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The Little Flowers of Saint Francis of Assisi by Brother Ugolino
CHAPTER XLIX HOW CHRIST APPEARED TO BROTHER JOHN OF ALVERNIA
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Among the learned and holy brethren and sons of St Francis, who, as
Solomon says, form the glory of their Father, was the venerable and
holy Brother John of Fermo, of the province of Ancona, who lived in our
times. Having spent the greater part of his life in the holy house of
Alvernia, he died there, and was known by the name of Brother John of
Alvernia; he was man of great holiness and great sanctity. This Brother
John, when he was a child, greatly loved the ways of penance, which
preserve the purity both of the body and of the soul; and at a very
tender age he began to wear a belt of iron, and to observe great
fasting and abstinence; more especially he used these mortifications
when he was residing with the Canons of San Pietro di Fermo, who lived
in great luxury; he avoided all pleasures, and macerated his body with
great severity. His companions, being against such penitential ways,
tried by every means to turn him from them, taking from him his
instruments of penance, and preventing him from fasting; wherefore the
holy child, inspired by God, resolved to leave the world and its
worshippers, and to put himself in the arms of his crucified Lord,
taking the habit of the crucified St Francis; which he did. Being
received into the Order so young, and confided to the care of the
master of the novices, he grew so spiritual and so devout, that
whenever he heard the said master speak of God, he felt his heart to
burn within him, as if it had been on fire, so that it was impossible
for him to remain quiet, and he ran to and fro in the garden, in the
forest, and even in the church; for so sweet was the sensation he
experienced, that it seemed to him as if his heart was melted like wax
before the fire. As time went on, this holy youth advanced from virtue
to virtue, and his soul was adorned and enriched with spiritural gifts;
he was often rapt in ecstasy, so that his mind was raised at times to
the splendours of the cherubim, at times to the ardour of the seraphim
and the joys of the beatified. At one time this ecstasy of divine love,
which seemed, as it were, to set his heart on fire, lasted for three
years, and this took place on the holy mountain of Alvernia. But as God
takes especial care of his children, sending them at divers times
consolation or tribulation, adversity or prosperity, according to their
need, in order to preserve in them the grace of humility, or to awaken
in their hearts a greater thirst after spiritual things, so it pleased
his divine bounty, when the three years were ended, to withdraw from
Brother John this flame of celestial love, and take from him every
spiritual consolation. Then was Brother John most disconsolate and
sorrowful, and this great trial made him so miserable, that he wandered
about the forest, crying out with sighs and tears for the beloved
Spouse of his soul, for without his presence his soul could enjoy
neither peace nor rest. Yet nowhere could he find his Beloved, or
recover those sweet spiritual sensations to which the love of Christ
had accustomed him. Now this trial lasted several days, during which
time he persevered in prayer, weeping and sighing, and imploring the
Lord to take pity on his soul, and restore to him his Beloved. At last,
his patience having been sufficiently tried, as he was wandering one
day sorrowfully in the forest he sat down, overcome with fatigue; and
as he was gazing up to heaven, with his eyes full of tears, Jesus
Christ, the blessed one, appeared to him, standing in silence on the
path by which he himself had come. Brother John knew him to be the
Christ, and throwing himself at his feet he burst into a flood of
tears, and thus addressed him: "Help me, O my Lord! for without thee,
my sweet Saviour, I am all in sorrow and in darkness; without thee,
gentle Lamb, I am in anguish and fear; without thee, Son of the most
high God, I am in confusion and in shame; without thee, I am despoiled
of every good, for thou art Jesus Christ, the true light of my soul;
without thee, I am lost and damned, for thou art the life of souls, the
life of life; without thee, I am sterile and unfruitful, for thou art
the foundation of every grace; without thee, I can have no consolation,
for thou, O Jesus, art our Redeemer, our love, our desire, the bread of
comfort, the wine which rejoices the hearts of angels and of saints;
enlighten me, O pitying Shepherd, for I am thy lamb, albeit most
unworthy." When the Lord delays to grant the desires of holy men, their
love towards him greatly increaseth; for the which reason Christ, the
blessed one, left Brother John, going from him without granting his
request, and without speaking to him. Then Brother John arose, and
running after Him threw himself again at his feet, imploring him not to
leave him, and crying out: "O Jesus Christ, most sweet Saviour, have
mercy on me in my trouble; by the truth of thy salvation and the
multitude of thy mercies, restore to me the joy of thy countenance, and
cast upon me a look of pity; for the earth is full of thy mercy"; but
the Lord Jesus went from him without saying a word, or leaving him any
consolation. Then Brother John followed him with great fervour, and
when he came up to him, Christ, the blessed one, turned round, and
looking at him most sweetly, he opened his holy and merciful arms and
embraced him; and when he opened his arms Brother John saw rays of
light come from his holy bosom, which lighted up all the forest, as
well as his own soul and body. Then Brother John knelt down at the feet
of Christ, the blessed one, who, as he had given his foot to Mary
Magdalene to kiss, so now gave he it to Brother John. Then Brother
John, taking it with great reverence, bathed it with his tears like
another Magdalene, saying most devoutly, "I pray thee, my Lord, look
not at my sins, but, by thy holy Passion and by the precious Blood
which thou hast shed, awaken my soul to the grace of thy love; for thou
hast commanded us to love thee with all our heart and with all our
strength; which commandment none can fulfill without thy help. Help me,
then, beloved Son of God, that I may love thee with all my heart and
all my strength." And as Brother John was thus praying at the feet of
Christ his prayer was granted, and the flame of divine love which he
had lost was restored to him, and he felt himself greatly comforted.
Then knowing that the gift of divine grace had been restored to him, he
began to return thanks to Christ, the blessed one, and devoutly to kiss
his feet. Then standing up, and looking on the Saviour's face, Jesus
Christ gave him his holy hands to kiss; and having kissed them, Brother
John approached the bosom of Christ, and embraced him. Christ, the
blessed one, received him in his arms; and as Brother John embraced the
Saviour, and was embraced by him, the air was filled with the sweetest
perfumes, so sweet that no other perfume in the world could be compared
with them. Thus was Brother John consoled, enlightened, and rapt in
ecstasy, and this sweet perfume lasted in his soul for many months; and
thenceforth from his lips, which had drunk at the fountain of divine
wisdom on the sacred bosom of the Saviour, there fell most wonderful
and celestial words, which changed the hearts of those who heard them,
producing great fruit in souls; and for a long time, whenever Brother
John followed the path in the forest where the blessed feet of Christ
had passed, he saw the same wonderful light and breathed the same sweet
odour. When Brother John came back to himself after this vision, though
the corporal presence of Christ had disappeared, his mind was so
enlightened and so imbued with divine wisdom, that although he was not
a learned man or versed in human studies, he explained most wonderfully
the most difficult questions on the Holy Trinity and the profound
mysteries of Holy Writ; and when speaking before the Pope, the
cardinals, the king, the barons, the masters, and doctors, they were
surprised at his sublime discourse, and at the words of wisdom which he
pronounced.
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