, located at
Engelszell Abbey The Lord would say to Mechtilde: "Everything you have and by which you can please Me you have from Me and through Me." In one extraordinary vision, she perceived that "the smallest details of creation are reflected in the Holy Trinity by means of the Humanity of Christ, because it is from the same earth that produced Them that Christ drew His Humanity." While
Julian of Norwich (1342–about 1416) is the most famous English author to employ the idea of God as mother, the concept did not originate with her.
Anselm of Canterbury (1033–1109) had already fostered devotion to "our Lord, our Mother" in his widely used . The Cistercians and Carthusians spread it by the use of these prayers in their monasteries, and women such as Marguerite d'Oyngt ( 1310) and Mechthild of Hackeborn took it up. In the description of her visions, Christ, the Virgin, and other members of the hierarchy of heaven appear as living realities. Mechtilde was particularly fond of the angels, whom she loved to picture as the associates of men on earth and in heaven.
Devotion of the three Hail Marys Mechtilde was concerned about her eternal salvation, so she prayed that the Virgin Mary would assist her at the hour of death. Mary appeared to her and reassured her, saying: "Yes, I will! But I wish, for your part, that you recite
three Hail Marys every day, remembering in the first the Power received from the Eternal Father, in the second the Wisdom received from the Son, with the third one the Love that has filled the Holy Spirit". The Virgin Mary taught her to pray and to understand especially how the three Hail Marys honor the three persons of the Trinity.
Devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus Both Mechthilde and Gertrude of Helfta became ardent devotees and promoters of devotion to
Jesus' heart due to its appearance in many of their visions. The idea of hearing the heartbeat of God became very important to the medieval saints who nurtured this devotion. Both Mechtilde and Gertrude ( 1302) perceived Jesus' heart as the breast of a mother, and considered the blood of Jesus in the
Eucharist to be as nourishing as the milk a mother gives to feed her child. In one vision, Mechtilde reported that Jesus said, "In the morning let your first act be to greet My Heart and to offer Me your own. Whoever breathes a
sigh toward Me, draws Me to himself." One of the visions recounted by Mechtilde states that Jesus, having appeared to her, commanded her to love him ardently, and to honor his Sacred Heart in the Blessed Sacrament as much as possible. He gave her his Sacred Heart as a pledge of his love, as a place of refuge during her life and as her consolation at the hour of her death. From this time, Mechtilde had an extraordinary devotion to the Sacred Heart, and she is said to have obtained "such great graces from it that she was accustomed to say that if she had to write down all the favors and all the blessings which she had received by means of this devotion, a large book would not contain them". In another vision, Jesus himself recommended the Gospels as a source of this devotion. Opening to her the wound of his heart, he said to her: "Consider how great is My Love: If you want to know It well, you will not find It expressed more clearly anywhere than in the Gospel. No one has ever expressed stronger or more tender feelings than these: As My Father has loved Me, so have I loved you (John 15:9)". Her accounts of these visions were later compiled in the .
Pope Francis pays tribute to Mechtilde as one of a number of "holy women" who have "spoken of resting in the heart of the Lord as the source of life and interior peace". ==The Book of Special Grace==