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BOOK
THREE
INTERNAL
CONSOLATION
·
1 - The Inward Conversation of Christ with the
Faithful Soul
·
2 - Truth Speaks Inwardly without the Sound of
Words
·
3 - Listen Humbly to the Words of God. Many Do
Not Heed Them
·
4 - We Must Walk Before God in Humility and
Truth
·
5 - The Wonderful Effect of Divine Love
·
6 - The Proving of a True Lover
·
7 - Grace Must Be Hidden Under the Mantle of
Humility
·
8 - Self-Abasement in the Sight of God
·
9 - All Things Should be Referred to God as
their Last End
·
10 - To Despise the World and Serve God is Sweet
·
11 - The Longings of Our Hearts Must Be Examined and
Moderated
·
12 - Acquiring Patience in the Fight against
Concupiscence
·
13 - The Obedience of One Humbly Subject to the
Example of Jesus Christ
·
14 - Consider the Hidden Judgments of God Lest You
Become Proud of Your Own Good Deeds
·
15 - How One Should Feel and Speak on Every
Desirable Thing
·
16 - True Comfort is to be Sought in God Alone
·
17 - All Our Care is to be Placed in God
·
18 - Temporal Sufferings Should be Borne Patiently,
After the Example of Christ
·
19 - True Patience in Suffering
·
20 - Confessing Our Weakness in the Miseries of Life
·
21 - Above All Goods and All Gifts We Must Rest in
God
·
22 - Remember the Innumerable Gifts of God
·
23 - Four Things Which Bring Great Peace
·
24 - Avoiding Curious Inquiry About the Lives of
Others
·
25 - The Basis of Firm Peace of Heart and True
Progress
·
26 - The Excellence of a Free Mind, Gained Through
Prayer Rather Than by Study
·
27 - Self-Love is the Greatest Hindrance to the
Highest Good
·
28 - Strength Against Slander
·
29 - How We Must Call Upon and Bless the Lord When
Trouble Presses
·
30 - The Quest of Divine Help and Confidence in
Regaining Grace
·
31 - To Find the Creator, Forsake All Creatures
·
32 - Self-Denial and the Renunciation of Evil
Appetites
·
33 - Restlessness of Soul—Directing Our Final
Intention Toward God
·
34 - God is Sweet Above All Things and in All Things
to Those Who Love Him
·
35 - There is No Security from Temptation in This
Life
·
36 - The Vain Judgments of Men
·
37 - Pure and Entire Resignation of Self to Obtain
Freedom of Heart
·
38 - The Right Ordering of External Affairs;
Recourse to God in Dangers
·
39 - A Man Should Not be Unduly Solicitous about his
Affairs
·
40 - Man Has No Good in Himself and Can Glory in
Nothing
·
41 - Contempt for All Earthly Honor
·
42 - Peace is not to be Placed in Men
·
43 - Beware Vain and Worldly Knowledge
·
44 - Do Not be Concerned About Outward Things
·
45 - All Men Are Not To Be Believed, For It is Easy
To Err in Speech
·
46 - Trust in God Against Slander
·
47 - Every Trial Must Be Borne for the Sake of
Eternal Life
·
48 - The Day of Eternity and the Distresses of this
Life
·
49 - The Desire of Eternal Life; The Great Rewards
Promised to Those Who Struggle
·
50 - How a Desolate Person Ought to Commit Himself
into the Hands of God
·
51 - When We Cannot Attain to the Highest, We Must
Practice the Humble Works
·
52 - A Man Ought Not to Consider Himself Worthy of
Consolation, But Rather Deserving of Chastisement
·
53 - God’s Grace Is Not Given to the Earthly
Minded
·
54 - The Different Motions of Nature and Grace
·
55 - The Corruption of Nature and the Efficacy of
Divine Grace
·
56 - We Ought to Deny Ourselves and Imitate Christ
Through Bearing the Cross
·
57 - A Man Should Not Be Too Downcast When He Falls
Into Defects
·
58 - High Matters and the Hidden Judgments of God
Are Not To Be Scrutinized
·
59 - All Hope and Trust Are To Be Fixed in God Alone

BOOK
THREE
INTERNAL
CONSOLATION
The
First Chapter
The
Inward Conversation of Christ with the Faithful Soul
“I
WILL hear what the Lord God will speak in me.”
Blessed
is the soul who hears the Lord speaking within her, who receives the word of
consolation from His lips. Blessed are the ears that catch the accents of divine
whispering, and pay no heed to the murmurings of this world.
Blessed
indeed are the ears that listen, not to the voice which sounds without, but to
the truth which teaches within. Blessed are the eyes which are closed to
exterior things and are fixed upon those which are interior. Blessed are they
who penetrate inwardly, who try daily to prepare themselves more and more to
understand mysteries. Blessed are they who long to give their time to God, and
who cut themselves off from the hindrances of the world.
Consider
these things, my soul, and close the door of your senses, so that you can hear
what the Lord your God speaks within you. “I am your salvation,” says your
Beloved. “I am your peace and your life. Remain with Me and you will find
peace. Dismiss all passing things and seek the eternal. What are all temporal
things but snares? And what help will all creatures be able to give you if you
are deserted by the Creator?” Leave all these things, therefore, and make
yourself pleasing and faithful to your Creator so that you may attain to true
happiness.
Truth
Speaks Inwardly Without the Sound of Words
The
Disciple
“SPEAK,
Lord, for Thy servant heareth.”
“I am Thy servant. Give me understanding that I may know Thine ordinances
. . . Incline my heart to Thine ordinances
. . . Let Thy speech distil as the dew.”
The
children of
Israel
once said to Moses: “Speak thou to us and we will hear thee: let not the Lord
speak to us, lest we die.”
Not
so, Lord, not so do I pray. Rather with Samuel the prophet I entreat humbly and
earnestly: “Speak, Lord, for Thy servant heareth.” Do not let Moses or any
of the prophets speak to me; but You speak, O Lord God, Who inspired and
enlightened all the prophets; for You alone, without them, can instruct me
perfectly, whereas they, without You, can do nothing. They, indeed, utter fine
words, but they cannot impart the spirit. They do indeed speak beautifully, but
if You remain silent they cannot inflame the heart. They deliver the message;
You lay bare the sense. They place before us mysteries, but You unlock their
meaning. They proclaim commandments; You help us to keep them. They point out
the way; You give strength for the journey. They work only outwardly; You
instruct and enlighten our hearts. They water on the outside; You give the
increase.
They
cry out words; You give understanding to the hearer.
Let
not Moses speak to me, therefore, but You, the Lord my God, everlasting truth,
speak lest I die and prove barren if I am merely given outward advice and am not
inflamed within; lest the word heard and not kept, known and not loved, believed
and not obeyed, rise up in judgment against me.
Speak,
therefore, Lord, for Your servant listens. “Thou hast the words of eternal
life.”
Speak to me for the comfort of my soul and for the amendment of my life, for
Your praise, Your glory, and Your everlasting honor.
Listen
Humbly to the Words of God. Many Do Not Heed Them
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, hear My words, words of greatest sweetness surpassing all the knowledge
of the philosophers and wise men of earth. My words are spirit and life, and
they are not to be weighed by man’s understanding. They are not to be invoked
in vanity but are to be heard in silence, and accepted with all humility and
with great affection.
The
Disciple
“Happy
is the man whom Thou admonishest, O Lord, and teachest out of Thy law, to give
him peace from the days of evil,”
and that he be not desolate on earth.
The
Voice of Christ
I
taught the prophets from the beginning, and even to this day I continue to speak
to all men. But many are hardened. Many are deaf to My voice. Most men listen
more willingly to the world than to God. They are more ready to follow the
appetite of their flesh than the good pleasure of God. The world, which promises
small and passing things, is served with great eagerness: I promise great and
eternal things and the hearts of men grow dull. Who is there that serves and
obeys Me in all things with as great care as that with which the world and its
masters are served?
“Be
thou ashamed, O Sidon, for the sea speaketh.”
And if you ask why, listen to the cause: for a small gain they travel far; for
eternal life many will scarcely lift a foot from the ground. They seek a petty
reward, and sometimes fight shamefully in law courts for a single piece of
money. They are not afraid to work day and night for a trifle or an empty
promise. But, for an unchanging good, for a reward beyond estimate, for the
greatest honor and for glory everlasting, it must be said to their shame that
men begrudge even the least fatigue. Be ashamed, then, lazy and complaining
servant, that they should be found more eager for perdition than you are for
life, that they rejoice more in vanity than you in truth.
Sometimes
indeed their expectations fail them, but My promise never deceives, nor does it
send away empty-handed him who trusts in Me. What I have promised I will give.
What I have said I will fulfill, if only a man remain faithful in My love to the
end. I am the rewarder of all the good, the strong approver of all who are
devoted to Me.
Write
My words in your heart and meditate on them earnestly, for in time of temptation
they will be very necessary. What you do not understand when you read, you will
learn in the day of visitation. I am wont to visit My elect in two ways—by
temptation and by consolation. To them I read two lessons daily—one reproving
their vices, the other exhorting them to progress in virtue. He who has My words
and despises them has that which shall condemn him on the last day.
A
Prayer for the Grace of Devotion
O
Lord my God, You are all my good. And who am I that I should dare to speak to
You? I am Your poorest and meanest servant, a vile worm, much more poor and
contemptible than I know or dare to say. Yet remember me, Lord, because I am
nothing, I have nothing, and I can do nothing. You alone are good, just, and
holy. You can do all things, You give all things, You fill all things: only the
sinner do You leave empty-handed. Remember Your tender mercies and fill my heart
with Your grace, You Who will not allow Your works to be in vain. How can I bear
this life of misery unless You comfort me with Your mercy and grace? Do not turn
Your face from me. Do not delay Your visitation. Do not withdraw Your
consolation, lest in Your sight my soul become as desert land. Teach me, Lord,
to do Your will. Teach me to live worthily and humbly in Your sight, for You are
my wisdom Who know me truly, and Who knew me even before the world was made and
before I was born into it.
We
Must Walk Before God in Humility and Truth
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, walk before Me in truth, and seek Me always in the simplicity of your
heart. He who walks before Me in truth shall be defended from the attacks of
evil, and the truth shall free him from seducers and from the slanders of wicked
men. For if the truth has made you free, then you shall be free indeed, and you
shall not care for the vain words of men.
The
Disciple
O
Lord, it is true. I ask that it be with me as You say. Let your truth teach me.
Let it guard me, and keep me safe to the end. Let it free me from all evil
affection and badly ordered love, and I shall walk with You in great freedom of
heart.
The
Voice of Christ
I
shall teach you those things which are right and pleasing to Me. Consider your
sins with great displeasure and sorrow, and never think yourself to be someone
because of your good works. You are truly a sinner. You are subject to many
passions and entangled in them. Of yourself you always tend to nothing. You fall
quickly, are quickly overcome, quickly troubled, and quickly undone. You have
nothing in which you can glory, but you have many things for which you should
think yourself vile, for you are much weaker than you can comprehend. Hence, let
none of the things you do seem great to you. Let nothing seem important or
precious or desirable except that which is everlasting. Let the eternal truth
please you above all things, and let your extreme unworthiness always displease
you. Fear nothing, abhor nothing, and fly nothing as you do your own vices and
sins; these should be more unpleasant for you than any material losses.
Some
men walk before Me without sincerity. Led on by a certain curiosity and
arrogance, they wish to know My secrets and to understand the high things of
God, to the neglect of themselves and their own salvation. Through their own
pride and curiosity, and because I am against them, such men often fall into
great temptations and sins.
Fear
the judgments of God! Dread the wrath of the Almighty! Do not discuss the works
of the Most High, but examine your sins—in what serious things you have
offended and how many good things you have neglected.
Some
carry their devotion only in books, some in pictures, some in outward signs and
figures. Some have Me on their lips when there is little of Me in their hearts.
Others, indeed, with enlightened understanding and purified affections,
constantly long for everlasting things; they are unwilling to hear of earthly
affairs and only with reluctance do they serve the necessities of nature. These
sense what the Spirit of truth speaks within them: for He teaches them to
despise earthly things and to love those of heaven, to neglect the world, and
each day and night to desire heaven.
The
Wonderful Effect of Divine Love
The
Disciple
I
BLESS You, O heavenly Father, Father of my Lord Jesus Christ, for having
condescended to remember me, a poor creature. Thanks to You, O Father of
mercies, God of all consolation, Who with Your comfort sometimes refresh me, who
am not worthy of it. I bless You always and glorify You with Your only-begotten
Son and the Holy Spirit, the Paraclete, forever and ever.
Ah,
Lord God, my holy Lover, when You come into my heart, all that is within me will
rejoice. You are my glory and the exultation of my heart. You are my hope and
refuge in the day of my tribulation. But because my love is as yet weak and my
virtue imperfect, I must be strengthened and comforted by You. Visit me often,
therefore, and teach me Your holy discipline. Free me from evil passions and
cleanse my heart of all disorderly affection so that, healed and purified
within, I may be fit to love, strong to suffer, and firm to persevere.
Love
is an excellent thing, a very great blessing, indeed. It makes every difficulty
easy, and bears all wrongs with equanimity. For it bears a burden without being
weighted and renders sweet all that is bitter. The noble love of Jesus spurs to
great deeds and excites longing for that which is more perfect. Love tends
upward; it will not be held down by anything low. Love wishes to be free and
estranged from all worldly affections, lest its inward sight be obstructed, lest
it be entangled in any temporal interest and overcome by adversity.
Nothing
is sweeter than love, nothing stronger or higher or wider; nothing is more
pleasant, nothing fuller, and nothing better in heaven or on earth, for love is
born of God and cannot rest except in God, Who is above all created things.
One
who is in love flies, runs, and rejoices; he is free, not bound. He gives all
for all and possesses all in all, because he rests in the one sovereign Good,
Who is above all things, and from Whom every good flows and proceeds. He does
not look to the gift but turns himself above all gifts to the Giver.
Love
often knows no limits but overflows all bounds. Love feels no burden, thinks
nothing of troubles, attempts more than it is able, and does not plead
impossibility, because it believes that it may and can do all things. For this
reason, it is able to do all, performing and effecting much where he who does
not love fails and falls.
Love
is watchful. Sleeping, it does not slumber. Wearied, it is not tired. Pressed,
it is not straitened. Alarmed, it is not confused, but like a living flame, a
burning torch, it forces its way upward and passes unharmed through every
obstacle.
If
a man loves, he will know the sound of this voice. For this warm affection of
soul is a loud voice crying in the ears of God, and it says: “My God, my love,
You are all mine and I am all Yours. Give me an increase of love, that I may
learn to taste with the inward lips of my heart how sweet it is to love, how
sweet to be dissolved in love and bathe in it. Let me be rapt in love. Let me
rise above self in great fervor and wonder. Let me sing the hymn of love, and
let me follow You, my Love, to the heights. Let my soul exhaust itself in
praising You, rejoicing out of love. Let me love You more than myself, and let
me not love myself except for Your sake. In You let me love all those who truly
love You, as the law of love, which shines forth from You, commands.”
Love
is swift, sincere, kind, pleasant, and delightful. Love is strong, patient and
faithful, prudent, long-suffering, and manly. Love is never self-seeking, for in
whatever a person seeks himself there he falls from love. Love is circumspect,
humble, and upright. It is neither soft nor light, nor intent upon vain things.
It is sober and chaste, firm and quiet, guarded in all the senses. Love is
subject and obedient to superiors. It is mean and contemptible in its own eyes,
devoted and thankful to God; always trusting and hoping in Him even when He is
distasteful to it, for there is no living in love without sorrow. He who is not
ready to suffer all things and to stand resigned to the will of the Beloved is
not worthy to be called a lover. A lover must embrace willingly all that is
difficult and bitter for the sake of the Beloved, and he should not turn away
from Him because of adversities.
The
Proving of a True Lover
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, you are not yet a brave and wise lover.
The
Disciple
Why,
Lord?
The
Voice of Christ
Because,
on account of a slight difficulty you give up what you have undertaken and are
too eager to seek consolation.
The
brave lover stands firm in temptations and pays no heed to the crafty
persuasions of the enemy. As I please him in prosperity, so in adversity I am
not displeasing to him. The wise lover regards not so much the gift of Him Who
loves as the love of Him Who gives. He regards the affection of the Giver rather
than the value of the gift, and sets his Beloved above all gifts. The noble
lover does not rest in the gift but in Me Who am above every gift.
All
is not lost, then, if you sometimes feel less devout than you wish toward Me or
My saints. That good and sweet feeling which you sometimes have is the effect of
present grace and a certain foretaste of your heavenly home. You must not lean
upon it too much, because it comes and goes. But to fight against evil thoughts
which attack you is a sign of virtue and great merit. Do not, therefore, let
strange fantasies disturb you, no matter what they concern. Hold strongly to
your resolution and keep a right intention toward God.
It
is not an illusion that you are sometimes rapt in ecstasy and then quickly
returned to the usual follies of your heart. For these are evils which you
suffer rather than commit; and so long as they displease you and you struggle
against them, it is a matter of merit and not a loss.
You
must know that the old enemy tries by all means in his power to hinder your
desire for good and to turn you from every devotional practice, especially from
the veneration of the saints, from devout meditation on My passion, and from
your firm purpose of advancing in virtue. He suggests many evil thoughts that he
may cause you weariness and horror, and thus draw you away from prayer and holy
reading. A humble confession displeases him and, if he could, he would make you
omit Holy Communion.
Do
not believe him or heed him, even though he often sets traps to deceive you.
When he suggests evil, unclean things, accuse him. Say to him: “Away, unclean
spirit! Shame, miserable creature! You are but filth to bring such things to my
ears. Begone, most wretched seducer! You shall have no part in me, for Jesus
will be my strength, and you shall be confounded. I would rather die and suffer
all torments than consent to you. Be still! Be silent! Though you bring many
troubles upon me I will have none of you. The Lord is my light, my salvation.
Whom shall I fear? Though armies unite against me, my heart will not fear, for
the Lord is my Helper, my Redeemer.”
Fight
like a good soldier and if you sometimes fall through weakness, rise again with
greater strength than before, trusting in My most abundant grace. But beware of
vain complacency and pride. For many are led into error through these faults and
sometimes fall into almost perpetual blindness. Let the fall of these, who
proudly presume on self, be a warning to you and a constant incentive to
humility.
Grace
Must Be Hidden Under the Mantle of Humility
The
Voice of Christ
IT
IS better and safer for you to conceal the grace of devotion, not to be elated
by it, not to speak or think much of it, and instead to humble yourself and fear
lest it is being given to one unworthy of it. Do not cling too closely to this
affection, for it may quickly be changed to its opposite. When you are in grace,
think how miserable and needy you are without it. Your progress in spiritual
life does not consist in having the grace of consolation, but in enduring its
withdrawal with humility, resignation, and patience, so that you neither become
listless in prayer nor neglect your other duties in the least; but on the
contrary do what you can do as well as you know how, and do not neglect yourself
completely because of your dryness or anxiety of mind.
There
are many, indeed, who immediately become impatient and lazy when things do not
go well with them. The way of man, however, does not always lie in his own
power. It is God’s prerogative to give grace and to console when He wishes, as
much as He wishes, and whom He wishes, as it shall please Him and no more.
Some
careless persons, misusing the grace of devotion, have destroyed themselves
because they wished to do more than they were able. They failed to take account
of their own weakness, and followed the desire of their heart rather than the
judgment of their reason. Then, because they presumed to greater things than
pleased God they quickly lost His grace. They who had built their homes in
heaven became helpless, vile outcasts, humbled and impoverished, that they might
learn not to fly with their own wings but to trust in Mine.
They
who are still new and inexperienced in the way of the Lord may easily be
deceived and overthrown unless they guide themselves by the advice of discreet
persons. But if they wish to follow their own notions rather than to trust in
others who are more experienced, they will be in danger of a sorry end, at least
if they are unwilling to be drawn from their vanity. Seldom do they who are wise
in their own conceits bear humbly the guidance of others. Yet a little knowledge
humbly and meekly pursued is better than great treasures of learning sought in
vain complacency. It is better for you to have little than to have much which
may become the source of pride.
He
who gives himself up entirely to enjoyment acts very unwisely, for he forgets
his former helplessness and that chastened fear of the Lord which dreads to lose
a proffered grace. Nor is he very brave or wise who becomes too despondent in
times of adversity and difficulty and thinks less confidently of Me than he
should. He who wishes to be too secure in time of peace will often become too
dejected and fearful in time of trial.
If
you were wise enough to remain always humble and small in your own eyes, and to
restrain and rule your spirit well, you would not fall so quickly into danger
and offense.
When
a spirit of fervor is enkindled within you, you may well meditate on how you
will feel when the fervor leaves. Then, when this happens, remember that the
light which I have withdrawn for a time as a warning to you and for My own glory
may again return. Such trials are often more beneficial than if you had things
always as you wish. For a man’s merits are not measured by many visions or
consolations, or by knowledge of the Scriptures, or by his being in a higher
position than others, but by the truth of his humility, by his capacity for
divine charity, by his constancy in seeking purely and entirely the honor of
God, by his disregard and positive contempt of self, and more, by preferring to
be despised and humiliated rather than honored by others.
Self-Abasement
in the Sight of God
The
Disciple
I
WILL speak to my Lord, I who am but dust and ashes. If I consider myself
anything more than this, behold You stand against me, and my sins bear witness
to the truth which I cannot contradict. If I abase myself, however, if I humble
myself to nothingness, if I shrink from all self-esteem and account myself as
the dust which I am, Your grace will favor me, Your light will enshroud my
heart, and all self-esteem, no matter how little, will sink in the depths of my
nothingness to perish forever.
It
is there You show me to myself—what I am, what I have been, and what I am
coming to; for I am nothing and I did not know it. Left to myself, I am nothing
but total weakness. But if You look upon me for an instant, I am at once made
strong and filled with new joy. Great wonder it is that I, who of my own weight
always sink to the depths, am so suddenly lifted up, and so graciously embraced
by You.
It
is Your love that does this, graciously upholding me, supporting me in so many
necessities, guarding me from so many grave dangers, and snatching me, as I may
truly say, from evils without number. Indeed, by loving myself badly I lost
myself; by seeking only You and by truly loving You I have found both myself and
You, and by that love I have reduced myself more profoundly to nothing. For You,
O sweetest Lord, deal with me above all my merits and above all that I dare to
hope or ask.
May
You be blessed, my God, for although I am unworthy of any benefits, yet Your
nobility and infinite goodness never cease to do good even for those who are
ungrateful and far from You. Convert us to You, that we may be thankful, humble,
and devout, for You are our salvation, our courage, and our strength.
All
Things should be Referred to God as their Last End
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, I must be your supreme and last end, if you truly desire to be blessed.
With this intention your affections, which are too often perversely inclined to
self and to creatures, will be purified. For if you seek yourself in anything,
you immediately fail interiorly and become dry of heart.
Refer
all things principally to Me, therefore, for it is I Who have given them all.
Consider each thing as flowing from the highest good, and therefore to Me, as to
their highest source, must all things be brought back.
From
Me the small and the great, the poor and the rich draw the water of life as from
a living fountain, and they who serve Me willingly and freely shall receive
grace upon grace. He who wishes to glory in things apart from Me, however, or to
delight in some good as his own, shall not be grounded in true joy or gladdened
in his heart, but shall be burdened and distressed in many ways. Hence you ought
not to attribute any good to yourself or ascribe virtue to any man, but give all
to God without Whom man has nothing.
I
have given all things. I will that all be returned to Me again, and I exact most
strictly a return of thanks. This is the truth by which vainglory is put to
flight.
Where
heavenly grace and true charity enter in, there neither envy nor narrowness of
heart nor self-love will have place. Divine love conquers all and enlarges the
powers of the soul.
If
you are truly wise, you will rejoice only in Me, because no one is good except
God alone, Who is to be praised above all things and above all to be blessed.
To
Despise the World and Serve God is Sweet
The
Disciple
NOW
again I will speak, Lord, and will not be silent. I will speak to the hearing of
my God, my Lord, and my King Who is in heaven. How great, O Lord, is the
multitude of Your mercies which You have stored up for those who love You. But
what are You to those who love You? What are You to those who serve You with
their whole heart?
Truly
beyond the power of words is the sweetness of contemplation You give to those
who love You. To me You have shown the sweetness of Your charity, especially in
having made me when I did not exist, in having brought me back to serve You when
I had gone far astray from You, in having commanded me to love You.
O
Fountain of unceasing love, what shall I say of You? How can I forget You, Who
have been pleased to remember me even after I had wasted away and perished? You
have shown mercy to Your servant beyond all hope, and have exhibited grace and
friendship beyond his deserving.
What
return shall I make to You for this grace? For it is not given every man to
forsake all things, to renounce the world, and undertake the religious life. Is
it anything great that I should serve You Whom every creature is bound to serve?
It should not seem much to me; instead it should appear great and wonderful that
You condescend to receive into Your service one who is so poor and unworthy.
Behold, all things are Yours, even those which I have and by which I serve You.
Behold, heaven and earth which You created for the service of man, stand ready,
and each day they do whatever You command. But even this is little, for You have
appointed angels also to minister to man—yea more than all this—You Yourself
have condescended to serve man and have promised to give him Yourself.
What
return shall I make for all these thousands of benefits? Would that I could
serve You all the days of my life! Would that for but one day I could serve You
worthily! Truly You are worthy of all service, all honor, and everlasting
praise. Truly You are my Lord, and I am Your poor servant, bound to serve You
with all my powers, praising You without ever becoming weary. I wish to do
this—this is my desire. Do You supply whatever is wanting in me.
It
is a great honor, a great glory to serve You and to despise all things for Your
sake. They who give themselves gladly to Your most holy service will possess
great grace. They who cast aside all carnal delights for Your love will find the
most sweet consolation of the Holy Ghost. They who enter upon the narrow way for
Your name and cast aside all worldly care will attain great freedom of mind.
O
sweet and joyful service of God, which makes man truly free and holy! O sacred
state of religious bondage which makes man equal to the angels, pleasing to God,
terrible to the demons, and worthy of the commendation of all the faithful! O
service to be embraced and always desired, in which the highest good is offered
and joy is won which shall remain forever!
The
Longings of our Hearts Must Be Examined And Moderated
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, it is necessary for you to learn many things which you have not yet
learned well.
The
Disciple
What
are they, Lord?
The
Voice of Christ
That
you conform your desires entirely according to My good pleasure, and be not a
lover of self but an earnest doer of My will. Desires very often inflame you and
drive you madly on, but consider whether you act for My honor, or for your own
advantage. If I am the cause, you will be well content with whatever I ordain.
If, on the other hand, any self-seeking lurk in you, it troubles you and weighs
you down. Take care, then, that you do not rely too much on preconceived desire
that has no reference to Me, lest you repent later on and be displeased with
what at first pleased you and which you desired as being for the best. Not every
desire which seems good should be followed immediately, nor, on the other hand,
should every contrary affection be at once rejected.
It
is sometimes well to use a little restraint even in good desires and
inclinations, lest through too much eagerness you bring upon yourself
distraction of mind; lest through your lack of discipline you create scandal for
others; or lest you be suddenly upset and fall because of resistance from
others. Sometimes, however, you must use violence and resist your sensual
appetite bravely. You must pay no attention to what the flesh does or does not
desire, taking pains that it be subjected, even by force, to the spirit. And it
should be chastised and forced to remain in subjection until it is prepared for
anything and is taught to be satisfied with little, to take pleasure in simple
things, and not to murmur against inconveniences.
The Twelfth Chapter
The Disciple
PATIENCE,
O Lord God, is very necessary for me, I see, because there are many adversities
in this life. No matter what plans I make for my own peace, my life cannot be
free from struggle and sorrow.
The
Voice of Christ
My
child, you are right, yet My wish is not that you seek that peace which is free
from temptations or meets with no opposition, but rather that you consider
yourself as having found peace when you have been tormented with many
tribulations and tried with many adversities.
If
you say that you cannot suffer much, how will you endure the fire of purgatory?
Of two evils, the lesser is always to be chosen. Therefore, in order that you
may escape the everlasting punishments to come, try to bear present evils
patiently for the sake of God.
Do
you think that men of the world have no suffering, or perhaps but little? Ask
even those who enjoy the most delights and you will learn otherwise. “But,”
you will say, “they enjoy many pleasures and follow their own wishes;
therefore they do not feel their troubles very much.” Granted that they do
have whatever they wish, how long do you think it will last? Behold, they who
prosper in the world shall perish as smoke, and there shall be no memory of
their past joys. Even in this life they do not find rest in these pleasures
without bitterness, weariness, and fear. For they often receive the penalty of
sorrow from the very thing whence they believe their happiness comes. And it is
just. Since they seek and follow after pleasures without reason, they should not
enjoy them without shame and bitterness.
How
brief, how false, how unreasonable and shameful all these pleasures are! Yet in
their drunken blindness men do not understand this, but like brute beasts incur
death of soul for the miserly enjoyment of a corruptible life.
Therefore,
My child, do not pursue your lusts, but turn away from your own will. “Seek
thy pleasure in the Lord and He will give thee thy heart’s desires.”
If you wish to be truly delighted and more abundantly comforted by Me, behold,
in contempt of all worldly things and in the cutting off of all base pleasures
shall your blessing be, and great consolation shall be given you. Further, the
more you withdraw yourself from any solace of creatures, the sweeter and
stronger comfort will you find in Me.
At
first you will not gain these blessings without sadness and toil and conflict.
Habit already formed will resist you, but it shall be overcome by a better
habit. The flesh will murmur against you, but it will be bridled by fervor of
spirit. The old serpent will sting and trouble you, but prayer will put him to
flight and by steadfast, useful toil the way will be closed to him.
The
Obedience of One Humbly Subject to the Example of Jesus Christ
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, he who attempts to escape obeying withdraws himself from grace. Likewise
he who seeks private benefits for himself loses those which are common to all.
He who does not submit himself freely and willingly to his superior, shows that
his flesh is not yet perfectly obedient but that it often rebels and murmurs
against him.
Learn
quickly, then, to submit yourself to your superior if you wish to conquer your
own flesh. For the exterior enemy is more quickly overcome if the inner man is
not laid waste. There is no more troublesome, no worse enemy of the soul than
you yourself, if you are not in harmony with the spirit. It is absolutely
necessary that you conceive a true contempt for yourself if you wish to be
victorious over flesh and blood.
Because
you still love yourself too inordinately, you are afraid to resign yourself
wholly to the will of others. Is it such a great matter if you, who are but dust
and nothingness, subject yourself to man for the sake of God, when I, the
All-Powerful, the Most High, Who created all things out of nothing, humbly
subjected Myself to man for your sake? I became the most humble and the lowest
of all men that you might overcome your pride with My humility.
Learn
to obey, you who are but dust! Learn to humble yourself, you who are but earth
and clay, and bow down under the foot of every man! Learn to break your own
will, to submit to all subjection! Be zealous against yourself! Allow no pride
to dwell in you, but prove yourself so humble and lowly that all may walk over
you and trample upon you as dust in the streets!
What
have you, vain man, to complain of? What answer can you make, vile sinner, to
those who accuse you, you who have so often offended God and so many times
deserved hell? But My eye has spared you because your soul was precious in My
sight, so that you might know My love and always be thankful for My benefits, so
that you might give yourself continually to true subjection and humility, and
might patiently endure contempt.
Consider
the Hidden Judgments of God
Lest
You Become Proud of Your Own Good Deeds
The
Disciple
YOU
thunder forth Your judgments over me, Lord. You shake all my bones with fear and
trembling, and my soul is very much afraid. I stand in awe as I consider that
the heavens are not pure in Your sight. If You found wickedness in the angels
and did not spare them, what will become of me? Stars have fallen from heaven,
and I—I who am but dust—how can I be presumptuous? They whose deeds seemed
worthy of praise have fallen into the depths, and I have seen those who ate the
bread of angels delighting themselves with the husks of swine.
There
is no holiness, then, if You withdraw Your hand, Lord. There is no wisdom if You
cease to guide, no courage if You cease to defend. No chastity is secure if You
do not guard it. Our vigilance avails nothing if Your holy watchfulness does not
protect us. Left to ourselves we sink and perish, but visited by You we are
lifted up and live. We are truly unstable, but You make us strong. We grow
lukewarm, but You inflame us. Oh, how humbly and lowly should I consider myself!
How very little should I esteem anything that seems good in me! How profoundly
should I submit to Your unfathomable judgments, Lord, where I find myself to be
but nothing!
O
immeasurable weight! O impassable sea, where I find myself to be nothing but
bare nothingness! Where, then, is glory’s hiding place? Where can there be any
trust in my own virtue? All vainglory is swallowed up in the depths of Your
judgments upon me.
What
is all flesh in Your sight? Shall the clay glory against Him that formed it? How
can he whose heart is truly subject to God be lifted up by vainglory? The whole
world will not make him proud whom truth has subjected to itself. Nor shall he
who has placed all his hope in God be moved by the tongues of flatterers. For
behold, even they who speak are nothing; they will pass away with the sound of
their words, but the truth of the Lord remains forever.
How
One Should Feel and Speak on Every Desirable Thing
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, this is the way you must speak on every occasion: “Lord, if it be
pleasing to You, so be it. If it be to Your honor, Lord, be it done in Your
name. Lord, if You see that it is expedient and profitable for me, then grant
that I may use it to Your honor. But if You know that it will be harmful to me,
and of no good benefit to the welfare of my soul, then take this desire away
from me.”
Not
every desire is from the Holy Spirit, even though it may seem right and good. It
is difficult to be certain whether it is a good spirit or a bad one that prompts
one to this or that, and even to know whether you are being moved by your own
spirit. Many who seemed at first to be led by a good spirit have been deceived
in the end.
Whatever
the mind sees as good, ask and desire in fear of God and humility of heart.
Above all, commit the whole matter to Me with true resignation, and say:
“Lord, You know what is better for me; let this be done or that be done as You
please. Grant what You will, as much as You will, when You will. Do with me as
You know best, as will most please You, and will be for Your greater honor.
Place me where You will and deal with me freely in all things. I am in Your
hand; turn me about whichever way You will. Behold, I am Your servant, ready to
obey in all things. Not for myself do I desire to live, but for You—would that
I could do this worthily and perfectly!”
A
Prayer that the Will of God Be Done
Grant
me Your grace, O most merciful Jesus, that it may be with me, and work with me,
and remain with me to the very end. Grant that I may always desire and will that
which is most acceptable and pleasing to You. Let Your will be mine. Let my will
always follow Yours and agree perfectly with it. Let my will be one with Yours
in willing and in not willing, and let me be unable to will or not will anything
but what You will or do not will. Grant that I may die to all things in this
world, and for Your sake love to be despised and unknown in this life. Give me
above all desires the desire to rest in You, and in You let my heart have peace.
You are true peace of heart. You alone are its rest. Without You all things are
difficult and troubled. In this peace, the selfsame that is in You, the Most
High, the everlasting Good, I will sleep and take my rest. Amen.
True
Comfort Is to Be Sought in God Alone
The
Disciple
WHA
TEV
ER I can desire or imagine for my own comfort I look for not here but hereafter.
For if I alone should have all the world’s comforts and could enjoy all its
delights, it is certain that they could not long endure. Therefore, my soul, you
cannot enjoy full consolation or perfect delight except in God, the Consoler of
the poor and the Helper of the humble. Wait a little, my soul, wait for the
divine promise and you will have an abundance of all good things in heaven. If
you desire these present things too much, you will lose those which are
everlasting and heavenly. Use temporal things but desire eternal things. You
cannot be satisfied with any temporal goods because you were not created to
enjoy them.
Even
if you possessed all created things you could not be happy and blessed; for in
God, Who created all these things, your whole blessedness and happiness
consists—not indeed such happiness as is seen and praised by lovers of the
world, but such as that for which the good and faithful servants of Christ wait,
and of which the spiritual and pure of heart, whose conversation is in heaven,
sometime have a foretaste.
Vain
and brief is all human consolation. But that which is received inwardly from the
Truth is blessed and true. The devout man carries his Consoler, Jesus,
everywhere with him, and he says to Him: “Be with me, Lord Jesus, in every
place and at all times. Let this be my consolation, to be willing to forego all
human comforting. And if Your consolation be wanting to me, let Your will and
just trial of me be my greatest comfort. For You will not always be angry, nor
will You threaten forever.”
All
Our Care is to Be Placed in God
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, allow me to do what I will with you. I know what is best for you. You
think as a man; you feel in many things as human affection persuades.
The
Disciple
Lord,
what You say is true. Your care for me is greater than all the care I can take
of myself. For he who does not cast all his care upon You stands very unsafely.
If only my will remain right and firm toward You, Lord, do with me whatever
pleases You. For whatever You shall do with me can only be good.
If
You wish me to be in darkness, I shall bless You. And if You wish me to be in
light, again I shall bless You. If You stoop down to comfort me, I shall bless
You, and if You wish me to be afflicted, I shall bless You forever.
The
Voice of Christ
My
child, this is the disposition which you should have if you wish to walk with
Me. You should be as ready to suffer as to enjoy. You should as willingly be
destitute and poor as rich and satisfied.
The
Disciple
O
Lord, I shall suffer willingly for Your sake whatever You wish to send me. I am
ready to accept from Your hand both good and evil alike, the sweet and the
bitter together, sorrow with joy; and for all that happens to me I am grateful.
Keep me from all sin and I will fear neither death nor hell. Do not cast me out
forever nor blot me out of the Book of Life, and whatever tribulation befalls
will not harm me.
Temporal
Sufferings Should Be Borne Patiently,
After
the Example of Christ
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, I came down from heaven for your salvation and took upon Myself your
miseries, not out of necessity but out of love, that you might learn to be
patient and bear the sufferings of this life without repining. From the moment
of My birth to My death on the cross, suffering did not leave Me. I suffered
great want of temporal goods. Often I heard many complaints against Me. Disgrace
and reviling I bore with patience. For My blessings I received ingratitude, for
My miracles blasphemies, and for My teaching scorn.
The
Disciple
O
Lord, because You were patient in life, especially in fulfilling the design of
the Father, it is fitting that I, a most miserable sinner, should live patiently
according to Your will, and, as long as You shall wish, bear the burden of this
corruptible body for the welfare of my soul. For though this present life seems
burdensome, yet by Your grace it becomes meritorious, and it is made brighter
and more endurable for the weak by Your example and the pathways of the saints.
But it has also more consolation than formerly under the old law when the gates
of heaven were closed, when the way thereto seemed darker than now, and when so
few cared to seek the eternal kingdom. The just, the elect, could not enter
heaven before Your sufferings and sacred death had paid the debt.
Oh,
what great thanks I owe You, Who have shown me and all the faithful the good and
right way to Your everlasting kingdom! Your life is our way and in Your holy
patience we come nearer to You Who are our crown. Had You not gone before and
taught us, who would have cared to follow? Alas, how many would have remained
far behind, had they not before their eyes Your holy example! Behold, even we
who have heard of Your many miracles and teachings are still lukewarm; what
would happen if we did not have such light by which to follow You?
True
Patience in Suffering
The
Voice of Christ
WHAT
are you saying, My child? Think of My suffering and that of the saints, and
cease complaining. You have not yet resisted to the shedding of blood. What you
suffer is very little compared with the great things they suffered who were so
strongly tempted, so severely troubled, so tried and tormented in many ways.
Well may you remember, therefore, the very painful woes of others, that you may
bear your own little ones the more easily. And if they do not seem so small to
you, examine if perhaps your impatience is not the cause of their apparent
greatness; and whether they are great or small, try to bear them all patiently.
The better you dispose yourself to suffer, the more wisely you act and the
greater is the reward promised you. Thus you will suffer more easily if your
mind and habits are diligently trained to it.
Do
not say: “I cannot bear this from such a man, nor should I suffer things of
this kind, for he has done me a great wrong. He has accused me of many things of
which I never thought. However, from someone else I will gladly suffer as much
as I think I should.”
Such
a thought is foolish, for it does not consider the virtue of patience or the One
Who will reward it, but rather weighs the person and the offense committed. The
man who will suffer only as much as seems good to him, who will accept suffering
only from those from whom he is pleased to accept it, is not truly patient. For
the truly patient man does not consider from whom the suffering comes, whether
from a superior, an equal, or an inferior, whether from a good and holy person
or from a perverse and unworthy one; but no matter how great an adversity
befalls him, no matter how often it comes or from whom it comes, he accepts it
gratefully from the hand of God, and counts it a great gain. For with God
nothing that is suffered for His sake, no matter how small, can pass without
reward. Be prepared for the fight, then, if you wish to gain the victory.
Without struggle you cannot obtain the crown of patience, and if you refuse to
suffer you are refusing the crown. But if you desire to be crowned, fight
bravely and bear up patiently. Without labor there is no rest, and without
fighting, no victory.
The
Disciple
O
Lord, let that which seems naturally impossible to me become possible through
Your grace. You know that I can suffer very little, and that I am quickly
discouraged when any small adversity arises. Let the torment of tribulation
suffered for Your name be pleasant and desirable to me, since to suffer and be
troubled for Your sake is very beneficial for my soul.
Confessing
Our Weakness in the Miseries of Life
The
Disciple
I
WILL bring witness against myself to my injustice, and to You, O Lord, I will
confess my weakness.
Often
it is a small thing that makes me downcast and sad. I propose to act bravely,
but when even a small temptation comes I find myself in great straits. Sometimes
it is the merest trifle which gives rise to grievous temptations. When I think
myself somewhat safe and when I am not expecting it, I frequently find myself
almost overcome by a slight wind. Look, therefore, Lord, at my lowliness and
frailty which You know so well. Have mercy on me and snatch me out of the mire
that I may not be caught in it and may not remain forever utterly despondent.
That
I am so prone to fall and so weak in resisting my passions oppresses me
frequently and confounds me in Your sight. While I do not fully consent to them,
still their assault is very troublesome and grievous to me, and it wearies me
exceedingly thus to live in daily strife. Yet from the fact that abominable
fancies rush in upon me much more easily than they leave, my weakness becomes
clear to me.
Oh
that You, most mighty God of Israel, zealous Lover of faithful souls, would
consider the labor and sorrow of Your servant, and assist him in all his
undertakings! Strengthen me with heavenly courage lest the outer man, the
miserable flesh, against which I shall be obliged to fight so long as I draw a
breath in this wretched life and which is not yet subjected to the spirit,
prevail and dominate me.
Alas!
What sort of life is this, from which troubles and miseries are never absent,
where all things are full of snares and enemies? For when one trouble or
temptation leaves, another comes. Indeed, even while the first conflict is still
raging, many others begin unexpectedly. How is it possible to love a life that
has such great bitterness, that is subject to so many calamities and miseries?
Indeed, how can it even be called life when it begets so many deaths and
plagues? And yet, it is loved, and many seek their delight in it.
Many
persons often blame the world for being false and vain, yet do not readily give
it up because the desires of the flesh have such great power. Some things draw
them to love the world, others make them despise it. The lust of the flesh, the
desire of the eyes, and the pride of life lead to love, while the pains and
miseries, which are the just consequences of those things, beget hatred and
weariness of the world.
Vicious
pleasure overcomes the soul that is given to the world. She thinks that there
are delights beneath these thorns, because she has never seen or tasted the
sweetness of God or the internal delight of virtue. They, on the other hand, who
entirely despise the world and seek to live for God under the rule of holy
discipline, are not ignorant of the divine sweetness promised to those who truly
renounce the world. They see clearly how gravely the world errs, and in how many
ways it deceives.
Above
All Goods and All Gifts We Must Rest in God
The
Disciple
ABOVE
all things and in all things, O my soul, rest always in God, for He is the
everlasting rest of the saints.
Grant,
most sweet and loving Jesus, that I may seek my repose in You above every
creature; above all health and beauty; above every honor and glory; every power
and dignity; above all knowledge and cleverness, all riches and arts, all joy
and gladness; above all fame and praise, all sweetness and consolation; above
every hope and promise, every merit and desire; above all the gifts and favors
that You can give or pour down upon me; above all the joy and exultation that
the mind can receive and feel; and finally, above the angels and archangels and
all the heavenly host; above all things visible and invisible; and may I seek my
repose in You above everything that is not You, my God.
For
You, O Lord my God, are above all things the best. You alone are most high, You
alone most powerful. You alone are most sufficient and most satisfying, You
alone most sweet and consoling. You alone are most beautiful and loving, You
alone most noble and glorious above all things. In You is every perfection that
has been or ever will be. Therefore, whatever You give me besides Yourself,
whatever You reveal to me concerning Yourself, and whatever You promise, is too
small and insufficient when I do not see and fully enjoy You alone. For my heart
cannot rest or be fully content until, rising above all gifts and every created
thing, it rests in You.
Who,
O most beloved Spouse, Jesus Christ, most pure Lover, Lord of all creation, who
shall give me the wings of true liberty that I may fly to rest in You? When
shall freedom be fully given me to see how sweet You are, O Lord, my God? When
shall I recollect myself entirely in You, so that because of Your love I may
feel, not myself, but You alone above all sense and measure, in a manner known
to none? But now I often lament and grieve over my unhappiness, for many evils
befall me in this vale of miseries, often disturbing me, making me sad and
overshadowing me, often hindering and distracting me, alluring and entangling me
so that I neither have free access to You nor enjoy the sweet embraces which are
ever ready for blessed souls. Let my sighs and the manifold desolation here on
earth move You.
O
Jesus, Splendor of eternal glory, Consolation of the pilgrim soul, with You my
lips utter no sound and to You my silence speaks. How long will my Lord delay
His coming? Let Him come to His poor servant and make him happy. Let Him put
forth His hand and take this miserable creature from his anguish. Come, O come,
for without You there will be no happy day or hour, because You are my happiness
and without You my table is empty. I am wretched, as it were imprisoned and
weighted down with fetters, until You fill me with the light of Your presence,
restore me to liberty, and show me a friendly countenance. Let others seek
instead of You whatever they will, but nothing pleases me or will please me but
You, my God, my Hope, my everlasting Salvation. I will not be silent, I will not
cease praying until Your grace returns to me and You speak inwardly to me,
saying: “Behold, I am here. Lo, I have come to you because you have called Me.
Your tears and the desire of your soul, your humility and contrition of heart
have inclined Me and brought Me to you.”
Lord,
I have called You, and have desired You, and have been ready to spurn all things
for Your sake. For You first spurred me on to seek You. May You be blessed,
therefore, O Lord, for having shown this goodness to Your servant according to
the multitude of Your mercies.
What
more is there for Your servant to say to You unless, with his iniquity and
vileness always in mind, he humbles himself before You? Nothing among all the
wonders of heaven and earth is like to You. Your works are exceedingly good,
Your judgments true, and Your providence rules the whole universe. May You be
praised and glorified, therefore, O Wisdom of the Father. Let my lips and my
soul and all created things unite to praise and bless You.
Remember
the Innumerable Gifts of God
The
Disciple
OPEN
my heart, O Lord, to Your law and teach me to walk in the way of Your
commandments. Let me understand Your will. Let me remember Your blessings—all
of them and each single one of them—with great reverence and care so that
henceforth I may return worthy thanks for them. I know that I am unable to give
due thanks for even the least of Your gifts. I am unworthy of the benefits You
have given me, and when I consider Your generosity my spirit faints away before
its greatness. All that we have of soul and body, whatever we possess interiorly
or exteriorly, by nature or by grace, are Your gifts and they proclaim Your
goodness and mercy from which we have received all good things.
If
one receives more and another less, yet all are Yours and without You nothing
can be received. He who receives greater things cannot glory in his own merit or
consider himself above others or behave insolently toward those who receive
less. He who attributes less to himself and is the more humble and devout in
returning thanks is indeed the greater and the better, while he who considers
himself lower than all men and judges himself to be the least worthy, is the
more fit to receive the greater blessing.
He,
on the other hand, who has received fewer gifts should not be sad or impatient
or envious of the richer man. Instead he should turn his mind to You and offer
You the greatest praise because You give so bountifully, so freely and
willingly, without regard to persons. All things come from You; therefore, You
are to be praised in all things. You know what is good for each of us; and why
one should receive less and another more is not for us to judge, but for You Who
have marked every man’s merits.
Therefore,
O Lord God, I consider it a great blessing not to have many things which human
judgment holds praiseworthy and glorious, for one who realizes his own poverty
and vileness should not be sad or downcast at it, but rather consoled and happy
because You, O God, have chosen the poor, the humble, and the despised in this
world to be Your friends and servants. The truth of this is witnessed by Your
Apostles, whom You made princes over all the world. Yet they lived in this world
without complaining, so humble and simple, so free from malice and deceit, that
they were happy even to suffer reproach for Your name and to embrace with great
affection that which the world abhors.
A
man who loves You and recognizes Your benefits, therefore, should be gladdened
by nothing so much as by Your will, by the good pleasure of Your eternal decree.
With this he should be so contented and consoled that he would wish to be the
least as others wish to be the greatest; that he would be as peaceful and
satisfied in the last place as in the first, and as willing to be despised,
unknown and forgotten, as to be honored by others and to have more fame than
they. He should prefer Your will and the love of Your honor to all else, and it
should comfort him more than all the benefits which have been, or will be, given
him.
Four
Things Which Bring Great Peace
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, I will teach you now the way of peace and true liberty.
Seek,
child, to do the will of others rather than your own.
Always
choose to have less rather than more.
Look
always for the last place and seek to be beneath all others.
Always
wish and pray that the will of God be fully carried out in you.
Behold,
such will enter into the realm of peace and rest.
The
Disciple
O
Lord, this brief discourse of Yours contains much perfection. It is short in
words but full of meaning and abounding in fruit. Certainly if I could only keep
it faithfully, I should not be so easily disturbed. For as often as I find
myself troubled and dejected, I find that I have departed from this teaching.
But You Who can do all things, and Who always love what is for my soul’s
welfare, give me increase of grace that I may keep Your words and accomplish my
salvation.
A
Prayer Against Bad Thoughts
O
Lord my God, be not far from me. O my God, hasten to help me, for varied
thoughts and great fears have risen up within me, afflicting my soul. How shall
I escape them unharmed? How shall I dispel them?
“I
will go before you,” says the Lord, “and will humble the great ones of
earth. I will open the doors of the prison, and will reveal to you hidden
secrets.”
Do
as You say, Lord, and let all evil thoughts fly from Your face. This is my hope
and my only comfort—to fly to You in all tribulation, to confide in You, and
to call on You from the depths of my heart and to await patiently for Your
consolation.
A
Prayer for Enlightening the Mind
Enlighten
me, good Jesus, with the brightness of internal light, and take away all
darkness from the habitation of my heart. Restrain my wandering thoughts and
suppress the temptations which attack me so violently. Fight strongly for me,
and vanquish these evil beasts—the alluring desires of the flesh—so that
peace may come through Your power and the fullness of Your praise resound in the
holy courts, which is a pure conscience. Command the winds and the tempests; say
to the sea: “Be still,” and to the north wind, “Do not blow,” and there
will be a great calm.
Send
forth Your light and Your truth to shine on the earth, for I am as earth, empty
and formless until You illumine me. Pour out Your grace from above. Shower my
heart with heavenly dew. Open the springs of devotion to water the earth, that
it may produce the best of good fruits. Lift up my heart pressed down by the
weight of sins, and direct all my desires to heavenly things, that having tasted
the sweetness of supernal happiness, I may find no pleasure in thinking of
earthly things.
Snatch
me up and deliver me from all the passing comfort of creatures, for no created
thing can fully quiet and satisfy my desires. Join me to Yourself in an
inseparable bond of love; because You alone can satisfy him who loves You, and
without You all things are worthless.
Avoiding
Curious Inquiry
About
the Lives of Others
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, do not be curious. Do not trouble yourself with idle cares. What matters
this or that to you? Follow Me. What is it to you if a man is such and such, if
another does or says this or that? You will not have to answer for others, but
you will have to give an account of yourself. Why, then, do you meddle in their
affairs?
Behold,
I know all men. I see everything that is done under the sun, and I know how
matters stand with each—what is in his mind and what in his heart and the end
to which his intention is directed. Commit all things to Me, therefore, and keep
yourself in good peace. Let him who is disturbed be as restless as he will.
Whatever he has said or done will fall upon himself, for he cannot deceive Me.
Do
not be anxious for the shadow of a great name, for the close friendship of many,
or for the particular affection of men. These things cause distraction and cast
great darkness about the heart. I would willingly speak My word and reveal My
secrets to you, if you would watch diligently for My coming and open your heart
to Me. Be prudent, then. Watch in prayer, and in all things humble yourself.
The
Basis of Firm Peace of Heart and True Progress
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, I have said: “Peace I leave with you, My peace I give unto you: not as
the world giveth, do I give unto you.”
All
men desire peace but all do not care for the things that go to make true peace.
My peace is with the humble and meek of heart: your peace will be in much
patience. If you hear Me and follow My voice, you will be able to enjoy much
peace.
The
Disciple
What,
then, shall I do, Lord?
The
Voice of Christ
Watch
yourself in all things, in what you do and what you say. Direct your every
intention toward pleasing Me alone, and desire nothing outside of Me. Do not be
rash in judging the deeds and words of others, and do not entangle yourself in
affairs that are not your own. Thus, it will come about that you will be
disturbed little and seldom.
Yet,
never to experience any disturbance or to suffer any hurt in heart or body does
not belong to this present life, but rather to the state of eternal rest. Do not
think, therefore, that you have found true peace if you feel no depression, or
that all is well because you suffer no opposition. Do not think that all is
perfect if everything happens just as you wish. And do not imagine yourself
great or consider yourself especially beloved if you are filled with great
devotion and sweetness. For the true lover of virtue is not known by these
things, nor do the progress and perfection of a man consist in them.
The
Disciple
In
what do they consist, Lord?
The
Voice of Christ
They
consist in offering yourself with all your heart to the divine will, not seeking
what is yours either in small matters or great ones, either in temporal or
eternal things, so that you will preserve equanimity and give thanks in both
prosperity and adversity, seeing all things in their proper light.
If
you become so brave and long-suffering in hope that you can prepare your heart
to suffer still more even when all inward consolation is withdrawn, and if you
do not justify yourself as though you ought not be made to suffer such great
things, but acknowledge Me to be just in all My works and praise My holy
name—then you will walk in the true and right path of peace, then you may have
sure hope of seeing My face again in joy. If you attain to complete contempt of
self, then know that you will enjoy an abundance of peace, as much as is
possible in this earthly life.
The
Excellence of a Free Mind, Gained
Through
Prayer Rather Than By Study
The Disciple
IT
IS the mark of a perfect man, Lord, never to let his mind relax in attention to
heavenly things, and to pass through many cares as though he had none; not as an
indolent man does, but having by the certain prerogative of a free mind no
disorderly affection for any created being.
Keep
me, I beg You, most merciful God, from the cares of this life, lest I be too
much entangled in them. Keep me from many necessities of the body, lest I be
ensnared by pleasure. Keep me from all darkness of mind, lest I be broken by
troubles and overcome. I do not ask deliverance from those things which worldly
vanity desires so eagerly, but from those miseries which, by the common curse of
humankind, oppress the soul of Your servant in punishment and keep him from
entering into the liberty of spirit as often as he would.
My
God, Sweetness beyond words, make bitter all the carnal comfort that draws me
from love of the eternal and lures me to its evil self by the sight of some
delightful good in the present. Let it not overcome me, my God. Let not flesh
and blood conquer me. Let not the world and its brief glory deceive me, nor the
devil trip me by his craftiness. Give me courage to resist, patience to endure,
and constancy to persevere. Give me the soothing unction of Your spirit rather
than all the consolations of the world, and in place of carnal love, infuse into
me the love of Your name.
Behold,
eating, drinking, clothing, and other necessities that sustain the body are
burdensome to the fervent soul. Grant me the grace to use such comforts
temperately and not to become entangled in too great a desire for them. It is
not lawful to cast them aside completely, for nature must be sustained, but Your
holy law forbids us to demand superfluous things and things that are simply for
pleasure, else the flesh would rebel against the spirit. In these matters, I
beg, let Your hand guide and direct me, so that I may not overstep the law in
any way.
Self-Love
is the Greatest Hindrance to the Highest Good
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, you should give all for all, and in no way belong to yourself. You must
know that self-love is more harmful to you than anything else in the world. In
proportion to the love and affection you have for a thing, it will cling to you
more or less. If your love is pure, simple, and well ordered, you will not be a
slave to anything. Do not covet what you may not have. Do not possess anything
that can hinder you or rob you of freedom.
It
is strange that you do not commit yourself to Me with your whole heart, together
with all that you can desire or possess. Why are you consumed with foolish
sorrow? Why are you wearied with unnecessary care? Be resigned to My will and
you will suffer no loss.
If
you seek this or that, if you wish to be in this place or that place, to have
more ease and pleasure, you will never rest or be free from care, for some
defect is found in everything and everywhere someone will vex you. To obtain and
multiply earthly goods, then, will not help you, but to despise them and root
them out of your heart will aid. This, understand, is true not only of money and
wealth, but also of ambition for honor and desire for empty praise, all of which
will pass away with this world.
The
place matters little if the spirit of fervor is not there; nor will peace be
lasting if it is sought from the outside; if your heart has no true foundation,
that is, if you are not founded in Me, you may change, but you will not better
yourself. For when occasion arises and is accepted, you will find that from
which you fled and worse.
A
Prayer for Cleansing the Heart and Obtaining Heavenly Wisdom
Strengthen
me by the grace of Your holy spirit, O God. Give me the power to be strengthened
inwardly and to empty my heart of all vain care and anxiety, so that I may not
be drawn away by many desires, whether for precious things or mean ones. Let me
look upon everything as passing, and upon myself as soon to pass away with them,
because there is nothing lasting under the sun, where all is vanity and
affliction of spirit. How wise is he who thinks thus!
Give
me, Lord, heavenly wisdom to learn above all else to seek and find You, to enjoy
and love You more than anything, and to consider other things as they are, as
Your wisdom has ordered them. Grant me prudence to avoid the flatterer and to
bear patiently with him who disagrees with me. For it is great wisdom not to be
moved by the sound of words, nor to give ear to the wicked, flattering siren.
Then, I shall walk safely in the way I have begun.
Strength
Against Slander
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, do not take it to heart if some people think badly of you and say
unpleasant things about you. You ought to think worse things of yourself and to
believe that no one is weaker than yourself. Moreover, if you walk in the spirit
you will pay little heed to fleeting words. It is no small prudence to remain
silent in evil times, to turn inwardly to Me, and not to be disturbed by human
opinions. Do not let your peace depend on the words of men. Their thinking well
or badly of you does not make you different from what you are. Where are true
peace and glory? Are they not in Me? He who neither cares to please men nor
fears to displease them will enjoy great peace, for all unrest and distraction
of the senses arise out of disorderly love and vain fear.
How
We Must Call Upon and Bless the Lord When Trouble Presses
The
Disciple
BLESSED
be Your name forever, O Lord, Who have willed that this temptation and trouble
come upon me. I cannot escape it, yet I must fly to You that You may help me and
turn it to my good. Now I am troubled, Lord, and my heart is not at rest, for I
am greatly afflicted by this present suffering.
Beloved
Father, what shall I say? I am straitened in harsh ways. Save me from this hour
to which, however, I am come that You may be glorified when I am deeply humbled
and freed by You. May it please You, then, to deliver me, Lord, for what can I,
poor wretch that I am, do or where can I go without You? Give me patience, Lord,
even now. Help me, my God, and I will not be afraid however much I may be
distressed.
But
here, in the midst of these troubles, what shall I say? Your will be done, Lord.
I have richly deserved to be troubled and distressed. But I must bear it. Would
that I could do so patiently, until the storm passes and calm returns! Yet Your
almighty hand can take this temptation from me, or lighten its attack so that I
do not altogether sink beneath it, as You, my God, my Mercy, have very often
done for me before. And the more difficult my plight, the easier for You is this
change of the right hand of the Most High.
The
Quest of Divine Help and Confidence in Regaining Grace
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, I am the Lord Who gives strength in the day of trouble. Come to Me when
all is not well with you. Your tardiness in turning to prayer is the greatest
obstacle to heavenly consolation, for before you pray earnestly to Me you first
seek many comforts and take pleasure in outward things. Thus, all things are of
little profit to you until you realize that I am the one Who saves those who
trust in Me, and that outside of Me there is no worth-while help, or any useful
counsel or lasting remedy.
But
now, after the tempest, take courage, grow strong once more in the light of My
mercies; for I am near, says the Lord, to restore all things not only to the
full but with abundance and above measure. Is anything difficult for Me? Or
shall I be as one who promises and does not act? Where is your faith? Stand firm
and persevere. Be a man of endurance and courage, and consolation will come to
you in due time. Wait for Me; wait—and I will come to heal you.
It
is only a temptation that troubles you, a vain fear that terrifies you.
Of
what use is anxiety about the future? Does it bring you anything but trouble
upon trouble? Sufficient for the day is the evil thereof. It is foolish and
useless to be either grieved or happy about future things which perhaps may
never happen. But it is human to be deluded by such imaginations, and the sign
of a weak soul to be led on by suggestions of the enemy. For he does not care
whether he overcomes you by love of the present or fear of the future.
Let
not your heart be troubled, therefore, nor let it be afraid. Believe in Me and
trust in My mercy. When you think you are far from Me, then often I am very near
you. When you judge that almost all is lost, then very often you are in the way
of gaining great merit.
All
is not lost when things go contrary to your wishes. You ought not judge
according to present feelings, nor give in to any trouble whenever it comes, or
take it as though all hope of escape were lost. And do not consider yourself
forsaken if I send some temporary hardship, or withdraw the consolation you
desire. For this is the way to the kingdom of heaven, and without doubt it is
better for you and the rest of My servants to be tried in adversities than to
have all things as you wish. I know your secret thoughts, and I know that it is
profitable for your salvation to be left sometimes in despondency lest perhaps
you be puffed up by success and fancy yourself to be what you are not.
What
I have given, I can take away and restore when it pleases Me. What I give
remains Mine, and thus when I take it away I take nothing that is yours, for
every good gift and every perfect gift is Mine.
If
I send you trouble and adversity, do not fret or let your heart be downcast. I
can raise you quickly up again and turn all your sorrow into joy. I am no less
just and worthy of great praise when I deal with you in this way.
If
you think aright and view things in their true light, you should never be so
dejected and saddened by adversity, but rather rejoice and give thanks,
considering it a matter of special joy that I afflict you with sorrow and do not
spare you. “As the Father hath loved Me, so also I love you,” I said to My
disciples, and I certainly did not send them out to temporal joys but rather to
great struggles, not to honors but to contempt, not to idleness, but to labors,
not to rest but to bring forth much fruit in patience. Do you, My child,
remember these words.
To
Find the Creator, Forsake All Creatures
The
Disciple
O
LORD, I am in sore need still of greater grace if I am to arrive at the point
where no man and no created thing can be an obstacle to me. For as long as
anything holds me back, I cannot freely fly to You. He that said “Oh that I
had wings like a dove, that I might fly away and be at rest!”
desired to fly freely to You. Who is more at rest than he who aims at nothing
but God? And who more free than the man who desires nothing on earth?
It
is well, then, to pass over all creation, perfectly to abandon self, and to see
in ecstasy of mind that You, the Creator of all, have no likeness among all Your
creatures, and that unless a man be freed from all creatures, he cannot attend
freely to the Divine. The reason why so few contemplative persons are found, is
that so few know how to separate themselves entirely from what is transitory and
created.
For
this, indeed, great grace is needed, grace that will raise the soul and lift it
up above itself. Unless a man be elevated in spirit, free from all creatures,
and completely united to God, all his knowledge and possessions are of little
moment. He who considers anything great except the one, immense, eternal good
will long be little and lie groveling on the earth. Whatever is not God is
nothing and must be accounted as nothing.
There
is great difference between the wisdom of an enlightened and devout man and the
learning of a well-read and brilliant scholar, for the knowledge which flows
down from divine sources is much nobler than that laboriously acquired by human
industry.
Many
there are who desire contemplation, but who do not care to do the things which
contemplation requires. It is also a great obstacle to be satisfied with
externals and sensible things, and to have so little of perfect mortification. I
know not what it is, or by what spirit we are led, or to what we pretend—we
who wish to be called spiritual—that we spend so much labor and even more
anxiety on things that are transitory and mean, while we seldom or never advert
with full consciousness to our interior concerns.
Alas,
after very little recollection we falter, not weighing our deeds by strict
examination. We pay no attention to where our affections lie, nor do we deplore
the fact that our actions are impure.
Remember
that because all flesh had corrupted its course, the great deluge followed.
Since, then, our interior affection is corrupt, it must be that the action which
follows from it, the index as it were of our lack of inward strength, is also
corrupt. Out of a pure heart come the fruits of a good life.
People
are wont to ask how much a man has done, but they think little of the virtue
with which he acts. They ask: Is he strong? rich? handsome? a good writer? a
good singer? or a good worker? They say little, however, about how poor he is in
spirit, how patient and meek, how devout and spiritual. Nature looks to his
outward appearance; grace turns to his inward being. The one often errs, the
other trusts in God and is not deceived.
Self-Denial
and the Renunciation of Evil Appetites
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, you can never be perfectly free unless you completely renounce self, for
all who seek their own interest and who love themselves are bound in fetters.
They are unsettled by covetousness and curiosity, always searching for ease and
not for the things of Christ, often devising and framing that which will not
last, for anything that is not of God will fail completely.
Hold
to this short and perfect advice, therefore: give up your desires and you will
find rest. Think upon it in your heart, and when you have put it into practice
you will understand all things.
The
Disciple
But
this, Lord, is not the work of one day, nor is it mere child’s play; indeed,
in this brief sentence is included all the perfection of holy persons.
The
Voice of Christ
My
child, you should not turn away or be downcast when you hear the way of the
perfect. Rather you ought to be spurred on the more toward their sublime
heights, or at least be moved to seek perfection.
I
would this were the case with you—that you had progressed to the point where
you no longer loved self but simply awaited My bidding and his whom I have
placed as father over you. Then you would please Me very much, and your whole
life would pass in peace and joy. But you have yet many things which you must
give up, and unless you resign them entirely to Me you will not obtain that
which you ask.
“I
counsel thee to buy of me gold, fire-tried, that thou mayest be made rich”
—rich in heavenly wisdom which treads underfoot all that is low. Put aside
earthly wisdom, all human self-complacency.
I
have said: exchange what is precious and valued among men for that which is
considered contemptible. For true heavenly wisdom—not to think highly of self
and not to seek glory on earth—does indeed seem mean and small and is
well-nigh forgotten, as many men praise it with their mouths but shy far away
from it in their lives. Yet this heavenly wisdom is a pearl of great price,
which is hidden from many.
Restlessness
of Soul—Directing Our Final Intention Toward God
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, do not trust in your present feeling, for it will soon give way to
another. As long as you live you will be subject to changeableness in spite of
yourself. You will become merry at one time and sad at another, now peaceful but
again disturbed, at one moment devout and the next indevout, sometimes diligent
while at other times lazy, now grave and again flippant.
But
the man who is wise and whose spirit is well instructed stands superior to these
changes. He pays no attention to what he feels in himself or from what quarter
the wind of fickleness blows, so long as the whole intention of his mind is
conducive to his proper and desired end. For thus he can stand undivided,
unchanged, and unshaken, with the singleness of his intention directed
unwaveringly toward Me, even in the midst of so many changing events. And the
purer this singleness of intention is, with so much the more constancy does he
pass through many storms.
But
in many ways the eye of pure intention grows dim, because it is attracted to any
delightful thing that it meets. Indeed, it is rare to find one who is entirely
free from all taint of self-seeking. The Jews of old, for example, came to
Bethany
to Martha and Mary, not for Jesus’ sake alone, but in order to see Lazarus.
The
eye of your intention, therefore, must be cleansed so that it is single and
right. It must be directed toward Me, despite all the objects which may
interfere.
God
is Sweet Above All Things and in All Things to Those Who Love Him
The
Disciple
BEHOLD,
my God and my all! What more do I wish for; what greater happiness can I desire?
O sweet and delicious word! But sweet only to him who loves it, and not to the
world or the things that are in the world.
My
God and my all! These words are enough for him who understands, and for him who
loves it is a joy to repeat them often. For when You are present, all things are
delightful; when You are absent, all things become loathsome. It is You Who give
a heart tranquillity, great peace and festive joy. It is You Who make us think
well of all things, and praise You in all things. Without You nothing can give
pleasure for very long, for if it is to be pleasing and tasteful, Your grace and
the seasoning of Your wisdom must be in it. What is there that can displease him
whose happiness is in You? And, on the contrary, what can satisfy him whose
delight is not in You?
The
wise men of the world, the men who lust for the flesh, are wanting in Your
wisdom, because in the world is found the utmost vanity, and in the flesh is
death. But they who follow You by disdaining worldly things and mortifying the
flesh are known to be truly wise, for they are transported from vanity to truth,
from flesh to spirit. By such as these God is relished, and whatever good is
found in creatures they turn to praise of the Creator. But great—yes, very
great, indeed—is the difference between delight in the Creator and in the
creature, in eternity and in time, in Light uncreated and in the light that is
reflected.
O
Light eternal, surpassing all created brightness, flash forth the lightning from
above and enlighten the inmost recesses of my heart. Cleanse, cheer, enlighten,
and vivify my spirit with all its powers, that it may cleave to You in ecstasies
of joy. Oh, when will that happy and wished-for hour come, that You may fill me
with Your presence and become all in all to me? So long as this is not given me,
my joy will not be complete.
The
old man, alas, yet lives within me. He has not yet been entirely crucified; he
is not yet entirely dead. He still lusts strongly against the spirit, and he
will not leave the kingdom of my soul in peace. But You, Who can command the
power of the sea and calm the tumult of its waves, arise and help me. Scatter
the nations that delight in war; crush them in Your sight. Show forth I beg,
Your wonderful works and let Your right hand be glorified, because for me there
is no other hope or refuge except in You, O Lord, my God.
There
is No Security from Temptation in This Life
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, in this life you are never safe, and as long as you live the weapons of
the spirit will ever be necessary to you. You dwell among enemies. You are
subject to attack from the right and the left. If, therefore, you do not guard
yourself from every quarter with the shield of patience, you will not remain
long unscathed.
Moreover,
if you do not steadily set your heart on Me, with a firm will to suffer
everything for My sake, you will not be able to bear the heat of this battle or
to win the crown of the blessed. You ought, therefore, to pass through all these
things bravely and to oppose a strong hand to whatever stands in your way. For
to him who triumphs heavenly bread is given, while for him who is too lazy to
fight there remains much misery.
If
you look for rest in this life, how will you attain to everlasting rest? Dispose
yourself, then, not for much rest but for great patience. Seek true peace, not
on earth but in heaven; not in men or in other creatures but in God alone. For
love of God you should undergo all things cheerfully, all labors and sorrows,
temptations and trials, anxieties, weaknesses, necessities, injuries, slanders,
rebukes, humiliations, confusions, corrections, and contempt. For these are
helps to virtue. These are the trials of Christ’s recruit. These form the
heavenly crown. For a little brief labor I will give an everlasting crown, and
for passing confusion, glory that is eternal.
Do
you think that you will always have spiritual consolations as you desire? My
saints did not always have them. Instead, they had many afflictions, temptations
of various kinds, and great desolation. Yet they bore them all patiently. They
placed their confidence in God rather than in themselves, knowing that the
sufferings of this life are not worthy to be compared with the glory that is to
come. And you—do you wish to have at once that which others have scarcely
obtained after many tears and great labors?
Wait
for the Lord, act bravely, and have courage. Do not lose trust. Do not turn back
but devote your body and soul constantly to God’s glory. I will reward you
most plentifully. I will be with you in every tribulation.
The
Vain Judgments of Men
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, trust firmly in the Lord, and do not fear the judgment of men when
conscience tells you that you are upright and innocent. For it is good and
blessed to suffer such things, and they will not weigh heavily on the humble
heart that trusts in God rather than in itself. Many men say many things, and
therefore little faith is to be put in them.
Likewise,
it is impossible to satisfy all men. Although Paul tried to please all in the
Lord, and became all things to all men, yet he made little of their opinions. He
labored abundantly for the edification and salvation of others, as much as lay
in him and as much as he could, but he could not escape being sometimes judged
and despised by others. Therefore, he committed all to God Who knows all things,
and defended himself by his patience and humility against the tongues of those
who spoke unjustly or thought foolish things and lies, or made accusations
against him. Sometimes, indeed, he did answer them, but only lest his silence
scandalize the weak.
Who
are you, then, that you should be afraid of mortal man? Today he is here,
tomorrow he is not seen. Fear God and you will not be afraid of the terrors of
men. What can anyone do to you by word or injury? He hurts himself rather than
you, and no matter who he may be he cannot escape the judgment of God. Keep God
before your eyes, therefore, and do not quarrel with peevish words.
If
it seems, then, that you are worsted and that you suffer undeserved shame, do
not repine over it and do not lessen your crown by impatience. Look instead to
heaven, to Me, Who have power to deliver you from all disgrace and injury, and
to render to everyone according to his works.
Pure
and Entire Resignation of Self to Obtain Freedom of Heart
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, renounce self and you shall find Me. Give up your own self-will, your
possessions, and you shall always gain. For once you resign yourself
irrevocably, greater grace will be given you.
The
Disciple
How
often, Lord, shall I resign myself? And in what shall I forsake myself?
The
Voice of Christ
Always,
at every hour, in small matters as well as great—I except nothing. In all
things I wish you to be stripped of self. How otherwise can you be mine or I
yours unless you be despoiled of your own will both inwardly and outwardly? The
sooner you do this the better it will be for you, and the more fully and
sincerely you do it the more you will please Me and the greater gain you will
merit.
Some
there are who resign themselves, but with certain reservation; they do not trust
fully in God and therefore they try to provide for themselves. Others, again, at
first offer all, but afterward are assailed by temptation and return to what
they have renounced, thereby making no progress in virtue. These will not reach
the true liberty of a pure heart nor the grace of happy friendship with Me
unless they first make a full resignation and a daily sacrifice of themselves.
Without this no fruitful union lasts nor will last.
I
have said to you very often, and now I say again: forsake yourself, renounce
yourself and you shall enjoy great inward peace. Give all for all. Ask nothing,
demand nothing in return. Trust purely and without hesitation in Me, and you
shall possess Me. You will be free of heart and darkness will not overwhelm you.
Strive
for this, pray for this, desire this—to be stripped of all selfishness and
naked to follow the naked Jesus, to die to self and live forever for Me. Then
all vain imaginations, all wicked disturbances and superfluous cares will
vanish. Then also immoderate fear will leave you and inordinate love will die.
The
Right Ordering of External Affairs;
Recourse
to God in Dangers
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, you must strive diligently to be inwardly free, to have mastery over
yourself everywhere, in every external act and occupation, that all things be
subject to you and not you to them, that you be the master and director of your
actions, not a slave or a mere hired servant. You should be rather a free man
and a true Hebrew, arising to the status and freedom of the children of God who
stand above present things to contemplate those which are eternal; who look upon
passing affairs with the left eye and upon those of heaven with the right; whom
temporal things do not so attract that they cling to them, but who rather put
these things to such proper service as is ordained and instituted by God, the
great Workmaster, Who leaves nothing unordered in His creation.
If,
likewise, in every happening you are not content simply with outward
appearances, if you do not regard with carnal eyes things which you see and
hear, but whatever be the affair, enter with Moses into the tabernacle to ask
advice of the Lord, you will sometimes hear the divine answer and return
instructed in many things present and to come. For Moses always had recourse to
the tabernacle for the solution of doubts and questions, and fled to prayer for
support in dangers and the evil deeds of men. So you also should take refuge in
the secret chamber of your heart, begging earnestly for divine aid.
For
this reason, as we read, Joshua and the children of
Israel
were deceived by the Gibeonites because they did not first seek counsel of the
Lord, but trusted too much in fair words and hence were deceived by false piety.
A
Man Should Not Be Unduly Solicitous About His Affairs
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, always commit your cause to Me. I will dispose of it rightly in good
time. Await My ordering of it and it will be to your advantage.
The
Disciple
Lord,
I willingly commit all things to You, for my anxiety can profit me little. But I
would that I were not so concerned about the future, and instead offered myself
without hesitation to Your good pleasure.
The
Voice of Christ
My
child, it often happens that a man seeks ardently after something he desires and
then when he has attained it he begins to think that it is not at all desirable;
for affections do not remain fixed on the same thing, but rather flit from one
to another. It is no very small matter, therefore, for a man to forsake himself
even in things that are very small.
A
man’s true progress consists in denying himself, and the man who has denied
himself is truly free and secure. The old enemy, however, setting himself
against all good, never ceases to tempt them, but day and night plots dangerous
snares to cast the unwary into the net of deceit. “Watch ye and pray,” says
the Lord, “that ye enter not into temptation.”
Man
Has No Good in Himself and Can Glory in Nothing
The
Disciple
LORD,
what is man that You are mindful of him, or the son of man that You visit him?
What has man deserved that You should give him Your grace? What cause have I,
Lord, to complain if You desert me, or what objection can I have if You do not
do what I ask? This I may think and say in all truth: “Lord, I am nothing, of
myself I have nothing that is good; I am lacking in all things, and I am ever
tending toward nothing. And unless I have Your help and am inwardly strengthened
by You, I become quite lukewarm and lax.”
But
You, Lord, are always the same. You remain forever, always good, just, and holy;
doing all things rightly, justly, and holily, disposing them wisely. I, however,
who am more ready to go backward than forward, do not remain always in one
state, for I change with the seasons. Yet my condition quickly improves when it
pleases You and when You reach forth Your helping hand. For You alone, without
human aid, can help me and strengthen me so greatly that my heart shall no more
change but be converted and rest solely in You. Hence, if I knew well how to
cast aside all earthly consolation, either to attain devotion or because of the
necessity which, in the absence of human solace, compels me to seek You alone,
then I could deservedly hope for Your grace and rejoice in the gift of new
consolation.
Thanks
be to You from Whom all things come, whenever it is well with me. In Your sight
I am vanity and nothingness, a weak, unstable man. In what, therefore, can I
glory, and how can I wish to be highly regarded? Is it because I am nothing?
This, too, is utterly vain. Indeed, the greatest vanity is the evil plague of
empty self-glory, because it draws one away from true glory and robs one of
heavenly grace. For when a man is pleased with himself he displeases You, when
he pants after human praise he is deprived of true virtue. But it is true glory
and holy exultation to glory in You and not in self, to rejoice in Your name
rather than in one’s own virtue, and not to delight in any creature except for
Your sake.
Let
Your name, not mine, be praised. Let Your work, not mine, be magnified. Let Your
holy name be blessed, but let no human praise be given to me. You are my glory.
You are the joy of my heart. In You I will glory and rejoice all the day, and
for myself I will glory in nothing but my infirmities.
Let
the Jews seek the glory that comes from another. I will seek that which comes
from God alone. All human glory, all temporal honor, all worldly position is
truly vanity and foolishness compared to Your everlasting glory. O my Truth, my
Mercy, my God, O Blessed Trinity, to You alone be praise and honor, power and
glory, throughout all the endless ages of ages.
Contempt
for All Earthly Honor
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, do not take it to heart if you see others honored and advanced, while you
yourself are despised and humbled. Lift up your heart to Me in heaven and the
contempt of men on earth will not grieve you.
The
Disciple
Lord,
we are blinded and quickly misled by vanity. If I examine myself rightly, no
injury has ever been done me by any creature; hence I have nothing for which to
make just complaint to You. But I have sinned often and gravely against You;
therefore is every creature in arms against me. Confusion and contempt should in
justice come upon me, but to You due praise, honor, and glory. And unless I
prepare myself to be willingly despised and forsaken by every creature, to be
considered absolutely nothing, I cannot have interior peace and strength, nor
can I be enlightened spiritually or completely united with You.
Peace
is Not to Be Placed in Men
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, if you place your peace in any creature because of your own feeling or
for the sake of his company, you will be unsettled and entangled. But if you
have recourse to the ever-living and abiding Truth, you will not grieve if a
friend should die or forsake you. Your love for your friend should be grounded
in Me, and for My sake you should love whoever seems to be good and is very dear
to you in this life. Without Me friendship has no strength and cannot endure.
Love which I do not bind is neither true nor pure.
You
ought, therefore, to be so dead to such human affections as to wish as far as
lies within you to be without the fellowship of men. Man draws nearer to God in
proportion as he withdraws farther from all earthly comfort. And he ascends
higher to God as he descends lower into himself and grows more vile in his own
eyes. He who attributes any good to himself hinders God’s grace from coming
into his heart, for the grace of the Holy Spirit seeks always the humble heart.
If
you knew how to annihilate yourself completely and empty yourself of all created
love, then I should overflow in you with great grace. When you look to
creatures, the sight of the Creator is taken from you. Learn, therefore, to
conquer yourself in all things for the sake of your Maker. Then will you be able
to attain to divine knowledge. But anything, no matter how small, that is loved
and regarded inordinately keeps you back from the highest good and corrupts the
soul.
Beware
Vain and Worldly Knowledge
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, do not let the fine-sounding and subtle words of men deceive you. For the
kingdom of heaven consists not in talk but in virtue. Attend, rather, to My
words which enkindle the heart and enlighten the mind, which excite contrition
and abound in manifold consolations. Never read them for the purpose of
appearing more learned or more wise. Apply yourself to mortifying your vices,
for this will benefit you more than your understanding of many difficult
questions.
Though
you shall have read and learned many things, it will always be necessary for you
to return to this one principle: I am He who teaches man knowledge, and to the
little ones I give a clearer understanding than can be taught by man. He to whom
I speak will soon be wise and his soul will profit. But woe to those who inquire
of men about many curious things, and care very little about the way they serve
Me.
The
time will come when Christ, the Teacher of teachers, the Lord of angels, will
appear to hear the lessons of all—that is, to examine the conscience of
everyone. Then He will search
Jerusalem
with lamps and the hidden things of darkness will be brought to light and the
arguings of men’s tongues be silenced.
I
am He Who in one moment so enlightens the humble mind that it comprehends more
of eternal truth than could be learned by ten years in the schools. I teach
without noise of words or clash of opinions, without ambition for honor or
confusion of argument.
I
am He Who teaches man to despise earthly possessions and to loathe present
things, to ask after the eternal, to hunger for heaven, to fly honors and to
bear with scandals, to place all hope in Me, to desire nothing apart from Me,
and to love Me ardently above all things. For a certain man by loving Me
intimately learned divine truths and spoke wonders. He profited more by leaving
all things than by studying subtle questions.
To
some I speak of common things, to others of special matters. To some I appear
with sweetness in signs and figures, and to others I appear in great light and
reveal mysteries. The voice of books is but a single voice, yet it does not
teach all men alike, because I within them am the Teacher and the Truth, the
Examiner of hearts, the Understander of thoughts, the Promoter of acts,
distributing to each as I see fit.
Do
Not Be Concerned About Outward Things
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, there are many matters of which it is well for you to be ignorant, and to
consider yourself as one who is dead upon the earth and to whom the whole world
is crucified. There are many things, too, which it is well to pass by with a
deaf ear, thinking, instead, of what is more to your peace. It is more
profitable to turn away from things which displease you and to leave to every
man his own opinion than to take part in quarrelsome talk. If you stand well
with God and look to His judgment, you will more easily bear being worsted.
The
Disciple
To
what have we come, Lord? Behold, we bewail a temporal loss. We labor and fret
for a small gain, while loss of the soul is forgotten and scarcely ever returns
to mind. That which is of little or no value claims our attention, whereas that
which is of highest necessity is neglected—all because man gives himself
wholly to outward things. And unless he withdraws himself quickly, he willingly
lies immersed in externals.
All
Men Are Not to Be Believed, for It Is Easy to Err in Speech
The
Disciple
GRANT
me help in my needs, O Lord, for the aid of man is useless. How often have I
failed to find faithfulness in places where I thought I possessed it! And how
many times I have found it where I least expected it! Vain, therefore, is hope
in men, but the salvation of the just is in You, O God. Blessed be Your name, O
Lord my God, in everything that befalls us.
We
are weak and unstable, quickly deceived and changed. Who is the man that is able
to guard himself with such caution and care as not sometimes to fall into
deception or perplexity? He who confides in You, O Lord, and seeks You with a
simple heart does not fall so easily. And if some trouble should come upon him,
no matter how entangled in it he may be, he will be more quickly delivered and
comforted by You. For You will not forsake him who trusts in You to the very
end.
Rare
is the friend who remains faithful through all his friend’s distress. But You,
Lord, and You alone, are entirely faithful in all things; other than You, there
is none so faithful.
Oh,
how wise is that holy soul
who said: “My mind is firmly settled and founded in Christ.” If that were
true of me, human fear would not so easily cause me anxiety, nor would the darts
of words disturb. But who can foresee all things and provide against all evils?
And if things foreseen have often hurt, can those which are unlooked for do
otherwise than wound us gravely? Why, indeed, have I not provided better for my
wretched self? Why, too, have I so easily kept faith in others? We are but men,
however, nothing more than weak men, although we are thought by many to be, and
are called, angels.
In
whom shall I put my faith, Lord? In whom but You? You are the truth which does
not deceive and cannot be deceived. Every man, on the other hand, is a liar,
weak, unstable, and likely to err, especially in words, so that one ought not to
be too quick to believe even that which seems, on the face of it, to sound true.
How wise was Your warning to beware of men; that a man’s enemies are those of
his own household; that we should not believe if anyone says: “Behold he is
here, or behold he is there.”
I
have been taught to my own cost, and I hope it has given me greater caution, not
greater folly. “Beware,” they say, “beware and keep to yourself what I
tell you!” Then while I keep silent, believing that the matter is secret, he
who asks me to be silent cannot remain silent himself, but immediately betrays
both me and himself, and goes his way. From tales of this kind and from such
careless men protect me, O Lord, lest I fall into their hands and into their
ways. Put in my mouth words that are true and steadfast and keep far from me the
crafty tongue, because what I am not willing to suffer I ought by all means to
shun.
Oh,
how good and how peaceful it is to be silent about others, not to believe
without discrimination all that is said, not easily to report it further, to
reveal oneself to few, always to seek You as the discerner of hearts, and not to
be blown away by every wind of words, but to wish that all things, within and
beyond us, be done according to the pleasure of Thy will.
How
conducive it is for the keeping of heavenly grace to fly the gaze of men, not to
seek abroad things which seem to cause admiration, but to follow with utmost
diligence those which give fervor and amendment of life! How many have been
harmed by having their virtue known and praised too hastily! And how truly
profitable it has been when grace remained hidden during this frail life, which
is all temptation and warfare!
Trust
in God Against Slander
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, stand firm and trust in Me. For what are words but words? They fly
through the air but hurt not a stone. If you are guilty, consider how you would
gladly amend. If you are not conscious of any fault, think that you wish to bear
this for the sake of God. It is little enough for you occasionally to endure
words, since you are not yet strong enough to bear hard blows.
And
why do such small matters pierce you to the heart, unless because you are still
carnal and pay more heed to men than you ought? You do not wish to be reproved
for your faults and you seek shelter in excuses because you are afraid of being
despised. But look into yourself more thoroughly and you will learn that the
world is still alive in you, in a vain desire to please men. For when you shrink
from being abased and confounded for your failings, it is plain indeed that you
are not truly humble or truly dead to the world, and that the world is not
crucified in you.
Listen
to My word, and you will not value ten thousand words of men. Behold, if every
malicious thing that could possibly be invented were uttered against you, what
harm could it do if you ignored it all and gave it no more thought than you
would a blade of grass? Could it so much as pluck one hair from your head?
He
who does not keep his heart within him, and who does not have God before his
eyes is easily moved by a word of disparagement. He who trusts in Me, on the
other hand, and who has no desire to stand by his own judgment, will be free
from the fear of men. For I am the judge and discerner of all secrets. I know
how all things happen. I know who causes injury and who suffers it. From Me that
word proceeded, and with My permission it happened, that out of many hearts
thoughts may be revealed. I shall judge the guilty and the innocent; but I have
wished beforehand to try them both by secret judgment.
The
testimony of man is often deceiving, but My judgment is true—it will stand and
not be overthrown. It is hidden from many and made known to but a few. Yet it is
never mistaken and cannot be mistaken even though it does not seem right in the
eyes of the unwise.
To
Me, therefore, you ought to come in every decision, not depending on your own
judgment. For the just man will not be disturbed, no matter what may befall him
from God. Even if an unjust charge be made against him he will not be much
troubled. Neither will he exult vainly if through others he is justly acquitted.
He considers that it is I Who search the hearts and inmost thoughts of men, that
I do not judge according to the face of things or human appearances. For what
the judgment of men considers praiseworthy is often worthy of blame in My sight.
The
Disciple
O
Lord God, just Judge, strong and patient, You Who know the weakness and
depravity of men, be my strength and all my confidence, for my own conscience is
not sufficient for me. You know what I do not know, and, therefore, I ought to
humble myself whenever I am accused and bear it meekly. Forgive me, then, in
Your mercy for my every failure in this regard, and give me once more the grace
of greater endurance. Better to me is Your abundant mercy in obtaining pardon
than the justice which I imagine in defending the secrets of my conscience. And
though I am not conscious to myself of any fault, yet I cannot thereby justify
myself, because without Your mercy no man living will be justified in Your
sight.
Every
Trial Must Be Borne for the Sake of Eternal Life
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, do not let the labors which you have taken up for My sake break you, and
do not let troubles, from whatever source, cast you down; but in everything let
My promise strengthen and console you. I am able to reward you beyond all means
and measure.
You
will not labor here long, nor will you always be oppressed by sorrows. Wait a
little while and you will see a speedy end of evils. The hour will come when all
labor and trouble shall be no more. All that passes away with time is trivial.
What
you do, do well. Work faithfully in My vineyard. I will be your reward. Write,
read, sing, mourn, keep silence, pray, and bear hardships like a man. Eternal
life is worth all these and greater battles. Peace will come on a day which is
known to the Lord, and then there shall be no day or night as at present but
perpetual light, infinite brightness, lasting peace, and safe repose. Then you
will not say: “Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?” nor will
you cry: “Woe is me, because my sojourn is prolonged.” For then death will
be banished, and there will be health unfailing. There will be no anxiety then,
but blessed joy and sweet, noble companionship.
If
you could see the everlasting crowns of the saints in heaven, and the great
glory wherein they now rejoice—they who were once considered contemptible in
this world and, as it were, unworthy of life itself—you would certainly humble
yourself at once to the very earth, and seek to be subject to all rather than to
command even one. Nor would you desire the pleasant days of this life, but
rather be glad to suffer for God, considering it your greatest gain to be
counted as nothing among men.
Oh,
if these things appealed to you and penetrated deeply into your heart, how could
you dare to complain even once? Ought not all trials be borne for the sake of
everlasting life? In truth, the loss or gain of God’s kingdom is no small
matter.
Lift
up your countenance to heaven, then. Behold Me, and with Me all My saints. They
had great trials in this life, but now they rejoice. They are consoled. Now they
are safe and at rest. And they shall abide with Me for all eternity in the
kingdom
of
My Father
.
The
Day of Eternity and the Distresses of This Life
The
Disciple
O
MOST happy mansion of the city above! O most bright day of eternity, which night
does not darken, but which the highest truth ever enlightens! O day, ever joyful
and ever secure, which never changes its state to the opposite! Oh, that this
day shine forth, that all these temporal things come to an end! It envelops the
saints all resplendent with heavenly brightness, but it appears far off as
through a glass to us wanderers on the earth. The citizens of heaven know how
joyful that day is, but the exiled sons of Eve mourn that this one is bitter and
tedious.
The
days of this life are short and evil, full of grief and distress. Here man is
defiled by many sins, ensnared in many passions, enslaved by many fears, and
burdened with many cares. He is distracted by many curiosities and entangled in
many vanities, surrounded by many errors and worn by many labors, oppressed by
temptations, weakened by pleasures, and tortured by want.
Oh,
when will these evils end? When shall I be freed from the miserable slavery of
vice? When, Lord, shall I think of You alone? When shall I fully rejoice in You?
When shall I be without hindrance, in true liberty, free from every grievance of
mind and body? When will there be solid peace, undisturbed and secure, inward
peace and outward peace, peace secured on every side? O good Jesus, when shall I
stand to gaze upon You? When shall I contemplate the glory of Your kingdom? When
will You be all in all to me? Oh, when shall I be with You in that kingdom of
Yours, which You have prepared for Your beloved from all eternity?
I
am left poor and exiled in a hostile land, where every day sees wars and very
great misfortunes. Console my banishment, assuage my sorrow. My whole desire is
for You. Whatever solace this world offers is a burden to me. I desire to enjoy
You intimately, but I cannot attain to it. I wish to cling fast to heavenly
things, but temporal affairs and unmortified passions bear me down. I wish in
mind to be above all things, but I am forced by the flesh to be unwillingly
subject to them. Thus, I fight with myself, unhappy that I am, and am become a
burden to myself, while my spirit seeks to rise upward and my flesh to sink
downward. Oh, what inward suffering I undergo when I consider heavenly things;
when I pray, a multitude of carnal thoughts rush upon me!
O
my God, do not remove Yourself far from me, and depart not in anger from Your
servant. Dart forth Your lightning and disperse them; send forth Your arrows and
let the phantoms of the enemy be put to flight. Draw my senses toward You and
make me forget all worldly things. Grant me the grace to cast away quickly all
vicious imaginings and to scorn them. Aid me, O heavenly Truth, that no vanity
may move me. Come, heavenly Sweetness, and let all impurity fly from before Your
face.
Pardon
me also, and deal mercifully with me, as often as I think of anything besides
You in prayer. For I confess truly that I am accustomed to be very much
distracted. Very often I am not where bodily I stand or sit; rather, I am where
my thoughts carry me. Where my thoughts are, there am I; and frequently my
thoughts are where my love is. That which naturally delights, or is by habit
pleasing, comes to me quickly. Hence You Who are Truth itself, have plainly
said: “For where your treasure is, there is your heart also.” If I love
heaven, I think willingly of heavenly things. If I love the world, I rejoice at
the happiness of the world and grieve at its troubles. If I love the flesh, I
often imagine things that are carnal. If I love the spirit, I delight in
thinking of spiritual matters. For whatever I love, I am willing to speak and
hear about.
Blessed
is the man who for Your sake, O Lord, dismisses all creatures, does violence to
nature, crucifies the desires of the flesh in fervor of spirit, so that with
serene conscience he can offer You a pure prayer and, having excluded all
earthly things inwardly and outwardly, becomes worthy to enter into the heavenly
choirs.
The
Desire of Eternal Life; the Great Rewards
Promised
to Those Who Struggle
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, when you feel the desire for everlasting happiness poured out upon you
from above, and when you long to depart out of the tabernacle of the body that
you may contemplate My glory without threat of change, open wide your heart and
receive this holy inspiration with all eagerness. Give deepest thanks to the
heavenly Goodness which deals with you so understandingly, visits you so
mercifully, stirs you so fervently, and sustains you so powerfully lest under
your own weight you sink down to earthly things. For you obtain this not by your
own thought or effort, but simply by the condescension of heavenly grace and
divine regard. And the purpose of it is that you may advance in virtue and in
greater humility, that you may prepare yourself for future trials, that you may
strive to cling to Me with all the affection of your heart, and may serve Me
with a fervent will.
My
child, often, when the fire is burning the flame does not ascend without smoke.
Likewise, the desires of some burn toward heavenly things, and yet they are not
free from temptations of carnal affection. Therefore, it is not altogether for
the pure honor of God that they act when they petition Him so earnestly. Such,
too, is often your desire which you profess to be so strong. For that which is
alloyed with self-interest is not pure and perfect.
Ask,
therefore, not for what is pleasing and convenient to yourself, but for what is
acceptable to Me and is for My honor, because if you judge rightly, you ought to
prefer and follow My will, not your own desire or whatever things you wish.
I
know your longings and I have heard your frequent sighs. Already you wish to be
in the liberty of the glory of the sons of God. Already you desire the delights
of the eternal home, the heavenly land that is full of joy. But that hour is not
yet come. There remains yet another hour, a time of war, of labor, and of trial.
You long to be filled with the highest good, but you cannot attain it now. I am
that sovereign Good. Await Me, until the
kingdom
of
God
shall come.
You
must still be tried on earth, and exercised in many things. Consolation will
sometimes be given you, but the complete fullness of it is not granted. Take
courage, therefore, and be strong both to do and to suffer what is contrary to
nature.
You
must put on the new man. You must be changed into another man. You must often do
the things you do not wish to do and forego those you do wish. What pleases
others will succeed; what pleases you will not. The words of others will be
heard; what you say will be accounted as nothing. Others will ask and receive;
you will ask and not receive. Others will gain great fame among men; about you
nothing will be said. To others the doing of this or that will be entrusted; you
will be judged useless. At all this nature will sometimes be sad, and it will be
a great thing if you bear this sadness in silence. For in these and many similar
ways the faithful servant of the Lord is wont to be tried, to see how far he can
deny himself and break himself in all things.
There
is scarcely anything in which you so need to die to self as in seeing and
suffering things that are against your will, especially when things that are
commanded seem inconvenient or useless. Then, because you are under authority,
and dare not resist the higher power, it seems hard to submit to the will of
another and give up your own opinion entirely.
But
consider, my child, the fruit of these labors, how soon they will end and how
greatly they will be rewarded, and you will not be saddened by them, but your
patience will receive the strongest consolation. For instead of the little will
that you now readily give up, you shall always have your will in heaven. There,
indeed, you shall find all that you could desire. There you shall have
possession of every good without fear of losing it. There shall your will be
forever one with Mine. It shall desire nothing outside of Me and nothing for
itself. There no one shall oppose you, no one shall complain of you, no one
hinder you, and nothing stand in your way. All that you desire will be present
there, replenishing your affection and satisfying it to the full. There I shall
render you glory for the reproach you have suffered here; for your sorrow I
shall give you a garment of praise, and for the lowest place a seat of power
forever. There the fruit of glory will appear, the labor of penance rejoice, and
humble subjection be gloriously crowned.
Bow
humbly, therefore, under the will of all, and do not heed who said this or
commanded that. But let it be your special care when something is commanded, or
even hinted at, whether by a superior or an inferior or an equal, that you take
it in good part and try honestly to perform it. Let one person seek one thing
and another something else. Let one glory in this, another in that, and both be
praised a thousand times over. But as for you, rejoice neither in one or the
other, but only in contempt of yourself and in My pleasure and honor. Let this
be your wish: That whether in life or in death God may be glorified in you.
How
a Desolate Person Ought to Commit Himself
Into
the Hands of God
The
Disciple
LORD
God, Holy Father, may You be blessed now and in eternity. For as You will, so is
it done; and what You do is good. Let Your servant rejoice in You—not in
himself or in any other, for You alone are true joy. You are my hope and my
crown. You, O Lord, are my joy and my honor.
What
does Your servant possess that he has not received from You, and that without
any merit of his own? Yours are all the things which You have given, all the
things which You have made.
I
am poor and in labors since my youth, and my soul is sorrowful sometimes even to
the point of tears. At times, also, my spirit is troubled because of impending
sufferings. I long for the joy of peace. Earnestly I beg for the peace of Your
children who are fed by You in the light of consolation. If You give peace, if
You infuse holy joy, the soul of Your servant shall be filled with holy song and
be devout in praising You. But if You withdraw Yourself, as You so very often
do, he will not be able to follow the way of Your commandments, but will rather
be obliged to strike his breast and bend the knee, because his today is
different from yesterday and the day before when Your light shone upon his head
and he was protected in the shadow of Your wings from the temptations rushing
upon him.
Just
Father, ever to be praised, the hour is come for Your servant to be tried.
Beloved Father, it is right that in this hour Your servant should suffer
something for You. O Father, forever to be honored, the hour which You knew from
all eternity is at hand, when for a short time Your servant should be outwardly
oppressed, but inwardly should ever live with You.
Let
him be a little slighted, let him be humbled, let him fail in the sight of men,
let him be afflicted with sufferings and pains, so that he may rise again with
You in the dawn of the new light and be glorified in heaven.
Holy
Father, You have so appointed and wished it. What has happened is what You
commanded. For this is a favor to Your friend, to suffer and be troubled in the
world for Your love, no matter how often and by whom You permit it to happen to
him.
Nothing
happens in the world without Your design and providence, and without cause. It
is well for me, O Lord, that You have humbled me, that I may learn the justice
of Your judgments and cast away all presumption and haughtiness of heart. It is
profitable for me that shame has covered my face that I may look to You rather
than to men for consolation. Hereby I have learned also to fear Your inscrutable
judgment falling alike upon the just and unjust yet not without equity and
justice.
Thanks
to You that You have not spared me evils but have bruised me with bitter blows,
inflicting sorrows, sending distress without and within. Under heaven there is
none to console me except You, my Lord God, the heavenly Physician of souls, Who
wound and heal, Who cast down to hell and raise up again. Your discipline is
upon me and Your very rod shall instruct me.
Behold,
beloved Father, I am in Your hands. I bow myself under Your correcting
chastisement. Strike my back and my neck, that I may bend my crookedness to Your
will. Make of me a pious and humble follower, as in Your goodness You are wont
to do, that I may walk according to Your every nod. Myself and all that is mine
I commit to You to be corrected, for it is better to be punished here than
hereafter.
You
know all things without exception, and nothing in man’s conscience is hidden
from You. Coming events You know before they happen, and there is no need for
anyone to teach or admonish You of what is being done on earth. You know what
will promote my progress, and how much tribulation will serve to cleanse away
the rust of vice. Deal with me according to Your good pleasure and do not
despise my sinful life, which is known to none so well or so clearly as to You
alone.
Grant
me, O Lord, the grace to know what should be known, to praise what is most
pleasing to You, to esteem that which appears most precious to You, and to abhor
what is unclean in Your sight.
Do
not allow me to judge according to the light of my bodily eyes, nor to give
sentence according to the hearing of ignorant men’s ears. But let me
distinguish with true judgment between things visible and spiritual, and always
seek above all things Your good pleasure. The senses of men often err in their
judgments, and the lovers of this world also err in loving only visible things.
How is a man the better for being thought greater by men? The deceiver deceives
the deceitful, the vain man deceives the vain, the blind deceives the blind, the
weak deceives the weak as often as he extols them, and in truth his foolish
praise shames them the more. For, as the humble St. Francis says, whatever
anyone is in Your sight, that he is and nothing more.
When
We Cannot Attain to the Highest,
We
Must Practice the Humble Works
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, you cannot always continue in the more fervent desire of virtue, or
remain in the higher stage of contemplation, but because of humanity’s sin you
must sometimes descend to lower things and bear the burden of this corruptible
life, albeit unwillingly and wearily. As long as you wear a mortal body you will
suffer weariness and heaviness of heart. You ought, therefore, to bewail in the
flesh the burden of the flesh which keeps you from giving yourself unceasingly
to spiritual exercises and divine contemplation.
In
such condition, it is well for you to apply yourself to humble, outward works
and to refresh yourself in good deeds, to await with unshaken confidence My
heavenly visitation, patiently to bear your exile and dryness of mind until you
are again visited by Me and freed of all anxieties. For I will cause you to
forget your labors and to enjoy inward quiet. I will spread before you the open
fields of the Scriptures, so that with an open heart you may begin to advance in
the way of My commandments. And you will say: the sufferings of this time are
not worthy to be compared with the future glory which shall be revealed to us.
A
Man Ought Not to Consider Himself Worthy of Consolation,
But
Rather Deserving of Chastisement
The
Disciple
LORD,
I am not worthy of Your consolation or of any spiritual visitation. Therefore,
You treat me justly when You leave me poor and desolate. For though I could shed
a sea of tears, yet I should not be worthy of Your consolation. Hence, I deserve
only to be scourged and punished because I have offended You often and
grievously, and have sinned greatly in many things. In all justice, therefore, I
am not worthy of any consolation.
But
You, O gracious and merciful God, Who do not will that Your works should perish,
deign to console Your servant beyond all his merit and above human measure, to
show the riches of Your goodness toward the vessels of mercy. For Your
consolations are not like the words of men.
What
have I done, Lord, that You should confer on me any heavenly comfort? I remember
that I have done nothing good, but that I have always been prone to sin and slow
to amend. That is true. I cannot deny it. If I said otherwise You would stand
against me, and there would be no one to defend me. What have I deserved for my
sins except hell and everlasting fire?
In
truth, I confess that I am deserving of all scorn and contempt. Neither is it
fitting that I should be remembered among Your devoted servants. And although it
is hard for me to hear this, yet for truth’s sake I will allege my sins
against myself, so that I may more easily deserve to beg Your mercy. What shall
I say, guilty as I am and full of all confusion? My tongue can say nothing but
this alone: “I have sinned, O Lord, I have sinned; have mercy on me and pardon
me. Suffer me a little that I may pour out my grief, before I go to that dark
land that is covered with the shadow of death.”
What
do you especially demand of a guilty and wretched sinner, except that he be
contrite and humble himself for his sins? In true sorrow and humility of heart
hope of forgiveness is born, the troubled conscience is reconciled, grace is
found, man is preserved from the wrath to come, and God and the penitent meet
with a holy kiss.
To
You, O Lord, humble sorrow for sins is an acceptable sacrifice, a sacrifice far
sweeter than the perfume of incense. This is also the pleasing ointment which
You would have poured upon Your sacred feet, for a contrite and humble heart You
have never despised. Here is a place of refuge from the force of the enemy’s
anger. Here is amended and washed away whatever defilement has been contracted
elsewhere.
God’s
Grace Is Not Given to the Earthly Minded
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, my grace is precious. It does not allow itself to be mixed with external
things or with earthly consolations. Cast away all obstacles to grace,
therefore, if you wish to receive its infusion.
Seek
to retire within yourself. Love to dwell alone with yourself. Seek no man’s
conversation, but rather pour forth devout prayer to God that you may keep your
mind contrite and your heart pure.
Consider
the whole world as nothing. Prefer attendance upon God to all outward
occupation, for you cannot attend upon Me and at the same time take delight in
external things. You must remove yourself from acquaintances and from dear
friends, and keep your mind free of all temporal consolation. Thus the blessed
Apostle St. Peter begs the faithful of Christ to keep themselves as strangers
and pilgrims in the world.
What
great confidence at the hour of death shall be his who is not attached to this
world by any affection. But the sickly soul does not know what it is to have a
heart thus separated from all things, nor does the natural man know the liberty
of the spiritual man. Yet, if he truly wishes to be spiritual, he must renounce
both strangers and friends, and must beware of no one more than himself.
If
you completely conquer yourself, you will more easily subdue all other things.
The perfect victory is to triumph over self. For he who holds himself in such
subjection that sensuality obeys reason and reason obeys Me in all matters, is
truly his own conqueror and master of the world.
Now,
if you wish to climb to this high position you must begin like a man, and lay
the ax to the root, in order to tear out and destroy any hidden unruly love of
self or of earthly goods. From this vice of too much self-love comes almost
every other vice that must be uprooted. And when this evil is vanquished, and
brought under control, great peace and quiet will follow at once.
But
because few labor to die entirely to self, or tend completely away from self,
therefore they remain entangled in self, and cannot be lifted in spirit above
themselves. But he who desires to walk freely with Me must mortify all his low
and inordinate affections, and must not cling with selfish love or desire to any
creature.
The
Different Motions of Nature and Grace
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, pay careful attention to the movements of nature and of grace, for they
move in very contrary and subtle ways, and can scarcely be distinguished by
anyone except a man who is spiritual and inwardly enlightened. All men, indeed,
desire what is good, and strive for what is good in their words and deeds. For
this reason the appearance of good deceives many.
Nature
is crafty and attracts many, ensnaring and deceiving them while ever seeking
itself. But grace walks in simplicity, turns away from all appearance of evil,
offers no deceits, and does all purely for God in whom she rests as her last
end.
Nature
is not willing to die, or to be kept down, or to be overcome. Nor will it subdue
itself or be made subject. Grace, on the contrary, strives for mortification of
self. She resists sensuality, seeks to be in subjection, longs to be conquered,
has no wish to use her own liberty, loves to be held under discipline, and does
not desire to rule over anyone, but wishes rather to live, to stand, and to be
always under God for Whose sake she is willing to bow humbly to every human
creature.
Nature
works for its own interest and looks to the profit it can reap from another.
Grace does not consider what is useful and advantageous to herself, but rather
what is profitable to many. Nature likes to receive honor and reverence, but
grace faithfully attributes all honor and glory to God. Nature fears shame and
contempt, but grace is happy to suffer reproach for the name of Jesus. Nature
loves ease and physical rest. Grace, however, cannot bear to be idle and
embraces labor willingly. Nature seeks to possess what is rare and beautiful,
abhorring things that are cheap and coarse. Grace, on the contrary, delights in
simple, humble things, not despising those that are rough, nor refusing to be
clothed in old garments.
Nature
has regard for temporal wealth and rejoices in earthly gains. It is sad over a
loss and irritated by a slight, injurious word. But grace looks to eternal
things and does not cling to those which are temporal, being neither disturbed
at loss nor angered by hard words, because she has placed her treasure and joy
in heaven where nothing is lost.
Nature
is covetous, and receives more willingly than it gives. It loves to have its own
private possessions. Grace, however, is kind and openhearted. Grace shuns
private interest, is contented with little, and judges it more blessed to give
than to receive.
Nature
is inclined toward creatures, toward its own flesh, toward vanities, and toward
running about. But grace draws near to God and to virtue, renounces creatures,
hates the desires of the flesh, restrains her wanderings and blushes at being
seen in public.
Nature
likes to have some external comfort in which it can take sensual delight, but
grace seeks consolation only in God, to find her delight in the highest Good,
above all visible things.
Nature
does everything for its own gain and interest. It can do nothing without pay and
hopes for its good deeds to receive their equal or better, or else praise and
favor. It is very desirous of having its deeds and gifts highly regarded. Grace,
however, seeks nothing temporal, nor does she ask any recompense but God alone.
Of temporal necessities she asks no more than will serve to obtain eternity.
Nature
rejoices in many friends and kinsfolk, glories in noble position and birth,
fawns on the powerful, flatters the rich, and applauds those who are like
itself. But grace loves even her enemies and is not puffed up at having many
friends. She does not think highly of either position or birth unless there is
also virtue there. She favors the poor in preference to the rich. She
sympathizes with the innocent rather than with the powerful. She rejoices with
the true man rather than with the deceitful, and is always exhorting the good to
strive for better gifts, to become like the Son of God by practicing the
virtues.
Nature
is quick to complain of need and trouble; grace is stanch in suffering want.
Nature turns all things back to self. It fights and argues for self. Grace
brings all things back to God in Whom they have their source. To herself she
ascribes no good, nor is she arrogant or presumptuous. She is not contentious.
She does not prefer her own opinion to the opinion of others, but in every
matter of sense and thought submits herself to eternal wisdom and the divine
judgment.
Nature
has a relish for knowing secrets and hearing news. It wishes to appear abroad
and to have many sense experiences. It wishes to be known and to do things for
which it will be praised and admired. But grace does not care to hear news or
curious matters, because all this arises from the old corruption of man, since
there is nothing new, nothing lasting on earth. Grace teaches, therefore,
restraint of the senses, avoidance of vain self-satisfaction and show, the
humble hiding of deeds worthy of praise and admiration, and the seeking in every
thing and in every knowledge the fruit of usefulness, the praise and honor of
God. She will not have herself or hers exalted, but desires that God Who bestows
all simply out of love should be blessed in His gifts.
This
grace is a supernatural light, a certain special gift of God, the proper mark of
the elect and the pledge of everlasting salvation. It raises man up from earthly
things to love the things of heaven. It makes a spiritual man of a carnal one.
The more, then, nature is held in check and conquered, the more grace is given.
Every day the interior man is reformed by new visitations according to the image
of God.
The
Corruption of Nature and the Efficacy of Divine Grace
The
Disciple
O
LORD, my God, Who created me to Your own image and likeness, grant me this grace
which You have shown to be so great and necessary for salvation, that I may
overcome my very evil nature that is drawing me to sin and perdition. For I feel
in my flesh the law of sin contradicting the law of my mind and leading me
captive to serve sensuality in many things. I cannot resist the passions thereof
unless Your most holy grace warmly infused into my heart assist me.
There
is need of Your grace, and of great grace, in order to overcome a nature prone
to evil from youth. For through the first man, Adam, nature is fallen and
weakened by sin, and the punishment of that stain has fallen upon all mankind.
Thus nature itself, which You created good and right, is considered a symbol of
vice and the weakness of corrupted nature, because when left to itself it tends
toward evil and to baser things. The little strength remaining in it is like a
spark hidden in ashes. That strength is natural reason which, surrounded by
thick darkness, still has the power of judging good and evil, of seeing the
difference between true and false, though it is not able to fulfill all that it
approves and does not enjoy the full light of truth or soundness of affection.
Hence
it is, my God, that according to the inward man I delight in Your law, knowing
that Your command is good, just, and holy, and that it proves the necessity of
shunning all evil and sin. But in the flesh I keep the law of sin, obeying
sensuality rather than reason. Hence, also, it is that the will to good is
present in me, but how to accomplish it I know not. Hence, too, I often propose
many good things, but because the grace to help my weakness is lacking, I recoil
and give up at the slightest resistance. Thus it is that I know the way of
perfection and see clearly enough how I ought to act, but because I am pressed
down by the weight of my own corruption I do not rise to more perfect things.
How
extremely necessary to me, O Lord, Your grace is to begin any good deed, to
carry it on and bring it to completion! For without grace I can do nothing, but
with its strength I can do all things in You. O Grace truly heavenly, without
which our merits are nothing and no gifts of nature are to be esteemed!
Before
You, O Lord, no arts or riches, no beauty or strength, no wit or intelligence
avail without grace. For the gifts of nature are common to good and bad alike,
but the peculiar gift of Your elect is grace or love, and those who are signed
with it are held worthy of everlasting life. So excellent is this grace that
without it no gift of prophecy or of miracles, no meditation be it ever so
exalted, can be considered anything. Not even faith or hope or other virtues are
acceptable to You without charity and grace.
O
most blessed grace, which makes the poor in spirit rich in virtues, which
renders him who is rich in many good things humble of heart, come, descend upon
me, fill me quickly with your consolation lest my soul faint with weariness and
dryness of mind.
Let
me find grace in Your sight, I beg, Lord, for Your grace is enough for me, even
though I obtain none of the things which nature desires. If I am tempted and
afflicted with many tribulations, I will fear no evils while Your grace is with
me. This is my strength. This will give me counsel and help. This is more
powerful than all my enemies and wiser than all the wise. This is the mistress
of truth, the teacher of discipline, the light of the heart, the consoler in
anguish, the banisher of sorrow, the expeller of fear, the nourisher of
devotion, the producer of tears. What am I without grace, but dead wood, a
useless branch, fit only to be cast away?
Let
Your grace, therefore, go before me and follow me, O Lord, and make me always
intent upon good works, through Jesus Christ, Your Son.
We
Ought to Deny Ourselves and Imitate Christ
Through
Bearing the Cross
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, the more you depart from yourself, the more you will be able to enter
into Me. As the giving up of exterior things brings interior peace, so the
forsaking of self unites you to God. I will have you learn perfect surrender to
My will, without contradiction or complaint.
Follow
Me. I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life. Without the Way, there is no going.
Without the Truth, there is no knowing. Without the Life, there is no living. I
am the Way which you must follow, the Truth which you must believe, the Life for
which you must hope. I am the inviolable Way, the infallible Truth, the unending
Life. I am the Way that is straight, the supreme Truth, the Life that is true,
the blessed, the uncreated Life. If you abide in My Way you shall know the
Truth, and the Truth shall make you free, and you shall attain life everlasting.
If
you wish to enter into life, keep My commandments. If you will know the truth,
believe in Me. If you will be perfect, sell all. If you will be My disciple,
deny yourself. If you will possess the blessed life, despise this present life.
If you will be exalted in heaven, humble yourself on earth. If you wish to reign
with Me, carry the Cross with Me. For only the servants of the Cross find the
life of blessedness and of true light.
The
Disciple
Lord
Jesus, because Your way is narrow and despised by the world, grant that I may
despise the world and imitate You. For the servant is not greater than his Lord,
nor the disciple above the Master. Let Your servant be trained in Your life, for
there is my salvation and true holiness. Whatever else I read or hear does not
fully refresh or delight me.
The
Voice of Christ
My
child, now that you know these things and have read them all, happy will you be
if you do them. He who has My commandments and keeps them, he it is that loves
Me. And I will love him and will show Myself to him, and will bring it about
that he will sit down with Me in My Father’s Kingdom.
The
Disciple
Lord
Jesus, as You have said, so be it, and what You have promised, let it be my lot
to win. I have received the cross, from Your hand I have received it. I will
carry it, carry it even unto death as You have laid it upon me. Truly, the life
of a good religious man is a cross, but it leads to paradise. We have begun—we
may not go back, nor may we leave off.
Take
courage, brethren, let us go forward together and Jesus will be with us. For
Jesus’ sake we have taken this cross. For Jesus’ sake let us persevere with
it. He will be our help as He is also our leader and guide. Behold, our King
goes before us and will fight for us. Let us follow like men. Let no man fear
any terrors. Let us be prepared to meet death valiantly in battle. Let us not
suffer our glory to be blemished by fleeing from the Cross.
A
Man Should Not Be Too Downcast
When
He Falls Into Defects
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, patience and humility in adversity are more pleasing to Me than much
consolation and devotion when things are going well.
Why
are you saddened by some little thing said against you? Even if it had been more
you ought not to have been affected. But now let it pass. It is not the first,
nor is it anything new, and if you live long it will not be the last.
You
are manly enough so long as you meet no opposition. You give good advice to
others, and you know how to strengthen them with words, but when unexpected
tribulation comes to your door, you fail both in counsel and in strength.
Consider your great weakness, then, which you experience so often in small
matters. Yet when these and like trials happen, they happen for your good.
Put
it out of your heart as best you know how, and if it has touched you, still do
not let it cast you down or confuse you for long. Bear it patiently at least, if
you cannot bear it cheerfully. Even though you bear it unwillingly, and are
indignant at it, restrain yourself and let no ill-ordered words pass your lips
at which the weak might be scandalized. The storm that is now aroused will soon
be quieted and your inward grief will be sweetened by returning grace. “I yet
live,” says the Lord, “ready to help you and to console you more and more,
if you trust in Me and call devoutly upon Me.”
Remain
tranquil and prepare to bear still greater trials. All is not lost even though
you be troubled oftener or tempted more grievously. You are a man, not God. You
are flesh, not an angel. How can you possibly expect to remain always in the
same state of virtue when the angels in heaven and the first man in paradise
failed to do so? I am He Who rescues the afflicted and brings to My divinity
those who know their own weakness.
The
Disciple
Blessed
be Your words, O Lord, sweeter to my mouth than honey and the honeycomb. What
would I do in such great trials and anxieties, if You did not strengthen me with
Your holy words? If I may but attain to the haven of salvation, what does it
matter what or how much I suffer? Grant me a good end. Grant me a happy passage
out of this world. Remember me, my God, and lead me by the right way into Your
kingdom.
High
Matters and the Hidden Judgments of God
Are
Not to Be Scrutinized
The
Voice of Christ
MY
CHILD, beware of discussing high matters and God’s hidden judgments—why this
person is so forsaken and why that one is favored with so great a grace, or why
one man is so afflicted and another so highly exalted. Such things are beyond
all human understanding and no reason or disputation can fathom the judgments of
God.
When
the enemy puts such suggestions in your mind, therefore, or when some curious
persons raise questions about them, answer with the prophet: “Thou art just, O
Lord, and righteous are Thy judgments”;
and this: “The judgments of the Lord are true and wholly righteous.”
My judgments are to be feared, not discussed, because they are incomprehensible
to the understanding of men.
In
like manner, do not inquire or dispute about the merits of the saints, as to
which is more holy, or which shall be greater in the kingdom of heaven. Such
things often breed strife and useless contentions. They nourish pride and
vainglory, whence arise envy and quarrels, when one proudly tries to exalt one
saint and the other another. A desire to know and pry into such matters brings
forth no fruit. On the contrary, it displeases the saints, because I am the God,
not of dissension, but of peace—of that peace which consists in true humility
rather than in self-exaltation.
Some
are drawn by the ardor of their love with greater affection to these saints or
to those, but this affection is human and not divine. I am He who made all the
saints. I gave them grace: I brought them to glory. I know the merits of each of
them. I came before them in the blessings of My sweetness. I knew My beloved
ones before the ages. I chose them out of the world—they did not choose Me. I
called them by grace, I drew them on by mercy. I led them safely through various
temptations. I poured into them glorious consolations. I gave them perseverance
and I crowned their patience. I know the first and the last. I embrace them all
with love inestimable. I am to be praised in all My saints. I am to be blessed
above all things, and honored in each of those whom I have exalted and
predestined so gloriously without any previous merits of their own.
He
who despises one of the least of mine, therefore, does no honor to the greatest,
for both the small and the great I made. And he who disparages one of the saints
disparages Me also and all others in the kingdom of heaven. They are all one
through the bond of charity. They have the same thought and the same will, and
they mutually love one another; but, what is a much greater thing, they love Me
more than themselves or their own merits. Rapt above themselves, and drawn
beyond love of self, they are entirely absorbed in love of Me, in Whom they
rest. There is nothing that can draw them away or depress them, for they who are
filled with eternal truth burn with the fire of unquenchable love.
Therefore,
let carnal and sensual men, who know only how to love their own selfish joys,
forbear to dispute about the state of God’s saints. Such men take away and add
according to their own inclinations and not as it pleases the Eternal Truth. In
many this is sheer ignorance, especially in those who are but little enlightened
and can rarely love anyone with a purely spiritual love. They are still strongly
drawn by natural affection and human friendship to one person or another, and on
their behavior in such things here below are based their imaginings of heavenly
things. But there is an incomparable distance between the things which the
imperfect imagine and those which enlightened men contemplate through revelation
from above.
Be
careful, then, My child, of treating matters beyond your knowledge out of
curiosity. Let it rather be your business and aim to be found, even though the
least, in the
kingdom
of
God
. For though one were to know who is more holy than another, or who is greater
in the kingdom of heaven, of what value would this knowledge be to him unless
out of it he should humble himself before Me and should rise up in greater
praise of My name?
The
man who thinks of the greatness of his own sins and the littleness of his
virtues, and of the distance between himself and the perfection of the saints,
acts much more acceptably to God than the one who argues about who is greater or
who is less. It is better to invoke the saints with devout prayers and tears,
and with a humble mind to beg their glorious aid, than to search with vain
inquisitiveness into their secrets.
The
saints are well and perfectly contented if men know how to content themselves
and cease their useless discussions. They do not glory in their own merits, for
they attribute no good to themselves but all to Me, because out of My infinite
charity I gave all to them. They are filled with such love of God and with such
overflowing joy, that no glory is wanting to them and they can lack no
happiness. All the saints are so much higher in glory as they are more humble in
themselves; nearer to Me, and more beloved by Me. Therefore, you find it written
that they cast their crowns before God, and fell down upon their faces before
the Lamb, and adored Him Who lives forever.
Many
ask who is the greater in the kingdom of heaven when they do not know whether
they themselves shall be worthy of being numbered among its least. It is a great
thing to be even the least in heaven where all are great because all shall be
called, and shall be, the children of God. The least shall be as a thousand, and
the sinner of a hundred years shall die. For when the disciples asked who should
be greater in the kingdom of heaven they heard this response: “Unless you be
converted and become as little children, you shall not enter into the kingdom of
heaven. Therefore, whosoever shall humble himself as this little child, he is
the greater in the kingdom of heaven.”
Woe
to those, therefore, who disdain to humble themselves willingly with the little
children, for the low gate of the heavenly kingdom will not permit them to
enter. Woe also to the rich who have their consolations here, for when the poor
enter into God’s kingdom, they will stand outside lamenting. Rejoice, you
humble, and exult, you poor, for the
kingdom
of
God
is yours, if only you walk in the truth.
All
Hope and Trust Are to Be Fixed In God Alone
The
Disciple
WHAT,
Lord, is the trust which I have in this life, or what is my greatest comfort
among all the things that appear under heaven? Is it not You, O Lord, my God,
Whose mercies are without number? Where have I ever fared well but for You? Or
how could things go badly when You were present? I had rather be poor for Your
sake than rich without You. I prefer rather to wander on the earth with You than
to possess heaven without You. Where You are there is heaven, and where You are
not are death and hell. You are my desire and therefore I must cry after You and
sigh and pray. In none can I fully trust to help me in my necessities, but in
You alone, my God. You are my hope. You are my confidence. You are my consoler,
most faithful in every need.
All
seek their own interests. You, however, place my salvation and my profit first,
and turn all things to my good. Even though exposing me to various temptations
and hardships, You Who are accustomed to prove Your loved ones in a thousand
ways, order all this for my good. You ought not to be loved or praised less in
this trial than if You had filled me with heavenly consolations.
In
You, therefore, O Lord God, I place all my hope and my refuge. On You I cast all
my troubles and anguish, because whatever I have outside of You I find to be
weak and unstable. It will not serve me to have many friends, nor will powerful
helpers be able to assist me, nor prudent advisers to give useful answers, nor
the books of learned men to console, nor any precious substance to win my
freedom, nor any place, secret and beautiful though it be, to shelter me, if You
Yourself do not assist, comfort, console, instruct, and guard me. For all things
which seem to be for our peace and happiness are nothing when You are absent,
and truly confer no happiness.
You,
indeed, are the fountain of all good, the height of life, the depth of all that
can be spoken. To trust in You above all things is the strongest comfort of Your
servants.
My
God, the Father of mercies, to You I look, in You I trust. Bless and sanctify my
soul with heavenly benediction, so that it may become Your holy dwelling and the
seat of Your eternal glory. And in this temple of Your dignity let nothing be
found that might offend Your majesty. In Your great goodness, and in the
multitude of Your mercies, look upon me and listen to the prayer of Your poor
servant exiled from You in the region of the shadow of death. Protect and
preserve the soul of Your poor servant among the many dangers of this
corruptible life, and direct him by Your accompanying grace, through the ways of
peace, to the land of everlasting light.

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