Chapter 23. The Birth of the Baptist.
3rd April 1944.
This vision of peace descends from
Heaven, amid the disgusting things which the world nowadays offers
us, and I do not know how that can be, because I am like a little
twig at the mercy of the wind in my continuous conflicts with human
wickedness so discordant with what lives within me.
We are still in Elizabeth's house. It
is a beautiful summer evening, still clear in the last rays of the
sun, and yet the sky is already decorated with a falcated moon that
looks like a silver comma attached to a large deep blue cloth.
The rose-bushes give off strong perfume
and the bees, like humming gold drops, are making their last flights
in the quiet warm evening air. From the meadows, there is a strong
smell of hay dried in the sun, it is almost like that of bread, of
warm bread, just taken out of the oven. Perhaps it comes also from
the many sheets hanging everywhere to dry, and which Sarah is now
folding.
Mary is walking with Her cousin,
linking arms with her. They go up and down very slowly, under the
semi-dark pergola.
But Mary watches everything and, while
taking care of Elizabeth, She sees that Sarah is ill at ease in
folding a long sheet which she has taken off a hedge. « Sit down
here, and wait for me » She says to her relative. And She goes to
help the old servant, pulling the sheet to straighten it, and then
folding it carefully. « They still smell of sun, they are warm »
She says with a smile. And to make the old lady happy, She adds: «
This sheet, after your bleaching, has become as beautiful as ever.
You are the only one who knows how to do things so well. »
Sarah goes away, overjoyed, with her
load of scented sheets.
Mary goes back to Elizabeth and says: «
Let us take a few more steps. They will do you good. » And as
Elizabeth is tired, and does not wish to move, Mary says to her: «
Let us go only to see if your doves are all in their nests, and if
the water in their tub is clear. We shall then come back home. »
Doves must be the favourite pets of
Elizabeth. When they are in front of the rustic tower where all the
doves are gathered, Elizabeth is deeply moved; in fact the hens are
in the nests and the cocks are in front of them, but neither of them
move, instead they all start cooing loudly when they see the two
women: a gentle form of greeting. Elizabeth is overcome by the
weakness of her condition and by fears which make her cry. She
expresses her fears to her cousin. « If I should die… what will
happen to my poor little doves? You will not be staying here. If You
were to remain in my house, it would not matter if I died. I have had
the greatest joy a woman can possibly have. The joy which I was no
longer expecting to have, and I cannot even complain of death with
the Lord, because He has overwhelmed me with His benignity, may He be
blessed for it. But there is Zacharias-… and then there will be the
child. An old man who would feel as though he were lost in a desert
without his woman. And the other is so small, that he would be like a
flower, condemned to die of cold because he is without his mother.
Poor baby, without the caresses of his mother!… »
« But why are you so sad? God has
given you the joy of being a mother, and He will not take it away
from you when it is full. Little John will receive all the kisses of
his mummy, and Zacharias all the attentions of his faithful wife
until the very end of his long life. You are two branches of the same
tree. One will not die, leaving the other alone. »
« You are good, and You comfort me.
But I am so old to have a son. And now that I am about to have one, I
am afraid. »
« Oh! No! There is Jesus here. We must
not be afraid where there is Jesus. My Child relieved your pain, you
said that yourself, when He was just a bud newly formed. Now that He
is becoming more and more mature, and He already lives as My Creature
- I can feel in My throat the beating of His little heart, and I feel
as if a little nestling with a light pulsating heart were resting on
My throat He will remove all dangers from you. You must have faith. »
« I have. But if I should die… don't
leave Zacharias at once. I know that You are concerned with Your own
house. But please remain here a little longer to help my husband in
his first days of sorrow. »
« I shall stay to take delight in your
joy and in the joy of your husband, and I will leave you when you are
strong and happy. But now be quiet, Elizabeth. Everything will be all
right. Nothing will happen to your household while you are suffering.
Zacharias will be served by the most loving maid, your flowers will
be looked after, and your doves will be attended to, and you will
find them all beautiful and happy to rejoice with, when their loved
mistress comes back. Let us go in now, because you are getting pale…
»
« Yes, I think I am beginning to
suffer again. Perhaps my time has come. Mary, pray for me. »
« I will support you with My prayer
until your labour ends in joy. »
The two women slowly go back into the
house.
Elizabeth withdraws to her rooms. Mary,
a capable and provident woman, gives the necessary instructions,
prepares everything that may be necessary, and at the same time, She
comforts Zacharias who is worried.
In the house that is sleepless that
night, and where one can hear the strange voices of women called in
to help, Mary is watchful like a lighthouse on a stormy night. The
whole house rotates around Her, and She sees to everything, smiling
sweetly. And She prays. When She is not called for this or that
matter, She concentrates in prayer. She is now in the room where they
always gather for their meals and to work. Zacharias is with Her, and
he sighs and walks up and down uneasily. They have already prayed
together. Then Mary has continued to pray. Also now that the old man,
being tired, has sat down on his big chair near the table, and is
quiet and sleepy, She prays. And when She sees him sleeping with his
head resting on his arms crossed on the table, She takes Her sandals
off to make no noise and walks barefooted and, making less noise than
a butterfly fluttering around the room, She takes Zacharias' mantle,
and lays it on him so gently that he continues to sleep in the
comfort of the woollen cloth that protects him from the cold air of
the night that comes in, in gusts from the door, which is very often
opened. Then She starts praying again, and She prays more and more
intensely, kneeling down, raising Her arms, when the painful cries of
Elizabeth become heart-rending.
Sarah comes in and invites Her to go
out. Mary goes out barefooted into the garden. « My mistress wants
You » she says.
« I am coming. » And Mary walks along
the house, goes upstairs… She looks like a white angel, wandering
in the peaceful starry night. She goes into Elizabeth's room.
« Oh! Mary! Mary! What a pain! I can't
stand it any longer, Mary! How much pain one must suffer to be a
mother! »
Mary caresses her lovingly, and kisses
her.
« Mary! Mary! Let me put my hands on
Your belly! »
Mary takes the two wrinkled and swollen
hands, and lays them on Her round abdomen, pressing them tightly with
Her smooth, slender little hands. And She speaks in a low voice, now
that they are alone: « Jesus is here, and He hears and sees you.
Have faith, Elizabeth. His holy heart is beating more strongly
because He is acting for your good. I can feel it throbbing as though
I were holding it in My hands. And I understand the words that My
Child says to Me. He is now saying: “Tell the woman not to be
afraid. Only a little more pain. And then, with the first rays of the
sun, among the many roses awaiting the morning's rays to open out on
their stems, her house will have the most beautiful rose, and it will
be John, My Predecessor.” »
Elizabeth now presses also her face
against Mary's belly, and weeps gently.
Mary stands for some time in that
attitude because the pain seems to ease giving a moment's relief. And
she beckons everybody to be quiet. She remains standing, beautiful
and white in the pale, faint light of an oil lamp, like an angel near
a person who suffers. She is praying. I can see Her moving Her lips.
But even if I did not see them move, I would understand that She is
praying from the enraptured expression on Her face.
Some time goes by, and Elizabeth is in
the throes once again. Mary kisses her again, and goes out . She goes
downstairs very quickly in the moonlight, and goes to see if the old
man is still sleeping. He is sleeping, and moaning in his sleep. Mary
makes a gesture of compassion, and starts to pray once again.
More time passes. The old man awakes
from his sleep and lifts up his head, and he is confused, because he
does not recollect why he is there. Then he remembers, makes a
gesture, and utters a guttural exclamation. He then writes: « Is he
not born yet? » Mary shakes Her head in denial. Zacharias writes: «
How much pain! Oh my poor woman! Will she manage without dying? »
Mary takes the hand of the old man, and
reassures him: « At dawn, in a short while, the baby will be born.
Everything will be all right. Elizabeth is strong. How beautiful this
day will be - it will soon be daybreak - how beautiful this day will
be when the child sees the light! It will be the nicest day of your
life! The Lord has kept aside great graces for you and your child is
the announcer of them. »
Zacharias shakes his head sadly, and
points to his dumb mouth. He would like to say many things, but
cannot.
Mary understands, and replies: « The
Lord will complete your joy. Believe in Him completely, hope in Him
indefinitely, love Him totally. The Most High will grant you more
than you dare hope for. He wants this total faith from you, to wash
out your past mistrust. Say in your heart with me: “I believe”.
Say it with every beat of your heart. The treasures of God are opened
for those who believe in Him and in His powerful bounty. »
The light begins to filter in through
the partly open door. Mary opens it. Dawn makes the dewy earth
completely white. There is a strong smell of humid earth and green
herbs, and the first chirping of the birds, calling one another from
branch to branch, can be heard.
The old man and Mary move towards the
door. They are pale because of the sleepless night, and the light at
dawn makes them look even more pale. Mary puts on Her sandals, and
goes to the foot of the staircase and listens. A woman looks out,
nods, and then goes back in. Nothing yet.
Mary goes into the room, and comes back
with some warm milk which She gives to the old man. She goes to the
doves, comes back, and disappears into the same room. Perhaps it is
the kitchen. She moves around watching. She looks as though She had
slept the most perfect sleep, She is so quick and serene.
Zacharias is walking up and down the
garden very nervously. Mary looks at him compassionately. She then
goes again into the usual room, and kneeling near Her loom, She prays
intensely, because the cries of Elizabeth are becoming sharper. She
bows down to the ground imploring the Eternal Father. Zacharias comes
back in, and seeing Her in this prostrate state, the poor old man
cries. Mary gets up and takes him by the hand. She is so much younger
than he is, but She looks as though She were the mother of the poor
old desolate soul, and She pours Her consolation on him.
They are standing thus, one beside the
other, in the sun that makes the morning air rosy, and it is thus
that the joyful news reaches them: « He is born! He is born! It's a
boy! Happy father! A boy as beautiful as a rose, as beautiful as the
sun, as strong and good as his mother! Joy for you, father, blessed
by the Lord Who gave you a son that you may offer him to the Temple!
Glory to God, Who has granted posterity to this house! Blessed are
you, and your son who was born to you! May his offspring perpetuate
your name for centuries, from generation to generation, and may his
descendants always be in union with the Eternal Lord. »
Mary blesses the Lord weeping for joy.
Then the two receive the little one, who has been brought to the
father, that he may bless him. Zacharias does not go to Elizabeth. He
receives the child, who is screaming desperately, but he does not go
to his wife.
Mary instead goes, carrying with love
the little one, who becomes quiet, as soon as She takes him in Her
arms. The woman who is following Her notices this, and she says to
Elizabeth: « Woman, your child became quiet immediately, when She
took him. Look how peacefully he is sleeping, and only Heaven knows
how restless and strong he is. But look now! He seems a little dove.
»
Mary lays the creature near his mother
and caresses her, tidying up her grey hair. « The rose is born »
She whispers in a low voice, « and you are alive. Zacharias is
happy. »
« Does he speak? »
« Not yet. But hope in the Lord. Rest
now. I am staying with you. »
-----------------
Mary says:
Mary says:
« If My presence had sanctified the
Baptist, it did not nullify for Elizabeth the sentence against Eve.
“You shall give birth to your children in pain” the Eternal
Father had said.
Only I, because I was without stain,
and I had not had any human copulation, was exempted from generating
with pain. Sadness and pain are fruits of fault. I, Who was the
Innocent One, had to know also sorrow and sadness, because I was the
Co-Redeemer. But I did not know the torture of generating. No. I did
not know that torture.
But believe Me, daughter, that there
never was, and never will be a torture of puerpery like Mine as the
Martyr of a spiritual Maternity, which was accomplished on the
hardest of beds, the bed of My cross, at the foot of the scaffold of
My dying Son. Which mother is compelled to generate thus? To blend
the torture of Her bowels which contract spasmodically because of the
death rattle of Her dying Creature, with the torture which tears Her
bowels apart in the strain of overcoming the horror of having to say:
“I love you, come to Me Who am your Mother” to each murderer of
Her Son, born of the most sublime love that Heaven ever saw, of the
love of a God with a virgin, of the kiss of Fire, of the embrace of
Light which became Flesh, and made the womb of a woman the Tabernacle
of God?
“How much pain to be a mother!”
says Elizabeth. So much! But nothing when compared to Mine.
“Let me press my
hands on Your belly". Oh, if you always asked Me for that when
you suffer!
I am the Eternal Bearer of Jesus. He is
in My womb, as you saw last year, like the Host in the monstrance.
Who comes to Me, finds Him. Who leans on Me, touches Him. Who
addresses Me, speaks to Him. I am His Dress. He is My Soul. My Son is
united to His Mother more, much more now, than He was in the nine
months that He was in My womb. And every pain is appeased, every hope
flourishes and every grace flows for those who come to Me and rest
their heads against My bosom.
I pray for you. Remember that. The
beatitude of being in Heaven, living in the ray of God, does not
cause Me to forget My children who are suffering on the earth. And I
pray. And all Heaven prays, because Heaven loves. Heaven is living
charity. And Charity has mercy on you. But even if I were all by
Myself, My prayer would be sufficient for the needs of those who hope
in God. Because I never stop praying for you all, for the holy and
the wicked, to give joy to the holy, to give repentance to the wicked
that they might be saved.
Come, come, o children of My sorrow. I
am waiting for you at the foot of the Cross to grant you graces. »
No comments:
Post a Comment