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"It was the aim and study of the holy father, Philip Neri, to introduce among Christians a daily spiritual repast. His children, who have drunk of the spirit of their holy father, have always sought to cultivate this custom of a spiritual repast among devout persons; and among the plans which they have tried, and the practices they have introduced, one, gentle reader, is a collection of the sayings and doings of the Saint, distributed into the number of the days of the year, to the end that every one might have each day, either a maxim to meditate upon, or a virtue to copy. The method of using these sayings and doings, is to read only one of them each day, and that the one set apart for the current day, (for to read more would not be food but curiosity,) and then to regulate the actions of the day by that maxim or example. I am sure that by doing this you will reap an abundant harvest, especially if to the maxim or example you add some particular devotion to the Saint who was the author of it. I think it useless to make any long commendation of this practice; but it is well you should know that by the daily suggestion of such truths, the fruit which the saint obtained in Rome was immense; and so also will it be in your soul if you practice it in a true spirit of devotion."
- An explanation of St. Philip Neri's recommended spiritual practice of meditating upon a daily saying or maxim.
WELL! When shall we have a mind to
begin to do good?
Nulla
dies sine linea:Do not let a day pass without
doing some good during it.
We must not be behind time in doing good; for death will not be behind his
time.
Happy is the youth, because he has time before him to do good.
It is well to choose some one good devotion, and to stick to it, and never
to abandon it.
He who wishes for anything but Christ, does not know what he wishes; he who
asks for anything but Christ, does not know what he is asking; he who works,
and not for Christ, does not know what he is doing.
Let no one wear a mask, otherwise he will do ill; and if he has one, let him
burn it.
Spiritual persons ought to be equally ready to experience sweetness and
consolation in the things of God, or to suffer and keep their ground in
drynesses of spirit and devotion, and for as long as God pleases, without their
making any complaint about it.
God has no need of men.
If God be with us, there is no one else left to fear.
He who wishes to be perfectly obeyed, should give but few orders.
A man should keep himself down, and not busy himselfin
mirabilibus super se.
Men should often renew their good resolutions, and not lose heart because
they are tempted against them.
The name of Jesus, pronounced with reverence and affection, has a kind of
power to soften the heart.
Obedience is a short cut to perfection.
They who really wish to advance in the ways of God, must give themselves up
into the hands of their superiors always and in everything; and they who are
not living under obedience must subject themselves of their own accord to a
learned and discreet confessor, whom they must obey in the place of God,
disclosing to him with perfect freedom and simplicity the affairs of their
soul, and they should never come to any resolution without his advice.
There is nothing which gives greater security to our actions, or more
effectually cuts the snares the devil lays for us, than to follow another
person’s will, rather than our own, in doing good.
Before a man chooses his confessor, he ought to think well about it, and
pray about it also; but when he has once chosen, he ought not to change, except
for most urgent reasons, but put the utmost confidence in his director.
When the devil has failed in making a man fall, he puts forward all his
energies to create distrust between the penitent and the confessor, and so by
little and little he gains his end at last.
Let persons in the world sanctify themselves in their own houses, for
neither the court, professions, or labor, are any hindrance to the service of
God.
Obedience is the true holocaust which we sacrifice to God on the altar of
our hearts.
In order to be really obedient, it is not enough to do what obedience
commands, we must do it without reasoning upon it.
Our Blessed Lady ought to be our love and our consolation.
The good works which we do of our own will, are not so meritorious as those
that are done under obedience.
The most beautiful prayer we can make, is to say to God, “As Thou knowest
and willest, O Lord, so do with me.”
When tribulations, infirmities, and contradictions come, we must not run
away in a fright, but vanquish them like men.
It is not enough to see that God wishes the good we aim at, but that He
wishes it through our instrumentality, in our manner and in our time; and we
come to discern all this by true obedience.
In order to be perfect, we must not only obey and honor our superiors; we
must honor our equals and inferiors also.
In dealing with our neighbor, we must assume as much pleasantness of manner
as we can, and by this affability win him to the way of virtue.
A man who leads a common life under obedience, is more to be esteemed than
one who does great penance after his own will.
To mortify one passion, no matter how small, is a greater help in the
spiritual life than many abstinences, fasts, and disciplines.
He who wishes to be wise without the true Wisdom, or saved
without the Savior, is not well, but sick - is not wise, but a fool.
Devotion to the Blessed Virgin is actually necessary, because there is no
better means of obtaining God’s graces than through His most holy mother.
A man should force himself to be obedient, even in little things which
appear of no moment; because he will thus render the practice of obedience in
great matters easy to himself.
He who always acts under obedience, may rest assured that he will not have
to give an account of his actions to God.
Perfection does not consist in such outward things as shedding tears and the
like, but in true and solid virtues.
Tears are no sign that a man is in the grace of God, neither must we infer
that one who weeps when he speaks of holy and devout things necessarily leads a
holy life.
Cheerfulness strengthens the heart and makes us persevere in a good life;
wherefore the servant of God ought always to be in good spirits.
When a man is freed from a temptation or any other distress, let him take
great care to show fitting gratitude to God for the benefit he has received.
We must accept the adversities which God sends us without reasoning too much
upon them, and we must take for granted that it is the best thing which could
happen to us.
We must always remember that God does everything well, although we may not
see the reason of what He does.
Every one ought to give in readily to the opinion of another, and to argue
in favor of another and against himself, and take things in good part.
There is nothing more to the purpose for exciting a spirit of prayer, than
the reading of spiritual books.
Let a man frequent the holy Sacraments, go to sermons, and be often reading
the Lives of Saints.
Let a man always think that he has God before his eyes.
When a man is in an occasion of sin, let him look what he is doing, get
himself out of the occasion, and avoid the sin.
There is nothing good in this world:Vanitas vanitatum, et omnia
vanitas.
We must die at last.
Beginners in religion ought to exercise themselves principally in
meditation on the Four Last Things.
He who does not go down into hell while he is alive, runs a great risk of
going there after he is dead.
The greatest help to perseverance in the spiritual life is the habit of
prayer, especially under the direction of our confessor.
There is nothing the devil fears so much, or so much tries to hinder, as
prayer.
An excellent method of preserving ourselves from relapsing into serious
faults, is to say every evening, “To-morrow I may be dead.”
A man without prayer is an animal without the use of reason.
The religious state is indeed the highest, but it is not suitable for all.
A most excellent means of learning how to pray, is to acknowledge ourselves
unworthy of such a benefit, and to put ourselves entirely into the hands of the
Lord.
The true preparation for prayer consists in the exercise of mortification;
for he who wishes to give himself up to prayer without mortification, is like a
bird wishing to fly before it is fledged.
We can never arrive at the contemplative life, if we do not first exercise
ourselves laboriously in the active life.
We must exercise the spirit which God gives us in prayer, and follow that;
so that, when, for example, it inclines us to meditate on the Passion, we must
not wish to meditate on some other mystery.
When a person goes to communion, he ought to follow the same spirit he had
in prayer, and not be casting about for new meditations.
We must never pray for a favor for anyone, except
conditionally, saying, “If it please God,” or the like.
When a spiritual person feels a great calmness of mind in asking anything of
God, it is a good sign that God either has granted it, or will do so shortly.
A man ought never to think he has done any good, or rest contented with any
degree of perfection he may have attained, because Christ has given us the type
of our perfection, in putting before us the perfection of the Eternal Father.
Be ye perfect, even as your heavenly Father is perfect.
The sweetness which some experience in prayer, is milk which our Lord gives
as a relish to those who are just beginning to serve Him.
To leave our prayer when we are called to do some act of charity for our
neighbor, is not really a quitting of prayer, but leaving Christ for Christ,
that is, depriving ourselves of spiritual sweetnesses in order to gain souls.
It is good for a man to go from prayer rather with an appetite and desire to
return to it, than satiated and weary.
The wisdom of the Scriptures is learned rather by prayer than by study.
A diligent charity in ministering to the sick, is a compendious way to the
acquisition of perfect virtue.
Let women remain indoors, and look after their families, and not be desirous
of going into public.
We must pray incessantly for the gift of perseverance.
We must not leave off our prayers because of distractions and restlessness
of mind, although it seems useless to go on with them. He who perseveres for
the whole of his accustomed time, gently recalling his mind to the subject of
his prayer, merits greatly.
If in times of dryness in prayer we make acts of humility, self-knowledge,
protestations of our own inability to help ourselves, and petitions for God’s
assistance, all this is real and substantial prayer.
The best remedy for dryness of spirit, is to picture ourselves as beggars
in the presence of God and the Saints, and like a beggar, to go first to one
saint, then to another, to ask a spiritual alms of them with the same
earnestness as a poor fellow in the streets would ask an alms of us.
We may ask a spiritual alms even corporally, by going first to the church
of one Saint, and then to the church of another, to make our petition.
Without prayer a man will not persevere long in spirituality; we must have
recourse to this most powerful means of salvation every day.
If young men wish to protect themselves from all danger of impurity, let
them never retire to their own rooms immediately after dinner, either to read
or write, or do anything else; but let them remain in conversation, because at
that time the devil is wont to assault us with more than usual vehemence, and
this is that demon which is called in Scripture the noonday demon, and from
which holy David prayed to be delivered.
If young men would preserve their purity, let them avoid bad company.
Let them also avoid nourishing their bodies delicately.
It is God’s custom to interweave human life with a trouble and a
consolation, at least, of an interior sort, alternately.
Young men should be very careful to avoid idleness.
When fathers have given their sons a good education, and put everything
clearly and distinctly in train for them, the sons who succeed them, and
continue to follow the road marked out for them, will have the advantage of
seeing their family persevere in holy ways, and in the fear of God.
In order to preserve their purity, young men should frequent the
Sacraments, and especially confession.
We must never trust ourselves, for it is the devil’s way first to get us to
feel secure, and then to make us fall.
We ought to fear and fly temptations of the flesh, even in sickness, and in
old age itself, aye, and so long as we can open and shut our eyelids, for the
spirit of incontinence gives no truce either to place, time, or person.
Our sweet Christ, the Word Incarnate, has given Himself to us for
everything that was necessary for us, even to the hard and ignominious death
upon the cross.
One of the most efficacious means of keeping ourselves chaste, is to have
compassion for those who fall through their frailty, and never to boast in the
least of being free, but with all humility to acknowledge that whatever we have
is from the mercy of God.
To be without pity for other men’s falls, is an evident sign that we shall
fall ourselves shortly.
In the matter of purity there is no greater danger than the not fearing the
danger: when a man does not distrust himself, and is without fear, it is all
over with him.
The devil generally makes use of the weaker sex when he wishes to cause us
to fall.
In order to begin well, and to finish better, it is quite necessary to hear
mass every day, unless there be some lawful hindrance in the way.
A most excellent means of keeping ourselves pure, is to lay open all our
thoughts, as soon as possible, to our confessor with the greatest sincerity, and
keep nothing hidden in ourselves.
To acquire and preserve the virtue of chastity, we have need
of a good and experienced confessor.
Let a man who desires the first place take the last.
As soon as a man feels that he is tempted, he should fly to God, and
devoutly utter that ejaculation which the fathers of the desert so much
esteemed:Deus
in adjutorium meum intende; Domine ad adjuvandum me festina:or
that verse,cor
mundum crea in me Deus.
When sensual thoughts come into the mind, we ought immediately to make use
of our minds, and fix them instantaneously upon something or other, no matter
what.
Never say, “What great things the Saints do,” but, “What great things God
does in His Saints.”
In the warfare of the flesh, only cowards gain the victory; that is to say,
those who fly.
We should be less alarmed for one who is tempted in the flesh, and who
resists by avoiding the occasions, than for one who is not tempted and is not
careful to avoid the occasions.
When a person puts himself in an occasion of sin, saying, “I shall not fall,
I shall not commit it,” it is an almost infallible sign that he will fall, and
with all the greater damage to his soul.
It is a most useful thing to say often, and from the heart, “Lord, do not
put any confidence in me, for I am sure to fall if Thou dost not help me;” or,
“O my Lord, look for nothing but evil from me.”
In temptation we ought not to say, “I will do,” “I will say,” for it is a
species of presumption and self-confidence; we ought rather to say with
humility, “I know what I ought to do, but I do not know what I shall do.”
The stench of impurity before God and the angels is so great, that no
stench in the world can equal it.
We must not trust in ourselves, but take the advice of our spiritual
father, and recommend ourselves to everybody’s prayers.
We must avoid lies as we would a pestilence.
When we go to confession, we should accuse ourselves of our worst sins
first, and of those things which we are most ashamed of, because by this means
we put the devil to greater confusion, and reap more fruit from our confession.
One of the very best means of obtaining humility, is sincere and frequent
confession.
In trying to get rid of bad habits, it is of the greatest importance not to
put off going to confession after a fall, and also to keep to the same
confessor.
In visiting the dying we should not say many words to them, but rather help
them by praying for them.
A sick man should make God a present of his will; and if it turns out that
he has to suffer for a long time, he must submit to the Divine Will.
The sick man must not fear when he is tempted to lose confidence; for if he
has sinned, Christ has suffered and paid for him.
Let the sick man enter into the Side of Jesus and His most holy Wounds; let
him not be afraid, but combat manfully, and he will come forth victorious.
The true way to advance in holy virtues, is to persevere in a holy
cheerfulness.
The cheerful are much easier to guide in the spiritual life than the
melancholy.
Those who wish to enter upon the religious life, should first of all
mortify themselves for a long time, and particularly mortify their will in
things to which they have the greatest repugnance.
Excessive sadness seldom springs from any other source than pride.
Charity and cheerfulness, or charity and humility, should be our motto.
It is very necessary to be cheerful, but we must not on that account give
in to a buffooning spirit.
Buffoonery incapacitates a person from receiving any additional
spirituality from God.
Nay more, it roots up the little a man may have already acquired.
At table, especially where there are guests, we ought to eat every kind of
food, and not say, “I like this,” and “I do not like that.”
Human language cannot express the beauty of a soul which dies in a state of
grace.
If a man finds it very hard to forgive injuries, let him look
at a crucifix, and think that Christ has shed all His Blood for him, and not
only forgave his enemies, but prayed the Eternal Father to forgive them also.
Let him remember also that when he says the Pater Noster every day, instead
of asking pardon for his sins, he is calling down vengeance upon them.
Men are generally the carpenters of their own crosses.
Let us concentrate ourselves so completely in the divine love, and enter so
far into the living fountain of wisdom, through the wounded Side of our
Incarnate God, that we may deny ourselves and our self-love, and so be unable
to find our way out of that Wound again.
We must not give up praying and asking, because we do not get what we ask
all at once.
He who is unable to spend a long time together in prayer, should often lift
up his mind to God by ejaculations.
We must often remember what Christ said, that not he who begins, but he that
perseveres to the end, shall be saved.
We ought to abhor every kind of affectation, whether in talking, dressing,
or anything else.
When a scrupulous person has once made up his mind that he has not consented
to a temptation, he must not reason the matter over again to see whether he has
really consented or not, for the same temptations often return by making this
sort of reflections.
If those who are molested by scruples wish to know whether they have
consented to a suggestion or not, especially in thoughts, they should see
whether, during the temptation, they have always had a lively love to the
virtue opposed to the vice in respect of which they were tempted, and hatred to
that same vice, and this is mostly a good proof that they have not consented.
The scrupulous should remit themselves always and in everything to the
judgment of their confessor, and accustom themselves to have a contempt for
their own scruples.
Scruples are an infirmity which will make a truce with a man, but very
rarely peace; humility alone comes off conqueror over them.
Even in bodily indispositions spiritual remedies are the most helpful.
As much love as we give to creatures, just so much we steal from the
Creator.
Penitents ought never to force their confessor to give them leave to do
anything against his inclination.
He who has the slightest taint of avarice about him, will never make the
least advance in virtue.
Avarice is the pest of the soul.
Experience shows that men given to carnal sins are converted sooner than
those who are given to avarice.
He who wishes for goods will never have devotion.
All sins are highly displeasing to God, but above all sensuality and
avarice, which are very difficult to cure.
We must always pray God not to let the spirit of avarice domineer over us,
but that we may live detached from the affections of this world,
If we find nothing in the world to please us, we ought to be pleased by
this very not finding anything to please us.
He who wishes to attain to perfection must have no attachment to anything.
It is a good thing to leave the world and our possessions to serve God, but
it is not enough.
The greatness of our love of God must be tested by the desire we have of
suffering for His love.
Let us strive after purity of heart, for the Holy Spirit dwells in candid
and simple minds.
The Holy Spirit is the master of prayer, and causes us to abide in
continual peace and cheerfulness, which is a foretaste of Paradise.
If we wish the Holy Spirit to teach us how to pray, we must practice
humility and obedience.
The fruit we ought to get from prayer, is to do what is pleasing to the
Lord.
A virtuous life consists in mortifying vices, sins, bad thoughts, and evil
affections, and in exercising ourselves in the acquisition of holy virtues.
Let us be humble and keep ourselves down:- Obedience! Humility! Detachment!
The love which our Blessed Lady had for God was so great, that
she suffered keenly through her desire of union with Him; hence the Eternal
Father, to console her, sent her His only and beloved Son.
If you wish to come where I am going, that is, to glory, you must come this
road, that is, through thorns.
Before communion, we ought to exercise ourselves in many acts of virtue.
Prayer and communion are not to be made or desired for the sake of the
devotion we feel in them, for that is seeking self, and not God; but we must be
frequent in both the one and the other in order to become humble, obedient,
gentle, and patient.
When we see these virtues in a man, then we know that he has really gathered
the fruit of prayer and of communion.
Our sweet Jesus, through the excess of His love and liberality, has left
Himself to us in the Most Holy Sacrament.
Let all go to the Eucharistic Table with a great desire for that Sacred
Food.Sitientes!
Sitientes!
To feel any displeasure because we are refused the Communion, is a sign of
hardiness, pride, and a want of mortification.
Those who are going to Communion should prepare themselves for more
temptations than usual, for the Lord will not have us stand idle.
It is a good thing, during the week that follows our communion-day, to do
something more than usual; for example, to say five Our Fathers and Hail Maries
with our arms extended, or an extra rosary.
It is not a good thing to load ourselves with many spiritual exercises; it
is better to undertake a little, and go on with it: for if the devil can
persuade us to omit an exercise once, he will easily get us to omit it the
second time, and the third, until at last all our pious practices will melt
away.
We must take care of little faults: for he who once begins to go backward,
and to make light of such defects, brings a sort of grossness over his
conscience, and then goes wrong altogether.
The servant of God ought to seek knowledge, but never to show it or make a
parade of it.
Let us always go to confession with sincerity, and take this as our rule -
Never out of human respect to conceal anything from our confessor, however
inconsiderable it may be.
He who conceals a grave sin in confession, is completely in the devil’s
hands.
Penitents should not generally change their confessors, nor confessors be
forward to receive the penitents of others, a few particular cases excepted.
When a person who has been living a spiritual life for a long time falls
into a serious fault, there is no better way of raising him up again than by
exhorting him to manifest his fall to any pious friend with whom he has a
particular intimacy: and God will reconduct him to his first estate for the
sake of his humility.
For young men to make sure of persevering, it is absolutely necessary that
they should avoid wicked companions, and be familiar with good ones.
In the spiritual life there are three degrees: the first may be called the
animal life; this is the life of those who run after sensible devotion, which
God generally gives to beginners, to allure them onwards by that sweetness to
the spiritual life, just as an animal is drawn on by a sensible object.
The second degree may be called the human life; this is the life of those
who do not experience any sensible sweetness, but by the help of virtue combat
their own passions.
The third degree may be called the angelic life; this is the life which
they come to, who, having been exercised for a long time in the taming of their
own passions, receive from God a quiet, tranquil, and almost angelic life, even
in this world, feeling no trouble or repugnance in anything.
Of these three degrees it is well to persevere in the second, because the
Lord will grant the third in His own good time.
We must not be too ready to trust young men who have great devotion; we
must wait till their wings are grown, and then see what sort of a flight they
make.
Outward mortifications are a great help towards the acquisition of interior
mortification and the other virtues.
He who cannot put up with the loss of his honor, can never make any advance
in spiritual things.
It is generally better to give the body rather too much food than rather
too little; for thetoo muchcan be easily subtracted, but when
a man has injured his constitution by thetoo little, it is not so
easy to get right again.
The devil has a crafty custom of sometimes urging spiritual persons to
penances and mortifications, in order that by going indiscreet lengths in this
way, they may so weaken themselves as to be unable to attend to good works of
greater importance; or be so intimidated by the sickliness they have brought
upon themselves as to abandon their customary devotions, and at last turn their
backs on the service of God.
Those who pay a moderate attention to the mortification of their bodies,
and direct their main intention to mortify the will and understanding, even in
matters of the slightest moment, are more to be esteemed than they who give
themselves up exclusively to corporal penances and macerations.
We ought to desire to do great things for the service of God, and not
content ourselves with a moderate goodness, but wish, if it were possible, to
surpass in sanctity and love even St. Peter and St. Paul.
Even though a man may be unable to attain such a height of sanctity, he
ought to desire it, so as to do at least in desire what he cannot carry out in
effect.
We ought to make no account of abstinences and fasts, when
there is self-will in the matter.
Our Blessed Lady is the dispenser of all the favors which the goodness of
God concedes to the Sons of Adam.
In seeking for counsel it is necessary sometimes to hear what our inferiors
think, and to recommend ourselves to their prayers.
A man ought never to say one word in his own praise, however true it may be,
no, not even in a joking way.
Whenever we do a good work, and somebody else takes the credit of it, we
ought to rejoice, and acknowledge it as a gift from God. Anyhow, we ought not
to be sorry, because if others diminish our glory before men, we shall recover
it with all the more honor before God.
Let us pray God, if He gives us any virtue or any gift, to keep it hidden
even from ourselves, that we may preserve our humility, and not take occasion
of pride because of it.
We ought not to publish or manifest to every one the inspirations which God
sends us, or the favors He grants us.Secretum meum mihi! Secretum
meum mihi!
In order to avoid all risk of vain-glory, we ought to make some of our
particular devotions in our own rooms, and never seek for sweetnesses and
sensible consolations in public places.
The true medicine to cure us of pride, is to keep down and thwart touchiness
of mind.
When a man is reproved for anything, he ought not to take it too much to
heart, for we commit a greater fault by our sadness than by the sin for which
we are reproved.
They who when they have got a little devotion think they are some great
one, are only fit to be laughed at.
Humility is the true guardian of chastity.
When a man has fallen he ought to acknowledge it in some such way as this:
“Ah, if I had been humble I should not have fallen!”
We ought to be pleased to hear that others are advancing in the service of
God, especially if they are our relations or friends; and we ought to rejoice
that they share in whatever spiritual good we may have ourselves.
In order the better to gain souls, in visiting the sick, we ought to
imagine that what we do for the sick man we are doing for Christ Himself; we
shall thus perform this work of mercy with more love and greater spiritual
profit.
He whose health will not permit him to fast in honor of Christ and our
Blessed Lady, will please them much more by giving some alms more than usual.
Nothing is more dangerous for beginners in the spiritual life, than to wish
to play the master, and to guide and convert others.
Beginners should look after their own conversion and be humble, lest they
should fancy they had done some great thing, and so should fall into pride.
If we wish to help our neighbor, we must reserve neither place, hour, or
season, for ourselves.
Avoid every kind of singularity, for it is generally the hot-bed of pride,
especially spiritual pride.
A man must not, however, abstain from doing a good work merely to got out
of the way of a temptation to vain-glory.
The love of God makes us do great things.
We may distinguish three kinds of vain-glory; the first we may callmistress;
that is, when vain-glory goes before our works, and we work for the sake of it:
the second we may callcompanion; that is, when a man does not do a
work for the sake of vain-glory, but feels complacency in doing it: the third
we may callservant;
that is, when vain-glory rises in our work, but we instantly repress it. Above
all things never let vain-glory bemistress.
When vain-glory iscompanion, it does not take away our merit;
but perfection requires that it should beservant.
He who works purely for the love of God, desires nothing but His honor, and
thus is ready in every thing either to act or not to act, and that not in
indifferent matters only, but even in good ones; and he is always resigned to
the Will of God.
The Lord grants in a moment what we may have been unable to obtain in
dozens of years.
To obtain perfectly the gift of humility, four things are required: to
despise the world, to despise no person, to despise one’s self, to despise
being despised.
Perfection consists in leading captive our own will, and in playing the king
over it.
A man ought to mortify his understanding in little things, if he wishes
easily to mortify it in great ones, and to advance in the way of virtue.
Without mortification nothing can be done.
We ought to hope for and love the glory of God by means of a good life.
St. Peter and the other apostles and apostolical men, seeing
the Son of God born in poverty, and then living so absolutely without anything,
that He had not where to lay His Head, and contemplating Him dead and naked on
a cross, stripped themselves also of all things, and took the road of the
evangelical counsels.
Nothing unites the soul to God more closely, or breeds contempt of the world
sooner, than being harassed and distressed.
In this life there is no purgatory; it is either hell or paradise; for to
him who serves God truly, every trouble and infirmity turns into consolations,
and through all kinds of trouble he has a paradise within himself even in this
world: and he who does not serve God truly, and gives himself up to sensuality,
has one hell in this world, and another in the next.
To get good from reading the Lives of the Saints, and other spiritual books,
we ought not to read out of curiosity, or skimmingly, but with pauses; and when
we feel ourselves warmed, we ought not to pass on, but to stop and follow up
the spirit which is stirring in us, and when we feel it no longer then to
pursue our reading.
To begin and end well, devotion to our Blessed Lady, the Mother of God, is
nothing less than indispensable.
We have no time to go to sleep here, for Paradise was not made for
poltroons.
We must have confidence in God, who is what He always has been, and we must
not be disheartened because things turn out contrary to us.
Men should not change from a good state of life to another, although it may
be better, without taking grave counsel.
Let every one stay at home, that is, within himself, and sit in judgment on
his own actions, without going abroad to investigate and criticize those of
others.
The true servants of God endure life and desire death.
There is not a finer thing on earth, than to make a virtue of necessity.
To preserve our cheerfulness amid sicknesses and troubles, is a sign of a
right and good spirit.
A man should not ask tribulations of God, presuming on his being able to
bear them: there should be the greatest possible caution in this matter, for he
who bears what God sends him daily does not do a small thing.
They who have been exercised in the service of God for a long time, may in
their prayers imagine all sorts of insults offered to them, such as blows,
wounds, and the like, and so in order to imitate Christ by their charity, may
accustom their hearts beforehand to forgive real injuries when they come.
Let us think of Mary, for she is that unspeakable virgin, that glorious
lady, who conceived and brought forth, without detriment to her virginity, Him
whom the width of the heavens cannot contain within itself.
The true servant of God acknowledges no other country but heaven.
When God infuses extraordinary sweetnesses into the soul, a man ought to
prepare for some serious tribulation or temptation.
When we have these extraordinary sweetnesses, we ought to ask of God
fortitude to bear whatever He may please to send us, and then to stand very
much upon our guard, because there is danger of sin behind.
One of the most excellent means of obtaining perseverance is discretion; we
must not wish to do everything at once, or become a saint in four days.
In our clothes we ought, like S. Bernard, to love poverty, but not
filthiness.
He who wishes to advance in spirituality, should never slur over his
defects negligently without particular examination of conscience, even
independent of the time of sacramental confession.
A man should not so attach himself to the means as to forget the end;
neither must we give ourselves so much to mortify the flesh as to forget to
mortify the brain, which is the chief thing after all.
We ought to desire the virtues of prelates, cardinals, and popes, but not
their dignities.
The skin of self-love is fastened strongly on our hearts, and it hurts us
to flay it off, and the more we get down to the quick, the more keen and
difficult it is.
This first step, which we ought to have taken of ourselves already, we have
always in our mind, yet never put it in execution.
A man ought to set about putting his good resolutions in practice, and not
change them lightly.
We must not omit our ordinary devotions for every trifling occasion that
may come in the way, such as going to confession on our fixed days, and
particularly hearing mass on week-days: if we wish to go out walking, or
anything of that sort, let us make our confession, and perform our usual exercises
first, and then go.
It is very useful for those who minister the word of God, or give
themselves up to prayer, to read the works of authors whose names begin with S,
such asSaintAugustine,SaintBernard,
&c.
Nothing more glorious can happen to a Christian, than to suffer for Christ.
There is no surer or clearer proof of the love of God than adversity.
When God intends to grant a man any particular virtue, it is His way to let
him be tempted to the opposite vice.
Persons who live in the world should persevere in coming to
church to hear sermons, and remember to read spiritual books, especially the
Lives of the Saints.
When temptation comes, a man should remember the sweetnesses he has had in
prayer at other times, and he will thus easily master the temptation.
The fervor of spirituality is usually very great in the beginning, but
afterwards, the Lordfingit se longius ire, makes as though He
would go farther: in such a case we must stand firm and not be disturbed, because
God is then withdrawing His most holy Hand of sweetnesses, to see if we are
strong; and then, if we resist and overcome those tribulations and temptations,
the sweetnesses and heavenly consolations return.
We ought to apply ourselves to the acquisition of virtue, because in the end
the whole terminates in greater sweetnesses than before, and the Lord gives us
back all our favors and consolations doubled.
It is easy to infuse a most fervent devotion into others, even in a short
time; but the great matter is - to persevere.
He who continues in anger, strife, and a bitter spirit, has a taste of the
air of hell.
To obtain the protection of our Blessed Lady in our most urgent wants, it is
very useful to say sixty-three times, after the fashion of a Rosary, “Virgin
Mary, Mother of God, pray to Jesus for me.”
When we make this prayer to our Blessed Lady, we give her every possible
praise in the least possible compass, because we call her by her name of MARY,
and give her those two great titles of Virgin, and Mother of God, and then name
JESUS, the fruit of her most pure womb.
The things of this world do not remain constantly with us, for if we do not
leave them before we actually die, in death at least we all infallibly depart
as empty-handed as we came.
To pray well requires the whole man.
The discipline and other like things ought not to be practiced without the
leave of our confessor; he who does it of his own mind, will either hurt his
constitution or become proud, fancying to himself that he has done some great
thing.
God takes especial delight in the humility of a man who believes that he
has not yet begun to do any good.
Before going to confession or taking counsel with our director, it will be
very useful to pray for a sincere good will to become a really holy man.
He who runs away from one cross, will meet a bigger one on his road.
Christ died for sinners; we must take heart, therefore, and hope that
Paradise will be ours, provided only we repent of our sins, and do good.
Never let a sick man set himself to reason with the devil, otherwise he
will inevitably be taken in; let him appeal to his ghostly father, of whom the
devil stands in mortal fear.
He who serves God must do the best he can not to receive the reward of his
labors in this world.
In giving alms to the poor we must act as good ministers of the Providence
of God.
He who feels that the vice of avarice has got hold of him, should not wish
to observe fasts of supererogation, but to give alms.
Perfection cannot be attained without the greatest toil.
As soon as we are stripped of the sordid garb of avarice, we shall be
clothed with the royal and imperial vest of the opposite virtue, liberality.
Even in the midst of the crowd we can be going on to perfection.
Not everything which is better in itself is better for each man in
particular.
Be devout to the Madonna, keep yourself from sin, and God will deliver you
from your evils.
If we wish to keep peace with our neighbors, we should never remind any one
of his natural defects.
We must sometimes bear with little defects in others, as we have against
our own will to bear with natural defects in ourselves.
Men of rank ought to dress like their equals, and be accompanied by
servants, as their state requires, but modesty should go along with it all.
We should not be quick at correcting others, but rather to think of
ourselves first.
Let us think, if we only got to heaven, what a sweet and easy thing it will
be there to be always saying with the angels and the saints,Sanctus,
Sanctus, Sanctus.
The best way to prepare for death is to spend every day of life as
though it were the last.
In passing from a bad state to a good one there is no need of
counsel, but in passing from a good one to a better, time, counsel, and prayer
must go to the decision.
We must continually pray to God for the conversion of sinners, thinking of
the joy there is in heaven both to God and the angels in the conversion of each
separate sinner.
To speak of ourselves without cause, saying, “I have said,” “I have done,”
incapacitates us for receiving spiritual consolations.
We ought to desire to be in such a condition as to want sixpence, and not be
able to get it.
Let us despise gold, silver, jewels, and all that the blind and cheated
world vainly and ignorantly prizes.
Let us learn here below to give God the confession of praise which we ought
to hope to give Him in heaven above.
He who wishes to go to Paradise must be an honest man and a good Christian,
and not give heed to dreams.
Fathers and mothers of families should bring up their children virtuously,
looking at them rather as God’s children than their own; and to count life and
health, and all they possess, as loans which they hold of God.
In saying the Pater Noster, we ought to reflect that we have God for our
Father in heaven, and so go on making a sort of meditation of it word by word.
To make ourselves disaffected to the things of the world, it is a good
thing to think seriously of the end of them, saying to ourselves,“And
then? And then?”
The devil, who is a most haughty spirit, is never more completely mastered
than by humility of heart, and a simple, clear, undisguised manifestation of
our sins and temptations to our confessor.
We ought not ordinarily to believe prophecies or to desire them, because it
is possible there may be many deceits and snares of the devil therein.
It is a most useful thing, when we see another doing any spiritual good to
his neighbor, to seek by prayer to have a part in that same good which the Lord
is working by the hand of another.
At communion we ought to ask for the remedy of the vice to which we feel
ourselves most inclined.
To him who truly loves God, nothing more displeasing can happen than the
lack of occasion to suffer for Him.
We ought to hate no one, for God never comes where there is no love of our
neighbors.
We must accept our own death and that of our relations when God shall send
it to us, and not desire it at any other time; for it is sometimes necessary
that it should happen at that particular moment for the good of our own and
their souls.
The perfection of a Christian consists in knowing how to mortify himself
for the love of Christ.
He who desires ecstasies and visions does not know what he is desiring.
As for those who run after visions, dreams, and the like, we must lay hold
of them by the feet and pull them to the ground by force, lest they should fall
into the devil’s net.
According to the rules of the fathers and ancient monks, whoever wishes to
advance in perfection must hold the world in no reputation.
There is nothing more displeasing to God, than our being inflated with
self-esteem.
When a man knows how to break down his own will and to deny his soul what
it desires, he has got a good degree in virtue.
When a man falls into any bodily infirmity, he must lie and think, and say,
“God has sent me this sickness, because He wishes something of me; I must
therefore make up my mind to change my life and become better.”
When a man has a tribulation sent him from God, and is impatient, we may
say to him, “You are not worthy that God should visit you; you do not deserve
so great a good.”
Poverty and tribulations are given us by God as trials of our fidelity and
virtue, as well as to enrich us with more real and lasting riches in heaven.
Scruples ought to be most carefully avoided, as they disquiet the mind, and
make a man melancholy.
Let us throw ourselves into the arms of God, and be sure that if He wishes
anything of us, He will make us good for all He desires us to do for Him.
Nothing helps a man more than prayer.
Idleness is a pestilence to a Christian man; we ought always therefore to
be doing something, especially when we are alone in our rooms, lest the devil
should come in and catch us idle.
We ought always to be afraid, and never put any confidence in ourselves;
for the devil assaults us on a sudden, and darkens our understanding; and he
who does not live in fear is overcome in a moment, because he has not the help
of the Lord.
In order to enter Paradise we must be well justified and well purified.
Let the young man look after the flesh, and the old man after avarice, and
we shall all be saints together.
Where there is no great mortification there is no great sanctity.
The sanctity of a man lies in the breadth of three fingers, (the forehead,)
that is to say, in mortifying the understanding, which would fain reason upon
things.
He who really wishes to become a saint must never defend himself, except in
a few rare cases, but always acknowledge himself in fault, even when what is
alleged against him is untrue.
What we know of the virtues of the saints is the least part of them.
The relics of the saints ought to be venerated, and we may laudably keep
them in our room; but it is not well, unless for some grave occasion, to wear
them on our persons, because it will often happen then that they are not
treated with all the respect which is becoming.
The old patriarchs possessed riches, and had wives and children, but they
lived without defiling their affections with these things, although they
possessed them, because they only allowed themselves the use of them, and were
ready to abandon them in whatever way the Majesty of God might require of them.
We ought to pray God importunately to increase in us every day the light
and heat of his goodness.
It is an old custom with the servants of God always to have some little
prayers ready, and to be darting them up to heaven frequently during the day,
lifting their minds to God from out of the filth of this world. He who adopts
this plan will get great fruit with little pains.
Tribulations, if we bear them patiently for the love of God, appear bitter
at first, but they grow sweet, when one gets accustomed to the taste.
The man who loves God with a true heart, and prizes him above all things,
sometimes sheds floods of tears at prayer, and has in abundance of favors and
spiritual feelings coming upon him with such vehemence, that he is forced to
cry out, “Lord! let me be quiet!”
But a man ought not to seek for these sweetnesses and sensible devotions
forcibly, for he will be easily deluded by the devil, and will run a risk of
injuring his health.
When the soul lies resignedly in the hands of God, and is contented with
the divine pleasure, it is in good hands, and has the best security that good
will happen to it.
To be entirely conformed and resigned to the Divine Will, is truly a road
in which we cannot get wrong, and is the only road which leads us to taste and
enjoy that peace which sensual and earthly men know nothing of.
Resignation is all in all to the sick man; he ought to say to God, “Lord,
if You want me, here I am, although I have never done any good: do with me what
You will.”
Never make a noise of any sort in church, except for the greatest
necessity.
Patience is necessary for the servant of God, and we must not be distressed
at trouble, but wait for consolation.
When seculars have once chosen their secular state, let them persevere in
it, and in the devout exercises which they have begun, and in their works of
charity, and they shall have contentment at their death.
The vocation to the religious life is one of the great benefits which the
Mother of God obtains from her Son for those who are devoted to her.
There is nothing more dangerous in the spiritual life, than to wish to rule
ourselves after our own way of thinking.
Among the things we ought to ask of God, is perseverance in well-doing and
in serving the Lord; because, if we only have patience, and persevere in the
good life we have begun to lead, we shall acquire a most eminent degree of
spirituality.
He is perfect in the school of Christ who despises being despised, rejoices
in self-contempt, and accounts himself to be very nothingness.
The way which God takes with the souls that love him, by allowing them to
be tempted and to fall into tribulations, is a true espousal between Himself
and them.
In temptations of the flesh, a Christian ought to have immediate recourse
to God, make the sign of the cross over his heart three times, and say,
“Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me.”
As to temptations, some are mastered by flying from them, some by resisting
them, and some by despising them.
In order to acquire prudence, and to make a good judgment, we must have
lived long and been intimate with many people.
It is a great perfection in a heart when it is discreet and does not
overstep the limits of convenience and what is befitting.
We must seek Christ where Christ is not, that is, in crosses and
tribulations, in which truly He is not now, but we shall find Him in glory by
this road.
December
Frequent confession is the cause of great good to the soul,
because it purifies it, heals it, and confirms it in the service of God: we
ought not therefore to omit confession on our fixed days for any business
whatsoever; but go to confession first, and to business afterwards, and the
first will help the last.
When we go to confession, we ought to persuade ourselves to find Jesus
Christ in the person of our confessor.
Give me ten men really detached from the world, and I have the heart to
believe I could convert the world with them.
He who communicates often, as he ought to do, brings forth good fruit, the
fruit of humility, the fruit of patience, the fruit of all the virtues.
Penitents ought not to go to confession for temporal ends, to get alms and
the like.
We ought to make no account of an immodest person, notwithstanding that he
may possess other virtues.
The Holy Spirit says of prelates and pastors, He who hears and obeys his superiors,
hears and obeys Me, and he who despises them, despises and disobeys Me.
If the servant of God would fain walk with more security through so many
snares scattered in every place, he should have our Blessed Lady as his
mediatrix with her Son.
The sick man may desire to get well, provided he seals his desire always
with an “If it please God,” “If it is good for my soul;” for we can do many
good things in health, which sickness hinders us from doing.
In sickness we ought to ask God to give us patience, because it often
happens, that when a man gets well, he not only does not do the good he
proposed to do when he was sick, but he multiplies his sins and his
ingratitude.
The mole is a blind rat, which always stays in the ground; it eats earth,
and hollows it out, but is never satisfied with it: so is the avaricious man or
woman.
Penitents should never make vows without the advice of their spiritual
fathers.
If we do make such vows, it is best to make them conditionally: for
example, “I make a vow to have two masses said on S. Lucy’s day, with this
bargain, If I can, If I do not forget it, because if I do not remember it I do
not wish to be bound.”
When a man has to buy anything, he ought not to do so because he is moved
by an attachment to the thing, but from want and necessity; for it will never
do to buy attachments.
Certain little voluntary attachments of self-love must be cut through, and
then we must dig round them, and then remove the earth, till we get down deep
enough to find the place where they are rooted and interlaced together.
A person must be ready to endure, when through a virtuous motive he is
mortified by others, and even when God permits him to be in bad odor with
others, and regarded and driven away as an infected sheep.
Our enemy the devil, who fights with us in order to vanquish us, seeks to
disunite us in our houses, and to breed quarrels, dislikes, contests, and
rivalries, because while we are fighting with each other, he comes and conquers
us, and makes us more securely his own.
He who does not think on the benefits he receives from God in this life,
and on those greater ones his mercy has prepared in that other life of bliss,
does not nourish love to God, but chills and freezes it.
If a soul could altogether abstain from venial sins, the greatest pain it
could have would be to be detained in this life, so great would its desire be
of union with God.
In the persecutions which bad men excite against piety and devotion, we
must keep our eyes on God, whom we serve, and on the testimony of a good
conscience.
How patiently Christ, the King and Lord of heaven and earth, bore with the
apostles, enduring at their hands many incivilities and misbeliefs, they being
but poor and rough fishermen! How much more ought we to bear with our neighbor,
if he treats us with incivility.
We must give ourselves to God altogether.
God makes all his own the soul that is wholly given to him.
It is as a general rule a bad sign when a man has not a particular feeling
of devotion on the chief feasts of the year.
Let us reflect that the Word left heaven, and stooped to become man for us.
Besides pardoning those who persecute us, we ought to feel pity for the
delusion they are laboring under.
To one who really loves God, there is nothing more harassing or burdensome
than life.
Let young men be cheerful, and indulge in the recreations proper to their
age, provided they keep out of the way of sin.
Not to know how to deny our soul its own wishes, is to foment a very
hot-bed of vices.
All created things are liberal, and show the goodness of the Creator: the
sun scatters its light, the fire its heat; the tree throws out its arms, which
are its branches, and reaches to us the fruit it bears: water, and air, and all
nature express the liberality of the Creator, and we, who are his lively image,
do not represent him, but through our degenerate manners deny Him in deeds
while we are confessing Him with our mouths.
The hour is finished - we may say the same of the year; but the time to do
good is not finished yet.