Adoration of the Sacred Heart By Cardinal Pie
Nothing is
more founded on reason, nothing is more conformed to the doctrines of the Faith
than the adoration of the Heart of Our Lord Jesus Christ.
The heart of
Jesus is what there is most profound in creation. It is the noblest part of the
holy human nature of the Word made Flesh. In our very physical nature, the heart
is everything: when it functions in an irregular manner, life is in danger; when
it ceases to beat, man immediately ceases to live. Likewise in the moral order:
it is through the heart that we are something. It is the heart which gives to
thoughts, to actions, to intentions, their value, good or bad. The good is what
comes out of the good treasure of our heart (Lk. 6:45). What constitutes evil is
the bad dispositions of the heart (Mt. 15:19). Also, while the eye of man takes
hold and fixes on exterior appearances, God looks only at the heart (I Kgs.
16:7). In the language of all peoples..., the heart has always signified
courage, virtue, and especially love. After the grave has snatched away a
cherished being from us, we believe that we still hold him completely if we
possess his heart. This part, separate from the rest of the body, seems to
remain essential.
Now, having
stated this, what adoration do we not owe to the Heart of Jesus? Physically,
this heart has been the principal organ of a life all together divine and human.
This heart has painstakingly given up, one after the other, all the drops of the
redeeming Blood. It has exuded and exudes each day all the drops of the
Eucharistic chalice. And if the material heart of Jesus is already worthy of
honor, what is it if we consider this Heart as the seat of His love, as the
principle of His inspirations? When I adore the Heart of Jesus, I adore this
effusion of eternal charity which has prompted the Word of God to offer Himself
as victim for our redemption. I adore this love which has confined a God for
nine months in the womb of Mary, which has given birth to God as an infant in
Bethlehem, which has nailed Him to the cross; this love which keeps Him night
and day on our altars, this love which spreads torrents from heaven or from the
tabernacle, and which is diffused into hearts.
Magdalen covered the feet of
Jesus with her kisses and her perfumes, but His Heart made these feet run in
search of the wandering sheep in pursuit of the poor sinner's soul. The invalids
and all those who were suffering invoked the all-mighty arm of Jesus, but this
arm was acting only under the guidance and by the impulse of His Heart. The
children of Judea loved to be touched by the divine hands of Jesus, but these
tender hands were only the instruments of His Heart. One among them, already a
young man, was one day the object of an inexpressible glance from Jesus, but
this sweet and penetrating glance... was a lightening bolt flashing forth the
fire of love from His heart (Mk. 10:21).
To you who
hardly give allowance to the veneration of the Heart of Jesus, what then are you
leaving of Him to me, since the Heart of Jesus is the whole of Jesus? If you
forbid me to love and honor His Heart, then you forbid me to think of Jesus, to
love and honor Jesus. Deprive Him of His Heart, He will no longer be Jesus to
me. But, beware, your censures would not succeed in stopping me. I have in my
favor the authority of the very institution of Jesus. On the eve of His death,
after giving His love to those close to Him in this world, He made an admirable
summary, a marvelous memorial of all His gifts. It seems that nothing more could
be added to this supreme invention of His love. But behold that, on the very day
of His death, having offered up His great cry and commended His spirit,
Jesus...provided for the accomplishment of a last oracle. What do I see? The
side of Jesus opened, and His Heart offered to the eyes of mankind to be the
object of their adoration and of their love!
"Observe," says St. Augustine,"[St.
John] has been mindful of the language he was to use. The word has fallen from a
reflective and vigilant pen. The holy writer was careful not to say that the
point of the lance had struck, had wounded-this
expression or any similar might not have rendered the truth-but that it
opened the side of Jesus in order that the gateway of life
might be in some way made manifest in this Divine Heart, the source of the
redemption, from which have flowed all the mysteries, all the sacraments of the
Church, without which we have no access to the life which is the true life. There it is,
the first basis and the first establishment of the devotion to the Heart of
Jesus. And if-notwithstanding the evidence through the centuries of a school of
fervent worshipers and passionate admirers of this glorious Heart-the worship of
the Sacred Heart is only taking its more explicit form in these last ages by a
doctrinal and liturgical development, I would say that we see there a
providential progress, an expansion of love announced by the prophets. "There
will be in the last days," Zacharias had said, "a fountain open to all the
inhabitants of Jerusalem" (Zach. 13:1).This gushing source is the Heart of
Jesus, offered more authentically to us and reviving in our souls new impulses
of ardor and of piety.
Who could
remain cold and indifferent to the Heart of Jesus? It would mean not having a
heart ourselves. God forbid I not speak to you of the Heart of Jesus without
speaking also of your own heart, and without placing these two hearts in the
presence of each other.
Your reason
may have been misled, deceived, corrupted in many ways. You have been born and
raised in an evil century. You have participated in a great many errors of your
time. Moreover, the original fall has left a profound devastation in all of us;
it has since gutted everything. However, in spite of the inclinations of
corrupted nature, the allurements of the senses, and the prejudices of
education, your heart has remained stronger than your mind. No matter what you
do, below all these evil layers which have superimposed themselves one after
another through acts of sin and lies, there remains at the core of your being a
nucleus, a germ, a power for good that nothing has been able to destroy. In a
word, there rests in your heart a faculty and a need
to love: a faculty which can never
completely translate itself into action, a need which can never find its
hunger totally filled, as long as your love does not move towards its
infinite end. I declare and promise that it is impossible for you to genuinely
place the heart which beats in your breast in opposition to the Heart of Jesus
without it immediately being carried toward His Heart by this movement of love
which is the essential act of religion, and which, in itself, constitutes the
accomplishment of all the divine law of the Old and New Testament: "Diliges:
You will love. “This is why the Lord makes His tender invitation: "My son, give
me thy heart" (Prov. 23:26), as though He were saying: Willingly I set aside all
others. You will easily acknowledge, My son, that my spirit is above thine.
Therefore, do not enter into a useless discussion with Me. For Me, I will always
easily overcome your mind, if you want to give Me your heart completely: "Præbe,
fili mi, cor tuum mihi: My son, give Me thy heart."
When you
have withdrawn from Jesus Christ, you have withdrawn from your own heart.
The Psalmist declared it thus-"Cor meum dereliquit me: My heart
has abandoned me." Fugitives from this better portion of yourselves, come back,
come back to your heart (Is. 66:8). Lord Jesus, You are the center and the
magnet of hearts. Man will never place himself again under the inspirations of
his own heart, without being carried back immediately to You.
The Catholic
Faith is truly the religion of hearts, and the veneration of the Sacred Heart of
Jesus Christ is the substantial summary of all Catholicism. The One who dwells
in inaccessible light in heaven, wanting to draw nearer to us, to proportion
Himself to us, to bring Himself to our level, at our ability, has taken our
nature, our flesh. He made Himself man, and being man, He had a heart. And we
also, although brought out of nothingness and formed from mud, we have received
and carry in ourselves a heart. Here is the Creator and the creature, heaven and
earth, Heart to heart. All religion is summed up in this Heart-to-heart
confrontation of God and man. Let us pray with the Church the invitatory of one
of the most ancient offices of the Sacred Heart: "Deus ergo nos
apponentem Cor suum, venite adoremus: God, in the Person of Jesus Christ,
His Son, disposing His Heart to us, let us come and adore Him."
Taken from:
Homily for the Closing of a
Novena to the Sacred Heart of Jesus," VI, 609-614
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