A MULTITUDE of revelations
show us that God chastises with implacable rigour all sins contrary to Justice
and Charity; and in matters of Justice He seems to exact that reparation be
made before the penalty is remitted ; as in the Church Militant her ministers
must exact restitution in order to remit the guilt, according to the axiom, Without
restitution no remission. Father P. Rossignolil speaks of a Religious of his
Order, named Augustin d Espinoza, whose saintly life was but one act of
devotion to the souls in Purgatory. A rich man who went to him to confession,
having died without having sufficiently regulated his affairs, appeared to him,
and asked him first if he knew him.
Certainly,” replied the
Father; “I administered the Sacrament of Penance to you a few days before your
death.” “You must know, then, “added the soul,” I come to you by a special
grace of God, to conjure you to appease His Justice, and to do for me that
which I can no longer do for myself. Follow me.” The Father first went to see
his Superior, to tell him what was asked of him, and to obtain permission to
follow the strange visitor. The permission obtained, he went out and followed
the apparition, who, without uttering a single word, led him to one of the
bridges of the city. There it begged the Father to wait a little, disappeared
for a Moment, then returned with a
bag of money, which it begged the Father to carry, and both returned to the cell
of the Religious. Then the deceased gave him a written note, and showed him the
money. “ All this, said he, is at your disposal. Have the charity to take it,
that you may satisfy my creditors, whose names are written upon this paper,
with the amount due to each. Be pleased to take what remains and use it for
good works at your own discretion, for the repose of my soul. With these words
he disappeared, and the Father hastened to carry out his wishes.
Eight days had scarcely
elapsed when Father d Espinoza received another visit from the same soul. He
thanked the Father most heartily. Thanks
to the charitable exactitude, he said, with which you have paid the debts that I left
on earth, thanks also to the Holy Masses which you have celebrated for me, I am
delivered from all my sufferings, and am admitted into eternal beatitude. We
find an example of the same kind in the Life of Blessed Margaret of Cortona. 1
This illustrious penitent also distinguished herself by her charity towards the
departed souls. They appeared to her in great numbers, to implore her
assistance and suffrages. One day, among others, she saw before her two
travellers, who begged her to assist them in repairing the injustices left to
their account. We are two merchants,
they told her, who have been assassinated on the road by brigands. We could not
go to confession or receive absolution; but by the mercy of our Divine Saviour
and His Holy Mother, we had the time to make an act of perfect contrition, and
we have been saved. But our torments in Purgatory are terrible, because in the
exercise of our profession we have committed many acts of injustice. Until
these acts are repaired we can have no repose nor alleviation. This is why we beseech
you, servant of God, to go and find such and such of our relatives and heirs,
to warn them to make restitution as soon as possible of all the money which we
have unjustly acquired. They gave the holy penitent the necessary information
and disappeared.