SERMON
XXVIII. PENTECOST SUNDAY
CONFORMITY
TO THE WILL OF GOD
"As the Father hath given me commandment, so do
I."
JOHN xiv. 31.
JESUS CHRIST was
given to us, by God, as a savior and as a master. Hence he came on earth
principally to teach us, not only by his words but also by his own example, how
we are to love God our supreme good: hence, as we read in this days Gospel, he
said to his disciples: "That the world may know that I love the Father, and
as the Father hath given me Commandment, so do I." To show the world the
love I bear to the Father, I will execute all his commands. In another place he
said:”I came down from heaven not to do my own will, but the will of him that
sent me." (John VI. 38.) Devout souls, if you love God and desire to become
saints, you must seek his will, and wish what he wishes. St. Paul tells us,
that the divine love is poured into our souls by means of the Holy Ghost. “The
charity of God is poured into our hearts by the Holy Ghost, who is given to
us." (Hom. v. 5.) If, then, we wish for the gift of divine love, we must
constantly beseech the Holy Ghost to make us know and do the will of God. Let
us continually implore his light to know, and his strength to fulfil the divine
will. Many wish to love God, but they, at the same time, wish to follow their
own, and not his will. Hence I shall show today, in the first point, that uur
sanctification consists entirely in conformity to the will of God; and in the
second, I shall show how, and in what, we should in practice conform ourselves
to the divine will.
First Point:
Our sanctification consists entirely in conformity
to the will of God.
1. It is
certain that our salvation consists in loving God. A soul that does not love
God is not living, but dead. "He that loveth not, abideth in death."
(1 John iii. 14.) The perfection of love consists in conforming our will to the
will of God. "And life in his good will." (Ps. xxix. 6.)”Have
charity, which is the bond of perfection." (Col. iii. 14.) According to
the Areopagite, the principal effect of love is to unite the wills of lovers,
so that they may have but one heart and one will. Hence all our works,
communions, prayers, penances, and alms, please God in proportion to their
conformity to the divine will; and if they be contrary to the will of God, they
are no longer acts of virtue, but defects deserving chastisement.
2. Whilst
preaching one day, Jesus Christ was told that his mother and brethren were
waiting for him; in answer he said: "Whosoever shall do the will of my Father
that is in heaven, he is my brother and sister and mother." (Matt. xii.
50.) By these words he gave us to understand that he acknowledged as friends
and relatives those only who fulfil the will of his Father.
3. The saints
in heaven love God perfectly. In what, I ask, does the perfection of their love
consist
It consists in an entire conformity to the divine will. Hence Jesus
Christ has taught us to pray for grace to do the will of God on earth, as the
saints do it in heaven. ”Thy will be done on earth, as it is in heaven."
(Matt. vi. 10.) Hence St. Teresa says, that”they who practice prayer, should seek in all things to conform their will to the will of God." In this, she adds, consists the highest perfection. He that practises it in the most perfect manner, shall receive from God the greatest gifts, and shall make the greatest progress in interior life. The accomplishment of the divine will has been the sole end of the saints in the practice of all virtues. Blessed Henry Suson used to say: "I would rather be the vilest man on earth with the will of God, than be a seraph with my own will."
(Matt. vi. 10.) Hence St. Teresa says, that”they who practice prayer, should seek in all things to conform their will to the will of God." In this, she adds, consists the highest perfection. He that practises it in the most perfect manner, shall receive from God the greatest gifts, and shall make the greatest progress in interior life. The accomplishment of the divine will has been the sole end of the saints in the practice of all virtues. Blessed Henry Suson used to say: "I would rather be the vilest man on earth with the will of God, than be a seraph with my own will."
4. A perfect act of conformity is sufficient to make a person a
saint. Behold, Jesus Christ appeared to St. Paul while he was persecuting the
Church, and converted him. What did the saint do? He did nothing more than
offer to God his will, that he might dispose of it as he pleased.
"Lord," he exclaimed, “what
wilt thou have me to do? (Acts ix. 6.) And instantly the Lord declared to
Ananias, that Saul was a vessel of election, and apostle of the Gentiles. “This
man is a vessel of election to carry my name before the Gentiles." (Acts
ix. 15.) He that gives his will to God, gives him all he has. He that mortifies
himself by fasts and penitential austerities, or that gives alms to the poor for God’s
sake, gives to God a part of himself and of his goods; but he that gives his
will to God, gives him all, and can say: Lord, having given thee my will, I
have nothing more to give thee I have given thee all. It is our heart that is,
our will that God asks of us. “My son, give me thy heart." (Prov. xxiii.
26.) Since, then, says the holy Abbot Nilus, our will is so acceptable to God,
we ought, in our prayers, to ask of him the grace, not that we may do what he
will, but that we may do all that he wishes us to do. Every one knows this
truth, that our sanctification consists in doing the will of God; but there is
some difficulty in reducing it to practice. Let us, then, come to the second
point, in which I have to say many things of great practical utility.
Second Point How, and in what, we ought to practice conformity to the will of God.
5. That we may feel a facility of doing on all occasions the divine
will, we must beforehand offer ourselves continually to embrace in peace
whatever God ordains or wills. Such was the practice of holy David. “My
heart," he used to say, ”is ready; God! my heart is ready." (Ps.
cvii. 2.) And he continually besought the Lord to teach him to do his divine
will. ”Teach me to do thy will." (Ps. cxlii. 1 0.) He thus deserved to be
called a man according to God’s own heart. ”I have found David, the son of
Jesse, a man according to my own heart, who shall do all my wills." (Acts
xiii. 2 2.) And why? Because the holy king was always ready to do whatever God
wished him to do.
6.
St. Teresa offered herself to God fifty times in the day, that he might dispose of her as he pleased, and declared her readiness to embrace either prosperity or adversity. The perfection of our oblation consists in our offering ourselves to God without reserve. All are prepared to unite themselves to the divine will in prosperity; but perfection consists in conforming to it, even in adversity. To thank God in all things that are agreeable to us, is acceptable to him; but to accept with cheerfulness what is repugnant to our inclinations, is still more pleasing to him. Father M. Avila used to say, that "a single blessed be God, in adversity, is better than six thousand thanksgivings in prosperity."
St. Teresa offered herself to God fifty times in the day, that he might dispose of her as he pleased, and declared her readiness to embrace either prosperity or adversity. The perfection of our oblation consists in our offering ourselves to God without reserve. All are prepared to unite themselves to the divine will in prosperity; but perfection consists in conforming to it, even in adversity. To thank God in all things that are agreeable to us, is acceptable to him; but to accept with cheerfulness what is repugnant to our inclinations, is still more pleasing to him. Father M. Avila used to say, that "a single blessed be God, in adversity, is better than six thousand thanksgivings in prosperity."
7. We should conform to the divine will,
not only in misfortunes which come directly from God such as sickness, loss of
property, privation of friends and relatives but also in crosses which come to
us from men, but indirectly from God such as acts of injustice, defamations,
calumnies, injuries, and all other sorts of persecutions. But, you may ask,
does God will that others commit sin, by injuring us in our property or in our
reputation? No; God wills not their sin; but he wishes us to bear with such a
loss and with such a humiliation; and he wishes us to conform, on all such
occasions, to his divine will.
8.
"Good things and evil... are from God." (Eccl. xi. 14.)
All blessings
such as riches and honors and all misfortunes such as sickness and
persecutions come from God. But mark that the Scripture calls them evils, only
because we, through the want of conformity to the will of God, regard them as
evils and misfortunes. But, in reality, if we accepted them from the hands of
God with Christian resignation, they should be blessings and not evils. The
jewels which give the greatest splendor to the crown of the saints in heaven,
are the tribulations which they bore with patience, as coming from the hands of
the Lord. On hearing that the Sabeans had taken away all his oxen and asses,
holy Job said: “The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away." (Job i. 21.)
He did not say that the Lord gave, and that the Sabeans had taken away; but that the Lord gave,
and that the Lord had taken away: and therefore he blessed the Lord, believing
that all had happened through the divine will. “As it has pleased the Lord, so
it is done: blessed be the name of the Lord." (Ibid.) Being tormented with
iron hooks and burning torches, the holy martyrs Epictetus and Atone said:
”Lord, thy will be done in us." And their last words were: ”Be blessed,
eternal God, for having given us the grace to accomplish thy will."
9. ”Whatsoever shall befall the just man,
it shall not make him sad." (Prov. xii. 21.) A soul that loves God is not
disturbed by any misfortune that may happen to her. Cesarius relates (lib. x.,
c. vi.), that a certain monk who did not perform greater austerities than his
companions, wrought many miracles. Being astonished at this, the abbot asked
him one day what were the works of piety which he practised. He answered, that
he was more imperfect than the other monks; but that his sole concern was to
conform himself to the divine will. Were you displeased, said the abbot, with
the person who injured us so grievously a few days ago? No, father, replied the
monk; I, on the contrary, thanked God for it; because I know that he does or
permits all things for our good. From this answer the abbot perceived the
sanctity of the good religious. We should act in a similar manner under all the
crosses that come upon us. Let us always say: ”Yea, Father; for so hath it
seemed good in thy sight." (Matt. xi. 26.) Lord, this is pleasing to thee,
let it be done.
10. He that acts in
this manner enjoys that peace which the angels announced at the birth of Jesus
Christ to men of good will that is, to those whose wills are united to the will
of God. These, as the Apostle says, enjoy that peace which exceeds all sensual
delights. “The peace of God, which surpasseth all understanding." (Phil.
iv. 7.) A great and solid peace, which is not liable to change. "A holy
man continueth in wisdom like the sun; but a fool is changing like the
moon." (Eccl. xxvii 12.) Fools that is, sinners are changed like the moon,
which increases today, and grows less on tomorrow; Today they are seen to laugh
through folly, and to- morrow, to weep through despair; Today they are humhle
and meek, tomorrow, proud and furious. In a word, sinners change with
prosperity and adversity; but the just are like the sun, always the same,
always serene in whatever happens to them. In the inferior part of the soul
they cannot but feel some pain at the misfortunes which befall them; but, as
long as the will remains united to the will of God, nothing can deprive them of
that spiritual joy which is not subject to the vicissitudes of this life. “Your
joy no man shall take from you." (John xvi. 22.)
11. He that reposes in the divine will, is
like a man placed above the clouds: he sees the lightning, and hears the claps
of thunder, and the raging of the tempest below, but he is not injured or
disturbed by them. And how can he be ever disturbed, when whatever he desires
always happens? He that desires only what pleases God, always obtains
whatsoever he wishes, because all that happens to him, happens through the will
of God. Salvian says, that Christians who are resigned, if they be in a low
condition of life, wish to be in that state; if they be poor, they desire
poverty; because they wish whatever God wills, and therefore they are always
content. ”Humiles sunt, hoc volunt, pauperes sunt, paupertate delectantur:
itaque beati dicendisunt." If cold, or heat, or rain, or wind come on, he
that is united to the will of God says: I wish for this cold, this heat, this
rain, and this wind, because God wills them. If loss of property, persecution,
sickness, or even death come upon him, he says: I wish for this loss, this
persecution, this sickness; I even wish for death, when it comes, because God
wills it. And how can a person who seeks to please God, enjoy greater happiness
than that which arises from cheerfully embracing the cross which God
sends him, and from the conviction that, in embracing it, he pleases God in the
highest degree? So great was the joy which St. Mary Magdalene de Pazzi used to
feel at the bare mention of the will of God, that she would fall into an
ecstacy.
12. But, how great is the
folly of those who resist the divine will, and, instead of receiving tribulations
with patience, get into a rage, and accuse God of treating them with injustice
and cruelty! Perhaps they expect that, in consequence of their opposition, what
God wills shall not happen? “Who resisteth his will ?" (Rom. ix. 19.)
Miserable men! instead of lightening the
cross which God sends them, they make it more heavy and painful. “Who hath
resisted him, and hath peace ?" (Job ix. 4.) Let us be resigned to the
divine will, and we shall thus render our crosses light, and shall gain great
treasures of merits for eternal life. In sending us tribulations, God intends
to make us saints. "This is the will of God, your sanctification." (1
Thess. iv. 3.) He sends us crosses, not because he wishes evil to us, but
because he desires our welfare, and because he knows that they are conducive to
our salvation. "All things work together unto good." (Rom. viii. 28.)
Even the chastisements which come from the Lord are not for our destruction,
but for our good and for the correction of our faults. ”Let us believe that
these scourges of the Lord....have happened for our amendment, and not for our
destruction." (Jud. viii. 27.) God loves us so tenderly, that he not only
desires, but is solicitous about our welfare. ”The Lord," says David, ”is
careful for me." (Ps. xxxix. 18.)
13. Let us, then, always throw ourselves into the hands of God, who
so ardently desires and so anxiously watches over our eternal salvation.
”Casting all your care upon him; for he hath care of you." (1 Peter v. 7.)
He who, during life, casts himself into the hands of God, shall lead a happy
life and shall die a holy death. He who dies resigned to the divine will, dies
a saint; but they who shall not have been united to the divine will during
life, shall not conform to it at death, and shall not be saved. The
accomplishment of the divine will should be the sole object of all our thoughts
during the remainder of our days. To this end we should direct all our
devotions, our meditations, communions, visits to the blessed sacrament, and
all our prayers. We should constantly beg of God to teach and help us to do his
will. "Teach me to do thy will." (Ps. cxlii. 10.) Let us, at the same
time, offer ourselves to accept without reserve whatever he ordains, saying,
with the Apostle: ”Lord, what wilt thou have me to do " (Acts ix. 6.)
Lord, tell me what thou dost wish me to do I desire to do thy will. And in all
things, whether they be pleasing or painful, let us always have in our mouths
that petition of the PATER NOSTER-”Thy will be done”Let us frequently repeat it
in the day, with all the affection of our hearts. Happy we, if we live and die
saying: ”Thy will be done” “Thy will be done!"
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