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The Autobiography of Saint Margaret Mary
 
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The Autobiography of Saint Margaret Mary [Paperback]

Margaret Mary Alacoque (Author), The Sisters of the Visitation (Translator)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

March 2, 2009
Translated by the Sisters of the Visitation, this is one of the Church's most famous classics. Written under obedience to her superiors, St. Margaret reveals the intimate spiritual life of a magnificent saint to whom Our Lord gave the famous revelations regarding the love of His Sacred Heart. Our Lord guided her from her earliest childhood and indicated to her how He cannot tolerate the slightest fault. He revealed to her the absolute sanctity of His love, and urged her not to resist His Holy Will in any way. She writes how God gave her a supernatural desire for great and continual suffering and love of the Cross. She tells us of angels appearing to her and how on another occasion she was given a mystical crown of thorns which caused her intense pain for the rest of her life. In sum, this is a powerful antidote to our natural tendency to reduce, in our own thinking, the Divine Majesty to strictly human dimensions. A spiritual jewel!

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 141 pages
  • Publisher: TAN Books & Publishers (March 2, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0895552957
  • ISBN-13: 978-0895552952
  • Product Dimensions: 6.8 x 4.3 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #484,665 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Autobiography of St Margaret Mary, January 23, 2007
This review is from: The Autobiography of Saint Margaret Mary (Paperback)
I hesitated to purchase this book after reading the long, detailed negative review by an earlier purchaser, but ultimately decided to buy it.

I have not regretted this. Yes, the book includes mortifications
that lay people would not practise, but it is also rich in detail of her visions.

I have yet to come across the worst mortifications mentioned by the prior reader. That may be due to the way I read, but they havenn't jumped out at me.

Each section of several paragraphs or more is briefly summarized in a sidebar, making the book easy to navigate by topics of interest.

The famous vision of St MM's heart being carried into a furnace and then being replaced, aflame, within her, is well described.

I have no problems recommending this book for anyone interested in the origins of the Devotion to the Sacred Heart.

John Lough
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Soul on FIRE ..., April 7, 2011
This review is from: The Autobiography of Saint Margaret Mary (Paperback)
What we have to do with here is a small volume of autobiography by the Seventeenth Century French saint, who beheld the Sacred Heart and brought its Public Devotion to the entire Catholic world.

This short book was written in the saint's own hand in the form of a narrative, with no distinctive breaks or chapters.

From the outset, the careful reader is brought directly into intimate rapport with the author, as immediately we receive an image of the psychological and spiritual struggles of the saint.

For the book is introduced with a statement from Saint Margaret Mary Alacoque, claiming that she has written it as an act of obedience. She writes:

"It is for the love of Thee, O my God, and through obedience, that I submit to write this account, asking Thy pardon for the resistance I have made. Thou alone knowest how great my repugnance thereto is; Thou alone therefore canst give me strength to overcome it, for this obedience was given me by Thee."

That in fact, if it were her own choice, she is confessing she would destroy this chronicle of her life. Yet in this pledge of obedience, one can immediately sense the all encompassing love she has for her Divine Master, Our Lord, as well as the turmoil she experiences in living the depth and reciprocity of that love. She wants as always only to please Our Lord.

The first part of the book details her early years, where, from childhood she experienced herself to be under the protection of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

At a very young age, she made a vow of perpetual chastity, ignorant of the meaning of the words `vow' or `chastity'. In her own words, "Without knowing their meaning, I felt continually urged to pronounce the following words:"O my God, I consecrate to Thee my purity, and I make Thee a vow of perpetual chastity."

At age eight, she was sent to a convent for education, where at nine years old, she received her first Communion:

"This Communion shed such bitterness over all my little pleasures and amusements that I was no longer able to enjoy any of them ... Whenever I wanted to join in the games of my companions, I always felt something which called me and drew me aside into some little corner, leaving me no peace until I had followed it. Our Lord then made me give myself to prayer."

I am struck by how conscientious the young Margaret Mary at such a young age. And that at this age, she was already forming the lifestyle of a religious.

Having fallen ill, with no form of cure to be found, she was removed from the convent and sent home. She was then consecrated to the Blessed Virgin Mary, in the attempt to find healing. As soon as the consecration was made, she was healed - the first of many miracles to occur in the saint's lifetime.

The book then moves, to relate the following part of her life, where her father having died, she began to care for her sick mother. The circumstances the pair found themselves in were incredibly difficult, under the authority of unkind relatives.

They kept the mother and child under lock and key, often refusing permission for Margaret Mary to attend Mass or pray in front of the Blessed Sacrament. This caused so much pain to the young girl, that she would retreat to a secluded spot, where for hours she would remain kneeling, shedding tears of grief to her Blessed Lord.

This was the beginning of a life of torment and the Saint's words express this with intensity. Her use of language and the recording of such life events leave the reader with a deep sense of the inner life of the saint.

Caring for her ill mother, living with such limited freedom, she found herself in conflict with all those around her, who desired her to marry, rather than to enter the religious life. Even her ailing mother shared these wishes.

Against this incredible pressure, Saint Margaret Mary was bestowed the grace of becoming a religious in the order of the Visitation of Holy Mary, at the convent in Paray-le-Monial, France. The order which was founded by Saint Francis de Sales. In this section of the book, Margaret Mary records her religious life with incredible detail.

For, it was here, at the convent in Paray-le-Monial, that she found home and solace in her relationship with her betrothed, Our Blessed Lord. It was also here that the life of turmoil continued, for she paid dearly and continuously for the graces and privileges bestowed upon her. Her life was one of incredible deep struggle, one of continual torment and suffering.

The first time I read this autobiography, was many years ago, before my first pilgrimage to Paray-le-Monial. On that reading, I felt such an affinity with this saint that it surprised and even shocked me. This affinity was also experienced when I first prayed by her relics in the Visitation chapel at Paray. As I prayed there, I felt so at home, that I never wanted to leave her side.

Having now been to Paray-le-Monial more than twenty times, praying many times by her side, I am again surprised on reading her autobiography.

Yet, this time, my surprise is very different. It is one of feeling so very lacking in understanding of why Saint Margaret Mary's life was filled with so much suffering and torment. I feel inadequate to do justice to the experiences of this poor saint. Yet, I also sense a glimmer of knowing what the extremes of her life were for.

This glimmer illumines a picture of a soul offered perhaps as a victim, not only to purge her own darkness of heart, but also to experience the tormenting pains Our Lord experiences at the expense of human sin.

As I read the words of Saint Margaret Mary, I am given a picture of one who meets the intensity of evil in the world with a depth of sensitivity, rare and pure.

Her torments, her sufferings are caused by the fact that she so acutely feels the harm of sin, from within and without. She acutely feels her own sin, the sin of others and the sin of the world.

It is as though she is continuously scourged, with no rest from the assailant. It seems that the more she becomes obedient to the voice of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, the more intensely she feels these things.

And as was so common in her time, the only peace she would often find, would be that relieved by her extreme mortifications and penances.

It is astonishing to read of Saint Margaret Mary's relationship with Our Lady, from such a young age. It is even more astonishing to follow the intense relationship throughout her life, from mid-teens on, with Our Lord. A relationship that is fueled by an almost constant dialogue between Himself and the saint.

One passage in particular, illumines the type of relationship they held, one that appears severe. She writes:

"One day, on account of some fault which I had committed, my Divine Master gave me the following lesson. "Learn" He said, "that I am a Holy Master and One that teaches holiness, I am pure and cannot endure the slightest stain. Therefore thou must act with simplicity of heart and with an upright and pure intention in My presence. Know that I cannot endure the least want of straightforwardness, and I shall make thee understand that, if the excess of My love has led Me to constitute Myself thy Master, in order to teach and fashion thee after My manner and according to My designs, nevertheless I cannot bear tepid and cowardly souls, and, if I am gentle in bearing with thy weakness, I shall not be less severe and exact in correcting and punishing thy infidelities."

She continues, "He has made me experience this all my life" and concludes with an admission that, "I own that nothing was more painful and terrible to me than to see Him ever so slightly displeased with me. All other sufferings, corrections and mortifications were nothing to me in comparison."

This relationship between Our Lord and Saint Margaret Mary is very much based on the importance to Our Lord of the vow of obedience. The importance of this vow becomes a theme throughout the latter part of the book.

We read of how Our Lord repeatedly chastises the poor young religious for disobeying her superiors and as well as for disobeying Himself. It is as though He is attempting to harness the rebellious nature of the saint by means of this vow, in preparation for the revelations to come.

In one case, the saint imagines Our Sovereign Lord will be pleased if she takes upon herself greater mortifications than she has been ordered to. She is severely reprimanded. Our Lord says to her, "Thou deceivest thyself ... in thinking to please Me by actions and mortifications chosen by self-will which, rather than yield, prefers to make superiors bend their will to it."

This is akin to a reprimand that on another occasion came from her vision of the Holy founder of the order, Saint Francis de Sales himself: "What is this, my daughter, dost thou think to please God in surpassing the limits of obedience, which is the foundation and principle support of this Congregation, and not austerities?"

Whilst it seems that earlier in her relationship with Our Lord, the accent is upon the Saint learning to overcome her rebellious nature, later on a shift occurs. Once she is more firmly harnessed by the Holy vow of obedience, the revelations begin.

This part of the book becomes even more extraordinary. As Saint Margaret Mary records these revelations, there seems to be a different quality in the way Our Lord addresses her.

This quality is incredibly passionate, like a fiery furnace of love about to burst its flames outwards. It can no longer be contained within Itself. Saint Margaret Mary has powerfully... Read more ›
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26 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Much to disturb and little to inspire, January 21, 2005
By 
Glutton for books (Washington, DC USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Autobiography of Saint Margaret Mary (Paperback)
Margaret Mary Alacoque was a French nun and mystic, whom allegedly received instructions from of Jesus in the 17th century. I have alawys been inspired by decotions to Jesus's love and mercy, and think it is amazing that so many similar messages have been received by people throughout the ages, telling the world to have faith and implore in God's mercy and love as represented by the image sacred heart; an image whose physical representation may slightly change over time in order to impress the curent audience more deeply, but the core of the message never changes. People dedicated to promoting devotion to the heart of Jesus, who encouraged people to implore God's love and mercry, include but are not limited to Gertrude of Helfa, Birgitta of Sweden, Teresa of Avila, Therese of Liseux, and Faustina.

I have heard much about how the devotion to that Sacred Heart, was most clearly articulated by Margaret Mary, and was interested in reading her autobiography, in order to learn more about the messages that she received and to see how the compared to those received by Faustina and her message of Divine Mercy. Like the work of Faustina, Mary Margaret's book was written in order to help her with confession. The introduction say that she implored one of the sisters to destroy the book upon her death.

However unlike Faustina's book, Mary Margaret's autobiography contains little very few details about the nature of the messages she recieved in regards to devotion to the sacred heart. She often says that she "received advice" and leaves it at that, not specifying what the advice might be. She has a few details about her early life, but little commentary about life in the convent and how she interacted with people.

This is a personal diary of hers, and where she mostly recorded her feelings about things but she often did not define what the things were, excpet in vague notions - "a conversation" here, "an act" there. It is vauge, but that is not fault of the author, as she was writing only for herself. However, the concequence is that the book provides very little information of substance from which a reader could draw inspiration or creat a role model. Faustina's diary was personal too, but she included much specific information about her dialogues with Jesus, and devotional practices recommended to her.

Margaret Mary's writing style is not as easy to read nor as accessible, as if it were a conversation, as are the styles that characterize the work of Teresa of Avila, Catherine of Siena, or even John of the Cross seemed more clear. As a reader I also felt very much an intruder by reading the book.

She does go on at leangth about different forms of mortification which she performed that were probably not uncommon during her life time, but I found incredibly disturbing as a modern reader. I appreciate the fact that people, particuarly those in religious orders and who were likely to become saints, felt unworthy of Jesus' suffering and crucifixion, so that they often looked for ways to humiliate themselves and cause themselves pain so that they could share in his sufferings. She talks about eating vomit of a sister and doing something with feces from some one else who had dyssentary. I don't know if the images are so striking because they are the few occasions in the book where she elaborates details to events, or if it is because the nature of the acts. I would not want this book in a house with children, who are likely to read deatials of saints for role models or inspiration.

The book has very few instructions about devotional practices to the Sacred Heart. If you are looking for more details about the messages given to Margaret Mary from Jesus and how to please God through life, I think that Fr. Colombiere, one of Margaret Mary's spiritual directors, published a book that contains such information. It is interesting to note that Faustina's spiritual director died on the aniversary of Columbiere's death. I feel terrible leaving a negative commenary on a book by a saint, but the book was not at all what I anticipated, and I don't want other people to buy it as I did, thinking that it contained a certain type of guidance that it lacks. When I finished the book, the only images that remained were not apects of Margaret Mary's life that I felt I could imitate or a new source of prayers for a bedrock of devotion (the book didcontain prayers, but they are prayers found in most Catholic prayer books), but instead images of mortification practices she adopted.
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