Showing posts with label Providence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Providence. Show all posts

October 11

Character Of The Interior Man

Preparation. - In the Christian religion, says St. Paul, “Christ is all and in all” (Col. 3. 11). The interior man strives to cling to God alone, and therefore in the first place, he views everything in God, and secondly, he finds everything in God. Let us examine whether our intentions are always upright and our affections perfectly pure, so that we may belong entirely to Jesus Christ and, through Him, wholly to God. “Christ is all in all;” “that God may be all in al” (1 Cor. 15. 28).

I. To Be Interior, We Must View God In All Things.

The interior man judges of every thing, not by reason alone or from mere appearances, but by the light of faith and the gift of understanding with which the Holy Ghost enlightens him. He knows that God is the centre of all creation, that every thing subsists by His power, and that His wisdom governs powerfully and mildly every thing, from the stars in the heavens to the smallest insect concealed under the grass. He acknowledges that from Him he receives the light that enlightens him, the air he breaths, the garments he wears, the food he eats and all the good done him, and he thanks the Lord for it all, and draws therefrom continual motives for adoring, loving, praising and thanking Him.

Does not the Gospel teach him that his superiors hold the place of God on earth (Luke 10. 16), and that Jesus considers as done to Himself whatever is done to the least of His brethren? (Mat. 25. 40). Wherefore he sees Jesus Christ in all those who lawfully command him or receive his services. He sees Jesus in the Holy Father, the bishops, priests, rulers and magistrates (Rom. 18. 2); in the unfortunate, the poor, the sick, the afflicted, in all who have a soul created by God and redeemed with the blood of Jesus.

He considers Him even in the events most opposed to his wishes. When he has to bear contempt, privations and reverses, he blesses Providence for furnishing him occasions of becoming more humble, more mortified, more patient, and consequently richer in merits.

Do we act thus? Alas! nature has such a dominion over us, that it is but seldom that the principles of faith can induce us to obey, suffer and practice charity in a manner worthy of God and befitting a disciple of Jesus. We so often act through feeling, taste and inclination, instead of viewing God in all things, and this is one of the reasons why we make so little progress in the interior life.

O my God, by a continuous creation, Thou drawest all creatures out of nothing. Thou art present to each, and nevertheless, I think of everything except of Thee, the Author of all good. Thou laborest without ceasing for my sanctification by mans of earthly events, and I am so often hardened against Thy holiest dispositions! Deign to forgive me, and show me henceforth, in all things and everywhere, Thy presence and beneficent influence.

II. To Be Interior, We Must Find All Things In God.

The interior man not only sees God in all things, but also finds all things in God. By means of faith, mental prayer and confidence he draws from the supreme Good that which satisfies his thirst for truth, love and happiness, by which the human heart is tormented here below. Often the angels hear his cry: “What is there in heaven, and what can I desire upon earth, if not Thyself? When shall I come and appear before Thy face,” to contemplate all truth in Thee? When a certain remembrance grieves him, or some created object disputes God’s place in his affections, he says with St. Francis de Sales; “Lord, Thou alone art sufficient for me; in Thee alone do I find what is necessary for my soul.”

And, in fact, what else can a soul need than to possess God, His grace and His love? In heaven He is the joy of the angels and saints, and one day He will be there our delights; and why should He not already in this life be everything to us? What! God is sufficient for Himself, and should not He be sufficient for us? O how narrow and miserly is the heart that craves for flesh and blood, for the transitory goods of this life, and remains cold and indifferent, when there is question of the supreme Good! Our heart having been created for God, is a vase destined to possess Him alone. The blood of a God redeemed, consecrated and sanctified it, and made it, as it were, into a ciborium, which every foreign attachment defiles and profanes.

And then what happiness can that heart enjoy out of its centre and final destiny? By serving and loving God alone, it would, on the contrary, already in this exile, enjoy a foretaste of the delights of our true country. If we really desire to become holy and happy, let us learn to content ourselves with the supreme and eternal Good, and often say to ourselves: “My only pleasure here below is to see God glorified and His will fulfilled. In this dwell my honor, my rest, my treasure and all my delights both in this life and in the next.”

O my God, for the love of Jesus and Mary, enable me to seek in Thee what is found nowhere else, that is, truth, love and happiness; truth, to enlighten my mind concerning the mysteries best calculated to raise and ennoble me; love, to purify and deify my heart, and happiness, to make me a partaker in Thy own peace and happiness. I shall thereby possess everything in Thee, O infinite Good, and “Thou shalt be all to me in all things.”

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July 12

The Service Of God

Preparation. - That we may esteem obedience more and more highly, we shall meditate tomorrow, first, how glorious it is to obey and serve God, and secondly, how much peace and happiness there is in so doing. In this manner we shall be convinced of the truth that our solid greatness and real bliss consist in conquering our passions and submitting to God. “It is a great glory to follow the Lord” (Eccli. 23.38).

I. How Glorious Is The Service Of God.

What renders the service of a master honorable in the eyes of worldlings, is the nobility of the person served. If he is wealthy, honored, famous, a prince or a monarch, it is a glorious thing to be in his service. What shall we say of the King of heaven, of the King of glory? he is not only rich, noble and exalted, but He is the Lord of the universe; being God, He is innately noble; He is infinitely great, and before Him all created greatness and dignities are but mere shadows. What is more honorable than to serve Him? He treats us, not as His servants, but as His friends: Henceforth “I shall call you friends (John 15. 14). Moreover, He causes us to share in His divine Sonship: “behold what manner of charity the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we should be called and should be the sons of God” (1 John 3. 1).

Does not such a favor, secured to all the servants of God, surround them with a halo of glory more splendid than all earthly glories? To serve God, infinitely great and perfect, is to raise ourselves above the earth, above ourselves, above the very heavens. Worldlings are the slaves of pride, covetousness and sensual pleasure that kill souls; the true faithful, on the contrary, enjoy the liberty of the children of the heavenly Father, that holy liberty, that sublime liberty, which dilates and ennobles the heart, and renders it superior to the passions, and intimately unites it to the infinite Majesty. Are we not kept back, perhaps, by some defect, some earthly tie, or some little thread of affection, which prevents us from belonging wholly to God? “Self-love,” says St. Vincent de Paul, “often makes us believe we are serving the Lord, even when we seek our own satisfaction.”

O Jesus, how many times do I listen to my inclinations or repugnances in the accomplishment of Thy precepts! I abhor humiliations, instead of accepting them for Thy sake; I yield to self-complacency in my works, instead of giving Thee glory for all. Enable me to follow the steps of the apostles, the martyrs and the other saints, who deeply abased themselves and served Thee, at their expense, without self-interest, human respect, seeking not human esteem, but solely to glorify Thy infinite perfections. Enable me to imitate them and their fidelity in obeying thee in all things; for in this consists solid greatness and true royalty. “To serve God is to reign.”

II. The Happiness Of Serving God.

A servant’s happiness depends on his master’s goodness. But what master is comparable to God who permits us to call Him “our Father,” and who is truly a Father to us, for His love for us has no equal. All His action, or Providence, in this world constantly tends to procure our welfare.

He forbids us to sin, because He considers sin as the greatest of evils and the most opposed to our interior peace. He commands us to practice the virtues, because He knows them to be efficacious means of making us happy, notably in the next life but in this also. He requires us to be patient in trials, because resignation sweetens them and renders them meritorious. He recommends prayer and the sacraments to us, because they are inexhaustible fountains of light, strength and consolations. Hence nothing is more true than Christ’s saying: “My yoke is sweet, and My burden is light” (Mat. 11. 29).

The service of God has, undoubtedly, an austere appearance. It is serious and requires recollection, the avoidance of dangerous pleasures, and the practice of mortification of the senses and the passions; but this exterior, which terrifies the worldling, conceals ineffable joys and sweetness. In order to understand this mystery, it behooves us to strive after solid piety, for God communicates Himself and His happiness to us only in proportion to our fidelity. He who gives but little, receives but little; but divine favors and bliss abound in the heart that loves God undividedly. “Taste ye and see.”

Let us examine what prevents us from belonging entirely to Jesus. Is it vanity, dissipation of mind, love of the world, of esteem? Or else, is it attachment to transitory pleasures, to an effeminate, idle and sensual life? To serve God with fervor, we should exercise ourselves in mental prayer, watchfulness, and self-denial under the guidance of grace and of those who direct soul.

O my Jesus, I am happy in Thy service, but not so much as I would be, were I constantly faithful and wholly detached. Through the intercession of Thy most holy Mother Mary, extricate me from my own self and from all that is created, and if I am not yet able to love suffering and mortification as the saints did, do not permit at least that I should shirk inconvenience, labor, hardships and sufferings in the performance of my duties.

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