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Contemplation: Blessed Virgin Mary at the Death of Jesus
At the death of my son, all things were disturbed. For the divinity, which
was never separated from Him, not even in death, in that hour of His death seemed to
partake of His suffering, although the divinity could suffer no pain of penalty, being
impassible and immutable. My Son suffered pain in all His members and even in His heart, which
nevertheless, being divine, is immortal; His soul, also, which was immortal, suffered because it left the body. The
assembled angels also seemed to be, as it were, disturbed, when they saw God in humanity
suffer on earth. But how could angels, who are immortal, be troubled? Truly, like a just
man, when he sees his friend suffer anything from which he is to reap great glory; he
rejoices, indeed, for the glory he is to gain, but grieves, nevertheless, in a manner, for
his suffering. So the angels grieved, as it were for His Passion, although they are
impassible. But they rejoiced at His future glory, and the benefit to result from His
Passion. The elements, too, were all troubled; the sun and the moon lost their splendor,
the earth quaked, the rocks were rent, the graves opened, at the death of my Son. All the
Gentiles were troubled wherever they were, because there came in their hearts a certain
sting of grief, although they knew not whence. The heart, too, of those who crucified Him,
was in tribulation in that hour, but not for their glory. The very unclean spirits were
troubled in that hour, and gathered together were troubled. Those, too, who were in
Abraham's bosom, were much troubled, so that they would have preferred to be in hell for
eternity rather than behold their Lord paying such a penalty. But what pain I, who stood
by my Son, a Virgin and His Mother, then suffered, no one can imagine. This excerpt was taken from The Revelations of Saint Bridget
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