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T358 From a treatise on the
Lord's Prayer by Saint Cyprian, bishop and martyr
Our prayer is communal
Above all, he who preaches peace and unity did not
want us to pray by ourselves in private or for ourselves alone. We do
not say "My Father, who art in heaven," nor "Give me this
day my daily bread." It is not for himself alone that each person
asks to be forgiven, not to be led into temptation or to be delivered
from evil. Rather, we pray in public as a community, and not for one
individual but for all. For the people of God are all one.
God is then the teacher of harmony, peace and unity,
and desires each of us to pray for all men, even as he bore all men in
himself alone. The three young men shut up in the furnace of fire
observed this rule of prayer. United in the bond of the Spirit they
uttered together the same prayer. The witness of holy Scripture
describes this incident for us, so that we might imitate them in our
prayer. Then all three began to sing in unison, blessing God. Even
though Christ had not yet taught them to pray, nevertheless, they spoke
as with one voice.
It is for this reason that their prayer was persuasive
and efficacious. For their simple and spiritual prayer of peace merited
the presence of the Lord. So too, after the ascension we find the
apostles and the disciples praying together in this way. Scripture
relates: They all joined together in continuous prayer, with the women
including Mary, the mother of Jesus, and his brothers. They all joined
together in continuous prayer. The urgency and the unity of their prayer
declares that God, who fashions a bond of unity among those who live in
his home, will admit into his divine home for all eternity only those
who pray in unity.
My dear friends, the Lord's Prayer contains many great
mysteries of our faith. In these few words there is great spiritual
strength, for this summary of divine teaching contains all of our
prayers and petitions. And so, the Lord commands us: Pray then like
this: Our Father, who art in heaven.
We are new men; we have been reborn and restored to
God by his grace. We have already begun to be his sons and we can say
"Father." John reminds us of this: He came to his own home,
and his own people did not receive him. But to all who received him, who
believe in his name, he gave the power to become children of God.
Profess your belief that you are sons of God by giving thanks. Call upon
God who is your Father in heaven.

T381 From a treatise on the Lord's Prayer by Saint
Cyprian, bishop and martyr
Prayer should be expressed in deeds as well as
words
Dear friends, why does the fact that God has taught us
such a prayer as this astonish us? Did he not express all of our prayers
in his own words of life? Indeed this was already foretold by Isaiah,
Filled with the Holy Spirit, he spoke of the majesty and fidelity of
God: The Lord will speak a final brief word of justice, a word
throughout the world. Our Lord Jesus Christ came for all mankind. He
gathered together male and female, the learned and the unlearned, the
old and the young and taught them his saving doctrine. He did not want
his disciples to be burdened by memorizing his teaching, he made a
complete summary of his commands such as was necessary for a trusting
faith, and could be quickly learned.
Thus he summarized his teaching on the mystery of
eternal life and its meaning with an admirable, divine brevity: And
eternal life is this: to know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ
whom you sent. Again, in quoting the first and the greatest precept of
the law and the prophets, he spoke in the same way: Listen, Israel, the
Lord your God is one Lord, and you shall love the Lord your God with all
your heart, with all your soul, and with all your strength. This is the
first commandment. The second is like it: you must love your neighbor as
yourself. On these two commandments depends all that is contained in the
law and the prophets. On another occasion the Lord said: Always treat
others as you would like them to treat you: that is the meaning of the
law and the prophets.
God taught us to pray not only by his words, but also
by his actions. He taught us by his own example for he often prayed on
our behalf. The Scripture says: He withdrew to the wilderness and
prayed. And again: He went into the hills to pray and he spent the whole
night in prayer to God.
Was the sinless Lord praying for himself? No, he was
praying and interceding on our behalf. He explained this to Peter:
Behold Satan demanded that he might sift you like wheat, but I have
prayed for you that your faith may not fail. Later on he prayed to the
Father for everyone: I am not praying for these only, but also for those
who will believe in me through their preaching, that they may be one;
just as you, Father, are in me, and I in you, that they also may be one
in us. God loves us; for the sake of our salvation he is generous toward
us. He is not satisfied with redeeming us by his blood. He also prays to
the Father on our behalf. Consider the love exemplified in that prayer.
The Father and Son are one; we too are to abide in that oneness.

T367 From a treatise on the Lord's Prayer by Saint
Cyprian, bishop and martyr
Your kingdom come. Your will be done
The prayer continues: Your kingdom come. We pray that
God's kingdom will become present for us in the same way that we ask for
his name to be hallowed among us. For when does God not reign, when
could there be in him a beginning of what always was and what will never
cease to be? What we pray for is that the kingdom promised to us by God
will come, the kingdom won by Christ's blood and passion, Then we who
formerly were slaves in this world will reign from now on under the
dominion of Christ, in accordance with his promise: Come, O blessed of
my Father, receive the kingdom which was prepared for you from the
foundation of the world.
However, my dear friends, it could also be that the
kingdom of God whose coming we daily wish for is Christ himself, since
it is his coming that we long for. He is our resurrection, since we rise
again in him; so too he can be thought of as the kingdom of God because
we are to reign in him. And it is good that we pray for God's kingdom;
for though it is a heavenly kingdom, it is also an earthly one. But
those who have already renounced the world are made greater by holding
positions of authority in that kingdom.
After this we add: Your will be done on earth as it is
in heaven; we pray not that God should do his will, but that we may
carry out his will. How could anyone prevent the Lord from doing what he
wills? But in our prayer we ask that God's will be done in us, because
the devil throws up obstacles to prevent our mind and our conduct from
obeying God in all things. So if his will is to be done in us we have
need of his will, that is, his help and protection. No one can be strong
by his own strength or secure save by God's mercy and forgiveness. Even
the Lord, to show the weakness of the human nature which he bore, said:
Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me, and then, by way
of giving example to his disciples that they should do God's will and
not their own, he added: Nevertheless, not as I will, but as you will.
All Christ did, all he taught, was the will of God.
Humility in our daily lives, an unwavering faith, a moral sense of
modesty in conversation, justice in acts, mercy in deed, discipline,
refusal to harm others, a readiness to suffer harm, peaceableness with
our brothers, a wholehearted love of the Lord, loving in him what is of
the Father, fearing him because he is God, preferring nothing to him who
preferred nothing to us, clinging tenaciously to his love, standing by
his cross with loyalty and courage whenever there is any conflict
involving his honor and his name, manifesting in our speech the
constancy of our profession and under torture confidence for the fight,
and in dying the endurance for which we will be crowned---this is
what it means to wish to be a coheir with Christ, to keep God's command;
this is what it means to do the will of the Father.

T376 From a treatise on the Lord's Prayer by Saint
Cyprian, bishop and martyr
We are God's children; let us abide in his peace
Christ clearly laid down an additional rule to bind us
by a certain contractual condition: we ask that our debts be forgiven
insofar as we forgive our own debtors. Thus we are made aware that we
cannot obtain what we ask regarding our own trespasses unless we do the
same for those who trespass against us. This is why he says elsewhere:
The measure you give will be the measure you get. And the servant who,
after his master forgives all his debt, refuses to forgive his fellow
servant is thrown into prison. Because he refused to be kind to his
fellow servant, he lost the favor his master had given him.
Along with his other precepts Christ lays this down
even more forcefully with a most vigorous condemnation. He says: When
you stand up to pray, if you have anything against anyone, let it go, so
that your heavenly Father may also forgive you; but if you do not
forgive men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive you your
trespasses. You will have no excuse on the day of judgment, for then you
will be judged just as you have judged, and you.will suffer whatever you
have done to others.
God bids us to be peace-loving, harmonious and of one
mind in his house; he wants us to live with the new life he gave us at
our second birth. As sons of God, we are to abide in peace; as we have
one Spirit, we should be one in mind and heart. Thus God does not
receive the sacrifice of one who lives in conflict; and he orders us to
turn back from the altar and be first reconciled with our brother, that
God too may be appeased by the prayers of one who is at peace. The
greatest offering we can make to God is our peace, harmony among fellow
Christians, a people united with the unity of the Father, the Son and
the Holy Spirit.
When Cain and Abel first offered their sacrifices, God
considered not so much the gifts as the spirit of the giver: God was
pleased with Abel's offering because he was pleased with his spirit.
Thus Abel the just man, the peacemaker, in his blameless sacrifice
taught men that when they offer their gift at the altar they should
approach as he did, in the fear of God, simplicity of heart, ruled by
justice and peaceful harmony. Since this was the character of Abel's
offering, it was only right that he himself should afterward become a
sacrifice. As martyrdom's first witness and possessing the Lord's
qualities of justice and peace, he foreshadowed the Lord's passion in
the glory of his own death. Such, then, are the men who are crowned by
the Lord and will be justified with him on the day of judgment.
But St. Paul and the sacred Scriptures tell us that
the quarrelsome man and the troublemaker, who is never at peace with his
brothers, cannot escape the charge of internal dissension even though he
may die for Christ's name. For it is written: He who hates his brother
is a murderer, nor can he attain the kingdom of heaven. God cannot abide
a murderer. He cannot be united with Christ, who has preferred to
imitate Judas rather than Christ.

B192 From a treatise On the Value Of Patience by
Saint Cyprian, Bishop and Martyr
We hope for what we do not see.
Patience is a precept for salvation given us by our
Lord, our teacher: Whoever endures to the end will be saved. And again:
If you persevere in my word, you will truly be my disciples; you will
know the truth, and the truth will set you free.
Dear brethren, we must endure and persevere if we are
to attain the truth and freedom we have been allowed to hope for; faith
and hope are the very meaning of our being Christians, but if faith and
hope are to bear their fruit, patience is necessary.
We do not seek glory now, in the present, but we look
for future glory, as Saint Paul instructs us when he says: By hope we
were saved. Now hope which is seen is not hope; how can a man hope for
what he sees? But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it in
patience. Patient waiting is necessary if we are to be perfected in what
we have begun to be, and if we are to receive from God what we hope for
and believe.
In another place the same Apostle instructs and
teaches the just, and those active in good works, and those who store up
for themselves treasures in heaven through the reward God gives them.
They are to be patient also, for he says: Therefore while we have time,
let us do good to all, but especially to those who are of the household
of the faith. But let us not grow weary in doing good, for we shall reap
our reward in due season.
Paul warns us not to grow weary in good works through
impatience, not to be distracted or overcome by temptations and so give
up in the midst of our pilgrimage of praise and glory, and allow our
past good deeds to count for nothing because what was begun falls short
of completion.
Finally the Apostle, speaking of charity, unites it
with endurance and patience. Charity, he says, is always patient and
kind; it is not jealous, is not boastful, is not given to anger, does
not think evil, loves all things, believes all things, hopes all things,
endures all things. He shows that charity can be steadfast and
persevering because it has learned how to endure all things.
And in another place he says: Bear with one another
lovingly, striving to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.
He shows that neither unity nor peace can be maintained unless the
brethren cherish each other with mutual forbearance and preserve the
bond of harmony by means of patience.

T444 From a catechetical1 instruction by Saint
Cyril of Jerusalem, bishop
Acknowledge your sins at a time of God's favor
If there is any slave of sin here present, he should
at once prepare himself through faith for the rebirth into freedom that
makes us God's adopted children. He should lay aside the wretchedness of
slavery to sin, and put on the joyful slavery of the Lord, so as to be
counted worthy to inherit the kingdom of heaven. By acknowledging your
sins strip away your former self, seduced as it is by destructive
desires, and put on the new self, renewed in the likeness of its
Creator. Through faith receive the pledge of the Holy Spirit, so that
you may be welcomed into the everlasting dwelling places. Draw near, to
be marked with the supernatural seal, so that you may be easily
recognized by your master. Become a member of Christ's holy and
spiritual flock, so that one day you may be set apart on his right hand,
and so gain the life prepared as your inheritance.
Those whose sins still cling to them like a goatskin
will stand on his left hand because they did not approach Christ's
fountain of rebirth to receive God's grace. By rebirth I mean, not
rebirth of the body, but the spiritual rebirth of the soul. Our bodies
are brought into being by parents who can be seen, but our souls are
reborn through faith: the Spirit breathes where he wills. At the end, if
you are made worthy, you may hear the words: Well done, good and
faithful servant, when, that is, you are found with no stain of
hypocrisy on your conscience.
If anyone here present is thinking of putting God's
grace to the test, he is deceiving himself, and he does not understand
the nature of things. You are but a man; there is one who searches out
men's thoughts and hearts. You must keep your soul innocent and free
from deceit.
The present is a time for the acknowledgment of sins.
Acknowledge what you have done, in word or deed, by night or day.
Acknowledge your sins at a time of God's favor, and on the day of
salvation you will receive the treasures of heaven.
Wash yourself clean, so that you may hold a richer
store of grace. Sins are forgiven equally for all, but communion in the
Holy Spirit is given in the measure of each one's faith. If you have
done little work, you will receive little; if you have achieved a great
deal, great will be your reward. The race you are running is for your
own advantage; look after your own interests.
If you have a grudge against anyone, forgive him. You
are drawing near to receive forgiveness for your own sins; you must
yourself forgive those who have sinned against you.

T157 From the Catecheses by Saint Cyril of
Jerusalem, Bishop
Even in time of persecution let the cross be your
joy
The Catholic Church glories in every deed of Christ.
Her supreme glory, however is the cross. Well aware of this, Paul says:
God forbid that I glory in anything but the cross of our Lord Jesus
Christ!
At Siloam, there was a sense of wonder, and rightly
so. A man born blind recovered his sight. But of what importance is
this, when there are so many blind people in the world? Lazarus rose
from the dead, but even this only affected Lazarus. What of those
countless numbers who have died because of their sins? Those five
miraculous loaves fed five thousand people Yet this is a small number
compared to those all over the world who were starved by ignorance.
After eighteen years a woman was freed from the bondage of Satan. But
are we not all shackled by the chains of our own sins?
For us all, however, the cross is the crown of
victory! It has brought light to those blinded by ignorance It has
released those enslaved by sin. Indeed it has redeemed the whole of
mankind!
Do not, then, be ashamed of the cross of Christ;
rather, glory in it. Although it is a stumbling block to the Jews and
folly to the Gentiles, the message of the cross is our salvation. Of
course it is folly to those who are perishing but to us who are being
saved it is the power of God. For it was not a mere man who died for us,
but the Son of God, God made man.
In the Mosaic law a sacrificial lamb banished the
destroyer. But now it is the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the
world. Will he not free us from our sins even more? The blood of an
animal, a sheep brought salvation. Will not the blood of the only
begotten Son bring us greater salvation?
He was not killed by violence, he was not forced to
give up his life. His was a willing sacrifice Listen to his own words: I
have the power to lay down my life and to take it up again. Yes, he
willingly submitted to his own passion. He took joy in his achievement;
in his crown of victory he was glad and in the salvation of man he
rejoiced. He did not blush at the cross for by it he was to save the
world. No, it was not a lowly man who suffered but God incarnate. He
entered the contest for the reward he would win by his patient
endurance.
Certainly in times of tranquility the cross should
give you joy. But maintain the same faith in times of persecution you
will be a friend of Jesus in times of peace and his enemy during war.
Now you receive the forgiveness of your sins and the generous gift of
grace from your king. When war comes fight, courageously for him.
Jesus never sinned; yet he was crucified for you. Will
you refuse to be crucified for him, who for your sake was nailed to the
cross? You are not the one who gives the favor; you have received one
first. For your sake he was crucified on Golgotha. Now you are returning
his favor; you are fulfilled your debt to him.
T 100 From the treatise On Spiritual Perfection by
Diadochus of Photice, bishop
All our love must be for God
No one who is in love with himself is capable of
loving God. The man who loves God is the one who mortifies his self-love
for the sake of the immeasurable blessings of divine love. Such a man
never seeks his own glory but only the glory of God. If a person loves
himself he seeks his own glory, but the man who loves God loves the
glory of his Creator. Anyone alive to the love of God can be recognized
from the way he constantly strives to glorify him by fulfilling all his
commandments and by delighting in his own abasement. Because of his
great majesty it is fitting that God should receive glory, but if he
hopes to win God's favor it becomes man to be humble. If we possess this
love for God, we too will rejoice in his glory as Saint John the Baptist
did, and we shall never stop repeating: His fame must increase, but mine
must diminish.
I know a man who, though lamenting his failure to love
God as much as he desires, yet loves him so much that his soul burns
with ceaseless longing for God to be glorified, and for his own complete
effacement. This man has no feeling of self importance even when he
receives praise. So deep is his desire to humble himself that he never
even thinks of his own dignity. He fulfills his priestly duty by
celebrating the Liturgy, but his intense love for God is an abyss that
swallows up all consciousness of his high office. His humility makes him
oblivious of any honor it might bring him, so that in his own estimation
he is never anything but a useless servant. Because of his desire for
self abasement, he regards himself as though degraded from his office.
His example is one that we ourselves should follow by fleeing from all
honor and glory for the sake of the immeasurable blessings of God's
love, for he has loved us so much!
Anyone who loves God in the depths of his heart has
already been loved by God. In fact, the measure of a man's love for God
depends upon how deeply aware he is of God's love for him. When this
awareness is keen it makes whoever possesses it long to be enlightened
by the divine light, and this longing is so intense that it seems to
penetrate his very bones. He loses all consciousness of himself and is
entirely transformed by the love of God.
Such a man lives in this life and at the same time
does not live in it, for although he still inhabits his body, he is
constantly leaving it in spirit because of the love that draws him
toward God. Once the love of God has released him from self-love, the
flame of divine love never ceases to burn in his heart and he remains
united to God by an irresistible longing. As the Apostle says: If we are
taken out of ourselves it is for the love of God; if we are brought back
to our senses it is for your sake.

R840 From a letter to Diognetus
The Christian in the world
Christians are indistinguishable from other men either
by nationality, language or customs. They do not inhabit separate cities
of their own, or speak a strange dialect, or follow some outlandish way
of life. Their teaching is not based upon reveries inspired by the
curiosity of men. Unlike some other people, they champion no purely
human doctrine. With regard to dress, food and manner of life in
general, they follow the customs of whatever city they happen to be
living in, whether it is Greek or foreign.
And yet there is something extraordinary about their
lives. They live in their own countries as though they were only passing
through. They play their full role as citizens, but labor under all the
disabilities of aliens. Any country can be their homeland, but for them
their homeland, wherever it may be, is a foreign country. Like others,
they marry and have children, but they do not expose them. They share
their meals, but not their wives. They live in the flesh, but they are
not governed by the desires of the flesh. They pass their days upon
earth, but they are citizens of heaven. Obedient to the laws, they yet
live on a level that transcends the law.
Christians love all men, but all men persecute them.
Condemned because they are not understood, they are put to death, but
raised to life again. They live in poverty, but enrich many; they are
totally destitute, but possess an abundance of everything. They suffer
dishonor, but that is their glory. They are defamed, but vindicated. A
blessing is their answer to abuse, deference their response to insult.
For the good they do they receive the punishment of malefactors, but
even then they rejoice, as though receiving the gift of life. They are
attacked by the Jews as aliens, they are persecuted by the Greeks, yet
no one can explain the reason for this hatred.
To speak in general terms, we may say that the
Christian is to the world what the soul is to the body. As the soul is
present in every part of the body, while remaining distinct from it, so
Christians are found in all the cities of the world, but cannot be
identified with the world. As the visible body contains the invisible
soul, so Christians are seen living in the world, but their religious
life remains unseen. The body hates the soul and wars against it, not
because of any injury the soul has done it, but because of the
restriction the soul places on its pleasures. Similarly, the world hates
the Christians, not because they have done it any wrong, but because
they are opposed to its enjoyments.
Christians love those who hate them just as the soul
loves the body and all its members despite the body's hatred. It is by
the soul, enclosed within the body, that the body is held together, and
similarly, it is by the Christians, detained in the world as in a
prison, that the world is held together. The soul, though immortal, has
a mortal dwelling place; and Christians also live for a time amidst
perishable things, while awaiting the freedom from change and decay that
will be theirs in heaven. As the soul benefits from the deprivation of
food and drink, so Christians flourish under persecution. Such is the
Christian's lofty and divinely appointed function, from which he is not
permitted to excuse himself.

T299 From the teachings of Saint Dorotheus, abbot
On false spiritual peace
The man who finds fault with himself accepts all
things cheerfully---misfortune, loss, disgrace, dishonor and any other
kind of adversity. He believes that he is deserving of all these things
and nothing can disturb him. No one could be more at peace than this
man.
But perhaps you will offer me this objection:
"Suppose my brother injures me, and on examining myself I find that
I have not given him any cause. Why should I blame myself?"
Certainly if someone examines himself carefully and
with fear of God, he will never find himself completely innocent. He
will see that he has given some provocation by an action, a word or by
his manner. If he does find that he is not guilty in any of these ways,
certainly he must have injured that brother somehow at some other time.
Or perhaps he has been a source of annoyance to some other brother. For
this reason he deserves to endure the injury because of many other sins
that he has committed on other occasions.
Someone else asks why he should accuse himself when he
was sitting peacefully and quietly when a brother came upon him with an
unkind or insulting word. He cannot tolerate it, and so he thinks that
his anger is justified. If that brother had not approached him and said
those words and upset him, he never would have sinned.
This kind of thinking is surely ridiculous and has no
rational basis. For the fact that he has said anything at all in this
situation breaks the cover on the passionate anger within him, which is
all the more exposed by his excessive anxiety. If he wished, he would do
penance. He has become like a clean, shiny grain of wheat that, when
broken, is full of dirt inside.
The man who thinks that he is quiet and peaceful has
within him a passion that he does not see. A brother comes up, utters
some unkind word and immediately all the venom and mire that lie hidden
within him are spewed out. If he wishes mercy, he must do penance,
purify himself and strive to become perfect. He will see that he should
have returned thanks to his brother instead of returning the injury,
because his brother has proven to be an occasion of profit to him. It
will not be long before he will no longer be bothered by these
temptations. The more perfect he grows, the less these temptations will
affect him. For the more the soul advances, the stronger and more
powerful it becomes in bearing the difficulties that it meets.

T295 From the teachings of Saint Dorotheus, abbot
The reason for all disturbance is that no one
finds fault with himself
Let us examine, my brothers, how it happens that many
times a person hears something unpleasant and goes away untroubled, as
if he had not heard it; and yet on some occasions he is disturbed and
troubled as soon as he hears such words. What is the cause of this
inconsistency? Is there one reason for it or many? I recognize a number
of them, and one in particular is the source of all the other's. As
someone has put it: Occasionally this results from the condition in
which the person happens to be.
If a person is engaged in prayer or contemplation, he
can easily take a rebuke from his brother and be unmoved by it. On other
occasions affection toward a brother is a strong reason; love bears all
things with the utmost patience. Another reason may be contempt; if a
person despises the one who is trying to trouble him and acts as if he
is the vilest of all creatures and considers it beneath his dignity even
to look at him, or to answer him, or to mention the affront and insults
to anyone else, he will not be moved by his words.
The result of this is, as I have said, that no one is
disturbed or troubled if he scorns and disregards what is said. But on
the other hand, it is also possible that a person will be disturbed and
troubled by his brother's words, either because he is not in a good
frame of mind, or because he hates his brother. There are a great number
of other reasons as well. Yet the reason for all disturbance, if we look
to its roots, is that no one finds fault with himself.
This is the source of all annoyance and distress. This
is why we sometimes have no rest. We must not be surprised when we are
rebuked by holy men. We have no other path to peace but this.
We have seen that this is true in many cases, and, in
our laziness and desire for rest, we hope or believe that we have
entered upon a straight path when we are impatient with everyone, and
yet cannot bear to blame ourselves.
This is the way we are. It does not matter how many
virtues a man may have, even if they are beyond number and limit. If he
has turned from the path of self-accusation, he will never find peace,
He will always be troubled himself, or else he will be a source of
trouble for others and all his labors will be wasted.

B1689 ELIZABETH ANN SETON - From a conference to
her spiritual daughters
Our daily work is to do the will of God
I will tell you what is my own great help. I once read
or heard that an interior life means but the continuation of our
Savior's life in us; that the great object of all his mysteries is to
merit for us the grace of his interior life and communicate it to us, it
being the end of his mission to lead us into the sweet land of promise,
a life of constant union with himself. And what was the first rule of
our dear Savior's life? You know it was to do his Father's will. Well,
then, the first end I propose in our daily work is to do the will of
God; secondly, to do it in the manner he wills; and thirdly, to do it
because it is his will.
I know what his will is by those who direct me;
whatever they bid me do, if it is ever so small in itself, is the will
of God for me. Then do it in the manner he wills it, not sewing an old
thing as if it were new, or a new thing as if it were old; not fretting
because the oven is too hot, or in a fuss because it is too cold. You
understand---not flying and driving because you are hurried, not
creeping like a snail because no one pushes you. Our dear Savior was
never in extremes. The third object is to do his will because God wills
it, that is, to be ready to quit at any moment and to do anything else
to which you may be called.
You think it very hard to lead a life of such
restraint unless you keep your eye of faith always open. Perseverance is
a great grace. To go on gaining and advancing every day, we must be
resolute, and bear and suffer as our blessed forerunners did. Which of
them gained heaven without a struggle?
What are our real trials? By what name shall we call
them? One cuts herself out a cross of pride; another, one of causeless
discontent; another, one of restless impatience or peevish fretfulness.
But is the whole any better than children's play if looked at with the
common eye of faith? Yet we know certainly that our God calls us to a
holy life, that he gives us every grace, every abundant grace; and
though we are so weak of ourselves, this grace is able to carry us
through every obstacle and difficulty.
But we lack courage to keep a continual watch over
nature, and therefore, year after year, with our thousand graces,
multiplied resolutions, and fair promises, we run around in a circle of
misery and imperfections. After a long time in the service of God, we
come nearly to the point from whence we set out, and perhaps with even
less ardor for penance and mortification than when we began our
consecration to him.
You are now in your first setout. Be above the vain
fears of nature and efforts of your enemy. You are children of eternity.
Your immortal crown awaits you, and the best of Fathers waits there to
reward your duty and love. You may indeed sow here in tears, but you may
be sure there to reap in joy.

B176 From a commentary on the Diatessaron by Saint
Ephrem, deacon
Keep watch; he is to come again
To prevent his disciples from asking the time of his
coming, Christ said: About that hour no one knows, neither the angles
nor the Son. It is not for you to know times or moments. He has kept
those things hidden so that we may keep watch, each of us thinking that
he will come in our own day. If he had revealed the time of his coming,
his coming would have lost its savor: it would no longer be an object of
yearning for the nations and the age in which it will be revealed. He
promised that he would come but did not say when he would come, and so
all generations and ages await him eagerly.
Though the Lord has established the signs of his
coming, the time of their fulfillment has not been plainly revealed.
These signs have come and gone with a multiplicity of change; more than
that, they are still present. His final coming is like his first. As
holy men; and prophets waited for him, thinking that he would reveal
himself in their own day, so today each of the faithful longs to welcome
him in his own day, because Christ has not made plain the day of his
coming.
He has not made it plain for this reason especially,
that no one may think that he whose power and dominion rule all numbers
and times is ruled by fate and time. He described the signs of his
coming; how could what he has himself decided be hidden from him?
Therefore, he used these words to increase respect for the signs of his
coming, so that from that day forward all generations and ages might
think that he would come again in their own day.
Keep watch; when the body is asleep nature takes
control of us, and what is done is not done by our will but by force, by
the impulse of nature. When deep listlessness takes possession of the
soul, for example, faintheartedness or melancholy, the enemy overpowers
it and makes it do what it does not will. The force of nature, the enemy
of the soul, is in control.
When the Lord commanded us to be vigilant, he meant
vigilance in both parts of man: in the body, against the tendency to
sleep; in the soul, against lethargy and timidity. As Scripture says:
Wake up, you just, and I have risen, and am still with you; and again,
Do not lose heart. Therefore, having this ministry, we do not lose
heart.

R1868 From a sermon by Saint Ephrem, deacon
The divine plan for the world is the mirror of
the spiritual world
Lord, shed upon our darkened souls the brilliant light
of your wisdom so that we may be enlightened and serve you with renewed
purity. Sunrise marks the hour for men to begin their toil, but in our
souls, Lord, prepare a dwelling for the day that will never end. Grant
that we may come to know the risen life and that nothing may distract us
from the delights you offer. Through our unremitting zeal for you, Lord,
set upon us the sign of your day that is not measured by the sun.
In your sacrament we daily embrace you and receive you
into our bodies; make us worthy to experience the resurrection for which
we hope. We have had your treasure hidden within us ever since we
received baptismal grace; it grows ever richer at your sacramental
table. Teach us to find our joy in your favor! Lord, we have within us
your memorial, received at your spiritual table; let us possess it in
its full reality when all things shall be made new.
We glimpse the beauty that is laid up for us when we
gaze upon the spiritual beauty your immortal will now creates within our
mortal selves.
Savior, your crucifixion marked the end of your mortal
life; teach us to crucify ourselves and make way for our life in the
Spirit. May your resurrection, Jesus, bring true greatness to our
spiritual self and may your sacraments be the mirror wherein we may know
that self. Savior, your divine plan for the world is a mirror for the
spiritual world; teach us to walk in that world as spiritual men.
Lord, do not deprive our souls of the spiritual vision
of you nor our bodies of your warmth and sweetness. The mortality
lurking in our bodies spreads corruption through us; may the spiritual
waters of your love cleanse the effects of mortality from our hearts.
Grant, Lord, that we may hasten to our true city and, like Moses on the
mountaintop, possess it now in vision.

T1317 From The Introduction to the Devout Life by
Saint Francis de Sales, bishop
Devotion must be practiced in different ways
When God the Creator made all things, he commanded the
plants to bring forth fruit each according to its own kind; he has
likewise commanded Christians, who are the living plants of his Church,
to bring forth the fruits of devotion, each one in accord with his
character, his station and his calling.
I say that devotion must be practiced in different
ways by the nobleman and by the working man, by the servant and by the
prince, by the widow, by the unmarried girl and by the married woman.
But even this distinction is not sufficient; for the practice of
devotion must be adapted to the strength, to the occupation and to the
duties of each one in particular.
Tell me, please, my Philothea, whether it is proper
for a bishop to want to lead a solitary life like a Carthusian; or for
married people to be no more concerned than a Capuchin about increasing
their income; or for a working man to spend his whole day in church like
a religious; or on the other hand for a religious to be constantly
exposed like a bishop to all the events and circumstances that bear on
the needs of our neighbor. Is not this sort of devotion ridiculous,
unorganized and intolerable? Yet this absurd error occurs very
frequently, but in no way does true devotion, my Philothea, destroy
anything at all. On the contrary, it perfects and fulfills all things.
In fact if it ever works against, or is inimical to, anyone's legitimate
station and calling, then it is very definitely false devotion.
The bee collects honey from flowers in such a way as
to do the least damage or destruction to them, and he leaves them whole,
undamaged and fresh, just as he found them. True devotion does still
better. Not only does it not injure any sort of calling or occupation,
it even embellishes and enhances it.
Moreover, just as every sort of gem, cast in honey,
becomes brighter and more sparkling, each according to its color, so
each person becomes more acceptable and fitting in his own vocation when
he sets his vocation in the context of devotion. Through devotion your
family cares become more peaceful, mutual love between husband and wife
becomes more sincere, the service we owe to the prince becomes more
faithful, and our work, no matter what it is, becomes more pleasant and
agreeable.
It is therefore an error and even a heresy to wish to
exclude the exercise of devotion from military divisions, from the
artisans' shops, from the courts of princes, from family households. I
acknowledge, my dear Philothea, that the type of devotion which is
purely contemplative, monastic and religious can certainly not be
exercised in these sorts of stations and occupations, but besides this
threefold type of devotion, there are many others fit for perfecting
those who live in a secular state.
Therefore, in whatever situations we happen to be, we
can and we must aspire to the life of perfection.

B1438 From a sermon by Saint Fulgentius of Ruspe,
bishop
The faithful and wise steward
The Lord, in his desire to explain the special
function Of those servants whom he placed over his people, said: Who do
you think is the faithful and wise steward whom his master has set over
his household to give them their portion of food at the, proper time?
That servant is blessed if he is found doing this when his master comes.
And who is the master? None other than Christ, who said to his
disciples: You call me teacher and master, and you are right, for so I
am. And who is the master's household? Surely, it is the Church which
the Lord redeemed from the power of the adversary, and which he
purchased for himself, thereby becoming its master. This household is
the holy Catholic Church which is so fruitfully extended far and wide
over the world, rejoicing that it has been redeemed by the precious
blood of the Lord. As the Lord himself says: The Son of Man came not to
be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.
Furthermore, he is the Good Shepherd who has laid down his life for his
sheep; the Good Shepherd's flock is this household of the Redeemer.
But who is the steward who must be both faithful and
wise? The apostle Paul tells us when he says of himself and his
companions: This is how one should regard us, as servants of Christ and
stewards of the mysteries of God. Moreover, it is required of stewards
that they be found faithful.
But this does not mean that the apostles alone have
been appointed our stewards, nor that any of us may give up our duty of
spiritual combat and, as lazy servants, sleep our time away, and be
neither faithful nor wise. For the blessed Apostle tells us that the
bishops too are stewards. A bishop, he says, must be blameless because
he is God's steward.
We bishops, then, are the servants of the householder,
the stewards of the Master, and we have received the portion of food to
dispense to you. If we should wonder what that portion of food is, the
blessed Apostle Paul tells us when he says: To each according to the
measure of faith which God has assigned to him. Hence what Christ calls
the portion of food, Paul calls the measure of faith. We may therefore
take this spiritual food to mean the venerable mystery of the Christian
faith. and we give you this portion of food in the Lord's name as often
as we, enlightened by the gift of grace, teach you in accordance with
the rule of the true faith. In turn, you daily receive the portion of
food at the hands of the Lord's stewards when you hear the word of truth
from the servants of God.

G540 From a treatise on Forgiveness by Saint
Fulgentius of Ruspe, bishop
He who overcomes shall not be harmed by the
second death
In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye as the final
trumpet sounds, for the trumpet shall indeed sound, the dead shall rise
incorruptible and we shall be changed. In saying "we," Paul is
indicating that the gift of that future change will also be given to
those who during their time on earth are united to him and his
companions by upright lives within the communion of the Church. He hints
at the nature of the change when he says: This corruptible body must put
on incorruptibility, this mortal body immortality. In order, then, that
men may obtain the transformation which is the reward of the just, they
must first undergo here on earth a change which is God's free gift.
Those who in this life have been changed from evil to good are promised
that future change as a reward.
Through justification and the spiritual resurrection,
grace now effects in them an initial change that is God's gift. Later
on, through the bodily resurrection, the transformation of the just will
be brought to completion, and they will experience a perfect, abiding,
unchangeable glorification. The purpose of this change wrought in them
by the gifts of both justification and glorification is that they may
abide in an eternal, changeless state of joy.
Here on earth they are changed by the first
resurrection, in which they are enlightened and converted, thus: passing
from death to life, sinfulness to holiness, unbelief to faith, and evil
actions to holy life. For this reason the second death has no power over
them. It is of such men that the Book of Revelation says: Happy the man
who shares in the first resurrection; over such as he the second death
has no power. Elsewhere the same book says: He who overcomes shall not
be harmed by the second death. As the first resurrection consists of the
conversion of the heart, the second death consists of unending torment.
Let everyone, therefore, who does not wish to be
condemned to the endless punishment of the second death now hasten to
share in the first resurrection. For if any during this life are changed
out of fear of God and pass from an evil life to a good one, they pass
from death to life and later they shall be transformed from a shameful
state to a glorious one.

R96 From a sermon by Saint Gregory of Nazianzen,
bishop
Let us show each other God's generosity
Recognize to whom you owe the fact that you exist,
that you breathe, that you understand, that you are wise, and, above
all, that you know God and hope for the kingdom of heaven and the vision
of glory, now darkly and as in a mirror but then with greater fullness
and purity. You have been made a son of God, coheir with Christ. Where
did you get all this, and from whom?
Let me turn to what is of less importance: the visible
world around us. What benefactor has enabled you to look out upon the
beauty of the sky, the sun in its course, the circle of the moon, the
countless number of stars, with the harmony and order that are theirs,
like the music of a harp? Who has blessed you with rain, with the art of
husbandry, with different kinds of food, with the arts, with houses,
with laws, with states, with a life of humanity and culture, with
friendship and the easy familiarity of kinship?
Who has given you dominion over animals, those that
are tame and those that provide you with food? Who has made you lord and
master of everything on earth? In short, who has endowed you with all
that makes man superior to all other living creatures?
Is it not God who asks you now in your turn to show
yourself generous above all other creatures and for the sake of all
other creatures? Because we have received from him so many wonderful
gifts, will we not be ashamed to refuse him this one thing only, our
generosity? Though he is God and Lord he is not afraid to be known as
our Father. Shall we for our part repudiate those who are our kith and
kin?
Brethren and friends, let us never allow ourselves to
misuse what has been given us by God's gift. If we do, we shall hear
Saint Peter say: Be ashamed of yourselves for holding on to what belongs
to someone else. Resolve to imitate God's justice, and no one will be
poor. Let us not labor to heap up and hoard riches while others remain
in need. If we do, the prophet Amos will speak out against us with sharp
and threatening words: Come now, you that say: When will the new moon be
over, so that we may start selling? When will sabbath be over, so that
we may start opening our treasures?
Let us put into practice the supreme and primary law
of God. He sends down rain on just and sinful alike, and causes the sun
to rise on all without distinction. To all earth's creatures he has
given the broad earth, the springs, the rivers and the forests. He has
given the air to the birds, and the waters to those who live in water.
He has given abundantly to all the basic needs of life, not as a private
possession, not restricted by law, not divided by boundaries, but as
common to all, amply and in rich measure. His gifts are not deficient in
any way, because he wanted to give equality of blessing to equality of
worth, and to show the abundance of his generosity.

G555 From a commentary on the Song of Songs by
Saint Gregory of Nyssa, bishop
A prayer to the Good Shepherd
Where do you pasture your sheep, O Good Shepherd, you
who carry on your shoulders the whole flock? For it is but one sheep,
this entire human race whom you lift onto your shoulders. Show me the
place where there are green pastures, let me know restful waters, lead
me out to nourishing grass and call me by name so that I can hear your
voice, for I am your own sheep. And through that voice calling me, give
me eternal life.
Tell me, you whom my soul loves. This is how I address
you, because your true name is above all other names; it is unutterable
and incomprehensible to all rational creatures. And so the name I use
for you is simply the statement of my soul's love for you, and this is
an apt name for making your goodness known. Very dark though I am, how
could I not love you who so loved me, that you laid down your life for
the sheep you tend? No greater love can be conceived than this, that you
should purchase my salvation at the cost of your life.
Show me, then, says the bride, where you tend your
sheep, so that I may find the saving pasture and be filled with heavenly
nourishment. For whoever does not eat this food cannot enter eternal
life. Let me run to you, the spring, and drink the divine draught that
you cause to pour forth for the thirsty, offering water from your side
opened by the spear. Whoever drinks of this becomes a fountain of water
springing up to eternal life.
If you feed me thus, then you will surely make me lie
down at noonday, and I shall at once sleep in peace, resting in a light
that knows no shadow. Indeed, there is no shadow at noon, for the sun
shines directly over that summit where you make those you tend lie down,
and take your children with you to your bed. No one is judged worthy of
this noonday rest who is not a child of light and of the day. But if
anyone makes himself equally distant from the shadows of daybreak and
those of nightfall, that is, from the origin of evil and its conclusion,
the sun of righteousness makes him lie down at noontide.
Show me, then, says the bride, how I should lie down;
show me the path to this noonday repose, lest my ignorance of your truth
cause me to stray from your good guidance and consort with flocks which
are strangers to yours.
Thus speaks the bride, anxious about the beauty God
has given her, and seeking to learn how her comeliness may continue for
ever.

T412 From a homily by Saint Gregory of Nyssa,
bishop
God can be found in man's heart
In our human life bodily health is a good thing, but
this blessing consists not merely in knowing the causes of good health
but in actually enjoying it. If a man eulogizes good health and then
eats food that has unhealthy effects, what good is his praise of health
when he finds himself on a sickbed? Similarly, from the Lord's saying:
Blessed are the pure of heart, for they shall see God, we are to learn
that blessedness does not lie in knowing something about God, but rather
in possessing God within oneself.
I do not think these words mean that God will be seen
face to face by the man who purifies the eye of his soul. Their sublime
import is brought out more clearly perhaps in that other saying of the
Lord's: The kingdom of God is within you. This teaches us that the man
who cleanses his heart of every created thing and every evil desire will
see the image of the divine nature in the beauty of his own soul. I
believe the lesson summed up by the word in that short sentence was
this: you men have within you a desire to behold the supreme good. Now
when you are told that the majesty of God is exalted above the heavens,
that his glory is inexpressible, his beauty indescribable, and his
nature transcendent, do not despair because you cannot behold the object
of your desire. If by a diligent life of virtue you wash away the film
of dirt that covers your heart, then the divine beauty will shine forth
in you.
Take a piece of iron as an illustration. Although it
might have been black before, once the rust has been scraped off with a
whetstone, it will began to shine brilliantly and to reflect the rays of
the sun. So it is with the interior man, which is what the Lord means by
the heart. Once a man removes from his soul the coating of filth that
has formed on it through his sinful neglect, he will regain his likeness
to his Archetype, and be good. For what resembles the supreme Good is
itself good. If he then looks into himself, he will see the vision he
has longed for. This is the blessedness of the pure of heart: in seeing
their own purity they see the divine Archetype mirrored in themselves.
Those who look at the sun in a mirror, even if they do
not look directly at the sky, see its radiance in the reflection just as
truly as do those who look directly at the sun's orb. It is the same,
says the Lord, with you. Even though you are unable to contemplate and
see the inaccessible light, you will find what you seek within yourself,
provided you return to the beauty and grace of that image which was
originally placed in you. For God is purity; he is free from sin and a
stranger to all evil. If this can be said of you, then God will surely
be within you. If your mind is untainted by any evil, free from sin, and
purified from all stain, then indeed are you blessed, because your sight
is keen and clear. Once purified, you see things that others cannot see.
When the mists of sin no longer cloud the eye of your soul, you see that
blessed vision clearly in the peace and purity of your own heart. That
vision is nothing else than the holiness, the purity, the simplicity and
all the other glorious reflections of God's nature, through which God
himself is seen.
Morals 5
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