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CHAPTER 10
The Tenth Motive
for practicing Virtue:
The Thought of
Hell, the Fourth of the Four Last Things
The least part
of the happiness we have endeavored to portray should be sufficient to
inflame our hearts with a love of virtue. Nevertheless, we shall also
consider the terrible alternative of misery reserved for the reprobate.
The sinner cannot comfort himself by saying, "After all, the only
result of my depraved life will be that I shall never see God. Further
than this I shall have neither reward nor punishment." Oh, no; we
are all destined to one or the other either to reign eternally with
God in Heaven or to burn forever with the devils in Hell!
This happiness
and misery, either of which must inevitably be our portion, are
represented by the two baskets of figs which Jeremias saw in the vision,
one containing "very good figs, like the figs of the first season,
and the other basket very bad figs, which could not be eaten." (Jer.
24:1-2). God willed thus to represent to His prophet the two classes of
souls, one of which forms the object of His mercy, and the other of His
justice. The happiness of the first is unequaled, and the misery of the
second is also incomparable; for the just enjoy the perpetual vision of
God, which is the greatest of all blessings, while the wicked are
forever deprived of this vision, and thereby suffer the greatest of all
evils.
If men who sin
so rashly would weigh this truth, they would know the terrible burden
that they lay upon themselves. Those who earn their living by carrying
burdens first estimate the weight they are to bear, that they may know
whether it is beyond their strength. Why, then, O rash man, will you
or a passing pleasure so lightly assume the terrible burden of sin,
without considering your strength to bear it? Will you not reflect on
the heavy weight you thus condemn yourself to bear for all eternity? To
help you do this I shall offer you a few considerations which will
enable you to realize in some measure the greatness of the punishment
reserved for sin.
Let us first
reflect on the almighty power of God, whose justice will chastise the
sinner. God's greatness is apparent in all His works. He is God, not
only in Heaven, earth, and sea, but in Hell and in every other place. He
is God in His wrath and in the justice with which He avenges the
outrages offered to His divine majesty. Therefore, He Himself exclaims
by the mouth of His prophet, "Will you not then fear me, and will
you not repent at my presence? I have set the sand a bound for the sea,
an everlasting ordinance, which it shall not pass over; and the waves
thereof shall toss themselves, and shall not prevail: they shall swell,
and shall not pass over it." (Jer. 5:22).
In other words,
will you not fear the almighty power of that Arm which controls the
elements, which sustains the universe, and which no power can resist? If
the works of His mercy excite us to love and praise Him, we have no less
reason to fear the greatness of His justice. Hence the prophet Jeremias,
though innocent, and even sanctified in his mother's womb, was deeply
penetrated with this salutary fear. "Who," he cries out,
"shall not fear thee, O king of nations?" (Jer. 10:7).
And again: "I sat alone, because thou hast filled me with
threats." (Jer. 15:17). Doubtless the prophet knew that
these threats were not uttered against him; yet they filled him with
terror. The pillars of Heaven, we are told, tremble before the majesty
of God, and the powers and principalities prostrate themselves in awe
before His throne. If these pure spirits, confirmed in bliss, and in no
manner doubting of their happiness, but only through admiration of the
Divine Perfections, tremble before His power, what should be the terror
of the sinner who has made himself the object of His wrath? It is the
power of our Sovereign Judge which is most appalling in the punishment
of sin. Speaking of God's punishments, St. John says, "Babylon's
plagues shall come in one day, death, and mourning, and famine, and she
shall be burnt with fire, because God is strong, who shall judge
her." (Apoc. 18:8). The great Apostle, filled with awe of
this power, exclaims, "It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands
of the living God." (Heb. 10:31).
We have not
such reason to fear the hands of men, from whom we can escape, and who
at least cannot thrust the soul into Hell. Hence Our Saviour tells His
disciples, "And fear ye not them that kill the body and are not
able to kill the soul. But rather fear him who can destroy both soul and
body in Hell." (Matt. 10:28). The author of Ecclesiasticus,
impressed with the might of this power, thus warns us: "Unless we
do penance we shall fall into the hands of the Lord, and not into the
hands of men." (Ecclus. 2:22). This united testimony proves,
as we have said, that as God is great in His mercy and rewards, so will
He be great in His justice and punishments.
This truth is
still more apparent in the terrible chastisements inflicted by God which
are related in Scripture. Witness the punishment of Dathan and Abiron,
who, with all their accomplices, were swallowed alive into the earth and
thrust into the depths of Hell for rebelling against their superiors.
Who can read unmoved the threats against transgressors recorded in
Deuteronomy? Among others equally terrible, here is one which the sacred
writer puts into the mouth of God: "Thou shalt serve thy enemy,
whom the Lord will send upon thee, in hunger, and thirst, and nakedness,
and in want of all things: and he shall put an iron yoke upon thy neck
till he consume thee
And thou shalt eat the fruit of thy womb, and
the flesh of thy sons and of thy daughters, which the Lord thy God shall
give thee, in the distress and extremity wherewith thy enemy shall
oppress thee." (Deut. 28:48, 53).
We can scarcely
imagine punishments more dreadful than these; yet they, as well as all
the sufferings of this life, are but a shadow when compared to the
terrible torments of the life to come. If His justice be so rigorous in
this world, though always tempered by His love, what will it be in
eternity when exercised without mercy? For the sinner who has despised
God's mercies in this life will feel only the effects con of His justice
in the life to come.
Another
consideration which may help us to appreciate the rigor of these
sufferings is the greatness of the mercy of which the sinner has
despised. What is there more astonishing than that mercy which caused
God to clothe Himself in human flesh, to endure innumerable sufferings
and humiliations, to take upon Himself the transgressions of the world,
and for these transgressions to expire as a malefactor on an infamous
gibbet? God is infinite in all His attributes; and, therefore, the
justice with which He will punish man will equal the boundless mercy
with which He redeemed him.
When God first
came upon earth there was nothing in us to excite His mercy; but at His
second coming our every sin will be an additional reason for Him to
exercise His justice. Judge, therefore, how terrible it will be.
"At His second coming," says St. Bernard, "God will be as
inflexible and as rigorous in punishing as at His first coming He was
patient and merciful in forgiving. There is now no sinner living who is
cut off from His reconciliation; but in the day of His justice none will
be received." These words of St. Bernard are confirmed by the royal
prophet,. who tells us, "Our God is the God of salvation: and of
the Lord, of the Lord are the issues from death. But God shall break the
heads of his enemies: the hairy crown of them that walk on in their
sins." (Ps. 67:21-22). Behold, then, how great is God's
mercy to those who are converted to Him, and how great is the rigor with
which He punishes obdurate sinners.
The same truth
is manifested by God's patience with the world, and with the vices and
disorders of every sinner in particular. How many there are who, from
the age of reason to the end of their lives, continually offend Him and
despise His law, regardless of His promises, His benefits, His warnings,
or His menaces! Yet God does not cut them off, but continues to bear
with them, unceasingly exhorting them to repentance. But when the term
of His patience will come, and His wrath, which has been accumulating in
the bosom of His justice, will burst its bounds, with what terrible
violence it will be poured out upon them! "Knowest thou not,"
says the Apostle, "that the benignity of God leadeth thee to
penance? But according to thy hardness and impenitent heart, thou
treasurest up to thyself wrath, against the day of wrath, and revelation
of the just judgment of God, who will render to every man according to
his works." (Rom. 2:4-6).
The meaning of
these words is not difficult. A treasure of wrath is a terrible
figure. Just as the miser adds coin to coin, riches to riches, so the
wrath of God is daily and even hourly increased by the transgressions of
the sinner. Were a man to let no day or hour pass without adding to his
material fortune, consider what an immense amount he would have
accumulated at the end of fifty or sixty years. Alas, then, for thee,
unhappy sinner, for there is hardly an hour in which thou dost not add
to the treasures of God's wrath which thy sins are accumulating against
thee. Thy immodest glances, the evil desires of thy corrupt heart, and
thy scandalous words and blasphemies would alone suffice to fill a
world. If to these are added the many other grievous crimes of which
thou hast been guilty, consider the treasure of vengeance and wrath
which a long life of sin will heap up against thee.
If to the
considerations already given we add a brief reflection on the gratitude
of men, it will help us realize, in some measure, the severity of the
punishment inflicted upon the sinner. Contemplate God's goodness to men;
the benefits He has heaped upon them; the means He has given them to
practice virtue; the iniquities He has forgiven them; the evils from
which He has delivered them. Consider, moreover, the ingratitude of men
for all these blessings; their many treasons and rebellions against God;
their contempt of His laws, which they trample underfoot for a paltry
interest, and often through malice or mere caprice. What, then, can he
expect who has thus outraged God's mercy, who, in the words of the
Apostle, has "trodden under foot the Son of God, and hath esteemed
the blood of the testament unclean, by which he was sanctified?" (Heb.
10:29). God is a just Judge, and their punishment will be proportioned
to their crimes. Remember the majesty of Him who has been offended, and
consider the sufferings of that body and soul which must offer
satisfaction for such an outrage. If the Blood of Christ were needed to
make reparation for man's offences, the dignity of the Victim supplying
what was lacking in the severity of His sufferings, how terrible will be
those sufferings which sinners must endure, and which must supply by
their vigor what is wanting in the merit of the victim!
If the thought
of the Judge impress us so deeply, what ought to be our feelings when we
consider who it is that will be the executioner! The executioner will be
the devil. What, then, may we not expect from the malice of such an
enemy? If we would form some idea of his cruelty, consider his treatment
of the holy man Job, whom God delivered into his hands. He destroyed his
flocks; laid waste his lands; overthrew his houses; carried off his
children by death; made his body a mass of ulcers, and left him no other
refuge but a dunghill and a potsherd to scrape his sores. In addition to
his suffering he left him a scolding wife and cruel friends, who reviled
him with words which tortured him more keenly than the worms which
preyed upon his flesh. Thus was Job afflicted by Satan, but it is
impossible to describe in human language Satan's treatment of our
Blessed Saviour during the night in which He was the victim of the
powers of darkness.
Seeing, then,
how cruel are the devil and his angels, will you not tremble with horror
at the thought of being delivered into their hands? They will have power
to execute upon you the most terrible inventions of their malice, not
for a day, or a night, or a year only, but for all eternity. Read the
appalling picture of these evil spirits given by St. John: "I saw a
star," says the Apostle, "fall from heaven upon the earth, and
there was given to him the key of the bottomless pit. And he opened the
bottomless pit; and the smoke of the pit arose as the smoke of a great
furnace; and the sun and the air were darkened with the smoke of the
pit. And from the smoke of the pit there came out locusts upon the
earth. And power was given to them, as the scorpions of the earth have
power. And it was commanded them that they should not hurt the grass of
the earth, nor any green thing, nor any tree, but only the men who have
not the seal of God on their foreheads. And it was given to them that
they should not kill them, but that they should torment them five
months: and their torment was as the torment of a scorpion when he
striketh a man. And in those days men shall seek death, and shall not
find it; and they shall desire to die, and death shall fly from them.
And the shapes of the locusts to were like unto horses prepared unto
battle; and on their heads were, as it were, crowns like gold; and their
faces were as the faces of men. And they had hair as the hair of women,
and their teeth were as the teeth of lions; and they had breastplates as
breastplates of iron, and the noise of their wings was as the sound of
chariots of many horses running to battle. And they had tails like to
scorpions, and there were stings in their tails." (Apoc.
9:1-10).
Does not the
Holy Ghost design to teach us by these terrible figures the fearful
effects of God's justice, the awful instruments of His wrath, and the
appalling tortures of the reprobate? Does He not wish that the fear of
these evils should save us from the lot of the sinner? What is that star
which fell from Heaven, and received the key of the bottomless pit, but
that bright angel who was precipitated from Heaven to reign forever in
Hell? Do not the locusts, so well equipped for battle, represent the
ministers of Satan? And are not the green things which they were
commanded to spare, the just who flourish under the dew of God's grace
and bring forth fruits of eternal life? Who are they who have not the
seal of God upon their foreheads but men who have not His Spirit, which
is the mark and seal of His faithful servants? It is against these
unhappy souls that the ministers of God's vengeance will work.
Yes, they will
be tormented in this life and in the next by the devils whom they willed
to serve, just as the Egyptians were tormented by the various living
creatures which they had adored. What terrible pictures are given us in
Scripture of the monsters of this eternal abyss! What can be conceived
more horrible than the behemoth, "that setteth up his tail like a
cedar, whose bones are like pipes of brass, who drinketh up rivers and
devoureth mountains?" (Job 40:10-19).
The
considerations already given are certainly sufficient to inspire us with
a horror of sin; but to strengthen this salutary fear let us reflect
upon the duration of these terrible torments. Try to realize what a
comfort it would be to the damned if at the end of millions of years
they could look forward to any term or alleviation of their sufferings.
But no; their suffering shall be eternal; they shall continue as long as
God shall be God. If one of these unhappy souls, says a Doctor of the
Church, were to shed one tear every thousand years, and if these tears
accumulated to such a flood as to inundate the world, he would still be
as far as ever from the end of his sufferings. Eternity would only be at
its beginning. Is there anything worthy of our fears but this terrible
fate? Truly, were the pain of Hell no more than the prick of a pin, yet
if it must continue forever there is no suffering in this world which
man should not endure to avoid it.
Oh! That this
eternity, this terrible forever, were deeply graven in our
hearts! We are told that a worldly man, giving himself to serious
reflection upon eternity, made use of this simple reasoning: There is no
sensible man who would accept the empire of the world at the expense of
thirty or forty years spent upon a bed, even were it a bed of roses. How
great, then, is the folly of him who, for much smaller interests, incurs
the risk of being condemned to lie upon a bed of fire for all eternity!
This thought wrought such a change in his life that he became a great
saint and most worthy prelate of the Church.
What
consideration will be given to this by the soft and effeminate, who
complain so much if the buzzing of a mosquito disturbs their night's
repose? What will they say when they will find themselves stretched upon
a bed of fire, surrounded by sulphurous flames, not for one short summer
night, but for all eternity? To such the prophet addresses himself when
he says, "Which of you can dwell with devouring fire? Which of you
shall dwell with everlasting burnings?" (Is. 33:14). O
senseless man! Will you continue to allow yourself to be deceived by the
arch-enemy of your soul? How can you be so diligent in providing for
your temporal welfare, and yet be so careless of your eternal interests?
If you were
penetrated with these reflections, what obstacle could turn you from the
practice of virtue? Difficult as it may appear, is there any sacrifice
you would refuse to escape these eternal torments? Were God to allow a
man to choose whether he would be tormented while on earth with a gout
or toothache which would never allow him a moment's repose, or embrace
the life of a Carthusian or a Carmelite, do you think there is anyone
who would not, purely from a motive of self-love, choose the state of a
religious rather than endure this continual suffering? Yet there is no
pain in this life which can be compared to the pains of Hell, either in
intensity or in duration. Why, then, will we not accept the labor God
asks of us, which is so much less than the austerities of a Carthusian
or a Carmelite? Why will we refuse the restraint of His law, which will
save us from such suffering?
What will add
most keenly to the sufferings of the damned will be the knowledge that
by a short penance and self-denial upon earth they might have averted
these terrible pains which they must fruitlessly endure for all
eternity. We see a figure of this awful truth in the furnace which
Nabuchodonosor caused to be built in Babylon (Dan. 3), the flames
of which mounted forty-nine cubits, but could never reach fifty, the
number of the year of jubilee, or general pardon. In like manner the
eternal flame of this Babylon, though it burns so fiercely, filling its
unhappy victims with pain and anguish, will never reach the point of
mercy, will never obtain for them the grace of pardon of the heavenly
jubilee.
Oh!
Unprofitable pains! Oh! Fruitless tears! Oh! Rigorous and hopeless
penance! If borne in this life, the smallest portion of them might have
saved the sinner from everlasting misery. Mindful of all these, send
forth your tears and sighs, remembering the prophet who "lamented
and howled, who went stripped and naked, making a wailing like the
dragons, and a mourning like the ostriches, because her wound was
desperate." (Micheas 1:8-9).
If men were
ignorant of these truths, if they had not received them as infallible,
their negligence and indifference would not be so astonishing. But have
we not reason to wonder, since men have received them on the word of Him
who has said, "Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall
not pass away"? (Lk. 21:33). Yet behold in what
forgetfulness of their duty and their God they continue to live.
Tell me, blind
soul, what pleasure you find in the riches and honors of this world
which is a compensation for the eternal fire of Hell. "If you
possessed the wisdom of Solomon," says St. Jerome, "the beauty
of Absalom, the strength of Samson, the longevity of Henoch, the riches
of Croesus, the power of Caesar, what will all these avail you at death,
if your body becomes the prey of worms, and your soul, like the rich
glutton's, the sport of demons for all eternity?"
CHAPTER 11
The Eleventh
Motive for practicing Virtue:
The Inestimable
Advantages promised it even in this Life
With such
powerful reasons for embracing virtue, I know not what excuse men can
make for refusing to practice it. That pagans, who are ignorant of its
value, do not prize it is not astonishing. A peasant digging in the
earth and finding a precious stone will probably throw it away, because
he does not know its worth. But that Christians, who have been taught
the value and beauty of virtue, continue to live in forgetfulness of God
and wedded to the things of this world, as if there were no such thing
as death or judgment, or Heaven or Hell, is a continual subject of
sorrowful wonder. Whence this blindness, whence this folly?
It has several
causes, the principal of which is the mistaken opinion of the generality
of men, who believe that no advantages are to be reaped from virtue in
this life, that its rewards are reserved for the life to come.
Men are so
powerfully moved by self-interest, and present objects make such an
impression upon them, that they think very little of future rewards and
seek only their immediate satisfaction. The same was true even in the
days of the prophets; for when Ezechiel made any promise or uttered any
threat in the name of the Lord, people laughed at him and said to one
another, "The vision that this man seeth is for many days to come;
and this man prophesieth of times afar off." (Ezech. 12:27).
In like manner did they ridicule the prophet Isaias: "Command,
command again, command, command again; expect, expect again, expect,
expect again." (Is. 28:10). Solomon teaches us the same when
he says, "Because sentence is not speedily pronounced against the
evil, the children of men commit evils without any fear
Because all
things equally happen to the just and the wicked
to him that
offereth victims and to him that despiseth sacrifices
the hearts of
the children of men are filled with evil, and with contempt while they
live, and afterwards they shall be brought down to hell." (Eccles.
8:11; 9:2-3).
Yes, because
the wicked seem to prosper in the world they conclude that they are
safe, and that the labor of virtue is all in vain. This they openly
confess by the mouth of the prophet Malachias, saying, "He laboreth
in vain that serveth God; and what profit is it that we have kept His
ordinances, and that we have walked sorrowful before the Lord of hosts?
Wherefore now we call the proud people happy, for they that work
wickedness are built up, and they have tempted God and are
preserved." (Mal. 3:14-15). This is the language of the
reprobate, and is the most powerful motive which impels them to continue
in sin; for, in the words of St. Ambrose, "They find it too
difficult to buy hopes at the cost of dangers, to sacrifice present
pleasures to future blessings." To destroy this serious error I
know nothing better than the touching words of Our Saviour weeping over
Jerusalem: "If thou also hadst known, and that in this thy day, the
things that are for thy peace; but now they are hidden from thy
eyes." (Lk. 19:42).
Our Divine Lord
considered the advantages which this people had received from Him; the
happiness He had reserved for them; and the ingratitude with which they
rejected Him when He came to them in meekness and humility. For this
they were to lose not only the treasures and graces of His coming, but
even their temporal power and freedom. This it was which caused Him to
shed such bitter tears and to foretell the unhappy fate that was in
store for His people. His words apply with great force to our present
subject.
Consider the
inestimable riches, the abundant graces, which accompany virtue; yet it
is a stranger, a wanderer on earth. Men seem to be blind to these divine
blessings. Have we not, therefore, reason to weep and to cry out, O
man, if thou also hadst known? If thou hadst known the peace, the
light, the strength, the sweetness, and the riches of virtue, thou
wouldst have opened thy heart to it, thou wouldst have spared no
sacrifice to win it. But these blessings are hidden from worldlings, who
regard only the humble exterior of virtue, and, having never experienced
its unutterable sweetness, they conclude that it contains nothing but
what is sad and repulsive.
They know not
that Christian philosophy is like its Divine Founder, who, though
exteriorly the humblest of men, was nevertheless God and sovereign Lord
of all things. Hence the Apostle tells the faithful that they are dead
to the world, that their "life is hid with Christ in God." (Col.
3:3). Just as the glory of Christ was hidden by the veil of His
humanity, so should the glory of His faithful followers be concealed in
this world. We read that the ancients made certain images, called
Silenes, which were rough and coarse exteriorly, but most curiously and
ingeniously wrought within. The ignorant stopped at the exterior and saw
nothing to prize, but those who understood their construction looked
within and were captivated by the beauty they there beheld. Such have
been the lives of the prophets, the Apostles, and all true Christians,
for such was the life of their Divine Model.
If you still
tell me that the path of virtue is rugged, that its duties are
difficult, I beg you to consider the abundant and powerful aids which
God gives you. Such are the infused virtues, interior graces, the gifts
of the Holy Ghost, the sacraments of the New Law, with other divine
favors, which are to us like sails to a ship, or wings to a bird, to
help us on our voyage to eternity. Reflect upon the very name and nature
of virtue. It is a noble habit, which, like all other habits, ought to
make us act with facility and pleasure. Remember also that Christ has
promised His followers not only the riches of glory, but those of grace:
the former for the life to come, the latter for this present life.
"The Lord," says the prophet, "will give grace and
glory." (Ps. 83:12). The treasures of grace are for this
life, and the riches of glory are for the next.
Consider
further with what care God provides for the necessities of all
creatures. How generously He supplies even the smallest creatures with
all that is necessary to the end for which they were created! Is it not
unreasonable then, to think that He will disregard the necessities of
man, the most important of which is virtue, and leave him a prey to his
weak will, his darkened understanding, and his corrupt nature? The world
and the prince of darkness are most assiduous in procuring vain
pleasures and joys for those who serve them. Can you doubt, then, that
God will grant refreshment, light, and peace to His faithful in the
midst of the labors performed for Him? What did God wish to teach us by
the words of the prophet: "You shall return, and shall see the
difference between the just and the wicked, and between him that serveth
God and him that serveth him not." (Mal. 3:18). Was it not
that if we would be converted we would see and know, even in this life,
the rewards of the good, "the difference between the just and the
wicked"? We would behold the contrast between the true riches of
the just and the poverty of the wicked; between the joy of the former
and the misery of the latter; between the peace of the one and the
conflicts of the other; between the light with which the good are
surrounded and the darkness by which the wicked are enveloped.
Experience will show you the real value of virtue and how far it exceeds
your former anticipations.
Upon another
occasion God replied in like manner to men who, having been deceived by
appearances, ridiculed the virtuous, saying, "Let the Lord be
glorified, and we shall see in your joy." (Is. 66:5). After
depicting the torments which God's justice prepares for the wicked,
Isaias thus describes the happiness reserved for the just: "Rejoice
with Jerusalem, and be glad with her, all ye that love her. Rejoice for
joy with her, all you that mourn for her. That you may suck, and be
filled with the breasts of her consolation; that you may milk out, and
flow with delights, from the abundance of her glory. For thus saith the
Lord: Behold I will bring upon her as it were a river of peace, and as
an overflowing torrent, the glory of the Gentiles, which you shall suck;
you shall be carried at the breasts, and upon the knees they shall
caress you. As one whom the mother caresseth, so will I comfort you, and
you shall be comforted in Jerusalem. And you shall see, and your heart
shall rejoice, and your bones shall flourish like an herb, and the hand
of the Lord shall be known to his servants
" (Is.
66:10-14). Yes, "the hand of the Lord shall be known to his
servants"; for as men by the beauties and wonders of the universe
judge of the infinite beauty and omnipotence of God, so shall the just
recognize the infinite love and goodness of God in the incomparable joys
and favors which He will bestow upon them.
As a further
proof of what has been said, I will add the remarkable words uttered by
Our Saviour when St. Peter asked what reward they would have for leaving
all things for love of Him: "Amen I say to you, there is no man who
hath left house, or brethren, or sisters, or father, or mother, or
children, or lands for my sake and for the gospel, who shall not receive
a hundred times as much, now in this time
and in the world to come
life everlasting." (Mk. 10:29-30). Mark how explicitly the
rewards of this life and the next are distinguished. Nor can we doubt
these words, for they are those of Him who has said, "Heaven and
earth shall pass away,' but my words shall not pass away."
And what is
this hundredfold which the just receive in this life? Honors, riches,
titles, and dignities are not their portion; the greater number of the
just lead hidden, obscure lives, forgotten by the world and overwhelmed
with infirmities. How, then, does God fulfill His infallible promise to
give them a hundredfold even in this life? Ah! It is not with the
perishable goods of this world that He will reward His servants.
Joy and peace
and happiness are the spiritual treasures with which the liberality of
our God enriches those who love Him. These are the blessings which the
world does not know, and which the wealth of the world can never buy.
And how fitting this is; for as man does not live by bread alone, so the
craving of his soul cannot be satisfied by anything short of spiritual
blessings.
Study the lives
of the saints, and you will see that they have received the hundredfold
promised in this life. In exchange for the false riches which they
forsook, they received true riches which they can bear with them to
eternity. For the turmoil and conflicts of the world, they received that
"peace which surpasseth all understanding." Their tears, their
fasting, and their prayers brought them more joy and consolation than
they could ever hope to obtain from the fleeting pleasures of this life.
If, then, you
have forsaken an earthly father for love of God, your Heavenly Father
will receive you as His child, and make you His heir to an everlasting
inheritance. If you have despised earthly pleasures for love of Him, He
will fill you with the incomparable sweetness of heavenly consolations.
The eyes of your soul will be opened, and you will love and cherish what
formerly frightened you. What was The formerly bitter will become sweet;
and, enlightened by grace, you will see the emptiness of worldly joys,
and you will learn to relish the delights of God's love. Thus does He
manifest His merciful goodness; thus does He fulfill His promise to us.
The annals of
the Cistercian Order mention an incident which, in connection with our
subject, is worth recording. Arnulph, a man of prominence in Flanders,
who was strongly wedded to the things of this world, was converted by
the preaching of St. Bernard. He was so touched by grace that he became
a Cistercian monk. On a certain occasion he fell dangerously sick and
remained unconscious for some time. The monks, believing him to be
dying, administered Extreme Unction. But soon after, his consciousness
returned, and he broke out into transports of praise, frequently
repeating, "How true are Thy words, O merciful Jesus!" To the
questions of his brethren he continued to repeat, "How true are Thy
words, O merciful Jesus!" Some of them remarked that pain had made
him delirious. "No, my brethren," he exclaimed; "I am
conscious, I am in full possession of my senses, and again I assure you
that all the words Jesus has uttered are true."
"But we do
not doubt this," said the monks; "why do you repeat it so
often?"
"God tells
us in the Gospel," he answered, "that he who forsakes earthly
affections for love of Him shall receive a hundredfold in this world,
and in the world to come, life everlasting, and I have already
experienced the truth of His promise. Great as my present pains are, I
would not exchange them, with the anticipation of heavenly sweetness
which they have procured me, for a hundred or a thousand fold of the
pleasures I forsook in the world. If a guilty sinner like me receives
such sweetness and consolation in the midst of his pains, what must be
the joys of perfect souls?" The monks marveled to hear a man of no
learning speak so wisely, but recognized in his words the inspiration of
the Holy Spirit.
Therefore, we
must conclude that the just, though deprived of earthly blessings, enjoy
the rewards promised to virtue in this life. To convince you more fully
of this we shall treat in the following chapters of the twelve
privileges attached to virtue in this world. Taken as a whole, they are
the twelfth motive for practicing virtue. We shall treat of each,
however, in a separate chapter. Though some experience in the practice
of virtue is necessary to comprehend what we are about to say, yet the
want of it may be supplied by our faith in the Holy Scriptures, which
firmly establish the doctrine we are teaching.
CHAPTER 12
The First
Privilege of Virtue: God's fatherly Care of the Just
The greatest
privilege attached to virtue is the care which God exercises over those
who serve Him. From this, as from a fountainhead, flow all other favors.
Though God's providence is extended to all His creatures, yet He
manifests a special care for His faithful servants. To appreciate the
greatness and goodness of God's providence we must have experienced it,
or attentively studied the Holy Scriptures, which, from the beginning to
the end, treat either directly or indirectly of God's care for His
creatures.
Throughout the
Bible we behold two characteristic features: on the one hand God
commanding man to obey Him, and on the other promising him, in return
for this obedience, inestimable rewards. To those who disobey, He
threatens the severest torments. This doctrine is so distributed through
the Bible that all the moral books contain God's commands and promises
and threats, while the historical books record the fulfillment of the
same, manifesting how differently God deals with the just and with the
wicked. All that God commands us is to love and obey Him, and in return
He offers us inestimable blessings for this life and the next.
The most
important of these blessings is the fatherly love and care with which He
watches over His children. His solicitude for them exceeds that of any
earthly father. What man ever reserved for his children an inheritance
comparable to that of eternal glory? What man ever suffered for his
children the torments endured by Our Saviour? At no less a price than
the last drop of His Blood He purchased the Kingdom of Heaven. What can
equal His constant care for us? We are ever present to His mind, and He
constantly helps and supports us in all the labors of life. "Thou
hast upheld me by reason of my innocence," says David, "and
hast established me in thy sight forever." (Ps. 40:13). And
again: "The eyes of the Lord are upon the just, and his ears unto
their prayers. But the countenance of the Lord is against them that do
evil things: to cut off the remembrance of them from the earth." (Ps.
33:16-17).
As the greatest
reward of the Christian in this life is God's fatherly care, and as our
joy and confidence must increase in proportion to our faith in this
providence, we shall add here a few passages from Scripture in proof of
this doctrine. In Ecclesiasticus we read, "The eyes of the
Lord are upon them that fear him; he is their powerful protector, and
strong stay, a defence from the heat, and a cover from the sun at noon;
a preservation from stumbling, and a help from falling; he raiseth up
the soul, and enlighteneth the eyes, and giveth health, life, and
blessing." (Ecclus. 34:19-20).
"With the
Lord," says the prophet, "shall the steps of a man be
directed, and he shall like well his way. When he shall fall he shall
not be bruised, for the Lord putteth his hand under him." (Ps.
36:23-24). And he says again: "Many are the afflictions of the
just, but out of them all will the Lord deliver them. The Lord keepeth
all their bones; not one of them shall be broken." (Ps.
33:20-21). This providence is still more strongly set forth in the
Gospel, where Our Saviour affirms that not a hair of the just shall
perish. (Cf. Lk. 21:18). Even stronger is His assurance expressed
by the mouth of His prophet: "He that toucheth you toucheth the
apple of my eye." (Zach. 2:8).
Besides this
care which He Himself has for us, "He hath given his angels charge
over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways. In their hands they shall bear
thee up, lest thou dash thy foot against a stone." (Ps.
90:11-12). Thus the mission of these pure spirits is to help the just,
who are their younger brethren, to walk in the way of piety. Nor does
their ministry cease at death, for we read in St. Luke that the holy
beggar Lazarus was carried by angels into Abraham's bosom. (Cf. Lk.
16:22). The royal prophet tells us that "the angel of the Lord
shall encamp round about them that fear him, and shall deliver
them." (Ps. 33:8).
We find another
illustration of God's guardianship and defence of the just in the Fourth
Book of Kings (4Kg. 6), where we are told that when the servant
of Eliseus feared for his master, against whom the King of Syria with
all his army advanced, the prophet begged the Lord to open the eyes of
his servant, to show him that there were as many for Eliseus as there
were coming against him. The prophet's prayer was heard, and the
servants beheld the mountain full of horses and chariots of fire, and in
the midst of them Eliseus. Does not the Holy Spirit will to teach us by
these symbols the care with which God surrounds the just?
This protection
not only delivers the just from evil and leads them to good, but turns
to their profit the sins into which they are sometimes permitted to
fall. For after a fall they acquire greater prudence, greater humility,
and love God more tenderly for pardoning their offences and delivering
them from their evils. Hence the Apostle tells us, "All things work
together unto good" to them that love God. (Rom. 8:28).
And this
protection God extends to the children of the just and to all their
posterity, as He Himself assures us, saying, "I am the Lord thy
God, mighty, jealous, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the
children, unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me; and
showing mercy unto thousands to them that love me and keep my
commandments." (Ex. 20:5-6). His words are verified in His
treatment of the house of David, for whose sake He would not destroy his
posterity, though they several times merited it by their crimes.
No less
striking was His mercy to the children of Abraham, for whose sake He
repeatedly pardoned them. He even promised that Ismael, Abraham's son,
though born of a bondwoman, should "increase and multiply
exceedingly," and grow into a great nation. (Gen. 17:20). He
protected even the holy patriarch's servant, whom He guided in his
journey and instructed in the means he should adopt to procure a wife
for Isaac. He is not only merciful to servants for the sake of a good
master, but He even blesses wicked masters because of just servants, as
we see in the history of Joseph, whose master God visited with
prosperity because of the virtuous youth who abode in his house. Who,
then, would not be devoted to so generous, so grateful a Master, who
watches so carefully over the interest of His servants?
Numerous are
the titles which the Holy Scriptures use to express God's providence.
The one most frequently recurring is the sweet name of Father, which we
find not only in the Gospel but also throughout the Old Testament. Thus
the Psalmist says, "As a father hath compassion on his children, so
hath the Lord compassion on them that fear him; for he knoweth our
frame, he remembereth that we are dust." (Ps. 102: 13-14).
But because the
love of a mother is deeper and more tender than that of a father, God
makes use of it to express His care and solicitude for the just.
"Can a woman," He says by the mouth of His prophet,
"forget her infant, so as not to have pity on the son of her womb?
And if she should forget, yet will not I forget thee. Behold, I have
graven thee in my hands; thy walls are always before my eyes." (Is.
49:15-16). What sweeter or more tender assurances of love could God
express?
And shall we
continue blind to so many proofs of His tenderness? And not content with
illustrating His love for us by that of a mother, He compares His
watchfulness to that of the eagle, a creature noted for its devotion to
its young, saying by Moses, "As the eagle enticing her young to
fly, and hovering over them, he spread his wings, and hath taken him and
carried him on his shoulders." (Deut. 32:11 ). Even more
forcibly did Moses express the paternal goodness of God when he told the
Israelites, "The Lord thy God hath carried thee, as a man is wont
to carry his little son, all the way that you have come, until you came
to this place." (Deut. 1:31 ).
As our Father,
God does not disdain to call us His children, His cherished children, as
the prophet Jeremias attests when, speaking in the name of God, he says,
"Surely Ephraim is an honorable son to me, surely he is a tender
child; for since I spoke of him, I will still remember him. Therefore
are my bowels troubled for him; pitying I will pity him." (Jer.
31:20). Let us ponder these words, which are uttered by God Himself,
that they may inflame our hearts and move us to make some return for His
affectionate tenderness to us.
It is an
illustration of this same providence that God assumes the title of
Shepherd. "I am the good shepherd," He tells us; "and I
know mine, and mine know me." (Jn. 10:14). How dost Thou
know them, O Lord? "As the Father knoweth me, and I know the
Father." (Jn. 10:15). Oh! Blessed care! Oh! Sovereign
providence! What happiness is comparable to this?
Hear the
prophet Ezechiel, speaking in the person of God, and beautifully
describing His loving watchfulness over us: "Behold I myself will
seek my sheep, and will visit them. As the shepherd visiteth his flock
in the day when he shall be in the midst of his sheep that were
scattered, so will I visit my sheep, and will deliver them out of all
places where they have been scattered in the cloudy and dark day. And I
will bring them out from the peoples, and will gather them out of the
countries, and will bring them to their own land; and I will feed them
in the mountains of Israel, by the rivers, and in all the habitations of
the land. I will feed them in the most fruitful pastures, and their
pastures shall be in the high mountains of Israel. There shall they rest
on the green grass, and be fed in fat pastures upon the mountains of
Israel. I will feed my sheep; and I will cause them to lie down, saith
the Lord God. I will seek that which was lost, and that which was driven
away I will bring again; and I will bind up that which was broken, and I
will strengthen that which was weak, and that which was fat and strong I
will preserve; and I will feed them in judgment" (Ezech.
34:11-17) that is, with great care and tenderness.
"I will
make a covenant of peace with them," the prophet continues,
"and will cause the evil beasts to cease out of the land; and they
that dwell in the wilderness shall sleep secure in the forests. And I
will make them a blessing round about my hill; and I will send down the
rain in its season. There shall be showers of blessing." (Ezech.
34: 25-26). In what stronger terms could God express the tenderness of
His love? It is needless to say that the flock mentioned represents the
just, and the fat lands and pastures the spiritual riches and treasures
with which God surrounds them. The Holy Spirit makes use of the same
touching figure again in the Twenty-second Psalm, where the different
offices of a shepherd are portrayed.
God is our
Shepherd, because He guides us; He is also our King, because He protects
us; our Master, because He instructs us; our Physician, because He heals
us; and our Guardian, because He watches over us. Holy Scripture is full
of these names. But the tenderest of all, the one which best expresses
His love, is that of Spouse, which occurs most frequently in the
Canticles of Canticles, though mentioned many times in other parts of
the Scriptures. With this name would He have even sinners invoke Him:
"From this time call to me: Thou art my father, the guide of my
virginity." (Jer. 3:4).
But why seek in
Scripture various names? Cannot every name expressive of good be applied
to Our Saviour? Does not he who seeks and loves Him find in Him the
fulfillment of all his desires? Hence, St. Ambrose says, "We
possess all things in Christ, or rather Christ is all things to us. If
you would be healed of your wounds, He is a Physician; if you thirst, He
is a living Fountain; if you fear death, He is your Life; if you are
weary of the burden of sin, He is your Justification; if you hate
darkness, He is uncreated Light; if you would reach Heaven, He is the
Way; if you hunger, He is your Food." (De Virg. L.3). Behold
how numerous are the titles which represent this one and indivisible
God, who is all things to us for the healing of our innumerable
infirmities.
We have
selected a few of the passages of Scripture bearing on our subject, to
comfort the just and to win and encourage souls who have not yet begun
to serve God. These consoling truths will support them in labor; will
reassure them in danger; will comfort them m tribulation; will inflame
them with love for so good a Master, and impel them to give themselves
wholly to the service of Him who gives Himself so completely to them.
Thus we see that the principal foundation of the Christian life is the
practical knowledge of this truth.
What are all
the promises of the world compared to the assurance and hopes contained
in these blessed titles? How much reason have they to rejoice who are
the objects of the love of which the Scriptures speak in such beautiful
terms! "Be glad in the Lord," says the prophet, "and
rejoice, ye just; and glory, all ye right of heart." (Ps.
31: 11). Yes, let others rejoice in honors, in riches, or in dignities;
but you who possess God for your portion enjoy an inheritance which
exceeds all other blessings as far as God exceeds all created things.
"They have called the people happy," says the psalmist,
"that hath these things; but happy is that people whose God is the
Lord." (Ps. 143:15).
Why, O prophet?
Because in possessing God all things are possessed. Therefore, though I
am a king and the ruler of a great nation, I will glory only in the
Lord. How, then, can men refuse to serve Him who is the Source of all
blessings? "What iniquity have your fathers found in me," God
asks by the mouth of His prophet, "that they are gone far from me,
and have walked after vanity, and are become vain? Am I become a
wilderness to Israel, or a lateward springing land?" (Jer.
2:5,31). If God complains so bitterly of the ingratitude of a people who
had received from Him but temporal favors, how much more reason has He
to reproach us, upon whom He has lavished so many spiritual and divine
blessings!
If unmoved by
the loving providence of God towards the just, at least be not
insensible to the rigor with which He punishes the wicked, to whom His
justice is meted out according to their own measure. For if they forget
their Creator, He will forget them. If they despise Him, He will despise
them. How miserable will their condition then be! They will be as a
school without a master, a ship without a rudder, a flock without a
shepherd. "I will not feed you," God says; "that which
dieth, let it die; and that which is cut off, let it be cut off. Let the
rest devour every one the flesh of his neighbor." (Zach.
11:9). "I will hide my face from them, and will consider what their
last end shall be." (Deut. 32:20).
The just
punishment inflicted by God on the wicked is still more plainly declared
in Isaias. The prophet speaks of his people under the figure of a vine
which has been carefully pruned and dressed, but has failed to bear
fruit. God, therefore, pronounces sentence against it: "I will show
you what I will do to my vineyard. I will take away the hedge thereof,
and it shall be wasted. I will break down the wall thereof, and it shall
be trodden down. And I will make it desolate; it shall not be pruned,
and it shall not be digged; but briers and thorns shall come up; and I
will command the clouds to rain no rain upon it." (Is.
5:5-6). That is, God will take from man all the efficacious help and
protection which he ungratefully refused, and will leave him to
inevitable ruin and destruction.
What greater
misfortune can befall a man than to be thus deprived of God's care in a
world beset with dangers? With what arms will a creature so frail,
helpless, and blind resist the attacks of the numerous enemies that
assail him? Where will he find strength to resist them? Who will
enlighten him, to enable him to avoid their snares? Without the divine
assistance, how can he avoid destruction?
But the
punishment of the wicked does not end here. God not only abandons them
to their weakness, but scourges them with His justice, so that the eyes
which hitherto watched for their happiness now look unmoved upon their
ruin. This God Himself tells us by the mouth of the prophet:
"I will
set my eyes upon them for evil, and not for good" (Amos 9:4)
that is, the providence which hitherto watched for their defence
will now work for vengeance on their crimes and disorders.
Even more
expressive is the language of Osee: "I will be like a moth to
Ephraim, and like rottenness to the house of Juda. I will be like a
lioness to Ephraim, and like a lion's whelp to the house of Juda: I, I
will catch, and go; I will take away, and there is none that can
rescue." (Osee 5:12,14). Here also the prophet Amos, who,
after telling us that God will put the wicked to the sword for their
sins of covetousness, thus continues: "They shall flee, and he that
shall flee of them shall not be delivered. Though they go down even to
hell, thence shall my hand bring them out; and though they climb up to
heaven, thence will I bring them down. And though they be hid in the top
of Carmel, I will search and take them away from there; and though they
hide themselves in the depth of the sea, there will I command the
serpent, and he shall bite them. And if they go into captivity before
their enemies, there will I command the sword, and it shall kill them.
And I will set my eyes upon them for evil, and not for good." (Amos
9:1-4).
Who can read
these words, remembering that they are uttered by God, and not tremble
at the misfortune of having an enemy so powerful and so relentless in
seeking his destruction? What rest or peace can he enjoy who knows that
God's eyes are upon him with wrath and indignation? If it be so great a
calamity to lose God's love, what must it be to have His providence
armed against you; to have turned against you that sword which was
formerly drawn in your defence; to have your destruction now viewed
without emotion by those eyes which formerly watched so solicitously for
your welfare; to have that arm which hitherto sustained you now
stretched forth to annihilate you; to have that Heart which in the time
of your goodness breathed but love and peace fox you now filled with
projects for your abasement; to have your shield and defence changed
into a moth to consume you, a roaring lion to devour you? Who can sleep
securely, knowing that God is over him like the rod of Jeremias to
chastise him? Who can thwart the designs of God? What power can resist
His arm? "Who hath resisted him," says Job, "and hath had
peace?" (Job 9:4).
Numerous are
the passages in Scripture in which God threatened the withdrawal of His
providence as one of the most terrible punishments which He could
inflict upon the sinner. "My people heard not my voice," He
says, "and Israel hearkened not to me. So I let them go according
to the desires of their heart. They shall walk in their own
inventions." (Ps. 80:12-13). Abandoned to the desires of
their corrupt hearts, they will proceed from disorder to disorder until
their ruin is accomplished. What, then, is man without God, but a garden
without a gardener, a ship without a pilot, a state without a ruler, an
army without a general, a body without a soul?
Behold, dear
Christian, how God's providence encompasses you. If you are not incited
to fidelity through gratitude for His paternal care, at least the fear
of abandonment by Him should impel you to serve Him. For many are moved
by threats and the fear of punishment, while they remain utterly
insensible to the hope of favor or reward.
CHAPTER 13
The Second
Privilege of Virtue:
The Grace with
which the Holy Spirit fills Devout Souls
God's fatherly
providence, of which we have just been treating, is the source of all
the favors and privileges which He bestows upon those who serve Him. For
it belongs to this providence to furnish man with all the means
necessary for his perfection and happiness.
The most
important of these means is the grace of the Holy Ghost, which in its
turn is the source of all other heavenly gifts. This is the garment with
which the good father in the parable ordered the prodigal to be clothed.
But, that we may have a clearer idea of it, let us see how theologians
define it. Divine grace, they tell us, is a participation of the divine
nature, that is, of God's sanctity, purity, and greatness, by virtue of
which man is despoiled of the baseness and corruption of his nature and
is clothed with the beauty and nobility of Jesus Christ.
Holy writers
illustrate this by a familiar example. A piece of iron, when taken out
of the fire, though it still continues to be iron, resembles the fire on
account of its heat and brightness. Grace acts in like manner. As a
divine quality it is infused into the soul, and so transforms man into
God that, without ceasing to be man, he assumes the virtues and purity
of God. This was the change wrought in St. Paul when he said, "I
live, now not I, but Christ liveth in me." (Gal. 2:20).
Grace may also
be called a supernatural and divine form, by means of which man lives as
becomes his origin, which is also supernatural and divine.
Grace is,
moreover, a spiritual dress, a chaste ornament of the soul, which
renders her so beautiful in the eyes of God that He adopts her as His
child, or rather accepts her as His spouse. It was this adornment which
made the prophet rejoice when he said, "I will greatly rejoice in
the Lord, and my soul shall be joyful in my God. For he hath clothed me
with the garments of salvation; and with the robe of justice he hath
covered me, as a bridegroom decked with a crown, and as a bride adorned
with her jewels." (Is. 61:10). Such are the gifts with which
the Holy Spirit enriches and adorns the soul. This is the garment of
various colors in which the king's daughter was gloriously arrayed. (Ps.
44:14). For from grace proceeds that glorious variety of virtues which
forms the power and beauty of the soul.
From what has
been said we can judge of the effects of grace in a soul. It renders her
so beautiful, as we have said, that God, who is captivated with her
loveliness, chooses her for His spouse, His temple, and His dwelling.
Another effect
of grace is the strength which it imparts to the soul. This beauty and
this strength are extolled in the Canticle of Canticles, in which the
angels exclaim, "Who is she that cometh forth as the morning
rising, fair as the moon, bright as the sun, terrible as an army set in
array?" (Cant. 6:9).
Grace, then, is
like an invulnerable armor. So strong does it render man that, according
to St. Thomas, the least degree of grace suffices to triumph over all
sin. (S. T. III, Q. 62, a. 6).
A third effect
of grace is to render man so pleasing to God that every good action
performed by him contributes to merit for him eternal life. By good we
here mean not only acts of virtue, but all those which arise from the
necessities of nature, such as eating, drinking, and sleeping, which, by
an upright intention, become pleasing to God and meritorious in His
sight. In addition to all this, grace makes man the adopted child of God
and heir to His kingdom.
Our Saviour
showed the greatness of this privilege when, seeing His Apostles
rejoicing that evil spirits obeyed them in His name, He said, Rejoice
not in this, that spirits are subject unto you; but rejoice in this,
that your names are written in heaven." (Lk. 10:20).
Grace, finally,
qualifies man for all good, smooths the way to Heaven, makes the yoke of
Christ sweet and light, cures man of his infirmities and lightens his
burdens, so that he is enabled to run in the path of virtue. Moreover,
it strengthens all the faculties of the soul, enlightens the
understanding, inflames the heart, moderates the appetites of the flesh,
and constantly stimulates us, so that we may not relax in the pursuit of
virtue. And as all the passions which reside in the inferior part of the
soul are so many breaches in the fortification of virtue, through which
the enemy effects an entrance, grace guards these avenues of sin with
sentinels. These are the infused virtues, each of which is the opposite
of the passion or vice which imperils the peace of the soul. Thus,
temperance resists gluttony, chastity combats impurity, humility
overcomes pride.
But the
crowning effect of grace is that it brings God into our souls, in order
to govern us, protect us, and lead us to Heaven. There God is pleased to
abide, like a king in his kingdom, a father in the bosom of his family,
a master with beloved disciples, a shepherd in the midst of his flock.
Since, then, this inestimable pearl, the pledge of so many other
blessings, is the unfailing lot of the virtuous, who will hesitate to
imitate the wisdom of that merchant who sold all he had to purchase this
pearl? (Cf. Matt. 13:45-46).
CHAPTER 14
The Third
Privilege of Virtue:
The Supernatural
Light and Knowledge granted to Virtuous Souls
The heavenly
light and wisdom with which God enlightens the just form the third
reward of virtue. And this blessing, as well as all the others, is the
effect of that grace which not only rules our appetites and strengthens
our will, but removes the darkness of sin from our understanding and
enables us to know and fulfill our duty.
St. Gregory
tells us that ignorance of our duty, as well as inability to do our
duty, are alike punishments of sin. (Moral. L. 25, c. 9.). Hence,
David so frequently repeats, "The Lord is my light" against
ignorance, "the Lord is my salvation" against weakness. (Ps.
26:1). On the one side He teaches us what we should desire, and on the
other He strengthens us to execute our desires. And both of these favors
are bestowed on us through grace. For in addition to a habit of faith
and infused wisdom which teach us what we are to believe and practice,
grace imparts to us the gifts of the Holy Ghost.
Four of these
gifts relate particularly to the understanding: wisdom, which instructs
us in spiritual and sublime things; knowledge, which informs us of the
things of earth and time; understanding, which helps us appreciate the
beauty and harmony of the divine mysteries; and counsel, which guides
and directs us amidst the difficulties which we encounter in the path of
virtue.
These gifts are
so many rays of light which proceed from the divine center of grace, and
in Scripture are called an unction or anointing. "But you have the
unction from the Holy One, and know all things." (1Jn.
2:20). Oil has the double virtue of giving light and healing, and fitly
represents the divine unction which enlightens the darkness of our
understanding and heals the wounds of our will. This is the oil which
exceeds in value the purest balsam, and for which David rejoiced when he
said: Thou, O Lord, hast anointed my head with oil. (Cf. Ps.
22:5). It is evident that the royal prophet did not speak here of a
material oil, and that by the head, he designated, according to the
interpretation of Didymus, the noblest pan of the soul, or the
understanding, which is illumined and supported by the unction of the
Holy Spirit.
Since it is the
property and function of grace to make us virtuous, we must love virtue
and abhor sin, which we cannot do if the understanding be not divinely
enlightened to discern the malice of sin and the beauty of virtue. For
the will, according to philosophers and theologians, is a blind faculty,
incapable of acting without the guidance of the intellect, which points
out the good it should choose and love, and the evil it should reject
and hate. The same is true of fear, of hope, and of hatred for sin. We
can never acquire these sentiments without a just knowledge of the
goodness of God and the malice of sin.
Grace, as you
have already learned, causes God to dwell in our souls; and as God, in
the words of St. John, is "the true light, which enlighteneth every
man that cometh into this world" (Jn. 1:9), the purer a soul
is, the brighter will this Light shine in her just as glass,
according as it is clearer, reflects more strongly the rays of the sun.
Hence, St. Augustine calls God the "wisdom of a purified soul"
(De Lib. Arbit., L. 2), because He fills her with His
light, which enables her to apprehend all that is necessary for
salvation.
Nor should this
surprise us when we consider with what care God provides even the brute
creation with all that is necessary for the maintenance of life. For
whence is that natural instinct which teaches the sheep to distinguish
among plants those which are poisonous and those which are wholesome?
Who has taught them to run from the wolf and to follow the dog? Was it
not God, the Author of nature? Since, then, God endows the brute
creation with the discernment necessary for the preservation of animal
life, have we not much more reason to feel that He will communicate to
the just the knowledge necessary for the maintenance of their spiritual
life?
This example
teaches us not only that such a knowledge really exists, but also marks
the character of this knowledge. It is not a mere theory or speculation;
it is eminently practical. Hence the difference between knowledge
divinely communicated and that which is acquired in the schools. The
latter only illumines the intellect, but the former, the inspirations of
the Holy Ghost, communicates itself to the will, strengthens it for
good, governs and stimulates it. By its efficacious virtue this divine
knowledge penetrates into the depths of the soul, of t transforms our
passions, and remodels us upon the likeness of Christ. Hence, the
Apostle tells us, "The word of God is living and effectual, and
more piercing than any two edged sword, and reaching unto the division
of the soul and spirit" (Heb. 4:12) that is, separating
the spiritual man from the animal man.
This, then, is
one of the principal effects of grace, and one of the most beautiful
rewards of virtue in this life. But to prove this truth more clearly to
carnal men, who reluctantly accept it, we will confirm it by undeniable
passages from both the Old and the New Testament. In the New Testament,
Our Saviour tells us, "The Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in
my name, he will teach you all things, and bring all things to your
mind, whatsoever I shall have said to you." (Jn. 14:26). And
again, "It is written in the prophets: And they shall all be
taught of God. Every one that hath heard of the Father, and
hath learned, cometh to me." (Jn. 6:45).
Numerous are
the passages in the Old Testament which promise this wisdom to the just.
"I am the Lord thy God, that teach thee profitable things, that
govern thee in the way that thou walkest." (Is. 48:17).
"The mouth of the just," says David, "shall meditate
wisdom, and his tongue shall speak judgment." (Ps. 36:30).
Throughout the one hundred and eighteenth Psalm, how frequent is his
prayer for this divine wisdom! "Blessed art thou, O Lord: teach me
thy justifications. Open thou my eyes, and I will consider the wondrous
things of thy law. Give me understanding, and I will search thy law; and
I will keep it with my whole heart."
Shall we not,
therefore, appreciate the happiness and honor of possessing such a
Master, from whom we may learn sublime lessons of immortal wisdom?
"If Apollonius," says St. Jerome, "traversed the greater
part of the world to behold Hipparchus seated upon a golden throne in
the midst of his disciples, and explaining to them the movements of the
heavenly bodies, what should not men do to hear God, from the throne of
their hearts, instructing them, not upon the motions of the heavenly
bodies, but how they may advance to the heavenly kingdom?"
If you would
appreciate the value of this doctrine, hear how it is extolled by the
prophet in the psalm from which we have already quoted: "I have
understood more than all my teachers," he exclaims, "because
thy testimonies are my meditation. I have had understanding above
ancients, because I have sought thy commandments." (Ps.
118:99-100). More expressive still are the words in which Isaias
enumerates the blessings promised to God's servants: "The Lord will
give thee rest continually, and will fill thy soul with brightness, and
deliver thy bones, and thou shalt be like a watered garden, and like a
fountain of water whose waters shall not fail." (Is. 58:11).
What is this
brightness with which God fills the soul of the just but that
clear knowledge of all that is necessary for salvation? He shows them
the beauty of virtue and the deformity of vice. He reveals to them the
vanity of this world, the treasures of grace, the greatness of eternal
glory, and the sweetness of the consolations of the Holy Spirit. He
teaches them to apprehend the goodness of God, the malice of the evil
one, the shortness of life, and the fatal error of those whose hopes are
centered in this world alone. Hence the equanimity of the just. They are
neither puffed up by prosperity nor cast down by adversity. "A holy
man," says Solomon, "continueth in wisdom as the sun, but a
fool is changed as the moon." (Ecclus. 27:12). Unmoved by
the winds of false doctrine, the just man continues steadfast in Christ,
immovable in charity, unswerving in faith.
Be not
astonished at the effect of this wisdom, for it is not earthly, but
divine. Is there anything of earth to be compared with it? "The
finest gold shall not purchase it, neither shall silver be weighed in
exchange for it. It cannot be compared with the
most precious stone
sardonyx, or the sapphire. The fear of the Lord is wisdom, and to depart
from evil is understanding." (Job 28:15-16,28).
And this wisdom
increases in the just, for Solomon tells us, "The path of the just,
as a shining light, goeth forwards and increaseth even to perfect
day" (Prov. 4:18), the beginning of a blessed eternity, when
God's wisdom and beauty will be revealed to us in all their brightness
and power.
This great gift
is the portion of the just only, for the wicked are plunged in an
ignorance so intense that it was well symbolized by the darkness which
covered the land of Egypt. The wicked themselves confess their
blindness, "We looked for light, and behold darkness; brightness,
and we have walked in the dark. We have groped for the wall, like the
blind, and we have groped as if we had no eyes; we have stumbled at
noonday as in darkness; we are in dark places as dead men." (Is.
59:9-10).
What can equal
the blindness of him who sells eternal happiness for the fleeting and bitter
pleasures of this world? How incomprehensible is the ignorance of him
who neither fears Hell nor strives for Heaven; who feels no horror for
sin; who disregards the menaces as well as the promises of God; who
makes no preparation for death, which hourly seizes its victims; who
does not see that momentary joys here are laying up for him eternal
torments hereafter! "They have not known or understood; they walk
on in the darkness" (Ps. 81:5) of sin through this life, and
will pass from it to the eternal darkness of the life to come.
Before
concluding this chapter we would make the following suggestion:
Notwithstanding the power and efficacy of this wisdom with which God
fills the souls of the just, no man, however great the light he has
received, should refuse to submit his judgment to his lawful superiors,
especially the authorized teachers and doctors of the Church. Who ever
received greater light than St. Paul, who was raised to the third
heaven; or than Moses, who spoke face to face with God? Yet St. Paul
went to Jerusalem to confer with the Apostles upon the Gospel which he
had received from Christ Himself; and Moses did not disdain to accept
the advice of his father-in-law, Jethro, who was a Gentile.
For the
interior aids of grace do not exclude the exterior succors of the
Church. Divine Providence has willed to make them both an aid to our
salvation. As the natural heat of our body is stimulated by that of the
sun, and the healing powers of nature are aided by exterior remedies, so
the light of grace is strengthened by the teaching and direction of the
Church. Whoever refuses, therefore, to humble himself and submit to her
authority will render himself unworthy of any favor from God.
CHAPTER 15
The Fourth
Privilege of Virtue:
The Consolations
with which the Holy Spirit visits the Just
We might regard
charity, or the love of God, as the fourth privilege of virtue,
particularly as the Apostle accounts it the first-fruit of the Holy
Ghost; but our intention being at present to treat more of the rewards
of virtue than of virtue itself, we shall devote this chapter to the
consolations of the Holy Ghost, and refer to another pan the
consideration of charity, the most noble of virtues.
This fourth
privilege of virtue is the effect of that divine light of which we spoke
in the preceding chapter.
This is the
teaching of David when he says, "Light is risen to the just, and
joy to the right of heart." (Ps. 96: 11). The Holy
Scriptures furnish abundant proof of this truth. If the path of virtue,
O deluded sinner, be as sad and difficult as you represent it, what does
the Psalmist mean when he exclaims, "O how great is the multitude
of thy sweetness, O Lord, which thou hast hidden for them that fear
thee!" (Ps. 30: 20). And again: "My soul shall rejoice
in the Lord, and shall be delighted in his salvation. All my bones [that
is, all the powers of my soul] shall say: Lord, who is like to
thee?" (Ps. 34: 9-10).
Do not these
texts clearly tell us of the joy with which the souls of the just
overflow, which penetrates even to the flesh, and which so inebriates
man's whole being that he breaks forth into transports of holy joy? What
earthly pleasure can be compared to this? What peace, what love, what
delight can equal that of which Thou, O my God, art the inexhaustible
source? "The voice of rejoicing and of salvation," continues
the prophet, "is in the tabernacles of the just." (Ps.
117:15). Yes, only just souls know true joy, true peace, true
consolation.
"Let the
just feast and rejoice before God, and be delighted with gladness."
(Ps. 67:4). "They shall be inebriated with the plenty of thy
house, and thou shalt make them drink of the torrent of thy
pleasure." (Ps. 35:9). Could the prophet more powerfully
express the strength and sweetness of these consolations? They shall be
inebriated, he tells us; for as a man overcome by the fumes of wine is
insensible to all outward objects, so the just, who are filled with the
wine of heavenly consolations, are dead to the things of this world.
"Blessed
is the people," he further says, "that knoweth
jubilation." (Ps. 88:16). Many would perhaps have said,
"Blessed are they who abound in wealth, who are protected by strong
walls, and who possess valiant soldiers to defend them!" But David,
who had all these, esteemed only that people happy who knew by
experience what it was to rejoice in God with that joy of spirit which,
according to St. Gregory, cannot find expression in words or actions.
Happy are they who are sufficiently advanced in love for God to know
this jubilation! It is a knowledge which Plato, with all his wisdom, and
Demosthenes, with all his eloquence, could never attain. Since, then,
God is the author of this joy, how great must be its strength and
sweetness! For if His arm be so terrible when stretched forth to
chastise, it is equally tender when extended to caress.
We are told
that St. Ephrem was frequently so overcome with the strength of this
divine sweetness that he was forced to cry out, "Withdraw from me a
little, O Lord, for my body faints under the weight of Thy
delights!" (St. John Climachus). Oh! Unspeakable Goodness! Oh!
Sovereign Sweetness, communicating Thyself so prodigally to Thy
creatures that the human heart cannot contain the effusions of Thy
infinite love! In this inebriation of heavenly sweetness the troubles
and trials of the world are forgotten, and the soul is strengthened and
elevated to joys beyond the power of her natural faculties.
Just as water
under the action of fire loses its property of heaviness, and rises in
imitation, as it were, of the element by which it is moved, so the soul
inflamed with the fire of divine love soars to Heaven, the source of
this flame, and burns with desire for the object of her love. "Tell
my beloved," she cries, "that I languish with love." (Cant.
5:8). These joys, which are the portion of the just in this world, need
not excite our wonder, if we consider all that God endured in His
Passion. All His sufferings and ignominies were for the sinner as well
as for the just. Hence, if He endured so much for the sinner, what will
He not do for the happiness of faithful souls?
The devotion
and fidelity of the just still further enable us to form some conception
of the ardor with which God promotes their happiness. Look into their
hearts, and you will find there not a thought or desire which is not for
Him whose glory is the end of all their actions; that they spare no
sacrifice to serve Him who is continually giving them proofs of His
love. If, therefore, frail and inconstant man be capable of such
devotedness, what will God not do for him? Isaias, and after him St.
Paul, tells us that "eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath
it entered into the heart of man, what things God hath prepared for them
that love Him." (Is. 64:4 and 1Cor. 2:9).
We could cite
many other passages from Scripture in proof of this truth, particularly
from the Canticle of Canticles, where these divine consolations are
represented, sometimes under the figure of generous wine which rejoices
the heart of man, or as milk sweeter than honey, containing all
strength, and filling the soul with life and joy. But what we have said
will suffice to prove to you the joys which are reserved for the good,
and how far these heavenly consolations exceed the pleasures of this
world. For what comparison can there be between light and darkness,
between Christ and Belial? How can the happiness afforded by a creature
be compared to that which is given by the Creator? That it is
particularly in prayer that just souls enjoy these divine consolations
is a truth we now wish to prove.
God Himself
tells us, "The children of the stranger that adhere to the Lord, to
worship him, and to love his name, to be his servants; every one that
keepeth the sabbath from profaning it, and that holdeth fast my
covenant, I will bring them into my holy mount, and will make them
joyful in my house of prayer." (Is. 56:6-7).
Hence St.
Lawrence Justinian tells us that the hearts of the just are inflamed in
prayer with love for their Creator; that they are frequently raised
above themselves and transported in spirit to the abode of the angels,
where, in the presence of their God, they unite their praise to that of
the celestial choirs. They weep and rejoice, for the sighs of their
exile mingle with the anticipations of their blessed country. They
feast, but are never filled. They drink, but are never satisfied. They
unceasingly long to be transformed into Thee, O Lord, whom they
contemplate with faith, whom they adore with humility, whom they seek
with desire, whom they possess and enjoy through love.
The powers of
their mind are inadequate to comprehend this happiness, which penetrates
their whole being, yet they tremble to lose it. Even as Jacob wrestled
with the angel, so do their hearts struggle to retain this divine
sweetness amid the turmoil and trouble of this world, crying out with
the Apostle, "Lord, it is good for us to be here." (Matt.
17:4).
When inflamed
with this divine fire, the soul longs to be freed from her prison of
clay. She waters her bread with her tears, that the hour of her
deliverance may not be delayed. She mourns that she has learned so late
the enjoyment of these treasures which God has prepared for all men. She
longs to proclaim them in public places, crying to the deluded victims
of this world, "O unhappy people, senseless men! Whither are you
hastening? What is the object of your search? Why will you not seek
happiness at its source? Taste and see that the Lord is sweet; blessed
is the man that hopeth in him." (Ps. 33:9).
O Lord,
"What have I in heaven, and besides thee what do I desire upon
earth? For thee my flesh and my heart hath fainted away; thou are the
God of my heart, and the God that is my portion for ever." (Ps.
72:25-26).
You will
probably tell me that these consolations are reserved for those who are
already advanced in virtue. No doubt these intimate joys of the soul are
known only to more perfect souls, yet the Divine Master grants even
beginners ineffable rewards. The happiness of the prodigal, the
rejoicing and feasting which resound in his father's house, are an image
of the spiritual joy which the soul experiences when she is released
from the slavery of the evil one and made an honored child of Christ.
It is very
evident that man, bound by the chains of the flesh and the allurements
of the world, could not trample pleasure underfoot and resolutely enter
the path of virtue, did not God accord him favors which sweeten all his
sacrifices. Therefore, when a soul is resolved to turn to God, He
smooths the way for her, and removes many obstacles that might cause her
to lose courage and fall back.
This is what
God did for the children of Israel when He led them out of the land of
Egypt: "When Pharao had sent out the people, the Lord led them not
by way of the land of the Philistines, which is near, thinking lest
perhaps they would repent, if they should see wars arise against them,
and would return into Egypt." (Ex. 13:17).
This same
Providence, which guided the Israelites, continues daily to manifest
like care for the faithful, bringing them out of the slavery of the
world and leading them to the conquest of Heaven, the true promised
land.
We find still
another figure of this truth in the Old Testament, where God commanded
the first and the last days of the week to be observed with particular
solemnity, thus teaching us that He rejoices with His children in the
beginning as well as in the consummation of their perfection. Those who
are entering the path of virtue are treated by God with the tenderness
and consideration which are shown to children. The affection of a mother
for her younger sons is not greater than that which she bears those of
riper years, yet she tenderly carries the little ones in her arms, and
leaves the older ones to walk by themselves. The latter are sometimes
obliged to earn their food before it is given them, while the little
ones not only receive it unsolicited, but are tenderly fed. This is a
faint image of the loving care with which God surrounds those who are
beginning to serve Him.
It is no
argument against this truth that you do not experience these divine
consolations when you think of God. Food is tasteless to a disordered
palate, and for a soul vitiated by sin and sensual affections this
heavenly manna has no relish. Cleanse your soul with the tears of
repentance and then "taste and see that the Lord is sweet." (Pr.
33:9).
What are all
the pleasures of this world compared to these ineffable consolations?
Why will you not begin to be happy from this moment? "O man!"
says Richard of St. Victor, quoting the words of the Gospel, "since
Paradise may be thine, why dost thou not sell all thy possessions to
purchase this pearl of great price?"
Dear Christian,
delay not an affair so important. Every moment is worth more to you than
all the riches of the universe. Even though you attain this heavenly
treasure, you will never cease to lament the time you have lost, and to
cry out with St. Augustine, "Too late have I known Thee , too late
have I loved Thee, O Beauty ever ancient and ever new!" This
illustrious penitent, though he unceasingly lamented the lateness of his
conversion, gave himself to God with all his heart, and therefore, won
an immortal crown. Imitate him, and thus avoid the unhappy lot of
lamenting not only the delay of your conversion, but even the loss of
your crown.
CHAPTER 16
The Fifth
Privilege of Virtue: The Peace of a Good Conscience
God, who gives
His creatures all that is necessary for their perfection, has planted
the seed of virtue in the soul of man, and has endowed him with a
natural inclination for good and an instinctive hatred of evil. This
inclination may be weakened and perverted by a habit of vice, but it can
never be totally destroyed.
We find a
figure of this truth in Job, where we see that, in the calamities which
befell the holy man, one servant always escaped to announce the
misfortune which had overtaken his master. So the faithful servant,
conscience, always remains with the sinner in the midst of his disorders
to show him what he has lost and the state to which his sins have
reduced him.
This is still
another striking proof of that providence we have been considering, and
of the value God attaches to virtue. He has placed in the center of our
souls a guardian that never sleeps, a monitor that is never silent, a
master that never ceases to guide and sustain us. Epictetus, the Stoic
philosopher, was deeply impressed with this truth when he said that
"as fathers are wont to entrust their children to a tutor who will
prudently guard them from vice and lead them to virtue, so God, after
creating man, confides him to the care of that interior guide which
stimulates him to virtue and warns him against vice."
But conscience,
which is such a kind master to the just, becomes a scourge to the
wicked. It tortures them with the remembrance of their crimes and
embitters all their pleasures. Among these torments of conscience, one
of the greatest is the hideousness and deformity of sin, which is so
abominable in itself that a heathen philosopher once said, "Though
I knew that the gods would pardon me if I sinned, and that men would
never know it, yet I would not take upon me a thing so abominable in
itself."
Another rod
with which conscience scourges the wicked is the sight of the evil
caused by sin, which, like the blood of Abel, seems to cry to Heaven for
vengeance. Thus we are told that King Antiochus, during his sickness,
was so assailed by the thoughts of his past crimes that the grief they
occasioned brought on his death. "I remember," he cried,
"the evils that I did in Jerusalem, whence also I took away all the
spoils of gold and of silver that were in it, and I sent to destroy the
inhabitants of Juda without cause. I know, therefore, that for this
cause these evils have found me; and behold I perish with great grief in
a strange land." (Mac. 6:12-13).
The shame and
dishonor of sin form another torment for the wicked. It is natural for
man to desire esteem, but who can honor the sinner? It is natural for
him to wish to be loved, but who is there who does not hate iniquity? To
these miseries let us add the fear of death, which never fails to haunt
the wicked, unless they are utterly abandoned. What comfort can they
have in reflecting on the uncertainty of life, the thought of the
terrible account they must render, and the anticipation of eternal
torments? Consider the sentiments which such reflections must awaken in
the sinner's breast, and you will form some idea of the torments of his
conscience.
Of these
torments one of the friends of Job spoke when he said, "The wicked
man is proud all his days, and the number of the years of his tyranny is
uncertain. The sound of dread is always in his ears"-the dread
sound of an accusing conscience. "And when there is peace, he
always suspecteth treason," for he cannot escape the alarms and the
warning cries of conscience. "He believeth not that he may return
from darkness to light." He believes it impossible to extricate
himself from the terrible darkness which envelops him; he almost
despairs of ever again enjoying the peace of a good conscience.
"Looking round about for the sword on every side," he is in
constant dread of avenging justice. "When he moveth himself to seek
bread he knoweth that the day of darkness is at hand." Even at
table, the place of mirth and rejoicing, the fear of judgment is upon
him.
"Tribulation
shall terrify him, and distress shall surround him, as a king that is
prepared for the battle. For he hath stretched out his hand against God,
and hath strengthened himself against the Almighty." (Job
15:22-26).
Thus does Holy
Scripture portray the torments of which the heart of the sinner is both
the theater and the victim. A philosopher has wisely said that by an
eternal law of God it is ordained that fear should be the inseparable
companion of evil; and this is confirmed by Solomon, who tells us,
"The wicked man fleeth when no man pursueth, but the just, bold as
a lion, shall be without dread." (Prov. 28:1). This thought
is also expressed by St. Augustine, who says, "Thou hast ordained,
O Lord, that every soul in which disorder reigns should be a torment to
herself; and truly it is so." (Conf. 1,12).
Nature teaches
us the same. Does not every creature suffer for infringing the law of
its being? Consider the pain which follows the displacement of a bone in
the body. What violence a creature endures when out of its element! How
quickly does sickness follow when the different parts of the body are
not in harmony! Since, then, it belongs to a rational creature to lead a
regular life, how can he escape suffering, how can he fail to become his
own torment, when he disregards the laws of reason and the order of
Divine Providence? "Who hath resisted God and hath had peace?"
(Job 9:4). Hence we see that creatures who submit to the order of God
enjoy a peace and security which abandon them the moment they resist
this divine law. Man, in his innocence, was absolute master of himself;
but after his disobedience he lost his peaceful empire and began to
experience remorse and an interior warfare against himself.
"Is there
any greater torment in this world," asks St. Ambrose, "than
remorse of conscience? Is it not a misery more to be feared than
sickness, than exile, than loss of life or liberty?" (De
Officiis, L.3,4).
"There is
nothing," says St. Isidore, "from which man cannot fly, save
from himself. Let him go where he will, he cannot escape the pursuit of
an accusing conscience." The same Father adds elsewhere,
"There is no torment which exceeds that of a guilty conscience. If,
then, you desire to live in peace, live in the practice of virtue."
This truth is
so manifest that even pagan philosophers acknowledged it. "What
doth it avail thee," says Seneca, "to fly from the
conversation of men? For as a good conscience may call all the world to
witness its truth, so a bad conscience will be tormented by a thousand
fears, a thousand anxieties, even in a desert. If thy action be good all
the world may witness it; if it be evil what will it avail thee to hide
it from others, since thou canst not hide it from thyself? Alas for thee
if thou makest no account of such a witness, for its testimony is worth
that of a thousand others." (Epist.97).
"Great,"
says Cicero, "is the power of conscience; nothing can more
effectually condemn or acquit a man. It raises the innocent above all
fear and keeps the guilty in perpetual alarm." This is one of the
eternal torments of the wicked, for it begins even in this life and will
continue forever in the life to come. It is the undying worm mentioned
by Isaias. (Cf. Is. 66:24).
Having thus
seen the sad effects of an evil conscience, we will be enabled to
realize more fully the blessed peace which the just enjoy.
Virtue shelters
them from the remorse and sufferings which have been described as the
lot of the wicked. The consolations and sweet fruits of the Holy Ghost
fill them with joy and transform the soul into a terrestrial paradise,
where He is pleased to take up His abode. "The joy of a good
conscience," says St. Augustine, "makes the soul a true
paradise." (De Gen. ad Lit., L. 12, c. 34). And elsewhere he
says, "Be assured, ye who seek that true peace promised to a future
life, that you may here enjoy it by anticipation, if you will but love
and keep the commandments of Him who promises this reward; for you will
soon find by experience that the fruits of justice are sweeter than
those of iniquity. You will learn that the joys of virtue, even in the
midst of trials and misfortunes, far exceed all the delights of pleasure
and prosperity accompanied by the remorse of a bad conscience." (Lib.
de Cat. 2,9).
Sin, as we have
said, finds in its baseness and enormity its own punishment; so virtue
finds in its beauty and worth its own reward. David teaches us this
truth: "The judgments of the Lord that is, His holy
commandments are true, justified in themselves. More to be desired
than gold and precious stones, and sweeter than honey and the
honeycomb." (Ps. 18:10-11). This was his own experience, for
he says, "I have been delighted in the way of thy testimonies, as
in all riches." (Ps. 118:14). The chief cause of this joy is
the dignity and beauty of virtue, which as Plato declares, is
incomparably fair and lovely. Finally, so great are the advantages of a
good conscience that, according to St. Ambrose, they constitute in this
life the happiness of the just.
The ancient
philosophers, as we have seen, though deprived of the light of faith,
knew the torments of a guilty conscience. Nor were they ignorant of the
joy of a good Ν conscience, as we learn from Cicero, who, in his Tusculan
Questions, says, "A life spent in noble and honorable deeds '
brings such consolations with it that just men are either insensible to
the trials of life or feel them very little." The same author adds
elsewhere that virtue has no more brilliant, no more honorable theater
than that in which the applause of conscience is heard. Socrates, being
asked who could live free from passion, answered, "He who lives
virtuously." And Bias, another celebrated philosopher, gave almost
the same reply to a similar question. "Who," he was asked,
"can live without fear?" "He who has the testimony of a
good conscience," he replied. Seneca, in one of his epistles,
wrote, "A wise man is always cheerful and his cheerfulness comes
from a good conscience."
If pagan
philosophers, knowing nothing of future rewards, so justly esteemed the
peace of a good conscience, how dearly should a Christian prize it! This
testimony of a good conscience does not, however, exclude that salutary
fear with which we must work out our salvation; but such a fear, so far
from discouraging us, inspires us with marvelous courage in the
fulfillment of our duties. We feel, in the depth of our hearts, that our
confidence is better founded when moderated by this holy fear, without
which it would be only a false security and a vain presumption.
It was of this
privilege that the Apostle spoke when he said, "Our glory is this,
the testimony of our conscience, that in simplicity of heart and
sincerity of God, and not in carnal wisdom, but in the grace of God, we
have conversed in this world." (2Cor. 1:12).
We have
endeavored to explain this privilege of virtue, but, despite all that
could be said, there is nothing save experience that can give us a keen
realization of it.
CHAPTER 17
The Sixth
Privilege of Virtue: The Confidence of the Just
The joy of a
good conscience is always accompanied by that blessed hope of which the
Apostle speaks when he tells us to rejoice in hope and to be patient in
tribulation. (Cf. Rom. 12:12). This is the rich inheritance of
the children of God, their general refuge in tribulation, and their most
efficacious remedy against all the miseries of life.
Before entering
upon this subject we must bear in mind that as there are two kinds of
faith, one barren and dead, the other living and strengthened by
charity, fruitful in good works; so there are two kinds of hope one
barren, which gives the soul no light in darkness, no strength in
weakness, no consolation in tribulation; the other "lively"
(Cf. 1Pet. 1:3), which consoles us in sorrow, strengthens us in
labor, and sustains us in all the dangers and trials of this world.
This living
hope works in the soul many marvelous effects, which increase according
as the charity which accompanies it becomes more ardent. The first of
these effects is the strength which supports man under the labors of
life by holding before his eyes the eternal reward reserved for him;
for, in the opinion of the saints, the stronger this hope of reward the
greater is man's courage in overcoming obstacles in the path of virtue.
"Hope,"
says St. Gregory, "fixes our hearts so steadfastly upon the joys of
Heaven that we are insensible to the miseries of this life."
"The hope of future glory," Origen tells us, "sustains
the just under the trials of life, as the hope of victory supports the
soldier during battle." "If the furious tempests of the
sea," says St. Chrysostom, "cannot daunt the sailor; if hard
frosts and withering blight cannot discourage the farmer; if neither
wounds nor death itself affright the soldier; if neither falls nor blows
dishearten the wrestler, because of the fleeting recompense they hope
from their labors, how much greater should be the courage of a
Christian, who is toiling for an eternal reward! Therefore, consider not
the roughness of the path of virtue, but rather the end to which it
leads; look not upon the pleasures which strew the path of vice, but
rather upon the precipice to which it is hurrying you."
Who is so
foolish as willingly to pursue a path, though strewn with flowers, if it
lead to destruction? Who, conversely, would not choose a rugged and
difficult path if it lead to life and happiness?
Holy Scripture
is full of commendations of this blessed hope. "The eyes of the
Lord," the prophet Hanani tells King Asa, "behold all the
earth, and give strength to them that with a perfect heart trust in
him." (2Par. 16:9). "The Lord is good to them that hope
in him, and to the soul that seeketh him." (Lam. 3:25).
"The Lord is good, and giveth strength in the day of trouble, and
knoweth them that hope in him." (Nahum 1:7).
"If you
return and be quiet, you shall be saved; in silence and in hope shall
your strength be." (Is. 30:15) By silence the prophet here
signifies that interior calm and sweet peace experienced by the soul
amid all her troubles, and which is the result of that hope in God's
mercy which expels all fear. "Ye that fear the Lord, hope in him,
and mercy shall come to you for your delight. My children, behold the
generations of men, and know ye that no one ma hath hoped in the Lord
and hath been confounded." (Ecclus. 2:9,11).
"Mercy
shall encompass him that hopeth in the Lord."(Ps. 31:10). Mark the
strength of this word encompass, by son which the prophet teaches
us that a virtuous man is shielded by God's protection, as a king
surrounded by his guards. Read the Psalms, and you will see how
beautifully David speaks of the power and merit of divine hope.
In one of his
sermons, St. Bernard dwells at some length on this virtue, and concludes
by saying, "Faith teaches us that God has inestimable rewards
reserved for His faithful servants. Hope answers, 'It is for me that
they are prepared'; and charity, inspired by hope, cries out, 'I will
hasten to possess them.'"
Behold, then,
the happy fruits of hope! It is a port of refuge from the storms of
life; it is a buckler against the attacks of the world; it is a
storehouse to supply us in the time of famine; it is the shade and tent
of which Isaias spoke, to protect us from the heat of summer and the
frosts of winter; in fine, it is a remedy for all our evils, for there
is no doubt that all we confidently and justly hope from God will be
granted to us, if for our welfare. Hence St. Cyprian says that God's
mercy is a healing fountain, hope a vessel into which its waters flow.
Therefore, the larger the vessel the more abundantly will we receive of
these waters. God told the children of Israel that every place upon
which they set their feet should be theirs. So every salutary blessing
upon which man fixes his hope will be granted to him. Hope, then, for
all blessings, and you will obtain them.
Thus we see
that this virtue is an imitation of the divine power; for, says St.
Bernard, nothing so manifests the power of God as the omnipotence with
which He invests those who hope in Him. Witness Josue, at whose command
the sun stood still; or Ezechiel, who bade King Ezechias choose whether
he would have the sun advance or go backward in its course, as a sign
from God.
In studying the
inestimable treasures of hope, you have some idea of one of the
blessings of which the wicked are deprived. Whatever hope remains to
them is dead; destroyed by sin, it can produce none of the glorious
fruits we have been considering. Distrust and fear as inevitably
accompany a bad conscience as the shadow does the body. Hence the
happiness of the sinner is the measure of his hope. He sets his heart
upon the vanities and follies of the world; he rejoices in them; he
glories in them; and in them he hopes in the time of affliction.
It is of such
hope that God speaks when He says, "The hope of the wicked is as
dust, which is blown away with the winds, and as a thin froth which is
dispersed by the storm; and a smoke which is scattered abroad by the
wind." (Wis. 5:15). Can you imagine a weaker or a vainer
confidence than this? But it is not only vain, it is deceptive and
injurious. "Woe to them that go down to Egypt for help, trusting in
horses, and putting their confidence in chariots, because they are many;
and in horsemen, because they are very strong; and have not trusted in
the Holy One of Israel, and have not sought after the Lord. Egypt is
man, and not God; and their horses flesh, and not spirit; and the Lord
shall put down his hand, and the helper shall fall, and he that is
helped shall fall, and they shall all be confounded together." (Is.
31:1,3).
Behold, dear
Christian, the difference between the hope of the just and the hope of
the wicked. One is of the flesh, the other of the spirit; one is
centered in man, the other in God. And even as God exceeds man, so does
the hope of the just exceed that of the sinner. Therefore, the prophet
exhorts us, "Put not your trust in princes; in the children of men,
in whom there is no salvation. Blessed is he who hath the God of Jacob
for his helper, whose hope is in the Lord his God; who made heaven and
earth, the sea, and all things that are in them." (Ps.
114:3,5-6).
"Some
trust in chariots, and some in horses; but we will call upon the name of
the Lord our God. They are bound, and have fallen; but we are risen, and
are set upright." (Ps. 19:8-9). Thus we see that our hopes
are realized according to that upon which they rest in ruin and
destruction, or in honor and victory.
Therefore, he
whose hope is fixed upon the things of this world is rightly compared to
the man in the Gospel who built his house upon the sand and beheld it
beaten down by the rain and winds; while he whose hope is fixed upon the
things of Heaven is like the man whose house was built upon a rock, and
which stood unshaken amidst the storms. (Cf. Matt. 7:25).
"Cursed be
he," cries out the prophet, "that trusteth in man, and maketh
flesh his arm, and whose heart departeth from the Lord. For he shall be
like tamaric [a barren shrub] in the desert, and he shall not see when
good shall come; but he shall dwell in dryness in the desert, in a salt
land and not inhabited. But blessed be the man that trusteth in the
Lord, and the Lord shall be his confidence; and he shall be as a tree
that is planted by the waters, that spreadeth out its roots towards
moisture; and it shall not fear when the heat cometh. And the leaf
thereof shall be green, and in the time of drought it shall not be
solicitous, neither shall it cease at any time to bring forth
fruit." (Jer. 17:5-9).
Can there be
any misery compared to life without hope? To live without hope is to
live without God. If this support be taken from man, what remains for
him? There is no nation, however barbarous, that has not some knowledge
of a god whom they worship and in whom they hope. When Moses was absent
for a short time from the children of Israel, they imagined themselves
without God; and in their ignorance they besought Aaron to give them a
god, for they feared to continue without one. Thus we see that human
nature, though ignorant of the true God, instinctively acknowledges the
necessity of a Supreme Being, and, recognizing its own weakness, turns
to God for assistance and support.
As the ivy
clings to a tree, and as woman naturally depends on man, so human nature
in its weakness and poverty seeks the protection and assistance of God.
How deplorable, then, is the condition of those who deprive themselves
of His support! Whither can they turn for comfort in trials, for relief
in sickness? Of whom will they seek protection in dangers, counsel in
difficulties? If the body cannot live without the soul, how can the soul
live without God? If hope, as we have said, be the anchor of life, how
can we trust ourselves without it on the stormy sea of the world? If
hope be our buckler, how can we go without it into the midst of our
foes?
What we have
said must sufficiently show us that an infinite distance separates the
hope of the just from that of the wicked. The hope of the just man is in
God, and that of the wicked is in the staff of Egypt, which breaks and
wounds the hand which sought its support. For when man leans upon such a
reed, God wishes to make him sensible of his error by the sorrow and
shame of his fall. We have an example of this in God's treatment of
Moab: "Because thou hast trusted in thy bulwarks, and in thy
treasures, thou also shalt be taken: and Chamos [the god of the
Moabites] shall go into captivity, his priests, and his princes
together." (Jer. 48:7). Consider what a support that is
which brings ruin upon those who invoke it.
Behold, then,
dear Christian, how great is this privilege of hope, which, though it
appears one with the special providence of which we have been treating,
differs from it, nevertheless, as the effect differs from the cause. For
though the hope of the just proceeds from several causes, such as the
goodness of God, the truth of His promises, the merits of Christ, yet
its principal foundation is this paternal providence. It is this which
excites our hope; for who could fail in confidence, knowing the fatherly
care that God has for us all?
CHAPTER 18
The Seventh
Privilege of Virtue: The True Liberty of the Just
From the
privileges we have been considering, but particularly from the graces of
the Holy Spirit and His divine consolations, there arises a seventh,
though no less marvelous, privilege, which is true liberty of the soul.
The Son of God brought this gift to men; hence He is called the
Redeemer, or Deliverer, for He freed mankind from the slavery of sin,
and restored them to the true liberty of the children of God. This is
one of the greatest of God's favors, one of the most signal benefits of
the Gospel, and one of the principal effects of the Holy Ghost.
"Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty." (2Cor.
3:17). This liberty is one of the most magnificent rewards which God has
promised to His servants in this life: "If you continue in my word,
you shall be my disciples indeed. And you shall know the truth, and the
truth shall make you free."
To this the
Jews answered, "We are the seed of Abraham, and we have never been
slaves to any man; how sayest thou: You shall be free?" Jesus
answered them, "Amen, amen I say unto you, that whosoever
committeth sin is the servant of sin. Now the servant abideth not in the
house for ever; but the son abideth for ever. If, therefore, the son
shall make you free, you shall be free indeed." (Jn.
8:31-37).
Our Saviour
teaches us by these words that there are two kinds of liberty. The first
is the liberty of those who are doubtless free in body, but whose souls
are enslaved by sin, as Alexander the Great, who, though master of the
world, was a slave to his own vices. The second is that true liberty
which is the portion of those whose souls are free from the bondage of
sin, though their bodies may be held in chains. Witness the great
Apostle, whose mind, despite his fetters, soared to Heaven, and whose
preaching and doctrine freed the world. To such a condition we
unhesitantly give the glorious name of liberty. For the noblest part of
man is the soul; in a measure it constitutes man. The body is merely
matter vivified by the soul. Hence, only he whose soul is at liberty is
truly free, and he whose soul is in bondage, however free his body may
be, possesses only the semblance of liberty.
Now, the sinner
is in bondage under sin, the most cruel of tyrants. The torments of Hell
are but the effects of sin; consider, then, how horrible sin itself must
be. It is to this cruel tyrant that the wicked are enslaved, for Our
Saviour tells us, "Whosoever committeth sin is the servant of
sin." (Jn. 8:34). Nor is the sinner a slave to sin only, but
to all that incites him to sin that is, to the world, the devil, and
the flesh with all its disorderly appetites. These three powers are the
sources of all sin, and, therefore, are called the three enemies of the
soul, because they imprison her and surrender her to a most pitiless
master.
The first two
powers make use of the flesh, as Satan made use of Eve, to tempt and
incite us to every kind of iniquity. Therefore, the Apostle calls flesh
"sin," giving the name of the effect to the cause, for there
is no evil to which man is not incited by the flesh. (Rom. 7:25).
For this reason theologians term it fomes peccati that is,
the germ and fuel of sin; for, like wool and oil, it serves to feed the
fire of sin. It is more commonly called sensuality, or concupiscence,
which, to speak more plainly, is our sensual appetite. Hence, St. Basil
tells us that our desires are the principal arms with which the devil
makes war upon us; for, carried away by the immoderate desires of the
flesh, we seek to gratify them by any means in our power, regardless of
God's law. From this disorder all sins arise.
This appetite
of the flesh is one of the greatest tyrants to whom, in the language of
the Apostle, the sinner has made himself a slave. By this we do not mean
that the sinner loses his free will, for free will is never lost,
however great the multitude of his crimes. But sin so weakens the will,
and so strengthens the appetites of the flesh, that the stronger
naturally prevails over the weaker. What is there more painful than the
consequences of such a victory?
Man possesses a
soul made to the image of God, a mind capable of rising above creatures
to the contemplation of God; yet he despises all these privileges and
places himself in subjection to the base appetites of a flesh corrupted
by sin and incited and directed by the devil. What can man expect from
such a guidance, or rather from such a bondage, but innumerable falls
and incomparable misfortunes?
Our souls may
be considered as consisting of two parts, which theologians call the
superior and the inferior parts. The first is the seat of the will and
of reason, the natural light with which God endowed us at creation. This
noble and beautiful gift of reason makes man the image of God and
capable of enjoying God, and raises him to a companionship with the
angels. The inferior part of the soul is the seat of the sensual
appetites, which have been given to us to aid us in procuring the
necessities of life and in preserving the human race. But these
appetites are blind they must follow the guidance of reason. They
are unfitted to command, and, therefore, like good stewards, they should
act only in obedience to their master. Alas! How often do we see this
order reversed! How often do we behold the servant become the master!
How many men
are so enslaved by their appetites that they will outrage every law of
justice and reason to gratify the sensual desires of their hearts! They
carry their folly still further, and make the noble faculty of reason
wait upon their base appetites and furnish them with means to attain
their unlawful desires. For when man devotes the powers of his mind to
the invention of new fashions in dress, new pleasures in eating; when he
strives to excel his fellow men in wealth and voluptuous luxuries, does
he not turn his soul from the noble and spiritual duties suited to her
nature, and make her the slave of the flesh? When he devotes his genius
to the composition of odes and sonnets to the object of a sinful love,
does he not debase his reason beneath this vile passion? Seneca, though
a pagan, blushed at such degradation, saying, "I was born for
nobler things than to be a slave to ( the flesh." (Epist.
65). Notwithstanding the folly and enormity of this disorder, it is so
common among us that we give it little attention. As St. Bernard says,
"We are insensible to the odor of our crimes because they are so
numerous." In the country of the Moors no one feels affronted if
called black, because it is the color of all the inhabitants. So where
the vice of drunkenness prevails no one thinks it disgraceful to drink
to excess, notwithstanding the degrading nature of this sin.
Yes, the
bondage of the flesh is so general that few realize its enormity. How
complete, therefore, is this servitude, and how great must be the
punishment reserved for one who delivers so noble a creature as reason
into the hands of so cruel a tyrant! It is from this slavery that the
Wise Man prays to be delivered when he asks that the inordinate desires
of the flesh be taken from him, and that he be not given over to a
shameless and foolish mind. (Cf. Ecclus. 23:6).
If you would
know the power of this tyranny you have only to consider the evils it
has wrought since the beginning of the world. I will not set before you
the inventions of the poets on this subject, or the example of their
famous hero, Hercules, who, after destroying or subduing all the
monsters of the world, was himself so enslaved by the love of an impure
woman that he abandoned his club for a distaff, and all future feats of
valor, to sit and spin among the maidens of his haughty mistress. It is
a wise invention of the poets to show the arbitrary power this passion
exercises over its victims. Nor will I quote from Holy Scripture the
example of Solomon, the wisest of men, enslaved by sensual affections,
and so far forgetting the true God as to build temples to the idols of
his sinful companions. But I will give you an illustration which, alas,
is not an uncommon occurrence.
Consider, for
instance, all that a married woman risks by abandoning herself to an
unlawful love. We choose this passion from among the rest to show you
the strength of the others. She cannot but know that should her husband
discover her crime he may kill her in his anger, and thus in one moment
she will lose her reputation, her children, her life, her soul, and all
that she can desire in this life or the next. She knows, moreover, that
her disgrace will fall upon her children, her parents, her brothers, her
sisters, and all her race; yet so great is the strength of this passion,
or rather the power of this tyrant, that she tramples all these
considerations underfoot to obey its dictates. Was there ever a master
more cruel in his exactions? Can you imagine a more miserable, a more
absolute servitude?
Yet such is the
bondage in which the wicked live. They are seated "in darkness and
the shadow of death," says the prophet, "hungry and bound with
chains." (Ps. 106:10). What is the darkness, if not the
deplorable blindness of the wicked, who neither know themselves nor
their Maker, nor the end for which they were created? They see not the
vanity of the things upon which they have set their hearts, and they are
insensible to the bondage in which they live.
What are the
chains which bind them so cruelly, if not the ties of their disorderly
affections? And is not this hunger which consumes them the insatiable
desire for things which they can never obtain?
Not
unfrequently the gratification of man's inordinate desires, so far from
satisfying him, only creates other more violent passions, as we learn
from the example of Amnon, the wicked son of David, who could neither
eat nor rest because of his love for Thamar; but he no sooner obtained
possession of her than he hated her even more intensely than he had
loved her. (Cf. 2Kg. 13:1-16).
Such is the
condition of all who are enslaved by this vice. They cease to be masters
of themselves; it allows them no rest; they can neither think nor speak
of anything else; it fills their dreams at night; and nothing, not even
the fear of God, the interests of their souls, the loss of their honor,
or life itself, can turn them from their course or break the guilty
chains which bind them. Consider also the jealousy and suspicions with
which they are tormented, and the dangers of body and soul which they
willingly risk for these base pleasures. Was there ever a master who
exercised such cruelty towards a slave as this tyrant inflicts upon the
heart of his victims? Hence we read that "wine and women make wise
men fall off." (Ecclus. 19:2). Most fitly are these two
passions classed together, for the vice of impurity renders a man as
little master of himself, and unfits him for the duties of life, as
completely as if robbed of the use of his senses by wine.
The great Latin
poet admirably paints the power of this passion in the example of Dido,
Queen of Carthage. She no sooner falls in love with Ζneas than she
abandons the care of public affairs; the walls and fortifications of the
city are left unfinished; public works are suspended; the youth are no
longer exercised in the noble profession of arms; the harbors are left
defenceless, and the city unprotected. Enslaved by this tyrannical
passion, Dido is unfitted for the duties of her position; all the powers
of her great genius are concentrated upon the object of her love. Oh!
Fatal passion! Oh! Pestilential vice, destroying families and
overthrowing kingdoms! It is the poison of souls, the death of genius,
the folly of old age, the madness of youth, and the bane of mankind.
But this is not
the only vice which reduces man to slavery. Study one who is a victim to
pride or ambition, and see how eagerly he grasps at honors, how he makes
them the end of all his actions. His house, his servants, his table, his
dress, his gait, his bearing, his principles are all fashioned to excite
the applause of the world; his words and actions are but baits to win
admiration. If we wonder at the folly of the Emperor Domitian, armed
with a bodkin and spending his leisure in the pursuit of flies, how much
more astonishing and pitiable it is to see a man devote not only his
leisure but a lifetime to the pursuit of worldly vanities which cannot
but end in smoke! Behold how he enslaves himself! He cannot do his own
will; he cannot dress to please himself; he cannot go where he chooses;
nay, many times he dares not enter a church or converse with virtuous
souls, lest his master, the world, should ridicule him.
To satisfy his
ambition he imposes upon himself innumerable privations; he lives above
his income; he squanders his means; he robs his children of their
inheritance, and leaves them only the burden of his debts and the evil
example of his follies. What punishment is more fitting for such madness
than that which we are told a certain king inflicted upon an ambitious
man, whom he condemned to be executed by having smoke poured into his
nostrils till he expired, saying to the unhappy victim that as he had
lived for smoke, so it was fit that he should die by smoke?
What shall we
say of the avaricious man whose money is his master and his god? Is it
not in this idol that he finds his comfort and his glory? Is it not the
end of all his labors, the object of his hopes? For it does he hesitate
to neglect body and soul, to deny himself the necessities of life? Is he
restrained even by the fear of God? Can such a man be said to be master
of his treasures? On the contrary, is he not their slave as completely
as if he were created for his money, and not his money for him?
Can there be a
more terrible slavery? We call a man a captive who is placed in prison
and bound with chains, but his bondage does not equal that of a man
whose soul is the slave of an inordinate affection. Such a man vainly
thinks himself free, but no power of his soul enjoys true liberty; his
free will, weakened by sin, is the only possession which remains to him.
It matters little what fetters bind man, if the nobler part of his soul
be captive. Nor does the fact that he has voluntarily assumed these
chains make his bondage less real or less ignominious. The sweetness of
a poison by no means diminishes its fatal effects.
A man who is
the slave of a passion is unceasingly tormented by desires which he
cannot satisfy and will not curb. So strong is the bondage of the
unhappy victim that when he endeavors to regain his liberty he meets
with such resistance that frequently he despairs of succeeding and
returns to his chains.
If these
miserable captives were held by one chain only, there would be more hope
of their deliverance. But how numerous are the fetters which bind them!
Man is subject to many necessities, each of which excites some desire;
therefore, the greater the number of our inordinate desires, the more
numerous our chains. This bondage is stronger in some than in others:
there are men of such tenacious disposition that it is only with
difficulty they reject what has once taken possession of their
imaginations. Others are of a melancholy temperament and cling with
gloomy obstinacy to their desires. Many are so narrow-minded that the
most insignificant object cannot escape their covetousness. This accords
with the saying of Seneca, that to small souls trifles assume vast
proportions. Others, again, are naturally vehement in all their desires;
this is generally the character of women, who, as a philosopher
observes, must either love or hate, for it is difficult for them to
observe a just medium.
If the misery
of serving one arbitrary master be so great, what must be the suffering
of the unhappy man who is enslaved by as many masters as there are
ungoverned affections in his heart? If the dignity of man depend upon
his reason and free will, what can there be more fatal to this dignity
than passion, which obscures the reason and enslaves the will? Without
these powers he descends to the level of the brute.
From this
miserable slavery the Son of God has delivered us. By the superabundant
grace of God we have been redeemed; by the sacrifice of the cross we
have been purchased. Hence the Apostle tells us that "our old man
[our sensual appetite] is crucified with Christ." (Rom.
6:6). By the merits of His crucifixion, we have been strengthened to
subdue and crucify our enemies, inflicting upon them the suffering which
they caused us to endure, and reducing to slavery the tyrants whom we
formerly served. Thus do we verify the words of Isaias: "They shall
make them captives that had taken them, and shall subdue their
oppressors." (Is. 14:2). Before the reign of grace, the
flesh ruled the spirit and made it the slave of the most depraved
desires. But strengthened by grace, the spirit rules the flesh and makes
it the docile instrument of the noblest deeds.
We find a
forcible illustration of this defeat of the power of darkness and the
triumph of truth in the example of King Adonibezec, whom the children of
Israel put to death after cutting off his fingers and toes. In the midst
of his suffering the unhappy king exclaimed, "Seventy kings having
their fingers and their toes cut off, gathered up the leavings of the
meat under my table; as I have done, so God hath requitted me." (Jud.
1:7). This cruel tyrant is a figure of the prince of this world, who has
disabled the children of God by robbing them of the use of their noblest
faculties, .thus rendering them powerless to do any good. They being
reduced to so helpless a condition, he throws to them, from the store of
his vile pleasures, what are fitly called crumbs, for the gratifications
which sin brings are never able to satisfy the appetites of the wicked.
See, then, that even of the brutal pleasures for which they bargained
with Satan, their cruel master will not give them sufficient.
Christ came and
by His Passion overcame this enemy and compelled him to endure the same
sufferings which he had inflicted on others. He cut off his members-that
is, He deprived him of his power and bound him hand and foot. Adonibezec,
the Holy Scriptures tell us, suffered death in Jerusalem. In the same
city Our Saviour died to destroy the tyrant sin. It was after this great
Sacrifice that men learned to conquer the world, the flesh, and the
devil. Strengthened by the grace which Christ has purchased for us,
neither the pleasures of the world nor the power of Satan can force them
to commit a mortal sin.
You will ask,
perhaps, what is the source of this liberty and the glorious victory
which it enables us to gain. After God, its source is grace, which, by
means of the virtues it nourishes in us, subdues our passions and
compels them to submit to the empire of reason. Certain men are said to
charm serpents to such a degree that, without injuring them or lessening
their venom, the snakes are rendered perfectly harmless. In like manner,
grace so charms our passions-the venomous reptiles of the flesh
that, though they continue to exist in our nature, they can no longer
harm us or infect us with their poison.
St. Paul
expresses this truth with great clearness. After speaking at some length
of the tyranny of our sensual appetites, he concludes with the memorable
words, "Unhappy man that I am, who shall deliver me from the body
of this death?" And he answers, "The grace of God by Jesus
Christ our Lord." (Rom. 7: 24,25). The body of death here
mentioned by St. Paul is not the natural death of the body which all
must undergo, but "the body of sin" (Rom. 6:6) our
sensual appetites, the fruitful source of all our miseries. These are
the tyrants from which the grace of God delivers us.
A second source
of this liberty is the joy of a good conscience and the spiritual
consolations experienced by the just. These so satisfy man's thirst for
happiness that he can easily resist the grosser pleasures of the flesh.
Having found the fountain of all happiness, he desires no other
pleasures. As Our Saviour Himself declared: Whoever will drink of the
water that He will give him shall thirst no more. (Cf. Jn. 4:13).
St. Gregory
thus develops this text: He who has experienced the sweetness of the
spiritual life rejects the objects of his sensual love. He generously
disposes of his treasures. His heart is inflamed with a desire for
heavenly things. He sees but deformity in the beauty which formerly
allured him. His heart is filled with the water of life, and, therefore,
he has no thirst for the fleeting pleasures of the world. He finds the
Lord of all things, and thus, in a measure, he becomes the master of all
things, for in this one Good every other good is contained.
Besides these
two divine favors, there is another means by which the liberty of the
just is regained. This is the vigilant care with which the virtuous man
unceasingly labors to bring the flesh under the dominion of reason. The
passions are thereby gradually moderated, and lose that violence with
which they formerly attacked the soul. Habit does much to cause this
happy change, but when aided and confirmed by grace its effects are
truly wonderful. Accustomed to the influence of reason, our passions
seem to change their nature. They are no longer the fierce assailants of
our virtue, but rather its submissive servants.
Hence it is
that they who serve God very often find more pleasure, even sensible
pleasure, in recollection, silence, pious reading, meditation, prayer,
and other devout exercises, than in any worldly amusement. In this happy
state the work of subduing the flesh is rendered very easy. Weakened as
it is, the attacks it makes on us serve only as occasions of new
conquests and new merits. Nevertheless, the ease with which we win these
victories should not disarm our prudence or render us less vigilant in
guarding the senses as long as we are on earth, however perfectly the
flesh may be mortified.
These are the
principal sources of that marvelous liberty enjoyed by the just. This
liberty inspires us with a new knowledge of God and confirms us in the
practice of virtue. This we learn from the prophet: "They shall
know that I am the Lord when I shall have broken the bonds of their
yoke, and shall have delivered them out of the hand of those that rule
over them." (Ezech. 34:27). St. Augustine, who experienced
the power of this yoke, says, "I was bound by no other fetters than
my own iron will , which was in the possession of the enemy. With this
he held me fast. From it sprang evil desires, and in satisfying these
evil desires I contracted a vicious habit. This habit was not resisted,
and, increasing in strength as time passed, finally became a necessity,
which reduced me to the most cruel servitude." (Conf. 8,5).
When a man who
has long been oppressed by the bondage under which St. Augustine groaned
turns to God, and sees his chains fall from him, his passions quelled,
and the yoke which oppressed him lying at his feet, he cannot but
recognize in his deliverance the power of God's grace. Filled with
gratitude, he will cry out with the prophet, "Thou hast broken my
bonds, O Lord! I will sacrifice to thee a sacrifice of praise, and I
will call upon the name of the Lord." (Ps. 115:7).
CHAPTER 19
The Eighth
Privilege of Virtue: The Peace enjoyed by the Just
The liberty of
the children of God is the cause of another privilege of virtue, no less
precious than itself the interior peace and tranquillity which the
just enjoy. To understand this more clearly, we must remember that there
are three kinds of peace: peace with God, peace with our neighbor, and
peace with ourselves. Peace with God consists in the favor and
friendship of God, and is one of the results of justification.
The Apostle,
speaking of this peace, says, "Being justified, therefore, by
faith, let us have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ." (Rom.
5:1). Peace with our neighbor consists in a friendly union with our
fellow men, which banishes from us all ill-will towards them. David
enjoyed this peace when he said, "With them that hated peace I was
peaceable; when I spoke to them they fought against me without
cause." (Ps. 119:7). To this peace St. Paul exhorted the
Romans, "As much as is in you, have peace with all men." (Rom.
12:18). Peace with ourselves is the tranquillity arising from a good
conscience, and the harmony existing between the spirit and the flesh
when the latter has been reduced to submission to the laws of reason.
We will first
consider the agitation and anxiety of the sinner, in order more keenly
to appreciate the blessing of holy peace. The wicked hearken to the
flesh, and, therefore, they are never free from the disturbance caused
by the unceasing and insatiable demands of their passions. Deprived of
God's grace which can alone check their unruly appetites, they are a
prey to innumerable desires. Some hunger for honors, titles, and
dignities, others long for riches, honorable alliances, amusements, or
sensual pleasures.
But none of
them will ever be fully satisfied, for passion is as insatiable as the
daughters of the horse-leech, which continually cry out for more and
more. (Cf. Prov. 30:15). This leech is the gnawing desire of our
hearts, and its daughters are necessity and concupiscence. The first is
a real thirst, the second a fictitious thirst; but both are equally
disturbing. Therefore, it is evident that without virtue man cannot know
peace, either in poverty or riches; for in the former, necessity allows
him no ease, and in the latter, sensuality is continually demanding
more. What rest, what peace, can one enjoy in the midst of ceaseless
cries which he cannot satisfy? Could a mother know peace surrounded by
children asking for bread which she could not give them?
This, then, is
one of the greatest torments of the wicked. "They hunger and
thirst," says the prophet, "and their souls faint within
them." (Ps. 106:5). Having placed their happiness in earthly
things, they hunger and thirst for them as the object of all their hope.
The fulfillment of desire, says Solomon, is the tree of life. (Cf. Prov.
8:12). Consequently, there is nothing more torturing to the wicked than
their unsatisfied desires. And the more their desires are thwarted, the
stronger and more intense they become. Their lives, then, are passed in
wretched anxiety, constant war raging within them.
The prodigal is
a forcible illustration of the unhappy lot of the wicked. Like him, they
separate themselves from God and plunge into every vice. They abuse and
squander all that God has given them. They go into a far country where
famine rages; and what is this country but the world, so far removed
from God, where men hunger with desires which can never be satisfied,
where, like ravenous wolves, they are constantly seeking more? And how
do such men understand the duties of life? They recognize no higher duty
than that of feeding swine. To satisfy the animal within them, to feed
their swinish appetites, is their only aim.
If you would be
convinced of this, study the life of a worldling. From morning until
night, and from night until morning, what is the object of his pursuit?
Is it not the gratification of some pleasure of sense, either of sight,
of hearing, of taste, or of touch? Does he not act as if he were a
follower of Epicurus and not a disciple of Christ? Does he seem to be
conscious that he possesses any faculty but those which he has in common
with the beasts? For what does he live but to enjoy the grossest
pleasures of the flesh? What is the end of all his revels, his feasts,
his balls, his gallantry, his luxurious couches, his enervating music,
his degrading spectacles, but to afford new delights to the flesh?
Give all this
what name you will fashion, refinement, elegance in the language
of God and the Gospel it is feeding swine. For as swine love to wallow
in the mire, so these depraved hearts delight to wallow in the mire of
sensual pleasures.
But what is
most deplorable in this condition is that a son of such noble origin,
born to partake of the Bread of Angels at God's own table, would feed
upon husks which cannot even satisfy his hunger. In truth, the world
cannot gratify its votaries. They are so numerous that, like swine
grunting and fighting for acorns at the foot of an oak, they quarrel and
wrest from one another the pleasures and gratifications for which they
hunger.
This is the
miserable condition which David described when he said, "They
wandered in a wilderness, in a place without water. They were hungry and
thirsty; their soul fainted in them." (Ps. 106:4-5). A
terrible characteristic of this hunger is that it is increased by the
gratifications which are meant to appease it. The poisoned cup of this
world kindles in the hearts of the wicked a fire to which pleasures only
add renewed heat. Is it strange that they are consumed by a burning
thirst? Unhappy man! Whence is it that you thirst so cruelly, if it be
not that you "have forsaken the fountain of living waters, and
sought broken cisterns which can hold no water"? (Jer.
2:13). You have mistaken the source of happiness. You wander in a
wilderness, and, therefore, you faint with hunger and thirst.
When Holofernes
besieged Bethulia he cut off the aqueducts, leaving to the besieged but
a few little streams which served only to moisten their lips. The
besieged city is an image of your condition. You have cut yourselves off
from the source of living waters, and you find in creatures the little
springs which may moisten your lips, but, far from allaying your thirst,
will only increase it.
The blindness
and vehemence of our desires often make us long for what we cannot
possibly obtain; and when, after violent efforts, the object of our
pursuit eludes our grasp, anger is added to our disappointment, and both
combine to throw us into a state of confusion. This gives rise to that
internal warfare mentioned by St. James when he asks "Whence are
wars and contentions among you? Are they not from your concupiscences,
which war in your members? You covet, and have not." (James
4:1-2). Another lamentable feature of this condition is that very often
when men have attained the summit of their wishes they are seized with a
desire for some other worldly advantage, and if their caprice is not
gratified, all they possess is powerless to comfort them. Their
unsatisfied desire is a continual thorn. It poisons all their pleasure.
"There is
also another evil," says Solomon, "which I have seen under the
sun, and which is frequent among men. A man to whom God hath given
riches, and substance, and honor, and his soul wanteth nothing of all
that he desireth; yet God doth not give him power to eat thereof, but a
stranger shall eat it up. This is vanity and a great misery." (Eccles.
6:1-2). Does not the Wise Man here clearly point out the wretched
condition of one in the midst of abundance, and yet unhappy because of
his unsatisfied desires?
If such be the
condition of those who possess the goods of the world, how miserable
must be the lot of those who are in need of everything! For the human
heart in every state is alike subject to unruly appetites, is alike the
theater of a most bitter warfare which rages among its opposing
passions. When these importunate desires are unsatisfied at every point,
the misery of their victim must be beyond description.
The condition
of the wicked which we have been considering will enable us by contrast
to set a true value on the peace of the just. Knowing how to moderate
their appetites and passions, they do not seek their happiness in the
pleasures of this life, but in God alone. The end of their labors is not
to acquire the perishable goods of this world, but the enduring
treasures of eternity. They wage unceasing war upon their sensual
appetites, and thus keep them entirely subdued. They are resigned to
God's will in all the events of their lives, and, therefore, experience
no rebellion of their will or appetites to disturb their interior peace.
This is one of
the principal rewards which God has promised to virtue. "Much peace
have they that love thy law, and to them there is no
stumbling-block." (Ps. 118:165).
"Oh! That
thou hadst hearkened to my commandments; thy peace had been as a river,
and thy justice as the waves of the sea." (Is. 48:18). Peace
is here represented by the prophet under the figure of a river, because
it extinguishes the fire of concupiscence, moderates the ardor of our
desires, fertilizes the soil of our heart, and refreshes our soul.
Solomon no less clearly asserts this same truth: "When the ways of
man shall please the Lord, he will convert even his enemies to
peace." (Prov. 16:7). He will convert his enemies, the
sensual appetites and passions, to peace, and by the power of grace and
habit He will subject them to the spirit.
Virtue meets
with much opposition in its first efforts against the passions, but as
it begins to be perfected, this opposition ceases and its course becomes
calm and peaceful. The truth of this is most keenly realized by the just
in their practices of piety. They cannot but contrast their present
peace with the restless fears and jealousies to which they were a prey
when they served the world.
Now that they
have given themselves to God and placed all their confidence in Him,
none of these alarms can reach them. Their calm resignation to His will
has wrought such a change in them that they can hardly believe
themselves the same beings. In truth, grace has transformed them by
creating in them new hearts. Can we, then, be surprised that such souls
enjoy a peace which, the Apostle says, surpasses all understanding?
He who enjoys
this favor cannot but turn to the Author of so many marvels and cry out
with the prophet, "Come and behold ye the works of the Lord, what
wonders he hath done upon earth, making wars to cease even to the ends
of the earth. He shall destroy the bow, and break the weapons; and the
shields he shall burn in the fire." (Ps. 45:9-10). What,
then, is more beautiful, more worthy of our ambition, than this peace of
soul, this calm of conscience, which is the work of grace and the
privilege of virtue?
As one of the
twelve fruits of the Holy Ghost, peace is the effect of virtue and its
inseparable companion. It is one of those blessings which give us on
earth many of the joys of Heaven. For the Apostle tells us, "The
kingdom of God is not meat and drink; but justice, and peace, and joy in
the Holy Ghost." (Rom. 14:17). According to the Hebrew
version, justice here means the perfection of virtue, which, together
with its beautiful fruits, peace and joy, gives the just a foretaste of
eternal happiness. If you would have still further proof that this peace
flows from virtue, hear the words of the prophet: "The work of
justice shall be peace, and the service of justice quietness and
security for ever." (Is. 32:17).
A second cause
of this peace is the liberty which the just enjoy. This liberty is
gained by the triumph of the nobler part of the soul over the inferior
appetites, which, after they have been subjugated, are easily prevented
from causing any disturbance. The great spiritual consolations which we
considered in a preceding chapter form another source of this peace.
They soothe the affections and appetites of the flesh by making them
content to share in the joys of the spirit, which they afterwards begin
to relish as the sovereign sweetness of God becomes better known.
Seeking, therefore, no other delights, they are never disappointed, and
consequently never feel the attacks of anger. The happy result of all
this is the reign of peace in the soul.
Finally, this
great privilege proceeds from the just man's confidence in God, which is
his comfort in all trials and his anchor in all storms. He knows that
God is his Father, his Defender, his Shield. Hence, he can say with the
prophet, "In peace in the selfsame I will sleep and I will rest;
for thou, O Lord, singularly hast settled me in hope." (Ps.
4:9-10).
Chapters 20-29
Index to The Sinner's Guide
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