Chapter 4 : Love – a third 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).
§ 5. The fifth sign of love: Having a tender and fervent love for her dear Son
17 O God of love! What words can we find to describe the feelings of the Saints when it comes to this and the various ways in which Jesus strengthened their love so as to make them sharers in His Cross and His sufferings?
18 How many times did St Lidwina accompany the Saviour on the Way of the Cross from the Garden of Olives to Calvary, returning with bruises on her swollen feet, gashes in her legs, split and bleeding lips, dislocated limbs, covered in thorns, thistles and spines – showing that her experience was not an imaginary one but involved a real participation in the torments and suffering of the Spouse who was so dear to her heart?Blessed Teresa of Jesus had such a great thirst for these that her everyday motto was: to suffer or to die.Alphonsus Rodríguez was a Brother in the Society of Jesus and the following words were always on his lips: Most sweet Jesus and Mary: allow me to suffer for you and to die for love of you; may I give all of myself to you and keep nothing for myself.Her most Serene Highness Philippa of Guelders (whom I mentioned earlier) was so sensitive in this regard that on hearing the least word spoken about the Cross, the spear, the thorns or the Passion of her dear Jesus, she would be overcome with sighs and burst into tears; these would be accompanied by such violent palpitations of the heart that people would run to help this faithful follower of the Cross as she languished and swooned with love. Her languor and suffering increased noticeably in the last seven years of her life. Her travails would start on Thursday evening and last until Saturday morning. Apart from this, she would experience such unusual pains, piercing sensations and emotional turbulence that she was forced to spend the whole of Friday lying on a bed, with her eyes fixed on a Crucifix. During this time, the powerful hand of her Master gradually honed her so that she might become like unto Him.On countless occasions, Blessed Mary Magdalene de’ Pazzi experienced in both her body and in her soul the terrible torments that the Saviour of the world, her dear Spouse, had endured on the Cross. There was one time she experienced an ecstasy lasting twenty-six hours when she followed in the footsteps of her Lord, having the same feelings as if she had been with Him during His agony in the garden, had been seized and bound by the Jews, dragged through the streets, taken before Pilate, scourged at the pillar, shown to the people, condemned to death and forced to carry the Cross to Calvary. Stretching out one hand and then the other as though she had actually been nailed to the Cross, she was then miraculously raised to her feet without bending her knees or otherwise changing her posture before finding herself with her back against the wall as though she had been crucified. There she remained for a long time, uttering all the words that Jesus did on the Cross. Finally, just as though her soul had separated from her body which now became unable to remain in this position, she bowed her head and fell towards the ground. She would have suffered injury if the other Sisters had not suddenly rushed forward to help her and received her into their arms.
Did not St Catherine of Genoa spend thirty-six years of her life in continual suffering? What part of the martyrdom undergone by her dear Spouse did she not share, including His effusion of blood – for she too shed a quantity of blood before her death; the rest had been consumed by an interior fire blazing incessantly within her which burned so ardently that she could make water boil by simply dipping her hand in it.
19 It may readily be thought that by highlighting the above individuals I may have been unfair in certain ways to others – granted that all Saints have had the honour, some to a greater and some to a lesser degree, of bearing the marks of their crucified Master. Accordingly, let us conclude these examples with a consideration that will put us back on track and lead us once more to the Virgin whom we left only for a short while in order to focus upon her Son and His Passion : namely, that the Mother of love is like the Mistress of a household dispensing favours similar to those we have been discussing. Through these, she shows her tender love for her dear children and those who would claim such favours must, after God himself, have their principal recourse in her.
Such has always been the mind of Holy Church which addresses the following prayer to her.
Sweet source of love and clemency,Pray listen to my heartfelt cries:May all my sorrow, all my sighsTo thine own grief united be.Pray make my soul a furnace-fireSo when thy work is meetly doneThy dear and well-beloved SonMay cherish it and much admire.Sweet Virgin grant this my request:Within my heart do thou engraveThose marks whereby Our Lord did saveMankind from sin through His conquest.O Virgin since my wicked crimeDelivered Jesus to the gibbet,Do not mine eyes’ their tears inhibitSince they would mourn till end of time.Dear Saviour how I envy Thee,Derided and Thy strength deplete!With gall may I be now repleteUntil life’s end doth summon me.This Cross of wood my heart o’erpowersAnd like a tree with glorious rootsIt sendeth forth triumphant shootsWhose thorns for me are fragrant flowers.Oh mirror innocent and pure,From baseness turn thy breast away;Allow my dreams to have their daySo I thy suff’ring might endure.The nails to glory I’ve assigned,The reed sweet thoughts within me urges;Whilst all the cruelty of the scourgesIs colloquy within my mind.Permitting thus my heart’s distress,Wilt thou this favour then decree –Through love of Jesus I may seeMe drowned in sadness shared with thee?
20 It is not, however, merely the sufferings of her beloved Son that she has the power to allocate to whomsoever she chooses, but also the love of Jesus in all its extent which she shares with the same Jesus and her dear children according to the order given her by God, the desire she notices within them, and the good services they perform. In this connection, here is a very humble prayer with which their faithful servant St Anselm concludes one of his devout orisons:
Sweet Jesus and Sweet Mother of Jesus, since it is reasonable that we should love all that you love, grant us love for the Father of our life who is worthy of all love. Oh Thou Lord who art faithful and true in thy love for men, will it be said that Thou hast loved us unto death and that thou canst yet refuse Thy love and that of Thy dear Mother to those who ask each of Thee from the bottom of their hearts and with their most tender affection? Dear Mother of this Divine Lover, whom thou didst merit to bear within thy sacred womb and to nourish at thy virginal breasts, wouldst thou really be able to refuse us thy love and that of thy most adorable Son, which we ask of thee with our hands joined in prayer, appealing to the gentleness of thy maternal heart? How I pray that my mind may honour you as you deserve! How I pray that my heart may love you as is fitting! How I pray that my soul may cherish you to the utmost of my ability – so that all which is in me, and all I am myself, may sing forever: May the Son and the Mother be praised for ever and ever!
© 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.

