on earth.”
“Say quite often during the day, when you commence to do something, were it only moving a chair, opening or shutting a door, or any other action, “For love of Thee, Jesus.”
When you have to suffer anything say, “I want to suffer it for the love of Jesus, just as Jesus has suffered all for love of me.” (Fr. Paul of Moll, Letters of Fr. Paul of Moll (Part 3): https://archive.org/details/TheVeryRevFatherPaulOfMoll)

He also said: “A good means of avoiding a long stay in purgatory is to die entirely resigned to the holy will of God. … A lady had met her death in a terrible railway collision near Ghent. Father Paul said that her soul has gone straight to heaven because, at the last moment, the lady cried out, “Lord, may Thy will be done.”

St. Alphonsus Liguori (c. 1760): “Say also, every day, three ‘Our Fathers’ and three ‘Hail Marys’ in honor of the Most Holy Trinity, for the graces bestowed upon Mary. The Blessed Virgin once revealed that this devotion is very pleasing to her.”

“A young girl from Scheepsdaele complained to Father Paul that she had very little time for her devotions, and even the few prayers she did say were said with many distractions. “Oh! in that case,” Father Paul replied, “you can remedy the matter by saying, in the evening, May all my imperfections of this day be changed into perfections!’”



Affectionate Salutations to Mary By Fr. Paul of Moll


I greet thee, Mary, Daughter of God the Father.
I greet thee, Mary, Mother of the Son of God.
I greet thee, Mary, Spouse of the Holy Spirit.
I greet thee, Mary, Temple of the Blessed Trinity.
I greet thee, Mary, white Lily of the resplendent Trinity.
I greet thee, Mary, fragrant Rose of the heavenly court.
I greet thee, Mary, Virgin full of meekness and humility, of whom the King of heaven willed to be born and nourished by thy milk.
I greet thee, Mary, Virgin of virgins.
I greet thee, Mary, Queen of martyrs, whose soul was pierced by the sword of sorrows.
I greet thee, Mary, Lady and Mistress, to whom all power has been given in heaven and on earth.
I greet thee, Mary, Queen of my heart, my sweetness, my life and all my hope.
I greet thee, Mary, Mother most amiable.
I greet thee, Mary, Mother most admirable.
I greet thee, Mary, Mother of beautiful love.
I greet thee, Mary, conceived without sin.
I greet thee, Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee, blessed art thou among women, and blessed be the fruit of thy womb.
Blessed be thy spouse Saint Joseph.
Blessed be thy father Saint Joachim.
Blessed be thy mother Saint Ann.
Blessed be thy angel Saint Gabriel.
Blessed be the Eternal Father who hath chosen thee.
Blessed be thy Son who hath loved thee.
Blessed be the Holy Ghost who hath espoused thee.
May all those who love thee bless thee.
O Blessed Virgin, bless us all in the name of thy dear Son. Amen.

The venerable Father Paul assured one of his friends, that those who devoutly venerate Mary with these affectionate salutations may rely on her powerful protection and blessing.

Once, whilst giving a copy of these Salutations to a girl from Eecloo, Father Paul said to her, "These Salutations are so beautiful! Say them every morning. From on high, in heaven, the Blessed Virgin will then give you her blessing. "Yes, yes, would to God that you could see her! The Blessed Virgin blesses you then; I know it quite well." He said further that it is impossible not to be heard favorably when we recite these Salutations to Mary for the conversion of sinners. 

Prayer for All Things Necessary for Salvation

O My God, I believe in Thee; Do Thou strengthen my faith. All my hopes are in Thee; Do Thou secure them. I love Thee with my whole heart; teach me to love Thee daily more and more. I am sorry that I have offended Thee, do Thou increase my sorrow.
I adore Thee as my first beginning, I aspire after Thee as my last end. I give Thee thanks as my constant benefactor; I call upon Thee as my sovereign protector.
Vouchsafe, O my God, to conduct me by Thy wisdom, to restrain me by Thy justice, to comfort me by Thy mercy, to defend me by Thy power.
To Thee, I desire to consecrate all my thoughts, words, actions and sufferings; that henceforward I may think only of Thee, speak of Thee, refer all my actions to Thy greater glory, and suffer willingly, whatever Thou shall appoint.
Lord, I desire that in all things, Thy will may be done, because it is Thy will, and the manner that Thou willest.
I beg of Thee, to enlighten my understanding, To inflame my heart, to purify my body, and to sanctify my soul.
Give me strength, O my God, to expiate my offenses, to overcome my temptations, to subdue my passions, and to acquire the virtues proper in my state of life.
Fill my heart, with tender affection, for Thy goodness, hatred of my faults, love of my neighbour, and contempt of the world.
Let me always, remember to be submissive to my superiors, condescending to my inferiors, faithful to my friends and charitable to my enemies.
Assist me to overcome sensuality by mortification, avarice by alms deeds, anger by meekness, and tepidity by devotion.
O my God, make me prudent in my undertakings, courageous in dangers, patient in affliction, and humble in prosperity.
Grant that I may be ever attentive at my prayers, temperate at my meals, diligent at my employments, and constant in my resolutions.
Let my conscience be ever upright, and pure, my exterior modest, my conversation edifying and my comportment regular.
Assist me, that I may continually labour to overcome nature, to correspond with Thy grace, to keep Thy commandments, and to work out my salvation.
Discover to me, O my God, the nothingness of this world, the greatness of heaven, the shortness of time, and the length of eternity.
Grant that I may prepare for death, that I may fear Thy judgment, escape hell and in the end obtain Heaven, through Jesus Christ, my Lord.

Amen.


Life and Biographies of Fr. Paul of Moll (Francis Luyckx 1824-1896):

St Gemma Galgani: Rev Father Paul of Moll
http://www.stgemmagalgani.com/2009/02/rev-father-paul-of-moll.html

The Very Rev. Father Paul Of Moll: A Flemish Benedictine And Wonder-Worker Of The Nineteenth Century, 1824-1896
https://archive.org/details/TheVeryRevFatherPaulOfMoll

Thursday, August 24, 2017

St. Alphonsus, Moral Theology, Book 2: Requirements For Mortal Sin

In this article:

53. What things are required for a mortal sin?
54. From what causes can a mortal sin become venial? I. from imperfect notice.
55. II. From imperfect consent.
56. III. From the unimportance of the matter.
59. How venial sin becomes mortal, I. on account of the end attached to it.
60. II. On account of the final end that was intended.
61. III. On account of contempt.
62. IV. On account of scandal.
63. V. On account of the danger of falling into mortal sin.
64. Whether someone would be in the state of mortal sin who purposes to commit all venial sins?

52. How many different ways can a sin be mortal? Notable advertence must be made for those who condemn facile things as mortal sins.

52.—Resp. 2. A mortal sin is twofold, on the one hand it is deadly by its genus; on the other hand from its accident. It is deadly by its genus because in itself it wounds the charity of God, or of our neighbor in regard to his person, things or rights, or gravely corrupts our very person (Azor, l. 4, c. 9, Sanchez, l. 1, mor. c 3).

For that reason, the following are resolved:

1. Sins committed against someone’s good, as are venial by their genus, such as uselessness, vain concupiscence, vain delight, prodigality, curiosity, and superfluous worship or clothing, or trifles, laziness, excess in food, drink, sleep, laughter, marital relations, fear, sadness, appetite for money, praise, etc.

2. Sins against the theological virtues are mortal by their nature, because they harm some internal good of God, e.g. veracity, mercy, charity. Likewise, nearly all the things which are done against the Decalogue, because those which are committed against the first three precepts similarly harm the Godhead, knowledge, divine omnipotence, and His external or internal honor, which are done against some precepts, harm the person, good or right of their neighbor.

3. Those sins against the seven virtues, which are called capital sins, are not all mortal sins by their genus, because they do not all gravely wound God or neighbor, or corrupt our selves. Resp. 3. It is called mortal from its accident when some act is venial or indifferent, it becomes mortal per accidens, on which we will treat more below.

Here we must rightly notice what Roncaglia says (tract. 2. q. 1, c. 1, reg. 1, in practice) namely, “Where it is clear that something is not a mortal sin, the confessor would be far amiss in judging such a transgression to be grave, and to pronounce his judgment of such a sin on the penitent.” Still, it is very dangerous for confessors to condemn something as a grave sin, where certitude is not manifest, as St. Thomas teaches. “Every question in which it is sought on mortal sin, unless the truth were expressly held, a determination is dangerous.” (Quodlib. 9, art. 15). He adduces the reasoning of this doctrine a little later, namely that “an error, in which something is believed to be mortal that is not, binds to mortal sin by conscience.” This is why St. Antoninus says: “Unless one were to have express authority of Sacred Scripture, or a canon, or a determination of the Church, or at least evident reason, something will be determined to be a mortal sin only with very great danger. ... For if something were determined to be mortal, and it were not mortal, acting against it he will sin because everything that is against conscience paves the road to hell.” Next, we learn in such a distinction that those following rigid doctrines insert themselves, and easily condemn men for mortal sin in those things in which grave malice does not appear from evident reason, and so expose them to the danger of eternal damnation; the same thing must be said about those, who easily impress the mark of laxity on opinions which clearly do not seem improbable. (see what was said in book 1, n. 89).

53. What things are required for a mortal sin?

53.—Resp. 1: Three things are required for a mortal sin and if one of these is lacking, it becomes venial, but otherwise, it is mortal of itself. 1) On the side of the intellect, full knowledge and deliberation. 2) On the side of the will, perfect consent. 3) Gravity of the matter at least as much as possible. The reasoning of the first and second part is, because when one considers human frailty, it does not seem fitting to divine goodness to punish man with eternal punishments without full consideration and consent. The reasoning of the third part is, where the matter is of little moment, there a moderate offense is morally considered as much as possible.

54. From what causes can a mortal sin become venial? I. from imperfect notice.

54.—Resp. 2: A sin that is mortal by its genus, can become venial from three causes, as is clear from the aforesaid. The first is, if on the side of the intellect there was not perfect knowledge of the malice or perfect perfect deliberation. The signs of imperfect deliberation are: a) If one weakly apprehended that it is evil as if half-asleep. b) If after, where he might better consider, he would judge that he was not going to do it if he could have so apprehended it. c) If one labors with vehement passion, apprehension or distraction, or was exceedingly disturbed, so that it was almost as if he did not know what he did. (See what was said in n. 4).

55. II. From imperfect consent.

55.—The second cause is on the side of the will, if there was not perfect consent (as St. Thomas teaches 1.2. q. 88, art. 6. See the aforesaid on consensus n. 5). Moreover, the sins of imperfect consent are: a) If one was so disposed that, although he could easily carry out the sin, still he would not carry it out. b) If someone were hesitant whether he should consent, especially if he is a devout man. c) If someone usually is so affected that he prefers to die than expressly commit a mortal sin, because such does nor easily consent. d) If anyone were extremely fearful and anxious to recall what appeared. e) If one was half in a dream and not sufficiently composed, etc., and will judge that he would not have done it if he were fully awake. (See Sanchez, 1, mor. c. 10, Baldell., l. 10, d. 8)

56. III. From the unimportance of the matter.

56.—The third cause is on the side of the matter, if this would be of little moment. Moreover, when it is such, it must be discerned by a moral judgment of the prudent, for which the following rules will serve: 1) that it will be judged on the matter, not only itself secundum se must absolutely be considered, but also respectively to the end intended, for which if he does a little thing, it is light, but grave, if he does much, as Vasquez teaches, 1.2. d. 158. (The rule is, the smallness of the matter where on account of the smallness the reasoning of the offense is not excused, as happens in infidelity, hatred of God, simony, perjury, venereal matters and blasphemy.) 2. The circumstances must be attended to, because it often happens that a matter that is of itself light, with attention given to the circumstances of the common good to avoid scandal, etc., it may become grave. 3. Whether some part of the matter commanded is grave, these must be considered both absolutely and secundum se, and even in order to the whole. 4. In repeated transgressions, if a great many small matters, either secundum se or according to the effects produced by themselves, were morally joined the matter becomes grave, because then all are morally reputed as one. But on the other hand, then grave matter is not censed if the small matters, neither secundum se nor according to the effects left behind were united among themselves.

59. How venial sin becomes mortal, I. on account of the end attached to it.

59.—There are five modes in which a venial sin becomes a mortal sin, as the doctors in common, and particularly Sanchez, teach: 1. By reason of the enjoined end. 2. By reason of the final end. 3. By reason of contempt. 4. By reason of scandal. 5. By reason of danger. I shall speak briefly on each of these.

Resp. 1. A venial sin crosses over into mortal sin by reason of the enjoined end, that if someone would lie in a small way, but to extort carnal relations: because when the end is a mortal sin, it is also mortal. Still, it is not necessary to explain that lie in confession, but only the desire for fornication; because without the malice of mortal sin, it remains venial.

60. II. On account of the final end that was intended.

60.—Resp. 2. It also crosses into mortal sin, by reason of an excessive affect in some matter: e.g. one would constitute the last end in it. For this purpose it does not suffice to be imposed very intensely and vehemently in the object, but it is required that appreciatively one should virtually so esteem it that he will be prepared for his sake of transgressing the precept obliging under mortal sin, that if anyone would be so inordinately affected to stories, play, person, that he would prefer a feast and omit mass, etc., than be deprived of them. (In the case of one who omits Mass for the sake of games, it suffices for him to confess that he had omitted Mass. See what was said in number 10. If someone, however, by the love of games was prepared to commit any mortal sin, it would be a sin of temerity and indeed very serious, but without a species. The Salamancans tr. 20, c. 12, p. 2, n. 12, and 13, with Palaus, Azor, Bonacina, Reg.). Moreover, Bonacina notes this affect is not only habitual, but ought to be actual, so that sin is contracted because it is not imputed to that fault, to which he was prepared to commit by habit.

61. III. On account of contempt.

61.—Resp. 3. Venial sin becomes mortal by reason of absolute and formal contempt. I say, however, absolute and formal contempt, namely when a precept is violated formally and absolutely, because he refuses to be subject to it or a higher one, which is a sin of consummate pride: or when he does not wish to obey a precept because there is a precept, and it is a sin of formal disobedience, each of which is gravely opposed to charity due to a superior. (Therefore, it is one thing to scorn a law, or a legislator, even a human one, not quâ such a person, but quâ the legislator, which is a mortal sin, and another to scorn a matter commanded, which is venial if the matter is light. The Salamancans ibid., n. 18, and more profusely in tr. 11, c. 2, p. 2, §4 per totum. See also what is going to be said in book 5, n. 161, v. Quarta.)

From which the following are resolved:

1. It is not a mortal sin if you indeed meant to obey and be subject absolutely, but here and now refused in a modest matter; or if you would admit the authority of the law or the one that commands, but here and now pay no heed to the execution. The reason is, because it is not absolute contempt and simpliciter, but only secundum quid.

2. If a precept were abruptly violated from indignation, malice, bad custom, or another cause, and not from contempt of the power of the superior, it is not mortal because it is not formal contempt, but only interpretative.

3. It is a mortal sin to do or omit something from the contempt of a just human law. Likewise, from contempt of God the lawgiver, or even the counselor (which, for that reason, contains a tacit blasphemy, as if God commanded useless things, or merely gave advice); and then to do something from the contempt of a prelate, such a one having authority from God, but not such as a man, unlearned, imprudent, imperfect, because this by and by is not to scorn absolutely and simply, but only secundum quid. (See Sanchez, 1. mor. c. 5; Bonacina, de peccat. d. 2, q. 3, p. 5).

62. IV. On account of scandal.

62.—Resp. 4. Venial sin, or an indifferent work having a species of evil, crosses over per accidens into mortal sin, if the ruin through it that were caused to a neighbor were mortal. The reason is, because in such a work something gravely opposed to charity is superadded. (See what is going to be said on scandal, as well as Filliuci, t. 21, c. 5, q. 10, n. 212).

63. V. On account of the danger of falling into mortal sin.

63.—Resp. 5. A venial sin, or an indifferent work, crosses over into mortal sin by reason of the danger of falling into mortal sin when someone, without sufficient caution, does something from necessity through which he may come into moral and proximate danger of sinning mortally, because he has such contempt for his eternal salvation that he would expose himself rashly to such probable danger. For this reason, in confession the species of the sin must be explained, by the danger of which he opposes himself, because he sinned in the same genus of sin. Moreover, proximate danger is supposed because frequently men of a similar condition lead him into mortal sin.

Question: Whether one sins mortally who exposes himself to a merely probable danger of sinning mortally?

The first opinion with Sporer (de poen. cap. 2, n. 342), and Gob., Hozes, Lumbier, Murc., etc. all cited by Croix (l. 5, n. 257, etc.), rejects this, because (as they say), when in that case it is also probable that there is no danger of sinning, he does not act rashly who commits a sin on such an occasion; for where the danger is not certain, there cannot be present a certain obligation to avoid it. But the opposite must altogether be held, with Busembaum (as above), whom Croix (loc. cit.) follows, with Carden., Eliz., and others. The convincing reason is that if it is illicit to use probable opinion without a just cause with the danger of loss of another’s spiritual or temporal goods, it is also certain among all, how much more it will not be lawful where the danger threatens his own soul? Nor is it opposed to say that where the danger is probable, there also it is probable that there is no danger: for the response is made that in that case, although the sin will be uncertain, whether it were or were not committed, still it is certain that there is danger of sinning. We said without a just cause, for where a just cause is present, there is no obligation of avoiding such a danger, unless the fall into sin were morally foreseen as a certainty. (See what is going to be said in book 3, n. 26, v. Pariter). And so physicians are excused, if they expose themselves to the danger of death to heal women ... so also a parish priest...

The reason is because the danger that is proximate of itself both becomes remote by reason of the circumstance of necessity, and at the same time by reason of means to beware of, which the person proposes (as is held) to apply namely, diligently by adverting the mind from foul delectation or from another passion, and moreover by fortifying himself with pious thoughts, prayers and frequent use of the sacraments. Which means, although they do not suffice to excuse, where the just cause is not present, to the extent that God does not help rashly exposing himself to danger, still he furnishes his aid to one who, from a just cause does not forsake, while in that case he did not remain from affect to sin, but from a certain necessity in that occasion. Otherwise, it must be said about simple confessors who fell a great many times in hearing confessions, because they are held to abstain from such exercise... But indeed, if someone in those occasions had lapsed and did not show off hope of emendation? See what is going to be said in the same place, n. 438, where we will say this must be held with each lost occasion to desert and save his soul. (See also what is going to be said in book 6, n. 453.)

64. Whether someone would be in the state of mortal sin who purposes to commit all venial sins?

64.—Whether, however, there were in the state of mortal sin, one who proposed to commit all venial sins? See what must be said in book 5, n. 12, vers. Quaeriutur autem.


Related articles:


https://against-all-heresies-and-errors.blogspot.com/2017/04/the-malice-of-mortal-sin-by-st-anthony-mary-claret.html

Thursday, August 17, 2017

HOW EASY IT IS TO LOVE MARY, AND HOW MUCH SHE IS PLEASED WITH, AND DESIRES OUR LOVE

Nothing is easier to man than love, because the heart has neither enjoyment nor life without it; this we have already seen and proved, and everyone is a witness of this to himself. Moreover, it is the same thing to see, to contemplate a good and amiable object, and to love it, because we feel ourselves carried away, and borne almost towards it. Now, if Mary be that object so amiable, that a more amiable may not be found among creatures, what obstacle or impediment shall delay, hold back, and detain our heart from running and flying to her? Even a little knowledge of her, such as may be obtained by reading, by hearing, and by meditating on her incomparable perfections, her benefits and her love, suffices to set us on fire, and make us melt towards her.

Even when she was in this world, in a most advanced age, the people crowded to see her. "Great is the concourse of people desiring to see and hear the Queen of Heaven" (S. Ign. apud Joann, Viguer, 75, 4), wrote the blessed martyr Ignatius to the Evangelist Saint John; and Saint Denis the Areopagite considered himself most happy to be presented to her by the same holy Evangelist. [Extract from chapter 6: Now, indeed, I no longer wonder that Saint Denis the Areopagite, at the first sight of this Great Lady, although still clothed with mortal flesh, would have fallen at her feet to adore her as God, had he not been withheld by faith, as he himself testifies. (Nieremb. Trop. Mar., l. 5, c. 2. Boz., l. 9, c. 9. Locr., l. 3, c. 1. Revil. in Paternica apud. Sogneri. Devot. Mariae, p. 1, c. 4). The Apostles and the first Christians were right to erect magnificent temples to her while still living, as did Saint James in Caesaraugusta, Saint John in Asia, Saint Peter in Rome, the disciples of the Prophet Elias upon Mount Carmel, Saint Martha in Marseilles, the holy Magi in Cranagor, and Queen Candace in Ethiopia.] What attractions, then, must she now possess from that glory, from which the great endowments of her most beautiful body, and of her most innocent soul, have received the last consummation of perfection? Let those fortunate souls instruct you, whose hearts, after contemplating for a short time this Most Luminous Sun, were so inflamed and consumed by its celestial fire, that to give vent to their seraphic ardor, one calls her "Captivator of Hearts," as Saint Bernard; another, like Saint Bonaventure, "My Heart, My Soul," and Saint Ephraim of Syria, "The Strong and Sweet Hope of My Soul." Saint Anselm, beside himself with love, exclaims: "O Most Beautiful and Lovely Mary, where dost thou hide thyself from the eyes of my heart? Wait for a poor, weak soul which follows after thee, and hide not thyself from a heart which seeks thee, and sees thee but little."

You cannot believe that she is deaf to these voices, or that, with haughty greatness, she sees not, or heeds not the prayers and tears of those who love her and seek her. She knows all, she sees all, even the least motions of our soul; and oh! How pleasing and acceptable they are to her! She knows well how to return our love with equal love—with equal love? Ay, with a love inestimably greater; with a love which cannot be surpassed, cannot be equalled. "I know, My Lady," said Saint Peter Damian to her, "I know that thou art most kind, and that thou lovest us with an invincible love." (Serm. de Nativ. B. V.). In a transport of love, the blessed Alphonsus Rodriguez, of the Society of Jesus, thus addressed her: "O My Most Amiable Lady, I love thee more than I love myself; but alas! Thou dost not love me as I love thee." "Not so, my Alphonsus," she answered; "I love thee more than thou canst love me; and know," she continued, "that thy love is as far from mine, as is earth from Heaven." "Oh, sweet contest of love!" adds the author who relates it, "in which to be conquered or to conquer, is equally desirable and glorious; but in which she must conquer, who is the most powerful in loving, whose love is not only more tender, but also stronger and more effectual." (Burghes, in Societ. Mar.).

But this Most Loving Queen not only is pleased with and returns our love, but she ardently desires and solicits it, most sweetly inviting and powerfully drawing us to her love. To her are well applied those words of Wisdom: "She is easily seen by them that love her, and is found by them that seek her. She preventeth them that covet her, so that she first showeth herself unto them. He that awaketh early to seek her, shall not labor, for he shall find her sitting at his door. . . . For she goeth about seeking such as are worthy of her; and she showeth herself to them cheerfully in the ways, and meeteth them with all providence." (Wisdom 6:13, 17). "I am the mother of fair love, and of fear, and of knowledge, and of holy hope." (Ecclus. 24:24). "Put me as a seal upon thy heart, as a seal upon thy arm." (Cant. 8:6). "Give me thy heart," she says to you, "give me thy heart, and I will give thee mine." You will not lose by the exchange; but oh! How much you will gain!

But she complains, that she calls on those that are deaf, that her love is not returned, that it is contemned, that she is rejected for the most unworthy objects. "Be astonished, O ye heavens, at this!" she cries out with Jeremiah; "they have forsaken me, the fountain of living water, and have digged to themselves cisterns, broken cisterns, that can hold no water." (Jerem. 2:12, 13).

But yet, you will say, it is those chosen souls, immaculate and holy, those chaste and innocent doves, and high-soaring eagles, that have wings to fly; but can I, a wretch, full of misery and sin, can I hope that this Sublime Queen will deign, I will not say, to love me, but even to cast an eye upon me? Yes, Parthenius, she goes about seeking for lovers; and the further we are from her, the more she approaches us in seeking us; the more wretched we are, the more she pities us, and our very miseries force that loving heart to relieve us, and to love us still more tenderly. She would not be the Queen of Mercy, if in her kingdom there were no objects of mercy; and to such, more than to any others, she says: "Come to me, all ye that are burdened, and I will refresh you." "Come to her," says Saint Bonaventure, "ye that labor and are burdened, and she will refresh your souls. 'Come over to me, all ye that desire me, and be filled with my fruits.'" (Ecclus. 24:26). "Approach unto me, all you who desire my love, and I will not reject you, I will not despise you, but will heap upon you those goods with which I abound through my greatness and my noble generation, which made me to be the Mother, Daughter, and Spouse of God. And happy is the soul that yields himself to such sweet invitations, and, from an ungrateful enemy, becomes a faithful friend; from a stranger, becomes a servant; and from an unfaithful one, becomes a most dear and faithful spouse." (S. Laurent. Justin, de cast, con. verb. et anim. c. xxi).

"However great may be a man's sins," said this Most Amiable Lady to Saint Bridget, "if he return to me with his whole heart, and with true amendment, I am immediately ready to receive him; neither do I consider how much he has sinned, but with what intention and will he returns. I am called by all the Mother of Mercy, and truly the mercy of my Son hath made me merciful; and he is miserable, who will not, when he can, approach mercy." (Sta. Brigit. in Revelat. lib. 2. c. 23).

What say you now, Parthenius? Are you yet convinced that it is very easy to love Mary, that your love pleases her above all things, that she desires, ardently desires it, and goes diligently in search of it? Are you persuaded that she keenly feels, that it pains her not to be loved, and that she regards not, cares not for the past vileness, misery, faithlessness, and ingratitude of him who sincerely wishes and resolves to love her? Yes, certainly you are convinced; you are persuaded of this. Take courage, then, and strong resolution. Let us love her who so greatly loves us, so greatly desires our love, our good. Oh! Ungrateful and foolish that we are; we have perhaps been lost in the pursuit of one who fled from us, who despised us, and sometimes even hated us; and shall we not yield ourselves to the love of her who has so long sought for, and so highly prizes our poor heart? "O Great Virgin, singularly chosen by God, and elevated above all in Heaven, how admirable and how lovely are thy eyes, and their most pleasing rays! Turn them upon us. Attract and draw us to thee, and obtain for us amendment of life, increase of grace, and the possession of eternal glory." (S. Bonavent)

Extracts taken from the book "The Love of Mary", Chapter "Third Day", by Roberto D., Hermit.

https://archive.org/details/TheLoveOfMary


Please contact me if you want to receive a free 1 page copy (or copies) of this article in leaflet form for your own use and/or for the distribution to others in order to spread the Love of Mary and the knowledge of Her Greatness. Included in the leaflet is Chapter "Third Day"; Chapter "Second Day"; and Chapter "Fourth Day".


Related articles:

https://against-all-heresies-and-errors.blogspot.com/2017/08/is-it-sinful-to-venerate-the-most-holy-virgin-more-devoutly-than-christ.html
https://against-all-heresies-and-errors.blogspot.com/2017/08/how-sweet-the-love-of-mary-is.html

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

HOW SWEET THE LOVE OF MARY IS

"HOW SWEET THE LOVE OF MARY IS - Hear Saint Bernard, who exclaims, "O Great, O Merciful, O Most Amiable Mary, thou canst not be named without enkindling love; the thought of thee consoles the affections of those who love thee: Thou never returnest to our memory without that sweetness that is natural to thee." (S. Bernardus apud Liguori. Glor. Mar.). Listen to Saint Anthony of Padua, who says, "She is joy to the heart, honey to the mouth, and sweet melody to the ear." (Anton. Pav. apud Bonav. Spec. c. viii). Blessed Henry Suso cries out, "O Mary, what must thou thyself be, since thy name alone is so sweet!"

       "But, above all, give ear to Saint Bonaventure, whose enamored heart, at every moment transported with love, breaks forth in a thousand ways: "How great is the multitude of thy sweetness, O Lady, which thou hast prepared for them that love thee and hope in thee!" (S. Bonav. Stim. Amor. p. 3. c. xvi). "How amiable are thy words to them that love thee, how sweet are the drops of thy graces!" (Idem in Psal. Domine in virtute). "Thy spirit is sweeter than honey, and thy inheritance is sweeter than honey and the honeycomb." (St. Bona. in Ps. Verba mea). "Her memory is sweeter than honey and the honeycomb, and her love is sweeter than all spices." (Id. in Ps Notus in Judaea). "She has taken from my heart all sadness and grief, and has inundated it with her sweetness." (Id. in Ps. Voce mea). "O My Sweet Lady, the mere thought of whom sweetens every affection, whose beauty rejoices the eye of my mind! O Lady, who ravishest hearts by thy sweetness, hast thou not stolen my heart? Where, I pray thee, hast thou placed it? Tell me, that I may be able to find it. Hast thou placed it in thy bosom? Perhaps thou hast placed it there that thou mightest warm and inflame it. O Ravisher of Hearts, when wilt thou restore me my heart? Wherefore dost thou steal the hearts of the simple? Why dost thou do violence to thy friends?" (Id. in Stim. Amor. p. 5. c. xix).


       "Oh, he indeed had felt how sweet is the love of Mary; but you shall also experience this, and so shall I, if we but make a trial, however slight it may be.


       "God, the provident Author of Nature, most attentive to whatever conduces to our good, has given all things a special natural inclination to all that is necessary and proper for them, and therefore has placed a singular pleasure and delight in the actions necessary for the sustenance of the individual, or the conservation of the species. In the same manner has He acted in the order of grace, which is much more necessary for us. He knows what great good and advantage the love of Mary, His Most Holy Mother, is to us, and has therefore instilled into us, even from our most tender years, a particular confidence, tenderness, and inclination towards her, and has infused into her devotion, service, and love, I know not what sweetness and delight, which ravishes us towards her, and which goes on, ever increasing more and more, as our confidence and love towards her increase. I shall bring no other proof of this than yourself and your own experience, and I am sure that, if you do not wish falsely to deceive yourself, you will frankly confess that you have felt in yourself, even from the cradle, if I may say so, a special tenderness towards this Amiable Lady, and so great sweetness of affection and piety in her service, that it dilates your heart, and fills you with consolation, much more than all the delights and pleasures you have ever felt on this earth.


       "Nor is this special providence of grace without a reason, since, as I have before said, the service and love of Mary are of much more importance to the life of the soul, than any external action to the preservation of the life of the body; and therefore God has willed that the interior delight of her devotion should be much greater than any pleasure of the senses. Or, rather, Mary, according to Richard of Saint Victor, makes her servants feel all sweetness and delight, even sensibly. "In Mary," he says, "each sense finds its own pleasure, its own delight." It is her thought and her care to render happy and contented those who love her, and to compensate them a hundred and a thousandfold for the pleasures of which they deprive themselves for love of her."


Extracts taken from the book "The Love of Mary", Chapter "Fourth Day", by Roberto D., Hermit.


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Please contact me if you want to receive a free 1 page copy (or copies) of this article in leaflet form for your own use and/or for the distribution to others in order to spread the Love of Mary and the knowledge of Her Greatness. Included in the leaflet is Chapter "Third Day"; Chapter "Second Day"; and Chapter "Fourth Day".