Saint
Bernard constantly places before us the major events of the life of Christ, and
writes: “He was incomprehensible and inaccessible, invisible and completely
unthinkable. Now he wishes to be comprehended, wishes to be seen, wishes to be
thought about. How, do you ask? As lying in the manger, resting in the Virgin’s
lap, preaching on the mountain, praying through the night, or hanging on the
cross, growing pale in death, free among the dead and ruling in hell, and also
as rising on the third day, showing the apostles the place of the nails, the
signs of victory, and finally as ascending over heaven’s secrets in their
sight.” Nat BVM 11.
Bernard
tells us that the invisible God wished to be seen in the flesh and to live
among humans as a human, so that he might recapture all the affections of
humans and little by little, lead them to spiritual love. Christ Jesus
uses our attraction to his human existence to take our disordered affections
and desires and reconfigure them around himself. And as a person advances
in love and contemplation, he is more and more present to God. “A person is
present to God to the extent that the person loves him,” says Bernard. This will lead to the heights of the intimacy with the divine Bridegroom in unity of spirit.
Filippino Lippi, Apparition of the Virgin Mary to Saint Bernard, 1480, oil on panel, 83 x 77 in., Badia, Florence. Excerpts from Father Timothy's homily for the Solemnity.