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TREATISE ON PRAYER AND MEDITATION
St. Peter of Alcantara
Chapter I.
Of the Fruit to be Derived from Prayer and Meditation
SINCE this short
treatise speaks of prayer and meditation, it will be well to state in a few
words what is the fruit which may be derived from this holy exercise, so
that men may give themselves to it with more willing heart. It is a well
known fact that one of the greatest hindrances we have to attaining our
final happiness and blessedness, is the evil inclination of our hearts, the
difficulty and dullness of spirit we have in respect to good rules; for, if
this was not in the way, it would be the easiest thing possible to run in
the path of virtues, and attain to the end for which we were created.
Concerning which the Apostle says, "I delight in the Law of God,
according to the inward man; but I see another law in my members warring
against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law of
sin." (Rom. 7:22-23) This, then, is the universal cause of all our
evil. One of the most efficacious means for overcoming this dullness and
difficulty, and for facilitating this matter, is devotion; for as St. Thomas
says, "Devotion is nothing else than a certain readiness and aptitude
for doing good." For this takes away from our mind all that
difficulty and dullness, and makes us quick and ready for all good. It is a
spiritual refection, a refreshment, like the dew of Heaven, a breath and
inspiration of the Holy Spirit, a supernatural affection. It so orders,
strengthens, and transforms a man's heart, that it imparts a new taste and
inspiration for spiritual things, a new distaste and abhorrence for sensible
things. The experience of every day shows us this. For when a spiritually
minded person rises from deep devout prayer, then straight away all his good
resolutions are renewed, together with fervor and determination to do good;
the desire then to please, and to love, a Lord so good and kind as He has
then shown Himself to be, a willingness to endure fresh troubles, and
chastenings, even to shedding blood for His sake, then, finally, all the
freshness of soul is renewed and blooms again.
If you ask me, by what means so powerful and noble an affection of
devotion is attained, the same holy teacher answers that it is by meditation
and contemplation of diving things; for from deeply meditating and
pondering over these things there springs up this disposition, and affection
in the will, which is called devotion; and this stirs and moves us to all
good. It is on this account that this holy and religious exercise is so
extolled and commended by all the Saints, as being The Means of acquiring
devotion, which, though it is but one virtue only, yet it disposes and moves
one to all the other virtues, and exists as a general stimulus to them all.
If you would see how true this is, hear how plainly St. Bonaventure
declares it in these words:
"If you would suffer patiently the adversities and miseries of
this life, be a man of prayer. If you would gain power and strength to
overcome the temptations of the enemy, be a man of prayer. If you would
mortify your will with all its affections and lusts, be a man of prayer.
If you would understand the cunning devices of Satan, and defend yourself
against his deceits, be a man of payer. If you would live joyfully, and
with sweetness walk in the path of penitence and sorrow, be a man of
prayer. If you would drive out the troublesome gnats of vain thoughts and
cares from your soul, be a man of prayer. If you would sustain your soul
with the richness of devotion, and kept it ever full of good thoughts and
desires, be a man of prayer. If you would strengthen and confirm your
heart in the pilgrimage with God, be a man of prayer. Lastly, if you
would root out from your soul every vice and in their place plant the
virtues, be a man of prayer, for in this is obtained the unction and grace
of the Holy Spirit who teaches all things.
"And besides all this, if you would climb to the height of
contemplation, and delight in the sweet embraces of the Bridegroom,
exercise yourself in prayer, for this is the way by which the soul mounts
up to contemplation and to the taste of heavenly things.
"You see, then, of how great virtue and power is prayer, and for
proof of all that has been said (to say nothing of Holy Scripture) let
this now be sufficient assurance that we have seen and heard, and see, day
by day, many simple persons who have attained to all these things above
mentioned and to others greater, through the exercise of prayer."
Thus far the words of St. Bonaventure.
Then, what richer treasure? What field can be found more fertile,
yielding more abundantly than this? Hear also what another most religious
and holy doctor, speaking of this same virtue, says:
"In prayer the soul is cleansed from sin, pastured with charity,
confirmed in faith, strengthened in hope, gladdened in spirit. By prayer
the inward man is directed aright, the heart is purified, the truth
discovered, temptation overcome, sadness avoided, the perceptions renewed,
languishing virtue restored, lukewarmness dismissed, the rust of vices
done away; and in it there do not cease to come forth living sparkles of
heavenly desires, with which the flame of divine love burns. Great are
the excellencies of prayer, great are its privileges! Before it Heaven is
opened, secrete things are made manifest, and to it the ears of God are
ever attentive." (St. Lawrence Justinian, In Signo Vitae)
This now is sufficient to show in some way what is the fruit of this holy
exercise.
Chapter II.
Of the Subject Matter of Meditation
HAVING seen what fruit may come of Prayer
and Mediation, let us now see what are the things on which we should
meditate. To which the answer is, that inasmuch as this holy exercise is
ordained to create in our hearts the love and fear of God, and to lead us to
keep His Commandments, the most fitting subject for this exercise will be
that which should most surely lead to the end proposed. And although it be
true that all created things, whether earthly or heavenly, may move us to
this, yet, generally speaking, the Mysteries of our Faith which are
contained in the Creed, are the most efficacious, and profitable. For here
are treated the subjects of the Divine blessings, the Last Judgment, the
pains of Hell, and the glory of Paradise, where there are the most powerful
stimulants to move our hearts to the love and fear of God; and in it are
treated also the Life and Passion of Our Savior Christ, in which consists
all our good. These two subjects especially are treated of in the Creed,
and are those on which we for the most part make our Meditations. And
therefore, with much reason it is said, that the Creed is the most fitting
subject for this holy exercise, although at the same time, there may be with
every one some subject which might more especially move his heart to the
love and fear of God.
Agreeably, then, with this, in order to help on the young who are now
entering upon this path, to whom we should give food which has been, as it
were, already digested, I will now briefly set forth two kinds of Meditation
for all the days of the week. Taken, for the most part, from the Mysteries
of our Faith, some are for the evening, and some for the morning; so that,
as we give our bodies their two meals each day, so should we give our souls,
whose food is Meditation and the consideration of things Divine. Of these
Mediations, some are upon the Mysteries of Sacred Passion and Resurrection
of Christ, and some upon the other Mysteries of which I have spoken. Those
who have not time to make such retirement twice in the day, will, at least,
be able to mediate one week upon the former mysteries, and another week upon
the latter. Or, they may fine themselves entirely to those on the Passion
and Life of Jesus Christ, which are the principal ones; although it would
not be well, in the beginning of the soul's conversion, to omit the others,
seeing that they are especially suitable at such time when the fear of God
and detestation of our sins are to be chiefly desired.
MEDITATION FOR MONDAY
On this day, you shall enter upon the memory of your sins, and upon the
knowledge of yourself, to see how many evil things you have done, and to see
that you have nothing that is good save from God.
For this consideration is the means of
acquiring humility, the mother of all the virtues.
Monday Morning Meditation
For this purpose you must first think of the multitude of the sins of
your past life, especially of those committed in the days when you knew not
God. For if you consider them well, you will find that they are more in
number than the hairs of your head, and that you lived in that day like the
Gentile who knows not God. Consider then, briefly, the Ten Commandments,
and the Seven Deadly sins, and you will see that there are none into which
you have not often fallen, in deed or word or thought. Let your mind, then,
rest upon the Divine Blessings, and upon your past time, and consider how
you have made use of them. For you have to give an account of all these
before God. Tell me, then, how have you used the days of your childhood,
your youth, your manhood, indeed all the days of your past life?
In what way did you use your bodily
senses, and the powers of your soul, which God gave to you for the purpose
of knowing and serving Him?
In what did you use your eyes, except
in things of vanity?
In what did you use your ears, except
to hear things of falsehood; in what your tongue, except in all manner of
rash oaths and murmurings? and your taste and all your senses, except in
sensual pleasures and flattery?
How have you profited by the Holy
Sacraments, which God ordained for your assistance?
What thanksgivings have you made for
all His benefits?
How have you responded to His
inspirations?
How have you used your health and
strength, your natural talents, your earthly goods, your opportunities and
occasions for living well?
What care have you taken of your
neighbor whom God commended to you, and what works of mercy towards him
can you show?
Then what will you answer on that day of reckoning when God shall say unto
you: "Give an account of your stewardship." O withered tree, destined for
eternal torments! What will you answer on that day, when there shall be
required from you the account of your whole life, and of every point and
moment in it?
Think, next, of the sins which you have committed, and do each day
commit, even after your eyes have been opened to the knowledge of God, and
you will find that the old Adam still lives in you, with many of the old
roots and habits. See how you have stood aloof from God, how unthankful you
have been for His benefits, how rebellious against his inspirations, how
slothful in things concerning His service, which you never performed with
that readiness and diligence and purity of intention which you do owe Him;
nay, think of how you have discharged them even for the sake of human
respects and interests!
Consider, also, moreover, how hard you are towards your neighbor, and how
gentle with yourself; how you love your own will, your self, your flesh,
your honor, and your own interests!
See how you are always proud, ambitious, quick to anger, vainglorious,
envious, malicious, prone to amusement, inconstant, full of levity, sensual,
given to recreations, laughter and idle talk. See, too, how inconstant you
are in good purposes, how inconsiderate in your words, and imprudent in your
deeds, and how cowardly and half-hearted in any matter of importance.
And further, after you have taken note of the multitude of your sins,
consider then their gravity, so that you may see how on all sides your
misery has grown upon you. For this you should, in the first place, think
of these three circumstances in your past life, namely,
Against Whom have you sinned?
For what end did you sin?
And in what way?
If you think, against Whom you did sin, you will find that it was against
God, whose goodness and majesty are infinite, whose blessings and mercies to
man are more in number than the sands of the sea-shore. Or if you think,
for what end you did sin, it was for some point of honor, some foul lust, or
some trivial interest, or very often for something of no interest
whatsoever, for no other reason than habit, and disregard for God. Or if
you think, in what way you did sin, it was with such ease and audacity as to
be without scruple or fear; nay, at time with such ease and content as if
you were sinning against a god made of wood who neither knew nor saw
anything that was done on earth. Is this the honor which is due to so great
a Majesty? Is this the thanks you gave for so great blessings? Is this the
return you make for that most Precious Blood shed upon the Cross, for those
scourgings and buffetings endured on your behalf? O miserable you, for what
you have lost, and more for what you have gained for yourself, and much more
still, if with all this, you do not sense your impending perdition!
Monday Evening Meditation
After all this it is most profitable to let your thoughts rest a while on
the consideration of your nothingness; that is, how you have by yourself
nothing, but sin, or in other words, nothingness; how all else is from God
alone. For it is clear that as all natural gifts, so those too, of grace,
which are greater, are His only. From him is the grace of predestination,
which is the source of all other graces; from Him the grace of our
vocation, and all the grace accompanying it; from Him the grace of
perseverance, and that of life eternal.
What have you, then, from which to glory, save your nothingness and sin?
Rest, then, awhile in the consideration of that nothingness, and take
note that this, and all else, comes from God; so that you may see clearly
and manifestly what you are, and what He is; how poor you are, and how
abundant in riches he is; and, consequently, how little you can trust in
and esteem yourself, and how greatly you can trust in Him, love Him, glory
in Him!
Then, having considered all these things, think of yourself with thoughts
most lowly. Ponder that you are nothing but "a reed shaken in the wind." of
no weights, or virtue, or firmness, or steadfastness or anything else.
Ponder that you are another Lazarus, dead for four days, a carcass
foul-smelling and abominable, so much that they who pass by cover their
noses, and shut their eyes. Judge on your own that this is what you are
before God and His angels, and hold yourself to be unworthy to lift your
eyes up to Heaven, or that this earth should bear you, or that creatures
should serve you; unworthy of the bread which you eat and of the air which
you breathe. With that sinner of the street, cast yourself down at the
Savior's feet, with your face covered in confusion and shame like the woman
taken in adultery; and with much sorrow and compunction of heart, beg of Him
pardon for your sins, and that, out of His infinite pity and mercy, He may
vouchsafe to turn to you, and receive you into His house.
THE SECOND PART OF THIS TREATISE WHICH SPEAKS OF DEVOTION
Chapter I.
What is Devotion?
THE greatest trouble those persons suffer
from who give themselves to Prayer is the failing in Devotion which they so
often experience in it. When there is no such failing, there is nothing
sweeter, or more easy that to pray. For this reason, now that we have
treated upon the subject-matter of Prayer, and upon the manner of praying,
it will be well to consider the things which help Devotion, and also those
which hinder it, and the temptations which most often assail devout people
in it; and certain other points that are necessary to observe in this
exercise. But first it will greatly help the matter to set forth what
Devotion is, that we may know to begin with, what is the precious thing for
which we are contending.
Devotion, says St. Thomas Aquinas, is a power which makes one prompt and
ready for any virtue, and stirs and helps one to do well. (Summa II, II, Q.
82, Art. 1.) This definition declares manifestly the great necessity and
usefulness of this power, for it contains in itself more than some would
think. We have on this account to consider that the chief hindrance to
living a good life is the corruption of human nature which came to us
through sin, and from which comes the great inclination we have towards
evil, and the difficulty and unwillingness we have in respect to what is
good. These two things make the path of virtue most difficult to us, while
in itself it is the thing most sweet, most beautiful, most to be desired,
most honorable in the world. It is against this difficulty and
unwillingness the Divine Wisdom has provided this most complete remedy in
the power and succor of Devotion. For as the north wind disperses the
clouds, and leaves the sky clear and serene, so true Devotion drives away
from our mind all that unwillingness and difficulty, and leaves it then free
and disposed for all that is good. This virtue so become as power within us
as being at one a very special gift of the Holy Spirit, a heavenly dew, a
succor and visitation of God attained through Prayer. Its very nature is to
contend against the difficulty of which we have spoken, and to overcome this
luke-warmness, to give us readiness and fill the soul with good desires, to
enlighten the understanding, to strengthen the Will, to kindle in us the
Love of God, to extinguish the flame of evil desires, to teach hatred of
worldly things, and abhorrence of sin, and to give us new fervor, new
spirit, new power, and incentive to well doing.
For as Samson, wile possessed of his hair, had greater strength than any
man in the world, and when this was taken away from him, became as weak as
other men; so is the Christian soul strong when he has this Devotion, and
weak when he has it not.
And this is what St. Thomas desired to show in his definition, and,
without doubt, this is the greatest praise one could give to this virtue,
that, being of itself only one virtue, it is a stimulus and incentive to all
others. Let not him then that would travel by the path of virtues, go
without these spurs; for without them he will never be able to arouse the
evil beast of his nature form is sluggishness.
From what has been said it will be clearly seen, then, what is true and
real Devotion. For Devotion is not a certain tenderness of heart, or sense
of consolation which those who pray feel sometimes, unless there be also a
promptitude and disposition for good works, for, when at times God would
prove who are His own, it often happens that the one is found and not the
other. The truth is that form this Devotion and readiness there often
arises the consolation spoken of: and, on the other hand, that very
consolation and spiritual delight will increase the Devotion itself, which
is the readiness and incentive to well-doing. And, therefore, God's
servants may, with good reason, desire and ask for these joys and
consolations, not for the pleasure they give, but because they are the means
of increasing the Devotion which fits them for well-doing, as the Prophet
showed when he said, "I will run the way of Thy commandments, when Thou has
set my heart at liberty," (Ps. 119:32) that is, with the joy of Thy
consolation which was the cause of my readiness.
And now let us proceed to treat of those means by which this Devotion is
to be attained, and, since with this virtue are united all others leading to
the special knowledge of God, we will consider the means of attaining to the
perfection of Prayer and Contemplation, to the consolations of the Holy
Spirit and the love and wisdom of God, and to that union of our souls with
God, which is the goal of all spiritual life.
And this, lastly, is to consider the mans by which we may attain to the
possession of God Himself in this life, which is that Treasure of the
Gospel, the "Pearl of great price" for the possession of which the
husbandman joyfully despoiled himself of all that he had.
Hence it is we see that the highest aim of our theology is, that from it
we may learn the way to the Supreme Good, and may make this life to become a
ladder by which we may advance step by step to the eternal happiness
awaiting us.
Taken from the English
Translation, A Golden Treatise on Mental
Prayer, edited by G. S. Hollings, S.S.J.E.,
(reedited by the Franciscan Archive), publ. by A. R. Mowbray & Co. Ltd.,
1904: a non-copyrighted edition. |