Mary set out and traveled to the hill country in haste to a town of Judah, the distance is about a four-day journey on foot. Mary is in haste out of joy and wonder. It is a joy and wonder that will issue in praise of the dawn of universal salvation. And when the child in Mary's womb comes near the infant John in Elizabeth's womb, Elizabeth cries out in praise and prophecy, “Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb.” Mary has set out and traveled in haste, all because love and joy have put a liveliness in her step.
This phrase describing how Mary visits Elizabeth is the very phrase used by Saint Benedict in chapter 43 of his Rule to explain how a monk on hearing the signal for an hour of the Work of God will go to the church. He will “immediately set aside what he has in hand and go with the utmost haste, yet with gravity and without giving occasion for frivolity.” The love of God must so animate the hearts of Benedict's monks that they move with a liveliness, urgency, joy, and wonder like Mary’s. Lovers do not walk towards each other, they run. So the monks go with utmost haste to praise the Lord at the Work of God.
The Visitation, c. 1495, attributed to Rueland Frueauf the Elder, German (c. 1445 - 1507), Oil on panel, 27 5/8 x 14 15/16 in., Fogg Museum. Meditation taken from a homily by Father Luke.