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CHAPTER LIII.
The Return from the Sepulchre.—Joseph of Arimathea is put in Prison.
THE Sabbath was close at hand, and Nicodemus and Joseph returned to Jerusalem by a small door not far from the garden, and which Joseph had been allowed by special favour to have made in the city wall. They told the Blessed Virgin, Magdalen, John, and some of the women, who were returning to Calvary to pray there, that this door, as well as that of the supper-room, would be opened to them whenever they knocked. The elder sister of the Blessed Virgin, Mary of Heli, returned to the town with Mary the mother of Mark, and some other women. The servants of Nicodemus and Joseph went to Calvary to fetch several things which had been left there.
The soldiers joined those who were guarding the city gate near Calvary; and Cassius went to Pilate with the lance, related all that he had seen, and promised to give him an exact account of everything that should happen, if he would put under his command the guards whom the Jews would not fail to ask to have put round the tomb. Pilate listened to his words with secret terror, but only told him in reply that his superstition amounted to madness.
Joseph and Nicodemus met Peter and the two Jameses
in the town. They all shed many tears, but Peter was
perfectly overwhelmed by the violence of his grief.
He embraced them, reproached himself for not having
been present at the death of our Saviour, and thanked
them for having bestowed the rites of sepulture upon
his sacred body. It was agreed that the door of the
supper-room should be opened to them whenever they knocked,
and then they went away to seek some other disciples
who were dispersed in various directions. Later I saw
the Blessed Virgin and her companions enter the supper-room;
Abenadar next came and was admitted; and by
303degrees the greatest part of the Apostles and disciples
assembled there. The holy women retired to that part
of the building where the Blessed Virgin was living.
They took some food, and spent a few minutes more in
tears, and in relating to one another what each had
seen. The men changed their dresses, and I saw them
standing under the lamp, and keeping the Sabbath. They
ate some lambs in the supper-room, but without observing
any ceremony, for they had eaten the Paschal lamb the
evening before. They were all perturbed in spirit, and
filled with grief. The holy women also passed their
time in praying with the Blessed Virgin under the lamp.
Later, when night had quite fallen, Lazarus, the widow
of Naïm, Dina the Samaritan woman, and Mara of Suphan,2222 According to the visions
of Sister Emmerich, the three women named in the text
had been living for some time at Bethania, in a sort
of community established by Martha for the purpose of
providing for the maintenance of the disciples when
our Lord wag moving about, and for the division and
distribution of the alms which were collected. The widow
of Naïm, whose son Martial was raised from the dead
by Jesus, according to Sister Emmerich, on the 28th
Marcheswan (the 18th of November), was named Maroni.
She was the daughter of an uncle, on the father’s side,
of St. Peter. Her first husband was the son of a sister
of Elizabeth, who herself was the daughter of a sister
of the mother of St. Anne. Maroni’s first husband having
died without children, she had married Elind, a relation
of St. Anne, and had left Chasaluth, near Tabor, to
take up her abode at Naïm, which was not far off, and
where she soon lost her second husband.
Dina, the Samaritan woman, was the same who conversed
with Jesus by Jacob’s well. She was born near Damascus,
of parents who were half Jewish and half Pagan. They
died while she was yet very young, and she being brought
up by a woman of bad character, the seeds of the most
evil passions were early sown in her heart. She had
had several husbands, who supplanted one another in
turn, and the last lived at Sichar, whither she had
followed him and changed her name from Dina to Salome.
She had three grown-up daughters and two sons, who afterwards
joined the disciples. Sister Emmerich used to say that
the life of this Samaritan woman was prophetic—that
Jesus had spoken to the entire sect of Samaritans in
her person, and that they were attached to their errors
by as many ties as she had committed adulteries.
Mara of Suphan was a Moabitess, came from the neighbourhood
of Suphan, and was a descendant of Orpha, the widow
of Chélion, Noëmi’s son. Orpha had married again in
Moab. By Orpha,
the sister-in-law of Ruth, Mara was connected with the
family of David, from whom our Lord was descended. Sister
Emmerich saw Jesus deliver Mara from four devils and
grant her forgiveness of her sins on the 17th Elud (9th
September) of the second year of his public life. She
was living at Ainon, having been repudiated by her husband,
a rich Jew, who had kept the children he had had by
her with him. She had with her three others, the offspring
of her adulteries.
‘I saw,’ Sister Emmerich would say,—‘I saw how the
stray branch of the stock of David was purified within
her by the grace of Jesus, and admitted into the bosom
of the Church. I cannot express how many of these roots
and offshoots I see become entwined with each other,
lost to view, and then once more brought to light.’ came
304from Bethania, and then, once more, descriptions
were given of all that had taken place, and many tears
shed.
Joseph of Arimathea returned home late from the supper-room, and he was sorrowfully walking along the streets of Sion, accompanied by a few disciples and women, when all on a sudden a band of armed men, who were lying in ambuscade in the neighbourhood of Caiphas’s tribunal, fell upon them, and laid hands upon Joseph, whereupon his companions fled, uttering loud cries of terror. He was confined in a tower contiguous to the city wall, not far from the tribunal. These soldiers were pagans, and had not to keep the Sabbath, therefore Caiphas had been able to secure their services on this occasion. The intention was to let Joseph die of hunger, and keep his disappearance a secret.
Here conclude the descriptions of all that occurred on the day of the Passion of our Lord; but we will add some supplementary matter concerning Holy Saturday, the Descent into Hell, and the Resurrection.
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