Thursday, January 31, 2013

Second Resurrection of Venerable Mariana de Jesus Torres



(This is a compilation from various Internet Sources)
Photos All Rights Reserved to their respective owners.


On September 17, 1588, Sister Mariana was saying her customary prayers at midnight, when suddenly her body shuddered so violently that she could not help but cry out.

Taken to bed, her body was examined and it was discovered that on each palm of her hands was something similar to a hole into which something had been driven. The same was present on the soles of her feet in the very place where the spikes had been driven into the feet of Our Lord. Upon her heart was a purple bruise and red mark, as if it had been wounded by a spear.

The next morning, the doctor examined her carefully and said she was completely debilitated: the marrow of her bones dried up, her body paralyzed. The only movement he could find was the beating of her heart.

This infirmity lasted for one year and, in the first months, to the physical suffering were added the spiritual ones, the dark night of the soul.

One day, on her bed of pain, she suddenly heard a dreadful clamor in the cell. She opened her eyes and saw a hideous serpent writhing and twisting in her cell, crawling frantically on the walls, as if pursued by someone trying to drive him away.

Her pain increased and her spirit was overwhelmed with despair. All the heroic acts of her life seemed criminal to her. Her good works appeared as works of perdition, her very vocation an illusion and sham by which she had delivered herself to eternal damnation. In this woeful interior state, when it seemed to her that her soul would detach itself from her body from the violence of her suffering and sink like lead into Hell, she mustered all her strength, crying out: “Star of the stormy sea, Mary Most Immaculate, the weak vessel of my soul is sinking. The waters of tribulation are drowning me. Save me, for I am perishing!”

Before she had pronounced the last word, she saw a celestial light around her and felt a loving hand touching her head. At the same time, she heard a sweet voice that said: “Why do you fear, My daughter? Do you know that I am with you in your tribulation? Rise up and look at Me!”

The humble religious raised herself up in her bed and saw a Lady of great majesty and grandeur who breathed sweetness and love. She asked: “Who are you, beautiful Lady?”

“I am the Mother of Heaven whom you invoked. I have come to dissipate the darkness of the night of your soul. (…) for your Lord and God has destined for you great and auspicious things during your lifetime(…). Now, I will impart life to your nerves, veins and arteries, and I will dispel the infernal serpent.” As she finished speaking, the enormous serpent emitted a horrible scream of despair and hurled himself into Hell with such a great roar that it caused the earth to tremble throughout the Convent and the city of Quito.

Mariana still remained in her bed suffering acute pains, and her health continued to worsen until September 1589. The second Wednesday of the month, at 9 o’clock in the morning, her agony began.

The Holy Mass was celebrated in her presence and she received Extreme Unction. At noon on Good Friday of that year, death appeared imminent.  At 3:30 P.M., surrounded by her praying and weeping sisters, Sister Mariana raised her eyes to heaven, gazed at her crucifix, pressed it against her heart and, heaving a last sigh, died.
                      
At the order of the Mother Abbess, her body was taken to the lower choir so that for three days it might be viewed by the people of Quito, who crowded into the church to pray to her as their protecting angel.  The funeral Mass and burial was set for Monday.  However, on Easter Sunday morning when the grieving nuns entered the upper choir to recite the 4 A.M. Little Office of Our Lady, they found Sister Mariana praying as normal.  The sisters screamed and ran in horror, certain that they were seeing a ghost.  Sister Mariana had resurrected a second time!  This time, she would continue her life of hard penance and continual prayer for 47 more years until her final death in 1635.

Interrogated by her confessor and the abbess, Sister Mariana explained that upon this, her second death, Our Lord had placed her soul in another state of purification and she had suffered a Mystical Purgatory that lasted until 3 A.M. Sunday morning, the same hour Christ had resurrected.  He then placed her soul back in her body, restoring it to full strength and vigor. Sister Mariana understood that God had restored her to life so that she could experience in her own person how sweet and meritorious it is to suffer and endure pain in imitation of Christ, becoming one with Him in the holocaust for the future of the Church.

Thus was the soul of this humble virgin prepared and purified to receive the apparition of the three Archangels and the Sovereign Empress under the invocation of Our Lady of Good Success, as well as for the great trials and mission reserved for her.


Sources:
1. The Admirable Life of Mother Mariana Vol. 1 & 2 by Fr. Manuel Sousa Pereira O.F.M. (Note: with Ultra-Conservative Foreword by the Translator)
2. Our Lady of Good Success: Prophecies for Our Times by Marian Therese Horvat Ph.D. (Note: Marian is an Ultra-Conservative)
3. Various Internet Sources

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

First Resurrection of Venerable Mariana de Jesus Torres


(This is a compilation from various Internet Sources)
Photos All Rights Reserved to their respective owners.


The following happened when Venerable Mariana was not yet the Abbess of the Royal Convent of the Immaculate Conception at Quito, Ecuador. While the Founding Mothers of the Convent admired Sister Mariana’s perfect observance of the rule and practice of virtue, there were other sisters who were stirred by jealousy.  Sister Mariana suffered insults and persecutions from these sisters without ever trying to justify herself or protest.  Only at the foot of the Tabernacle did she confide her secret sorrows to her Beloved. One day in 1582, after a particularly bitter incident with one of her sisters, Sister Mariana went to the feet of Jesus Christ communicating to Him her torment and begging Him for fortitude. While she was talking to Jesus, at a moment, she heard an overwhelming sound, and saw that the whole Church had become immersed in darkness, as from dust and smoke. Looking up, Sister Mariana saw the main altar illuminated by full day. The Tabernacle opened and Christ Himself emerged, suffering, as on Golgotha in His agony with the Blessed Virgin, St. John and Mary Magdalene at His feet.

Seeing this, the humble virgin, believing herself to be at fault, prostrated herself on the ground with her arms extended in the form of a cross, exclaiming: “Lord, I am the guilty one. Punish me and pardon your people.”

Her Guardian Angel made her rise, saying: “No! You are not to blame. Arise and approach, for God desires to reveal to you a great secret.”

The Blessed Virgin, at His feet, was shedding tears. Sister Mariana asked her, “My Lady, am I to blame for this sadness?”

“No,” she replied, “it is not you, but the criminal world.”  Then as Our Lord began His Agony, she heard the voice of the Eternal Father saying, “This punishment will be for the 20th century.”  She saw three swords hanging over the head of Christ. On each was written, “I shall punish heresy”, “I shall punish blasphemy”, “I shall punish impurity.” With this, she was given to understand all that would take place in the present era.

The Holy Virgin continued:  “My daughter, will you sacrifice yourself for the people of this time?”  Sister Mariana replied, “I am willing.” And immediately the swords moved away from the agonizing Christ and buried themselves in the heart of Sister Mariana, who fell dead through the violence of the pain.

Sister Mariana had indeed died and stood before the judgment seat of God, Who found no fault in her and invited her to receive the crown prepared for her since the beginning of the world.  At the same time, her distraught sisters implored heaven to restore the life of this exemplary religious.  Our Lord presented Sister Mariana with two crowns:  one of immortal glory of indescribable beauty, the other of white lilies surrounded by thorns. Sister Mariana understood that if she would choose the former, she would remain in celestial glory.  With the other, she would return to suffer in the world.  Her first desire was to remain in heaven to be assured of her salvation and to enjoy the unsurpassed happiness of the Beatific Vision.  During her difficult struggle, Our Lady approached her and said, “My daughter, I left the glories of heaven and descended to earth to protect my children.  I desire that you also imitate me in this and return to life, for your life is most necessary for the Order of my Conceptionists.”

“Woe to the Colony in the 20th century!  If, in Ecuador, already so guilty, there are not souls who by their lives of immolation and sacrifice appease the Divine Justice, fire will rain from heaven, consuming its inhabitants and purifying the soil of Quito. Until the end of time, one of these sacrificial souls will inhabit this convent and, imitating you, will appease Divine Justice.”

Trembling yet consoled by the promise of her Divine Mother that one faithful religious would always remain in her convent, Sister Mariana chose the crown of lilies surrounded with thorns and returned to the world to suffer, to the great rejoicing of the sisters and Franciscan Friars who had not ceased their prayers and refused to leave her bedside.

After returning to the world, she dedicated herself with greater zeal to the practice of the monastic life, carrying out the offices of bursar, choirmaster and novice mistress.  Because God had given her the discernment of souls, Sister Mariana was able to guide the sisters under her care according to the spirit of each one. When one of the novices would conceal a fault, she would call her aside to remind her, for nothing could be hidden from her.  Although she was always a model of goodness and sweetness, she demanded strict observation of even the smallest rules and insisted that her novices rise at 4 A.M. to recite The Little Office of the Blessed Virgin.  She warned the sisters that bitter times for the convent should come should the Little Office be put aside, and that the demon would work relentlessly to prevent its recitation.


Sources:
1. The Admirable Life of Mother Mariana Vol. 1 & 2 by Fr. Manuel Sousa Pereira O.F.M. (Note: with Ultra-Conservative Foreword by the Translator)
2. Our Lady of Good Success: Prophecies for Our Times by Marian Therese Horvat Ph.D. (Note: Marian is an Ultra-Conservative)
3. Various Internet Sources