Showing posts with label grace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grace. Show all posts

Mary Always Remembers You, By T.N. Jorgensen, S.J. Part 4.


GRACE AND HER POWER

Power, the second essential quality of fullness of presence, is Mary’s in an unusual degree because she dispenses God’s grace. Without grace we cannot merit heaven, advance in holiness, help any soul, or perform any act pleasing to God in the spiritual world. Grace, then, is most necessary for us at every moment, and all graces come to us through Mary. Nor is she merely a blind channel through which grace flows as water might flow through a lifeless pipe. Mary’s humble Annunciation fiat brought Christ, the source of all our graces: to earth. Her co-operation brings that grace to each of us. She is still God’s loving handmaid doing His will in all things, but now she enjoys an even fuller knowledge and love as she and the Spirit, her Spouse, work together to foster the Christ-life in each of our souls.
All through the hours of every day Mary offers us the grace we need at that particular moment. She offers it wisely, knowing just why and how we need it. She offers it lovingly, her love for God and her love for us uniting to make her generous in helping us live Christ’s life, the life with which she herself lived and lives. Each opportunity and inspiration we have to suffer for God, to overcome our selfishness, to practise any virtue whatsoever it be, is a clear sign to us that Mary is actively helping us. Each time that we fail to use a grace, we fail her; each time that we do use one, we delight her. Our lives are wrapped up in hers most intimately at every moment.

Mirror Of The Blessed Virgin Mary by Saint Bonaventure. CHAPTER VI.


THE FOURFOLD GRACE IN MARY--OF GIFTS, OF SPEECH, OF PRIVILEGES, AND OF REWARDS

Ave Maria, gratia plena. We have still some things to say of the grace of
the most sweet Mary. We will now consider the fourfold grace of her gifts,
her speech, her privileges, and her rewards.

First, consider in Mary the grace of the Gifts of the Holy Ghost. To this
grace Mary, giving thanks, could apply the word of Ecclesiasticus: "In me
is all grace of the way and the truth." What wonder if she herself is the
grace full of life and truth, who is the Mother of Him who was "full of
grace and truth"? And what wonder if in that rod is so great an affluence
of the Gifts of the Holy Ghost, in whose flower the Holy Spirit rested with
such an abundance of His gifts? Mary is that rod, and the Son of Mary is
that flower, of whom it is said in Isaias: "There shall come forth a rod
from the root of Jesse, and a flower shall ascend from that root, and there
shall rest upon Him the spirit of wisdom and of understanding, the spirit
of counsel and of fortitude, the spirit of knowledge and of piety, and he
shall be filled with the spirit of the fear of the Lord." On this flower
was a great abundance of the Holy Spirit, which has overflowed into the
whole Church, so that the Evangelist John says: "Of His fullness we have
all received, and grace for grace." Now that such an abundance of grace has
overflowed from this flower into the whole garden, how much more will it
abound in the rod or stem of the flower, in Mary herself? Let Mary,
therefore, say in all security, "In me is all grace of the way and the
truth." Certainly the grace of the way and the truth consists in the
aforesaid seven gifts of the Holy Ghost; it was by the aforesaid seven
gifts that the grace of the way and the truth was in Mary. The grace of the
truth set Mary in order in the truth above herself, below herself, in
herself, and without herself. The grace, I say, of the truth set Mary in
order above herself by the gift of Wisdom; below herself, by the gift of
counsel; in herself, by the gift of understanding; without herself, by the
gift of knowledge. The grace of the truth set in order the soul of Mary in
truth above herself, in the most wise contemplation of things to be
enjoyed; below herself, in fleeing foresight of things that were to be
shunned; in herself, in her sure knowledge of what to believe; without
herself, in a most reasonable discretion concerning all she had to do. The
grace of her life set Mary in order in a good life with regard to the
devil, with regard to her neighbor, and with regard to God. The grace, I
say, of life set Mary in order in a good life; towards the devil, by
fortitude; towards her neighbor, by the gift of piety; towards God, by the
gift of fear. The grace of life set Mary in order in a most strong
resistance to the devil; in a most loving kindness to her neighbor; in a
most devout reverence towards God. This was signified by the Holy Ghost in
a most fitting manner by the house which Wisdom built for Himself, having
seven columns, which were the seven Gifts of the Holy Ghost. Whoever,
therefore, feels within himself the beginning of a desire for the Gifts of
the Holy Ghost, can find the shape of these pillars in this house, and he
ought to desire these seven pillars with great ardor and much prayer.
Likewise, he who desires the sevenfold grace of the Holy Spirit must look
for the flower of the Holy Spirit in the rod. By the rod or stem we attain
to the flower, and so to the Spirit that rests upon the flower. By Mary we
approach to Christ, and by the grace of Christ we find the Holy Spirit.
Therefore St. Bernard well says, addressing Mary: "By thee we have access
to thy Son, O blessed finder of grace, mother of life, mother of salvation,
that by thee He may receive us, who by thee was given to us."

Secondly, consider in Mary the grace of the lips, or of speech, of which it
is said in the Psalm: "Grace is shed abroad on thy lips." Such was the
grace of the lips in Mary that she could excellently be prefigured by
Judith, of whom it is said: "There is not such another woman upon earth in
look, in beauty, and in sense of words" (Judith XI, 19.) Truly there is
not, nor ever was, nor ever will be, such another woman upon earth, as Mary
was, in her glorious life, in the beauty of a pure conscience, and in the
sense of words of a most skilled tongue. We shall clearly see the grace of
the lips in Mary if we diligently gather and meditate the words of her lips
as recorded in the Gospel. We find in the Gospel seven sentences, sweeter
than honey, dropping from the lips of Mary, and indicating excellently the
honey-flowing grace of her lips, as it is said in the Canticle: "Thy lips
are as a dropping honeycomb" (IV, 11.) The seven words of Mary, spoken to
the Angel, to God, and to men, are as seven wells of honey. To the Angel,
Mary spoke the word of chastity and the word of humility. Mary had on her
lips the word of chastity when she said in answer to the Angel: "How shall
this be done, for I know not man?" This is a lesson to the unchaste, who
have on their lips not chaste, but base and carnal words. Mary spoke to the
Angel the words of humility when she said: "Behold the handmaid of the
Lord, be it done unto me according to thy word." This is a lesson to the
proud and arrogant, who neither think nor speak humbly of themselves, but
have words of boasting and elation on their lips. Again Mary spoke to men
the word of charity and the word of truth: the word of charity in greeting,
the word of truth in instruction. Mary spoke the word of charity when she
so affectionately saluted the mother of the Precursor that even the infant
in that mother's womb exulted. This is a lesson to the rancorous, who will
not only not speak charitably to their neighbors, but disdain to speak to
them at all. Mary spoke the word of truth when, the wine failing, she said
to the servants at the marriage feast: "Whatsoever He shall say to you, do
ye." This is a lesson to those who will not only not speak good words to
their neighbors, but urge them to evil deeds. Again, Mary spoke three times
to the Lord. She spoke more to God than to angels or to men, for she spoke
twice to the angels and twice to men, but three times to God. To God she
spoke a word of praise, of loving complaint, and of compassion. Of praise
for the benefits bestowed on herself; of loving complaint for the loss of
her Son; of compassion for the failing of the wine. Mary had the word of
praise to God on her lips, when in thanksgiving for that God had looked
upon her lowliness, she said: "My soul doth magnify the Lord." This is a
lesson to the ungrateful, who, alas, give such scant thanks to God for His
benefits, and at times grow puffed up against God by these very benefits.
Mary had the word of loving complaint to God upon her lips, when she said
to her Son, after the three days' loss: "Son, why hast thou done so to us?
Behold thy Father and I have sought Thee sorrowing." Here is a lesson for
the undevout, who do not seek Jesus sorrowing, when by the withdrawal of
devotion they have lost him for many days. Mary spoke the word of
compassion to God when at the marriage feast she said to her Son: "They
have no wine." Here is a lesson to the unmerciful, who are not moved to
compassion by the needs of others, and who neither help their neighbors,
nor draw them to God. Behold now, O Mary, our advocate, it is still needful
to us that thou shouldst speak to thy Son for us, that many of us have no
wine; we lack the wine of the Holy Spirit, the wine of compunction, the
wine of devotion and spiritual consolation. Of which St. Bernard thus
speaks: "How often is it necessary for me, O my brethren, after your
tearful complaints to beseech the Mother of Mercy to say to her Son that
you have no wine! And she, I say, beloved, if she is piously besought by
you, will not be lacking to your need, for she is merciful, she is the
Mother of Mercy. For if she had compassion for the shame of those whose
guest she was, much more will she have compassion on you if you call upon
her earnestly." Consider well, from what we have said, what power Mary hath
with the King of kings, because of the grace of her lips, for it is written
in the Book of Proverbs: "He who loveth cleanness of heart, for the grace
of his lips shall have the king for a friend" (Prov. XXII, 11.)

Thirdly, consider in Mary the grace of privileges. Of this grace it is
said: "Thou hast found grace with the Lord, behold thou shalt conceive in
the womb, and shalt bear a Son, and thou shalt call His name Jesus. He
shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Most High." See how
Gabriel, asserting that Mary had found grace, immediately specifies what
that grace is, saying: "Behold thou shalt conceive in the womb." Oh, how
great and how unheard-of in all the world that a virgin should conceive and
bring forth the Son of the Most High. We can perceive in Mary seven
privileges, privileges full of immense graces, granted to Mary alone by
God.

The first privilege of Mary was that she was, above all men, free from sin
and most pure. For she was so abundantly sanctified by grace in her
mother's womb that it is believed she was never in the least degree
inclined to the slightest venial sin. Therefore St. Bernard saith: "It
behoved the Queen of Virgins, by a singular privilege of sanctity, to lead
a life free from every sin, so that, while she brought forth the slayer of
sin and death, she should obtain for all the gift of life and justice."

The second privilege of Mary is that, above all men, she was full of grace.
St. Jerome saith: "On others grace was bestowed in measure; but the whole
fullness of grace was poured into Mary." And, therefore, well doth this
same Blessed Doctor, comparing the grace of Mary with that of the angels
and preferring it, say: "It is to be believed that the glorious Virgin Mary
merited greater privileges of virtue, and received grace praised by the
angels."

The third privilege of Mary was that she alone was a mother and at the same
time an inviolate virgin. St. Bernard, praising this privilege, says: "Mary
chose for herself the better part. Clearly the better, because conjugal
fecundity is good, but virginal chastity is better, but the best is
virginal fecundity, or fecund virginity. The privilege of Mary will not be
given to another, because it will not be taken away from her."

The fourth privilege of Mary is that she alone is the ineffable Mother of
the Son, the Mother of that Son of whom alone God is the Father; wonderful
above measure that so great a privilege should be granted to a creature. Of
this privilege St. Bernard saith: "This is the singular glory of our
Virgin, and the excellent prerogative of Mary, that she merited to have her
Son in common with God the Father."

The fifth privilege of Mary is that she alone above all creatures was in
the body most familiar with God. For, what was never granted to any other
creature, nor will ever be granted again in eternity --she bore God for
nine months in her womb, she nourished God from her breasts full of heaven,
for many years she sweetly brought up our Lord, she had God subject to her,
she handled and embraced her God in pure embraces and kisses with tender
familiarity, as St. Augustine says: "No wonder, Mary, that God reigning in
Heaven deigns to rejoice with thee, whom, when He was a little child born
of thee, thou didst so often kiss on earth." (Serm. de Sanct., XXV, CCVIII,
n. II, appendix.)

The sixth privilege of Mary was that she alone, above all creatures, is
most powerful with God. St. Augustine says: "She merited to be the mother
of the Redeemer." He also says: "Beg for what we ask, excuse what we fear,
because we shall never find one more powerful in merit than thee, who hast
merited to be the Mother of the Redeemer and of the Judge. It is a great
privilege that she is more powerful with God than all the Saints, as St.
Augustine declares: "There is no doubt that she who brought forth the price
by which all were freed, can above all others pay the suffrage of holy
liberty." But what would it avail us for Mary to have such great power if
she cared nothing for us ? Therefore, brethren, we must hold it for
certain, and incessantly give thanks for this, that, as she has more power
with God than all the Saints, so is she also more solicitous for us before
God than all the Saints. It is the same Augustine who teaches us this,
saying: "We know, O Mary, that thou above all the saints art solicitous for
the holy Church--thou who obtainest for sinners time to repent, that they
may renounce their errors."

The seventh privilege of Mary is that she, above all the Saints, is most
excellent in glory. St. Jerome says: "Everywhere the holy Church of God
sings, what it is unlawful to believe of any other of the saints, that the
merits (of Mary) transcend those of all angels and archangels. This
privilege not, as it were, of nature, but of grace--belongs to the Virgin
Mary." Behold how glorious is the privilege of Mary's glory that she, after
God, is most exalted in glory. The glorious privilege of the glory of Mary
is, that whatever after God is most beautiful, whatever is sweetest,
whatever is pleasanter in glory, that is Mary's, that is in Mary, that is
by Mary. It is entirely the glorious privilege of Mary, that, after God,
our greatest glory and our greatest joy is because of her. St. Bernard
says: "After God, it is our greatest glory, O Mary, to behold thee, to
adhere to thee, to abide in the defense of thy protection."

These, therefore, are the seven privileges of Mary by which we obtain the
life of grace. And therefore, we may implore Mary, as Abraham implored
Sara: "Say, I beseech thee, that thou art my sister, that it may be well
with me because of thee, and that my soul may live by thy grace" (Gen. XII,
13.) 0 Mary, our Sara, say that thou art our sister, that because of thee
it may be well for us with God, and that our souls may live in God because
of thy grace. Say, O our most beloved Sara, that thou art our sister, that,
for the sake of such a sister, the Egyptians, that is, the evil spirits,
may reverence us, that, because of such a sister, the angels may fight for
us, and that above all, for the sake of such a sister, the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Ghost may have mercy on us.

Fourthly, consider in Mary the grace of rewards, on which we have already
touched in speaking of her seventh privilege. To this grace can be applied
that word of Ecclesiasticus: "Grace upon grace hath a chaste and holy
woman" (XXVI, 19.) The woman chaste above all women is Mary, the woman holy
above all women, in whom is grace above grace, the grace of glory above the
grace of the way, the grace of rewards in Heaven above the grace of merits
in this world. This grace of the beatitude of Mary consists in seven gifts
of body and of soul. Every glorified body has four glorious gifts: the gift
of wonderful clarity, the gift of wonderful subtility, the gift of
wonderful agility, and the gift of wonderful impassability; and if every
glorified body has these gifts, how much more so will the body which
brought forth Him who is the Glorifier of all bodies? What wonder if her
gift of clarity is the brightest in Heaven, who by the gift of holiness was
so resplendent in this world that St. Bernard says of her: "While yet thou
didst live among sinners, thou didst shine before God with such sanctity,
that thou alone didst merit to approximate to the glory of the eternal
King." Again, what wonder if by the gift of subtility she is most subtile,
who by the gift of humility was most subtile in this world? Speaking to
her, Blessed Bernard says: "Thou wouldst never have ascended far above all
the choirs of angels, if on earth thou hadst not lowered thyself by
humility below all men." Again, what wonder if by the gift of agility she
is swiftest in Heaven, who by her gift of loving kindness was so swift upon
earth? For in the offices of charity she went with haste into the hill
country, of the swiftness of whose haste St. Ambrose says: "Whither would
she, who was now full of God, hasten, unless into the hill country with
haste? For the grace of the Holy Spirit knoweth no tardy delays." Again,
what wonder if by the gift of impassability she is impassable in Heaven,
who by the gift of patience and equanimity was so impassable in this world
that she never felt the slightest impatience or hatred when the sword
passed through her own soul? For we neither read nor believe that the least
sign of impatience ever appeared in Mary. St. Bernard says: "Diligently
revolve in thy mind the whole of the Gospel story, and if thou discoverest
in Mary the least sign of rebuke, of hardness, or of indignation, then thou
mayest hesitate to believe in her virtue in other things, and fear to
approach her."

If such is the glory of the body of Mary, what, thinkest thou, is the glory
of her soul ? This blessed soul has three beatific gifts--the gift of
wonderful love, the gift of wonderful knowledge, and the gift of wonderful
fruition, or, to put it in a more modern way, the gifts of vision,
fruition, and experience. But in whatever manner the gifts of Mary are
expressed, it is certain that these gifts surpass those of all other souls.
For if all blessed souls are endowed with these gifts in Heaven, how much
more the soul of her who brought forth in this world the soul of the
Beatifier of all souls? St. Bernard says: "She penetrated the most profound
abyss of divine Wisdom beyond what could be believed, and as far as the
condition of a creature is capable, she was united to that inaccessible
Light." Again, what wonder if the soul of Mary is immersed in fecund love,
what wonder if she is loving above all, who is above all beloved? Truly,
before and above all; for St. Augustine thus addresses her: "The King of
kings, loving thee above all as His true Mother and Spouse, is joined to
thee in the embrace of love." Again, what wonder if in most delightful
fruition is immersed the soul of Mary who was fed by the most blessed Fruit
of her womb? St. Augustine says: "Mary in brightness of soul enjoys Christ,
and His glorious embraces, always present, always beholding Him, always
thirsting to see Him, she is ineffably nourished by Him." Therefore, as the
most glorious Mary exceeds all Saints in the grace of the way and in the
grace of merits, so she exceeds all Saints in the grace of glory and in the
grace of rewards. Therefore, she is well symbolized by Queen Esther, of
whom we read that, being led to the nuptial chamber of King Assuerus, she
found grace and mercy before him above all women, and he placed the diadem
of the kingdom upon her head. This is eminently suited to Mary, of whom St.
Jerome says: "She is raised above the choirs of angels, that she may behold
the beauty and the countenance of the Savior, whom she had loved and
desired with all the desire of her heart." This Queen Esther, the blessed
Virgin Mary, at her Assumption was led into the bridal chamber of the King
Assuerus, the Eternal King, of which incident St. Augustine, addressing
Mary, says: "The Queen Mary, being led into the bridal chamber of
everlasting rest, possesses the favor and grace of the King Assuerus, that
is, the grace of the True King above all women, that is, above all
angelical intelligences, and above all beatified souls, so that in Mary
there should be grace above that of all the blessed. And in very truth the
King of kings placed on her head the diadem of the kingdom, a truly
priceless diadem, so delightful, so wonderful, that no tongue can fitly
speak of it and it is incomprehensible to every intellect.

Now, therefore, beloved, you have seen with how great grace of gifts Mary
is enriched, with how great grace of the lips, with how great privileges,
with how abundant a dower of rewards. Let us, therefore, beseech this
finder of graces that she may let us find grace with God, through Our Lord
Jesus Christ, Amen.

Mother Of Divine Grace By Father Stanislaus. M. Hogan, O.P. Chapter XI. Queen Of Angels; Cause Of Our Joy; Comfort Of The Afflicted.


A HUMAN being, yet Sovereign Lady of the Angelic host; a creature, yet exercising sway in the realms of Divine Justice, and over those upon whose life God has pronounced sentence: these are the claims we make for the Mother of God when we call her Queen of Angels, Cause of our Joy, and Comfort of the Afflicted who expiate their sins in the cleansing fires of Purgatory.

Jesus Christ is the chief of creation, and from His sovereignty none are exempt. God has set Him on His right hand, " above all principality, and power, and virtue, and dominion, and every name that is named, not only in this world, but also in that which is to come, and he hath subjected all things under his feet." 1 " It is evident," says St. Thomas, " that both men and Angels are destined to one end, the glory of the vision of God. Hence, the Mystical Body of the Church is not composed of men only but also of Angels. . . . Wherefore, Christ is not only the Head of mankind but of Angels." 2 This being so, the Mother of Jesus Christ is superior to the Angels in the order of Grace and Glory. She can say in the very language of God: " This is my beloved Son." None of the Angels can claim such a privilege. They stand before the throne of God: " We are Thy servants, whatsoever Thou shalt command us we will do." 3 They are God's messengers; 4 heralds of His manifestations to mankind; 5 and ministers of His Son. 6 But " a throne was set for the king's mother, and she sat on his right hand," 7 for as Jesus Christ is established at the right hand of His Father and has entered into His inheritance, 8 so is His Mother established in the participation of His power and glory, and in the exercise of the privileges and prerogatives of a Queen.

The transcendent revelation of God was made to the Virgin of Nazareth, and an Angel awaited her words of consent that the Mystery might be accomplished. He " on whom the Angels desire to look," 9 and who is " above all principality, and power, and virtue, and dominion," took flesh in Mary's womb, was carried in her arms, tended by her in the days of His infancy, and " was subject " to her during a period of thirty years. The Divine Maternity, as we have seen in the foregoing pages, demanded extraordinary Grace, Grace in proportion to the dignity and office of Mother of God. The position was unique. So also was the Grace conferred, for that Grace was conferred upon the Mother that she might be worthy to occupy the position, and in the fact of the Incarnation we possess divine testimony as to the actual worthiness of our Blessed Lady for the office. No other creature, therefore, either angelic or human, can be compared with Mary in the order of grace. She excels all creatures in dignity, consequently in perfection, since her dignity demanded the highest perfection and the plenitude of grace. And since the degree of glory that is attained is commensurate with the grace conferred and corresponded to, and with the charity that is communicated by grace, it follows that, as the Mother of God surpasses all creatures in Grace and Charity, she transcends them in glory. Grace and glory have been merited for us by Jesus Christ: of His fulness we all have received: but no creature to such an extent as His own Mother. She most closely resembles Him, 10 and so is uplifted above all other creatures as a Queen ranks superior to her subjects.

So far there is no difficulty. We can really understand how the unique position of our Lady, her extraordinary Grace and Charity, and her proximity to God, would give her the highest place in heaven. There is, however, another question to be answered: Are the Angels indebted in any way to the Mother of God ? Have her merits in any way affected them ? Has she obtained any Grace for them, any supernatural perfection, or any increase of glory ?

Some theologians have taught that the Word would have become incarnate even though man had not sinned. According to this opinion, the sanctification of the Angels was due in the first place to the foreseen merits of the Incarnate Word, and, secondarily, to the merits, also foreseen, of His Mother.

St. Thomas holds the contrary opinion as the one " to which it would seem that assent should preferably be given." His reason for this is as follows. " Whatever is the effect of God's will only, and is beyond anything due to a creature, can only be known in so far as it is revealed in the Sacred Scriptures which are the means by which the Divine Will is made manifest to us. Wherefore, since the Scriptures uniformly state that the sin of our first parents was the reason for the Incarnation, it is more fittingly asserted that the Incarnation was decreed by God as a remedy against sin, in such wise, that if sin had not been committed the Incarnation would not have occurred." 11

From this teaching, which is more general amongst theologians, it follows that the Angels were not indebted to the merits of " the Word made flesh," or, consequently, to those of His Blessed Mother for the grace which sanctified them, or the glory of the vision of God. This is stated in definite terms by St. Thomas. " Christ as man is the Head of the Angels, but not so specially (proprie) y or in the same manner as He is Head of the human race, and this for two reasons. First, as regards similarity of nature, for He resembles man specifically in nature but is like to the Angels generically, in that they are endowed with an intellectual nature. Secondly, as regards His influence, for He does not influence the Angels ... by meriting Grace or x by praying for them, since they are already in the state of beatitude." 12
 

Are we to say, then, that neither our Divine Lord nor His Blessed Mother conferred any favour on the Angels, or that the Angelic hosts were not indebted in any way to Jesus and Mary ? By no means. Another passage from the writings of St. Thomas shows us that the Angels do actually owe certain gifts and favours to " the man Christ Jesus," and, consequently, to His Mother. " The Angels are not wayfarers as regards the essential recompense, hence Christ did not merit it for them. But in a certain sense they are wayfarers In regard to the accidental recompense, in so far forth as they minister unto us. In this respect Christ's merits were effectual to them." 13 The essential recompense for every intellectual being is the possession of God, the vision of God face to face, which, as a writer puts it," is found in the immediate communication of the created mind with the divine mind." 14 It is this vision of God which is the " reward exceeding great" for Angels and men. Hence, the Word of God, the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity, together with the Father and the Holy Ghost, is the essential or substantial recompense of all who have entered into the glory of the Kingdom. Everything else is accidental or accessory. The fruition of God alone is the full and final recompense. For this recompense there was of necessity grace in proportion, grace which fitted the Angels for the vision of God. This grace was God's gratuitous gift, and the Angels received it through the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity, the Word, but not " the Word made flesh." It was not merited for them by Jesus Christ, neither was it received by them through Mary's hands. " Take away the humanity of the Word, and, consequently, the Mother of God," says Father Terrien; " the Angels would still enjoy the vision of God in which their essential happiness lies, because the Grace which is the principle of this vision did not come to them either from Jesus or Mary," 15

Our Blessed Lady, therefore, is not Mother of Divine Grace for the Angels as she is for us. We owe all the Grace we receive to Jesus Christ; and as He was given to us by Mary, so the graces He has won for us are still conferred upon us through His Mother, not the graces which make for our accessory happiness only, but that grace which gives us the right to the eternal inheritance.

But the accidental grace conferred upon the Angels—that is," an increase of knowledge because of the mysteries of salvation; an increase of joy because of the restoration of the order in their ranks which Lucifer had disturbed; and an increase of glory because of the triumphs of Christ and His Church 16—this has been bestowed upon them by Christ the Son of God and Son of Mary, since as the Incarnate Word, He is above all principality and power; He is their Head because He is the Head of the Church of which they also are members.

With regard to this grace, Mary is Mother of Divine Grace for the Angelic hosts, and her merits have won grace and glory for them, which add to their perfection and increase their happiness. And so St. Antoninus tells us in his Summa that— " Since Mary is the Mother of the Saviour of men, she is in a certain sense the principle and source of the glory of the Angels, and may rightly be called their Mother." 17 In the beautiful words of Father Hugon, O.P., " Mary belongs to us more fully than to the Angels; she is our very own; we have cost her more, and she has given more to us than to them. She is only Mother of Grace and Glory that is accidental in the case of the Angels, but she is Mother of all Grace, all glory, of every good to us: tota mater, she is wholly a Mother to us. We are the children of her sorrows; the Angels are the heirs of her triumphs.

Her Motherhood of them is all joy; but in our case it is indeed a childbirth with all its attendant suffering and love. Because we have cost so great a price we belong to her and she belongs to us in a special manner. Because we have received greater graces * through her we are bound to show greater gratitude. We shall show our gratitude best by being wholly devoted to her." 18

Dante tells us that St. Bernard commanded him to " look upon the face which most resembles Christ, because its brightness alone could prepare him to behold Christ."19 He speaks of the Virgin-Mother as " the Queen who can do whatsoever she will "; 20 while at the singing of the Ave Maria by Gabriel" every face thereby gathered serenity. 21 " Again, in the Purgatorio, we find that the mere utterance of her [Mary's] name by dying lips, even when repentance has been till then neglected, is enough to secure the privilege of admission to purgatorial penance, and, consequently, of ultimate salvation. . . . Once more in each of the seven divisions of purgatory, in which severally one of the deadly sins is purged, when examples of the contrary virtues are presented for the meditation of the penitents, the first example is in every case taken from some incident in the life of the Virgin— a thought borrowed by Dante from St. Bonaventura." 22 We have seen that Mary is the Almoner of God's Grace, and that each Grace conferred upon us passes through her hands: but in heaven itself, and for her children who have " entered into the joy of the Lord," is Mary still a Mother of Grace? And does she turn her " eyes of mercy" upon those other children, wayfarers no longer, yet who have not been granted the vision of Light Eternal, the souls " who are content in the fire: for they hope to come, whensoever it be, amongst the blessed " ? 23

It has been stated above that every intellectual being finds its true happiness in the vision and possession of God. It is the unending Communion between the Uncreated and the created mind which constitutes the everlasting joy and perfect bliss of the Just in heaven; and it is by means of the grace conferred and corresponded with that this blessedness is won. Since, therefore, the Mother of God has in a secondary way merited this grace for us, she has also in the same subordinate manner merited our essential happiness—of course de congruo only. We do not imply that once the blessed have received their reward the Mother of God merits any further increase of their essential happiness. The degree of glory is apportioned to each soul by God as the reward of its " hunger and thirst after justice." It cannot be increased, since the opportunity for meriting any increase has passed, and God's decision is irrevocable. We merely say that, since the glory is commensurate with the grace conferred and corresponded with during life and at the hour of death, Mary, who has merited the Grace for us in the manner mentioned, has also merited the glory.

There is, however, other joy in heaven apart from the substantial happiness of the blessed. There is the accessory happiness of which we have spoken, and which adds to and completes the bliss of the Just. The vision and continual presence of Him Whom Mary has given to us, Jesus, " the fruit of her womb," makes for the happiness of the Blessed. So also does the presence of Mary herself, our Mother, to whom after Jesus we are so deeply indebted. What a source of unspeakable joy are Jesus and Mary to those who have loved and served them, who possess them now without fear of ever losing them, and who see face to face the Child and His Mother !

In heaven " death shall be no more, nor mourning, nor crying, nor sorrow shall be any more, for the former things are passed away. 24 Those who have loved each other on earth, and who have died in the friendship of God shall be united once more and for ever, and they shall owe their reunion in a sense to the grace that Mary has merited for them— de congruo, as we have explained. Mary will still be a Mother to each human being. As she taught the Evangelists in the early days of the Church the secrets of the Infancy and Hidden Life of her Son, may we not think of her as revealing to His brethren, whom she by her prayers has moulded into a resemblance of Him, the Mysteries of Nazareth, Bethlehem, and Calvary? She can supply details that no other creature can supply. Knowledge of them will add to the happiness of the Blessed. Shall we be at fault in saying that the Mother will not withhold them ? And her Mother's love will urge those who enjoy the rest after labour to pray more earnestly and plead more insistently for those who are struggling still in the Vale of Tears. And as each wayfarer reaches home at last, and is crowned by Jesus, and welcomed by Mary, will not the other souls rejoice and be glad anew that Mary's prayers have not been in vain or the grace of God been void ? 25

There are other children who have prayed to Mary in life, whose prayers have indeed been heard, but who have a debt to pay to Eternal Justice before they can come to the nuptials of the Lamb. They cry for pity and for mercy: does the Mother of Mercy come to their assistance? Who can doubt it when we find the Church praying in the Holy Sacrifice and in the Office of the Dead: " O God, the Giver of pardon and the Author of human salvation, we beseech Thy clemency, through the intercession of the ever Blessed Virgin Mary and of all Thy Saints, to admit the brethren and sisters, the friends and benefactors of our congregation, to the fellowship of eternal life." 26 The writings of the Saints bear testimony to the fact of the intercession of the Mother of God on behalf of the souls in Purgatory and to the efficacy of this intercession. 27 And when Dante represents the rulers of the world, many of whom had been deadly enemies in life, as singing the Salve Regina together, 28 he has but embodied in his immortal poem the teaching of theology on the subject. The Salve Regina, as our readers are aware, is a prayer to our Blessed Lady as the Mother of Mercy. She is styled Spes nostra (our Hope); and the request is made that she will " turn her eyes of mercy towards " those who pray to her, and " after this their exile " that she " will show unto them the Fruit of her womb." The prayer is familiar to all of us. We say it frequently; but the fact that Dante represents it as being sung by the souls in Purgatory emphasises the teaching of theologians on the question of Mary's sovereignty and power there, for as Dr. Hettinger says:" Dante . . . wrote as a theologian," as a "poetic Thomas Aquinas." Mary's power in the realms of Purgatory is acknowledged by theology. How does she wield it for the benefit of those " who hope to come, whensoever it be, amongst the blessed " ?

Let us again think of the intensity of a mother's love, especially in regard to a child who is ailing. Her love makes her importunate; urges her to inspire others to plead for and to interest themselves in her child; and she will not be rebuffed. We have a remarkable example of this in the " woman of Canaan." 29 The Mother of God is human,, with a Mother's human heart. Will she not inspire her other children, who still can merit, to pray for and apply their merits to those exiles in Purgatory, that the days of their exile may be shortened and their home-coming be hastened ? Furthermore, as Mother of mankind, Mary has personal knowledge of those committed to her care. We know that St. Thomas teaches how " each created intelligence understands in the Word, not indeed all things, but the more, the more perfect its vision of the Word. And in the Word, the knowledge of whatever is of interest to them is not withheld from the blessed." 30 What we have said in the preceding chapter with reference to Mary's interest in and intercession for us in life holds good as regards the souls in Purgatory. She knows them most intimately because of her clear vision of God. She takes an interest in them, therefore, greater than that taken by any other creature, because for them the sufferings of her Divine Son have not been fruitless, and their presence in heaven will swell the chorus of praise to God. Hence Mary personally intercedes for them. Are her prayers efficacious of themselves ? Can the Mother by her own pleading set her children free ? Theological opinion is divided upon this question. But, whatever view we take, we must remember that the merits and satisfaction of Mary the Mother of God are almost limitless. They form an immense treasure for the satisfying of Eternal Justice, for they surpass the collective merits and satisfaction of all other creatures, and are surpassed only by those of Jesus Christ. Mary does not require this treasure. She was sinless and had no debt to pay. And thus the Mother of God can offer to Him, as a means of satisfying for her children's debt to His justice, the treasure of merits and satisfaction she accumulated during her life on earth. Thus can she obtain mercy for them before the Throne of Mercy; hasten the termination of their exile; and bring them at last to the unveiled vision of God.

The attitude of Heresy in regard to Mary Mother of God is fiercely antagonistic. The antagonism is so bitter as to make it utterly unreasonable; yet despite its unreasonableness it cannot rob the Virgin of Nazareth of her glorious title of Mother of God; the testimony of Scripture is too strong and too definite. But it strives to rob the Mother of the consequences and privileges of her Divine Maternity; to minimise her greatness and power; and to withhold all veneration from her who is " the glory of Jerusalem, the joy of Israel, and the honour of her people." It makes much of the words of Jesus Christ to His Mother at the Marriage Feast, and decides that the Son rebuked the Mother by addressing her as" Woman." Jesus addressed Mary as " Woman " on Calvary, when with His dying breath He gave her to the world. Did He convey a rebuke then ? Mary Immaculate is " Woman," the Ideal Woman, the Type of Womanhood, as her Son is the Ideal Man. She is the only woman amongst all others who corresponds to " the woman " foretold from the beginning as the one who should crush the serpent's head, and between whom and the spirits of evil eternal antagonism must exist. The Catholic Church recognises this fact, has always recognised it. The Catholic Church now as in the beginning recognises Mary's power, position, and dignity: recognises that she has " trampled all heresies under her feet": recognises that devotion to and love of God's Mother go hand in hand with loyalty to and love of Jesus Christ. God called her " Blessed amongst women." She herself, filled with the spirit of prophecy because He Who inspired the Prophets of Israel was tabernacled in her bosom, foretold that " henceforth and for ever all generations should call her blessed." The Catholic Church in every age and country turns to the Mother and hails her as " Mary . . . blessed . . . amongst women." In her recognition of the Immaculate the Church gives yet another proof of her own divine origin.

" It is by Mary that the salvation of the world has been begun, and it is by Mary that it must be consummated." 31 The Church is the Ark of Salvation in this world. Her duty is to labour for the salvation of souls, and so she prays to, and begs the intercession of, the Mother of the Church. She teaches her children to practise devotion to Mary, for she knows full well that such devotion is a true sign of God's predestination to eternal life. She knows from centuries of experience that they " who find Mary shall find life," for Mary gave Jesus, the Life, to men; and that they " shall have salvation from the Lord," since every grace that we obtain comes through our Lady's hands.

Into those Virgin-Mother's hands we place what we have written, all unworthy though it be, while we dare to say with another client of the Immaculate:

Ancor ti prego, Regina, che puoi 

Cio che tu vuoli, che conservi sani 
. . . . gli affeti suoi
" This yet I pray thee, Queen, Who canst do what thou wilt; that in him thou (midst . . . preserve . . . affection sound. "


Paradiso, xxxiii.

 From - Mother Of Divine Grace: A Chapter in the Theology of the Immaculate. By Father Stanislaus. M. Hogan, O.P.

1 Eph. i. 21. 
2 Sum. Theol., III. Pars, Q. CIII, A. 4.

3 4 Kings x. 5. 


4 Cf. Ps. ciii. 4.

5 Gen. xvi. 7; Num. xxii. 31; Tob. xii. 15-21; Luke ii. 9-10, 13-14. 


6 Matt. iv. II; Luke xxii. 43 

7 3 Kings ii. 19.

 8 Sum. Theol., III. Pars, Q. LVIII., A. 3. 

9 1 Pet. i. 12.

1o Riguarda omai nella faccia ch' a Cristo piu si somiglia (" Look now upon the face that most nearly resembles Christ.")(Paradiso, xxxii. 85.)

11 Sum. TheoL, III. Pars, Q. I., A. 3.

12 Sent. iii. D. 13, Q. 2, A. 2.
 

13 De Veritate, Q. XXIX., A. 7, ad. 5. 

14 Bellord, Meditations on Christian Dogma, vol. i., p. 124.

15 Op. cit., vol. iv., 1. viii., c. vi., p. 139. 

16 Hugon, op. cit., pp. 284-285. 

17 IV. p., tit. xv., c. xiv.

 18 Op. cit., pp. 286-287. 

19 Paradiso, xxxii., 85-87.

20 Ibid, xxxiii., 40. 


21 Ibid, xxxii., 99.

22 Studies in Dante, by Edward Moore, D.D. Second series. Oxford, MDCCCXCIX., p. 63.

23 Inferno, i., 118—120. Carlyle's translation.
 


24 Apoc. xxi. 4. 

25 Cf. Hugon, op. cit., pp. 292-293; Terrien, op. cit., vol. iv., 1. x., c. iii.

26 Ex Missa et Off. Defunctorum, O.P.


27 Cf. The Glories of Mary. Part I., c. viii., sect. ii. 

28 Purgatorio, vii. 82.

29 Matt. xv. 21-31.  

30 Sum. Theol, III.a Pars, Q. X., A. 2.  

31 B. Louis De Montfort, op. cit., p.28.

Mother Of Divine Grace By Father Stanislaus. M. Hogan, O.P. Chapter X Mary The Almoner Of Divine Grace.


The devotional routine of worship within I quoted bears witness to her acceptance . by the Church," 1 says an author already, of the opinion that all gifts come through Mary. It is a constant nan sequitur to external appreciation that when a Catholic is in special need of divine aid, when he is to have recourse to prayer, he is universally recommended to say a " Hail Mary." We need scarcely say that everyday experience confirms the truth of this statement; and while Catholics in general may have but little explicit knowledge of the opinion given above, that " all gifts come through Mary," in other words, that the Mother of God is the channel of God's Grace, the true Catholic instinct is in this direction.

There are two facts regarding our Blessed Lady accepted by all Catholics and which have ever been so accepted: Mary Is the Mother of God, Mary Is the Mother of men; and because of her Divine Maternity she enjoys the sovereignty of a Queen. Her Son is King by right divine and by right of conquest, and His sovereignty is universal. It is to the Word made flesh, Jesus Christ, that the pledge is given: Ask of Me, and I will give Tbee the Gentiles for Thy inheritance, and the utmost farts of the earth for Thy possession. 2 The sovereignty of the Mother is co-extensive with the inheritance of her Son. He has redeemed all men. Mary Is therefore their Queen, and as such must rule as well as reign. What the sovereignty of our Lady implies we have seen when we considered her claims to be Mediatrix, Co-operatrix, and Intercessor; we also saw that her claims to exercise these functions are rooted in her free and intelligent co-operation with God in the work of man's salvation and redemption. Does our Lady's sovereignty extend further than mediation and intercession f Does she still co-operate with the Eternal In the work of man's salvation?—still actively further God's designs in the Incarnation ? These are questions we shall attempt to answer now.

The purpose of the Incarnation is realised in each soul by means of that Sanctifying Grace  which Jesus Christ has merited for us. It is through the reception of this Grace that human souls " put on the new man, who according to God is created in justice and holiness of truth." 3 Mary, as Mother of God, was the channel of the Incarnation: she still is the channel of Divine Grace; and all the grace that men receive from God comes to them through her who gave to them their Redeemer. This is but an opinion; it is not the defined teaching of the Church. But it is the opinion of some of the deepest theologians and the greatest Saints, while it has also received the approval of more than one Supreme Pontiff.

Before we proceed further it will be advisable to consider for a moment the nature of our Lady's intercession. It is not merely intercession for all men in general but for each one in particular. This doctrine is the outcome of principles which theologians accept as certain. St. Thomas teaches that: " Each created intelligence understands in the Word, not indeed, all things, but the more, the more perfect its vision of the Word. And in the Word, the knowledge of whatever is of interest to them is not withheld from the blessed." 4 Hence, a father or mother will have knowledge in heaven of whatever affects their children. They will see the difficulties and dangers their children have to face, the trials they have to bear, their joys and sorrows, their hopes and fears. A mother does not cease to be a mother when she enjoys the vision of God. Her children are hers for ever; the relationship cannot be broken; and her interest in them is not lessened but intensified because of the clear vision she possesses and the happiness that is hers. If she showed her love of and interest in her children in life, she will continue to show that love and interest in them now that she is in heaven; consequently, she will pray for them, plead for them before God, that they may never be separated from her for eternity.

Mary, the Mother of God, is also our Mother; Mother of the human race; Mother of each individual. The difficulties, dangers, temptations, and trials of each of her children are known to her: Can she be indifferent to them ? Would she be really a Mother, or show a Mother's love of or take a Mother's interest in us her children ? Would she have the honour of her Divine Son at heart if she did not help us by making intercession for each of us when such intercession makes for the triumph of her Son and the reign of God in each individual soul i Her Motherhood of men began when she accepted the Motherhood of God, and it was ratified and confirmed on Calvary. Jesus Christ, " having loved His own, loved them to the end." It is the same with His Mother. We are her children, therefore will she love us to the end. So long as there is a human being on earth there is one who has a claim upon our Lady's care, one to be followed by her maternal love through all the vicissitudes of life until the end, so that when her Divine Son shall behold Himself reflected in such a soul, He may turn to her into whose keeping He entrusted it that it might be " made conformable " to Him, and repeat once more His words from the Cross: " Mother, behold thy son !"

Mary does not cease to be our Mother because she is the Queen of Heaven. She is now and for ever " full of Grace," Plena sibi, superplena nobis, and overflowing with Grace for us. " It is a wonderful thing for any Saint to possess grace that is sufficient to save many souls," says St. Thomas, but " the supreme degree of plenitude is to possess grace sufficient to save the whole human race. This is the plenitude of grace possessed by Christ and His Mother. For you may obtain salvation from this glorious Virgin in every danger. . . . You may have her assistance in every act of virtue, and hence she says in Ecclesiastics: In me is all grace of the way and of truth." 5

According to St. Thomas, therefore, our Blessed Lady can assist us to practise virtue, and give us strength to overcome every temptation; in other words, she can help us to work out our salvation. Her power, then, Is not a sterile power, nor merely nominal; it means actual assistance. Hence, when St. Thomas teaches that our Blessed Lady can win Grace for us, and that we may obtain salvation from her, it is the same as if he taught that she actually obtains this Grace we need and that we actually win salvation from her. In this teaching the Angelical follows closely in the footsteps of his master, Blessed Albert the Great, who calls our Blessed Lady " the Universal Almoner of all good." 6 Other doctors taught the same opinion previously. St. Peter Damian says: " In thy hands are the treasures of divine mercy;" 7 and St. Anselm exclaims: " If thou keep silence no other can pray for or assist us: but if thou wilt intercede, all others may pray and plead for us." 8 St. Bernard of Clairvaux addresses us in the following words: " O thou, whosoever thou art, that knowest thyself to be here not so jnuch walking upon firm ground as battered to and fro by the gales and storms of this life's ocean, if thou wouldst not be overwhelmed by the tempest, keep thine eye upon this Star's clear shining. If the hurricanes of temptation arise against thee, or thou art running upon the rocks of trouble, look to the Star, call upon Mary. ... In danger, in difficulty, or in doubt, think of Mary, call upon Mary. . . . If thou follow her, thou wilt never go astray. If thou pray to her, thou wilt never have need to despair. ... If she hold thee, thou wilt never be weary. If she keep thee, thou wilt reach home safe at last." 9 Again he says: " She openeth her bosom of mercy to all, that of her fulness all may receive: the captive, ransom ; the sick, health; the sorrowful, comfort; the sinful, pardon; the righteous, grace; even Angels, gladness." 10 But it is in his Sermon De Aquaductu, and hi? Homily for the Nativity of our Blessed Lady, that we fihd St. Bernard's most explicit teaching on this question: " Take away the sun which gives light to the world: where, then, is day ? Take away Mary, the Star of the Sea, a vast and limitless sea: what remains save blinding mist, the shadow of death, and blackest darkness ?
 

Let us, therefore, reverence Mary with our whole heart, with all the affection of our soul, with all our loyalty, for this is the will of Him Who desires that we shall obtain everything through Mary." 11 " God has decreed that we shall receive nothing unless it comes through Mary's hands." 12 We address the Mother of God as the " Virgin most Powerful," and St. Bonaventure gives the reason for our doing so, in the following words:" Because the Almighty is with thee . . . therefore art thou all-powerful with Him, thou art all-powerful by Him, and thou art all-powerful before Him, so that thou canst say: My power is in Jerusalem." 13 "God the Son has communicated to His Mother," says Blessed Louis de Montfort," all that He has acquired by His life and His death, His infinite merits and His admirable virtues; and He has made her the treasuress of all that His Father has given Him for His inheritance. It is by her that He applies His merits to His members, and that He communicates His virtues, and distributes His grace. She is His mysterious canal; she is His aqueduct, through which He makes His mercies flow gently and abundantly. To Mary, His faithful Spouse, God the Holy Ghost has communicated His unspeakable gifts; and He has chosen her to be the dispensatrix of all He possesses, in such sort that she distributes to whom she wills, as much as she wills, as she wills, and-when she wills, all His gifts and graces. The Holy Ghost gives no heavenly gift to men which He does not pass through her virginal hands." 14

We have said that more than one Sovereign Pontiff has approved of this doctrine: we should have said that several Popes have emphatically taught it. Benedict XIV. calls Mary "the heavenly canal by which all graces and all gifts come to us." 15 In his Encyclical on the Jubilee of the Immaculate Conception, the late Pope Pius X. styles our Lady " the supreme ministrant in the distribution of grace." 16 Leo XIII. makes St. Bernardine of Siena's words his own when he says that " every grace which is bestowed upon man comes to him by three perfectly ordered degrees: God communicates the grace to Christ; from Christ it passes to the Holy Virgin; we receive it from Mary's hands." 17

We are all aware that this glorious Pontiff summoned the Catholic world to beg the intercession of the Mother of God, by the Rosary, against the dangers which threatened the Church and the Faith. Year after year he issued his Encyclicals in which, as Supreme Doctor of the Church, he insistently taught the power and efficacy of this form of prayer. He consecrated the month of October to our Lady of the Rosary; ordered the public recitation of the Rosary each day during the month, and added another invocation to our Lady in the Litany of Loreto— " Queen of the Most Holy Rosary, pray for us." This attitude of the Sovereign Pontiffs proves that, though nothing has been defined in this matter, we are in agreement with the mind of the Church when we say that the Mother of God Is the Almoner of Divine Grace. 18
 

We have seen what some of the Saints and Popes have said in reference to this doctrine. Their teaching is consonant with the Liturgy of the Church. Not only does the Church formally ask that Jesus Christ will " accept our prayers through her of whom He was born," but in the Canon of the Mass she recognises the position and power of the Mother of God in the prayer Communicantes: " Communicating with, and honouring in the first place the memory of the glorious and ever Virgin Mary, Mother of our Lord and God Jesus Christ; as also of the blessed Apostles and Martyrs . . . and of all Thy Saints; by whose merits and prayers grant that we may be in all things defended by the help of Thy protection."

Theologians began to treat the question in the fifteenth century, but It was only in the seventeenth century that it came to receive more formal and explicit recognition. 19 Our Lady's claims were defended against the attacks of certain writers who were antagonistic to the popular devotion to the Mother of God. A number of theologians took up the cause of the Immaculate, and foremost amongst them was a Saint who is also a Doctor of the Church, St. Alphonsus Liguori. He teaches in the most express terms, that all graces without exception are conferred upon us by God through His Blessed Mother. Further on we shall give some of the Saint's reasons for his statement. Suarez, S.J., 20 Vega, S.J., 21 Con-tenson, O.P., 22 and Justin of Mieckow, O.P., 23 in former times, were firm defenders of this doctrine, while in our own days, to mention only a few theologians, it is taught by Father Lepicier, 24 Father Hugon, O.P., 25 and Father Terrien, S.J. 26 Now it is very remarkable that, when our Lord communicated his grace on solemn occasions, He did so through the instrumentality of His Mother. Three occasions on which this occurred stand out clearly: the Visitation to St. Elizabeth, the Marriage-Feast at Cana, and Calvary. On these occasions, the graces conferred are typical of those which extend over the entire spiritual life of Man: the Graces of Vocation, of Justification, and of Perseverance. The sanctification of the unborn Baptist represents the calling of any soul to the supernatural life of Faith. The establishing of the Apostle's belief in Jesus Christ, the result of the miracle at Cana, typifies the justification of the sinner. Finally, St. John is the type of those children of adoption, born of the sufferings of Christ and the sorrows of His Mother, who persevere to the end, and for whom " there is laid up a crown of justice. ,, " In making use of His Mother to communicate this threefold Grace," says Father Hugon, "Christ gives us to understand that all other help must come through her since all other Graces are consequent to, dependent on, and applications of, these three fundamental Graces." 27

The full purpose of the Incarnation is only realised in each soul when it has been " made conformable to the image of Jesus Christ." When the Mother of Christ became Mother of the Mystical Body of Christ, she took upon herself the duties of a Mother towards that Mystical Body, and must do for all her children what she did for Christ Himself. A mother does not merely conceive and bring forth her children; she nourishes, tends, and safeguards them. The spiritual Maternity of Mary demands similar service. We must " in all things grow up in Him who is the head, even Christ"; and such growth and development necessitates a continual outpouring of actual grace each moment of life, until we arrive " unto the measure of the age of the fulness of Christ. " 28 Mary, as the Mother of God and of men, is a Queen, and, as we have seen, her intercessory power is immeasurable. She can obtain for us the grace that is indispensable, 29 and it is in obtaining this grace for us all our life long that she " shows herself a Mother " in reality, and nourishes, tends, and safeguards us until the end.

Furthermore, our Blessed Lady has been fittingly called the Collum Ecclesia, the neck of the Church. Jesus Christ is the Head, the Holy Ghost is the Heart of the Church. From the Head proceeds all energy and life; the Heart, by its action, causes this life and energy to circulate through each member of the Church, the Mystical Body of Christ. But the head is joined to the body by the neck, and this is the position which God's Mother holds in the Church. Life and energy in the supernatural order, in other words grace, flow from the Head, Jesus Christ, into the body, the Church, through her. Jesus Christ is the principle of grace. His Mother has received her fulness of Grace from Him, and is absolutely dependent upon Him for her perfection. But now, as of old, the Son makes use of His Mother to accomplish His designs and communicate His favours. Of " His fulness we all have received, and grace for grace "; 30 but, as members of His mystical body we have received that Grace through her who is, and shall for ever be, the link that united the race of man with God in Jesus Christ.

In replying to the objection that, as Jesus Christ is the One Necessary Mediator, consequently we cannot lay claim to the mediation of His Mother, or teach that all Graces come through her, St. Alphonsus replies: " Mediation of justice by way of merit is one thing, and mediation of grace by way of prayer is another. And again, it is one tiling to say that God cannot, and another that He will not, grant graces without the intercession of Mary. . . . We most readily admit that Jesus Christ is the only Mediator of Justice . . . and that by His merits He obtains us all graces and solvation; but we may say that Mary is the Mediator of grace; and that receiving all she obtains through Jesus Christ, and because she prays and asks for it in the name of Jesus Christ, yet, all the same, whatever graces we receive they come to us through her intercession." 31

Elsewhere the Saint teaches that," if all these first fruits of Redemption passed by Mary as the channel through which grace was communicated to the Baptist, the Holy Ghost to Elizabeth, the gift of prophecy to Zachary, and so many other graces to the whole house, the first graces, which, to our knowledge, the Eternal Word had granted on earth after His Incarnation, it is quite correct to believe that from henceforward God made Mary the universal channel, as she is called by St. Bernard, through which all the other graces which our Lord is pleased to dispense to us should pass." 32
Our Blessed Lady, like Rebecca her foretype, " a most beautiful virgin, and not known to man . . . went down to the spring, and filled her pitcher. . . . And the servant ran to meet her, and said: Give me a little water to drink of thy pitcher. And she answered: Drink, my lord. And quickly she let down the pitcher upon her arm, and gave him to drink. And when he had drunk, she said: I will draw water for thy camels also, till they drink." 33 " Mary c went down to the spring ' of grace by her humility, and became c full of Grace,' and not only does she in her charity give her faithful servants to drink when they ask her, but even sinners receive of her plenitude ' till they all drink.'" 34

Mary Immaculate is therefore fully deserving of her title of Mother of Divine Grace. Full of Grace herself, she overflows with Grace for us. Just as " we have not a high priest who cannot have compassion on our infirmities," 35 but One Who has sympathy for us, and everlasting love; One Who is ready to help us, even our Brother; so does it come to pass, that she who gave Him to us, and in giving Him has made us His brethren, becomes a Mother to each of us, the intermediary between her Divine Son and her spiritual children, the instrument of the continued workings of the Incarnation in each human life.

Rightly, then, do we call her Spes nostra, Mary our Hope. Rightly do we beg that she will " succour the miserable, help the faint-hearted, comfort the sorrowful, pray for the people, plead for clerics, and make intercession for those virgins who are consecrated to God." All are her children, since all have been redeemed by her Son. Rightly do we ask her, our Advocate, to prove a Mother to us in this " vale of tears," to " turn her eyes of mercy towards us," that through her we may obtain the Mercy of God. And with fullest confidence do we pray that, when the time of exile in a strange land is drawing to a close, when " the winter is past " and " the rain is over and gone," our Mother will win for us the crowning grace of perseverance at the last, and " show unto us the blessed fruit of her womb, Jesus."


From - Mother Of Divine Grace: A Chapter in the Theology of the Immaculate. By Father Stanislaus. M. Hogan, O.P. 

1 J. Herbert Williams, op. cit., p. 149. The whole chapter, the third in the second part, is instructive.

2 Ps. ii. 8.

3 Eph. iv. 24.

4 Sum. Theol., III. Pars, Q. X., A. 2; cf. De Veritate, Q. VIII., A. 4; Q. XX., A. 4.


5 Expositio super Salut. Angelica.

6 Omnium bonitatem universaliter distributiva. Quast super Missus est, xxix.

7 Serm. I., De Nativitate


8 Orat. 45. Ad.B. Virginem.

9 Sermo ii., sup. Missus est. Marquess of Bute's translation. 

10 Sermo xcviii. Marquess of Bute's translation.

11 Sermo de Aquӕductu.

12 " Nihil nos habere voluit quod fer Mariӕ manus non transiret " (Serm. III., in Vigil. Domini., No. io). 


13 Speculum viii.

 14 Op. cit., pp. 12-13.

15 Bull, Gloriosӕ Dominӕ.

16 Ea ... est princeps largiendarutn gratiarum ministra. 


17 Encyclical on the Rosary, Jucunda semper, September 8, 1894.

18 Cf. Justin of Mieckow, O.P., op. cit., Conf. 129. § 6; Hugon, O.P., op. cit., pp. 240-244; Terrien, S.J., op. cit., vol. iii., 1. v., ch. i., ii.; 1. vii., ch. iii. Dante gave expression to the instinctive and traditional opinion of the Catholic mind in the verse:

Donna, se'tanto grande, e tanto vali, 

Che qual vuol grazia, e ate non ricorre,
Sua dizianza vuol volar senz'ali.
(" Lady, thou art so great and hast such worth, that if there be who would have grace, yet betaketh not himself to thee, his longeth seeketh to fly without wings.") (Paradiso, xxxiii. 13-15. Wicksteed's translation). Possibly St. Antoninus, O.P., Archbishop of Florence, "borrowed the thought from Dante's
immortal poem," says Father Terrien (op. cit., vol. iii., p. 575, note), when he wrote of our Lady: Qui petit sine ipsa duce, sine alis tentat volare (Sum. Theol, p. iv., tit. 15, c. 22, § 9), " Whoso makes a request without her as guide, seeks to fly without wings."

19 Terrien, op. cit., vol. iii., pp. 578-581.

20 De Myst. Vitӕ Cbristi, d. 23, sect. 3, 5. 

21 Theol. Mariana, Palestra xxix., Cert. iv. 

22 Theol. Ment. et Cord., lib. x., passim

23 Op. cit., Conf. 129.

24 Op. cit., pp. 404 sqq. 


25 Op. cit., pp. 257 sqq.

26 Op. cit., vol. iii., liv. vii., c. 3 and 4.


27 Op. cit., pp. 258-259.  

 28 Eph. iv. 13.

29 Regina, che puoi 

       Cio che tu vuoi . . . says Dante. Paradiso, xxxiii.

30 John i. 16.

31 Glories of Mary. Part I., c. v., pp. 123-124.

32 Ibid., second part, discourse v., p. 321.

33 Gen. xxiv. 16-19.


34 La Vierge Marie et le Plan Divin, par Auguste Nicolas, liv., iii., c. 5. Paris, 1864. 

35 Heb. iv. 15.
 

Mother Of Divine Grace By Father Stanislaus. M. Hogan, O.P. Chapter IX The Mother Of Mankind.


IN the words of the Promise 1 there is a very marked antithesis between the serpent and " the woman," between the seed of the serpent and that of " the woman," an antithesis which affects not only the personality but also the office of " the woman." Moreover, the fact that the promise was made in reference to one who should be Eve's descendant emphasises the contrast between Eve and " the woman." Eve had failed. The perfection, therefore, from which she had fallen should be realised in her descendant. She whose heel was to crush the head of the serpent, and whose seed was to destroy the dominion of sin and death which the revolt of our first parents had established in the world, should not only undo the havoc Eve had wrought, but should be in reality what Eve had failed to be, " Mother of the Living." God's hopes had been destroyed and His plan frustrated by the disobedience of our first parents, with the result that Adam was not head of the human race in the full sense, nor Eve the mother of mankind. By their sin they had lost God'sf crowning gift, the supernatural life, and they had furthermore inflicted that loss upon their children. But God would not suffer His designs to be thwarted by any creature. He would uplift man and place the supernatural life once again within his reach. He would vanquish the serpent and defeat his purpose. He would accomplish this by the " seed " of " the woman." Her seed, therefore, should be the real head of the human race; and " the woman" should be the true Mother of Mankind, the Second Eve, the Mother of the Living because the Mother of Him Who came " that men might have life and have it more abundantly." 2

This position of our Blessed Lady as the Second Eve has ever been recognised in the Church. Several of the Fathers allude to our Lady in express terms as fulfilling the functions of Eve; and, as Cardinal Newman has shown, they insist that " she was not a mere instrument in the Incarnation . . . they declare she co-operated in our salvation." 3 He shows that St. Justin Martyr, St. Irenaeus, and Tertullian "do not speak of the Blessed Virgin merely as the physical instrument of our Lord's taking flesh, but as an intelligent, responsible cause of it; her faith and obedience being accessories to the Incarnation and gaining it as her reward. As Eve failed in these virtues, and thereby brought on the fall of the race in Adam, so Mary by means of the same had a part in its restoration." 4 A single quotation from one of the Fathers will give point to the Cardinal's words. St. Irenaeus says: " As Eve by the speech of the Angel was seduced, so as to flee God, transgressing His word, so Mary received the good tidings by means of the Angel's speech, so as to bear God within her, being obedient to His word. And, though the one had disobeyed God, yet the other was drawn to obey God; that of the virgin Eve the Virgin Mary might become the advocate. And, as by a virgin the human race had been bound to death, by a Virgin it is saved, the balance being preserved, a virgin's disobedience by a Virgin's obedience." 5 Predestined " from of old and before the world was made," to be the Mother of the Redeemer, our Blessed Lady became the Mother of the redeemed and was confirmed in that office on Calvary. For the words of her Divine Son were not symbolical only, but effective; and as the disciple to whom Jesus committed His Mother was the representative of the race of man for whom He suffered and died, so was the Mother of Jesus made Mother of men in becoming the mother to St. John, We are witnesses of the pangs of a spiritual childbirth on Calvary that was universal in its effectiveness; and as Jesus died for all men, the Mother who gave Him to us was given to us to be our Mother, that she might mould and fashion " those whom God foreknew," that they might " be made conformable to the image of His Son."

"To us she is always the Mother," says a modern writer, " and this is scarcely removed from being our Mother. Mary would thus be the Mother of Christendom though the Lord had not adopted us as His brothers, and though He had not specially so designated her. But He has so designated her, and He has so adopted us. Our religious instinct, our natural intelligence anticipates or at least accepts our Lord's appointment. Mother, we learn to call her who was the Mother of Jesus. ... It is impossible to overestimate the effect—one would not say in the militant progress of the Christian Creed, but in . its after-recognition—of the simple revelation of the Fatherhood of God. But while God was revealed to us as our Father, there was coincidently the manifestation of one among ourselves as the Mother of Christendom. No one needs to listen to argument upon the association of the name of Mother. Now Christianity appeals— the life and death of our Lord is full of it—to our affections as much as it satisfies our understanding and spiritual craving. Somewhere in Christianity we might anticipate that the most moving of our associations would appear. It appears blazingly on the first page. Can you omit the Mother and Child from Christianity? Can you deny the Mother of Bethlehem to be our Mother as well ? 6 No Catholic would ever dream of denying the Motherhood of Mary; and the Church in teaching the Communion of Saints acknowledges this Motherhood as the complement of the Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood of Jesus Christ. Where this relationship of the Immaculate is ignored there is an absence of solidarity amongst men. There is no " Church " in the real sense. There may be a school of thought, a system of philosophy, but there is not the cohesion which is characteristic of the Mystical body of Christ. 7

The Mother of God is also Mother of mankind, and being so, she was endowed with special Graces for her office. As Mother of the human race, Mary is Mediatrix, Co-operatrix and Intercessor, a threefold office which is summed up in the title by which we address her in her Litany: Refugium Peccatorum, The Refuge of Sinners.

The functions of a mediator, as St. Thomas tells us, imply " the bringing together of extremes." The extremes in the present case are God and man, each separated from the other by sin, each united to the other by Jesus Christ, Who, therefore, is the perfect Mediator between God and man, in that by His death He reconciled man to God. He is the " one mediator of God and men" as the Apostle tells us. 8 Why seek for another ? The mediation of Jesus Christ is infinite; it was also essential. No other mediation on the part of any creature could ever be of such efficacy as that of our Divine Lord. All this is absolutely true; and yet the infinite and necessary mediation of Jesus Christ does not exclude the finite mediation of His Mother, when such mediation makes for the union of man with God. 9 There is mediation of influence, of association, of disposing power, and such according to the teaching of the Church is the mediation of our Blessed Lady, who is styled by Pius IX. "the most powerful Mediatrix and Reconciler in the whole world before her only begotten Son." 10

From the words of the Sovereign Pontiff we learn the nature of our Lady's mediation. It is not the direct mediation between humanity and God; it is the mediation of a mother, strengthened by the influence and supported by all the associations which attach to a mother's name and office, in the presence of her Son, on behalf of those other children of hers whom He in dying committed to her care.

This is shown forth in the Liturgy. The Church accepts the fact of Mary's Motherhood of men and then prays that she will " show herself a Mother." But in what manner is the Mother of God to show her maternal solicitude for us ? By God's acceptance of our supplications through her. 11

In other words, the Church prays that Jesus Christ, the One,. Perfect, and only Mediator before His Eternal Father, will hearken to our petitions when they are presented to Him by His Mother. This is mediation. Can a son refuse his mother's request? Can Jesus refuse the request of Mary His Mother on behalf of us His brethren ? " What is thy petition . . . that it may be granted thee? And what wilt thou have done: although thou ask the half of my kingdom, thou shalt have it. Then she answered: If I have found favour in thy sight, O King . . . give me . . . my people for which I request. But he, as the manner was, held out the golden sceptre with his hand, which was a sign of clemency." 12

As Mother of the human race, Mary also cooperated in its redemption, for she is intimately united with her Divine Son in the economy of man's salvation. The Divine Maternity was not forced upon her; she was perfectly free, as has been already stated, either to accept or refuse the dignity. She accepted it, and in pronouncing her " Fiat" Mary acted, not as a mere individual, but as the representative of the human race. 13 Her consent was necessary for the accomplishment of the Mystery, for as we have said, Mary was not merely an instrument that God might use and set aside, or merely a substitute in the place of any other. She had been chosen by God, therefore she was necessarily included in the Divine Plan as the one human being who, according to the designs of God, was essential to their fulfilment. Eve had wrought ruin for the human race by her free, deliberate consent to the suggestions of the Evil One; Mary repaired the injury inflicted by Eve in freely consenting to be the Mother of God. Hence, from the very beginning of the work of reparation Mary co-operated fully, freely, and intelligently with God's purpose in the Incarnation.

Now the purpose of the Incarnation, as the Creed shows us, was man's salvation. The Word was made flesh proper nos homines et propter nostrum salutem (for us men and for our salvation); and the manner in which the Incarnation was accomplished is expressed in the terms: " Et incarnatus est de Spiritu Sancto EX MARIA VIRGINE " (and was incarnate by the Holy Ghost of the Virgin Mary) . The Son and His Mother are inseparable. Her co-operation was necessary to the Incarnation, but that co-operation did not cease when the Mystery was wrought. It continued throughout the life of Jesus Christ and was renewed on Calvary, where the Mother merited our salvation in union with her Son. 14

We have seen that an act is meritorious when it is morally good, is performed freely, under the influence of Divine Grace, by one who is a wayfarer towards heaven, and who performs the act for God. We have also seen that each act of our Blessed Lady was a meritorious act, and have given the reasons for the statement, 15 It is a theological principle that the Mother of God, because of her union with Him, has merited de congruo —that is, according to the fitness of things—whatever her Divine Son has merited in strict justice, or de condigno. 16 By His death on the Cross Jesus Christ merited our salvation in the most absolute manner. The Grace which is indispensably necessary for us, and without which we can do nothing, has been merited for us by Christ on Calvary. " That Grace was His not only as an individual but also because He is the Head of the Church of which we are the members, that from the Head it might overflow upon the members. Whoever is established in Grace and suffers for justice' sake, merits eternal life, as St. Matthew says: Blessed are they that suffer persecution for justice' sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 17 Christ, therefore, by His Passion, merited salvation, not only for Himself but also for all His members." 18 But the Mother of God is also the Mother of Christ's Mystical Body. She could not merit our salvation in the strict sense, since she was a creature and not divine. But because of her union with God, her perfect conformity with His will, and her burning Charity, she could and did p merit our salvation. Her conformity to the • will of God and her Charity were so perfect that she willed and loved only what and as God willed and loved. Hence, like Him, and in order to accomplish His designs, Mary did not spare her only-begotten Son for our sake, and so she merited the salvation of those other children of hers, for whom He suffered and died. Nor may we forget that the actions of our Blessed Lady as Mother of God take on a dignity and value which is immeasurable, and that they were the outcome of Charity and therefore meritorious each of them, Mary possessed the plenitude of Charity as she possessed the fulness of Grace, She is the Mother of Fair Love, a love so great that it is surpassed by the infinite love of God alone; and, loving God so intensely, she desired in consequence what He desired, with all the ardour and strength 'of her being.

The Sacrifice of the Cross is the only necessary sacrifice—necessary in the sense that it had been preordained by God. It alone wrought our salvation and redemption; alone, that Sacrifice made superabundant satisfaction for our sins. But inasmuch as this Sacrifice was the culminating point of the purpose of the Incarnation, and the free consent of the Virgin of Nazareth was required for the accomplishment of this Mystery, in giving her consent, Mary became intimately associated with God in the purpose of the Incarnation and subsequent Sacrifice. She had her place at the Altar, and it was as a Mother who offered to God all she loved and possessed—her Son. In the sufferings of Jesus the anguish of Mary was included as a part, though not an essential part, of the price that was paid. And if the Apostle could rejoice that by his sufferings he filled up " those things that are wanting of the sufferings of Christ," 19 with greater reason could the Mother rejoice that her sorrows filled up what was "wanting of the sufferings" of her Son, and thus unite her sacrifice with His for the sins of the world.

The third function which our Blessed Lady exercises as Mother of the human race is that of Intercession. It is of faith that the saints offer our prayers to God and plead for us; while the greater the degree of Charity possessed by them, and the more intimate their union with God in consequence of this Charity, the more efficacious will be their intercession. " Prayer is made to another in a twofold manner," says St. Thomas. " First, as if the one to whom we pray will grant our request; secondly, as if he will obtain our request. We. pray to God alone in the first manner, in that, as all our petitions should be made that we may obtain grace and glory, it is God alone Who bestows these gifts: The Lord will give grace and glory? 20 But we pray to the Angels and Saints in the second way, not that God may come to know our wants through them, but that our petitions may be granted on account of their merits and intercession. Hence we read in the Apocalypse: And the smoke of the incense of the prayers of the Saints ascended up before God from the hand of the Angel 21 This may also be understood from the manner in which the Church prays: for we ask mercy from the Holy Trinity, but we ask the Saints to pray for us." 22 How powerful, then, must be the intercession of the Queen of Saints! Her Charity is only surpassed by the everlasting love of God; her union with God by Grace and love is far beyond that of any other creature and of all creatures collectively; and her Divine Maternity, by uniting her so closely to God, has endowed her with a power greater than that wielded by all God's Angels and Saints together. 23 It is but meet and natural that Mary should possess this power of pleading in a super-eminent manner. The unique position she occupies as Mother of God and Mother of mankind gives her this power. Love makes a mother importunate and her pleading resistless. Just because Mary loved God so intensely, and so ardently desired that His designs should be accomplished; just because she loves us, not only because her Son loves us and died to prove His love, but also because He gave us to her and her to us as His last legacy, does she desire to assist us by interceding for us, knowing, as no other creature can possibly understand, that in pleading for us she gives glory to God and furthers the purpose of the Incarnation.

Yet we are not to think that our Blessed Mother pleads for all men with equal insistence and power. True, she is the Mother of all, but there are many who reject her help and refuse to recognise her claims upon them, or her power of intercession. She has the desire to succour all men, but because her will is in the most perfect conformity with the Will of God, she only wills absolutely and efficaciously whatever is the absolute and efficacious Will of the Eternal. We may take, therefore, the words of Scripture: Ego diligentes me diligo (I love them that love me), 24 as the standard of the extent and efficacity of our Lady's intercession. We do not imply that she will not plead for sinners. She is the " Refuge of Sinners," and we pray to her to " pray for us sinners" every day of our exile in this vale of tears. But Mary is not and cannot be a " refuge " to those who persist in sin, in the presumptuous hope that she will intercede for them and win mercy for them despite themselves. " Nothing in Christianity is more detestable than this diabolical presumption," says Blessed Louis Marie Grignonde Montfort. " For how can we say truly that we love and honour our Blessed Lady, when by our sins we are pitilessly piercing, wounding, crucifying, and outraging Jesus Christ her Son ? If Mary laid down a law to herself to save by her mercy this sort of people, she would be authorising crime, and assisting to crucify and outrage her Son. Who would dare to think such a thought as that ?" 25 Our Blessed Lady will not intercede for such as these. But for the sinner who strives to break with sin, for the weary and desponding, for all who recognise that she is their Mother, she will show a Mother's love and plead with a Mother's importunity, and her pleading will not be in vain. " And the king said to her: My Mother, ask; for I must not turn away thy face." 26

From - Mother Of Divine Grace: A Chapter in the Theology of the Immaculate. By Father Stanislaus. M. Hogan, O.P. 

1 Gen. ii. 15.

Cf. John x. io.

3 Letter to Pusey in Difficulties of Anglicans, vol. ii., p. 36. Longmans, Green and Co, 1900.

4 Letter to Pusey in Difficulties of Anglicans, vol, ii., p. 35.

5 Adv. Hӕr. v. 19. Cardinal Newman's translation, op. cit., P- 35.

6 The Mother of Jesus, by J. Herbert Williams, pp. 178-179. London, 1906.

7 Cf. Apologie des Christenthums, by Father Albert-Maria Weiss, O.P., French translation, vol. x,, pp. 275 sqq.

8 I Tim. ii. 5.

9 Sum Theol., III. Pars, Q. XXI., A. 1. 

10 Bull Ineffabilis.

11 Monstra te esse Matrem:
      Sumat per te preces. 
      Qui pro nobis natus 
      Tulit esse tuus.

" Show thyself a watchful mother;
   And may He our pleadings hear,
   Who for us a helpless Infant
   Owned thee for His Mother dear."

(Hymn for Vespers of our Lady. Translated by Father Aylward, O.P.)

12 Esth. vii. 2-3; viii.4.

13 Sum. Theol., III. Pars,Q. XXX.,A. 1.

14 Cf. Lepicier, op. cit., pp. 388 sqq. 

15 Vide supra, ch. v.

16 St. Thomas (Ia.-IIa., Q. CXIV., A. 6) formulates this principle when he says that" since one in the state of grace does God's will, it is fitting (congruum est) that, according to the degree of friendship, God should accede to the request of such a one when he prays for another's salvation, provided that other does not impede the request." Hence St. Paul (i Cor. iii. 9) terms us " God's coadjutors." This principle is insinuated in the Office for the Feast of the Seven Dolours, while the reason for it, the perfect conformity of our Lady's will with God's will, is repeatedly insisted upon by the Fathers, who call her " Mother of Grace," " Mother of Salvation," " Mother of Life." It would seem that it is to the insufficient attention paid to this principle that Blessed Louis-Marie Grignon de Montfort, O.P., refers when he complains that " the greater part of Christians, even the most learned, do not know the, necessary union which there is between Jesus and His Mother." (T me Devotion to the Blessed Virgin, Father Faber's translation, 8th ed., p. 40. Cf. Lepicier, op, cit., pp. 389-399.)

17  v. io.

18 Sum. Theol., III. Pars, Q. XLVIII, A. 1.

19 Col. i. 24.

20 Ps. kxxxiii. 12.

21 viii. 4.

22 Sum. Theol., II.-II., Q. LXXXIII., A. 4.

23 Cf. Lepicier, op. cit., pp. 404-405.

24 Prov. viii. 17.

25 True Devotion to the Blessed Virgin. Father Faber's translation, 8th ed., p. 69.

26 3 Kings ii. 20.