ON THE VIRTUE OF ABANDONMENT TO DIVINE PROVIDENCE;
ITS NATURE AND EXCELLENCE.
SANCTITY CONSISTS IN FIDELITY TO THE ORDER ESTABLISHED BY
GOD, AND IN SUBMISSION TO ALL HIS OPERATIONS.
Fidelity to the order established by God comprehended the whole sanctity of the righteous under the old law; even that of St. Joseph, and of Mary herself.
God continues to speak to-day as He spoke in former times
to our fathers when there were no directors as at present, nor
any regular method of direction. Then all spirituality was
comprised in fidelity to the designs of God, for there was no
regular system of guidance in the spiritual life to explain it in
detail, nor so many instructions, precepts and examples as there
are now. Doubtless our present difficulties render this necessary,
but it was not so in the first ages when souls were more simple
and straightforward. Then, for those who led a spiritual life,
each moment brought some duty to be faithfully accomplished.
Their whole attention was thus concentrated consecutively like
a hand that marks the hours which, at each moment, traverses
the space allotted to it. Their minds, incessantly animated by
the impulsion of divine grace, turned imperceptibly to each
new duty that presented itself by the permission of God at
different hours of the day. Such were the hidden springs by
which the conduct of Mary was actuated. Mary was the most
simple of all creatures, and the most closely united to God.
Her answer to the angel when she said: "Fiat mihi secundum
verbum tuum": contained all the mystic theology of her
ancestors to whom everything was reduced, as it is now, to the