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Book VII
OF THE UNION OF THE SOUL WITH HER GOD, WHICH IS PERFECTED IN PRAYER.
CHAPTER XII. MARVELLOUS HISTORY OF THE DEATH OF A GENTLEMAN WHO DIED OF LOVE ON MOUNT OLIVET.
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Besides what I have said, I have found a history which to sacred lovers is
none the less credible for being wonderful, since, as the holy Apostle says:
Charity willingly believeh all things; [353] that is, it is not quick to
believe that any one is lying, and if there are no apparent marks of
falsehood in things which are told, it makes no difficulty about believing
them; but above all when they are things which exalt and magnify the love of
God towards men, or the love of men towards God, for charity, which is
sovereign queen of the virtues, rejoices in the things which contribute to
the glory of its empire and domination. And although the account I am about
to give is not so fully published nor so well witnessed as the greatness of
the marvel which it contains would require, it does not therefore lose its
truth; for, as S. Augustine excellently says, miracles, magnificent as they
may be, are scarcely known in the very place where they are worked; and even
when they are related by those who have seen them, they are with difficulty
believed, but they do not therefore cease to be true; and, in matter of
religion, good souls have more sweetness in believing things in which there
is more difficulty and admiration.
Upon a time, then, a very illustrious and virtuous knight went beyond seas
to Palestine, to visit the holy places in which Our Lord had done the works
of our redemption; and, properly to begin this holy exercise, before
everything he worthily confessed and communicated. Then he went first to the
town of Nazareth, where the angel announced to the most holy Virgin the most
sacred Incarnation, and where the most adorable conception of the Eternal
Word took place; and there this good pilgrim set himself to contemplate the
abyss of the heavenly goodness, which had deigned to take human flesh in
order to withdraw men from perdition. Thence he passed to Bethlehem, to the
place of the Nativity, and one could not say how many tears there he shed,
contemplating those with which the Son of God, little infant of the Virgin,
had watered that holy stable, kissing and kissing again a hundred times that
sacred earth, and licking the dust on which the first infancy of the divine
Babe had been received. From Bethlehem he went to Bethabara, and passed as
far as the little place of Bethania, when, remembering that Our Lord had
unclothed himself to be baptized, he also unclothed himself, and entering
into the Jordan, and bathing in it, and drinking of the waters thereof, it
seemed to him as if he saw his Saviour receiving baptism from the hand of
his precursor, and the Holy Ghost descending upon him in the form of a dove,
with the heavens yet opened, while from them seemed to him to come the voice
of the Eternal Father, saying: This is my beloved Son in whom I am well
pleased. From Bethania he goes into the desert, and there sees with the eyes
of his Spirit the Saviour fasting, and fighting and conquering the enemy,
then the angels ministering to him admirable meats. Thence he goes up to
Mount Thabor, where he sees the Saviour transfigured, then to Mount Sion,
where he seems to see Our Lord still on his knees in the supper-room,
washing the disciples' feet, and afterwards distributing to them his divine
body in the sacred Eucharist. He passes the torrent of Cedron, and goes to
the Garden of Gethsemani, where his heart melts into the tears of a most
loving sorrow, while he there represents to himself his dear Saviour
sweating blood, in that extreme agony, which he suffered there, to be soon
afterwards bound fast with cords and led into Jerusalem; whither he goes
also, following everywhere the footprints of his beloved, and in imagination
sees him dragged hither and thither, to Annas, to Caiphas, to Pilate, to
Herod, scourged, blindfolded, spat upon, crowned with thorns, presented to
the people, condemed to death, loaded with his cross—which he carries, and
while carrying it has the pitiful meeting with his mother all steeped in
grief, and with the daughters of Jerusalem who weep over him. He ascends at
last, this devout pilgrim, to Mount Calvary, when he sees in spirit the
cross laid upon the earth, and our Saviour, stript naked, thrown down and
nailed hands and feet upon it, most cruelly. He contemplates then how they
raise the cross and the Crucified into the air, and the blood which streams
from all parts of this ruined divine body. He regards the poor sacred
Virgin, quite transpierced with the sword of sorrow; then he turns his eyes
on the crucified Saviour, whose seven words he hears with a matchless love,
and at last he sees him dying, then dead, then receiving the lance-stroke,
and showing by the opening of the wound his divine heart, then taken down
from the cross and carried to the sepulchre, whither he follows him,
shedding a sea of tears on the places moistened with the blood of his
Redeemer. And so he enters into the sepulchre and buries his heart by the
body of his divine Master; then, rising again with him, he goes to Emmaus,
and sees all that passes between the Lord and the two disciples; and at last
returning to Mount Olivet, where the mystery of the Ascension took place,
and there seeing the last marks and vestiges of the feet of the Divine
Saviour, prostrate upon them, and kissing them a thousand thousand times,
with sighs of an infinite love, he began to draw up to himself all the
forces of his affections, as an archer draws the string of his bow when he
wishes to shoot his arrow, then rising, his eyes and his hands turned to
heaven: O Jesus! said he, my sweet Jesus! I know no more where to seek and
follow thee on earth. Ah! Jesus, Jesus, my love, grant then to this heart
that it may follow thee and go after thee thither above. And with these
ardent words, he at the same moment shot his soul into heaven, a sacred
arrow which as an archer of God he directed into the central-white of his
most blessed mark. But his companions and servants who saw this poor lover
fall suddenly thus as if dead, amazed at this accident, ran instantly for
the doctor, who coming found that he had really passed away: and to make a
safe judgment on the causes of so unexpected a death, he inquires of what
temperament, of what manners, and of what feelings, the deceased might be;
and he learned that he was of a disposition very sweet, very amiable,
wondrously devout, and most ardent in the love of God. Whereupon the doctor
said: Without doubt, then, his heart has broken with excess and fervour of
love. And in order the better to confirm his decision, he would have him
opened, and found that glorious heart open, with this sacred word engraved
within it: Jesus my love! Love, then, did in this heart the office of death,
separating the soul from the body, no other cause concurring. And it is S.
Bernardine of Siena, a very wise and very holy doctor, who makes this
relation in the first of his Sermons on the Ascension.
Indeed, another author of nearly the same age, who has concealed his name
out of humility, but who is worthy to be named, in a book which he has
entitled: Mirror of Spiritual Persons, relates a history even more
admirable. For he says that in the parts of Provence there was a nobleman
entirely devoted to the love of God and to the devotion of the Most Holy
Sacrament of the Altar. Now one day, being extremely afflicted with a malady
which caused him continual vomitings, the divine communion was brought him;
and not daring to receive it on account of the danger of casting it up
again, he begged his pastor to apply it at least to his breast, and with it
to make the sign of the cross over him. This was done, and in a moment his
breast, inflamed with holy love, was cleft, and drew into itself the
heavenly food wherein his beloved was contained, and at the same instant
gave up its breath. I see in good truth that this history is extraordinary,
and would deserve a more weighty testimony: yet after the true history of
the cleft heart of S. Clare of Montefalco, which all the world may see even
to this day, and that of the stigmata of S. Francis, which is most certain,
my soul finds nothing hard to be believed amongst the effects of divine
love.
[353] 1 Cor. xiii. 7.
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