Chapter 6 : The Fifth Star or Splendour of the Crown of Power of the MOTHER OF GOD
She is the Mother of the world to come and Redeemer of our race
Continuing our translation of the 1845 reprint of Fr François Poiré's Triple Crown of the Mother of God (1643 French edition).
§ 6. The extreme humility which may be seen in the way she helped to restore fallen men
The fourth misfortune: enslavement
5 Adam and man’s fourth misfortune may be called enslavement and captivity. St Peter declared[1] that the man who allows himself to be conquered is by right the prisoner of war and the slave of his conqueror. The man might object to this law, saying that he had not been taken in the course of a real war but only captured by trickery and through betrayal. For having disobeyed the commandment of his Lord, however, he would deserve to be placed under the power of Satan, who even if he is not a legitimate conqueror, is at least to be considered as executing the justice of God to whom the man was indebted in love and obedience. This raging foe, who is the king of all the children of pride, in this way slowly gained power over man by exploiting his prisoners' weaknesses and cowardice. From being a simple gaoler who was himself shackled in irons, he became the Prince of this world[2]. He inflicted upon men the most ferocious tyranny imaginable, loading upon them continual afflictions. As the prophet David remarked[3], he will exact from them usury upon usury, and for each sin that a man commits, he will be made to pay a thousandfold over, and be made to pay for fifty others too, swelling in this way the capital owed with interest so as to keep him more and more enslaved.
Footnotes
[1] For by whom a man is overcome, of the same also he is the slave. II Pet. ii.19.
[2] John xiv. 30; see also: And he said to him: To thee will I give all this power, and the glory of them; for to me they are delivered, and to whom I will, I give them. If thou therefore wilt adore before me, all shall be thine. Luke iv. 5-7.
[3] Ps. LXXI. 14.
The fifth misfortune: imprisonment and darkness
6 The fifth of man’s misfortunes was imprisonment in the darkness at the bottom of a pit where this proud tyrant held him so as to prevent his escape. The darkness there was so total that the prophet Isaiah refers to this place as the region of the shadow of death[1]. The darkness is nothing less than the dense cloud of ignorance in which a man’s understanding is shrouded the first time he falls into sin. The darkness becomes even more opaque and suffocating after his frequent relapses, so that increasingly he plunges more deeply into the stinking quagmire of sin. This is the reason for the deep and terrible misery in which his heart and mind continually languish. Poor Tobias the elder[2] once said there was no more happiness left in the world for him once he had lost his sight and the ability to enjoy heaven’s gentle light; in the same way, the wretched sinner is cut off from the sun and condemned to live in a darkness worse than that endured by the Cimmerians[3], where he can receive neither joy nor consolation in the midst of his misery. What hope could he have had for these? On the one hand, he had deserved to lose God’s loving presence and on the other he found himself delivered into the hands of the most vicious and inhuman tyrant imaginable.
Footnotes
[1] The people that walked in darkness, have seen a great light: to them that dwelt in the region of the shadow of death, light is risen. Isai. ix. 2.See also Matt. iv. 16.
[2] Tobias (Tobit) ii.
[3] A people fabled by the ancients to live in perpetual darkness. 1871 There the people dwell, Of the Cimmerians, in eternal cloud and darkness. W. C. Bryant, translation of Homer, Odyssey vol. I. xi. 267.
The sixth misfortune: despair at being unable to escape
7 Man’s last misfortune is one which puts the seal on all the rest: his despair at not being able to escape from the consequences of his sin. For even if he had shed tears continually, seeking a release from this dreadful condition, it was beyond his power to escape; and even if every creature had done this, they would not have achieved anything. To those who swallow sin like water and go along with hell’s temptations without any fear whatsoever, I say in all sincerity that they should seriously reflect upon what we have been saying and realize how easy it is to go down the path leading to death, but how difficult it is to escape. The Sage had every good reason to say that he who reflects upon this thought several times each day would never ever want to hand himself over to such a cruel enemy. In the name of the Lord, if the infinite mercy of the Redeemer Had not melted before the sight of our miseries, we would have been obliged to endure them for all eternity. Is it necessary to state that whoever ends up in this misfortune after understanding this question more clearly, must be someone who has no feeling of compassion for himself and no sense of humanity towards Him who was to redeem us at such a high price? What could be the end result of such disdain and of such a profound forgetfulness of one’s salvation, other than than to be abandoned by Him whose every grace was looked upon with scorn and whose blood of the New Testament was trampled under foot? Do not engage in this risky game if you are not willing to pay back the principal together with interest; and whoever is so rash as to go against God, let him remember that He did not spare the Angels of Heaven, any more than the head of our race, whom he had so generously enriched with every sort of natural gift and supernatural favour. Just as it would be a tremendous act of folly for such a person to imagine that he was dearer and more precious to God than those we just mentioned, it must follow that he has lost his wits if he thinks he could ever escape with a better reckoning than they were given.
While thoughtful readers reflect upon this point which is so important, I am now returning to the glorious Virgin.
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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.
© Peter Bloor 2025