Stories & Legends
Miracles in Spain - 13
The Cleric Who Honored the Joys of Our Lady
The monk honored Our Lady
by chanting her Joys
As many as there were wounds suffered by the Son, so many Joys did he recite to the One who bore Him. Indeed the cleric was good and very deserving, and he received a good reward, a good compensation.
In these five Joys that we have named we must understand more. For there are five bodily senses that make us sin – sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch. If we offer freely to the Glorious Mother these five Joys that we have named for the errors we commit due to these five senses, we will earn pardon through Her holy intercession.
Now, this cleric fell gravely ill. His eyes were about to pop out of his head. He considered his journey to be complete and his final hour to be drawing near.
As his hour approached, the Mother of the Heavenly King appeared to him, the One who in mercy is without peer. She said to him:
"Friend, may the Spiritual Father save you, who were His Mother's loyal friend. Take heart, fear not, be not discouraged, know that you will soon be relieved of this pain. Consider yourself at one with God, free from care. With Me near you, you need not fear; consider yourself cured of all the pain. I always received from you service and love, and now I wish to repay you for your labor."
The dying monk received a visit
from the Glorious One
For, although the cleric thought that he would leave his sickbed to be once again with his friends, his soul did not receive such an extension. It forsook the body, it had to leave it. The Glorious One, Queen of Heaven, took it. The godchild went with the good Godmother; and the Angels carried it to Heaven where blessings never cease.
What the Glorious Mother promised him, blessed may She be, She indeed fulfilled. What She said, he did not understand, but everything She said turned out true.
All who heard the voice and saw this happen understood that the Glorious One performed a miracle. For she came herself to deliver her loved one from the perils of life. They considered the cleric to be very fortunate, and all glorified the precious Virgin.
Adapted from Gonzalo de Berceo, Miracles of Our Lady,
trans. by T. Mount and A. Cash, Un of Lexington Press, 1997, pp. 38-409
Posted October 10, 2020
trans. by T. Mount and A. Cash, Un of Lexington Press, 1997, pp. 38-409
Posted October 10, 2020