| |
Jesus Living in Mary
Abridged from Bethlehem by
Father Frederick William Faber
God is incomprehensible. When we speak of Him, we scarcely know what we say. Faith is our medium,
instead of either thought or tongue. In like manner those created things, which lie on the
edges of His insupportable light, become indistinct through an excess of Divine
brightness, and are seen confusedly as He is Himself. Thus, He has drawn the Blessed
Virgin Mary so far into His light, that although she is our fellow-creature, there is
something inaccessible about her. She participates in a measure in His incomprehensible
Godhead. It is just as we cannot look for a moment at the noonday sun, whose shivering
flames of black and silver drive us backward in blindness and in pain.
Who, then, could hope to see plainly a little blossom floating like a lily on the surface of that
gleaming fountain, and topped everywhere by its waves of fire? So is it with the
Immaculate Virgin Mary. She lies up in the fountain-head of creation, almost at the very
point where it issues from God; and amid the unbearable flashes of God's primal
decrees she rests, almost without color or form to our bedazzled eyes; only we know that
she is there, and that the Divine light is her beautiful clothing, "a Woman clothed
with the Sun." The longer we gaze upon her, the more invisible does she become, and
yet at the same time the more irresistible is the attraction by which she draws us toward
herself. While her personality seems to be almost merged in the grandeur of her
relationship to God, our love of her own self becomes more distinct, and our own
relationship to her more sweetly sensible.
It was a wonderful life which the Eternal Word, the Second Person of the Trinity, led in the Bosom
of the Father. It fascinates us. We can hardly leave off speaking of it. Yet behold! He
seeks also a created home. Was His eternal home wanting in anything of beauty or of
joy? Let the enraptured Seraphim speak, who have lain for ages on the outer edge of that
uncreated Bosom, burning their immortal lives away in the fires of an insatiable
fulfilment, fed ever from the Vision of that immutable Beatitude. Quite obviously, there
could be nothing lacking in the Bosom of the Father. God would not be God, if He fell
short of self-sufficiency. Yet deep in His unfathomable Wisdom there was something which
appears to our eyes like a need. There is an appearance of a desire on the part of Him to
Whom there is nothing left to desire, because He is self-sufficient. This apparent
desire of the Holy Trinity becomes visible to our faith in the Person of the Word. It is
as if God could not contain Himself, as if He were overcharged with the fulness of His own
Essence and Beauty, or rather as if He were outgrowing His own unlimited dimensions. It
seems as if He must go out of Himself, and summon creatures up from nothing, and fall upon
their neck, and overwhelm them with His love, and so find rest. Alas! How words tremble,
and grow wild, and lose their meanings, when they venture to touch the things of God!
God's love must flow. It seems like a necessity; yet all the while it is an eternally
pondered, eternally present, freedom--glorious and calm--as freedom is in Him Who has
infinite room within Himself. What looks to us so like a necessity is but the fullness of
His freedom. He will go forth from Himself, and dwell in another home, perhaps a series of
homes, and beatify wherever He goes, and multiply for Himself a changeful incidental
glory, such as He never had before, and scatter gladness outside Himself, and call up
world after world, and bathe it in His light, and communicate His inexhaustible Self
inexhaustibly, and yet remain immutably the Same, awesomely reposing in Himself,
majestically satiating His adorable thirst for glory from the depths of His Own Self.
Abysses of Being are within Him, and His very freedom with a look of imperiousness allures
Him into the possibilities of creation. Yet, this freedom to create, together with the
free decree of creation, is as eternal as that inward necessity by which the Son is ever
being begotten, and the Holy Ghost ever proceeding from the Father and the Son. All this
becomes visible to us in time, and visible in the Person of the Word, and only
visible by supernatural Revelation, which reason may corroborate, but never could
discover.
The Word in the Father's Bosom seeks another home, a created home. He will seem to leave His
uncreated home, and yet He will not leave it. He will appear as though He were allured
from it, while in truth He will go on filling it with His delights, as He has ever done.
He will go, yet He will stay even while He goes. Whither, then, will He go? What manner of
home is fit for Him, Whose home is the Bosom of the Father, and Who makes that home the
glad wonder that it is? All possible things lay before Him at a glance, as on a map. They
lay before Him also in the sort of perspective which time gives, and by which it makes
things new. His home shall be wonderful enough; for there is no limit to His wisdom. It
shall be glorious enough; for there is no boundary to His power. It shall be dear to Him
beyond word or thought; for there is no end to His love. Yet even so, nothing short of an
infinite condescension can find any fitness for Him in finite things. Nevertheless, His
created home shall be such as a God's power and wisdom and love can choose out of a
God's possibilities. Who then shall dream, until He has seen it, what that thrice
infinite perfection of the Holy Trinity shall choose out of His inexhaustible
possibilities? Who, when he has seen it, shall describe it as he ought?
The glorious, adorable, and eternal Word, in the ample range of His unrestricted choice,
predestined the Bosom of Mary to be His created home, and fashioned, with well-pleased love, the
Immaculate Heart which He Himself was to tenant. O Mary, O marvelous mystical creature, O
resplendent speck, lost almost to view in the upper light of the supernal fountains! Who
can sufficiently abase himself before thee, and weep for the want of love to love thee
properly, thee whom the Divine Word so loved eternally?
There were no creatures to sing anthems in Heaven, when that wondrous choice was made. No angelic
thunders of songs rolled 'round the Throne in oceans of melodious sound, when the
Word decreed that primal object of his adorable predilection. No creations of almost
divine intelligence were there to shroud their faces with their wings, and brood in
self-abasing silence on the beauty of that created Home of their Creator. There was only
the silent song of God's own awesome life, and the eternal voiceless thunder of His
Divine good pleasure. Forthwith -- we must speak in our own human way -- the Holy
Trinity begins to adorn the Word's created home with a marvelous outpouring of
creative skill and love. She was to be the head of all mere creatures, having a created
person as well as a created nature, while her Son's created nature, with the
Uncreated Person, was to be the absolute Head of all creation, the unconfused and
undivided junction of God and of creation. She was to be a home for the Word, as the Bosom
of the Father had been a home for Him, realized and completed in unity of nature. The
materials which the Word was to take for His created Nature were once to have been
actually hers, so that the union between the Divine Word and herself should be more
exalted than words can express.
Each Person of the Holy Trinity claimed her for his own by a special relationship.
She was the eternally elected daughter of the Father. There was no other relationship in which she could stand
to Him, and it was a reflection of the eternal filiation of His uncreated Son. She was the
Mother of the Son; for it was to the amazing realities of that office that He had summoned
her out of nothing. She was the Spouse of the Holy Ghost; for He it was Who was espoused
to her soul by the most transcendent union of which the kingdom of grace can boast, and it
was He Who out of her spotless Blood made that undefiled Flesh which the Word was to
assume and to animate with His human Soul. Thus she was marked with an indelible character
by Each of the Three Divine Persons. She was Their eternal idea, nearest to that Idea
which was the cause of all creation, the Idea of Jesus; she was necessary, as They had
willed it, to the realization of that Idea; and she came before it in priority of time and
in seeming authority of office. Such is the barest statement of the place which the
Immaculate Virgin Mary occupies in the decrees of God. All we could add would be weak
compared with this. Words cannot magnify her whom thought can hardly reach; and our
compliments are almost presumption -- as if what lies so close to God could be honored
by our approval. Our praise of Mary, in this one respect like our praise of God, of which
it is in truth a part, is best embodied in our wonder and our love.
It was on the eighth of December that those primeval decrees of God first began to spring into actual
fulfillment upon earth. Like all God's purposes, they came among men with veils upon
their heads, and lived in unsuspected obscurity. Yet the old creation of the material
world was an event of far less importance than the Immaculate Conception. When Mary's
soul and body sprang from nothingness at the word of God, the Divine Persons encompassed
Their chosen creature in that selfsame instant, and the grace of the Immaculate Conception
was Their welcome and their touch. The Daughter, the Mother, the Spouse, received one and
the same pledge from All in that single grace, or fountain of graces, as was befitting the
grandeur of her Predestination, and her relationship to the Three Divine Persons, and the
dignity she was to uphold in the system of creation. In what order her graces came, how
they were enchained one with another, how one was the cause of another, and how others
were merely out of the gratuitous abundance of God, how they acted on her power of
meriting, and how again her merits reacted upon them -- all this it is beside our
purpose to speak of, even if we could do so fittingly. We know that even the slightest
grace of the lowest of us is a world of supernatural wonders itself; how, then shall we
dare venture into the labyrinth of Mary's graces, or hope to come forth from it with
anything more than a perplexed and breathless admiration? It was no less than God Who was
adorning her, making her the living image of the August Trinity. It was that she might be
the Mother of the Word and His created home, that omnipotence was thus adorning her.
To the eye of God her beautiful soul and fair body had glided like stars over the abyss of a
creatureless eternity, discernible amid the glowing lights and countless glimmerings of
the angelic births, across the darkness of chaos and the long epochs of the ripening
world, and through the night of four thousand years of man's fall and wandering. How
wonderfully she must have come into being, if she was to be worthy of her royal
predestination, and of the decrees she was obediently to fulfil, and yet with an obedience
entirely free!
Out of the abundance of the beautiful gifts with which God endowed her, some colossal graces rose,
like lofty mountaintops, far above the level of the exquisite spiritual scenery which
surrounded them. The use of reason from the first moment of her Immaculate Conception
enabled her to advance in grace and merits beyond all calculation. Her infused science,
which, from its being infused, was independent of the use of the senses, enabled her
reason to operate, and thus her merits to accumulate, even during sleep. Her complete
exemption from the slightest shade of venial sin raised her as nearly out of the
imperfections of a creature as was consistent with finite and created holiness. Her
confirmation in grace made her a heavenly being while she was yet on earth, and gave her
liberty and merit a character so different from ours that in propositions regarding sin
and grace we are obliged to make her an exception, together with our Blessed Lord. So
gigantic were the graces of that supernatural life, which God made contemporaneous with
her natural existence, that in her very first act of love her heroic virtues began far
beyond the point where those of the highest saints have ended.
All this is but a dry theological description of the Word's created home, as it was when the Divine
Persons clothed and adorned it as it rose from nothingness. Yet how surpassingly beautiful
is the sanctity which it implies! Fifteen years went on, with those huge colossal graces,
full of vitality, uninterruptedly generating new graces, and new correspondences to grace
evoking from the abyss of the Divine Word new graces still, and merits multiplying merits,
so that if the world were written over with its figures it could never represent the sum.
It seems by this time as if her grace were as nearly infinite as a finite thing could be,
and her sanctity and purity have become so constrainingly beautiful that their constraints
reach even to the Eternal Word Himself, and He yields to the force of their attractions,
and anticipates His time, and hastens with inexplicable desire to take up His abode in His
created home. This is what theology means when it says that Mary merited the anticipation
of the time of the Incarnation.
But let us pause for a moment here. St. Dionysius, when he saw the vision of Our Blessed Lady, said
with wonder that he might have mistaken her for God. We may say, in more modern and less
simple language, that Mary is like one of those great scientific truths, whose full
magnificence we never master except by long meditation, and by studying its bearings on a
system, and then at last the fertility and grandeur of the truth seem endless to us. So it
is with the Immaculate Mother of God. She teaches us God as we never could else have
learned Him. She mirrors more of Him in her single self, than all intelligent and material
creation beside her. In her the prodigies of His love toward ourselves became credible.
She is the hilltop from which we gain distant views into His perfections, and see fair
regions in Him, of which we should not else have dreamed. Our thoughts of Him grow
worthier by means of her. The full dignity of creation shines bright in her, and standing
on her, the perfect mere creature, we look over into the depths of the Hypostatic Union,
which otherwise would have been a gulf whose edges we never could have reached.
The earthly place, where the Divine Word's assumption of His created nature was to be effected,
was the inner room, or woman's apartment, of the Holy House of Nazareth, where Mary
and Joseph dwelt. It was an obscure dwelling of humble poverty in a rustic and sequestered
village of a small land, whose days of historic glory had passed away, and whose destiny
in the onward march of civilization would seem, as philosophical historians would speak,
to be exhausted. The national independence of the people had come to an end. The
questions, which divided their sects, were narrow and trivial. Jerusalem, long since
eclipsed by Athens and outgrown by Alexandria, sat now, humbled and silent, beneath the
somber shadow of Rome. Even in this land Nazareth was almost a byword of contempt. Folds of
pastoral green hills shut it up within itself, and its men were known beyond their own
hills only for being coarse and fierce rustics, with perhaps a reputation for something
worse. The Eternal God was about to become a Nazarene. He, Whose Eye saw down into every
wooded hollow and penetrated every sylvan glen upon the globe, Who saw the white walls of
fair cities perched jealously on their hilltops or basking in the sunshine by the blue
sea, chose that ill-famed, inglorious Nazareth for the scene of His great Mystery. Who can
question that, with God, nothing is accidental, and that nothing happened as it were by
chance with the central wonder of the Incarnation? It was His choice; and to us Nazareth
and its Holy House, exiled, wandering, and angel-borne, Syrian, Dalmatian, Italian
(Loreto), all by turns, are consecrated places; doubly consecrated by their old memories,
and also by their strange continued life of local graces and the efficacious balm of a
Divine Presence, awesome and undiminished.
This is a picture to us of the moment of the Incarnation. Innumerable decrees of God, decrees
without number, like the waves of the sea, decrees that included or gave forth all other
decrees, came up to the midnight room at Nazareth, as it were, to the feet of that most
wonderful of God's creatures, with the resistless momentum which had been given them
from eternity, all glistening with the manifold splendors of the Divine perfections, like
huge billows just curling to break upon the shore; and they stayed themselves there,
halted in full course, and hung their accomplishment upon the young Virgin's word.
It was a stupendous moment. It was fully in Mary's power to have refused. Impossible as the
consequences seem to make it, the matter was completely in her hands, and never did free
creature exercise its freedom more freely than did she that night. How the angels must
have hung over that moment! With what adorable delight and unspeakable complacency did not
the Holy Trinity await the opening of her lips, the Fiat of her whom God had evoked out of
nothingness, and whose own fiat was now to be music in His ears; Creation's echo to
that fiat of His at Whose irresistible sweetness creation itself sprang into being! Earth
only, poor, stupid, unconscious earth, slept in its cold moonlight.
That Mary should have any choice at all is a complete revelation of God in itself. How a creature so
encompassed and cloistered in grace could have been free in any sense to do that which was
less pleasing to God is a mystery which no theology to be met with has ever yet
satisfactorily explained. Nevertheless the fact is beyond controversy. She had this
choice, with the uttermost freedom in her election, in some most real sense of freedom.
But who could doubt what the voice would be, which should come up out of such abysses of
grace as hers! There had not been yet on earth, nor in the angels' world, an act of
adoration so nearly worthy of God as that consent of hers, that conformity of her deep
lowliness to the magnificent and transforming will of God.
But another moment, and there will be an act of adoration greater far than that,
in the Person of the Incarnate Word. Now God is free. Mary has made Him free. The creature has added a fresh
liberty to the Creator. She has unchained the decrees, and made the sign, and in their
procession, like mountainous waves of light, they broke over her in floods of golden
splendor. The eternal Sea bathed the queenly creature all around, and the Divine
complacency rolled above her in majestic peals of soft mysterious thunder, and a God-like
Shadow falls upon her for a moment, and without shock, or sound, or so much as a tingling
stillness, God in a created nature dwelt in His immensity within her Bosom, and the
Eternal Will was done, and creation was complete. Far off a storm of jubilee swept far,
flashing through the angelic world. But the Divine Mother heard not, heeded not. Her head
sank upon her bosom, and her soul lay down in a silence which was like the peace of God. The
Word was made Flesh.
PRAYER: THE CHIEF DUTY OF THE CHRISTIAN
The Ascetical Doctrine of St. Alphonsus Maria Liguori
Moreover, prayer is the most necessary weapon of defense against our enemies; he who does
not avail himself of it, says St. Thomas, is lost. He does not doubt that the reason
of Adam's fall was because he did not recommend himself to God when he was tempted:
"He sinned because he had not recourse to the divine assistance" (P.1, q.94,
a.4). St. Gelasius says the same of the rebel angels: "Receiving the grace of
God in vain, they could not persevere, because they did not pray" (Tr. adv. Pelag.
haer.) St. Charles Borromeo, in a pastoral letter, observes, that among all the
means of salvation recommended by Jesus Christ in the Gospel, the first place is given to
prayer, and He has determined that this should distinguish His Church from all false
religions, when He calls her the house of prayer: "My house is a
house of prayer" (Matt. 21:13). St. Charles concludes that prayer is "the
beginning and progress, and the completion of all virtues" (Litt. Past. de Or. in
comm.) So that in darkness, distress, and danger, we have no other hope than to
raise our eyes to God, and with fervent prayers to beseech His mercy to save us: "As
we know not," said King Josaphat, "what to do, we can only turn our eyes to
Thee" (2 Par. 20:12). This also was David's practice, who could find no
other means of safety from his enemies, than continual prayer to God to deliver him from
their snares: "My eyes are ever towards the Lord; for He shall pluck my feet out of
the snare" (Ps. 24:16). So he did nothing but pray: "Look Thou upon me,
and have mercy on me; for I am alone and poor. I cried unto Thee, O Lord; save me
that I may keep Thy commandments." "Lord, turn Thine eyes to me, have pity
on me, and save me; for I can do nothing, and apart from Thee there is none that can help
me" (Ps. 24:15; 118:146).
And indeed, how could we ever resist our enemies and observe God's precepts,
especially since Adam's sin, which has rendered us so weak and infirm, unless we had
prayer as a means whereby we can obtain from God sufficient light and strength to enable
us to observe them? It was a blasphemy of Luther to say that after the sin of Adam
the observance of God's law has become absolutely impossible to man. Jansenius
also said that there are some precepts which are impossible even to the just, with the
power which they actually possess, and thus far his proposition is valid; but it was
justly condemned by the Church for the addition he made to it, when he said that they
do not have the grace to make these same precepts possible. It is true, says St.
Augustine, that man, in consequence of his weakness, is unable to fulfill some of
God's commands with his present strength and the ordinary grace given to all men; but
he can easily, by prayer, obtain such further aid as he needs for his salvation: "God
commands not impossibilities, but by commanding He expects you to do what you can, and
then to ask for His Divine assistance to do what is beyond your strength; and He helps
you, that you may be able." This famous text of St. Augustine is rightly
celebrated, for it was afterwards adopted and made a doctrine of Faith by the holy Council
of Trent (Sess. 6, c. 11). The holy Doctor immediately adds, "Let us see how
man is enabled to do that which he cannot. By medicine he can do that which his
natural weakness renders impossible to him" (De Natura et Gratia c.43). That
is, by prayer we may obtain a remedy for our weakness; for when we pray, God gives us
strength to do that which we cannot do of ourselves.
We cannot believe, continues St Augustine, that God would have imposed on us the
observance of a law, and then made the law impossible. When, therefore, God shows
us that of ourselves we are unable to observe all His commandments, it is simply to
admonish us to do the easier things by means of the ordinary grace which He bestows on us
all, and then to do the more difficult things by means of the more powerful help which we
can obtain by prayer. "By the very fact that it is absurd to suppose that God
could have commanded us to do impossible things, we are admonished what to do in easy
matters, and what to ask for in difficulties" (De Natura et Gratia c.69). But
why, it will be asked, has God commanded us to do things impossible to our natural
strength? Precisely for this reason, says St. Augustine, that we may be impelled to
pray for His help to do that which of ourselves we cannot do. "He commands some
things which we cannot do, that we may know what we ought to ask of Him" (De Gr. et
Lib. Arb. c.16). And in another place: "The law was given that grace might be
sought for; grace was given that the law might be fulfilled" (De Spir. et Litt.
c.19). The law cannot be kept without grace, and God has given the law with this
object, that we may always ask him for grace to observe it. In another place he
says: "The law is good, if it be used lawfully; what then, is the lawful use of the
law?" He answers: "When by the law we perceive our own weakness, and ask
of God the grace to heal us" (Serm. 156, Ed. Ben.) St. Augustine then says:
"We ought to use the law; but for what purpose? In order to learn by means of
the law that which we find to be above our strength and our own inability to observe it,
in order that we may then obtain by prayer the Divine aid to cure our weakness."
St. Bernard's teaching is the same: "What are we, or what is our strength, that
we should be able to resist so many temptations? This is certainly what God
intended; that upon seeing our deficiencies and realizing that we have no other help, we
should with all humility have recourse to His mercy" (In Quad. 5.5). God knows
how useful it is to us to be ob1iged to pray, in order to keep us humble and to exercise
our confidence; and He therefore permits us to be assaulted by enemies too mighty to be
overcome by our own strength, that by prayer we may obtain from His mercy the aid to
resist them." It is especially to be remarked that no one can resist the temptations
of the flesh against purity without recommending himself to God when he is tempted.
This foe is so terrible that, in the conflict, it takes away, as it were, all light; it
makes us forget all our meditations, all our good resolutions; it makes us also disregard
the truths of faith, and even almost lose the fear of the Divine punishments. For
impure temptations conspire with our natural inclinations, which drive us with the
greatest violence to the indulgence of sensual pleasures. In such a moment, he who
does not have recourse to God is lost. The only defense against this temptation is
prayer, as St. Gregory of Nyssa says: "Prayer is the bulwark of chastity" (De
Or. Dom. 1); and before him King Solomon said: "And as I knew that I could not
otherwise be continent except God gave it, I went to the Lord and besought Him"
(Wisd. 8:21). Chastity is a virtue that we do not have the strength to practice,
unless God bestows it upon us; and God does not give this strength except to him who asks
for it. But whoever prays for it will certainly obtain it.
Hence St. Thomas observes (in contradiction to Jansenius), that we ought not to say that
the precept of chastity, or any other, is impossible to us; for though we cannot observe
it by our own strength, we can by God's assistance. "We must say, that
what we can do with the Divine assistance is not altogether impossible to us" (1.2
q.109, a.4). Nor let it be said that it appears an injustice to order a cripple to
walk straight. No, says St Augustine, it is not an injustice, provided always that
means are given to him to find the remedy for his lameness; for after this, if he
continues to go crooked, the fault is his own. "It is most wisely commanded
that man should walk uprightly, so that when he sees that he cannot do so of himself, he
may seek a remedy to heal the lameness of sin" (De Perf. Just. hom. c.3).
Finally, the same holy Doctor says, "He knows how to live aright who knows how to
pray aright" (Serm 55, E.B. app.); and, on the other hand, St. Francis of Assisi
says, that without prayer you can never hope to find good fruit in a soul.
Wrongly, therefore, do those sinners excuse themselves who say that they have no strength
to resist temptation. But if you don't have this strength, why do you not ask
for it? This is the reproof which St. James gives them: "You have it not,
because you ask it not" (James 4:2). There is no doubt that we are too weak to
resist the attacks of our enemies. But, on the other hand, it is certain that God is
faithful, as the Apostle says, and will not permit us to be tempted beyond our strength:
"God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that which you are
able; but will make also with the temptation issue, that ye may be able to bear it"
(1 Cor. 10:13). "He will provide an issue for it," says Primasius, "by the
protection of His grace, that you may be able to withstand the temptation." We
are weak, but God is strong; when we ask Him for aid, He communicates His strength to us;
and we shall be able to do all things, as the Apostle reasonably assured himself: "I
can do all things in Him Who strengtheneth me" (Phil. 4:13). Therefore, he who
falls into sin has no excuse (says St. John Chrysostom), because he has neglected to pray;
for if he had prayed, he would not have been overcome by his enemies. "Nor can
anyone be excused who, by ceasing to pray, has shown that he did not wish to overcome his
enemy" (Serm. De Moyse).
Back to Top
Back to Bulletins
Visit also: www.marienfried.com
|