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| Written by St. Louis Marie de Montfort | |||
| Saturday, 24 September 2005 00:00 | |||
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Page 1 of 2 Having spoken thus far of the necessity of devotion to the most holy Virgin, I must now show in what this devotion consists. This I will do, with God’s help, after I shall have first laid down some fundamental truths which shall throw light on that grand and solid devotion which I desire to disclose. — First Truth — 61. Jesus Christ our Savior, true God and true Man, ought to be the last end of all our other devotions, else they are false and delusive. Jesus Christ is the Alpha and the Omega, (1) the beginning and the end, of all things. We labor not, as the Apostle says, except to render every man perfect in Jesus Christ; because it is in Him alone that the whole plenitude of the Divinity dwells together with all the other plenitudes of graces, virtues and perfections. It is in Him alone that we have been blessed with all spiritual benediction; and He is our only Master, who has to teach us; our only Lord on whom we ought to depend; our only Head to whom we must be united; our only Model to whom we should conform ourselves; our only Physician who can heal us; our only Shepherd who can feed us; our only Way who can lead us; our only Truth whom we must believe; our only Life who can animate us; and our only All in all things who can satisfy us. There has been no other name given under Heaven, except the name of Jesus, by which we can be saved. God has laid no other foundation of our salvation, our perfection or our glory, than Jesus Christ. Every building which is not built on that firm rock is founded upon the moving sand, and sooner or latter infallibly will fall. Every one of the faithful who is not united to Him, as a branch to the stock of the vine, shall fall, shall wither, and shall be fit only to be cast into the fire. Outside of Him there exists nothing but error, falsehood, iniquity, futility, death and damnation. But if we are in Jesus Christ and Jesus Christ is in us, we have no condemnation to fear. Neither the angels of Heaven nor the men of earth nor the devils of Hell nor any other creature can injure us; because they cannot separate us from the love of God, which is in Jesus Christ. By Jesus Christ, with Jesus Christ, in Jesus Christ, we can do all things; we can render all honor and glory to the Father in the unity of the Holy Spirit; (2) we can become perfect ourselves, and be to our neighbor a good odor of eternal life (2 Cor. 2:15-16). 62. If, then, we establish solid devotion to our Blessed Lady, it is only to establish more perfectly devotion to Jesus Christ, and to provide an easy and secure means for finding Jesus Christ. If devotion to Our Lady removed us from Jesus Christ, we should have to reject it as an illusion of the devil; but so far from this being the case, devotion to Our Lady is, on the contrary, necessary for us—as I have already shown, and will show still further hereafter—as a means of finding Jesus Christ perfectly, of loving Him tenderly, of serving Him faithfully. 63. I here turn for one moment to You, O sweet Jesus, to complain lovingly to Your Divine Majesty that the greater part of Christians, even the most learned, do not know the necessary union there is between You and Your holy Mother. You, Lord, are always with Mary, and Mary is always with You, and she cannot be without You, else she would cease to be what she is. She is so transformed into You by grace that she lives no more, she is as though she were not. It is You only, my Jesus, who lives and reigns in her more perfectly than in all the angels and the blessed. Ah! If we knew the glory and the love which You receive in this admirable creature, we should have very different thoughts both of You and her from what we have now. She is so intimately united with You that it were easier to separate the light from the sun, the heat from the fire; nay, it were easier to separate from You all the angels and the saints than the divine Mary, because she loves You more ardently and glorifies You more perfectly than all the other creatures put together. 64. After that, my sweet Master, is it not an astonishingly pitiable thing to see the ignorance and the darkness of all men here below in regard to Your holy Mother? I speak not so much of idolaters and pagans, who, knowing You not, care not to know her. I speak not even of heretics and schismatics, who care not to be devout to Your holy Mother, being separated as they are from You and Your holy Church; but I speak of Catholic Christians, and even of doctors among Catholics, (3) who make profession of teaching truths to others, and yet know not You nor Your holy Mother, except in a speculative, dry, barren and indifferent manner. These gentlemen speak but rarely of Your holy Mother and of the devotion we ought to have to her, because they fear, so they say, lest we should abuse it, and do some injury to You in honoring Your holy Mother too much. If they hear or see anyone devout to our Blessed Lady, speaking often of his devotion to that good Mother in a tender, strong and persuasive way, and as a secure means without delusion, as a short road without danger, as an immaculate way without imperfection, and as a wonderful secret for finding and loving You perfectly, they cry out against him, and give him a thousand false reasons by way of proving to him that he ought not to talk so much of our Blessed Lady; that there are great abuses in that devotion; and that we must direct our energies to destroy these abuses, and to speak of You, rather than to incline the people to devotion to our Blessed Lady, whom they already love sufficiently. We hear them sometimes speak of devotion to our Blessed Lady, not for the purpose of establishing it and persuading men to embrace it, but to destroy the abuses which are made of it; and all the while these teachers are without piety or tender devotion toward Yourself, simply because they have none for Mary. They regard the Rosary and the Scapular as devotions proper for weak and ignorant minds, without which men can save themselves; and if there falls into their hands any poor client of Our Lady who says his Rosary, or has any other practice of devotion toward her, they soon change his spirit and his heart. Instead of the Rosary, they counsel him the seven Penitential Psalms. Instead of devotion to the holy Virgin, they counsel him devotion to Jesus Christ. O my sweet Jesus, do these people have Your spirit? Do they please You in acting thus? Does it please You when, for fear of displeasing You, we neglect doing our utmost to please Your Mother? Does devotion to Your holy Mother hinder devotion to Yourself? Does she attribute to herself the honor we pay her? Does she head a faction of her own? Is she a stranger who has no connection with You? Does it displease You that we should try to please her? Do we separate or alienate ourselves from Your love by giving ourselves to her and honoring her? 65. Yet, my sweet Master, the greater part of the learned could not discourage devotion to Your holy Mother more, and could not show more indifference to it, even if all that I have just said were true. Thus have they been punished for their pride! Keep me, Lord, keep me from their sentiments and their practices, and give me some share of the sentiments of gratitude, esteem, respect and love which You have in regard to Your holy Mother, so that the more I imitate and follow her, the more I may love and glorify You. 66. So, as if up to this point I had still said nothing in honor of Your holy Mother, "give me now the grace to praise You worthily," in spite of all her enemies, who are Yours as well; and grant me to say loudly with the saints, "Let not that man presume to look for the mercy of God who offends His holy Mother." 67. Make me love You ardently, so that I may obtain of Your mercy a true devotion to Your holy Mother, and inspire the whole earth with it; and for that end, receive the burning prayer which I offer to You with St. Augustine (4) and Your other true friends:
—Second Truth— 68. We must conclude, from what Jesus Christ is with regard to us, that, as the Apostle says (1 Cor. 6:19-20), we do not belong to ourselves but are entirely His, as His members and His slaves, whom He has bought at an infinitely dear price, the price of all His Blood. Before Baptism we belonged to the devil, as his slaves; but Baptism has made us true slaves of Jesus Christ, who have no right to live, to work or to die, except to bring forth fruit for that God-Man (Rom. 7:4); to glorify Him in our bodies and to let Him reign in our souls, because we are His conquest, His acquired people and His inheritance. It is for the same reason that the Holy Spirit compares us: 1. to trees planted along the waters of grace, in the field of the Church, who ought to bring forth their fruit in their seasons; 2. to the branches of a vine of which Jesus Christ is the stock, and which must yield good grapes; 3. to a flock of which Jesus Christ is the Shepherd, and which is to multiply and give milk; 4. to a good land of which God is the Husbandman, in which the seed multiplies itself and brings forth thirty-fold, sixty-fold and a hundred-fold (Ps. 1:3; Jn. 15:2; 10:11; Matt. 13:8). Jesus Christ cursed the unfruitful fig tree (Matt. 21:19), and pronounced sentence against the useless servant who had not made any profit on his talent. (Matt. 25:24-30). All this proves to us that Jesus Christ wishes to receive some fruits from our wretched selves, namely our good works, because those works belong to Him alone: "Created in good works, in Christ Jesus" (Eph. 2:10)—which words of the Holy Spirit show that Jesus Christ is the sole beginning, and ought to be the sole end, of all our good works, and also that we ought to serve Him, not as servants for wages, but as slaves of love. I will explain what I mean. 69. Here on earth there are two ways of belonging to another and of depending on his authority: namely, simple service and slavery, whence we derive the words "servant" and "slave." By common service among Christians a man engages himself to serve another during a certain time, at a certain rate of wages or of recompense. By slavery a man is entirely dependent on another during his whole life, and must serve his master without claiming any wages or reward, just as one of his beasts, over which he has the right of life and death. 70. There are three sorts of slavery: (5) a slavery of nature, a slavery of constraint and a slavery of will. All creatures are slaves of God in the first sense: "The earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof" (Ps. 23:1); the demons and the damned are slaves in the second sense; the just and the saints in the third. Because by slavery of the will we make choice of God and His service above all things, even though nature did not oblige us to do so, slavery of the will is the most perfect and most glorious to God, who beholds the heart (I Kg. 16:7), claims the heart (Prov. 23:26), and calls Himself the God of the heart (Ps. 72:26), that is, of the loving will. 71. There is an entire difference between a servant and a slave:
72. There is nothing among men which makes us belong to another more than slavery. There is nothing among Christians which makes us more absolutely belong to Jesus Christ and His holy Mother than the slavery of the will, according to the example of Jesus Christ Himself, who took on Himself the form of a slave for love of us (Phil. 2:7); and also according to the example of the holy Virgin, who called herself the servant and slave of the Lord. (Lk. 1:38). The Apostle calls himself, as by a title of honor, "the slave of Christ." (7) Christians are often so called in the Holy Scriptures; and the word for the designation, "servus," as a great man has truly remarked, (8) signified in olden times a slave in the completest sense, because there were no servants then like those of the present day. Masters were served only by slaves or freedmen. This is what the Catechism of the holy Council of Trent, in order to leave no doubt about our being slaves of Jesus Christ, expresses by an unequivocal term, in calling us mancipia Christi, "slaves of Jesus Christ." (9) |
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Consecrate Yourself to Mary
Using the Consecration Prayer
of St. Louis-Marie de Montfort
I, (Name), a faithless sinner, renew and ratify today in your hands the vows of my Baptism; I renounce forever Satan, his pomps and works; and I give myself entirely to Jesus Christ, the Incarnate Wisdom, to carry my cross after Him all the days of my life, and to be more faithful to Him than I have ever been before.
In the presence of all the heavenly court I choose you this day for my Mother and Queen. I deliver and consecrate to you, as your slave, my body and soul, my goods, both interior and exterior, and even the value of all my good actions, past, present and future; leaving to you the entire and full right of disposing of me, and all that belongs to me, without exception, according to your good pleasure, for the greater glory of God, in time and in eternity.
