Peter Weeping Before the Virgin on Holy Saturday - Guercino (1647) |
HOLY SATURDAY ~ Dom Gueranger, Passiontide and Holy Week
On this day, by her firm and unwavering faith in her Son's Resurrection to come tomorrow, Blessed Mary resumes within her single self the whole Church. How sacred is this Saturday, which, notwithstanding all its sadness, is such a day of glory to the Mother of Jesus! It is on this account that the Church has consecrated to Mary the Saturday of every week.
Now, at
last, we understand what sin has done: By sin, death entered into the world;
and it passed upon all men. Though Jesus knew no sin, yet has he permitted
Death to have dominion over him, in order that he might make it less bitter to
us, and, by his Resurrection, restore unto us that eternal life, of which we
had been deprived by sin. How gratefully we should appreciate this Death of our
Jesus! By becoming Incarnate, he became a Servant; his Death was a still deeper
humiliation. The sight of this Tomb, wherein his Body lies lifeless and cold,
teaches us something far more important than the power of death: — it reveals
to us the immense, the incomprehensible love of God for man. He knew that we
were to gain by his humiliations; — the greater his humiliations, the greater
our exaltation: this was his principle, and it led him to what seems like an excess!
Let us, then, love this sacred Sepulcher, which is to give us Life. We have
thanked him for having died for us upon the Cross; let us thank him, but most
feelingly, for having humbled himself, for our sakes, even to the Tomb!
And now, let
us visit the Holy Mother, who has passed the night in Jerusalem, going over, in
saddest memory, the scenes she has witnessed. Her Jesus has been a Victim to
every possible insult and cruelty : he has been crucified : his precious Blood
has flowed in torrents from those Five Wounds : He is dead, and now lies buried
in yonder Tomb, as though he were but a mere man, yea the most abject of men.
How many tears have fallen, during these long hours, from the eyes of the
Daughter of David, and yet, her Son has not come back to her! Near her is Magdalene;
heartbroken by yesterday's events, she has no words to tell her grief, for
Jesus is gone, and, as she thinks, forever. The other Women, less loved by
Jesus than Magdalene, yet, still, dear to him, stand round the disconsolate
Mother. They have braved every insult and danger in order to remain on Calvary
till all was over, and they intend returning thither with Magdalene, as soon as
the Sabbath is over, to honour the Tomb and the Body of Jesus.
John, the
adopted son of Mary, and the Beloved Disciple of Jesus, is oppressed with
sorrow. Others, also, of the Apostles and Disciples visit the house of
mourning. Peter, penitent and humble, fears not to appear before the Mother of
Mercy. Among the Disciples, are Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus. We may easily
imagine the conversation, it is on the Sufferings and Death of Jesus, and on
the ingratitude of the Jews. The Church, in the 7th Responsory of to-day's
Tenebrae, represents these men as saying: "Behold! how the Just One dieth,
and there is none that taketh it to heart. Iniquity has had its way. He was silent
as a Lamb under his shearer, and he opened not his mouth. He was taken away from
distress and judgment: but his memory shall be in peace." Thus speak the men! The women are thinking of their morrow's
visit to the Sepulcher! The saintliness of Jesus, his goodness, his power, his
Sufferings, his Death – everything is remembered, except his Resurrection,
which they had often heard him say should certainly and speedily take place.
Mary alone
lives in expectation of his triumph. In her was verified that expression of the
Holy Ghost, where, speaking of the Valiant Woman, he says: Her lamp shall not
be put out in the night. Her courage fails not, because she knows that the Sepulcher
must yield up its Dead, and her Jesus will rise again to Life. St. Paul tells us
that our religion is vain, unless we have faith in the mystery of our Savior’s Resurrection. Where was this faith on the day after our Lord's
Death? In one heart only — and that was Mary's. As it was her chaste womb that
had held within it Him whom heaven and earth cannot contain, so on this day, by
her firm and unwavering faith, she resumes within her single self the whole
Church. How sacred is this Saturday, which, notwithstanding all its sadness, is
such a day of glory to the Mother of Jesus! It is on this account that the
Church has consecrated to Mary the Saturday of every week.
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