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The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ by Anne Catherine Emmerich
CHAPTER XXXII.
The second Fall of Jesus.
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THE afflicted Mother of Jesus had left the forum, accompanied by John
and some other women, immediately after the unjust sentence was
pronounced. She had employed herself in walking to many of the spots
sanctified by our Lord and watering them with her tears; but when the
sound of the trumpet, the rush of people, and the clang of the horsemen
announced that the procession was about to start for Calvary, she could
not resist her longing desire to behold her beloved Son once more, and
she begged John to take her to some place through which he must pass.
John conducted her to a palace, which had an entrance in that street
which Jesus traversed after his first fall; it was, I believe, the
residence of the high priest Caiphas, whose tribunal was in the
division called Sion. John asked and obtained leave from a kind-hearted
servant to stand at the entrance mentioned above, with Mary and her
companions. The Mother of God was pale, her eyes were red with weeping,
and she was closely wrapped in a cloak of a bluish-gray colour. The
clamour and insulting speeches of the enraged multitude might be
plainly heard; and a herald at that moment proclaimed in a. loud voice,
that three criminals were about to be crucified. The servant opened the
door; the dreadful sounds became more distinct every moment; and Mary
threw herself on her knees. After praying fervently, she turned to John
and said, Shall I remain? ought I to go a-way? shall I have strength to
support such a sight?' John made answer, If you do not remain to see
him pass, you will grieve afterwards.' They remained therefore near the
door, with their eyes fixed on the procession, which was still distant,
but advancing by slow degrees. When those who were carrying the
instruments for the execution approached, and the Mother of Jesus saw
their insolent and triumphant looks, she could not control her
feelings, but joined her hands as if to implore the help of heaven;
upon which one among them said to his companions: What woman is that
who is uttering such lamentations?' Another answered: She is the Mother
of the Galil?an.' When the cruel men heard this, far from being moved
to compassion, they began to make game of the grief of this most
afflicted Mother: they pointed at her, and one of them took the nails
which were to be used for fastening Jesus to the cross, and presented
them to her in an insulting manner; but she turned away, fixed her eyes
upon Jesus, who was drawing near, and leant against the, pillar for
support, lest she should again faint from grief, for her cheeks were as
pale as death, and her lips almost blue. The Pharisees on horseback
passed by first, followed by the boy who carried the inscription. Then
came her beloved Son. He was almost sinking under the heavy weight of
his cross,. and his head, still crowned with thorns, was drooping in
agony on his shoulder. He cast a look of compassion and sorrow upon his
Mother, staggered, and fell for the second time upon his hands and
knees. Mary was perfectly agonised at this sight; she forgot all else;
she saw neither soldiers nor executioners; she saw nothing but her
dearly loved Son; and, springing from the doorway into the midst of the
group who were insulting and abusing him, she threw herself on her
knees by his side and embraced him. The only words I heard were,
Beloved Son!' and Mother!' but I do not know whether these words were
really uttered, or whether they were only in my own mind.
A momentary confusion ensued. John and the holy women endeavoured to
raise Mary from the ground, and the archers reproached her, one of them
saying, What hast thou to do here, woman? He would not have been in our
hands if he had been better brought up.
A few of the soldiers looked touched; and, although they obliged the
Blessed Virgin to retire to the doorway, not one laid hands upon her.
John and the women surrounded her as she fell half fainting against a
stone, which was near the doorway, and upon which the impression of her
hands remained. This stone was very hard, and was afterwards removed to
the first Catholic church built in Jerusalem, near the Pool of
Bethsaida, during the time that St. James the Less was Bishop of that
city. The two disciples who were with the Mother of Jesus carried her
into the house, and the door was shut. In the mean time the archers had
raised Jesus, and obliged him to carry the cross in a different manner.
Its arms being unfastened from the centre, and entangled in the ropes
with which he was bound, he supported them on his arm, and by this
means the weight of the body of the cross was a little taken of, as it
draped more on the ground. I saw numbers of persons standing about in
groups, the greatest part amusing themselves by insulting our Lord in
different ways, but a tow veiled females were weeping.
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