Mary's Hope
TAKEN FROM THE GLORIES OF MARY
by Saint Alphonsus Liguori
with Nihil Obstat and Imprimatur, 1931
Hope takes its rise in faith; for God enlightens us by faith to know
His goodness and the promises He has made, that by this knowledge we
may rise by hope to the desire of possessing Him. Mary then, having had
the virtue of faith in its highest degree, had also hope in the same
degree of excellence; and this made her say with David, But it is good
for me to adhere to my God, to put my hope in the Lord God. [Ps.
72:28]
Mary was indeed that faithful spouse of the Holy Ghost, of whom it was
said, Who is this that cometh up
from the desert, lowing with
delights, leaning on her beloved? [Cant. 8:5] For she was
always perfectly
detached from earthly affection, looking upon the world as a desert,
and therefore in no way relying either on creatures ot on her own
merits, but relying only on Divine grace, in which was all her
confidence, she always advanced in the love of God. Thus Ailgrino said
of her: "She ascended from the desert, that is, from the world, which
she so fully renounced, and so truly considered as a desert, that she
turned all her affections from it. She leant upon her Beloved, for she
trusted not in her own merits, but in His graces Who bestows
graces."
The most holy Virgin gave a clear indication of the greatness of her
confidence in God, in the first place, when she saw the anxiety of her
holy spouse St. Joseph. Unable to account for her wonderful pregnancy,
he was troubled at the thought of leaving her; but Joseph ... minded to put her away
privately.
[Matt. 1:19] It appeared then necessary, as
we have elsewhere remarked, that she should discover the hidden mystery
to St. Joseph; but no, she would not herself manifest the grace she had
received; she thought it better to abandon herself to Divine
Providence, in the full confidence that God Himself would defend her
innocence and reputation. This is precisely what Cornelius à
Lapide says, in his commentary on the words of the Gospel quoted above:
"The Blessed Virgin was unwilling to reveal this secret to Joseph, lest
she might seem to boast of her gifts; she therefore resigned herself to
the care of God, in the fullest confidence that He would guard her
innocence and reputation."
Mary again showed her confidence in God when she knew that the time
for
the birth of our Lord approached, and was yet driven even from the
lodgings of the poor in Bethlehem, and obliged to bring forth in a
stable: and she laid Him in a manger, because there was no room for Him
in the inn. [Luke 2:7] She did not then let drop a single word of
complaint.
but abandoning herself to God, she trusted that He would there assist
her.
The Divine Mother also showed how great was her confidence in Divine
Providence when she received notice from St. Joseph that they must fly
into Egypt. On that very night she undertook so long a journey to a
strange and unknown country without provisions, without money,
accompanied only by her infant Jesus and her poor spouse, who arose and
took the Child and His Mother by night, and retired into Egypt. [Matt. 2:14]
But much more did she show her confidence when she asked her Son for
wine at the marriage-feast of Cana; for when she had said, They have no
wine, Jesus answered her, Woman,
what is it to thee and to Me? My hour
is not yet come. [John 2:3] After this answer, which seemed an
evident refusal,
her confidence in the Divine goodness was such that she desired the
servants to do whatever her Son told them; for the favor was certain to
be granted:
Whatsoever He shall say to you, do ye.
It indeed was so: Jesus Christ
ordered the vessels to be filled with water, and changed it into wine.
Let us, then, learn from Mary to have that confidence in God which we
ought always to have, but principally in the great affair of our
eternal salvation---an affair in which it is true that we must
cooperate; yet it is from God alone that we must hope for the grace
necessary to obtain it. We must distrust our own strength, and say with
the Apostle, I can do all things in
Him Who strengtheneth me. [Phil. 4:13]
Ah, my most holy Lady, the Ecclesiasticus tells me that thou art the
Mother of holy hope;
[24:24] and the holy Church, that thou art our hope.
For what other hope, then, need I seek? Thou, after Jesus, art all my
hope. Thus did St. Bernard call thee; thus will I also call thee:
"Thou art the whole ground of my hope;" and, with St. Bonaventure, I
will repeat again and again, "O salvation of all who call upon thee,
save me!"

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