THE GREEN
SCAPULAR
and ITS FAVORS.
By Rev Father Marie Edouard MOTT C.M.
CATHOLIC TRUTH
SOCIETY of OREGON No. Pr058 (reprinted 1961 from a 1923 original
“LE SCAPULAIRE VERT ET SES PRODIGES").
This work that appears today on the Green Scapular,
with its origin and the countless favors of which it is the instrument, has
been in demand for a long time.
It is true, its marvelous effects were well known, but its origin remained
shrouded in an almost impenetrable mystery, upon which, however, people were
most anxious to be enlightened.
One can easily understand why this mystery might have prevailed during the life
time of the happy seer of whom God chose to make use for the transmission of
this pledge of salvation, namely Sister Justine Bisqueyburu, Daughter of
Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul.
Now her death having occurred on September 23, 1903, the reasons for keeping
the secret no longer exist, and we may at last satisfy the pious curiosity of
the faithful.
I should have wished to do so sooner, had I not been deterred by insurmountable
obstacles. As these obstacles have now disappeared, I am happy to set to work
and share with my readers the precious information which for a long time has
been in my possession.
At first, I intended not to sign my name to this work and most gladly would I
have remained in obscurity. But, after revolving the first impulse in my mind,
it seemed to me that since I am acting as a witness it would be wiser to reveal
myself, considering that an anonymous declaration has not, as a rule, much
value.
From the year 1870 on, being then a very young priest, I was put in touch with
Sister Bisqueyburu by the Most Honored Father Etienne, our Superior General,
who, the year following authorized me in a still more explicit manner to
receive the depositions of the Sister, who then was Superioress of the
Hotel-Dieu (the ‘Hostel of God’) of Carcassonne, France. This authorization,
bearing the date of June 24, 1871, was thus worded: "I beg Sister Bisqueyburu
to say and confide to Father Mott, Priest of the Mission and Director of the
Seminary of Oran (Algeria), all that had happened to her and all she knows
concerning the Green Scapular."
In order to receive these depositions, I undertook, in 1872, the journey to
Carcassonne; but I must confess that, in spite of that authorization so
explicit and bearing almost the character of a command, I could not draw much
out of the exceedingly humble seer. She shrouded herself in an almost absolute
silence, as she felt the utmost repugnance to speak of these matters, giving as
a pretext that since 1840 (the epoch of the first apparitions), she had
forgotten everything and, for the time being, had no other concern but to
fulfill the obligations of her state the best she could.
To these reasons must be added, it seems to me, the difficulty which a Superior
of fifty-four years of age must have found to open herself in such a matter to
so young a priest, scarcely twenty-six years old, and who, after all, was to
her but a stranger.
Fortunately, Carcassonne is not far from Narbonne, where the hospital was in
charge of Sister Buchepot, former Directress of the Seminary (the mistress of
novices) of Sister Bisqueyburu, and who had received all her communications.
Hence, it was to her I then applied and she gave me all the information I could
wish for. She even lent me letters which Sister Bisqueyburu had written to her
at the time of the apparitions, together with the correspondence carried on
with her director, Father Aladel, who likewise had been the director of Saint
Catherine Laboure, the seer of the Miraculous Medal.
Later on, I was able to procure a few autographs of Father Aladel concerning
this affair, as well as other precious and perfectly authentic documents, which
were a great help to me.
The following is the plan of this little work:
I deemed it useful to begin, in part first, by introducing to my readers
Sister Justine Bisqueyburu.
For the items of this biographical sketch, I am indebted to several of her
former companions who wrote them out for me. Having for long years lived side
by side with her, they are true eyewitnesses of her saintly life, and most
trustworthy witnesses they are too.
In part second is found the account of the apparitions to which the
Green Scapular owes its origin, the manner of using it, its efficacy and the
approbations of which it has been the object.
Finally, part third tells of some of the countless wonderful cures, but
especially of the conversions of which the scapular has been, and continues to
be the instrument.
May our Lord make use of these pages to glorify more and more the Immaculate
Heart of His Holy Mother, whose badge the Green Scapular is. May He inspire
those who shall read them with an ever increasing confidence in the goodness
and power of this Holy Heart, Refuge of Sinners; and, thanks to His most
efficacious intervention, may He see return to His fold great flocks of strayed
sheep who one day in Heaven shall forever praise His Divine mercies: Misericordias
Domini in aeternum cantabo (Psalm 88:2 in the Vulgate, or Psalm 89:1 in the
Hebrew: ‘The mercies of the Lord I will sing for ever.’).
Fr. Marie Edouard Mott
PART ONE: Biography of Sister Justine Bisqueyburu.
Daughter of Clement Bisqueyburu, merchant, and of
Ursula Albine d'Anglade, our Sister was born at Mauleon (Lower Pyrenees) on
November 11, 1817, feast of Saint Martin, and was Baptized the following day,
and received the name of Justine.
We know almost nothing of her connections and early childhood, unless it be
that her mother's kinsfolk lived at Loteron: There she at an early age (for
what motive is not known) was entrusted to her maternal aunt, Miss d'Anglade,
and to Mr. d'Anglade, who took a great liking to her and at his death left her
all his fortune. With them, she grew up, received her First Communion and was
educated.
When the time came for her decision as to a state of life, the Divine call came
to her, though we know none of the circumstances. All we do know is that she
was then twenty-two years old and that she asked this permission of her aunt,
Miss d’Anglade, who loved her dearly and who would have wished to keep her. A
thorough Christian, however, she would not thwart the designs of God upon this
soul and hence let her go, toward the end of August, 1839, to make her postulancy
at the hospital of Pau under the guidance of the venerable Sister Vallier.
Her postulancy having expired, she left for Paris to begin her Seminary or
Novitiate. Strange to say, she made the journey in care of the saintly priest
who was soon to become the confidant of the extraordinary graces with which she
was favored, a circumstance willed by a particular design of Divine Providence.
This was Father Aladel, Director of the Daughters of
Charity who, happening to pass through the city of Pau on his return to Paris,
willingly agreed to accompany the young postulant on her journey. She entered
the Seminary November 27, 1839, on the ninth anniversary of the famous
apparition of the Immaculate Virgin to Saint Catherine Laboure, an apparition
to which the Miraculous Medal owes its origin. The good Father Aladel, who was
so wisely directing Sister Catherine Laboure in her extraordinary ways, did not
suspect that confidences somewhat similar were soon to be reposed in him by
this postulant.
After nine months of Seminary training, she was placed in the house of Charity
of Blangy (Lower Seine.)
We should like to have some details of the time spent in the Seminary and the
manner in which she conducted herself, but we may draw a fair conclusion from
the remarks written about her, in truly eulogistic terms, at the time of her
taking the habit:
"Sister Bisqueyburu (Justine). Tall. Knows how to read, write, cipher, knows her grammar. Gentle disposition. Is sensible, has judgment and an ardent imagination. Skillful, intelligent, courageous, pious and virtuous. Fit for school."
As one can see, her piety had not escaped the eyes
of her Directresses who, in these remarks, had condensed the results of their
observations. But the First Directress alone, Sister Buchepot, had been able to
see, from receiving the communications of the young Sister, to what degree her
soul was united to God. Favored as she was from the beginning of her Seminary
with extraordinary graces, of which we shall speak at length in part two, she
knew how to keep them secret and spoke of them only to those charged with her
direction.
The remarks written at the time of her receiving the Habit end with these
words, "Fit for school." And, in fact, her first employment on
leaving the Seminary was that of school teacher at Blangy, a small place
situated in the Department of Lower Seine. Yet she did not stay there long, for
in 1841, we find her in the House of Charity of Notre-Dame parish at
Versailles, where she remained until 1855. It was there she made her first Holy
Vows. There also she had the opportunity of spending herself unreservedly in the
practice of charity, revealing the extraordinary aptitude with which she was
gifted for the care of the sick. Her good Superior, Sister Le Pelletier, was
afflicted with a cancer on the tongue which caused her cruel sufferings and
required delicate attentions most repugnant to nature. Sister Bisqueyburu
considered herself happy to bestow this care upon her and did so with great
affection. Night and day was she at the bedside of the venerated patient,
endeavored to soothe her pains and anticipated her last wish; and when the
moment of supreme separation arrived, her filial devotedness inspired her to
render less painful the ever-momentous passing from time to eternity.
When the Crimean war broke out in 1854 and military authorities made an appeal
to the devotedness of the Daughters of Charity for the nursing of the wounded
soldiers on the battlefield, the Superior readily complied with her expressed
wish to be employed for that purpose. She left for Constantinople in 1855 with
the other Sisters destined to the same charitable functions, and, like them,
she devoted herself unreservedly to this work.
The devotedness of the Daughters of Charity in the painful labor of the
ambulances, aroused an admirable enthusiasm in those who witnessed it
regardless of religion or nationality, and provoked a generous emulation, even
within the ranks of schism and heresy.
An English lady, Miss Nightingale, who had been for a long time at the head of
the Anglican Association of Charity in London, conceived the thought of endowing
her country with an institution similar to that of the Daughters of Charity.
She even went to Paris for the purpose of an interview with Father Etienne,
their Superior General, begging him to show her the rules and organization of
that Community that she might take a copy of them. After having obtained all
that she wished, she left full of confidence in the success of her enterprise.
At her return to France in 1856, Sister Bisqueyburu was given a duty which was
like the sequence of the one she had efficiently fulfilled in Constantinople.
She was placed at the military hospital at Val de-Grace in Paris, (a former
Benedictine convent, the ‘Valley of Grace’) where she remained two years. One
of the Sisters who lived with her at that time and later was placed under her
charge at Rome - Sister Bergasse - testified that she was deeply devoted to her
patients and that she possessed all the qualities of a true servant of the
poor.
Qualities as precious as hers determined Superiors to place her at the head of
an establishment. The one first entrusted to her in 1858 was the Military
Hospital of Rennes, which she was commissioned to open. But she remained only a
few months and the last days she spent there, were very painful, for, a month
before her departure, she had received an order to be in readiness to be sent
to Algiers at the first signal, and at the same time, she was to keep the most
absolute silence about it. The secret was indeed well kept, but the
affectionate heart of the new Superior suffered from it. As she dearly loved
her companions, as well as the hospital which she had put in excellent order,
the thought of the impending separation was most painful to her and her grief
was so much the greater as exteriorly she was not to betray the least sign of
it. In this circumstance, she revealed great strength of character, and when
the order for departure arrived, she at once complied with it and knew how to
leave without commotion.
At Algiers, she was placed at the head of the Dey's Military Hospital, a very
important house which necessitated a sure and firm hand to direct it, together
with a kind and motherly heart that would be guided by correct judgment. Sister
Bisqueyburu showed herself equal to her task during the nine years she held
this office, from 1858 to 1867.
One of her companions who had the great privilege of spending seven years under
her direction at Algiers, (Sister Naude) and who became Superior of an
important house in foreign lands, gave us the following statement of this epoch
of her life under the date of March 22, 1907, less than four years after the
death of the Sister:
"I am trying to
recall memories of long ago of this fervent soul whom I had the happiness to
know and to love in our Lord.
“On leaving the Seminary, I was for seven years under her direction. I was
constantly thanking God for it, for, in the midst of the duties of that large
hospital of the Dey at Algiers. I could fancy myself still under the direction
of the saintly Sister Buchepot, our dear and venerated Directress of the
Seminary.
"Sister Bisqueyburu was a living rule. She drew our attention to the
military exactness we had the opportunity to witness on the part of the nurses
and patients in order by a comparison to inspire us with a greater, higher and
more supernatural fidelity to our Holy Rules, of which she gave us a perfect
example herself.
"Everywhere the first in the accomplishment of duty, she surpassed us in
the practice of humility and mortification.
"Under an austere exterior appearance lay hidden a great kindness of
heart. The illness of one of her companions was to her a most painful trial and
when the patient died, she was inconsolable.
"In 1886, eight of our sixteen Sisters were stricken with cholera within
less than forty-eight hours and three died immediately, This good Sister
multiplied herself in order to attend to them all and at each new death she
offered herself to God as a victim, begging Him to spare her companions. Thus
long ago did Saint Louise de Marillac. Her grief was truly painful to behold,
and our worthy Director, the Very Reverend Father Doumercq, had great
difficulty in cheering up this otherwise energetic soul. Five successive times
I have seen her maternal heart submitted to this trial. It was really
heartrending. And yet her resignation to God's will was perfect.
"Her esteem for our dear vocation was so deep that she could not
understand the slightest hesitation on our part in the duties and sacrifices
she imposed upon us.
"For our venerated Superiors she had a respect and obedience inspired by
her great spirit of faith and she was prompt in executing not only their
orders, but their least wish. Likewise, civil authorities, military officials,
doctors and administrators placed an entire confidence in her.
"In the beginning, she had numberless difficulties, finding herself at
variance with many prejudices which she succeeded in overcoming, adjusting
everything with much wisdom and firmness, for she knew how to convert the
sentiments of those most opposed to her into admiration for her virtuous and
saintly life. The strength necessary was the outcome of her solid piety, her
unreserved confidence in God and her tender devotion to the Most Holy Virgin.
But nothing would ever make one suspect that she had been the object of
supernatural favors.
"In 1867, Superiors sent her to Italy in the service of the Pontifical
Army which, with so much heroism, was devoting itself in defense of a cause,
alas! already despaired of.
"After spending three days and three nights on the battlefield of Mentana,
she went to Rome to equip and organize three ambulances; that of the Quirinal,
that of Saint Agatha, and another whose name escapes my memory.
"On this new field of action, where she displayed the same zeal as at
Algiers, God had several consolations in store for her. Pope Pius IX, who soon
appreciated her valor, often saw her and gave her more than one token of his
fatherly kindness. He even sometimes allowed her to accompany him in his walks
through his private gardens. Monsignor de Merode, who occupied a superior rank
at the Pontifical Court, also held her in the highest esteem.
"She was very far from taking pride in these favors. She never even spoke
of them, but it is probable that God permitted them in compensation for what
she had suffered at her departure from Algiers."
In 1868, she left Rome to take the direction of the
Hotel-Dieu of Carcassonne, where God granted her a great consolation. She
received the visit of the Very Reverend Father Doumercq, Director of the
Daughters of Charity in Algiers, who, happening to pass through Carcassonne,
came to see her.
The Hotel-Dieu of Carcassonne was her last mission. She remained there
thirty-five years (from 1868 to 1903), giving there, as she did in other
places, the example of many virtues and accomplishing much good. June 16, 1868,
Tuesday in the octave of Corpus Christi, she was installed Sister Servant of
the Hotel-Dieu of Carcassonne by Sister Roche.
Many adjustments were necessary in this establishment when she took charge of
it. Yet without being discouraged by difficulties, she resolved to re-establish
order, and courageously set her hand to the work which, with the help of God,
she brought up to excellent standards.
The following was written to us, May 18, 1907, by one of her companions who
lived with her during the last seven years of her life:
"Sister Bisqueyburu,
very intelligent, and of a quick and ardent disposition, took personal interest
in all the details of the house; making her rounds through the duties in the
twinkling of an eye, visiting the sick in their wards, having for each a
cheering word and devoting herself untiringly to the service of God and the
poor.
"From the start, she undertook to put in good condition the old Hotel-Dieu
of Carcassonne, which was very dilapidated at her arrival. She had the floors
of the corridors repaired, as they had suffered from the dampness that arose
from the earth. The large stairway leading up to the second floor was built and
iron beds were procured for the poor sick, who had been very uncomfortable
heretofore. Near each bed she had a red marble slab fixed for the convenience
of the service, she even furnished the section reserved for the officers at her
own expense, had gaslights put everywhere and had a clock set in top of the
cupola. As previously it had been very poor, the usual fare of the patients and
the Sisters was improved under Sister's watchful direction.
"The chapel, which had just been built, lacked the barest necessities. It
was the pious Superior who supplied it with linen, sacred vessels, feast day
vestments and all the objects required by the liturgy. She organized a choir
and selected as an organist a young girl who had suffered from reverses of
fortune and whose musical talent could be used to her benefit.
"The administration of the Hotel-Dieu, whose extreme ideas were in
opposition with hers, furnished her with the occasion of displaying a great
patience, to which she united deference in their regard, but not to the exclusion
of firmness when duty required it, and she at last triumphed over the great
difficulties first encountered. In consequence, they esteemed her to such a
degree that she possessed their respect and veneration. She was consulted by
them in many matters and by degrees, they entered into her views. Thus, she had
the consolation of seeing the Crucifix put back in its place of honor in the
wards from whence it had been taken. At the same time, public prayers which had
been suppressed in the wards were resumed.
"The doctors likewise appreciated her devotedness, her virtue and
particularly, her exactness in carrying out their orders.
"Besides this, she was pleasant to deal with, and secular persons, as well
as members of the clergy with whom she was acquainted greatly enjoyed even a
slight contact with her."
Another companion of hers, Sister Moy, who for twenty years lived under her, in a similar manner eulogized her:
"She loved the
poor sick dearly with a maternal love. It was a happiness for her to visit them,
to listen to their complaints and to relieve them whenever she could.
"Her vigilance was remarkable, and as she was quick on her feet one would
have thought she was everywhere at once.
"Doctors and administrators greatly appreciated her. Persons of the world
had recourse to her as to an oracle, and always received from her light,
consolation and strength. She did a great deal of good by opening both her
heart and her purse to all sorts of woes and needs; but she was very clever in
throwing a mantle over her good deeds.
"She was most pious and regular, always up at four o'clock and the first
to be in the chapel."
The following may be read about her in a circular letter of the Most Honored Mother, Superior of the Daughters of Charity, January 1, 1905:
"Sister Bisqueyburu,
Superior of the Hotel-Dieu of Carcassonne, concealed under an austere exterior
and a quick manner a great depth of kindness and devotedness, exercised
exemplary regularity and possessed a great spirit of faith. To this, all her
companions agree.
"She had more than an ordinary devotion to the Blessed Virgin; a devotion
which betrayed itself in her words and in the fervor with which she said the
chaplet. When a patient refused the succors of religion, Sister Bisqueyburu did
not wish that the Sister in charge should complain about it openly, but she
herself went before the Blessed Virgin in the Oratory and recited a Memorare
(‘Remember us, most Blessed Virgin’), and rarely was her prayer fruitless.
"Always up at four o'clock as long as her strength permitted it, always
first at all community exercises, a strict observer of silence, Sister Bisqueyburu
held the Holy Rules in high esteem. But she was not like the Pharisees of the
Gospel whom our Lord reproached for laying upon others burdens which they would
not touch with their fingers, and if there be Sisters who found her too strict,
they must confess that she was still more so to herself than to others.
"She understood her vow of poverty and practiced it with zeal and to
perfection, never wasting anything. On her bed of suffering where she spent the
last ten months of her life, she still worked whenever her illness permitted
it, thus being to her companions a perfect model of a true servant of the poor.
Yes, dearly did she love her poor and the thought of having one day to leave
them at her departure from Hotel-Dieu, rent her heart. Our dear Lord wished to
spare her that supreme sorrow by recalling her to Himself before the
secularization of an establishment which for many years had witnessed her
devotedness."
Sister Naude, to whose testimony we have already
referred, wrote May 7, 1907: "How can one speak in adequate terms of a
life filled with years dotted with unusual incidents, especially in the
beginning; years replenished with good works. How is it possible to give an
idea of her solid virtue, sincere piety, a will strong in spite of the
multitude of various events with which it had been in conflict, a patience
amazing in so lively and impressionable a temperament as was hers?"
Another of her companions, Sister Corboz, who had been Sister's assistant in
the later years of her life, wrote June 10, 1907:
"I shall give you
very simply what I have remarked in this worthy Sister. She was of a reticent
disposition and if some persons have judged her less favorably, it was because
they had neither sufficiently studied nor understood her.
"Severe toward herself, she sometimes seemed to be also with regard to
others, even her companions when she thought they did not evince enough zeal
for their perfection. Her keen eye noticed the least defect, the slightest
resistance, which she reproved rather severely. But her severity soon changed
into an unequalled sweetness as soon as she perceived that her admonitions were
sincerely turned to profit. In consequence, she several times told me: 'I have
been severe toward my companions yet I never ceased to love them'. And more
than one act of charity confirmed the truth of this statement.
"Her regularity, piety, and love of duty were exemplary and even in the
most painful moments of her community life, she was never heard to utter a
complaint. She was most attached to her Community and filled with respect
toward superiors from whom the least attention caused her a true
happiness."
From the beginning of her vocation, this worthy
Daughter of Saint Vincent had been the object of supernatural favors from the
Most Holy Virgin, which we shall make known in the second part. Her humility
managed to keep them completely secret for a long time; but in her last illness,
her companions succeeded in making her admit several revealing details. She
regretted it as soon as she was aware of it; but without doubt, God permitted
this avowal so that we might have a full assurance of the authenticity of these
favors.
Something of this secret, however, had transpired, though it cannot be told how
it happened; for one day when she still was at Algiers, some of her companions
having gone to see good Father Girard, Superior of the Ecclesiastical Seminary,
the conversation fell on the Miraculous Medal, the Scapular of the Passion and
finally the Green Scapular which already had worked wonders in the conversion
of poor sinners. "At any rate," they said, "if for the Green
Scapular there were visions, the secret has been well kept, for nobody knows
who the happy seer is." - "But," answered good Father Girard, "that
privileged soul is your fervent Sister Servant . . . ; oh! That does not mean
you should go and publish it broadcast." And they were faithful to the
latter recommendation.
On her part, Sister Bisqueyburu skillfully eluded the pointed questions which
at times were addressed to her.
"On several occasions," said Sister Naude, "we tormented her to
make her admit it was she who had the vision. She never could be trapped and
dismissed us in a manner that discouraged any further quizzing."
"During the last years of her life," said Sister Brun, another of her
companions who had spent eighteen years with her, "we used often to speak
to her about the happiness of souls favored with visions of the Blessed Virgin.
We then more particularly dwelt on the Green Scapular, which she recommended us
to use with the patients in enmity with God, which, by the way, always proved
successful. When we had a patient whose condition was critical, we recommended
him to the prayers of our good Superior, made use of the Green Scapular and
were always heard.
"But when we tried to find out to whom the Blessed Virgin had revealed
that scapular, she either smiled or referred us to our Superiors for better
information, or she simply said: 'You bother me; leave me alone with all your
visions. It is not well to believe too readily all that sort of thing’."
But toward the end of her last illness, God permitted that she should be
unaware of the purpose of certain questions addressed to her, thus betraying
herself unconsciously. That illness lasted a long time, affording her an
opportunity for the practice of many virtues to the great edification of those
surrounding her.
To make sure of not missing any of the exercises of piety prescribed by the
rules at the time appointed for them, she requested two of her companions to
come and recite them aloud near her bed, and she joined with them the best she
could. Moreover, she kept in touch with all that was going on in the house and
she still directed it by her orders and advices.
"When her condition grew worse," wrote Sister Naude, "we should
have liked to speak of her about receiving the Last Sacraments, and yet, in
spite of the saintly disposition we saw her in, the courage to do so failed us.
We would have liked her to ask for them herself. But she very likely did not
believe her state so alarming, and did not think of it. I therefore resorted to
the following scheme: I slipped the Green Scapular under her pillow, saying to
myself: 'If she is the one to whom this scapular was revealed, the Blessed
Virgin will not permit that her privileged daughter should leave this world
without the succors of religion.' At once, wonderful to say, she asked for a
priest and received the Sacraments with the deepest piety.
"This was two weeks before her death and during these last days, so
painful for her, she edified us all by her patience, her gentleness, her
kindness with regard to all.
"Her weakness was as great as her emaciation, and her life could be
prolonged only by means of constant stimulation.
"As she felt her end drawing near, she frequently raised her eyes to
Heaven saying:
'Heaven! . . . Oh! Heaven . . . Heaven!" And her look seemed to say: 'Will that beautiful Heaven be mine?'
“She dreaded death, not that she was afraid to die,
but, as she expressed herself, she feared to appear before the Sovereign Judge
void of merits. 'What?' said one of her companions to her. 'Do you count as
nothing those sixty-four years you spent in serving God and the poor?'
"She replied, 'It is true.' Then she added, 'but what are they worth,
these works? I have been the object of so much adulation! Did I not receive my
reward here below?'
"But her fears soon vanished and she henceforth spoke of nothing but
Heaven and the Blessed Virgin.
"She often repeated to us: 'Do love the Blessed Virgin, love her much. She
is so beautiful!' 'Sister, one would think you had seen her,' said Sister Louise
to her. But instead of answering, she repeated: 'Love her much. She is so
beautiful!’ ‘But what must we do to love her?' 'You must imitate her virtues.'
"I then ventured to ask her some questions of which she did not notice the
purpose and which she answered without being aware that she was revealing a
secret kept for more than sixty years. 'What was the color of her dress?'
'White.' 'And her mantle?' 'Blue.' 'How did she wear her hair?' 'It was hanging
loose about her.' And she illustrated every statement with a gesture, whilst
her eyes seemed to behold sweet visions of the past.
"I showed her the Green Scapular and she at once said: 'Yes, that's it
exactly.' And she piously kissed it.
"I also asked her whether the Blessed Virgin had appeared to her at
Carcassonne too. But then she became aware that she had given herself away, and
she replied in a tone not very gracious: 'I don't know,' adding: 'Why did I say
that anyhow?' And as if to destroy the favorable impression produced upon us by
her revelation, she quickly said: 'I am nothing but a conceited creature, and
Father Aladel who knew the whole thing told me I was deluded. Do not bring this
up any more. Leave me alone.' From that time she refused to speak of it."
And shortly after, on September 23, 1903 (anniversary of Saint Vincent's
ordination to the Priesthood, in 1660), she sweetly surrendered her soul to God
in the sentiments of deepest piety, being in the eighty-second year of her age
and the sixty-fifth of her vocation, leaving a perfume of sanctity behind her.
There is no doubt that she now in Heaven beholds with happiness the august
Virgin who so often deigned to appear to her in this place of exile!
This was the conviction of the Sisters who best knew her and had come in
closest contact with her. Three days after her death, one of them wrote to
Sister Naude: "Oh! let me weep with you! It is such relief to be able to
pour the abundance of one's heart into the heart of a friend! Yours, dear
Sister, understands mine, and they both had for the dear departed the same
affection, the same veneration. Now they share together the same sorrow . . .
"How I love to recall her humility, fervor, regularity! Ever in the path
of duty, strong and noble in the hour of sacrifice, in sufferings, in all sorts
of sorrows, she was for us the type of a true Daughter of Saint Vincent de Paul
. . .
"Now she, is in Heaven and gazes in holy rapture on Him Who here below
possessed all her love, Who was the ultimate Object of all her actions. I am
sure that her happiness has not bereft her of the memory of those who weep her
loss. We have in her a very powerful advocate in Heaven."
How much must her glory in Heaven be increased by that train of souls whose
salvation was wrought through the Green Scapular revealed to her by the
Immaculate Heart of Mary!
PART TWO: The Revelations of the Green Scapular.
In part one, we sketched in rather rapid strokes the
life of Sister Justine Bisqueyburu; a life full of merits and good works, a
life which is a tribute to the great Saint Vincent de Paul, whose worthy
Daughter she was. From her life, we may glean many lessons of virtue, which are
for us a powerful incentive in the pursuit of virtue, of generosity in the
performance of duty, of self-forgetfulness in the practice of Divine charity.
But in the religious family of Saint Vincent such examples are so numerous,
that it was not the mere purpose of relating them which induced us to publish
these pages.
God, by raising up this chosen soul in His Church and lavishing choice graces
upon her, did not merely intend her to work out her own salvation, but had also
destined her for a special mission in which the salvation of a multitude of
souls was involved.
Just as He had made use of a Daughter of Saint Francis de Sales, Saint Margaret
Mary Alacoque, for the purpose of manifesting the Sacred Heart of His Divine
Son to the world, He likewise willed to make use of a Daughter of Saint Vincent
de Paul, Sister Bisqueyburu, in order to reveal the Immaculate Heart of Mary,
to present it to the veneration of the faithful, and to make of its sacred
representation an instrument for the salvation of infidels and poor sinners.
True, a first manifestation of this most pure Heart had already taken place in
the Chapel of the Mother House of the Daughters of Charity, on November 27,
1830. On the reverse of the Miraculous Medal, revealed to Saint Catherine
Laboure, and since then known as the Miraculous Medal, the Heart of Mary
appeared, pierced with a sword, opposite to the Sacred Heart of Jesus crowned
with thorns and surmounted by a cross. Likewise, later on, July 29, 1846,
another Daughter of Charity, Sister Appoline Andriveau, was favored by an
apparition of our Lord, Who revealed to her a new scapular of a red color, on
which, next to His Heart, was also that of His Mother, and which for this
reason received the name of Scapular of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary.
But in the apparition which Sister Bisqueyburu had, it is her Immaculate Heart
alone which the Blessed Virgin wished to present to our veneration and our
prayers, as we are about to see from the autograph notes of the seer, those of
her Director, Father Aladel, and of her Directress, Sister Buchepot.
We have already seen that after the expiration of her postulancy at Pau, Justine
Bisqueyburu undertook the journey to Paris, accompanied by Father Aladel, and
that she entered the Seminary of the Daughters of Charity (140 Rue de Bac),
November 27, 1839. As she did not arrive there in time to take part in the
great retreat which had closed just a few days previous she had to wait until
the following January before being able to make her little entrance retreat.
In those days, the retreat exercises were held in a hall situated above the
chapel, in which there was an altar bearing a statue of the Most Holy Virgin.
This statue, reputed miraculous, is of very ancient origin.
Now, it was in this hall and before this statue that the new little Seminary
Sister made her entrance retreat; and it was during that retreat that the
Blessed Virgin appeared to her for the first time on January 28, 1840.
The Sister was at prayer when suddenly the Blessed Virgin made herself visible
to her eyes. She was dressed in a long white gown which reached to her bare
feet, over which was a mantle of very light blue, but she wore no veil. Her
hair hung loose about her; in her hands, she held her heart, from the top of
which abundant flames gushed out. The majesty of her bearing was enhanced by a
beauty all heavenly. At this sight, the young Sister, struck with admiration
and awe, almost let a cry escape her lips.
Again, at the close of the retreat she was favored with the same vision, and
also four or five times in the course of her Seminary on the principal feasts
of the Blessed Virgin.
Up to that time, this favor seemed to have been quite personal and to have had
no other purpose than to increase her tender devotion to Mary and her
Immaculate Heart. But the course of events showed that God had other designs
which were soon to be revealed.
After receiving the Holy Habit, Sister Bisqueyburu as already said, was sent to
Blangy (Lower Seine) to teach school. Shortly after her arrival, September 8, 1840,
feast of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin, she had another vision. The Mother
of God appeared to her during meditation, holding in her right hand her heart
surmounted by flames, and in the other hand a kind of scapular, or rather
one-half of a scapular. It was a single piece of green goods, rectangular in
shape and of middle size hanging by a string which was green also and closed as
if destined to go around the neck. The whole thing looked more like a medallion
of cloth, than a scapular properly so called. On one side was a picture of the
Blessed Virgin such as she had shown herself in her preceding apparitions; and
on the other side was a heart all ablaze with rays more dazzling than the sun,
and as transparent as crystal. Those are the very expressions made use of by
the Sister to describe the vision. That heart, pierced with a sword, was
encircled by an inscription of oval shape surmounted by a gold cross, and thus
worded: ‘Immaculate Heart of Mary, pray for us, now and at the hour of our
death.’ At the same time, an interior voice was heard by the Sister revealing
to her the meaning of the vision. She understood that this holy picture was by
the medium of the Daughters of Charity, to contribute to the conversion of
souls, particularly infidels, and to procure for them a good death; that copies
should be made as soon as possible and distributed with confidence.
Sister Buchepot was the only one, at first to whom Sister Bisqueyburu imparted
this new favor, in a letter dated October 8, 1840; and this she did timidly and
most secretly, "fearing lest all this be the effect of imagination, and
requesting her to keep this communication secret." "However,"
she added, "if you believe it to be necessary for me to speak of it to
Father Aladel, I shall do so."
The same apparition was again renewed August 15 and September 13, 1841, and
Sister Buchepot informed Father Aladel of it by these few lines: "Sister Bisqueyburu
again saw on the feast of the Assumption and this morning during thanksgiving,
the Blessed Virgin and the scapular of which I already spoke to you. She feels
strongly impelled to tell you so and this costs her so much that her anguish
rouses my compassion. I promised her to write this little note to you, so that
when on Thursday she will go to see you in the parlor, your charity might make
it easy for her."
On Thursday following, September 16, Father Aladel received in fact this new
communication. But whether he did not attach enough importance to it, whether
prudence inspired him not to rush matters, in order to test whether these
supernatural manifestations came from God, according to the Apostle (1 John 4:1),
he did not seem as yet to take active measures for the making and distribution
of the scapular.
The Blessed Virgin complained of it to the Sister in a new vision which she was
favored during the morning meditation of May 3, 1842, a Communion day. (Daily
Communion had not then been established.)
This is how the Sister herself relates her vision to Sister Buchepot, in a
letter dated from Versailles, May 20, 1842: "It seemed to me I heard a
voice which told me that she was not pleased because they delayed so long in
making the scapulars. She was so beautiful! . . . I promised her to make you
acquainted with it, as well as Father Aladel, so that you might both examine
whether it was indeed her holy will, at the same time begging you to attend to
it as soon as possible. I hope to come to Paris in the near future; then I
shall tell you all that I have seen and heard. A want of time prevents me from
writing to Father Aladel; I shall try to do so next week. Please pay him my
respectful regards and ask him to pray for his humble daughter."
Two days later on May 22, Sister Buchepot sent this letter to Father Aladel,
adding to it the following lines: "I am sending you a letter I received
yesterday. You see we are being urged on. . . . If you advise me, I shall write
again to Mr. Letaille. I am surprised that he who is so devoted to the Blessed
Virgin thus delays her affairs. After reading this letter will you kindly send
it back to me, that I may answer it . . . I beg you also to add a yes or no,
concerning Mr. Letaille."
We can see hereby that the wishes of the Blessed Virgin had received attention
as far as the preliminary steps were concerned, since Mr. Letaille had been
entrusted with the engraving of the plate destined to produce prints of the
image of the scapular and that partly he was accountable for the delay.
This is what Father Aladel answered Sister Buchepot on the same day, May 22:
"It would seem a good thing for you to write again (to Mr. Letaille). I
suppose the good works he is called upon to do prevent him from rushing this
affair. It may also be that his engraver does not hurry as much as he is
expected to."
At last, the scapular could be made, although only in small quantities, but it
was not given with sufficient confidence and more by way of experiment. Hence,
the results were not very satisfactory. [However, read the extraordinary
story of Mr. Copin’s conversion in Part III of this booklet.]
The Blessed Virgin repeatedly showed her displeasure in the course of the year
1846, to the Sister, who wrote on June 4, to her former Directress: "Above
all, the affair must be hurried on; there is unfortunately much delaying. . .
." There she excused herself for not going to Paris to see Father Aladel
as she was kept at Versailles by a First Communion class. "But I may
write," she added, "although it costs me. What must Father Aladel
think of the little confidence I show him? I am going to correct myself and
labor at becoming more simple."
And in another letter, bearing the date of the following month of the same
year, 1846, and also addressed to Sister Buchepot, she told her: "For a
long time I have had a desire to write to you; but I did not dare to do so,
because I am always afraid to be in a state of illusion. Today I want to
overcome this ill-founded fear, and wish to be toward you like a little child
who speaks to her mother with complete openness of heart.
"I believe again to have seen, yes I saw, I am sure of it. It is
absolutely necessary that Father Aladel attend to the scapular, that he should
disseminate it and so with confidence. Heretofore, I am sure, he did not attach
great importance to it. He was very wrong. True, I do not deserve to be
believed, for I am only a poor girl in every respect. May I entreat him to do
this, not for my sake, but I ask him in the name of Mary to do it for these
poor souls who die without knowing the true religion; yes, if it be given with
confidence, there will be a great number of conversions."
But, feeling that it was not very pleasant to transmit such a message, she
wondered whether she should not give it herself. She therefore added: "Help
me out, good Mother. Do you advise me to write to Father Aladel? I think it
would be more proper if I should speak to him of it; what is your idea? It has
been almost a year since I last mentioned the matter to him. I fear to see him,
he still awes me very much. I cannot help it . . . ."
“Answer me, I beg of you, as soon as possible; we
cannot lose any time."
The apparitions of 1846 had this particularity, that the hands of the Blessed
Virgin were filled with rays. This is what the Sister says of it in a letter to
her former directress, dated Versailles, August 10, 1846:
"Has Father Aladel
arrived? I forgot to tell you that he asked me whether the scapular (such as it
had been made with the plates of Mr. Letaille) was really exact. I answered in
the affirmative, that I did believe it was; but perhaps I answered too hastily,
for now, as far as I can remember, it seems to me that it had no rays
proceeding from the hands of the Blessed Virgin and reaching to the hem of her
garment. And however, it seems to me that is the way she appeared the last
time. It seems to me, understand well, for I am always tempted to consider all
this an illusion of the devil, who perhaps makes use of this means for my
destruction, making me believe things that are not.
"But I told you that I would say all; I want to keep my word. Do not speak
of this to Father Aladel, I would rather tell him myself, because I fear he
thinks I have not enough confidence in him, for which he has already reproached
me."
And she asked that they should send her the picture
of the scapular that she might add to it with lead pencil the rays as she saw
them at the last apparition.
They did not believe it was necessary, however, to have the engraving made
over, and it remained and still is without rays. It was thought that this
omission of detail would not prevent the scapular from corresponding
substantially to the desires of the Blessed Virgin.
They did better; they went more actively about the printing and making of the
scapular, and distributed it with more confidence.
But one difficulty arose whose solution could not be found in the preceding
revelations. What were the conditions required to render this scapular
effective? Must it be submitted to a special blessing, be imposed with certain
ceremonies, oblige those who wear it to certain prayers or practices, should it
be used only on behalf of infidels and in foreign missions only?
To solve these diverse problems there was but one way, namely that the Sister
would beg the Blessed Virgin to give the answer. But as she had a great
repugnance to do so, her director had to oblige her to do it. "I am going
to obey," she wrote to her former directress, "but it costs me; I
hardly feel fit to ask for anything. I am in so wretched a state." She
obeyed, although with repugnance, and on the eighth of September (1846), the
Blessed Virgin, having again appeared to her, her hands filled with rays, the
answer was in substance as follows:
That the scapular, not being like other scapulars, the habit of a confraternity, but is merely two holy pictures put on a single piece of goods and hanging by a string as would be a medal, no special formula is requisite to bless it and there can be no question of imposing it. It suffices that it be blessed by a priest and worn by the infidel or sinner whom we wish to benefit by its happy influence. It may even be slipped unknown to him in his clothes, or his bed or room. As to the prayers to be recited, there is but one that should be said every day, the one that forms the oval inscription with which the Holy Heart is surrounded on the Scapular. ‘Immaculate Heart of Mary, pray for us now and at the hour of our death.’ If the person in whose behalf this scapular is applied should not say it, then the one who makes use of or gives the scapular must say it in her place. This scapular may be used in France, as well as in foreign lands. The greatest graces are attached to its use; but these graces are more or less great in proportion to the degree of confidence which accompanies it. This was the meaning of the different kinds of rays which fell from the hands of the Blessed Virgin at the last apparition.
These indications were exactly complied with, and the scapular being applied under these conditions, produced henceforth, and is ever producing an incalculable number of marvelous conversions and sometimes cures. In the third part the relation of some of these marvels will appear.
Are not these wonders like an authentic proof of the
supernatural origin of this devotion, and of the sanction which God Himself
seems thus to give it?
But it may be wondered whether or not it has been submitted to the decision of
the Church; whether it has some ecclesiastical approbation to recommend it.
In the first place, everything leads to presume, though we have no written
token of it, that our Father Aladel, so wise, so prudent and so cautious, did
not authorize the making and distributing of the Green Scapular without making
sure, beforehand, of the approbation of the Archbishop of Paris, Monsignor Affre.
Thus, we saw him in 1832 humbly asking of the predecessor of Monsignor Affre, Monsignor
de Quelen, the authorization for the striking of the Medal revealed in 1830,
known since then under the name of Miraculous Medal. How can it be thought that
for the Green Scapular, which is a kind of medallion of cloth, he should have
believed himself dispensed from a similar measure? How can it be thought that
Mr. Letaille, so Christian a publisher as he was, would have been willing to
take a share in the diffusion of a devotion which would not have been
sanctioned by the first pastor of the diocese?
However, for this devotion, spreading little by little not only throughout
France but even abroad, an approbation merely diocesan might have appeared
insufficient to certain doubtful minds. Hence, it was resolved to solicit from
Pope Pius IX an ampler approbation which would silence any scruples.
This was done by Father Borgogno, Procurator General of the Congregation of the
Mission at the Holy See, who achieved complete success. He gives the following
statement of it in a letter dated April 3, 1870:
"Having spoken about the Green Scapular to the Holy Father, I related to him the details of its origin adding that particular graces of conversions among hardened sinners had been obtained by means of it. When asked me whether I had any with me, I answered in the affirmative and showed him one. The Holy Father took it, examined it attentively and said to me: 'This is a beautiful and pious picture.' Then he added, 'Well, what do you wish in this matter?' I answered, 'Nothing else than the permission for our Sisters (the Daughters of Charity) to make and distribute scapulars similar to this one, with the faculty of distributing them.' Then he said: 'I give full permission for that. Write to these good Sisters that I authorize them to make and distribute them'."
Hence, it is plain that it was with a full knowledge of the matter, after attentively considering this image, that the Pope, while praising its beauty and piety, gave his sanction thereto.
What more could be desired? In fact it is here a
question of nothing but a pious image and not of the badge of a confraternity.
And the new Canon Law [promulgated in 1917,] (Canon 1385, 1, 3:2) which forbids
the printing of any pious picture without an ecclesiastical authorization, says
that this authorization must be given by the Ordinary of the place inhabited by
the author, or that where the picture is to be printed, adding that for
religious a permission from a Major Superior is moreover required (Canon 1385,
3). Now, in 1911 there appeared at Lille a pamphlet of eight pages on the Green
Scapular with a reproduction of its two pictures; and this pamphlet bore the
approbation of Most Honored Father Fiat, Superior General of the Mission and
the Daughters of Charity (July 8th, 1911), and also an authorization of Monsignor
Delamaire, Coadjutor and soon afterwards Archbishop of Cambrai (July 13, 1911).
It may be remarked, by the way, that the Green Scapular was not a stranger to
Our Holy Father Pope Pius XI, since it had a place on his working desk side by
side with the Miraculous Medal. The following is what the Most Honored Mother
of the Daughters of Charity wrote on the subject as she was relating her
journey to Rome and her audience of January 27, 1923:
"The audience with the Sovereign Pontiff was consoling. As I was telling him that our Sisters were using with success the Green Scapular for the conversion of sinners, I offered one to His Holiness who took it in his hands, then placed it on his writing desk with the Miraculous Medal."
Hence, there need be no anxiety about the legitimacy
of this devotion. Not only does it fall under no censure, but it moreover
presents itself to the piety of the faithful with all the warrants required by
the Church.
Also after living for a long time in obscurity (too long, perhaps), it does not
fear now to appear in broad daylight. And the Community of the Daughters of
Charity, while keeping the monopoly of the Green Scapular, has decided to put
it on the market. Therefore those persons who wish to procure that precious
pledge of salvation must have it blessed by a priest (any priest has this
power), and they must observe the conditions previously pointed out.
As to the graces of conversion or others which shall have been obtained by
means of the Green Scapular, those who know of them are requested to send an
account of the facts, exact and authentic as possible, to Saint Joseph's,
Emmitsburg, Maryland; being careful to mention precisely the circumstances of
time, place and persons; not fearing under pretense of humility to give the
names. It is a question of glorifying God and His Most Holy Mother.
PART THREE: The Favors Associated with the Green Scapular.
The wonders attributed to the Green Scapular are truly countless. Almost constantly we are informed of conversions of infidels or sinners who, first rebellious, declared themselves vanquished as soon as the Green Scapular was used. Thus are realized the words spoken by the Blessed Virgin to Sister Bisqueyburu in 1846:
"Yes, if it be given with confidence, there will be a great number of conversions." Cures obtained by the same means are not so numerous, though there have been some.
It is absolutely impossible here to mention all
these favors. We shall confine ourselves to relating just a few. They will
suffice to justify the promises of the Blessed Virgin, and to inspire
confidence in the use of this new pledge of salvation, which we owe to her
maternal kindness.
This story of Mr. Copin is very likely the first or one of the first attributed
to the Green Scapular, for it took place September 30, 1842, and the first
Scapulars were only made in July of 1842.
This wonderful conversion may be considered as a reward not only for the zeal
which Mr. Letaille displayed in bringing about the conversion of his bookkeeper
to the practice of religion, but also for the religious eagerness he showed in
attending to the engraving of the plate used in printing the Scapular.
The relation that follows is most authentic, based on the testimony written by
persons who were in closest touch with the event: the convert himself, Mr.
Copin, then Mr. Letaille, Father Aladel, and Sister Grand. It is from these
testimonies, carefully preserved in the Archives of the Congregation of the
Mission, that the following details are drawn.
. . . . . . . Mr. Copin’s Conversion.
Mr. Copin, who was born about the year 1792 amid the
disturbances of the Great Revolution, had not received a Christian education.
Having had no religious instruction, he knew the Church, her doctrine, her
ceremonies and her ministers only through her detractors.
He had at first entered upon a military career and served in the army of
Napoleon I, taking part in several campaigns. He had reached the rank of under
officer when, in a battle against the English, he was wounded and taken
prisoner.
Returning to France and retiring from the army, he availed himself of his
knowledge of bookkeeping and we thus find him in 1840 about fifty years of age,
as bookkeeper in the house of Letaille (formerly conducted by Pintard, at 30 Rue
Saint Jacques). "He acquitted himself of his duty," said Mr.
Letaille, "with a perfect regularity and steadfastness up to his death.
Being of a cold temperament, firm, perhaps somewhat headstrong, he had a tender
heart capable of devotedness."
He married one of the employees of the house - much younger
than himself - and was very good to her and practiced in his home all domestic
virtues. Nothing was wanting to make of him a perfect man but to add to these
natural virtues faith and the practice of religion.
At that time (1840) Mr. Charles Letaille, who had himself returned to God after
two years of hesitation and prayer, felt in the fervor of a neophyte the need
of imparting to others the faith he had regained and which he had attributed to
Our Lady of Victory.
To satisfy this apostolic inclination, he undertook the conversion of his
bookkeeper, Mr. Copin, whom he held in great esteem and whose religious doubts
and prejudices he had previously shared. Let us hear from him the story of the
efforts of his zeal:
"When we became
acquainted, we both were skeptical philosophers, discussing everything,
doubting everything, but more through ignorance and presumption than prejudice.
"As soon as I had embraced the practice of religious duties, I felt the
need of special studies in order to explain my conduct and to be able to answer
as a Christian to the attacks directed against me on all sides. To this effect,
I implored the help of the Most Holy Virgin.
"I consecrated myself to her promising her that if she would guide me in
all things, I would no longer concern myself about anything but to serve her
Divine Son under her banner.
"Mr. Copin became the companion of my religious studies and for two years
(1840-1842) we interrupted our monotonous secretarial work only to discuss
points of dogma or ethics.
"With God's help, I soon became a better example. . . . .
"Recognizing that the efforts of my zeal were powerless and almost
fruitless, and penetrated with the sentiments of my great weakness, I betook
myself to prayer and entreated our Lady of Victory to come to my help. I also
recommended the conversion of this good soul to the interests of the priests
and religious persons whom the great mercy of God had made use of to save my
own self."
Among those persons were Father Desgenettes, the
saintly pastor of Our Lady of Victory and founder of the famous
Archconfraternity which bears that name; a Jesuit Father who is not named; two
Daughters of Charity of the Mother House, Sister Henriette and Sister Grand, on
duty in the secretariat, lastly Father Aladel, Director of the Community of the
Daughters of Charity, and confidant of the revelations of the Blessed Virgin to
Sister Bisqueyburu concerning the Green Scapular.
It was thus God was pleased to surround this predestined soul, who was soon to
appear before His tribunal, with all that could help him to secure a favorable
judgment.
That moment, in fact, was not far removed. "Meanwhile," related Mr.
Letaille, "the worthy Mr. Copin fell sick. At first, it was only a sore
throat, a hacking cough which seemed not very alarming. However, the case was
most serious. Mr. Copin, whose body was worn out by the privations and fatigues
of his military campaigns, was by these facts predisposed to disease. His lungs
became ulcerated and his condition grew critical.
"Although he was well aware of it, he did not seem disturbed in the least.
For him it was a conflict to sustain with disease and he loved warfare, hoping
to triumph by dint of energy. His energy, let it be said, was more than
ordinary, and he gave many proofs of it during his illness. One day as he
himself had applied a searing iron to his arm, he placed a silver coin on it
and pressed on it so hard that it was all bent. And in the last stages, when
his illness confined him to bed, he succeeded in overcoming his extreme
weakness to attend to his bookkeeping which he kept up until his death."
Yet his state of soul inspired him with no anxiety regarding eternity.
Fortunately, others thought of it in his place, and Mr. Letaille's zeal for his
friend increased in proportion to the imminent danger.
"In this extremity," he said, "I had recourse to some means
which I deemed to be decisive. I obtained the consent of the venerable Father
Desgenettes, my Director, to pay my patient a visit. He came to see him several
times, and each time had a long talk with him, but alas! without any success.
The poor sick man said that he would be very glad to know the truth, but that
he felt himself surrounded by darkness which prevented him from seeing the
truth. As he was gifted with an upright and sincere soul, he did not wish to
perform an action contrary to his convictions.
"As I was exasperated at seeing the disease progressing each day and the
longed-for conversion proceeding so slowly, I tried to put my poor friend in
touch with the good Sisters of Charity whom he loved and revered."
There were in particular two Sisters of the Mother House, Sister Henriette and
Sister Grand, who very efficaciously helped Mr. Letaille in his zealous efforts
to bring about the conversion of the dear patient. Sister Grand took charge of
pleading his cause with the Very Reverend Father Aladel, whom she induced to
visit the patient.
"I saw Father Aladel this morning," she wrote to Mr. Letaille, on
Saturday, September 17, "and he consents to see the patient, not thinking,
however that he will be able to hear his Confession. Nevertheless, I look upon
this visit as a great blessing; I induced him to pay it tomorrow, Sunday, after
Vespers, that is about four or five o'clock.
"I think, it would be well if the patient were prepared for the visit. You
might tell him that I am so grateful for the prayers he kindly said for my
brother, that I should at any cost obtain this same happiness for him; that I
beg him to give a kind reception to this venerable priest, to open to him his
heart entirely and to tell him why he does not seriously begin to make his
Confession . . . etc.
“Tell him that this good priest, who is under rules, did not hesitate to
inconvenience himself to make this call for the sake of the glory God might
derive from it . . . . . . .
"Consider whether it is better for Father Aladel to meet at your house or
at his and then come and tell me tomorrow, Sunday, before our High Mass, which
is at eight o'clock.
"I dare hope that the Blessed Virgin will bless this visit. Please offer
tomorrow's Communion for that intention. This soul must, must be saved, our
Lord wishes it - the Blessed Virgin wishes it." It can be seen what a
heart of an Apostle this good Daughter of Charity possessed!
The visit took place on Sunday, September 18; but it had not the expected
result. "The worthy Father Aladel," said Mr. Letaille, "was
received as the other priest who had previously called, with a courtesy deeply
respectful, but his endeavors to persuade the patient to take the step that
cost him so much, remained fruitless. Dear Mr. Copin was moved to tears at
these marks of interest, and his grief was, so he said, not to be able in
conscience to admit what was proposed to him with so much zeal."
"It was then that the idea occurred to have recourse to the Green
Scapular. Monday, September 19, 1842. Sister Grand sent one to Mr. Letaille
asking him to induce the patient to accept it, at least as a means to restore
him back to bodily health. "Try," said she, "and if needs be, be
insistent. Bring the heart of Mary (whose image is on the scapular) near that
unhappy heart, so that her power may break its lock, and that grace may,
as soon as possible, penetrate into that soul. All our Sisters are going to
join in prayer for him."
Mr. Copin accepted the scapular to please his friend, and even wore it on his
person, but without attaching much importance to it.
However, the disease made rapid strides and Father Desgenettes advised Mr.
Letaille to enlighten the patient upon the seriousness of his state and to tell
him that his end was near.
"I was the only Christian friend," said Mr. Letaille, "who could
venture for his salvation such an announcement and it cost me beyond words. I
appealed to the Blessed Virgin for light and grace. I prayed myself weary and
then went out to my patient.
"The conversation soon fell upon Heaven. It was our usual subject. And I
told him gently, without effort, that the time had come for him to think of it
. . . . that the end of his mortal career was near at hand. . . . .
"Overwhelmed by this news he sat on his bed, took my hands and after a few
moments of silence he said to me: 'How different do the things of this world
look when one is standing on the brink of eternity.’ . . . . These words gave
me some hope, and our conversation continued in its affectionate turn. But soon
I understood that unless a miracle would happen, my poor friend would not ask
for the priest, that he would content himself with using all his energy in order
to die without weakness, like a disciple of Socrates. I was distressed."
"The moment however was not far distant when this distress was to be
changed into great joy; the Immaculate Heart of Mary was soon to work a great
favor. The patient spent the greater part of his time in bed; but he rose each
day, worked at his bookkeeping and even ate at the table with his family.
On Friday morning, September 30, Mr. Letaille called to see him, but the
conversation was very superficial and religion was not even mentioned. The
little success of the preceding days lent no encouragement to a fresh attempt.
Now, in the evening of that very Friday, about seven o'clock, Mr. Copin was at
table with his family, when all of a sudden, he rose abruptly, left the table
and retired in his bedroom. There he fell on his knees before an image of the
Blessed Virgin and took his Green Scapular in his hands as a "medium"
as he expressed himself; he kissed it respectfully, and shed abundant tears.
Then he felt impelled to promise the Blessed Virgin that within the week he
would seriously settle the affair of his conscience.
Rising, he went back to his family, but soon he retired again, went on his
knees in a recess near his bed, weeping and praying, and finished by promising
our Blessed Mother not to wait a week but to attend to it the very next day.
Immediately he wrote the following note to Mr. Letaille:
"Most dear friend: I have to speak to you about many things; and if you could give me a few hours tomorrow afternoon, I would consider it a great favor. I made a promise to our good Mother, I prayed hard to her yesterday and am most anxious to see you about it. Good-bye, pray for me, I need it so much! It is in your house I should like to see you; here my emotion would be too great.
Sincerely
Yours,
Copin."
What a sudden and truly miraculous change! That man,
usually so cold, so matter of fact, so far from any religious practice, now
weeps, prays, promises Mary not to put off his reconciliation, with God, and
writes to his friend to declare himself vanquished!
On receiving this note, Saturday morning, October 1, Mr. Letaille could not
control his joy; he sent the note immediately to Sister Grand, adding to it the
following lines. "Dear Sister: This morning on returning from Mass, I
received a very consoling letter from our poor dear patient. Our good
Immaculate Mother came to his help. I am sending it to you that you may see for
yourself. How edified I am by his humility and confidence! 'I made a promise to
our good Mother.’ . . . This is the first time, as far as I can remember, that
he made use of this appellation in speaking of the Blessed Virgin. I do not
know as yet what this promise is . . . I went right away to see our dear pastor
(of Saint-Severin's) Father Hanicle and gave him a general account of this sad
story, showing him the enclosed note. He will come at half-past three. Perhaps
Mr. Copin will still be there. We place everything in the hands of our good
Immaculate Mother. It makes me happy to see that it happens on a Saturday and
the eve of the Feast of the Holy Angels, to whom I am going to begin a novena
for him tomorrow. I wrote to Father Desgenettes in order to recommend him to
the special prayers of the Archconfraternity; and with the help of our good Mother,
I shall go tomorrow evening to pray at the shrine of her Immaculate Heart. I
know that it is needless to ask you to think of us from noon until four
o'clock, as I know full well the extent of your charity for him and for us.
Help us, Sister, we beg you so much. Will you kindly tell this to Father Aladel
and keep the note for me?"
That very day, in fact, Mr. Copin, bracing himself up against his weakness, was
able to call on Mr. Letaille to tell him about his sudden conversion and the
promise he made to the Blessed Virgin. The two friends fell into each other's
arms. "The time of discussion was over," said Mr. Letaille, "we
agreed in humbling ourselves and thanking God." And the pastor of
Saint-Severin who arrived could begin hearing the Confession of the happy convert;
of which event Mr. Letaille hastened to inform good Sister Grand: "My dear
Sister," said he, "our good Mother has triumphed! Alleluia! The poor
sick man just went to Confession to Father Hanicle, from four until five
o'clock. It was the Green Scapular that conquered him." [It will be noted
that Mr. Corbin was unusually scrupulous in his conscience and that the good
Father went to extreme lengths to accommodate his scruples.]
And Sister Grand answered October 2: "How good Mary is! How powerful! How
liberal! How merciful! . . . How we thank you for telling us the good news! We
are so interested in it! Tell the happy patient so, while awaiting the time
when we may call on him ourselves, October 4, to rejoice with him and express
our happiness . . . The demon is overcome! But what a triumph! and what a feast
must be held in the heavenly home! All the Angels are celebrating this
longed-for return. All sing 'Glory to God, love to the Divine Mother.' And we
too, let us not weary returning thanks, especially by greater fidelity and
fervor."
On the same day, she also imparted her joy to Father Aladel: "Father, how happy I am at this new triumph of our powerful Mother! The poor patient is to continue his Confession tomorrow (Monday evening, October 3) Sister Henriette and I will go to see him on Tuesday (October 4), and I dare hope that you will have the charity to go there also on one of these days. . . . These are good beginnings to recommend the new Scapular . . . ! This first trial is well calculated to encourage us. . . . How evident it is that Heaven is blessing it and how true has the revelation proved itself to be. . . . As a consequence I do love that Green Scapular. But especially do I love Mary, our good Mother, who is giving us this new pledge of her inexhaustible love. Yes, indeed! In Heaven, there must be a great feast at the conversion of a sinner. I can well feel this by the almost excessive joy which I experience."
On the Tuesday following, October 4, the patient received the visit of Sister Grand and the day after, on Wednesday the 5th, that of Father Aladel, who joyfully convinced himself of the reality of this surprising and sudden conversion.
However, Mr. Copin had not yet ended his Confession which had already required two interviews. It was only on Monday, October 17, that he received absolution and on the next day, Tuesday the 18th, feast of Saint Luke, he made at the Church of Saint-Severin his first and last Communion. Here is an account of it by Mr. Letaille, given to Sister Grand the very day of this happy Communion:
"My dear Sister, I
am sending you this note to ask you to help us to thank our Immaculate Mother,
for the protection she never ceases to show us.
"Everything went well. Our dear patient has been somewhat tried but I do
hope that with the help of God this will make him much the stronger.
"Yesterday, Monday, Father Hanicle (the Pastor of Saint-Severin's) as he
intended to come to hear his Confession, had to go to the ministry and returned
only at nine p.m. Our poor sick man waited for him patiently, went to
Confession at nine o'clock and then returned home.
"The next day, that is to say, this morning, he had to undergo a fast that
was extremely difficult for him, considering his condition. He had to abstain
from every drink, lozenge, etc., from midnight until after eight o'clock.
[Nowadays, the Church freely dispenses the sick from such rules of fasting.]
"This morning, exactly at eight o'clock, he came with his wife to
Saint-Severin's and I arrived with my mother. He was very weak; but you know
how brave he is. As it was somewhat cold, we took him to the sacristy to warm
himself, while waiting for the priest, who was not long coming. He had a few
scruples of conscience which he wanted to submit to Father but they could not
have been much for it did not look as if Father gave him absolution.
"After that we went to the altar of Our Lady of Holy Hope. We followed
him, the four of us - he, his wife, my mother and I - united in one same
thought, in one same sentiment.
"To spare him every subject of confusion, I told him to do everything he
would see me do, and you may believe I kept him sitting as much as possible.
"At last, the moment of Communion arrived, and under the protection of our
good Immaculate Mother he received our dear Master! Praised and adored be at
all times the Most Holy Sacrament of love, and blessed be forever the purity
and Immaculate Conception of our good Mother! Amen! Oh! my dear Sister, how
good God is . . . ! And our Blessed Mother, too!
"After the last Gospel, I sat with him to help him make his thanksgiving;
when our dear Lord Who just now had reassumed His rights over our poor hearts,
willed by a magnanimous gesture to take us all together to Himself. How welcome
to me was the thought with which he then inspired Father; for as I am thinking
it over, it seems to me as if our Lord wished thus to bind us to Him before
everybody. This is how it happened.
"At the end of the Mass, before leaving the altar, Father stopped,
recollected his thoughts for a moment, then turning around, he said aloud: 'My
brethren, I spoke to you of an elderly gentleman whose conversion we obtained,
together with that of his wife, by our prayers to Our Lady of Hope. I had asked
you to pray in order to draw down the graces of heaven on his First Communion
which he had not as yet had the happiness of making. He made it at this Mass,
under the protection of Saint Luke who, as you know was a physician; this is a
good omen. We asked and obtained by our prayers the cure of his soul. Let us
now ask of Our Lady of Hope, Refuge of the hopeless, the cure of his body,
under the patronage of Saint Luke. Let us for that intention say a Pater and an
Ave {an Our Father and a Hail Mary}.'
"After that, Father knelt down and we answered the prayers which he said
aloud . . . ! O! how I wished you had been there! You would have been so happy
. . . !"
What were the sentiments of the happy convert at the moment when our Lord, coming to him in Holy Communion, took possession of his soul? We learn it by a letter of Sister Grand to Father Aladel, dated Saturday, October 22:
"Last Thursday I
went to see that poor patient, to congratulate him for the great grace of his
First Communion. What a sweet impression I carried away from this visit! If it
were possible that I could doubt the infinite goodness of God, I confess that I
would there have found incontestable proofs of it. . . .
"Sister Pineau was with me. We found Mr. Copin in bed, very weak, but calm
and perfectly resigned.
"As I expressed the anxiety which I had felt on the day of his Communion
at the thought that it would be very hard for him to stand the fatigue of
waiting until morning, followed by the long stay in the Church, he answered:
'No, Sister, I was not
tired that day. On the contrary, I went to bed at eight o'clock in the evening
and the whole day was spent in the sensation of my happiness. In the morning, I
had something that worried me, and, as I wished to prepare calmly for this
action, I wanted to see Father Hanicle once more to settle it. He soothed me by
saying that I had already confessed it.
‘I feared lest I should be very cold and yet I could prepare myself better than
I had dared to expect. And afterwards, all the remainder of the day I felt too
happy. You see it was something so overpowering that it was a case of telling
our dear Lord it is enough. I could not bear so much, I thought I was gone;
nevertheless I was calm and peaceful, saying to myself that I ought to accept
that consolation, not for its own sake, but for the precious memory of it that
would remain with me. I was so full of my happiness that it seems to me I could
not have spoken of anything else. . . . I was wishing that everybody would love
God, that everybody would come to seek Him here in Holy Communion, and I so
much regretted not having loved Him sooner!
'When I found myself alone, closing my eyes, I let my tears flow, and my wife
inquired if I had had some sorrow. I could give her no other answer except that
my tears were from an excess of happiness and if it should continue, my heart
must burst, as it could bear no more. . . . But now, Sister, all is passed, and
of that great happiness nothing remains but the memory. I feel again today, as
well as yesterday, dry and cold, yet though our dear Lord should seem to
abandon me a little, how could I complain, I who for so long a time had
abandoned Him.’
"I then told him
that very likely our Lord intended by these moments of sensible grace, to
strengthen his faith and relieve him forever of the doubts which had so
painfully affected him since his conversion, to make him realize by these
lights and consolations that He is truly hidden in the Sacrament of love. 'Oh!
yes, Sister,' he replied, 'that is indeed what I was clearly given to know and
to understand.'
"I was wishing, Father, you could witness as I did, the sweet peace with
which he spoke of the graces received on that beautiful day. With what emotion
he recalled them!
"In presence of such sentiments, and contrasting them with those that
animated Mr. Copin a few days ago, one cannot help considering such a change as
humanly inexplicable, as a real miracle of grace.”
That Communion, as well made, imparted to him a strength and courage that never left him during the few days he had still to spend on earth.
"I remember," related Mr. Letaille,
"that when he finished his thanksgiving, he reached me his hand saying:
'Now I have received enough to last to the end; I ask for nothing more.' He
felt that henceforth it would be his turn to give.
"His strength returned a little at first; but soon he had to confine
himself again to his room and bed, without ever interrupting his work or the
little practices of piety he had embraced. He always received his relatives and
friends calmly and there was in his greeting something more cordial and
affectionate than before his conversion; he let them see without affectation
that he was using the rosary which never left him, as well as the Green
Scapular that hung on his breast. He spoke to them with humility, but also with
firmness, of his conversion, which he considered the greatest good fortune of
his life.
"At last the end of his suffering came, for he did suffer greatly, but he
knew how to conceal his pain with great fortitude. He liked especially to
reassure his wife by assuming a cheerful countenance. As he judged her too weak
to assist at his death, he begged me to keep her at a distance, and he bade her
farewell in a note which he placed under the marble slab of his writing desk.
"His agony was incredibly sweet. Even then, when he could no longer hear
what I said to him, with eyes riveted and face aglow, he repeated three or four
times very distinctly: 'Ah! how glad I am! Ah! how glad I am!’ Then he passed
away gently.
"This is, in all simplicity, the relation of that conversion so surprising
to those who knew the previous dispositions and the mental caliber of Mr.
Copin, suddenly conquered and transformed by the application of that blessed
Scapular. God has granted me the grace to witness other very edifying
conversions but none has ever impressed me so strongly as did this one."
‘Marriage’ to a Divorcee.
It was time for classes to begin in a large High
School, and all the pupils were ready and interested in the subject, except
one, and where was she, she who was always on time and fully alive to the day's
work? Alas poor Noeline,(not her real name for the sake of her family’s
privacy,) had a heavy little heart that morning and she was waiting to see the
Sister Superior, to unburden her sorrow to the kind Sister whom she felt would
help if anyone could.
"Good morning, Noeline, what can I do for you?" asked Sister.
In tears and sobs the young girl said, "Oh, Sister, my mother will die
today, my mother will surely die today!”
"Now, Noeline, Sister said, "surely your dear mother is not that
ill."
"I tell you, Sister, my mother will die of a broken heart today, because
my sister is to be married to a divorced man and nothing will stop her. She has
it all arranged, and they are to be married this morning. Oh, Sister, my poor
mother will die!"
And the poor girl stood weeping by Sister's side. Suddenly Sister said: "Your
mother will not die nor your sister marry that man either. Take this Green
Scapular home this minute, tell mother to start saying the prayer: 'Immaculate
Heart of Mary, pray for us now and at the hour of our death' and to say it over
and over and not to stop, and I tell you that man will not marry your sister.
Hasten on now, and tell mother this and to say the prayer with confidence in
Blessed Mother, and all will be well."
“Poor Noeline” started on the way home and did as she was told. The sorrow stricken
mother received Sister's message and with a heavy heart, but as one clutching
at a last straw, she began the hours of prayer for her poor deluded child.
Surely, Mary would help in this hour of anguish! The morning dragged on, the
mother prayed, and Sister Superior too, and her students implored Blessed
Mother for 'something very urgent that morning'; and all waited almost
breathlessly for the outcome.
Early the next morning Noeline arrived in school, but oh, with what a different
feeling. No, her sister did not marry that man as planned on the previous day,
and this she hastened to impart to Sister Superior. With animation she came to
tell Sister that the man who was in the army and who was permitted to have the
day off for the marriage, when he came and saw how heartbroken the girl's
mother was, said to his intended bride, "We had better wait, I could not
go through this with your mother feeling as she does, let us wait a short while
and see if she will not get over this and give her consent." What a
surprise; what a moment of intense relief! Yes, the Blessed Mother was doing
her work and would continue to shield her child who had been so faithful to her
in days gone by. So the marriage was put off indefinitely. However, it was
decided between the couple that if the groom-to-be could get a furlough, they
would be married, hoping by this time the mother would be reconciled. Sister
urged the girl to tell her mother to continue the prayer and she knew Our
Blessed Lady would not let that marriage take place. The prayer was answered.
Just a few days before the furlough, all leaves of absence were withdrawn, that
division of men ordered to start for parts unknown (in fact it was to
Indochina) and all communications between the man and the girl were broken off.
Thus, did Mary show her power and reward the confidence of her humble servants
who confided in her.
Two Conversion Stories From the Archives.
A patient was entered in the hospital as a
Protestant and was operated on. A short time before she was to be discharged,
the patients in the room with her received the Sacraments of Penance and Holy
Communion. One day she remarked that she was a Catholic and had been brought up
in a Catholic orphanage till she was almost twelve years of age. Then she had
gone out to work in a good family. Later, she was married out of the Church and
had brought up her children as Protestants, which Church she herself had
joined, about thirty-two years before. She very much resented being asked if
she would not like to return to her own Faith, notwithstanding which she
willingly accepted a Green Scapular. The next morning, the Sister, who had
given her the scapular, came into the room and she noticed a worried look in
the eyes of her patient. On inquiring if she could assist her, the woman said
she would like to see a priest. Throughout the long years, she had been most
unhappy for having left her childhood's faith but the friends she consulted had
told her she never could return. She received the Sacraments and sent for her
husband and told him she was determined henceforth to live up to the Catholic
Church. ‘Thanks to the Green Scapular she continues faithful to her good
resolutions now she is again at her own home.’ (Thus the note in the Archives.)
A young couple who were very wealthy suffered by losing all they had and were
reduced to a state of great poverty. The wife was a Catholic but the husband a
Protestant; their three little boys were being brought up Catholics. After they
met with reverses, the mother became careless about her religion and neglected
sending the children to church or catechism because “she had no fit clothing
for them”, and in time, all religion became a thing of the past in the family.
Again, the wheels of fortune turned and they not only retrieved what they had
lost but became millionaires. The mother gradually returned to the practice of
her religion, as did also two of the boys, but the oldest one did not. This was
a source of continual worry to the mother who realized she was responsible
before God, for, the son, now 55. He ignored all efforts to win him back. A
neighbor, learning the facts, gave the mother two Green Scapulars and told her
to have him wear one. He laughed and refused to do so. She then placed one on
his bed and sewed the other in his suit. A few weeks later, he said to his
mother: "Guess where I have been. I have been to the Jesuits to have them
instruct me in my Faith and prepare me to approach the Sacraments." Shortly
after, he made his First Confession and received his First Holy Communion. The
family are extremely grateful to Our Lady of the Green Scapular.
A Gangrenous Leg.
The following incident occurred in a hospital conducted by the Sisters of Charity. A woman in one of the wards inquired for a Sister whom she had known some years before. The Sister went to see her immediately and found her suffering with a gangrenous leg and the Sister in charge of the ward gave the visitor very little hope of recovery, saying that it was well-nigh impossible to save the leg and she feared it would have to be amputated. This was sad, for the poor woman had no idea her condition was so serious. She was also a victim of diabetes. The leg was so swollen it looked more like a piece of stone than a human leg. Some days passed and as the leg was treated every day without showing any improvement, the poor patient began to be despondent about her cure.
Pitying her condition, a Sister gave her a Green Scapular, telling her to put all her confidence in our Blessed Mother. Lovingly and with kisses, she put it around her neck. The Sister also gave her a prayer leaflet of Saint Joseph, and, since it was the month of March, she began a novena to Saint Joseph. On the nineteenth, Feast of Saint Joseph, she was much improved, for the greater part of the pain had ceased and the doctors now looked for her recovery. At the end of two weeks, she was permitted to return home, where later on two of the Sisters called to see how she was progressing. She told them her leg was getting on fine and that the attending doctor thought that he would only need to make two more visits before he discharged her. She was still wearing the Green Scapular and she said she felt sure her recovery was due to Our Lady of the Scapular. Again and again, her children, who are quite grown, expressed their appreciation of their mother's cure and their gratitude to the Queen of Heaven.
A Letter from a Grateful Son.
“My father, a convert for about eighteen years, left
the Church over fifteen years ago, at the age of forty, because he said he
could not believe in the Immaculate Conception and in the Infallibility of the
Pope. During these intervening years, he has often expressed the desire for the
grace of Faith, but it was not until this year that it came.
“Since last May, he has been wearing the Green Scapular and has said the prayer
on it, asking others to pray for him also. Several days before he went to
Confession, a Sister spoke to him about Our Lady and it seemed that this time
our Lord opened his eyes to the possibility of this mystery.
“On the afternoon of the Feast of the Nativity of Our Lady, which was the day
recalling the first revelation of the Green Scapular, my father went to
Confession and every day since then he has received Holy Communion.
“He has told me since that he will always wear the scapular and each month he has Mass offered in thanksgiving to Blessed Mother for his return to the Faith.” [Sadly, this letter does not specify the exact year of the conversion.]
* * *
Thanks to the Marian Center, Saint Joseph's Provincial House of the Daughters of Charity, Emmitsburg, Maryland.