The Summit of Adoration
by Father Mathurin of the Mother of God
Diabolical plan… or Divine Plan?
God wills or
permits all the
sufferings that
happen. The finest
example to
illustrate this
great truth is
found in Jesus,
God incarnate on
earth. The Gospel
relates that after
the resurrection of
Lazarus, the chief
priests and
doctors of the law
met in the middle of the night, violating their own
laws, going counter to every form of justice. “This
Jesus is resurrecting the dead! If we let Him
continue working His miracles, we are doomed. We
must eliminate Him!” It was a satanic resolution,
directly inspired by the devil. Nevertheless, it was
the Plan of God! All the forces of evil banded
together to destroy Jesus, break Him, annihilate
Him. They executed their diabolical plot, they
slaughtered Jesus: the Plan of God was
accomplished!
Certain people are wondering: “Was the corona
virus concocted by men?” What difference would it
make to know how it started? In the case of Jesus,
was His death the work of men or the work of Satan?
Was His death on the cross divine or diabolical?
Strange to say, it was both! The devils set everything
in motion and gathered their attendants and
henchmen in secret meetings to eliminate that Man.
At the same time, never was a diabolical scheme so
divine! Sometimes ‒ and this is rather surprising ‒
you would say that the more a design is diabolical,
the more it touches upon the divine. There is a
mystery in all of that. It is God who leads and directs
everything to His end.
Once we have understood this, everything takes
on a different light. God directs, and He has the last
word. Souls must enter into His plan, see His hand
behind the most regrettable, terrible, evil, morbid
events. The enemies of Our Lord coveted money and
power, they wanted to establish their own reign, and
our beloved Jesus was thwarting their designs. All
the powers of evil plotted to destroy and slaughter
Jesus: they succeeded in putting to death the Son of
God incarnate! The devils were rubbing their hands
in satisfaction. But when Satan understood that they
had executed the Plan of God, he bit the dust: it was
his greatest defeat. The death of Jesus on the cross
was the salvation willed and conceived by God from
the very beginning. It was the plan He had decreed
for the salvation of man immediately following the
sin of our first parents.
In these times, when diabolical hatred is reaching
its culminating point, a mystery of love is being
prepared for the salvation of humanity: Divine Love
will also attain its apogee. How do we react when
faced with these events? Let us be very careful to
regard everything with views of faith. We need to
have human prudence, of course, but above all we
need to have faith and believe that it is God who is
acting through all these events.
Churches are closed all over the world. Public
officials prohibit any gatherings. They are afraid of
the corona virus. Forbidding access to the
sacraments, Holy Mass and Communion, cannot
come from God. It is a diabolical phenomenon
contrary to God. But God will draw glory from it.
It makes me enormously sad that perpetual
adoration by the faithful has stopped at Montmartre,
where it had been maintained even during the
bombardments of the Second World War. The
situation could have been managed differently, by
setting up a certain control the way it is done to keep
other institutions and businesses open.
Perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrament is a
lightning rod for the nations. The purpose of
perpetual adoration is to assure an uninterrupted
prayer for the Church, for the nation, for the world. I
am certain that the adorers are suffering enormously
from being deprived of it.
Prayer, the remedy to current
problems
We have made an appeal for more prayers. May
each person do his part and give more time to
adoration before the Blessed Sacrament, where
Jesus is really present. If we pray humbly, salvation
will come. Salvation is God. He is summoning us.
We must pray with humility, striking our breast.
Let us make the humble prayer of the publican
who beat his breast, not that of the Pharisee who
found satisfaction in himself and condemned others:
“Those people did this and that! But I am not like the
rest of men.” Oh no! Let us examine our own life
instead: let us humble ourselves and weep over our
sins before God. Considering the lights and graces
we have received, we ought to be giants of sanctity.
In the depths of our soul, let us be convinced that
with all these graces we have received, we are worse
than the others, guiltier before God. Much will be
required of the one who has received much, says
Jesus. All the more will be demanded of the one to
whom more has been given.
1
Let us frequent the sacraments ‒ Mass,
Communion, Confession ‒ which are currently
prohibited almost everywhere. To make up for this,
we ought to frequent them more, multiply them
here. We ought to compensate with more Masses,
more Communions, more adorations, more
confessions ‒ always with humility, otherwise our
prayer will be rejected by Heaven. God resists the
proud and gives His grace to the humble. The
Blessed Virgin sings in Her Magnificat: He who is
mighty exalts the humble...
2
But He deploys
all the might of His arm to scatter the proud
in the conceit of their heart, and He puts
down the mighty from their throne.
3
With humility, let us ask pardon for ourselves, for
the Church, for our brothers. Let us compensate,
entreat, adore! When we are in front of the Blessed
Sacrament, when we are praying alone in our room
as the Gospel says,
4
let us enter into these
dispositions. Thus the current woes will truly be a
blessing that will transform our soul. In that case,
this virus deserves a crown (corona virus): it will
draw us nearer to God! Let us bless the Lord!
There is panic everywhere. The Church has
always had its frailties, but it has never closed its
doors, especially in times of calamities, when the
faithful had the greatest need of divine assistance.
Today, the doors to the sacraments are closed to
almost everyone. Some good people are saying, “We
follow Mass on television.” On the set, you are
looking at the image of the Blessed Sacrament. It is
not the Host you are looking at, it is an image that
makes you think of Jesus in the Eucharist. But it is
not the Eucharist. When I am in front of the Host, I
am in front of God personally present. When I view
Mass on television, I am not in the presence of the
sacrifice of Calvary, I am in front of a representation.
To really participate in the Mass, we have to leave
our home ‒ if possible ‒ and go to attend it. The
Blessed Sacrament is not an image or a
representation, it is God really present.
In your home, you can adore Jesus Host in spirit,
but you are not in front of the Real Presence. Still, it
is better than nothing. If you look at an image of
Jesus Host and it stimulates you to pray, that is fine,
more than fine. But as the Authority of the Church, I
cannot say that the image is the equivalent of the
Real Presence. That is not what Jesus teaches us. We
cannot institute things that Jesus has not instituted.
Jesus wanted to dwell with us by the Real Presence
of the Eucharist, not only by an image on a screen or
on paper. He wanted to conceal Himself in bread at
the moment of the consecration, and it is in this
form that He wants to be adored by His children.
The Church has always taught spiritual
communion. I myself have recommended it to many
of our friends. You can derive great profit from it if
you are attentive when you do it. However, it is not
Sacramental Communion. When you make a
Sacramental Communion, it is really Jesus that you
receive in yourself.
Jesus says, My Flesh is food indeed, and My
Blood is drink indeed. He who eats My Flesh and
drinks My Blood abides in Me and I in Him.
5
The Faith of the early Christians
When the early
Christians went to
the catacombs to
attend the Sacred
Mysteries, each one
of them was
exposing himself to
being arrested,
recognized as a
Christian and led
to his death. It was
a risk, an
immediate danger,
far worse than the
corona virus. They
ran the risk of a death with extreme tortures. The
case of Saint Tarcisius is not an isolated one.
Christians exposed their lives to go and bring the
Holy Eucharist ‒ Sacramental Communion ‒ to their
brothers who were going to die. Certainly they
already believed in spiritual communion, but they
risked their lives for Sacramental Communion. Little
Tarcisius died stoned to death, having exposed
himself in this manner. That is the Church, that is its
truth. The Church, especially in times of calamity,
has the duty to proclaim the truth.
It is an effort of the Church that we are making,
in a spirit of humility, to compensate, implore, and
touch the Heart of God with great love, great faith,
great humility. I expose these facts to communicate
my sorrow to you when I see the churches closed. I
am not casting stones at the clergy, but it really hurts
me. I have an immense sorrow for all the adorers
who love God and are now deprived of adoring Him
in His sanctuaries. They have no choice; on the other
hand, these faithful will continue adoring in their
homes. This gesture will be great before God. In
their heart they will adore God as they pray before a
cross or a pious image. They will think of the Blessed
Sacrament whom they adored at Montmartre or
elsewhere.
Give more and more time to adoration. Great
graces come from silent adoration before the Blessed
Sacrament. Something divine takes place in our soul.
As Saint Louis Mary de Montfort said,
“We can only conceive of this good from
experience.” Words cannot express it, you have to
live it.
The rosary is also a wonderful devotion. There is
nothing more beautiful than to meditate on the
mysteries of the lives of Jesus and Mary. You say
Hail Marys as you contemplate the mystery. Apart
from the fifteen traditional mysteries, you can also
contemplate any other mystery of the life of Jesus
and Mary. Say the Hail Marys slowly: this prayer
will make you enter into contemplation before the
Blessed Sacrament.
There is no set formula for everyone, each soul is
different. Each one of you is a singular soul that God
cherishes above all others. When you are with God,
you are the only one who matters in His eyes. You
are alone with Him, He attends to you personally.
His treatment concerning you is specific. You must
be attentive: what He does is made to measure for
you. He is the One who makes you enter into
contemplation. You cannot really pray unless God
inspires you. God has sent the Spirit of His Son into
our hearts, crying: Abba, Father!
6
In adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, it is Jesus
who comes to pray in you and offer you a special
grace at that moment. We must enter into contact
with God. We may adopt a guide, a method that
helps us enter into contemplation, but the contact,
the grace comes to us from Him.
Adoration makes us humble
Normally, it is the
creature who ought to
give himself to its
Creator. When you are
in adoration, you
discover that it is the
Creator who gives
Himself to you. This
thought confounds you,
it is a humiliation that
fills you with love.
Adoration makes us
humble, we who are so proud due to our fallen
nature. God gives Himself to us! Our little gift is so
meager, so puny compared to His divine gift.
When you adore, when you are in contemplation,
and you realize that it is God who is giving the gift,
you are humbled, amazed, but it is an amazement
full of love. We thought we had given something to
God, and we discover our egoism, our pettiness, our
egocentrism, our vanity, our lack of generosity. We
contemplate the gift that God gives us, this God who
gives Himself: gift in essence. Adoration is done very
simply, it is not a cerebral effort. We are in front of
God to praise and adore Him, to glorify Him, to
compensate.
It may happen that you have nothing to say. Then
you get down on your knees and prostrate yourself.
If you feel cold, prostrate yourself even more. Do not
hesitate to prostrate yourself, face to the ground. Oh,
what a beautiful adoration! Prostrate yourself, adore,
humble yourself. Then you get back up, contemplate
Jesus and prostrate yourself again. You become
aware of your nullity ‒ this nothing, this coward that
you are ‒ and God gives Himself to you.
The Virgin Mary made this adoration, prostrating
Herself before Her God, face to the ground. Then
She would get back up to then prostrate Herself
again, make a complete adoration before God. She
did it dozens and sometimes hundreds of times,
maintaining this practice until an advanced age.
Mary was already making these adorations prior to
the institution of the Blessed Sacrament. After the
death of Jesus, you can imagine the prostrations She
must have made before the Real Presence, and with
what reverence She made this gesture! She would
rise and prostrate Herself again to make a physical
act of humiliation, to lower Herself to the dust,
tranquilly. She would remain there for a moment
and then rise again.
I recommend that you make this prostration
thirty-three times, to honor the thirty-three years of
the life of Jesus. Jesus lowered Himself to us and
beyond. Make these adorations tranquilly. “Lord,
what is my prayer worth? I want to do as the Virgin
did, as Your Mother did.” There are various ways of
doing adoration. Love will inspire you. Prostrating
ourselves stimulates our attention. We are fragile.
This gesture keeps us alert, especially during
nocturnal adoration when despite ourselves, fatigue
may overwhelm us.
If you really enter into prayer, God will do the
rest. He sees your good will: you want to love Him,
you humble yourself before Him, and He will
manifest Himself to you. God speaks to each person,
not with sound or noise; He speaks to the heart. He
communicates Himself to the person who humbles
himself, lowers himself before Him. The soul comes
out more humiliated, even more confounded. It is in
this spirit of adoration that we ought to compensate.
Many graces depend upon it.
Adore in the name of the Holy Church ‒ for
yourselves, for all our brothers of the earth ‒ in
union with these dear men and women who no
longer have this privilege, this pleasure, this joy they
had of being in adoration before the Blessed
Sacrament, because so many churches no longer
permit it. You offer their prayers, their sufferings to
God. “O Lord, intervene! I offer You my adoration in
union with these people who are suffering, who want
to be in Your presence.”
This prayer will change the world more than any
speeches. Speeches are necessary, but it is God who
touches souls through our words. God uses our
words, but it is always His grace that touches hearts,
not us or our words.
The highest Summit of Adoration
The first worship that man must render to God is
to adore Him. Adoring is far more than prostrating
oneself. Adoring is recognizing the sovereign domain
of God, our Creator. In sorrow, in suffering, when we
apply ourselves to recognizing the hand of God
working and acting, and then we give thanks to
God, that is the summit of adoration. We must
not only submit because we have no choice.
Submitting, accepting is already very good ‒ but to
enter so completely into the plan of God that we give
thanks to Him!... “Lord, thank You! Thank You for
this trouble that is happening to me, thank You for
all the sorrows that come my way. Thank You, Lord!”
When this Thank You is full of gratitude towards
God, it is the summit of adoration we can render to
God.
God is waiting for this act of devotion from the
Apostles of the Latter Times. We are going to spread
this devotion all over the world. First we have to
practice it. Are we hurting? Instead of complaining
and murmuring in our heart, let us say: Thank You,
Lord! The worst sins of the Jewish people, as related
in the Bible, were idolatry and murmuring. By
adoring God in suffering, we do the contrary. We
adore God and we thank Him: “Thank You, Lord, for
the slightest trouble that happens to me. It is not the
devil or a human being who is making me suffer, it is
You, Lord, who are acting behind these instruments.
Thank You!” Without anyone even noticing it, our
heart rises up to God.
Beneath the eye of God, with tears of gratitude,
let us say: “Lord, You give this to me, a vile being
such as me? I can adore You like this... me? O Lord,
You honor me too much!” God is waiting for this
worship from us to then transmit it to the world. The
world will live it. It will be something rarely seen in
the history of humanity. Having lived it, we will then
have to promote it. May God help you to do it good-
heartedly. In the name of our brothers of the earth,
give thanks to God for all the woes: “Lord, thank You
for these graces. It is a mercy that You are sending
us.” Over one-third of the world’s population is in
confinement. “Lord, are we going to profit from it?
My God, give us a powerful grace!”
Grace presents itself under two aspects: actual
grace and habitual grace. Habitual grace is the life of
God in us, the state of grace. Actual grace is the help
that God gives us to accomplish at every moment the
good He expects of us. Grace is an infinite
intervention of God. From moment to moment,
grace is distinct for each one of the seven billion
human beings on earth. All of us, sinners, at the very
moment we fall into sin, God intervenes to pick us
back up and draw us to Himself. His grace works in
an infinite manner in each one of the scenarios of
our life, especially in moments of suffering. But we
have to pray.
We are living in a time of blessings such as
humanity has not had for a long time. Let us pray
and render this worship to God: “My God, thank
You! You are taking the means to bring us back to
You, for we are too frivolous, we are distracted, we
think only of having a good time. I want to enter into
Your plan, I want Your grace, Your assistance, for
me and for my brothers. Thank You, Lord, for
intervening.” The present sufferings are blessings
from God. Many people, still too few, are benefitting
from this time of grace. The future will depend upon
our reaction.
The situation inspires gestures of charity, but
above all else it inspires the thought of God. Many
people are talking about the charitable works that
are being performed, but the media do not mention
that people are thinking more about God. Families
are uniting, and that is very good, but above all we
must unite ourselves to God. If we made all these
fine gestures without thinking of God, it would be
worth very little. Charity always has great value, but
we must practice it in view of pleasing God. The first
charity is to think of God and to serve Him. He is
waiting for us to think of Him, to do something for
Him. Considering the seven billion human beings on
earth, there are too few who are turning to God.
Thanks to this confinement, people have the
occasion to pray more, to reflect a little. We humans
are so distracted, we do not think about our eternity.
God is giving us a chance. “O Lord! What goodness!
What mercy! We deserve to be struck with the rod,
and You strike us gently, so gently.” A little
confinement destabilizes a lot of people. Even so,
they can still eat and even have a little fun. If people
react well, we could avert the worrisome scenarios
that are looming on the horizon. It all depends on
our comportment.
God is asking us for little things: a certain
confinement that is going to last a little longer. Will
there be anything else? No matter. What would it be
worth to spend a lot of time on earth without
preparing for eternity? What would it be worth to
live a long time if I do not think about my eternity?
The current pandemic is the finest scenario possible
if it leads me to a blessed eternity, if it leads me to do
a little more for God.
The martyrs rejoiced in times of persecution: “We
will do a little more for God, perhaps we will have
the chance of being martyrs. What a bargain!” As for
us, we are afraid of suffering: “Will there be less food
on the table? Will I be lacking anything?” We are
afraid of going hungry, afraid of being cold, afraid of
being tired, afraid of everything; we are afraid of
being afraid.
Blessed be God!
We ought to give thanks to God when He gives
and also when He takes: “Lord, if You take certain
things from me, thank You in advance. I am ready,
but come to my assistance! I am a coward, I am
afraid of suffering. But I trust in You, for I know that
You will help me and that Your grace will act in me.”
Just saying thank You to God in every circumstance
will lead you to a summit in this cult of adoration
that we owe Him. God is waiting for a sacrifice of
praise from His children, especially in trials. He
sends us chastisements a little reluctantly: “Thank
You, Lord. It is for our good, You are too kind. We
have abandoned You. You are taking things in hand,
and we complain.”
Some go to the point of blasphemy. If there is
anything that hurts God, it is blasphemy. People
even blaspheme Him when they are in abundance.
God acts gently, because humans will blaspheme
Him. As for us, let us bless Him in these little
sufferings and in any other suffering, which may well
be more considerable. “O Lord, we do not deserve so
much attention on Your part. We ought to be
attentive to You, and it is You who are attentive to
us.” The roles are reversed. The creature should be
totally attentive to its Creator. God is attentive to the
good of His creature, His child, and the creature is
fickle, distracted, frivolous, occupied with earthly
things, as if there were nothing after death. If we do
not take care, distractions and complaints can arise
even with the elite among humans, those who make
a profession of serving God.
May our lives be lives of Magnificat, of gratitude
in all kinds of sufferings. Let us do it good-heartedly,
more and more. Praising God when you suffer is
more than prostrating yourself before the Blessed
Sacrament. To adore God, to bless Him in
suffering, to thank Him, is a pinnacle of
adoration. God is inviting us to do it with love. He
is observing us to see whether we are going to profit
from this pandemic, which is a divine blessing.
All kinds of little sufferings are going to come. We
are at the beginning of the first phase. Do not be
afraid. Put your trust in God. If we do not praise God
at this start of the test, soon we will not be praising
Him at all. If we complain when God barely begins to
intervene for our good, what will we do later? I know
that your heart desires it, so let us do it all together
according to the expectation of the Heart of God,
according to the expectation of His Infinite Love. If
we do it, the world will do it. We are already doing it,
but we will do it even better.
For
its
own
misfortune,
humanity
has
turned
away
from
the
road
that
God
had
laid
out
for
it.
Like
a
good
father,
God
is
taking
the
necessary
means
to
bring
His
children
back
to
the
way
of
true
happiness
in
His
service.
Even
when
He
strikes,
our
heavenly
Father
wants
to
shower
humanity
with
His
gifts,
like
a
father
who,
after
having
been
severe,
shows
kindness
to
make
his
child
forget
the
bitterness
of
the
punishment.
We
will
never
be
able
to
understand
all
the
love
that
God
puts
into
the
chastisements
inflicted
upon
His
children.
“The world is going to its perdition,
but I love souls, I want to save them.
I am constrained to be severe in order
to attain My end; but believe Me,
I do it out of pure mercy.
If I permit so much sorrow, it is in view
of saving souls for eternity.”
Jesus to Sister Consolata Betrone
1.
St. Luke 12:48.
2.
I St. Peter 5:5.
3.
Cf. St. Luke 1:51-52.
4.
Cf. St. Matthew 6:6.
5.
St. John 6:56-57.
6.
St. Paul, Galatians 4:6.