CHAPTER VI.
THE GLORIOUS TRANSITION OF THE VIRGIN MARY
And now, according to the decree of the divine will, the day was
approaching in which the true and living Ark of the covenant was to be placed in the
temple of the celestial Jerusalem, with a greater glory and higher jubilee than its
prophetic figure was installed by Solomon in the sanctuary beneath the wings of the
cherubim (III King 8, 8). Three days before the most happy Transition of the great Lady
the Apostles and disciples were gathered in Jerusalem and in the Cenacle. The first one to
arrive was saint Peter, who was transported from Rome by the hands of an angel. At that
place the angel appeared to him and told him that the passing away of the most blessed
Mary was imminent and the Lord commanded him to go to Jerusalem in order to be present at
that event. Thereupon the angel took him and brought him from Italy to the Cenacle.
Thither the Queen of the world had retired, somewhat weakened in body by the force of her
divine love; for since She was so near to her end, She was subjected more completely to
love's effects.
The great Lady came to the entrance of her oratory in order to receive
the vicar of Christ our Savior. Kneeling at his feet She asked his blessing and said:
"I give thanks and praise to the Almighty, that He brought to me the holy Father for
assisting me in the hour of my death.'' Then came saint Paul, to whom the Queen showed the
same reverence with similar tokens of her pleasure at seeing him. The Apostles saluted Her
as the Mother of God, as their Queen and as Mistress of all creation; but with a sorrow
equal to their reverence, because they knew that they had come to witness her passing
away. After these Apostles came the others and the disciples still living. Three
days after, they were all assembled in the Cenacle. The heavenly Mother received them all
with profound humility, reverence and love, asking each one to bless Her. All of them
complied, and saluted Her with admirable reverence. By orders of the Lady given to saint
John, and with the assistance of saint James the less, they were all hospitably
entertained and accommodated.
Some of the Apostles who had been transported by the angels and
informed by them of the purpose of their coming, were seized with tenderest grief and shed
abundant tears at the thought of losing their only protection and consolation. Others were
as yet ignorant of their approaching loss, especially the disciples, who had not been
positively informed by the angels, but were moved by interior inspirations and a sweet and
forcible intimation of God's will to come to Jerusalem. They immediately conferred with
saint Peter, desirous of knowing the occasion of their meeting; for all of them were
convinced, that if there had been no special occasion, the Lord would not have urged them
so strongly to come. The apostle saint Peter, as the head of the Church, called them all
together in order to tell them of the cause of their coming, and spoke to the assembly:
"My dearest children and brethren, the Lord has called and brought us to Jerusalem
from remote regions not without a cause most urgent and sorrowful to us. The Most High
wishes now to raise up to the throne of eternal glory his most blessed Mother, our
Mistress, our consolation and protection. His divine decree is that we all be present at
her most happy and glorious Transition. When our Master and Redeemer ascended to the right
hand of his Father, although He left us orphaned of his most delightful presence, we still
retained his most blessed Mother and our light now leaves us what shall we do? What help
or hope have we to encourage us on our pilgrimage? I find none except the hope that we all
shall follow Her in due time."
Saint Peter could speak no farther, because uncontrollable tears and
sighs interrupted him. Neither could the rest of the Apostles answer for a long time
during which, amid copious and tenderest tears, they gave vent to the groans of their
inmost heart. After some time the vicar of Christ recovered himself and added: "My
children, let us seek the presence of our Mother and Lady. Let us spend the time left of
her life in her company and ask Her to bless us." They all betook themselves to the
oratory of the great Queen and found Her kneeling upon a couch, on which She was wont to
recline for a short rest. They saw Her full of beauty and celestial light, surrounded by
the thousand angels of her guard.
The natural condition and appearance of her sacred and virginal body
were the same as at her thirty-third year; for, as I have already stated, from that age
onward it experienced no change. It was not affected by the passing years, showing no
signs of age, no wrinkles in her face or body, nor giving signs of weakening or fading, as
in other children of Adam, who gradually fall away and drop from the natural perfection of
early man or womanhood. This unchangeableness was the privilege of the most blessed Mary
alone, as well because it consorted with the stability of her purest soul, as because it
was the natural consequence of her immunity from the sin of Adam, the effects of which in
this regard touched neither her sacred body nor her purest soul. The Apostles and
disciples, and some of the other faithful occupied her chamber, all of them preserving the
utmost order in her presence. Saint Peter and saint John placed themselves at the head of
the couch. The great Lady looked upon them all with her accustomed modesty and reverence
and spoke to them as follows: "My dearest children, give permission to your servant
to speak in your presence and to disclose my humble desires." Saint Peter answered
that all listened with attention and would obey Her in all things; and He begged Her to
seat Herself upon the couch, while speaking to them. It seemed to saint Peter that She was
exhausted from kneeling so long and that She had taken that position in order to pray to
the Lord, and that in speaking to them, it was proper She should be seated as their Queen.
But She, who was the Teacher of humility and obedience unto death,
practiced both these virtues in that hour. She answered that She would obey in asking of
their blessing, and besought them to afford Her this consolation. With the permission of
saint Peter She left the couch and, kneeling before the Apostle, said to him: "My
lord, I beseech thee, as the universal pastor and head of the holy Church, to give me thy
blessing in thy own and in its name. Pardon me thy handmaid for the smallness of the
service I have rendered in my life. Grant that John dispose of my vestments, giving them
to the two poor maidens, who have always obliged me by their charity." She then
prostrated Herself and kissed the feet of saint Peter as the vicar of Christ, by her
abundant tears eliciting not less the admiration than the tears of the Apostle and of all
the bystanders. From saint Peter She went to saint John, kneeling likewise at his feet,
said: "Pardon, my son and my master, my not having fulfilled toward thee the duties
of a Mother as I ought and as the Lord had commanded me, when from the Cross He appointed
thee as my son and me as thy mother (John 19, 27). I humbly and from my heart thank thee
for the kindness which thou hast shown me as a son. Give me thy benediction for entering
into the vision and company of Him who created me."
The sweetest Mother proceeded in her leave-taking, speaking to each of
the Apostles in particular and to some of the disciples; and then to all the assembly
together; for there were a great number. She rose to her feet and addressed them all,
saying: "Dearest children and my masters, always have I kept you in my soul and
written in my heart. I have loved you with that tender love and charity, which was given
to me by my divine Son, whom I have seen in you, his chosen friends. In obedience to his
holy and eternal will, I now go to the eternal mansions, where I promise you as a Mother I
will look upon you by the clearest light of the Divinity, the vision of which my soul
hopes and desires in security. I commend unto you my mother, the Church, the exaltation of
the name of the Most High, the spread of the evangelical law, the honor and veneration for
the words of my divine Son, the memory of his Passion and Death, the practice of
his doctrine. My children, love the Church, and love one another with that bond of charity
which your Master has always inculcated upon you (John 13, 34). To thee, Peter, holy
Pontiff, I commend my son John and all the rest."
The words of the most blessed Mary, like arrows of a divine fire,
penetrated the hearts of all the Apostles and hearers, and as She ceased speaking, all of
them were dissolved in streams of tears and, seized with irreparable sorrow, cast
themselves upon the ground with sighs and groans sufficient to move to compassion the very
earth. All of them wept, and with them wept also the sweetest Mary, who could not resist
this bitter and well-founded sorrow of her children. After some time She spoke to them
again, and asked them to pray with Her and for Her in silence, which they did. During this
quietness the incarnate Word descended from heaven on a throne of ineffable glory,
accompanied by all the saints and innumerable angels, and the house of the Cenacle was
filled with glory. The most blessed Mary adored the Lord and kissed his feet. Prostrate
before Him She made the last and most profound act faith and humility in her mortal life.
On this occasion the most pure Creature, the Queen of the heavens, shrank within Herself
and lowered Herself to the earth more profoundly than all men together ever have or ever
will humiliate themselves for all their sins. Her divine Son gave Her His blessing and in
the presence of the courtiers of heaven spoke to Her these words: "My dearest Mother,
whom I have chosen for my dwelling-place, the hour is come in which thou art to pass from
the life of this death and of the world into the glory of my Father and Mine, where
thou shalt possess the throne prepared for thee at my right hand and enjoy it through all
eternity. And since, by my power and as my Mother have caused thee to enter the world free
and exempt from sin, therefore also death shall have no right or permission to touch thee
at thy exit from this world. If thou wishest not to pass through it come with Me now to
partake of my glory, which thou hast merited."
The most prudent Mother prostrated Herself at the feet of her Son and
with a joyous countenance answered: "My Son and my Lord, I beseech Thee let thy
mother and thy servant enter into eternal life by the common portal of natural death, like
the other children of Adam. Thou, who art my true God, hast suffered death without being
obliged to do so; it is proper that as I have followed Thee in life, so I follow Thee also
in death.'' Christ the Savior approved of the decision and the sacrifice of his most
blessed Mother, and consented to its fulfillment. Then all the angels began to sing in
celestial harmony some of the verses of the Canticles of Solomon and other new ones.
Although only saint John and some of the Apostles were enlightened as to the presence of
Christ the Savior, yet the others felt in their interior its divine and powerful effects;
but the music was heard as well by the Apostles and disciples, as by many others of the
faithful there present. A divine fragrance also spread about, which penetrated to the
street. The house of the Cenacle was filled with a wonderful effulgence, visible to all,
and the Lord ordained that multitudes of the people of Jerusalem gathered in the streets
as witnesses to this new miracle.
When the angels began their music, the most blessed Mary reclined back
upon her couch or bed. Her tunic was folded about her sacred body, her hands joined and
her eyes fixed upon her divine Son, and She was entirely inflamed with the fire of divine
love. And as the angels intoned those verses of the second of the Canticles: "Surge,
propera, amica mea," that is to say: "Arise, haste, my beloved, my dove, my
beautiful one, and come, the winter has passed," etc., She pronounced those words of
her Son on the Cross: "Into thy hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit." Then She
closed her virginal eyes and expired. The sickness which took away her life was love,
without any other weakness or accidental intervention of whatever kind. She died at the
moment when the divine power suspended the assistance, which until then had counteracted
the sensible ardors of her burning love of God. As soon as this miraculous assistance was
withdrawn, the fire of her love consumed the life-humors of her heart and thus caused the
cessation of her earthly existence.
Then this most pure Soul passed from her virginal body to be placed in
boundless glory, on the throne at the right hand of her divine Son. Immediately the music
of the angels seemed to withdraw to the upper air; for that whole procession of angels and
saints accompanied the King and Queen to the empyrean heavens. The sacred body of the most
blessed Mary, which been the temple and sanctuary of God in life, continued to shine with
an effulgent light and breathed forth such a wonderful and unheard of fragrance, that all
the bystanders were filled with interior and exterior sweetness. The thousand angels of
her guard remained to watch over the inestimable treasure of her virginal body. The
Apostles and disciples, amid the tears and the joy of the wonders they had seen, were
absorbed in admiration for some time, and then sang many hymns and psalms in honor of the
most blessed Mary now departed. This glorious Transition of the great Queen took place in
the hour in which her divine Son had died, at three o'clock on a Friday, the thirteenth
day of August, she being seventy years of age, less the twenty-six days intervening
between the thirteenth day of August, on which She died, and the eighth of September, the
day of her birth. The heavenly Mother had survived the death of Christ the Savior
twenty-one years, four months and nineteen days; and his virginal birth, fifty-five years.
This reckoning can be easily made in the following manner: when Christ our Savior was
born, his virginal Mother was fifteen years, three months and seventeen days of age. The
Lord lived thirty-three years and three months; so that at the time of his sacred Passion
the most blessed Lady was forty-eight years, six months and seventeen days old; adding to
these another twenty-one years, four months and nineteen days, we ascertain her age as
seventy years, less twenty-five or twenty-six days. *(Age at death, 69 years, 11 months, 5
or 6 days.)
Great wonders and prodigies happened at the precious death of the
Queen; for the sun was eclipsed (as I have mentioned above) and its light was hidden in
sorrow for some hours. Many birds of different kinds gathered around the Cenacle, and by
their sorrowful clamors and groans for a while caused the bystanders themselves to weep.
All Jerusalem was in commotion, and many of the inhabitants collected in astonished
crowds, confessing loudly the power of God and the greatness of his works. Others were
astounded and as if beside themselves. The Apostles and disciples with others of the
faithful broke forth in tears and sighs. Many sick persons came who all were cured. The
souls in purgatory were released. But the greatest miracle was that three persons, a man
in Jerusalem and two women living in the immediate neighborhood of the Cenacle, died in
sin and impenitent in that same hour, subject to eternal damnation; but when their cause
came before the tribunal of Christ, His sweetest Mother interceded for them and they were
restored to life. They so mended their conduct, that afterwards they died in grace and
were saved. This privilege was not extended to others that died on that day in the world,
but was restricted to those three who happened to die in that hour in Jerusalem. What
festivities were celebrated on that occasion in heaven I will describe in another chapter,
lest heavenly things be mixed up with the sacred things of earth.
WORDS OF THE QUEEN.
My daughter, besides what thou hast understood and written of my
glorious Transition, I wish to inform thee of another privilege, which was conceded to me
by my divine Son in that hour. Thou hast already recorded, that the Lord offered me the
choice of entering into beatific vision either with or without passing through the portals
of death. If I had preferred not to die, the Most High would have conceded this favor,
because sin had no part in me, and hence also not its punishment, which is death. Thus it
would also have been with my divine Son, and with a greater right, if He had not taken
upon Himself the satisfaction of the divine justice for men through his Passion and Death.
Hence I chose death freely in order to imitate and follow Him, as also I did during his
grievous passion. Since I had seen my Son and true God die, I would not have satisfied the
love I owe Him, if I had refused death, and I would have left a great gap in my conformity
to and my imitation of my Lord the Godman, whereas He wished me to bear a great likeness
to Him in his most sacred humanity. As I would thereafter never be able to make up for
such a defect, my soul would not enjoy the plenitude of the delight of having died as did
my Lord and God.
Hence my choosing to die was so pleasing to Him, and my prudent love
therein obliged Him to such an extent, that in return He immediately conceded to me a
singular favor for the benefit of the children of the Church and conformable to my wishes.
It was this, all those devoted to me, who should call upon me at the hour of death,
constituting me as their Advocate in memory of my happy Transition and of my desiring to
imitate Him in death, shall be under my special protection in that hour, shall have me as
a defense against demons, as a help and protection, and shall be presented by me before
the tribunal of his mercy and there experience my intercession. In consequence the Lord
gave me a new power and commission and He promised to confer great helps of His grace for
a good death and for a purer life on all those who in veneration of this mystery of my
precious death, should invoke my aid. Hence I desire thee, my beloved daughter, from this
day on to keep in thy inmost heart a devout and loving memory of this mystery, and to
bless, praise, and magnify the Omnipotent, because he wrought such sacred miracles for me
and for the mortals. By this solicitude thou wilt oblige the Lord and me to come to thy
aid in that last hour.
And since death follows upon life and ordinarily corresponds with it,
therefore the surest pledge of a good death is a good life; a life in which the heart is
freed and detached from earthly love. For this it is, which in that last hour afflicts and
oppresses the soul and which is like a heavy chain restraining its liberty and preventing
it from rising above the things loved in this world. O my daughter! How greatly do mortals
misunderstand this truth, and how far they err from it in their actions! The Lord gives
them life in order that they may free themselves from the effects of original sin, so as
to be unhampered by them at the hour of their death; and the ignorant and miserable
children of Adam spend all their life in loading upon themselves new burdens and fetters,
so that they die captives of their passions and in the tyranny of their hellish foes. I
had no share in original sin and none of its effects had any power over my faculties;
nevertheless I lived in the greatest constraint, in poverty and detached from earthly
things, most perfect and holy; and this holy freedom I did indeed experience at the hour
of my death. Consider then, my daughter, and be mindful of this living example; free thy
heart more and more each day, so that with advancing years thou mayest find thyself more
free, more detached and averted from visible things, and so that when the Spouse shall
call thee to his nuptials, thou wilt not need to seek in vain the required freedom and
prudence.
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