ical disturbances
stopped. Hence, "the use of the Trisagio as a form for invoking the
Holy Trinity in dangerous fatal times" (p. 78). Among other things
the following is tacitly asked in the Trisagio: "Of thy ire and anger,
Lord and triune free us. Of the snares, nearness of the demon; of all
ire, hate and bad will; of all plagues or epidemics, hunger, storms;
of our enemies and their machinations free us" (pp. 20-21).
Reminders of Cannibalism
Altho the Trinity is composed, as everybody knows, of the Father,
Son, and Holy Ghost, and in the Trisagio the three persons are
invoked and asked at the same time, nevertheless there are other
forms of securing the divine favor, invoking separately only one of
the persons of the Trinity. Thus in the Novena of Jesus Sacramentado,
the Father is asked by means of the intercession of the Son, or in
other words, by only a viscera of the Son or an organ of his body,
the heart, or more properly the Sacred Heart of Jesus. "The eternal
Father has complacency," says the Novena (p. 6), "in that it is
asked in the name of the Heart of his beloved Son * * *." "The Father
Eternal said so directly to the venerable Mary of the incarnation"
(pp. 6-7). "Ask me thru the heart of my only begotten Son, and thru
it I shall hear thee and thou shalt obtain all that thou wouldst
ask * * *." Jesus said to his wife Margaret (esposa Margarita):
"I ask you that on Friday immediately before the Corpus festivity,
you particularly devote yourself to the worship of my heart" (p. 7).
The adoration of the heart is not symbolic; it is the real heart
that is adored: "they shall adore with greater frequency, to Jesus
transsubtantiated, and in him, to his Divine Heart" (p. 7). "His
Novena will be made before an image of Jesus or to His Sacred Heart"
(p. 10). The devout one, carrying his adoration almost to a point
of the revival of atavic cannibalism, says to Jesus: "O, thou owner
of mine! Give me thine body and with it thine heart that I may eat
it!" (para que le coma) (p. 12).
There is a Novena dedicated to Saint Angel Custodio (Manila, 1897),
who is the "Angel delegated by God to be at our side, and exercise
with us the loving offices of a careful tutor, a loving governor,
a loving preceptor, a faithful conductor, and an intimate and
true friend * * *" (p. 6). "No saint in heaven interests himself
more in our soul and in our business than the holy Guardian Angel"
(p. 6). His intervention is so useful a
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