Archive for The Sacred Heart of Jesus

The Sacred Heart of Jesus

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 DEVOTION TO THE SACRED HEART

1. It is part of the mainline of our faith: The reason is that it is
basically honor paid to the love of God as seen in and symbolized in the
Heart of Jesus. Without that Divine Love we would not exist at all, nor
would we have been redeemed. For to love is to will good to another for the
other's sake.It is because (1) He willed us the good of existence that we
exist at all and continue to exist; (2) Our existence would be miserable
without the redemption, which was needed not just for original sin - which
if one had nothing else would not result in eternal punishment, but also
and principally for the reparation of our personal sins, without which most
persons would be eternally doomed.

So Pius XI, in his Encyclical, "Miserentissimus Redemptor," wrote (as cited
by Pius XII, in "Haurietis aquas"): "Does not this one devotion contain a
summary of all our religion, and a guide to a more perfect life? Indeed, it
more easily leads our minds to know Christ the Lord intimately, and it more
effectively turns our hearts to love Him more ardently and to imitate Him
more perfectly."

So it is not a peripheral devotion, like that to St. Anthony or other
Saints. To honor the love of God is the very heart of our faith.

2. Hypostatic union: The term means union of two natures in one Person, the
divine Person. It is because of this that we can directly our devotion
immediately to the physical Heart of the Redeemer. Pius XII wrote
("Haurietis aquas" P21): "We recognize that His Heart, the noblest part of
human nature, is hypostatically united to the Person of the divine Word.
Consequently, there must be paid to it that worship of adoration with which
the Church honors the Person of the Incarnate Son of God Himself."

3. Triple Love: "Haurietis aquas" PP 55-57: "It is a symbol of that divine
love which He shares with the Father and the Holy Spirit, but which He, the
Word made flesh, alone manifests through a weak and perishable body, since
'in Him dwells the fullness of the divinity in a bodily way [Col 2:9].' It
is besides, the symbol of that burning love which, infused into His soul,
enriches the human will of Christ and enlightens and governs its acts by
the most perfect knowledge derived both from the beatific vision and that
which is directly infused. And finally - and this in a more natural and
direct way - it is the symbol also of sensible love, since the body of
Jesus Christ, formed by the Holy Spirit in the womb of the Virgin Mary,
possesses full powers of feelings and perception, in fact, more so than
another other human body."

To fill in on the triple love: 

1) 1 John 4:8 says "God is love." In speaking of humans, we can see that he
or she has love. But that is a duality. The perfectly undivided character
of God means we must not say He has love,but that He is love. He is love
within Himself since--in view of the fact that to love is to will good to
another for the other's sake - the Father eternally wills the Supreme Good
of the Divine Nature to the Son. That will is effective, and thereby the
Son is begotten from the Father. Father and Son together will that same
Supreme Good to the Holy Spirit: thus the Holy Spirit originates, is
effected from and by both.--In His divinity He, the Divine Second Person of
the Holy Trinity loves us, that is He wills to us the divine good of a
share in the Divine Nature (cf. 2 Pet 2:4) making possible the superhuman
happiness of the Beatific Vision in eternity. 

2) The human will of Jesus, the Incarnate God, also wills us that same
eternal happiness. We can as it were get a measure on it.For if to love is
to will good to another for the other's sake, then, if someone sets out to
bring good to the other, but is stopped by a small obstacle, then that is a
small love. If it takes a great obstacle to stop it, it is a great love.
But if even an immense obstacle does not stop it - that love is immense,
beyond measure. 

So St.Paul says in Romans 5:8: that God "proved His love for us, since at
the right time, Christ died for us." And what a death! Hideously painful.
And He knew from the first instant of His conception what it was, for, as
we shall explain later, His human soul from the first instant saw the
vision of God, in which all knowledge is available. He let us as it were
look inside Himself twice. In Luke 12:50: "I have a baptism to be baptized
with, and how am I straitened until it be accomplished." That is: I know
what dreadful suffering awaits me. I am in a tight spot, cannot be
comfortable until I get it over with. About a week before His death, He was
speaking to a crowd in Jerusalem. He decided again to let us see within Him
- for surely He could have held back the anguished cry (John 12:27): "Now
my heart is troubled! What shall I say? Father, save me from this hour." If
we have a long running pain or stress, it as it were wears the skin thin,
and it becomes all the more unbearable. We however can take comfort in the
thought: May be it won't come - maybe it won't be so bad. But the vision
was merciless, it showed Him infallibly everything to the last horrid
detail. Since as Pius XII told us, He had the most perfect of all human
bodies, being formed by the Holy Spirit in the womb of the Immaculate
Virgin, it would feel pain more than others. The vision showed Him too the
coldness and ingratitude of so many who rejected Him. So He is said to have
told St.Margaret Mary that that pain of rejection was worse than the
physical suffering.

We can get a gauge on the severity rejection too. The pain is in proportion
to the form the rejection takes, and the love the rejected one has for the
one who is rejecting. The form it took on Him? - the worst possible death.
As to His love, it was shown by what lengths He would go to to bring us
eternal happiness - so that love was beyond measure. So the pain of
rejection was similarly beyond measure.

3) The third kind of love is a love of feeling. In human affairs, love
itself is in the spiritual will; but normally along with that goes a
parallel on the bodily side,which psychologists call somatic resonance.
That is a love of feeling. Since, recalling again what Pius XII told us,
that His human body was most perfect, it would be most perfectly resonant
to the love in His spiritual will. - Centuries before, God had told the
people through Isaiah (55:9): "As high as the heavens are above the earth,
so high are my ways above your ways." On hearing this one might say in
dismay: How can we hope to please Him? But now we know in Christ He has a
human heart, with human feelings, that responds as our hearts do, minus our
imperfections. 

4. Covenant and love: We saw one measure of His love, the obstacles it
could overcome. There is another way to gauge its force, the new covenant.

A covenant is a sort of contract. In Ex. 19:5 God said to the people
through Moses: "If you really hearken to my voice and keep my covenant, you
will be my special people." That means: "If you do this, I will do that."
Now in a contractual type of arrangement, each party gives the other
something of at least closely equivalent value. What was that which Christ
gave to the Father? His own obedience unto death. How much was that worth?
Of course, it was infinite. Therefore, what the Father pledged to give in
turn would be similarly infinite. In other words, He bound Himself to make
available, on behalf of our race as a whole, an infinite, inexhaustible
measure of forgiveness and grace.

We said He did this for our race as a whole. That is true, but there is
more: In Gal 2:20, St.Paul tells us that "He loved me, and gave Himself for
me." Was that true only for St.Paul, a most special person? Not at all.
Vatican II, in "Gaudium et spes" P22 taught: "Each one of us can say with
the Apostle: The Son of God loved me, and gave Himself for me." To
translate that into contractual language: Our Redeemer generated an
infinite objective title to forgiveness and grace not just for our race as
a whole, but He created an infinite title in favor of each one of us
individually.

In passing: How can anyone be lost with an infinite title to forgiveness
and grace? Could he not go on sinning greatly for years,and then pull up
short just before the end? We reply: God would not be unwilling to grant
grace even to such a one, if he would really repent But there are two
problems: First, if someone planned in advance to sin a long time and then
quit in time -would there be really a change of heart? Hardly.It was all
preplanned. Secondly, it is one thing for Him to give, another for us to
take in what He gives. By sinning long and gravely a person makes Himself
incapable of receiving. Much sin over time will result in hardness or
blindness. So God might give, but the sinner could not see at all what God
was trying to tell him. For the first thing an actual grace needs to do is
to give the person the good thought of what God wants him to do. But the
pull of habit coming from many sins can cancel out, overwhelm the pull of
grace, which is gentle, in that it respects our freedom; while the pulls of
creatures, if one lets himself be deeply enmeshed, do not respect his
freedom: they take it away.

5. His knowledge and love: Pius XII, in his Encyclical on the Mystical
Body, wrote: "The most loving knowledge of this kind, with which the divine
Redeemer pursued us from the first moment of the Incarnation, surpasses the
diligent grasp of any human mind; for by that blessed vision which He
enjoyed when just received in the womb of the Mother of God, He has all the
members of the Mystical Body continuously and perpetually present to
Himself, and embraces them with saving love.... In the manger, on the
Cross, in the eternal glory of the Father, Christ has all the members of
the Church before Him and joined to Him far more clearly and far more
lovingly than a mother has a son on her lap, or than each one knows and
loves himself."

Many today deny this teaching, and charge Jesus was ignorant. They do not
really mean that a Divine Person, a Divine He, could fail to know anything.
But they assert that His human mind did not register that He was Messiah
etc. Some even say He had the mentality of a Jew of the first third of the
first century, that we cannot be sure He knew much about the afterlife,
that He even harbored a bit of superstition.

They are terribly wrong. Pius XII, in 1950, in "Humani generis," told us
that: "One should not think that the things taught in Encyclical letters do
not require assent,o n the plea that in them the Popes do not use the
supreme teaching authority. These things are taught with the ordinary
teaching authority, about which it is also correct to say: 'He who hears
you,hears me.'" Now that promise of Christ cannot fail - so such a thing is
infallible. The Pope went on to specify which things in Encyclicals are of
this nature. He said that if the Popes in their official journal
deliberately take a stand on a matter till then debated in theology, then
it is removed from debate, and comes under that promise of Christ [Lk
10:16].

The text of Mystical Body Encyclical we just quoted fills those conditions.
For the modern debate was sparked by a book by P.Galtier in 1939 ("L'unite
du Christ"), and the Encyclical appeared in 1943. Further, the Pope in
"Sempiternus Rex," in 1951, complained people were rejecting that teaching.
In the Sacred Heart Encyclical of 1956 he reiterated his teaching. Then in
1966 the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, under Paul VI, also
complained people were rejecting the papal teaching on this point. Such a
rejection is equivalent to heresy on two counts:1)On the grounds of "Humani
generis" just cited, 2) It is a general principle that if something is
repeatedly taught on the ordinary magisterium level, it is infallible (such
repetition shows the intention to make it definitive).

Theological reasoning alone, without the help of the Popes can show the
same thing, in the following way: For any soul to have that vision of God,
two things are needed - grace, to elevate the power to know, and then the
divinity needs to join itself directly to the human mind without even an
image in between (images are finite, God is infinite). Now in Christ of
course there was grace. But also, in view of His structure, that union was
inevitable. Ordinarily if we put together a human body and soul it is
automatically a human person. That did not happen in His case, since His
whole humanity was assumed, taken over, by the Second Person of the
Trinity. Hence not just His human mind, but His entire humanity was joined
as closely as that of any soul int the Vision - in fact more so. Because an
ordinary soul having that vision remains a person separate from God. In
Jesus, there was and is only one Person. So the vision was inevitable.

6. Consecration and reparation: The essential devotion does not consist in
singing hymns or lighting vigil lights, though these are good. Nor is it
identified with the Nine First Fridays, though the Church highly favors
these. Rather, Pius XII, in "Miserentissimus Redemptor," explained:
"Certainly, among the other things which properly belong to the worship of
the Sacred Heart, that consecration stands out and is notable, by which
we, recognizing that we have received all that we are and have from the
eternal love of God, dedicate ourselves and all that we have to the Divine
Heart of Jesus. "But Pius XI added: "...if the first and chief thin in
consecration is the repayment of the love of the creature to the love of
the Creator, the second thing at once follows form it, that, if that
Uncreated Love has been neglected by forgetfulness or violated by
offenses, compensation should be made in some way for the injustice that
has been inflicted: in common language we call this debt one of
reparation...."

There are, then, two essentials: consecration and reparation.

When Pope Leo XIII consecrated the world to the Sacred Heart in 1899, he
explained it this way: "For we, in dedicating ourselves, not only recognize
and accept His rule explicitly and freely, but we actually testify that if
that which we give were ours, we would most willingly give it, and we ask
Him to graciously accept from us that very thing, even though it is already
His."

In other words, in consecration we as it were say that we acknowledge He
already has most full rights over us, as Creator and Redeemer, and we owe
Him everything, and He would not need to repay us at all. But we say that
we beg Him not to kindly accept the very same service on a title of love,
and propose to serve Him better.

How do we serve Him? By the very same means we present in detail in
speaking of Marian consecration (cf. "Our Father's Plan," chapter 24).

As to reparation: All sin is a debt. The Holiness of God wants it paid. A
rabbi, Simeon ben Eleazar ("Tosefta, Kiddushin" 1.14) wrote: "He [anyone]
has committed a transgression. Woe to him. He has tipped the scale to the
side of debt for himself and for the world." The sinner takes from one pan
what he has no right to have. The scale is out of balance. He could begin
to rebalance in case of theft, by giving the property back; in case of a
stolen pleasure, he begins to rebalance by giving up some other pleasure he
could have had. But this only begins: for even one mortal sin has an
infinity: Infinite Person offended. Therefore if the Father willed full
rebalance - did not have to, but did will it - the only way was to send a
Divine Person to become Man. He could generate an infinite value to fully
rebalance. This does not mean we can do nothing. St.Paul makes clear that
we are saved and made holy if and to the extent that we are members of
Christ, and like Him - so we must be like Him in this work of reparation:
rebalance is a most essential part. -Luther foolishly thought Jesus did an
infinite work, we need not add. And He thought we could disobey the
commandments if in faith he took Christ as his Savior - did not see that
obedience (cf.Rom 1:5) is an essential part of faith. So faith which must
include obedience cannot justify disobedience. Pius XII, in
"Miserentissimus Redemptor:" "If the soul of Christ was made sorrowful even
to death on account of our sins, which were yet to come, but were foreseen,
there is no doubt He received some consolation from our reparation,
likewise foreseen.

7. Consecration and Reparation to the Immaculate Heart of Mary:
Pius XII, in "Haurietis aquas" P124, wrote: "In order that graces in
greater abundance may flow on all Christians ... from the devotion to the
most Sacred Heart of Jesus, let the faithful see to it that devotion to the
Immaculate Heart of the Mother of God be closely joined to this devotion.
For, by God's will, in carrying out the work of human Redemption, the
Blessed Virgin Mary was inseparably linked with Christ, in such away that
our salvation flowed from the love and sufferings of Jesus Christ, to which
the love and sorrows of His Mother were intimately united." 

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Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me; for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.

Deuteronomy 7: 6 - 11
6 “For you are a people holy to the LORD your God; the LORD your God has chosen you to be a people for his own possession, out of all the peoples that are on the face of the earth.
7 It was not because you were more in number than any other people that the LORD set his love upon you and chose you, for you were the fewest of all peoples;
8 but it is because the LORD loves you, and is keeping the oath which he swore to your fathers, that the LORD has brought you out with a mighty hand, and redeemed you from the house of bondage, from the hand of Pharaoh king of Egypt.
9 Know therefore that the LORD your God is God, the faithful God who keeps covenant and steadfast love with those who love him and keep his commandments, to a thousand generations,
10 and requites to their face those who hate him, by destroying them; he will not be slack with him who hates him, he will requite him to his face.
11 You shall therefore be careful to do the commandment, and the statutes, and the ordinances, which I command you this day.
Psalms 103: 1 - 4, 6 - 7, 8, 10
1 Bless the LORD, O my soul; and all that is within me, bless his holy name!
2 Bless the LORD, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits,
3 who forgives all your iniquity, who heals all your diseases,
4 who redeems your life from the Pit, who crowns you with steadfast love and mercy,
6 The LORD works vindication and justice for all who are oppressed.
7 He made known his ways to Moses, his acts to the people of Israel.
8 The LORD is merciful and gracious, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love.
10 He does not deal with us according to our sins, nor requite us according to our iniquities.
1 John 4: 7 - 16
7 Beloved, let us love one another; for love is of God, and he who loves is born of God and knows God.
8 He who does not love does not know God; for God is love.
9 In this the love of God was made manifest among us, that God sent his only Son into the world, so that we might live through him.
10 In this is love, not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the expiation for our sins.
11 Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another.
12 No man has ever seen God; if we love one another, God abides in us and his love is perfected in us.
13 By this we know that we abide in him and he in us, because he has given us of his own Spirit.
14 And we have seen and testify that the Father has sent his Son as the Savior of the world.
15 Whoever confesses that Jesus is the Son of God, God abides in him, and he in God.
16 So we know and believe the love God has for us. God is love, and he who abides in love abides in God, and God abides in him.
Matthew 11: 25 - 30
25 At that time Jesus declared, “I thank thee, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that thou hast hidden these things from the wise and understanding and revealed them to babes;
26 yea, Father, for such was thy gracious will.
27 All things have been delivered to me by my Father; and no one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and any one to whom the Son chooses to reveal him.
28 Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.
29 Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me; for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.
30 For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.”

My soul: let then the Will of God be accomplished in thee. With Thy help I can do all. Serve the Lord, trust in His Mercy: This will soothe thy pains.

— St Teresa of Avila


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Theologian of the Sacred Heart

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Pope John Paul II

on the occasion of the third

centenary of the death of Saint Margaret Mary

 

To Bishop Raymond Seguy
BISHOP OF AUTUN. CHALON. AND MACON

 

“The third centenary of the death of Saint Margaret Mary, canonized by my predecessor Benedict XV in 1920, recalls the memory of one who, from 1673 to 1675, was favored with appearances of the Lord Jesus and was entrusted with a message whose widespread influence in the Church has been tremendous. It was during the Octave of Corpus Christi in 1675, in that Grand Century when so many writers and artists penetrated the riches of the human soul, that the young Visitandine of Paray-le-Monial heard these bewildering words:

“Behold this heart which has so loved human beings and which has spared itself nothing even to exhausting and spending itself to give witness to this love; and in recompense for the most part I have received only ingratitude.”

When I was on pilgrimage in 1986 to the tomb of Margaret Mary, I asked, in the spirit of what has been handed down in the Church, that veneration of the Sacred Heart be faithfully restored. For it is in the Heart of Christ that the human heart learns to know the true and unique meaning of its life and destiny; it is in the Heart of Christ that the human heart receives its capacity to love.

Saint Margaret Mary learned the grace of loving by means of the cross. In it she delivers to us a message that is ever relevant. It is necessary, she says, “to make ourselves living copies of our crucified Spouse, by expressing him in ourselves in all our actions” (Letter of January 5, 1689).

She invites us to contemplate the Heart of Christ, that is, to recognize in the humanity of the Word incarnate, the infinite riches of his love for the Father and for all human beings. It is the love of Christ which makes a person worthy of being loved. Created in the image and likeness of God, the human person has received a heart eager for love and capable of loving. The love of the Redeemer, which heals it from the wound of sin, elevates it to its filial condition. With Saint Margaret Mary, united to the Savior also in his suffering offered for love, we shall ask for the grace of knowing the infinite value of every person.

To give to veneration of the Sacred Heart the place due to it in the Church, it is necessary to take up again the exhortation of Saint Paul: “Have within you the sentiments which were in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 2:5, NIV). All the gospel accounts should be reread from this perspective: each verse, meditated with love, will reveal an aspect of the mystery hidden for centuries and now revealed to our eyes (Colossians 1:26). The only Son of God, in becoming incarnate, takes a human Heart. Through the years he passed in the midst of men, “gentle and humble of heart” (Matthew 11:29, NIV), he revealed the riches of his interior life by each of his gestures, his looks, his words, his silences. In Christ Jesus is fulfilled the fullness of the commandment of the Old Testament: “You shall love the Lord with all your heart” (Deuteronomy 6:5, NIV). In fact, only the Heart of Christ has loved the Father with an undivided love.

And behold we are called to share in this love and to receive through the Holy Spirit this extraordinary capacity to love. After their encounter with the Risen One on the road to Emmaus, the disciples were filled with amazement: “Were not our hearts burning inside us as he talked to us on the road and explained the Scriptures to us?” (Luke 24:32, NIV). Yes, the human heart is inflamed by contact with the Heart of Christ, for it discovers in this love for the Father that the risen Lord has accomplished “all that the prophets have announced” (Luke 24:25, NIV).

The humanity of the Lord Jesus dead and risen reveals itself to us through contemplation of his Heart. Nourished by meditation on the Word of God, prayer of adoration places us in the closest, most intimate relationship with this “Heart that has so loved human beings.” Understood in this way, devotion to the Sacred Heart fosters active participation of the faithful at times of grace in the Eucharist and the Sacrament of Penance; intimately bound to the humanity of Christ given for the salvation of the world, the faithful thus derive the desire to be united to all those who suffer and the courage to be witnesses of the Good News.

I encourage pastors, religious communities, and all animators of pilgrimages to Paray-le-Monial to contribute to the diffusion of the message received by Saint Margaret Mary. And to you, pastor of the Church of Autun, and to all who will allow themselves to be moved by this teaching, I hope you will discover in the Heart of Christ the force of love, the sources of grace, the real presence of the Lord in his Church by the gift daily renewed of his Body and Blood. To each of you, I willingly grant my apostolic blessing.”

 

Pope John Paul II
Feast of the Sacred Heart
June 22, 1990
The Vatican

Pope John Pual II Prays the Litany of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, Our Sunday Visitor Publishing Division,©1992, all rights reserved, pp. 103-105.

This text is presented here for religious and educational purposes only, in reliance on 17 USC 107. No other use is intended or permitted.


“Heart” in the Greek: kardia

“The heart” (Eng., “cardiac,” etc.), the chief organ of physical life (”for the life of the flesh is in the blood,” Lev. 17:11), occupies the most important place in the human system. By an easy transition the word came to stand for man’s entire mental and moral activity, both the rational and the emotional elements. In other words, the heart is used figuratively for the hidden springs of the personal life. “The Bible describes human depravity as in the ‘heart’, because sin is a principle which has its seat in the center of man’s inward life, and then ‘defiles’ the whole circuit of his action, Matt. 15:19,20. On the other hand, Scripture regards the heart as the sphere of Divine influence, Rom. 2:15; Acts 15:9. … The heart, as lying deep within, contains ‘the hidden man,’ 1 Pet. 3:4, the real man. It represents the true character but conceals it” (J. Laidlaw, in Hastings’ Bible Dic.).

 

As to its usage in the NT it denotes (a) the seat of physical life, Acts 14:17; Jas. 5:5; (b) the seat of moral nature and spiritual life, the seat of grief, John 14:1; Rom. 9:2; 2 Cor. 2:4; joy, John 16:22; Eph. 5:19; the desires, Matt. 5:28; 2 Pet. 2:14; the affections, Luke 24:32; Acts 21:13; the perceptions, John 12:40; Eph. 4:18; the thoughts, Matt. 9:4; Heb. 4:12; the understanding, Matt. 13:15; Rom. 1:21; the reasoning powers, Mark 2:6; Luke 24:38; the imagination, Luke 1:51; conscience, Acts 2:37; 1 John 3:20; the intentions, Heb. 4:12, cp. 1 Pet. 4:1; purpose, Acts 11:23; 2 Cor. 9:7; the will, Rom. 6:17; Col. 3:15; faith, Mark 11:23; Rom. 10:10; Heb. 3:12.

 

The heart, in its moral significance in the OT, includes the emotions, the reason and the will.

 

psuche

[Which means] the soul, or life, is rendered “heart” in Eph. 6:6 (marg., “soul”), “doing the will of God from the heart.” In Col. 3:23, a form of the word psuche preceded by ek, from, lit., “from (the) soul,” is rendered “heartily.”


From Vine’s Expository Dictionary of New Testament Words.


Editor’s note for Catholics: Although Vines is a Protestant source, and somewhat old, it should give you a good idea of how this word is used, which helps in our understanding of the idea of “heart” that underlies the devotion to the Sacred Heart. Jesus’ heart is the seat of His humanity but it is fully mingled with his divinity. Thus the heart is the center of the person, the seat of emotions, the core of his being, human and divine. Thus the prayer: Lord Jesus make our hearts like unto thine.

 ******************************************************************

Gertrude: the only female Saint to be called “the Great”

Gertrude of Helfta was a highly intelligent woman. She was born on 6 January 1256 in the little town of Eisleben in Thuringia. At age 5, Gertrude went to the Cistercian monastery school of Helfta in Saxony, and since then has always been known as “Gertrude of Helfta”. She dedicated herself to study, and it was not long before she surpassed all her companions.

She also discovered Christ in the monastery, and the beauty of living for him and with him in the intimacy of love. But the divine Teacher remained in the background of her life for some time while she used all her faculties to improve her education, becoming proficient in literature, philosophy, song and the refined art of miniature painting.

After several years, Gertrude moved from the monastery school to the novitiate, taking the veil and becoming a nun. For her Jesus was “Someone”, but her studies were still her all. But she was not on the wrong track, for knowledge, when it goes hand in hand with humility, does not distance people from God. And he was waiting on her path.

Experiencing a ‘new birth’

In 1280, she was 24 years old and a half-hearted and distracted nun. Towards the end of the year, she went through an inner crisis that lasted several weeks. She felt lonely. lost and depressed. Her human plans disintegrated like shattered idols. This might have been the end of everything, but instead, it was a new beginning.

On 27 January 1281, Gertrude saw Jesus in person in the form of a marvellous adolescent who said to her, “I have come to comfort you and bring you salvation”. Remembering that day, she was to write: “Jesus, my Redeemer, you have lowered my indomitable head to your gentle yoke, preparing for me the medicine suited to my weakness”. From that moment, she was solely concerned with living in full union with Jesus.

In her writings, she established the date of her newfound unity with Christ as 23 June 1281: all her life she must have seen that day as the day of her new birth, the birth of the true Gertrude in the image of Christ.

She abandoned the study of profane subjects and dedicated herself entirely to the study of Scripture, writings of the Church Fathers and theological treatises. She found extraordinary delight in reading the letters of Augustine, Gregory the Great, Bernard and Hugh of Saint-Victor.

From a scholar specialized in the humanities, she became a “theologian” filled with God and his fragrance. Her life was truly filled with the Lord alone.

But Gertrude did not want to be the only one to enjoy this supreme “Pleasure”: so she began to write short treatises for the Sisters in the monastery and those who approached her in which she explained the most difficult passages of Scripture. true spiritual treasures written in a clear and lively style.

The monastery parlour was also often filled with people in search of her words, comfort and guidance. She exercised a great influence on souls.

A confidant of Jesus

Since her conversion, she had become the confidant of Jesus, who revealed to her the infinite Love of his divine Heart and charged her to spread it among human beings with love for the suffering and for sinners. Gertrude’s ecstasies with Jesus prompted her to write those ardent pages that would bring souls to him.

Humble, always happy and smiling, with a loving heart for all, she sparkled with trust, joy and peace, and led everyone to the Lord. To her soul, Jesus was like a spring day, vibrant with life and scented with flowers: Love par excellence, the one overwhelming Love. This is why she is known on the one hand as the “Teresa of Germany” and on the other, the “theologian of the Sacred Heart”.

One day, Jesus said to Gertrude: “It would be good to make known to men and women how they would benefit from remembering that I, the Son of God and of the Blessed Virgin Mary, always stand before God for the salvation of the human race, and that should they commit some sin through their weakness. I offer my unblemished Heart to the Father for them”.

She truly became one with Jesus and transmitted him to her brethren in the many works she has bequeathed to us. some of which have been lost.

In 1298 her health deteriorated but she transformed her sufferings into love, an offering with Jesus to the Father and a gift for humankind.

During her long and painful illness, she decided to recount the “adventure” of her conversion and to tell of the wonderful revelations with which Jesus had favoured her: “Until the age of 25, I was a blind and insane woman… but you, Jesus, deigned to grant me the priceless familiarity of your friendship by opening to me in every way that most noble casket of your divinity, which is your divine Heart, and offering me in great abundance all your treasures contained in it”.

On 17 November 1301, at age 45. she rejoined her Bridegroom for ever. Interestingly, she is the only woman among the saints to be called “the Great’: St. Gertrude the Great.
 


Taken from:
L’Osservatore Romano
Weekly Edition in English
14 November, page 8

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