Saturday, August 3, 2024

Chap 23 - The Police



Chapter 23 of "Our Lady of Lourdes" details the tension and drama as Bernadette is forcibly taken by a police agent to the Commissary of Police, M. Jacomet. The crowd, deeply moved by her earlier divine experience, follows anxiously, but a priest urges them to stay calm. The chapter emphasizes the contrast between Bernadette's innocence and the harsh treatment she receives, reflecting on the comfort of divine protection during persecution.

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A THREATENING murmur went through the multitude.
Many of those who were there had, the same morning, seen the humble child transfigured by the divine ecstacy and illuminated by rays from on high.
For them, this little girl blessed by God had about her something sacred.  They thrilled with indignation on seeing the agent of police lay hands on her, and would have interfered on her behalf had not a priest, who at that moment came out of the church, made signs to the crowd to remain quiet.
“Let,” he said, “the authorities act as they will.”  
By a wonderful coincidence, such as is often to be met with in the history of supernatural events, where any one gives himself the trouble, or rather the pleasure of sifting them, the Universal Church had sung that very day, the first Sunday in Lent, those immortal words destined to comfort and console the innocent and the weak in the presence of persecution.  “God hath confided thee to the care of His Angels, that they may watch over thee in thy way.  They will bear thee up in their hands, lest thy feet should be dashed against, and wounded by the stones in thy path.  Trust in him:  He will protect thee under the shadow of his wings.  His almighty Power shall encompass thee as with an invisible shield.  Go boldly!  thou shalt crush the Asp and the Serpent under thy feet;  the lion and the dragon shall be brought low by thee.  ‘Because he hath hoped in me,’ says the Lord, ‘I will deliver him—I will protect him because he hath confessed my name.  He shall call on me and I will graciously hear him.  I am with him in the day of trouble.’ ”
The Gospel for the day related how the Saviour of men, eternal type of the just upon earth, had to undergo His temptations;  and it gave all the details of his famous struggles against, and victory over the Evil Spirit, in the solitude of the desert:  Ductus est Jesus in desertum, ut tentaretur a Diabolo.
Such were the texts so replete with consolation for innocent and persecuted weakness, which the Church had proclaimed;  such were the mighty souvenirs which she had revived and the memory of which she celebrated the very day on which, in the depth of an obscure town among the mountains, an agent of the civil power arrested, in the name of the law, an ignorant little girl, in order to conduct her into the presence of the most crafty of the representatives of Authority.
The multitude had followed Bernadette as she was carried off by the official agent, in a great state of excitement and grief.  The office of the Commissary of Police was not far off.  The Sergent entered with the child, and leaving her by herself in the passage, returned to lock and bolt the door.
A moment afterwards, Bernadette was ushered into the presence of M. Jacomet.
An immense crowd remained standing outside.





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