LE PELERINAGE DE
LOURDES
ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PIUS XII
WARNING AGAINST MATERIALISM ON THE CENTENARY
OF THE APPARITIONS AT LOURDES
TO THE CARDINALS, ARCHBISHOPS, AND BISHOPS OF FRANCE
IN PEACE AND COMMUNION WITH THE APOSTOLIC SEE
Beloved Sons and Venerable Brethren,
Greetings and Apostolic Benediction.
Deep in our soul are profound and pleasant memories of the pilgrimage
to Lourdes which We had the privilege of making when We went to
preside, in the name of Our Predecessor, Pius XI, over the Eucharistic
and Marian celebrations marking the close of the Jubilee of the
Redemption.
2. We are particularly pleased, therefore, to learn that, on the
initiative of the Bishop of Tarbes and Lourdes, this Marian city
is preparing an appropriate celebration for the centenary of the
apparitions of the Immaculate Virgin at the grotto of Massabielle,
and that an international committee has been set up for this purpose
under the presidency of His Eminence Eugene Cardinal Tisserant,
Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals.
3. We wish to join with you, Beloved Sons and Venerable Brothers,
in thanking God for the great favor granted your country, and for
the many graces He has bestowed on multitudes of pilgrims during
the past century.
4. We wish to invite all Our children to renew in this jubilee
year their confident and generous devotion to her who, in the words
of Saint Pius X, deigned to establish at Lourdes "the seat
of her immense kindness."[1]
5. Every Christian land is a Marian land; there is not a nation
redeemed in the blood of Christ which does not glory in proclaiming
Mary its Mother and Patroness. This truth is brought into sharp
relief by reflection on the history of France. Devotion to the Mother
of God dates back to the early days of France's evangelization,
and Chartres, one of the most ancient Marian shrines, still attracts
a great number of pilgrims, including thousands of young people.
6. The Middle Ages, which, especially through Saint Bernard, sang
Mary's glory and celebrated her mysteries, witnessed a marvelous
flowering of French cathedrals dedicated to our Lady: Le Puy, Rheims,
Amiens, Paris, and so many others. . . With their spires upthrust
they announce from afar the glory of the Immaculate; they heighten
its splendor in the pure light of their stained-glass windows and
in the harmonious beauty of their statues. They bear witness above
all to the faith of a people which outdid itself in a magnificent
display of energy, erecting against the sky of France the permanent
homage of its devotion to Mary.
7. In the cities and the countryside, on the hilltops and overlooking
the sea, shrines consecrated to Mary - whether humble chapels or
splendid basilicas - little by little enfolded the country in their
protective shadow. Princes and shepherds of souls and the faithful
without number have come to these shrines through the centuries,
to the holy Virgin whom they have greeted with titles expressive
of their hope or gratitude.
8. Here they invoke Notre Dame de Miséricorde [Our Lady
of Mercy], de Toute Aide [of All Help], de Bon Secours [of Prompt
Succor]. There the pilgrim seeks refuge near Notre Dame de la Garde
[Our Lady of Watchfulness], de Pitié, or de Consolation.
Elsewhere the pilgrim's prayer rises to Notre Dame de Lumiere [Our
Lady of Light], de Paix, de Joie, or d'Esperance [of Hope]. Or he
implores the intercession of Notre Dame des Vertus, des Miracles,
or des Victoires. It is a wonderful litany of invocations whose
unceasing recital tells, from province to province, the blessings
which the Mother of God has bestowed on the land of France through
the ages.
9. In many ways the nineteenth century was to become, after the
turmoil of the Revolution, a century of Marian favors. To mention
but a single instance, everyone is familiar today with the "miraculous
medal." This medal, with its image of "Mary conceived
without sin," was revealed to a humble daughter of Saint Vincent
de Paul whom We had the joy of inscribing in the catalogue of Saints,
and it has spread its spiritual and material wonders everywhere.
10. A few years later, from February 11 to July 16, 1858, the Blessed
Virgin Mary was pleased, as a new favor, to manifest herself in
the territory of the Pyrenees to a pious and pure child of a poor,
hardworking, Christian family. "She came to Bernadette,"
We once said. "She made her her confidante, her collaboratrix,
the instrument of her maternal tenderness and of the merciful power
of her Son, to restore the world in Christ through a new and incomparable
outpouring of the Redemption."[2]
11. You are quite familiar with the events which took place at
Lourdes at that time, the spiritual proportions of which are better
measured today. You know, Beloved Sons and Venerable Brethren, the
astonishing circumstances under which the voice of that child, the
messenger of the Immaculate, compelled the world's recognition despite
ridicule, doubt, and opposition. You know the steadfastness and
purity of her testimony, wisely put to the test by episcopal authority
and approved as early as 1862.
12. Crowds flocked even then and they still surge into the grotto
of the apparitions, to the miraculous spring, and into the shrine
erected at Mary's request.
13. There is the moving procession of the lowly, the sick, and
the afflicted. There is the impressive pilgrimage of thousands of
the faithful from a particular diocese or country. There is the
quiet visit of a troubled soul seeking truth. "No one,"
We once said, "has ever seen such a procession of suffering
in one spot on earth, never such radiance of peace, serenity, and
joy!"[3]
14. Nor will anyone ever know, We might add, the full sum of the
benefits which the world owes to the aid of the Virgin! "O
specus felix, decorate divae Matris aspectu! Veneranda rupes, unde
vitales scatuere pleno gurgite Iymhae!"[4]
15. This century of Marian devotion has also in a certain way woven
close bonds between the See of Peter and the shrine in the Pyrenees,
bonds which We are pleased to acknowledge.
16. The Virgin Mary herself desired this tie. "What the Sovereign
Pontiff defined in Rome through his infallible Magisterium, the
Immaculate Virgin Mother of God, blessed among all women, wanted
to confirm by her own words, it seems, when shortly afterward she
manifested herself by a famous apparition at the grotto of Massabielle.
. ."[5] Certainly the infallible word of the Roman Pontiff,
the authoritative interpreter of revealed truth, needed no heavenly
confirmation that it might be accepted by the faithful. But with
what emotion and gratitude did the Christian people and their pastors
receive from the lips of Bernadette this answer which came from
heaven: "I am the Immaculate Conception!"
17. It is therefore not surprising that it should have pleased
Our Predecessors to multiply their favors toward this sanctuary.
18. As early as 1869 Pius IX of holy memory rejoiced that the obstacles
created against Lourdes by the malice of men "rendered stronger
and more evident the clarity of the fact."[6] And strengthened
by this assurance, he heaped spiritual benefits upon the newly erected
church and crowned the statue of our Lady of Lourdes.
19. In 1892 Leo XIII granted the proper Office and Mass of the
feast "In apparitione Beatae Mariae Virginis Immaculatae,"
which his successor was to extend to the Universal Church a short
time later. Henceforth the ancient appeal of the Scriptures was
to have a new application: "Arise, my love, my beautiful one,
and come. My dove in the clefts of the rock, in the hollow place
of the wall. . ."[7]
20. Near the end of his life, this great Pontiff decided to install
and bless a reproduction of the grotto of Massabielle in the Vatican
gardens, and in those days his voice rose to the Virgin of Lourdes
in an ardent and trusting prayer: "In her power may the Virgin
Mother, who once cooperated through her love with the birth of the
faithful into the Church, now be the means and guardian of our salvation;
may she return the tranquillity of peace to troubled souls; may
she hasten the return of Jesus Christ in private and public life."[8]
21. The fiftieth anniversary of the definition of the dogma of
the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin gave Saint Pius
X occasion to bear witness in a solemn document to the historic
connection between this act of the Magisterium and the apparitions
at Lourdes. "Pius IX," he wrote, "had hardly defined
it to be of Catholic faith that Mary was from her very origin exempt
from sin, when the Virgin herself began performing miracles at Lourdes."[9]
22. Soon afterward he created the episcopal title of Lourdes, attached
it to that of Tarbes, and signed the introduction of the cause for
the beatification of Bernadette. It was especially reserved to this
great Pope of the Eucharist to emphasize and promote the wonderful
harmony existing at Lourdes between Eucharistic worship and Marian
prayer. "Devotion to the Mother of God," he noted, "has
led to a flowering at Lourdes of remarkable and ardent devotion
to Christ our Lord."[10]
23. It could not have been otherwise. Everything about Mary directs
us to her Son, our only Savior, in anticipation of whose merits
she was immaculate and full of grace. Everything about Mary raises
us to the praise of the adorable Trinity; and so it was that Bernadette,
praying her rosary before the grotto, learned from the words and
bearing of the Blessed Virgin how she should give glory to the Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit.
24. We are pleased in this centenary year to adopt as Our home
the homage rendered by Saint Pius X: "The unique glory of the
shrine of Lourdes lies in the fact that people are drawn there from
everywhere by Mary to adore Jesus Christ in the august Sacrament,
so that this shrine - at once a center of Marian devotion and a
throne of the Eucharistic mystery - surpasses in glory, it seems,
all others in the Catholic world.[11]
25. Benedict XV wanted to enrich this shrine, already loaded down
with favors, with new and valuable indulgences, and though the tragic
circumstances of his Pontificate did not allow him to multiply public
expressions of his devotion, he nevertheless willed to honor the
Marian city by granting to its bishop the privilege of the pallium
at the place of the apparitions.
26. Pius XI, who had been to Lourdes himself as a pilgrim, continued
the work of Benedict XV. He had the joy of raising to the honors
of the altar the girl who had been favored by the Virgin and who,
in the habit of the Congregation of Charity and Christian Instruction,
had become Sister Marie Bernard. Did he not, so to say, authenticate
on his part the promise made by the Immaculate to young Bernadette
that she would "be happy not in this world, but in the next"?
27. From that time on, Nevers, which takes pride in keeping Bernadette's
precious relics, has attracted a great number of Lourdes pilgrims
who have wanted to learn from her how the message of Lourdes applies
to our day.
28. Soon the illustrious Pontiff who, like his predecessors, had
honored the anniversary celebrations of the apparitions by sending
a legate, decided to conclude the Jubilee of the Redemption at the
Grotto of Massabielle where, in his own words, "the Immaculate
Virgin Mary appeared several times to Blessed Bernadette Soubirous,
and, in her kindness, exhorted all men to do penance at the scene
of these wondrous apparitions, a place she has showered with graces
and miracles."[12] Truly, Pius XI concluded, is this sanctuary
"now justly considered one of the principal Marian shrines
in the world."[13]
29. We could not refrain from adding Our voice to this unanimous
chorus of praise. We did so particularly in Our Encyclical Fulgens
corona, by recalling, in the spirit of Our Predecessors, that "the
Blessed Virgin Mary herself wanted to confirm by some special sign
the definition which the Vicar on earth of her Divine Son had pronounced
amidst the vigorous approbation of the whole Church."[14]
30. On that occasion We recalled how the Roman Pontiffs, conscious
of the importance of this pilgrimage, had never ceased to "enrich
it with spiritual favors and generous benefits."[15]
31. The history of the past century, which We have recalled in
its broad outlines, is a constant illustration of this Pontifical
generosity, the most recent manifestation of which has been the
closing at Lourdes of the centenary year of the definition of the
dogma of the Immaculate Conception.
32. But We would like especially to recall to your attention, Beloved
Sons and Venerable Brothers, a recent document in which We encouraged
the growth of a missionary apostolate in your beloved country. We
intended by this message to call to mind the "singular merits
which France had acquired through the centuries in the progress
of the Catholic faith," and for this reason "We turned
Our mind and heart to Lourdes where, four years after the definition
of the dogma, the Immaculate Virgin herself gave supernatural confirmation
to the declaration of the Supreme Teacher, by appearances, conversations,
and miracles."[16]
33. Today once again We turn to the famous shrine as it prepares
to receive the crowds of centenary pilgrims on the shores of the
River Gave. In the past century ardent public and private prayers
have obtained from God many graces of healing and conversion at
Lourdes through Mary's intercession, and We are firmly confident
that in this jubilee year our Lady intends to respond open-handedly
once more to the expectation of her children. But We are particularly
convinced that she urges us to master the spiritual lessons of the
apparitions and set ourselves upon the path which she has so clearly
traced for us.
34. These lessons, a faithful echo of the Gospel message, accentuate
in a striking way the differences which set off God's judgments
from the vain wisdom of this world.
35. In a society which is barely conscious of the ills which assail
it, which conceals its miseries and injustices beneath a prosperous,
glittering, and trouble-free exterior, the Immaculate Virgin, whom
sin has never touched, manifests herself to an innocent child. With
a mother's compassion she looks upon this world redeemed by her
Son's blood, where sin accomplishes so much ruin daily, and three
times makes her urgent appeal: "Penance, penance, penance!"
She even appeals for outward expressions: "Go kiss the earth
in penance for sinners." And to this gesture must be added
a prayer: "Pray to God for sinners."
36. As in the days of John the Baptist, as at the start of Jesus'
ministry, this command, strong and rigorous, shows men the way which
leads back to God: "Repent!"[17] Who would dare to say
that this appeal for the conversion of hearts is untimely today?
37. But the Mother of God could come to her children only as a
messenger of forgiveness and hope. Already the water flows at her
feet: "Omnes sitientes, venite ad aquas, et haurietis salutem
a Domino."[18] At this spring where gentle Bernadette was the
first to go to drink and wash, all miseries of soul and body will
flow away. "And I went and washed and I see," the grateful
pilgrim will be able to reply, in the words of the blind man of
the Gospel.[19]
38. But as was true for the crowds which pressed around Jesus,
the healing of bodily ills is still a gesture of mercy and a sign
of that power which the Son of Man has to forgive sins.[20] The
Virgin invites us to the blessed grotto in her Divine Son's name
for the conversion of our hearts and in the hope of forgiveness.
Will we heed her?
39. The true greatness of this jubilee year is in the humble answer
of the man who admits that he is a sinner. Great blessings for the
Church could be justly anticipated if every pilgrim to Lourdes -
in fact, every Christian united in spirit with the centenary celebrations
- would first realize within himself this work of sanctification,
"not in word, neither with the tongue, but in deed and in truth."[21]
Moreover, everything invites him to this work, for nowhere, perhaps,
except at Lourdes does one feel so moved to prayer, to the forgetting
of oneself, and to charity.
40. When they see the devotion of the stretcher-bearers and the
serene peace of the invalids, when they consider the spirit of brotherhood
which unites the faithful of all races in a single prayer, when
they observe the spontaneous mutual assistance and the sincere fervor
of the pilgrims kneeling before the grotto, then the best of men
are seized by the appeal of a life more completely dedicated to
the service of God and their brothers; the less fervent become conscious
of their lukewarmness and return to the road of prayer; quite hardened
and skeptical sinners are often touched by grace, or at least, if
they are honest, are moved by the testimony of this "multitude
of believers of one heart and one soul."[22]
41. But in itself this experience of a few brief days of pilgrimage
is not usually sufficient to engrave in indelible letters the call
of Mary to a genuine spiritual conversion. That is why We exhort
the shepherds of dioceses and all priests to outdo one another in
zeal that the centenary pilgrimages may benefit by preparation,
and, above all, by a follow-up which will be as conducive as possible
to a profound and lasting action of grace.
42. Only on condition of a return to regular reception of the sacraments,
a regard for Christian morals in everyday life, entry into the ranks
of Catholic Action and other apostolates recommended by the Church,
can the great crowds expected to gather at Lourdes in 1958 yield
- according to the expectations of the Immaculate Virgin herself
- the fruits of salvation so necessary to mankind today.
43. But however important it may be, the conversion of the individual
pilgrim is not enough. We exhort you in this jubilee year, Beloved
Sons and Venerable Brothers, to inspire among the faithful entrusted
to your care a common effort for the Christian renewal of society
in answer to Mary's appeal.
44. "May blind spirits . . . be illumined by the light of
truth and justice," Pius XI asked during the Marian feasts
of the Jubilee of the Redemption, "so that those who have gone
astray into error may be brought back to the straight path, that
a just liberty may be granted the Church everywhere, and that an
era of peace and true prosperity may come upon all the nations."[23]
45. But the world, which today affords so many justifiable reasons
for pride and hope, is also undergoing a terrible temptation to
materialism which has been denounced by Our Predecessors and Ourselves
on many occasions.
46. This materialism is not confined to that condemned philosophy
which dictates the policies and economy of a large segment of mankind.
It rages also in a love of money which creates ever greater havoc
as modern enterprises expand, and which, unfortunately, determines
many of the decisions which weigh heavy on the life of the people.
It finds expression in the cult of the body, in excessive desire
for comforts, and in flight from all the austerities of life. It
encourages scorn for human life, even for life which is destroyed
before seeing the light of day.
47. This materialism is present in the unrestrained search for
pleasure, which flaunts itself shamelessly and tries, through reading
matter and entertainments, to seduce souls which are still pure.
It shows itself in lack of interest in one's brother, in selfishness
which crushes him, in justice which deprives him of his rights -
in a word, in that concept of life which regulates everything exclusively
in terms of material prosperity and earthly satisfactions.
48. "And I will say to my soul. the rich man said, Soul, thou
hast many good things laid up for many years; take thy ease, eat,
drink, be merry. But God said to him, Thou fool, this night do they
demand thy soul of thee."[24]
49. To a society which in its public life often contests the supreme
rights of God, to a society which would gain the whole world at
the expense of its own soul[25] and thus hasten to its own destruction,
the Virgin Mother has sent a cry of alarm.
50. May priests be attentive to her appeal and have the courage
to preach the great truths of salvation fearlessly. The only lasting
renewal, in fact, will be one based on the changeless principles
of faith, and it is the duty of priests to form the consciences
of Christian people.
51. Just as the Immaculate, compassionate of our miseries, but
discerning our real needs, came to men to remind them of the essential
and austere steps of religious conversion, so the ministers of the
Word of God should, with supernatural confidence, point out to souls
the narrow road which leads to life.[26] They will do this without
forgetting the spirit of kindness and patience which they profess,
but also without concealing anything of the Gospel's demands.[27]
In the school of Mary they will learn to live not only that they
may give Christ to the world, but also, if need be, to await with
faith the hour of Jesus and to remain at the foot of the cross.
52. Assembled around their priests, the faithful must cooperate
in this effort for renewal. Wherever Providence has placed a man,
there is always more to be done for God's cause. Our thoughts turn
first to the host of consecrated souls who, within the framework
of the Church, devote themselves to innumerable good works. Their
religious vows dedicate them more than others to fight victoriously
under Mary's banner against the onslaught which inordinate lust
for freedom, riches, and pleasure makes on the world. In response
to the Immaculate, they will resolve to oppose the attacks of evil
with the weapons of prayer and penance and by triumphs of charity.
53. Our thoughts turn also to Christian families. to ask them to
remain faithful to their vital mission in society. May they consecrate
themselves in this jubilee year to the Immaculate Heart of Mary!
For married couples this act of piety will be a valuable aid in
performing their conjugal duties of chastity and faithfulness. It
will keep pure the atmosphere in which their children grow up. Even
more, it will make the family, inspired by its devotion to Mary,
a living center of social rebirth and apostolic influence.
54. Beyond the family circle, professional and civic affairs offer
a vast field of action for Christians who desire to work for the
renewal of society. Gathered about the Virgin's feet, docile to
her exhortations, they will first take a searching look at themselves
and will try to uproot from their consciences any false judgments
and selfish impulses, fearing the falsehood of a love for God which
does not translate itself into effective love for their brothers.[28]
55. Christians of every class and every nation will try to be of
one mind in truth and charity, and to banish misunderstanding and
suspicion. Without doubt, social structures and economic pressures
of enormous weight burden the good will of men and often paralyze
it. But if it is true, as Our predecessors and We Ourselves have
insistently stressed, that the quest for social and political peace
among men is, above all, a moral problem, then no reform can bear
fruit, no agreement can be lasting without a conversion and cleansing
of heart. In this jubilee year the Virgin of Lourdes reminds all
men of this truth!
56. And if in her solicitude Mary looks upon some of her children
with a special predilection, is it not, Beloved Sons and Venerable
Brothers, upon the lowly, the poor, and the afflicted whom Jesus
loved so much? "Come to me, all you who labor and are burdened,
and I will give you rest," she seems to say along with her
divine Son.[29]
57. Go to her, you who are crushed by material misery, defenseless
against the hardships of life and the indifference of men. Go to
her, you who are assailed by sorrows and moral trials. Go to her,
beloved invalids and infirm, you who are sincerely welcomed and
honored at Lourdes as the suffering members of our Lord. Go to her
and receive peace of heart, strength for your daily duties, joy
for the sacrifice you offer.
58. The Immaculate Virgin, who knows the secret ways by which grace
operates in souls and the silent work of this supernatural leaven
in this world, knows also the great price which God attaches to
your sufferings united to those of the Savior. They can greatly
contribute, We have no doubt, to this Christian renewal of society
which We implore of God through the powerful intercession of His
Mother.
59. In response to the prayers of the sick, of the humble, of all
the pilgrims to Lourdes, may Mary turn her maternal gaze upon those
still outside the limits of the only fold, the Church, that they
may come together in unity. May she look upon those who are in search,
who are thirsty for truth, and lead them to the source of living
waters.
60. May she cast her glance upon the vast continents and their
limitless human areas where Christ is unfortunately so little known,
so little loved; and may she obtain for the Church freedom and the
joy of being able to respond everywhere, always youthful, holy,
and apostolic, to the longing of men.
61. "Kindly come . . . ," said the Virgin to Bernadette.
This discreet invitation, which does not compel but is addressed
to the heart and requests with delicacy a free and generous response,
the Mother of God addresses again to her children in France and
the whole world. Christians will not remain deaf to this appeal;
they will go to Mary. It is to each of them that We wish to say
at the conclusion of this letter with St. Bernard: "In periculis,
in angustiis, in rebus dubiis, Mariam cogita, Mariam invoces. .
. Ipsam sequens, non devias; ipsam rogans, non desperas; ipsam cogitans,
non erras; ipsa tenente, non corruis; ipsa protegente, non metuis;
ipsa duce, non fatigaris, ipsa propitia, pervenis. . . "[30]
62. We are confident, Dear Sons and Venerable Brothers, that Mary
will hear your prayer and Ours. We ask her this on the feast of
the Visitation, which fittingly honors her who a century ago visited
the land of France.
63. And in inviting you to sing to God together with the Immaculate
Virgin the Magnificat of your gratitude, We invoke upon you and
your faithful, on the shrine of Lourdes and its pilgrims, on all
those who bear the responsibilities of the centenary celebration,
the most bounteous outpouring of grace. In token of which We impart
with all Our heart, and with Our constant and paternal best wishes,
the Apostolic Benediction.
Given at Rome, from Saint Peter's, on the feast of the Visitation
of the Most Holy Virgin, July 2, 1957, the nineteenth year of Our
Pontificate.
PIUS XII
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Letter of July 12, 1914: Acta Apostolicae Sedis 6: 1914, p.
376.
2. Discourse delivered at Lourdes on April 28, 1935: Eugenio Cardinal
Pacelli, Discorsi e panegirici (2nd ed., Vatican, 1956) p. 435.
3. Ibid., p. 437.
4. "O blessed grotto, favored by Mary's presence! O hallowed
rock whence spring the living waters of a flowing stream!"
- Office of feast of the Apparitions, Hymn for II Vespers.
5. Decree de Tuto for the Canonization of Saint Bernadette, July
2, 1933: AAS 25: 1933, p. 377.
6. Letter of September 4, 1869, to Henri Lasserre: Vatican Secret
Archives, Ep. lat. anno 1869, n. 388, f. 695.
7. Cant. 2. 13-14. Gradual of the Mass of the feast of the Apparitions.
8. Brief of September 8, 1901: 21 Acta Leonis XIII, 159-160.
9. Encyclical letter Ad diem illum, February 2, 1904: I Acta Pii
X 149.
10. Letter of July 12, 1914: AAS 6: 1914, p. 377.
11. Brief of April 25, 1911: Arch. brev. ap., Pius X, an. 1911,
Div. Lib. IX, pars I, f. 337.
12. Brief of January 11, 1933: Arch. brev. ap. Pius XI, Ind. Perpet.
f. 128.
13. Ibid.
14. Encyclical letter Fulgens corona, September 8, 1953: AAS 45:
1953, p. 578. [English tr. in The Pope Speaks, Vol. l, No. 1, p.43
- Ed.].
15. Ibid.
16. Apostolic constitution Omnium Ecclesiarum, August 15, 1954:
AAS 46: 1954, p. 567.
17. Matt. 3.2; 4.17.
18. Office of the feast of the Apparitions, first Response of Third
Nocturne.
19. John 9. 11 .
20. Cf. Mark 2.10.
21. 1 John 3.18.
22. Acts 4.32.
23. Letter of January 10, 1935: AAS 27, p. 7.
24. Luke 12.19-20.
25. Cf. Mark 8.36.
26. Cf. Matt. 7.14.
27. Cf. Luke 9.55.
28. 1 John 4.20.
29. Matt. 11.28.
30. "Amid dangers, difficulties, and doubts, think of Mary,
invoke Mary's aid.... If you follow her, you will not stray; if
you entreat her, you will not lose hope; if you reflect upon her,
you will not err; if she supports you, you will not fall; if she
protects you, you will not fear; if she leads you, you will not
grow weary; if she is propitious, you will reach your goal...."
Second Homily on the Missus est: PL CLXXXIII, 70-71
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