Chapter 5 : Zeal for souls – a fourth feature of the gratitude we owe the Mother of God
Continuing our translation of the 1845 reprint of Fr François Poiré’s Triple Crown of the Mother of God (1643 French edition).
Zeal is Love’s sword which is turned against anything troubling the peaceful possession of the beloved or the happiness of his friend.
This is why, says Saint Thomas[1] (after St Denis[2]), the more intense love is the more vigorously it withstands opposition or resistance and seeks to remove everything that opposes the good of the beloved.
It is for this reason I am placing zeal immediately after love. If anyone is at pains to know what connection there is between zeal and the gratitude due to the Queen of hearts for her great qualities, then I aim to make this plain in the paragraphs which follow.
Footnotes
[1] I-II, quæst. 28, art. 4.
[2] Cap. 4 de Divin. Nom. Commonly attributed to Dionysius the Pseudo-Areopagite.
§ 1. Zeal for souls is a form of gratitude most pleasing to the MOTHER OF GOD
Because of the love she has for God and for souls
1 When fire catches hold of one of your friend’s houses, spreading from room to room and floor to floor, ravaging his property and reducing it to ashes, there can be no doubt that the most pleasing service we could provide for him would be to spare no effort in saving what we know is dearest to him and which he would least like to lose. The fire of sin has caught hold of God’s house, which is also that of the Virgin, and the flames spread every day capturing countries and causing new disasters – and we think we can just stand with our arms folded wondering what we are supposed to do in such a case! Are we not showing ourselves seriously wanting since the answer to our question is obvious as we see others running to fetch water, going in front of the fire to head it off and trying to protect everything they can from the advancing flames? Would it not actually show a lack of judgement if we went to ask the Lady of the house for her permission to come and help? In the first place, asking a question like that would seem to doubt that she loved God whose souls these were in danger of perishing; and if we cannot have any doubts about this without risk of impiety, why would we have any doubts about her being pleased to see us running to offer help and trying to save as many as we could?
The great Aphraates[1], seeing the Emperor Valens with torch in hand ready to burn down the House of God, felt an ardour blazing within him which made him abandon his beloved solitude and make his way in haste to Antioch where he was ready to die if necessary in the midst of the flames in order to spend his every last effort in saving those whose lives were at risk. St Catherine of Sienna was ready to block off the gates of hell with her own body in order to prevent souls from being lost. St Paul had no hesitation in wishing himself to be an anathema provided this would be of service to his brethren[2].
With one spark of charity which set their hearts on fire, these saints would have offered themselves body and soul to prevent an offence against God, and to avoid the risk of a single person being lost. Are we really to imagine therefore that the desolation of the Kingdom of God would be a matter of indifference for the holy Virgin or that she would react in a lukewarm manner – she whose heart, as I have said, is a powerful furnace of love able to set the whole world on fire!
Footnotes
[1] Theodoretus, lib. IV Eccles. Hist., c. 24.
[2] Rom. ix. 3.
Because of the interest she has in their welfare
2 What I have said so far amounts to quite a lot but it is still not everything since it is true that, even were there nothing else at stake, her own interest would oblige her to call out for water and to make use of all those persons she could find so as to reduce the effects of the fire. She would be obliged to do this in virtue of being Lady of the household and Queen, faced with losing those of her subjects who were caught in the fire. She would be obliged in virtue of her position as Spouse who would have to share her Husband’s experiences for better or worse. She would be obliged in virtue of her position as Mother who would feel sick at heart to lose any of her children. I am referring to her as Mother because I have demonstrated elsewhere that all the children of salvation were conceived within her, borne within her womb, nourished at her breasts and raised by her loving dedication. Let anyone try to tell me that a Mother such as this would fail to be touched by the loss of her beloved children, or fail to be moved by the love of those who are willing to risk their lives to save them in the midst of the dangers surrounding them?
Because of the love she has for her Son
3 But what shall I say about the incomprehensible love she has for her Son and the esteem she has for the precious blood that He shed for the salvation of souls? What a sword of sorrow she would receive every time it is is shed because of sinners, if sorrow were able to pierce her heart at present! On the contrary, what joy it is for her to see it falling on good ground and producing the fruits which she wants. How will she look upon those who collect it until the last drop, waiting for a moment to put it to good use? What courage must she instil in these so that they never weary of this practice? What graces must she grant them so they may acquit themselves worthily in such a holy undertaking? With what love and affection must she bless their plans and look favourably upon their undertakings? In order to move swiftly onto practical matters, I am here leaving out any mention of those countless other considerations which render dear to her all those who work for the zeal of souls.
© Peter Bloor 2025
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SUB tuum præsidium confugimus, Sancta Dei Genitrix. Nostras deprecationes ne despicias in necessitatibus, sed a periculis cunctis libera nos semper, Virgo gloriosa et benedicta. Amen.
The Virgin of Tenderness. >12th century.
Totus tuus ego sum
Et omnia mea tua sunt;
Tecum semper tutus sum:
Ad Jesum per Mariam.
He that hearkeneth to me, shall not be confounded: and they that work by me, shall not sin. They that explain me shall have life everlasting. Ecclesiasticus (Sirach) xxiv. 30-31.

