CHAPTER III.
BAPTISM OF THE CONVERTS. THE FIRST MASS. PERPETUAL
PRESENCE OF THE HOLY SPECIES IN MARY.
As the Apostles continued their preaching and wonders in
Jerusalem the number of the faithful increased and, as saint Luke says in the fourth
chapter of the Acts, after seven days reached five thousand. All of them were busy
catechising the newcomers in preparation for Baptism, though that work was done
principally by the disciples; for the Apostles were preaching and were conducting some
controversies with the pharisees and sadducees. The Queen, with the assistance of her
angels and of the other Marys, proceeded to prepare and adorn the hall, in which her
divine Son had celebrated the last Supper; and with her own hands She cleansed it and
scrubbed it for his return in the consecration to be performed on the next day. She asked
the owner to furnish it in the same way as I have described for the Thursday of the Last
Supper and the devout host deferred to her wishes with deepest reverence. She also
prepared the unleavened bread and the wine necessary for the consecration, together with
the same paten and chalice in which the Savior had consecrated. For the Baptism She
provided pure water and the basins for administering it with ease and reverence. Then the
loving Mother retired and passed the night in most fervent aspirations, prostrations,
thanksgiving and other exercises of exalted prayer; offering to the eternal Father
all that She, in her heavenly wisdom, knew would help worthily to prepare Herself and all
the rest for the worthy administration of Baptism.
Early the next day, which was the octave of the coming of the Holy
Ghost, all the faithful and catechumens gathered with the Apostles and disciples in the
house of the Cenacle. Saint Peter preached to this gathering instructing them in the
nature and excellence of Baptism, the need in which they stood of it and its divine
effects, how they would, through it, be made members of the mystical body of the Church,
receive an interior character; be regenerated to a new existence as children of God and
inheritors of his glory through the remission of sins and sanctifying grace. He exhorted
them to the observance of the divine law, to which they subjected themselves by their own
free will, and to humble thanksgiving for this benefit and for all the others,
which they received from the hands of the Most High. He explained to them also the
mysterious and sacred truth of the holy Eucharist, which was to be celebrated in the
consecration of the true body and blood of Jesus Christ, and he admonished all
those especially, who were to receive holy Communion after their Baptism.
Through this sermon all the converts were inspired with additional
fervor; for their dispositions were altogether sincere, the words of the Apostles full of
life and penetration, and the interior grace very abundant. Then the Apostles themselves
began to baptize amid the most devout and orderly attention of the others. The catechumens
entered one door of the Cenacle and after being baptized, they passed out through another,
while the disciples and other of the faithful acted as ushers. The most holy Mary was
present at the entire ceremony, although keeping to one side of the hall. She prayed for
all of them and broke forth in canticles of praise. She recognized the effects of Baptism
in each one, according to the greater or less degree of virtues infused in their souls.
She beheld them renewed and washed in the blood of the Lamb, and their souls restored to a
divine purity and spotlessness. In witness of these effects, a most clear light visible to
all that were present, descended upon each one that was baptized. By this miracle God
wished to authenticate the first beginnings of this Sacrament in his holy Church, and to
console both those first children and us, who are made partakers of this blessing without
much adverting to it or giving thanks for it.
This administration of Baptism was continued on that day until all were
baptized, although there were about five thousand to receive it. While the baptized were
making their thanksgiving for this admirable blessing, the Apostles with all the disciples
and the faithful spent some time in prayer. All of them prostrated themselves on
the ground adoring the infinite and immutable God, and confessing their own unworthiness
of receiving Him in the most august sacrament of the Altar. In this profound humility and
adoration they prepared themselves more immediately for Communion. And then they recited
the same psalms and prayers which Christ had recited before consecrating, imitating
faithfully that sacred function just as they had seen it performed by their divine Master.
Saint Peter took in his hands the unleavened bread, and, after raising up his eyes to
heaven with admirable devotion, he pronounced over the bread the words of consecration of
the most holy body of Christ, as had been done before the Lord Jesus (II Cor. 9, 24).
Immediately the Cenacle was filled with the visible splendor of innumerable angels; and
this light converged in a most singular manner on the Queen of heaven and earth and was
seen by all those present. Then saint Peter consecrated the chalice and performed all the
ceremonies, which Christ had observed with the consecrated body and blood, raising them up
for the adoration of all the faithful. The Apostle partook himself of the Sacrament and
communicated it to the eleven Apostles as most holy Mary had instructed him. Thereupon, at
the hands of saint Peter, the heavenly Mother partook of it, while the celestial spirits
then present attended with ineffable reverence. In approaching the altar the great Lady
made three profound prostrations, touching the ground with her face.
She returned to her place, and it is impossible to describe in words
the effects of this participation of the holy Eucharist in this most exalted of creatures.
She was entirely transformed and elevated, completely absorbed in this divine
conflagration of the love of her most holy Son, whom She had now received bodily. She
remained in a trance, elevated from the floor; but the holy angels shielded Her somewhat
from view according to her own wish, in order that the attention of those present might
not be unduly attracted by the divine effects apparent in Her. The disciples continued to
distribute holy Communion, first to the disciples and then to the others who had
been believers before the Ascension. But of the five thousand newly baptized only one
thousand received Communion on that day; because not all were entirely prepared or
furnished with the insight and attention required for receiving the Lord in this
great sacrament and mystery of the Altar.
To explain the rare and prodigious favor, that the sacramental body of
Christ in the sacred species should be preserved continually in the bosom of Mary, it is
not necessary to seek for another cause than that underlying all the other favors with
which God distinguished this great Lady, namely: that it was his holy will and according
to his infinite wisdom, by which He performs according to measure and weight all that is
befitting (Wis. 11, 21). Christian prudence and piety will be content to know as a reason,
that God had singled this mere Creature out to be his natural Mother, and that therefore
She alone, of all creatures, deserved this distinction. As this miracle of her Mothership
was unique and without parallel, it would be shameful ignorance to seek proofs of what the
Lord did in Her by comparing it with what He did or ever will do in other souls; since
Mary alone rises supereminently above the common order of all. Yet, though all this is
true, the Lord nevertheless wishes that by the light of faith and by enlightenment, we
seek the reasons of the propriety and equity, according to which the powerful arm of the
Almighty wrought these wonders in his most worthy Mother, so that in them we may
know and bless Him in Her and through Her; and so that we may understand, how secure our
salvation, all our hope, and our lot are in the hands of that powerful Queen, toward whom
her Son has directed all the excess of his love. In accordance with these truths I will
explain what has been made known to me of this mystery.
The heavenly Mother lived thirty-three years in the company of her Son
and true God; and from the time when He was born of her virginal womb She never left Him
to the time of his death on the Cross. She nursed Him, served Him, followed Him and
imitated Him conducting Herself always as a Mother, Daughter and Spouse, as a most
faithful Servant and Friend; She enjoyed the sight of Him, his conversation, his doctrine
and the favors, which, by all these meritorious services, She attained in this mortal
life. Christ ascended into heaven, and the force of love and right reason demanded,
that He should take to heaven with Him his most loving Mother, in order that He should not
be deprived of Her there, nor She in this world of his presence and company. But the most
ardent love which both of Them had for men, dissolved in a manner these bonds of union,
inducing our kindest Mother to return to the world in order to establish the Church; and
moving the Son to give his consent to her absence from Him during that time. But as
the Son of God was powerful enough to recompense Her for this privation to a certain
extent, it became for Him an obligation of his love to make such a recompense. And the
fulfillment of this obligation would not have been so publicly acknowledged or made so
manifest, if He denied his blessed Mother the favor of accompanying Her upon earth, while
He remained seated at the glory of the right hand of his Father. Besides, the most ardent
love of the blessed Mother, having been accustomed and nourished in the presence of the
Lord her Son, would have inflicted upon Her insufferable violence, if for so many years
She was to be deprived of that kind of presence of Him, which was possible during
her stay in the Church.
From the understanding which has been given me of the mystery of the
love of Christ the Lord for his most holy Mother and of the force with which He was drawn
toward Her, I would go so far as to say, that if He had not found this way of
remaining with Her in the sacramental species, He would have come down from the right
hand of the Father to the world in order to render companionship to his Mother while She
sojourned with his Church. And if it had been necessary that the heavenly mansions and the
celestial courtiers should be deprived of the presence of the most sacred humanity from
that time, He would have considered that of less importance than to be deprived of
the company of his Mother. It is no exaggeration to say this, when we all must confess,
that in the purest Mary the Lord found a correspondence and a degree of love more
conformable to his will than in all the blessed combined; and consequently, his own love
for Her exceeded his love for all others. If the Shepherd of the Gospel leaves the
ninety-nine sheep in order to go in search of only one that is lost, and if we
nevertheless dare not say of Him that He leaves the greater for the less; it should not
cause wonder in us that this divine Shepherd should leave all the rest of the saints
in order to be in the company of his most sincere Sheep, who clothed Him with her own
nature and raised and nourished Him as a Mother. Without a doubt the eyes of his beloved
Spouse and Mother would attract Him in swiftest flight from those heights (Cant. 6,
4) to that earth, where He had lived, whither He before this come for the salvation of the
children of Adam, toward whom He was less attracted, yea rather repelled by their sins and
by the necessity of suffering for them. If now He descended to live with his beloved
Mother, it would not be to suffer and die; but to enjoy the delights of her company.
Fortunately it is not necessary to rob heaven of his presence; since by descending in
sacramental form He could satisfy both his own love and that of his most blessed Mother,
in whose heart, as in his couch, this true Solomon could take up his rest without leaving
the right hand of his eternal Father (Cant. 3, 7).
WORDS OF THE QUEEN.
Consider attentively the common deception of mortals and the
woeful damage they suffer. For in the decisions of their will they ordinarily are moved
solely by what they perceive through the senses, and they immediately proceed to act upon
their choice without further consideration or counsel. Since the sensible impressions
immediately move the animal passions and inclinations, it is evident that men do not act
according to right reason, but according to the impulse of passion, excited by the senses
and their objects. Hence, he that considers only the injury and pain caused, is
straightway moved to vengeance; he that follows only his hankering after strange property,
as soon as he lays his eyes upon it, is impelled to injustice. In the same manner act so
many unfortunates, who follow the concupiscence of the eyes, the movements of the flesh,
and the pride of life because these are the only things offered by the world and
the devil. In their blind deception they follow darkness as their light, taste the bitter
as sweet, take deadly poison for remedy of their souls, and hold that for wisdom which is
nothing but diabolical and earthly ignorance. Do thou guard thyself against these
pernicious errors, and never resolve on anything, or govern thyself by anything that is
merely sensible or arising from sensible impressions, nor pursue the advantages held out
through them. In thy actions take counsel first of all from the interior knowledge and
light communicated to thee by God, in order that thou mayest not go blindly forward; and
He shall always grant thee sufficient guidance. Immediately seek the advice of thy
superiors and teachers, if thou canst do so before making thy choice. And if thy superior
or teacher is not at hand, seek counsel of others, even inferiors; for this is more secure
than to follow thy own will, which may be disturbed and blinded by passion. This is the
rule to be followed especially in the exterior works, pursuing them with recollection,
with secrecy, and according to the demands of circumstances and fraternal charity as they
occur. In all of them it is necessary not to lose out of sight the north-star of interior
light, while moving in the profound gulf of the intercourse with creatures, where there is
continual danger of perishing.
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