THE INFINITE LOVE OF
JESUS
TO HIS HOLY MOTHER
HIGH OF SORROW
IN THE PASSION, HIS
DIVINE HEART
Just as the adorable Heart of our
Savior was inflamed with infinite love for his holy Mother, his
sorrows were also inconceivable when he saw her submerged in an
ocean of tribulations at the moment of his passion. Since the Holy Virgin was
the Mother of our Redeemer, she fought a continuous love battle within her
Heart. Because, knowing that it was God's will that his most beloved Son should
suffer and die for our salvation, the ardent love that she had for the divine
Will and for the salvation of men placed her, on the one hand, in total
submission to divine dispositions. And on the other hand, her incomparable
motherly love for her beloved son caused her unspeakable pain in view of the
torments she had to suffer for the redemption of the world.
The saints judge that, when the day of
his passion arrives, given the love and obedience with which he always behaved
with his holy Mother and according to the kindness she has to console her
friends in their afflictions, before entering into their sufferings, said
goodbye to his dearest Mother. And to do everything within obedience, both to
the will of his Father and to that of his Mother, since he did not know any
other than that of that divine Father, he asked him for permission to execute
what was ordered by his eternal Father; He informed her that it was the will of
his Father that she accompany him to the foot of the cross and once he was
dead, wrap his body in a canvas to deposit it in the tomb, and gave him
instructions on what he should do and where he should remain until he had
risen.
It is also probable that he would have
made her know what he was going to suffer in order to prepare her and to
dispose her to accompany him spiritually and bodily in his sufferings. And
since their inner pains were unspeakable, they did not declare them to each
other in words, but their eyes and hearts understood each other and
communicated their afflictions to each other.
But the most perfect love of both and
their total conformity to the vThe divine will did not allow the slightest
imperfection in his natural feelings. On the one hand, the Savior was the only
Son of his beloved Mother and he felt her pains immensely and, on the other, he
was her God and wanted to strengthen her in the greatest known desolation. He
consoled her with his words that she listened to and kept carefully in her
heart and with new graces that she poured into her soul so that she could
endure and overcome the immense pains that were prepared for her. These were so
great that if he had been able to suffer instead of his beloved Son, he would
have more easily endured his own torments than to see them suffer for him; it
would have been more bearable for her to give her life for him than to see him
suffer such excruciating ordeals. But since God arranged things differently,She
offered her Heart and Jesus her body so that each one would suffer what God had
ordained. Mary suffered the torments of her Son and her own in
the most sensitive part that is the Heart and Jesus suffered in his
body inexplicable sufferings and in his Heart the inconceivable
sufferings of his holy Mother.
The Savior said goodbye to his holy
Mother and went to sink into the immense ocean of her sorrows. His
desolate Mother remained in continuous prayer and accompanied him
internally. That sad day began for her with prayers, tears, intimate
agonies, in perfect submission to the divine will; She said with her Son
in the bottom of her Heart what he said to his Father in the agony of the
Garden of Olives: Father, not my will but yours be done.
The night of our Redeemer's prison in
the garden, the Jews took him tied, first to the house of Annas, then to that
of Caiaphas; There, tired of making fun of him and of insulting him in a
thousand ways, each one withdrew to his home. Jesus remained a prisoner in the
same house until the day came. Saint John the Evangelist left the
house of Caiaphas, either by order received from Our Lord or by some
divine inspiration, and went to the house of the Holy Virgin to inform her of
what happened.
¡Oh God! Who could express
the sadness, pains and lamentations that crossed between the Mother of Jesus
and her beloved disciple, when he told her what had happened up to then?
Certainly the feelings and anguish of both were indescribable. One spoke more
with the heart than with the lips, and with the tears more than with words.
especially the Holy Virgin because, as her immense modesty did not allow her to
be obfuscated words, her Heart suffered the unimaginable.
Later. Seeing that the moment had come
to go find and accompany her only Son in his torments, she left her house at
daybreak. imitating the divine Lamb in silence, like a mute sheep, bathing the
path with her tears and sending the ardent sighs of her Heart to heaven. May
the devotees of this desolate Virgin walk on that path and accompany her in
pain in her sorrows.
The Jews bring the Savior to the house
of Pilate and Herod amid outrages and outrages; The afflicted Mother
could not contemplate the Son because of the multitude and the commotion of the
mob, until the moment when Pilate showed him to the people, scourged
and crowned with thorns. It was then when hearing the cries of the mob, the
tumult of the city, the insults and blasphemies of the Jews against her Son,
her Heart suffered immense pain and her eyes shed fervent tears 1; as
she had put all her love in him, although the presence of her Son was what
afflicted her the most, he desired her above all else. And it is that love
knows such excesses when it supports the absence of the loved one less than the
pain, no matter how great, caused by its presence.
Amid such bitterness and anguish this
holy sheep yearned to see her divine Lamb. Finally she saw him torn from head
to toe by the lashes, his head pierced by cruel thorns, his face bruised,
swollen, covered in blood and spittle, with a rope around his neck, his hands
tied. A reed scepter in hand and dressed in a mocking cloak. He knew that his
Mother was there and she knew that his divine Majesty read the feelings of his
heart, pierced with pains no less immense than those he carried in his body.
There he heard the false testimonies
that they wielded against him and how they postponed him to the thief and
murderer Barabbas. There he heard millions of angry voices shouting: ¡Out,
out, ¡crucify him! 2. There he met the death sentence pronounced
against the author of life. There he saw the cross on which he was to be
crucified and how, with it on his back. he started walking towards Calvary.
She, following his bloody footprints, washed the road with as many tears as
Jesus shed blood; She too carried the most painful cross that she suffered in
her heart. as he carried it on his shoulders.
Finally she arrived at Calvary,
accompanied by the holy women who were endeavoring to comfort her. But she was
silent, in imitation of the meek Lamb and suffered inconceivable pain when she
heard the hammering of the executioners on the nails that fixed her Son on the
cross. And how she was so weak from having been awake and crying all night and
for not having taken food to sustain herself, when she saw the one who loved
infinitely more than herself, lifted up and nailed to the cross, with such
cruel pains, without To be able to give her any relief, she fainted in the arms
of those who accompanied her as it usually happens in excessive pain. Her tears
stopped, she was colorless and trembling. until his Son gave him new strength
to accompany him to death.
Then, shedding new streams of tears,
she began to suffer another martyrdom of pain at the sight of her Son hanging
on the cross. This did not prevent her from exercising her office as
mediator before God on behalf of sinners, cooperating with her redeemer for
their salvation and offering for them to the eternal Father her blood, her
sufferings and her death with the ardent desire for their eternal happiness. The
unspeakable love for her beloved Son made her fear seeing him expire and die
and, at the same time, it filled her with pain to see how her torments were
prolonged that would only end with death.
She, too, wanted the heavenly Father to
soften the severity of her torture and also wanted to fully conform to
the dispositions of this adorable Father. And so divine love
gave birth to a battle in his Heart in such conflicting desires and
feelings that, because they came from that same love, they caused him inexplicable
pain.
The most sacred Sheep and the divine
Lamb looked at and understood each other and communicated their pains that
were such that only the hearts of the Son and the Mother could
understand them. Because they loved each other perfectly, they suffered these
cruel torments together because their mutual love was the
measure of their pain. Those who consider them will not be able to understand
them if they are far from understanding the love of such a Son for his Mother
and of such a Mother for her Son.
The sorrows of the Holy Virgin grew and
were continually renewed with the new outrages and torments that the rage of
the Jews unloaded on her Son. What pain did it feel to hear him shout those
words: ¿My God? OMG. why have you abandoned me? l. What
bitterness when he saw that they gave him gall and vinegar in the burning of
his thirst! ¡Oh grief when he saw his Heart being pierced with a spear! What
sadness to receive him dead in her arms! ¡once down from the cross! What
sadness when his holy body was taken from him and locked in the tomb! With what
regret would he go home to await the resurrection! Certainly this divine Virgin
would have preferred to suffer all the pains of her Son rather than see how he
suffered! Perfect love works in the hearts that strive to imitate their divine
Father and their good Mother, making them gladly bear their own afflictions and
vividly feel those of others in such a way that it is easier for them to bear
them personally than to watch others suffer them. This is what our Savior did
during his life and particularly on the day of his passion. Because knowing
that Judas had sold him, he showed greater sadness for his condemnation (when
he said that it would have been better for him not to have been born) than for
the torments he was going to suffer because of his betrayal.
He also made the women who were crying
behind him when he carried his cross see how the tribulations that
they and the city of Jerusalem were going to suffer were more sensitive to
him than everything he suffered. Daughters of Jerusalem
- he told them - do not weep for me; weep for yourselves and for your children.
For the time came that say: Blessed are the barren, and the wombs that
have not given a birth and the breasts that suckled hall no
2. At the very moment that he was nailed to the cross, forgotten about
his own tortures, he showed that the needs of sinners were more sensitive to
him than his own sufferings, when he asked his Father to forgive them. The love
he has for his creatures made him feel his ills more than his own. That
is why one of the greatest torments of our Savior on the cross, more sensitive
than his own physical pains, was to see his holy Mother submerged in a sea of
bitterness. He had more love for her than for all creatures
combined. She was the best of all mothers, the most faithful companion of his
travels and work. And because she was very innocent, she did not deserve those
sufferings.
She was a Mother who was more filled
with love for her Son than the hearts of all the angels and saints and saw her
suffer torments never before known. What would not be the affliction of this
Mother who had before her eyes such a Son so unjustly tormented and submerged
in an ocean of sufferings without being able to give him the slightest
relief! It is certainly such a heavy cross that no spirit can understand
it. It is a cross reserved for grace, love and the heroic virtues of a
Mother of God.
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