Mil 1 aaaulHHlKiaoitifmiliiii JmSiSmmlMMm IHHI mBSsSSm WBBBm mjSEHMSBRiiHiitll s ftffi :y > o5 -nt 2.. * o ■ ^ . A * >k' *^. ^ ■ ^ y ■■^Sl ' Ik ■■ \ V \ cS>^ a^ o 0' rp '* «** v o -\ -f U N I O N WITH OUR LORD JESUS CHIRST. U NION Our Lord Jesus Christ REV. FR. JOHN BAPTIST SAINT -JURE, Of the Society of Jesus. Translation Revised by a Father of the sa?ne Society. Paradisum habemux multo meliorem et longe delectahiliorem guam primi parentes hnhuerunt, et pwadisus noster Christus Dominus est. — St. Bernard, Serm. I., in Xativ. Doni. we a paradise much better and more delightful than our first par- - paradise is our Lord Jesus Christ. 4R NEW YORK : . - J v : J. SADLIER & CO., 31 BARCLAY STREET. Montreal : No. 275 Notre-Dame Street. 1876. op CfiweiuMg WAS HINGTON Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1S76. by D. & J. SADLIEIt & CO., in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C. Stereotyped by VINCENT DILL, 2j and 27 New Chambers St., N. Y. APPROBATION. PREFACE TO THE FRENCH EDITION. The Rev. Fr. John Baptist Saint-Jure, author of the book we present to the public, is too renowned for his learning and holiness of life to need any eulogium from us. The greater number of the works that gave him so distinguished a rank among the grand ascetic writers of the seventeenth century, are still in the hands of pious persons ; and for more than two hundred years "The Know- ledge and Love of Our Lord Jesus Christ" " The Book of the Elect ; or, Jesus Crucified" " The Master ; or, Jesus Teaching Men" have not ceased to produce in the Church most abundant fruits of sanctity. It is therefore with reason that we are sur- prised to see forgotten during this long period, one of the most excellent of the works of this apostolic man. The " Union with our Lord viii Preface to the French Edition. Jesus Christ in His Principal Mysteries " is in our day almost entirely unknown. The Catalogue of Writers of the Society of Jesus has not even given its title, and it seems to have escaped the researches of those editors who for some years past have been so zealous in reproducing the other works of the same author. The edition that we now reprint in English appeared but a few months after the death of Father Saint-Jure. Unlike the preceding editions, it bears his name, and it contains some new matter on the union of the soul with our Lord by charity. It is, as it were, a spiritual testament of the holy man wherein he seems anxious to declare for a last time, that admirable doctrine on the love of Jesus Christ which during his long career he never wearied of teaching. TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE. This short work of Father Saint-Jure which we present to the public is peculiar in its character. It is a book suggestive of matter for reflection and meditation rather than one intended for mere spiritual reading. Consequently it appears suited particularly to persons who are trying earnestly to ad- vance in the practice and acquisition of the Christian virtues and the imitation of our Lord. To such persons we humbly recom- mend it, begging their prayers for The Translator. CONTENTS. PAGE Preface to the French Edition vii Translator's Preface ix CHAPTER I. On the Mysteries of Our Lord Jesus Christ 13 CHAPTER II. Jesus Christ is the Spiritual Air that we ought Constantly to to Breathe 38 CHAPTER III. Practice of Union with Our Lord Jesus Christ for the Season of Advent 55 CHAPTER IV. Practice of Union with Our Lord Jesus Christ from Christ- mas to Lent 87 CHAPTER V. Practice of Union with Our Lord Jesus Christ for the Season of Lent 138 xii Contents, CHAPTER VI. PAGE Practice of Union with Our Lord Jesus Christ from Easter to the Feast of the Blessed Sacrament 300 CHAPTER VII. Practice of Union with Our Lord Jesus Christ in the Mystery of the Eucharist from the Feast of the Blessed Sacra- ment to the Month of August 343 CHAPTER VIII. Practice of Union with Our Lord Jesus Christ for the Month of August, by the Virtue of Faith 395 CHAPTER IX. Practice of Union with Our Lord Jesus Christ for the Month of September, by the Virtue of Hope 408 CHAPTER X. Practice of Union with Our Lord Jesus Christ for the Months of October and November until Advent, by the Virtue of Charity 42 1 UNION OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST. CHAPTER I. OX THE MYSTERIES OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST. Our. predestination and salvation depend absolutely on our union with our Lord Jesus Christ, since, as the Prince of the Apostles tells us, there is no salvation out of Jesus Christ, and God has given to men under hea- ven or in the whole universe no other name by which they can be saved. " Neither is there salvation in any other. For there is no other name under heaven given to men, whereby we must be saved." (Acts iv. 12.) And our Lord, speaking of himself, assures us that everything in heaven or on earth is subject to his power, and that God, his Father, has placed all things at his disposal. " All power is given to me in 2 14 Mysteries of Our Lord. heaven and on earth." (Matt, xxviii. 18.) " The Father has given him all things into his hands." (John xiii. 3.) We must from this draw two important conclusions which we ought never to forget, but rather should recall each moment of our lives, and should, as it were, write everywhere in large characters, even with the golden rays of the sun, if this were possible. These conclusions are that we have a continual and inexplicable need of Jesus Christ for all that concerns our salvation, and that, consequently, we should exert all our efforts to unite ourselves intimately and inseparably with him. Now this union is formed, practiced, and ren- dered perfect by sanctifying grace ; by acts of the virtues, in particular of the virtues of Faith, Hope, and Charity; by the worthy reception of the sacred body of Jesus Christ in the Blessed Sacrament, which, for this reason, is called Communion ; by desires, by petitions, but chiefly by imitation of our Lord, which produces his likeness in us. Inasmuch as it is in this likeness that the entire secret of our predestination and salva- tion consists, so he who bears it will infallibly be predestined and saved. The nearer we approach our Lord, the more we resemble Mystei'ies of Our Lord. 15 him, the more signs of predestination and sal- vation, the greater number of tokens of eter- nal happiness we shall possess. "Whom he foreknew," says the celebrated passage of St. Paul, "he also predestinated to be made conformable to the image of his Son : that he might be the first-born amongst many brethren." (Rom. viii. 29.) " Behold," says St. Chrysostom, " the height of glory to which God raises thee, making thee by grace what his only Son is by nature, and calling thee from dust and ashes to the honor of being his brother. But to bring this to pass thou must resemble him ; because those for whom God has from all eternity stored up special favors and whom he has looked upon with particular kindness, he has predestined to be one day like to his son in heaven, provided they be like him here on earth. For this reason the Holy Spirit, speaking by the prophet Aggeus, gives to the Son of God a very significative and remarkable name, calling him the seal which the Father uses to mark his elect. " I will make thee as a signet, for I have chosen thee." (Agg. ii. 24.) Our Lord is the seal with which God signs all the predestinate ; he impresses it upon them, and they must all be marked with it, for it alone 1 6 Mysteries of Our Lord. confirms them in their high estate and in their sovereign glory. Thus St. Paul, writing to the faithful of the church of Ephesus, tells them that they are marked with Jesus Christ and bear his like- ness. "In Christ you were signed." (Ephes. i. 13.) And St. John saw twelve thousand of every tribe of the children of Israel who were marked in the same manner. "There were twelve thousand signed." (Apoc. vii. 5.) He says that on the contrary the reprobate bear the mark of the beast, that is of Antichrist or the devil, and that it is engraved and stamped upon them. It is, then, this mark and likeness which makes us adopted children of God, and assures our salvation. The noblest of God's designs, and the greatest work that he performs in heaven or on earth, is to form and represent his Son Jesus Christ in us. The first and most sublime production of God the Father is the production of his Word in himself by eternal generation ; the second is the production of his Word incarnate out of himself, in the most pure womb of the ever Blessed Virgin by the incarnation ; and the third is the production of it in us by justifica- tion. The production of the Word in the Mysteries of Our Lord. ij bosom of the Father is the glory of the Father ; the production of the Word incarnate in the womb of the Virgin is the glory of his Mother ; and the production of Jesus Christ in us is our glory, our salvation, and the most perfect dis- position in which we can be to procure great honor to God. Therefore God, anxious for his honor and our salvation, ardently desires this representation of Jesus Christ in us, and acts continually in a thousand manners to produce it. ■ The Father, moreover, desires it, because, knowing that his Son humbled and annihilated himself for his glory, he wills that as a recom- pense he be exalted, and be made as it were, to exist in a glorious manner in us and in all things ; for as he loves him solely he wishes to behold him everywhere, and to have no other object on which to look with complacency. The Son also desires it, so that his sufferings may not be in vain, and his designs may not remain unaccomplished ; the Holy Ghost, de- sires it, he who, having formed our Lord Jesus Christ in the womb of the Blessed Virgin, is constantly occupied, by means of the lights, inspirations, and assistance he gives in forming him morally in us, so that we may manifest him to the whole universe, expressed and 1 8 Mysteries of Our Lord. represented in our interior, our exterior, and all our actions. Again, the Church, our mother, exerts all her efforts for no other object than to perfect in us the image of Jesus Christ, and to make -us like unto him ; and when she sees that we do not resemble him, she says, with St. Paul : "My little children, of whom I am in labor again until Christ be formed in you," (Gal. iv. 19,) who formerly bore gloriously the image of Jesus Christ, your Father and my Spouse, and who were very like to him in the purity of your lives, now that the irregularity of your conduct has effaced from your souls the features of that divine likeness, I am constrained to conceive and bring you forth anew to Jesus Christ, to retrace his features in you until you resemble him perfectly. Behold whither all the designs of God and of the Church tend, to making us like Jesus Christ — and behold also what should be the object of all our own intentions and efforts. To accomplish this object we should, as it were, bind and unite ourselves to his mysteries, because his mysteries are his principal actions, and, what is more, they are nothing else but himself; for the incarnation, the nativity, the passion, the death, and the resurrection of our Mysteries of Our Lord. 19 Lord, are our Lord incarnate,' newly born, suffering, dying, and risen. Hence to bind and unite ourselves -to his mysteries is to bind and unite ourselves to him, and by that bind- ing and that union to put on his likeness. Our Lord desires to continue and fulfill in us, as in his members whom he would sanctify and save, all those mysteries which are the sources of our sanctification and salvation. Thus he desires to express and consummate in us his incarnation, his birth, his passion, his death, his resurrection and ascension, becoming in a certain manner again incarnate in us, being born in our souls, and enabling us to reproduce the characteristics of these mysteries and to practice the virtues he practiced in them. So what St. Paul says, namely, that he filled up those things that were wanting to the sufferings of Christ, in his flesh (Coloss. i. 24) in a general way, must also be understood of Christ's incarnation, his nativity, and all his other mysteries ; it is necessary for us, if we would be saved, to fill up what is wanting in these mysteries, not in our Lord, in whom they were accomplished to the last degree, and who on his part did all that was requisite, but in us, who as his members and images are 20 Mysteries of Our Lord. bound to reproduce them according to our capacity. Hence we must unite ourselves most care- fully to all our Lord's mysteries, yet the greater part of Christians fail to do this. This neglect causes St. Bernard to say : " There are Christians to whom Jesus Christ is not yet born ; there are others for whom he has not yet suffered ; others for whom he has never risen ; and others still for whom he has not ascended to heaven." (Serm. 4, de Resurr.) And then the saint gives the reason : it is because these Christians have not united them- selves to these mysteries, have not been assimilated to them, and have not reproduced the virtues our Lord practiced in them. In order not to incur this reproach, which would not only bring us confusion, but would entail upon us a great loss, we should enter into the mysteries of our Lord, considering that they are the sources of our supernatural life, and the fountains of living waters of which Isaiah said : " You shall draw waters with joy out of the Saviour's fountains." (Is. xii. 3.) You shall joyfully draw the salutary waters of grace from the fountains of the Saviour ; that is, from his mysteries, so that we may repeat with St. Paul : "We all, beholding the glory Mysteries of Our Lord. 21 of the Lord with open face, are transformed into the same image from glory to glory, as by the Spirit of the Lord." (2 Cor. iii. 18.) We, who are true Christians, consider the glory of our Lord, that is to say his mysteries, not timidly, nor with shame at the lowliness and meanness that appear on the exterior of some of them, but with a steady countenance and a resolute eye, deeming them all glorious, and so much the more so in proportion as they are more covered with infamy and dishonor for our salvation. We present ourselves before these divine mysteries as before clear and bright mirrors, and their rays fall upon us, transforming us into their likeness ; thus, moved and impelled by the Holy Ghost, we go on from light to light — I mean from mystery to mystery — from our Lord's incarnation to his nativity, then to his circumcision, and so on to his other mysteries, in order to draw from each new traits of resemblance to Jesus Christ him- self in our soul and body and in our whole being. Xow, it must be remarked that each of our Lord's mysteries is composed of two parts : the first is the body and exterior of the mystery, the second is its interior and spirit. The body and exterior is all in the mystery 22 Mysteries of Our Lord. that appeals to the senses : as in the nativity, the poverty, contempt, nakedness, cold, the manger, etc.; in the passion, the scourges, the thorns, the nails, the insults ; in the resurrec- tion, the coming forth from the tomb completely victorious over death, the brightness, beauty, agility, subtilty, and immortality of his sacred body ; and the same with regard to the other mysteries. The spirit and interior of the mystery is what passed in our Lord's soul while he accomplished^ it; first, the thoughts of his understanding with regard to God his Father, his holy Mother, his elect, all men, and every soul in particular ; secondly, the affections of his will ; thirdly, the intentions and designs he had in accomplishing the mystery, both for the glory of his Father and for our salvation ; fourthly, the virtues he practiced in it, the humility, poverty, obedience, and the like; and finally, the grace he merited for us by those thoughts, affections, intentions and virtues, to have in a certain proportion the same thoughts, affections, and intentions, and to practice the same virtues in the same mystery, which is properly to enter into the spirit and assume the features and coloring of the mystery. For we are bound to believe Mystei'ies of Our Lord. 23 that as our Lord is the Saviour and pattern of men, he has merited for them by his operations in each of his mysteries, the assistance neces- sary to enable them to imitate those opera- tions, and consequently to resemble him, and by that resemblance to make certain their predestination and eternal salvation. It must be understood, moreover, that each mystery has its own spirit and character, that each is filled with a special grace and produces a particular impression, and that our Lord had in each different intentions for the glory of his Father and our sanctification, and thus different modes of preparing us for our beatitude. Just as the material sun produces different effects as he moves along his course and accomplishes his annual revolution, so when the Sun of Justice, our Lord, is in the mystery of his incarnation and thence casts his rays upon us, he produces effects of grace and other impressions of salvation, different from what he does when he is in the mystery of his birth or of his resurrection. Each mystery has its own light and warmth, its ideas and sentiments, its affections and virtues ; these constitute the particular spirit of the mystery, its principle, its soul, so to speak, and consequently they 24 Mysteries of Oil}' Lord. are what we should especially endeavor to understand and to imprint in our souls. We should not, meanwhile, forget the body and exterior of the mystery, for he who would desire to imitate only its interior and spirit would assuredly deceive himself, and would be like a person seeking a man and then content- ing himself with only a soul ; for just as a man is not a soul alone, nor a body alone, but a soul and body joined and united, so our Lord's mysteries are composed of the union of the interior and exterior, and not of the one without the other. Moreover, the exterior of the mystery serves to dispose and prepare us to receive and appreciate the interior, and therefore should be studied first ; for, even as God does not create the soul of man until his body be formed and organized to a certain point, so our Lord does not produce the spirit' and interior ; that is to say, the thoughts, affections, and fruits of his incarnation, his nativity, or his passion, in a man who is not first prepared by the exterior acts of those mysteries. It is, then, necessary for whosoever would share in the grace, and receive the spirit of a mystery, for example, our Lord's nativity, to prepare himself by some act of poverty, by some Mysteries of Our Lord. 25 endurance of cold or discomfort ; for he who would expect to profit by this mystery while retaining an affection for riches and pleasures,, would grossly deceive himself, and would resemble a person turning his back to the place to which he desires to go ; and this because the disposition of him who desires something must always have some conformity to the object of his desire. As our Lord's mysteries are the vital princi- ples and causes of our salvation, it is necessary, if we would be saved, that they be applied to us and in some sort renewed in us. As it is^ not enough for our salvation that we rise and ascend into heaven in the person of our Lord, who contained us all in himself by grace and by glory, if we do not also in our own persons rise and ascend into heaven ; so it is not sufficient that we be incarnate, that Ave be born, and that we suffer and die in him, if we do not likewise accomplish these acts after his example in ourselves, because the imitation; and re-accomplishment of these last mysteries in us is the road to the glory of the first. In; the great mystery of our fall, and in conse- quence of our sad condemnation, not only w T e all once sinned in Adam, as St. Paul says, and were all driven from Paradise and died in him, 3 26 Mysteries of Our Lord. but, moreover, we are individually stained with sin, we are banished from that place of :happiness, and we are subjected to the rigor- ous sentence of death. Our Lord's mysteries, the painful and the joyous, the ignominious and the glorious, must be renewed in us indi- vidually, their likeness must be impressed upon, and their effects produced in, every •individual soul. For this reason we should take great pains to unite ourselves with them, especially at the times when the Church proposes them to us 'because then they have more efficacy. We must believe that it is not without a reason that our Lord inspires his Church to put ! before our eyes at such or such a time the mysteries of his life, but in order that then more than at another time he may render them useful to us and communicate their fruits imore abundantly. The prophet Isaiah indeed promises us that we shall draw joyfully from the fountains of the Saviour, which are his 'mysteries, the waters of grace, of the virtues, and of our salvation ; but the prophet Zacha- riah adds that this shall be on a certain day : " In that day," he says, " there shall be a foun- tain open to the house of David, and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem." (Zach. xiii. I.) Mysteries of Our Lord. 2 J It is, then, " in that day," that is at the time the Church directs, that the soul should draw those salutary waters from the mysterious fountains of the Saviour, because then they are open and send forth their waters with full force ; whereas at other times, if they are not altogether closed, they are at least not so widely open and do not pour out their streams so abundantly. So, while the precious waters flow plenteously, the soul should take advan- tage of them ; and thus she may reap more fruit in a single day than she would in six or eight at another season, as is related of the Blessed Mary d'Ognies in her life written by Cardinal de Vitry. But, as dispositions are various and the movements of the Holy Spirit diverse, this does not prevent there being souls that have greater facility in entering into one mystery than into another, and drawing more profit from one than from another ; such souls should stay and draw the waters of their salvation and advancement in virtue as long as the mys- terious fount remains open to them. You ask me now liozv we may unite our- selves to these mysteries of our Lord's life and death. I reply that, granted the knowledge faith gives us of them and which is suffi- 28 Mysteries of Our Lord. cicnt, it is chiefly by means of the affections and the virtues relating to them, as you will see when we treat of each of the mysteries separately. We have arranged these mysteries and the practices of the union we should contract through them with our Lord, in the following manner : From Advent to Christmas the practice will be upon the mystery of our Lord's incarnation. ■ From Christmas to Lent we will dwell upon the nativity, the circumcision, the adoration of the Magi, the flight into Egypt and the dwelling there, the return to Nazareth, and the entire hidden life of our Lord. During the season of Lent we will study the passion and death of our Lord. From Easter to the feast of the Blessed Sacrament, our Lord's resurrection and ascen- sion, and the descent of the Holy Ghost, will be our subjects. From the feast of the Blessed Sacrament till Advent we will meditate upon the most Holy Eucharist considered as a Sacrament and a wSacrifice ; we will endeavor to unite our- selves to our Lord in this adorable mystery by suitable affections, especially by faith, hope, charity, and imitation of him. Mysteries of Our Lord. 29 In each practice or exercise we shall always include six things which will be its six parts or divisions : First, the subject-matter about which we are to occupy ourselves, that is, the mystery pro- posed for our consideration and practice. We shall dwell especially upon the knowledge of it given us by faith, without seeking other lights which very often only amuse and puff up the mind while drying up the will. Faith, and not learning or science, converted and in- structed the world. Believe firmly the mys- tery just as the Church teaches it to you, and this is enough to cause it to produce in you its effects. Secondly, tlie affections and interior acts which we must conceive and form -according to the mystery, in which the soul should care- fully exercise itself, and keep itself, as it were, buried during the whole season of the mystery. Thirdly, the virtues most prominent in the mystery and the practice of which, both inte- rior and exterior, we should embrace with special affection, and of which we should daily produce with fidelity and confidence, but with- out haste or embarrassment of spirit, a certain number of acts in proportion to our disposition and strength. 30 Mysteries of Our Lord. Upon this point I have an important coun- sel to give : some persons are afflicted, and complain that their souls do not open to the mysteries of -our Lord; that when the great feasts come, then it is that they have least devotion, that then their understanding is more than ever darkened and they comprehend nothing of these wonders ; their will is more than ever arid, so that they are obliged to remain dull and dry, as it were, at the gate of the mystery, without power to enter into it. I say to these persons that they should not be troubled, and complain of this ; God does not require of them such a sensible appreciation of his mysteries, inasmuch as it does not depend upon them, but is purely his gift. They would like to have clear and beautiful thoughts, to be filled with devout affections and to burst into floods of pious tears, never considering that the key to the stores of such sensible light and de- votion is not in their hands. All that God demands of them is that they apply them- selves to our Lord's mysteries by an imitation of the virtues he practiced therein, by a prac- tical reproduction of his mysteries in their daily lives ; this they can do with the help of his grace, which he is always ready to give them ; and this is the chief thing, for, as our Mysteries of Our Lord. 31 Lord's principal object in his mysteries was to effect our salvation and as a means to this, to render us virtuous, the accomplishment of this object in us by the practice of the virtues must be their most important and most necessary fruit. St. Bernard, treating of the mystery of the nativity, says-: " In order that Mary, Joseph, and the Infant cradled in the manger may always dwell in us, in order that we may enter into the mystery of our Lord's nativity, and that it may penetrate our souls, let us live in this world soberly, justly, and piously." (Serm. 4, in Nat. Dom.) And St. Paul, speaking on the same subject, teaches us in positive terms the same thing — not to seek to have grand lights nor lofty conceptions: " The grace of God our Saviour hath appeared to all men, instructing us that, denying ungodliness and worldly desires, we should live soberly and justly and piously in this world." (Tit. ii. 11.) Our Saviour Jesus Christ, with infinite goodness and grace, has appeared as the Sun of Justice to the eyes of all men, to dissipate their darkness and teach them to avoid sin, to renounce worldly desires, and to lead lives of sobriety toward themselves, of justice toward their neighbor, and of piety toward 32 Mysteries of Our Lord. . God. It is, then, in this way, a way all are capable of, that we ought to unite ourselves to our Lord's mysteries. Fourthly, meditations on the mysteries of the season : these you can easily enough make yourself from the matter contained in each practice or exercise, dwelling upon whatever moves you most ; or you can select them from such books as you judge most suitable. Fifthly, readings appropriate to each exer- cise will be indicated, without however for- bidding you to select others, provided they relate to the subject. Finally, the sixth thing will be ejacidatory verses, which should be always in the heart and often on the lips, in order to keep the mystery fresh in the memory, and, by a constant recol- lection of it, to unite us to it, and, through it, to our Lord. Besides all these, there are still three things to be remarked concerning the affections : The first is the very common and injurious delusion of taking much more pains and em- ploying much more time to cultivate and polish the understanding than the will, al- though merit, sanctity, and perfection in this life, are not in the understanding, but in the will. We seek only to learn, to enlighten our Mysteries of Our Lord. 33 mind, and to add knowledge to knowledge, and we neglect our will, which meanwhile needs to be carefully exercised in affections of piety and incited to the love and practice of humility, patience, and the other virtues, most particularly charity, wherein the perfection of the will lies. We all know quite enough, and much more than we practice. Who does not know that he ought to love God with all his heart, and ought to avoid sin above every- thing ? And nevertheless how few there are who do it ! The reason of this disorder is that our mind has an extreme desire to learn, and we naturally find much pleasure in the acquisition of knowledge, whereas our will is indifferent to virtue and must be constrained to practice it, thus obliging us to do violence to ourselves. The second thing to be remembered is also another illusion that possesses a vast number of persons who in the spiritual life are gov- erned too much by the senses ; they wish to feel their spiritual operations, and, if they are not sensibly touched and moved in their devo- tional exercises, they are troubled, become uneasy, and believe they are making no pro- gress. To disabuse these persons, let me as- sure them that the spiritual life is, as its name 34 Mysteries of Our Lord. implies, a life whose vital acts take place in the spirit, and not in the body. Material things make sensible impressions upon the body ; thus fire makes itself felt in the hand by means of heat, and ice by cold. Spiritual things do not act upon the soul in the same manner, but insensibly, producing in it spiritual effects : which action consists in causing it to avoid evil and to do good, in enlightening its under- standing with knowledge necessary for salva- tion, in strengthening its will so as to regulate its affections, that it may bear patiently its aridities and all its trials, govern rightly the movements of the body, and, in a word, prac- tice all virtue. If sometimes during exercises of piety the body is penetrated with sensible consolation, it is rather the pure effect of the grace and unction of the Holy Ghost, than of the spirit- ual operation of the soul. The third thing to be remarked is, that when you desire to obtain some virtue or other favor from God, you should, among all dispositions and means, make use principally of prayer or petition, because by it you will attain your end more speedily, more easily, and more certainly, than by reading, medita- tion, or other operations of the understand- Mysteries of Our Lord. 35 ing. Therefore ask perseveringly by prayers, sometimes long, sometimes short, but always earnest, thus doing what our Lord and his apostles so frequently recommended, namely, to " pray without ceasing." (Luke xxi. 36 ; t Thess. v. 17.) To induce our Lord to bless your enterprise and pour upon you through these channels of salvation an abundance of graces, it will be well to prepare yourself for each exercise by Communion and some other good works. In conclusion, I say to all who are sincerely and earnestly desirous to be saved, that they should before everything else endeavor to unite themselves to their Saviour ; that, seek- ing virtue, perfection, and God, they should exert all their efforts ta unite themselves inti- mately with Jesus Christ, because he is the model of all virtues, the example of perfec- tion, and the road by which to seek and reach God. St? Augustine says : " We have no road that is shorter and surer, we can conceive of no means more efficacious to approach and reach God, than Jesus Christ." (Aug. i.n Ps. cxviii., Cone. 6.) Let us, then, take great pains to unite our- selves continually to him in everything, but 36 Mysteries of Our Lord. chiefly in his mysteries, according to the di- rections that will be given in this book. Cer- tainly, as the well-being of a child depends on its remaining at its mother's breast, whence it draws the nourishment that makes it grow and become strong, so we, if we would grow in grace and become strong in virtue, must cling to our Lord in his amiable mysteries. Let us go to these fountains of the Saviour to draw with faith in their truth, with deep affection of the heart, and a desire of imitation by our works, the waters of our salvation and beati- tude. In the churches, sings David in pro- phetic vision of these mysteries, " bless ye God, the Lord, from the fountains of Israel. There is Benjamin, a youth in ecstasy of mind." (Ps. Ixvii. 27, 28.) Praise and bless God for the fountains of Israel, which are the mysteries of his Son, in which the little Benjamin, that is, the soul, will exercise itself in a spirit of lowliness, simplicity, and faith, and in its exercises will have transports of admiration, reverence, love, humility, and other sentiments. Moses had previously spoken under the same inspiration : 4< Benjamin, the best beloved of the Lord, shall dwell confidently in him ; as in a bridal-cham- Mysteries of Our Lord. 37 ber shall he rest all the day long." (Deut. xxxiii. 12.) Benjamin, the beloved of the Lord, shall dwell in confidence in these mys- teries, and shall rest therein all his life long as in a place of peace, sleep, and repose. CHAPTER II. JESUS CHRIST IS THE SPIRITUAL AIR THAT WE OUGHT CONSTANTLY TO BREATHE. Spiritiis oris nostri Christus Dominus. — Lam. i\\, 20). The breath of our mouth, Christ the Lord. THESE are the words of the Prophet Jere- miah, which St. Irenseus, St. Justin, Origen, Tertullian, St. Ambrose, St. Jerome, and a multitude of other Fathers understand to refer literally to our Lord, to signify that he is the breath of our nostrils and the air that \vc -ought constantly to breathe. Among all the things we need for our life and which we can- not dispense with, experience shows that the most necessary is, beyond doubt, air ; without it we would surely and speedily die. The necessity for air arises from the fact that our life depends upon the preservation of the natural heat of the blood ; this heat being very great, requires to be constantly cooled so that it will not extinguish itself; for heat is extinguished by its own intensity if it is not tempered by cool air, as is seen in fire in an oven, which goes out directly if the mouth of Jes?(s Christ the Spiritual Air. 39 the oven is closed, and in animals that are stifled to death. This is the reason why respi- ration is necessary to our life.* The breath of our mouth, Clwist the Lord. — Our Lord Jesus Christ is the breath of our mouth and the air our soul should breathe. Just as we have absolute need of the air for the natural life of our bodies, so, and in an incomparably greater degree, the spiritual and divine air which is Jesus Christ, is necessary for the supernatural life of our souls. We would soon die without air, and to prevent this we breathe it constantly every hour and moment, at all times and in all places ; in like manner we have an extreme and indispensable need of Jesus Christ for all that concerns our salvation, and our souls cannot without him be for a moment alive and in a state of grace ; therefore we must constantly draw him into us and inhale him. Now, with regard to the manner of inhaling our Lord and drawing him into us, I will tell you that there are several different ways. We notice that the air we breathe is not always the same ; that sometimes it is warm and some- * The reader is reminded that this passage was written two hun- dred years ago, when the natural sciences were not so well understood as at the present day. — Translator. 40 Jesus Christ the Spiritual Air. - times cold ; one day dry and the next damp ; in one place pure and rarefied, as on the moun- tains, and in another place, as in the valleys and over marshes, heavy and thick ; that the bodies of persons brought up in different at- mospheres have different constitutions and tendencies, and even their minds are fre- quently affected by the same cause. In like manner, our spiritual and divine air, that is our Lord Jesus Christ, has different qualities in our regard ; and we must inhale and draw him into us according to this diversity. First, we must inhale and draw him into us in his characters of our Saviour, our Redeemer, our High Priest, our Master, our Model, our Remedy for all our evils, and our Source of all blessings. Secondly, we must inhale him in his virtues and draw him into us, sometimes humble, some- times patient, at another time obedient, then meek, charitable, forgiving injuries done him, or according to his practice of some other virtue in our regard. Thirdly, in his mysteries, we have to inhale our Lord incarnate, or newly born, or lead- ing a hidden life, or conversing with men, or suffering and dying, or ascending into heaven, or in some other mystery. Jcs2is Christ the Spiritual Air. 41 . When we have drawn Jesus Christ into us in these different manners, we must offer him to God his Father with most profound respect, with infinite thanksgivings to him for having given his Son to us in all these states, with an ardent zeal for the divine glory and a burning desire that he may, under these different forms, glorify and praise God as God merits, and that we, on our part, may with all our strength honor, love, and serve God in Christ and by Christ. The reader may ask me, moreover, what means we must use to inhale our Lord, and with what chains we can draw him to us. I reply that it must be, in the first place, by acts of faith, believing firmly two things : first, that our Lord is truly such as his mysteries repre- sent him, that he became incarnate, that he is our Saviour, our Redeemer, that he is humble, etc. ; secondly, that we have an absolute need of him in these states, that without him there is no salvation for us, that without him we would be forever in bondage and misery, that with- out him we could never have a truly humble thought, and that we must derive from him all the good we are capable of. Just as anything in our body that is not animated by our soul has no life, as our hair 42 Jesus Christ the Spiritual Air. and nails, so all in us that our Lord, who is our only Saviour and our true life, does not touch, is dead and lost. If his thoughts, his affections, his words and his works, do not purify and sanctify ours, the latter are stained and criminal ; if his prayers do not animate and vivify ours, then ours are only aberrations, indevotion, and irreverence ; if his sufferings are not applied and united to our sufferings, ours are useless and lost, and are no more than evils to us ; and if his death does not commu- nicate its merit and strength to ours, our death will be the death of a reprobate. " If I shall touch only his garment, I shall be healed," said the woman afflicted with an issue of blood. (Matt. ix. 21.) If I can but touch his robe I shall be healed ; without this touch I shall never be healed, no matter what I do. The • second thing by means of which we must draw our Lord to us, is desires ; and the third, petitions. For, as the lungs and heart by their dilatation attract the air, so the soul attracts our Lord when she opens and expands with her desires and prayers ; whence it is that we may say with the Royal Prophet : " I opened my mouth and panted." (Ps. cxviii. 131.) I opened the mouth of my soul and drew my spiritual breath, which is Jesus Christ the Spiritual Air. 43 our Lord, who himself by the same prophet had commanded me, saying: "Open thy mouth wide and I will fill it" (Ps. lxxx. 11) with great desires. We must enkindle in our souls ardent desires and burning wishes for our Lord to come to us in such or such a .aality, in this virtue, or in that particular mystery, and we must beg him to come, pray him, suppHcate him, conjure him with all the earnestness possible. Let us say to him with Isaiah : " Thy name and thy remembrance are the desire of my soul." (Is. xxvi. 8.) Thy name and thy mem- ory, the memory of thy incarnation, of thy humility, of thy character as my Saviour, is foremost in my mind, and I desire to draw thee to me in that state and in that beautiful and salutary character. "My soul hath desired thee in the night; yea, and with my spirit within me in the morning early I will watch to thee." (Is. xxvi. 9.) My soul hath thought of thee during the night ; with ardent affections it hath longed for thee in the mystery of thy birth. My eyes opened early in the morning to see if thou hadst come. " I have longed for thy salvation, O Lord. . . My soul hath fainted after thy salvation. 44 Jesus Christ the Spiritual Air. . . As the hart panteth after the fountains of waters, so my soul panteth after thee, O God. 'My soul hath thirsted after the strong living God. When shall I come and appear before the face of God?" (Ps. cxviii. 174; xli. 1, 2.) O my Lord, how I long for thee in the mys- tery of thy hidden life, in thy virtue of patience, in the functions of pastor, physician, high priest, which thou dost exercise toward me, and which are the sources of my salvation ! My soul faints through the vehemence of its desire. As the hart, pursued by the hunters and parched with thirst, runs with all '■ 3 strength to the fountains to drink, so my soul, O my God and my risen Lord, runs to thee. Oh ! how I thirst for Jesus Christ, my Saviour, for my sake withdrawn into the desert, suffer- ing for me, for me obedient even unto death, so that he may come to me, may enter into me, may impress upon me the features of his virtues and his mysteries ! And wdien shall I present myself to him marked with those noble features ? Again, say to our Lord with the same David : "Thou art my helper and my protector. O my God, be not slack." (Ps. xxxix. 18.) Thou art my help and my protection. O my God. do not delay thy coming. And with the Spouse Jesus Christ the Spiritual Air. 45 in the Apocalypse : " Come. . . Amen. Come Lord Jesus." ' (Apoc. xxii. 20.) Come, Oh ! come, Jesus my Saviour, and say to me : "Surely I come quickly," thou shalt see me very soon. With St. Bernard let us repeat to him : " Desidero te millies : Mi Jesu, quando venies ? O mi Jesu dulcissz/7ie, Spes suspirantis animce ; Te pice quaerunt lachrymcz, Et clamor mentis intimcz" (Bern. Jubil.) "A thousand times I sigh for thee : O Jesus mine, when wilt thou come ? O Jesus mine, most sweet to me, My panting spirit's hope and home, In quest of thee 'mid tears and cries My famished soul relentless flies." Or, again : — " yesu Christe, fous indeficiens, Fous humana cor da reficiens ; Te saspiro te solum sitiens, Tit solus es mild sufficiens." (Id. Orat. Rhythm, ad Chr. et B. V.) "O Jesus Christ, unfailing fount of love, O fount, the human heart's refreshing cup, For thee I breathe, for thee alone I thirst, For thou to me alone art all enough." After the desires you should proceed to prayers and supplications, most earnestly beg- ging our Lord for two things : first, that it may please him to come to you in this char- 46 J e sits Christ the Spiritual Air. acter, or in that virtue, or that particular mystery ; secondly, that he will deign to bestow upon you the salutary effects of the character in which you invite him to come, that he will impart to you the knowledge, esteem, and love he had for that special virtue, and grant you to practice it as he did, and that he will communicate to you the lights and affections belonging to the mystery. Beg him to bestow on you the spirit and grace of that, and of all his mysteries, to apply to you their merits, and furnish you the assistance necessary to imitate the virtues he practiced in them ; and in this way to impress upon you in a manner his incarnation, his birth, his solitary life, his conversation, his sufferings and death, and enable you to express and represent him incarnate, newly-born, solitary, conversing with men, suffering, dying, and dead, in your life and in your conduct. This is what the Church often asks in the holy sacrifice of the Mass, as when she says : " Titos tantis, Domine, dignaris uti mysteriis, qucesumus ut effectibus 110s eontm vcracitcr aptare digneris" (Dom. 3d, post Epiph.) "We beseech thee, O Lord, that we, to whom thou vouchsafest the enjoyment of so great mys- teries, may be fitted truly to receive their Jesus Christ the Spiritual Air. 47 benefits." And again : " Ut sacri peragat instituta mysterii, et salutare tirani in uibis mirabiliter operetur." (Dom. 3d Adv.) "Let the sacrifice of our devotion, we beseech thee, O Lord, be always offered unto thee ; that it may both accomplish this sacred mystery, and also wonderfully work in us thy salvation." In the fourth place, we may draw our Lord into us in a mystery by exercising the affec- tions which have most harmony with it, and which we shall indicate in each division of this book. The fifth means of drawing our Lord to us is the courageous and exact practice of the virtues, which you will also find indicated. Behold, then, what should be our continual occupation and our mo-st cherished practice ! It is the perpetual breathing of Jesus Christ as our spiritual air, and then the breathing or sending him back to God his Father, to be our mediator before the Eternal Throne, our advocate, our refuge, our priest, and our sacri- fice of adoration, expiation, thanksgiving and impetration, in a word, to be our all. In addition to what we have already men- tioned, we should, in order to practice this exercise still more perfectly, breathe and draw our Lord into us in his mysteries according as 48 Jesus Christ the Spiritual Air. the Church solemnizes them, or according as our devotion inclines or our wants oblige us. You should draw him into you in his virtues, when you have occasion to practice those virtues, or to overcome the contrary vices ; for example, when you ought to humble your- self, when you have to endure contempt or conquer a sentiment of vanity and self-esteem, inhale our Lord humble, teaching you interiorly to what degree he humbled himself for you, and saying to you : " Learn of me, for I am humble of heart." When it is your duty to obey, and to submit your will and judgment, inhale our Lord obedient and submissive ; he will enable you to understand his perfect submission, and how he obeyed even unto death and the death of the cross for love of you. Do the same with regard to the other virtues. But as our salvation and perfection consist especially in two things — in acting and suffer- ing, we should imitate our Lord in both respects. First, in acting. As we daily act and do something, and as our Lord, while on earth, did the same, we should in all our actions breathe our Lord acting, and should do every- thing with him, by him, and in him, in his fashion, both as to the interior and the exterior Jesus CJirist t/w Spiritual Air. 49 of the act, the intentions, the moderation, the time, the place, and all other circumstances. Just as your soul is the cause of all the actions of your body in the natural life, our Lord, taking the place of soul in your supernatural and divine life, should be the cause or spring of all the actions of both your soul and your body ; and then you may say with St. Paul : "I live, now not I, but Christ liveth in me." (Gal. ii. 20.) I live ; no, it is not I who live, but it is Jesus Christ who lives, thinks, loves, hates, speaks, and acts in me. To act excellently toward God you must, in the following manner, draw our Lord to you and bind yourself to him : Our Lord was always recollected in God, always attentive to God, always occupied with God, keeping himself in spirit before the Infinite Majesty with extreme care, with singular modesty, with most profound reverence, and with inex- plicable abasements, humiliations, and anni- hilations of self, uninterruptedly offering to God for the divine glory, his soul and body, his being, his faculties, his acts, and all that passed in the universe. Draw our Lord into you by conducting yourself in the sarrie man- ner toward God, so as to do with Christ and 50 Jesus CJirist the Spiritual Air. like him the same thing, according to your capacity. When you are going to pray, either mentally cr vocally, inhale our Lord praying to his Father ; and seeing his attention, devotion, fervor, and respect, endeavor to imitate him in such a way that it maybe he who prays in you and by you. If you have the honor to be a priest and to say Mass, inhale him as your high priest who, in you and by you, sacrifices himself to God the Father for his glory and your salvation, and offers himself and you as a sacrifice of infinite adoration, in acknowledgment that God is your first principle from whom you derive your body, your soul, and all that you have ; that he is your sovereign Lord who has absolute power over you to do with you what- soever he wills, without your having any right on your part to oppose him by the least thought, or to contradict him by the least word ; and that he is your last end for whose glory you were created, and for whom you ought entirely and constantly to employ and spend yourself. This sacrifice of the Mass is one of infinite propitiation to obtain the par- don of your sins and the remission of the punishment due to them ; it is a sacrifice of Jesus Christ the Spiritual Air, 51 infinite thanksgiving to thank God for all the benefits with which he has loaded you ; a sac- rifice of infinite impetration to obtain from him fresh benefits, that is, all the assistance you need. " As Christ says the Mass with you and in you, say it also with him and in him. By following this plan all the faithful, who, according to St. Peter, (1 Petr. ii. 9) are in a certain manner raised to the dignity of priests, may also in some sort say Mass, drawing to themselves our Lord who performs this action and offers this sacrifice. After having drawn our Lord into you in the Mass as your priest, draw him in the Blessed Sacrament as your Shepherd who nourishes you with his own flesh and blood and gives you a divine food capable of pro- ducing in your soul, if it is well disposed, the effects of bodily food, which will be to strengthen it, delight it, satisfy it, unite it to him, and cause it to sleep and consequently to forget all creatures; who will fulfill these words of the Wise Man: " With the bread of life and understanding he shall feed him, and give him the water of wholesome wisdom to drink," (Eccl. xv. 3,) the water of the wisdom of his salvation. Having received our Lord, try to employ 52 Jesus Clirist the Spiritual Air. well the precious moments, and beg this dear Shepherd to operate in you in a high degree all these effects. To act in a Christian and holy manner toward your neighbor, draw into you our Lord, loving men, honoring, instructing, re- proving them, bearing w T itll them, having compassion on their spiritual and corporal miseries, giving them remedies, conversing with them. See him with the Samaritan woman, and remark w r ith what gentleness, affability, charity, and prudence, he deals with her. Take courage to imitate him, breathe him in his gracious, amiable, and most useful discourse, in his modest and peaceful de- meanor, in his condescension, his kindness, and his patience, and in all the other virtues he practiced in the highest degree during his intercourse with men ; and study to reproduce in your conduct and conversation these fea- tures of perfection, these lineaments of graces. With regard to the actions that relate to yourself do the same : for example, when going to take your meals, breathe our Lord taking his, either alone or in company, and consider his temperance, his sobriety, and his modesty. Laboring, traveling, or performing any other action, inhale our Lord engaged Jesus Christ the Spiritual Air. 53 in the same, and act with him and by his spirit, offering with the Wise Man this prayer to God : " Send wisdom out of thy holy hea- ven, and from the throne of thy majesty, that she may be with me and may labor with me." (Wis. ix. 10.) O God ! send me from on high and from the throne of thy greatness, thy Son, the Incarnate Wisdom, so that he may be in me and may labor with me ; for I am sure that without him I shall fail in everything, and shall do naught that will be of value. Secondly, we must imitate our Lord in suf- fering. When you have to endure some suffering of bouy or soul, breathe our Lord suffering, so that he may communicate to you his patience and fortitude, and you may, as far as is possible, suffer with him for the same ends and in the same manner. There are souls that are always afflicted, and bodies that are always sick and infirm : let these persons as their sovereign remedy, draw into them our Lord fastened for cheir sake to the cross and thereon suffering inexplicable torments and extreme agonies ; and wdien the moment of their death approaches, that moment which must decide their happy or unhappy eternity, or even now, and frequently, let them take great care to draw into them our Lord dying to 54 Jesus Christ the Spiritual Air. console and sanctify their death by his, and to make theirs a dependence and a consequence of his. Behold, then, the method we must use to breathe our spiritual air, and to draw our Lord into us. As this is absolutely necessary for our salvation and our perfection, we must en- deavor to practice it without relaxation, and, in order to do so, can make this compact with our Lord, namely, that each moment our body breathes the physical air, we will have the intention of breathing him and drawing him into us in one or more of the ways mentioned, or in all of them. Certainly, if our body is so anxious and careful to breathe continually the air for the preservation of its natural life, our soul should be vastly more careful to breathe unceasingly our Lord to preserve its life of grace. Then let it do so with as much dili- gence and fidelity as the importance of the affair deserves. CHAPTER III. PRACTICE OF UNION AYITH OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST FOR THE SEASON OF ADVENT. I.— THE SUBJECT. THE practice of union with our Lord for the season of Advent, has for its subject the adorable mystery of the incarnation, and his dwelling during the space of nine months in the most pure womb of his holy Mother. The mystery of the incarnation is a mystery of union, a mystery of love, a mystery of glorifi- cation, and a mystery of annihilation. It is a mystery of union, because the divine nature was in it united intimately, substan- tially, personally, and forever, with the human nature, and the Son of God became the Son of man. " Verbiim caro factimi est. The word was made flesh," (John. i. 14,) and the one formed with the other so close a union " that," St. Bernard says, " God and slime, that is to say, man made from the slime of the earth, were joined together in the inseparable unity of one person, and all that God did appeared to be done by the slime, and all that the slime 56 Practice of Union with Our Lord suffered seemed to be suffered by God in it, though a mystery as incomprehensible as it is inexplicable." (Serm. 2 in Vigil. Nativ.) And earlier than St. Bernard, St. Leo had said : " There is such a communication and so close a union between the two natures, while each retains inviolable its own qualities, that there is no division of goods nor of evils between them, but what belongs to one belongs also to the other." (Serm. 8 in Nativ. Dom.) So the Son of God by this union made himself, as St. Paul says, "in all things such as we are, without sin." (Heb. iv. 15.) The incarnation is a mystery of love, be- cause, as the principal and strongest inclina- tion of the person who loves is to desire and procure by all the means he can devise, union with the person beloved, the love that God bore to man caused him to desire, to seek, and to bring about this admirable union. And this sliows evidently and clearer than the sun the infinite greatness of that love which St. Paul so often describes to the faithful, and which he says surpasses all thought and language. The incarnation is a mystery of glorification, inasmuch as human nature was in it raised to such a height of glory that there is no science nor power that can raise it higher. Speaking For the Season of Advent. 57 on this subject St. Augustine says "that this elevation of human nature is so high and emi- nent that it cannot be more so." (L. 1, de Pr^ed., Sa,nct. c. 1.) The reason is manifest, because human nature is raised in this mystery to the throne of the Divinity, and a true man is become true God. St. Augustine in another place says : " Go.d desired to show in what esteem he held human nature, and what degree of honor he gave it among all creatures, when he was pleased to appear to the eyes of men as a true man." (L. de vera Relig. c. 16.) The incarnation is also a mystery of glorifi- cation of the Divinity ; because God, wishing to be infinitely glorified according to his merit, not only in himself, but also outside of himself, as he obtains the first by his Word which is the knowledge infinitely excellent and the sovereign esteem he has of himself, so for the latter purpose he has employed the only means possible, namely, the production of a creature capable of rendering him a glory absolutely infinite. This he has done in the adorable mystery of the incarnation wherein that same Word is personally united to our nature in an individual humanity, to which, besides the created gifts bestowed upon it that incomparably surpass 58 Practice of Union with Our Lord all those he has granted to all other creatures, he has communicated substantially all his infi- nite perfections, making it infinitely holy, perfect, and capable of glorifying God infi- nitely ; and this in two manners : The first, by the simple manifestation of those perfections ; for, as St. Augustine says, " the beauty of creatures is the glorious testi- mony and the praise they render to him who created them." (Serm. 143, de temp.) The second, interiorly, by his own acts, which the Incarnate Word always referred to the honor of God, and which, being all infi- nitely excellent on account of the infinite dignity of his person, all honored God infi- nitely. This second manner is also exterior ; for our Lord by his example and teachings induced men to honor God, and he is, more- over, the cause of all the honor and praise that are offered to God and that will be offered throughout all eternity, and the principle of all the good works that will ever be done in the world, since they are due to his merits. This is the reason why the Sacred Scriptures frequently call the Incarnate Word the especial glory of God ; (Ps. lvi. 9 ; lxxxiv. 10 ; Is. Ix. I ; Rom, iii. 23) and the celebrated words of St. John: " Iti principio erat Vcrbnm, et Ver- For the Season of Advent. 59 bunt erat apud Deum, et Dens erat Verbnm" (John i. 1,) express the same meaning. "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God." The Word that is God is the eternal and infinite glory of God, because it is the thought of infinite esteem which he has of himself and which is justly proportionate to its object. 11 And the Word was made flesh," and we saw the glory of God that is that same Incarnate Word, the Son of God, the honor and glory of his Father, even as the wise son, as Solomon says, is the ornament and glory of an earthly father. (Prov, x. 1.) "The Word was made flesh ;" therefore, at the moment of his birth, the angels sang "Gloria in altissimis Deo"* as though they meant to say : We can now give to God in this Child all the glory he is worthy of; and it is this Child that gives it to him, and all creatures likewise can give it in and by this Child. Thus it is that our Lord Jesus Christ in his quality of the uncreated Word, is the infinite glory of God in himself from all eternity; and as the Incannate Word, he is still the infinite glory of God in himself and outside of himself for all eternity to come. This shows us that * " Glory to God in the highest."— (Luke ii. 14.) 60 Practice of Union with Our Lord the incarnation is, as we have said, a mystery of glorification of the Divinity. It is, finally, a. mystery of annihilation, in the person of God, because, in order to unite himself to us in that manner and to testify his love for us by so indisputable a proof, and to elevate us to the height of infi- nite glory, it was necessary for him to humble, abase, and annihilate himself, making himself man, a son of Adam the sinner, a poor man and a miserable creature, and consequently a mere nothing, as the creature is of itself. St. Paul teaches us this great truth in these re- markable words : " Being in the form of God, he thought it not robbery to be equal with God ; but debased himself, taking the form of a servant, being made in the likeness of men, and in habit found as a man." (Philipp. ii. 6.) The Son being Go'd by essence, and not deem- ing it an injury to his Father to esteem and call himself God, nevertheless annihilated him- self, taking the nature of a servant when he took man's nature, and when he appeared both in body and soul in all things like us. The incarnation is a mystery of annihilation in the humanity of our Lord, because that humanity was despoiled of its natural person- ality, annihilated to itself and to all that For the Season of Advent. v 6 1 distinguishes the person of a man ; and still further, it was annihilated in all the inclinations of man for honors, comforts, and pleasures, the Word to whom it was united, leading it in the very opposite ways of opprobrium, poverty, and suffering. The incarnation is a mystery of annihilation in our Lady, who, to be capable of assuming the character of Mother to the Man-God, had to be humbled and annihilated in her own estimation below all creatures. Our Lord, during the nine months that he dwelt in the most pure womb of the Blessed Virgin, as in the purest and holiest place on earth, was ceaselessly occupied in praising, blessing, adoring, thanking, and loving his Father, and in offering to him his soul and body, his being, his faculties and their opera- tions, for that Father's glory and the salvation of men. He addressed him at the instant of his incarnation these words of the Royal Prophet which the Apostle repeats: "Sacri- fice and oblation thou wouldst not, but a body thou has fitted to me. Holocausts for-sin did not please thee. Then said I : Behold I come, that I should do thy will, O God." (Heb. x, 5, 6, 7 ; Ps. xxxix. 7.) I know that neither peace-offerings, nor holocausts, nor victims 62 Practice of Union with Our Lord slain for the expiation of sin, please thee ; but , that thou hast given me a body to be sacrificed in their stead. Thou hast thus decreed ; I submit. I offer myself cheerfully for the exe- cution of the sentence, and I give myself to thee to do with me all that shall please thee. Our Lord also occupied himself in justifying and sanctifying his holy Mother, and in enrich- ing her with gifts and graces; he likewise thought graciously of all men, and of you in particular, and he yielded himself in spirit to suffering, infamy, and death, for your salva- tion. . Now, although the womb of the Blessed Virgin was the holiest place in all the universe and the one most worthy of receiving our Lord, still, in view of his infinite majesty as God, and of the perfect use he had of his rea- son as man, and of all the graces and wonder- ful gifts he possessed, the obscurity and lowli- ness of that dwelling where he was shut up in general privation of all the objects of the senses, causes the Church to say to him with St. Ambrose and St. Augustine : " Non lior- riiisti Virgiuis uterum? Thou didst not abhor the Virgin's womb, thou hadst no horror to enter it in order to accomplish our salva- tion. For the Season of Advent. 63 II. — THE AFFECTIONS. /. Admiration. The first affection will be admiration and astonishment founded upon the grandeur of the mystery, and upon the grandeur of the benefits of which it is to us the source. Regarding the grandeur of the mystery it is enough to say : Verbum caro factum est — The Word was made flesh — because these words contain in a few syllables the novelty of novel- ties, the wonder of wonders, the miracle of miracles, that join in the same person great- ness with littleness, dignity with lowliness, beatitude with misery, immortality with death, eternity with time, all with nothing, the Cre- ator with the creature, and God with man. That God should become true man, and man true God, is something so strange and so above finite comprehension, that no created reason with all its power can understand how it was possible. The most magnificent and most perfect of all God's works and his incomparable master-piece, is, says St. Denis the Areopagite, the incarnation of his Son which so far sur- passes our intelligence that the most enlight- ened of the angels with all his natural intellect 64 Practice of Union with Our Lord understands nothing- in it. (St. Dionys. de div. nomin. c. 2.) When we see a machine worked by some excellent engineer producing extraordinary and unexpected effects, we are astonished and look on in admiration. The change of King Nebuchodonosor into a beast, which, however, was not a change of substance and nature, but only of exterior appearance and of certain operations, impressed and terrified all the peo- ple of the time and all posterity. What admiration and delight then should we not experience at beholding the union of two natures infinitely diverse by which God became true man and man. true God ; by which the infinite was changed to the finite, the immense received limits, the omnipotent became weak, the most happy miserable, the immortal sub- ject to death ; by which God led the life and performed the actions of man, and man those of God ? " Quis audivit unquam tale" Isaiah cries out, " et quis vidit liinc simile?" Who ever saw or heard the like ? The same prophet remarks that for this reason the first name given to the Incarnate Word will be Admira- ble : % K Vocabitur nomen ejus Admirabilis" his name shall be called (Admirable) Wonderful. (Is. ix. 6.) For the Season of Advent. 65 Our admiiacion and astonishment ought to have also for their object the grandeur of the benefits we receive from this mystery, and which are comprehended in these words : "Ft liabitavit in nobis." (John i. 14.) The Word was made flesh and dwelt among us ! By this dwelling he has delivered us from all our evils and has loaded us with his blessings ; he has united our nature to his divine person, and consequently, by the bond of relationship that we have with him in his human nature, has raised us to the sovereign honor of an alliance with God ; he has dissipated the darkness in which we were plunged and were wandering miserably and blindly to our damnation, send- ing us the clear daylight of truth and enabling us to see the sure road of our salvation ; he has destroyed the power of the devil and the tyranny of sin ; he has closed the gates of hell and opened to us those of paradise, that we may there live forever in happiness, with him. The Church in admiration calls this mystery a commerce and a wonderful traffic : 4 ' O ad- mirabile commerchim ! " And she has great reason, because therein our Lord has given us his divinity and taken our humanity ; he has conferred upon us his riches and his glory and 66 Practice of Union with Our Lord has taken upon himself our poverty and infamy. What a traffic ! What graces ! What inex- plicable favors ! If a king should send to a poor villager overwhelmed with misery in his little cabin, ten millions of dollars, the poor man would undoubtedly be extremely aston- ished and surprised at such an unexpected gift from a prince, and without any merit on his part. This is what happens in the mys- tery of the incarnation, and in a far higher degree, both as regards the infinite greatness of the gift that is made and the infinite great- ness of the giver, as well as the infinite little- ness of man who receives it. 2. Gratitude. For this reason man, moved by this inesti- mable benefit, should break forth with all the fullness of his affections into praises, benedic- tions, and thanksgivings to God, saying with David: "The mercies of the Lord I will sing forever." (Ps. lxxxviii. 2.) I will bless and thank him for them eternally ; and with Isaiah : 4i O Lord, thou art my God, I will exalt thee and give glory to thy name ; for thou hast done wonderful things, thy designs of old faithful. Amen." (Is. xxv. i.) O my Lord! I gladly tell thee that thou art my God ; I For the Season of Advent. 6j will praise thee and will glorify thy holy name with all my power, because thou hast done admirable things in the incarnation of thy Son which was the effect of thy love, and of those eternal thoughts thou hadst of my salvation, and the inviolable promises thou didst make of it, which thou hast executed in good time. Then he should exclaim in the words of the apostle : "Thanks be to God for his unspeak- able gifts !" (2 Cor. ix. 15.) Praise, adoration, and infinite thanks be offered to God for his unspeakable gift, which is his Son incarnate. Certainly St. Bernard is right in telling us : " Remember, man, that thou art dust, and therefore be not proud; and also remember that, even dust as thou art, thou art united to God, and therefore be not ungrateful." (Serin. 2 in Cant.) And when he says in another place: " This benefit ought never to be for- gotten by those who have received it, and there are in it two things upon which they ought to deeply reflect : one is the manner in which God conferred it — he emptied himself for us ; and the other is the profit we have received from it, which was to fill us with him." Ingratitude for so great a benefit would be something fearful, and would deserve a terrible punishment. 68 Practice of Union zvith Our Lord j. Love. As the love that God bears us was the true cause of the personal union he was pleased to contract with our nature, and the source of all the blessings we receive from it, we ought to accept that sovereign honor and the trea- sures of those immense blessings with sincere and ardent love. As God comes to us through love we ought to go to him in the same way, and with much greater reason, since he is of himself worthy of infinite love, and w^e of our- selves are only worthy of hate. The gift he has made us of his Son, and that which 'the Son has made us of himself, obliges us all to this love, and should force the most obstinate hearts. Love attains the highest degree of its perfection and exerts its last effort when it confers a gift commensurate with the power of the giver ; when this gift is something most precious and which the giver cherishes above all things ; when it is made without constraint or obligation and in a disinterested spirit ; and when, moreover, it is very necessary ai}d very useful to the one who receives it ; if you add to all these conditions the fact of the giver bestowing it with great difficulty and extreme pain, you can say nothing more. Now, all For the Season of Advent. 69 these qualities are combined in excess in our Lord who was given to us in the incarnation, and who therefore exacts from us with perfect right a most ardent reciprocal love. 4. Desires and Petitions. We should conceive burning desires and should ask most earnestly that our Lord would deign to come to us in this mystery. The just men of the Old Law earnestly prayed for the coming of the Messiah ; they greatly desired and sighed for it, and offered many petitions, and supplications, and vows, and tears, to draw him from heaven. Each one of them was, as well as Daniel, a man of desires, yir desideri- ornm. Send, O Lord, they said, send him whom thou hast resolved to send. "Drop down de\y, ye heavens, from above, and let the clouds rain the just ; let the earth be opened and bud forth a Saviour, and let justice spring up together. O that thou wouldst rend the heavens and wouldst come down." (Is. xlv. 8; lxiv. 1.) Thou, O Saviour, so greatly de- sired, burst the heavens and come quickly. We cannot wait for thee to come by ordinary ways, we are so anxious for thee, so eager to behold thee. The first sentiment of her love that the JO Practice of Union with Our Lord Spouse revealed, and the first word from her lips in the Canticle was, according to the usual interpretation of the Fathers, an expression of the desire that filled all humanity, and espe- cially the synagogue, the desire of the coming of the Messiah, and the prayer she offered to obtain it. Let the Divine Word, she cried, uniting his nature to mine, give me the kiss of peace, reconciling me with God his Father, and teaching me not only by his angels and prophets, but by himself and with his own words, the doctrine of my salvation. In the eighth chapter of the same book, as the Fathers explain the passage, this trans- port of desire escapes from her heart and lips : " Who shall give thee to me for my brother, sucking the breasts of my mother, that I may find thee without and kiss thee ; and now no man may despise me ?" Who will do me this favor, O Divine Word and only Son of God ! that I may see thee clothed with my nature and shrouded with my flesh, and thus become my brother and the son of my mother ? Who will help me so that I will not be obliged to seek thee in the bosom of thy Father where thou art hidden from all eternity and enveloped with inaccessible light, but may find thee in the womb of thy Mother, or clinging to her For the Season of Advent. Jl breast ? Who will give me to see thee with my eyes, to hear thee with my ears, to touch thee with my hands, and, holding thee fast, to attach myself to thee by sentiments of faith, love, joy, gratitude, respect, adoration, obedi- ence, and homage, so that none may dare to contemn me, since by this mystery thou art become my brother and my spouse, and I thy sister and thy beloved ? In other passages the Spouse declares that he whom she sought was To Ins deside7-abilis, the All Desirable ; and she calls him the end of all her desires and the object of all her longings. Our Lord in the Apocalypse calls himself Amtriy which is a Hebrew word meaning, in its primitive signification, "it is so, it is true," because he is true and truth itself. "These things saith the Amen, the faithful and true witness." (Apoc. iii. 14.) In its secondary signification the word Amen is a prayer, or an expression of desire, " God grant that it may be so." Thus our Lord, the Amen, is the term of all our wishes, and his incarnation is the accomplishment of all our desires. The Mosarebs called our Lady when she was in the ardor of her desires for the incarnation, and especially on the day of the incarnation 72 Practice of Union witli Our Lord when the great mystery was accomplished in her, our Lady of O, because the first word that escapes our heart and lips when we greatly desire a thing is, Outinam — Oh ! would to God. The seven anthems of the Magnificat which the Church sings during the seven days before Christmas and w T hich all begin with O, refer to this ; they are all desires and prayers urging the Eternal Word to come and accomplish the mystery of the incarnation. Let us, then, desire with all the earnestness we are capable of, and ask with all our strength, our Lord to come to us, to effect in our souls and bodies his incarnation, to impress its 'fea- tures upon us and communicate to us its grace and spirit. Let us continually inhale and draw the incarnate Word into us by acts of faith, by desires, by supplications, and by the burning words of the patriarchs, so that he may do for us what his divinity did for his humanity, which was to sanctify it, strengthen it, deify it, and render it so agreeable and glorious to God that the least of its actions, its slightest glance and most trifling movement procured infinite honor to the Eternal Father, and immense treasures of blessings to men ; and that we may have grace likewise to imitate his sacred humanity in all the duties it performed toward the For the Season of Advent. 73 Divinity to which it was not only united sub- stantially and personally, but to which it con- tinued to unite itself by its own interior acts v by its love, its adorations, its glorifications, its- thanksgivings, -its zeal for God's honor, its. submission to his decrees, etc. Let us beg him to become incarnate in us ; and, as his incarnation is a mystery of union, of love, of glorification, and of annihilation, to operate in, us in an eminent degree all these effects. III. — THE VIRTUES. The most important point in these exercises. is the effective expression of our Lord's mys- teries, by the exact and constant practice of the virtues he practiced in them, the principal ones of which we shall always be careful to propose. 1. Union with our Lord Jesus Christ. As our Lord so graciously and lovingly united himself to us in his incarnation, Ave ought, in order to express and represent this mystery, to exert all our efforts to unite our- selves to him. We ought to unite ourselves to him through the motives of love for him and zeal for his glory, and the knowledge of our extreme need of him. For, as our nature- 7 74 Practice of Union with Our Lord became innocent, holy, and perfect, only by union with the Word, we can individually share its regeneration only by uniting ourselves to the Incarnate Word. God himself gives us an example of what we must do to form this union with our Lord, and teaches us our lesson in it. First, as he took pleasure in uniting himself to that sacred humanity, we should imitate him by finding in our union with our Lord our satisfaction and our chief delight. Secondly, as he united him- self to that humanity in order to come and unite himself to us, and through it to confer upon us his gifts, w T e should go to him likewise through it, should by it unite ourselves to him aaid render ourselves capable of receiving his gifts and the effects of his goodness. Thirdly, as he united himself to that adorable humanity in order to draw from it his own glory and to accomplish our salvation, we should in the same way unite ourselves to it in order to promote God's honor and to save our own souls. Assuredly, since God throughout all eternity has performed no greater act, none more excellent, none more glorious to him and more useful to us, than when he united himself to that most holy humanity, w r e, simi- larly, can do nothing that will render more For the Season of Advent. 75 glory and praise to God, nor that will be more advantageous to us, than to unite ourselves to it. Finally, as God united himself to that sacred humanity intimately, inseparably, and forever, not forsaking it at the hour of death, let us likewise contract with our Lord an inti- mate and eternal union, such a union as neither death, nor life, nor anything whatso- ever can destroy. 2. Zeal for our 'Lord's Glory. It is certainly most reasonable that, since the Eternal Word became incarnate, and in his incarnation humbled himself and made use of his divinity and his humanity to exalt us, we should do all in our power to procure for him all the glory we can. The Greek Fathers call this mystery a Descent, because in it the Son of God descended infinitely low, and caused us to ascend infinitely high ; they also call it a Condescension, because in it he ex- ercised unspeakable goodness and condescen- sion in order to accommodate himself to us ; he assumed our degradation in order to give us his glory ; he united himself to our poverty to fill us with his riches, and he charged him- self with our miseries to give us a share in his felicity. y6 Practice of Union with Our Lord This is why, sensibly touched by this most admirable abasement, and completely won by this incomparable desire of our Lord for our glory, we should conceive a burning zeal for his, and by all possible means endeavor to procure him honor. We should breathe only his praises, and should refer to them all our thoughts, all our affections, all our plans, all our words, and all our works. We should consecrate our souls and bodies to his glory, employing for it all our strength, using and consuming ourselves for it, so as to recognize in some degree, although infinitely unequal, the prodigious things he has done, and the unutterable sufferings he has endured in order to raise us from the dust and place us in a state of glory and honor. Besides we are bound to apply ourselves with all our powers to glorify God. God's glory is the end of the incarnation of the Eternal Word, and, in general, the end of all that God does ; because his will cannot pro- pose as the last end of all his works anything but his exterior honor and the glory he can receive from his creatures, this being the thing that of all outside himself is best. Conse- quently, God's glory is the end of our creation and preservation ; save for it we would still be For the Season of Advent. jj in nothingness, therefore we ought to refer to it ail that we are, since we exist only for it. Our Lord traced for us the model in his own person, having from the moment of his con- ception until his death acted incessantly for this end, whence he said : "I honor my Fa- ther. . . I seek not my own glory. . . I have glorified thee on the earth." (Jno. viii. 49 ; xvii. 4.) I glorify my Father, to his glory I refer all my thoughts, all my affections, all mv words, and all mv works ; I seek not mv own glory. And still, now in the highest heaven, he refers to the same intention of God's cdorv, and he will for all eternity, his body, his soul, all that he does and all that he will ever do ; and with him, and in him, all men and all creatures who are in a certain manner con- tained, purified, sanctified, and deified in his sacred humanity ; and moreover, he offers them all for the same intention, out of himself and in themselves, as things that belong to him. Let us then follow this perfect model, and,, in order to do so, let us unite ourselves inti- mately and inseparably with Jesus Christ by sanctifying grace, by acts of faith, hope, and charity, by desires and petitions, as to the first cause, the general and only instrument y 8 Practice of Union with Our Lord of all the exterior glory offered to the Divini- ty, for this purpose making ourselves but one with him, as we are in reality, since we have the honor to be members of a body of which he is the Head. Let us spiritually unite our souls to his soul, our faculties to his faculties, our thoughts to his thoughts, our affections to his affections, our words to his words, our looks, our steps, our motions, and all our actions to his which are infinitely honorable to God, so that all that belongs to us may take from all that be- longs to him a divine lustre and coloring. Let us fill ourselves with his spirit, which is a spirit of pure devotion to the glory of God, since his incarnation, his birth, his life, his death, and all his mysteries, have no other end than God's glory. Let us very frequently offer him, as a trea- sure that belongs to us, to God, to glorify God in every manner and as much as he merits. Let us also pray him to offer us with himself, as one of his own possessions, for God's glory, and in himself as being contained in him. Still more, let us very frequently offer our- selves for the honor and praise of God with God himself. To understand what I mean, we must first know that God is our Creator For the Season of Advent. 79 who has formed our bodies and souls. David says : " He made us, and not we ourselves." (Ps. xcix. 3.) We also learn this from reason and experience, which teach us that nothing" can make itself. Secondly, that he is our pre- server who not only has given us being - , but who preserves it to us ; and as preservation differs from first production only in some little formalities, and is in substance and essence the first production persevered in and a con- tinued creation that follows its first plan, as the life of our body is only a perpetual flow of life from the soul over it ; so to say that God preserves us is only to say that he constantly communicates being to us, and always pro- duces our bodies and souls, and produces them in such or such a manner — a healthy body, an infirm or sickly one ; a robust, weak, beautiful, or ugly body ; a body of a melancholy, bilious, or other temperament ; a soul with much, or with little, or with no talent, memory, judg- ment; a soul sometimes gay, sometimes sad, now consoled, then desolate, afflicted, pained, tempted, and with such and such a species of temptation. God creates our souls and bodies in these different dispositions, and sometimes in several different ways in one day. Thirdly, it must be carefully remarked that 80 Practice of Union zvitJi Our Lord God makes our bodies and souls thus for his own glory, and produces them in these dif- ferent states in order to procure to himself by means of each of these different dispositions a particular kind of honor which he could not derive from any other. This is why, if you tell me that if you had more talents, more judgment, more capacity than God has given you, if your body were stronger and healthier than it is, you would in your opinion render him more honor than w r ith the body and mind you have ; I will reply that truly you might with a different body and mind render honor to God, but not the kind of honor he desires from you, which only your body and your mind just as you possess them can render him. An artisan uses instruments of different sizes and shapes .to fashion his works, and a small and bent instrument will not do what a large and straight one will, but w r ill be good for some other part of the work. In embroidery the different silks used to form a flower all produce effect, each according to its particular color and shade ; and in music, the different tones produce harmony, but each in its own particu- lar manner. Just so a healthy body and a sick body, a great mind and an inferior one, a rich man and a poor man, and, in general, all For the Season of Advent. 8 1 creatures in the universe in their marvelous diversity, serve God in their different ways, and each in its own way renders him an honor which it alone can render him. We know very well that God has created us for his glory and our own beatitude, but we are ignorant of what particular glory -he re- quires frorri us, and to what degree of beatitude he has designed to raise us, whether it be to a place in the choir of angels of the lowest order, or among the archangels, or with the highest seraphim. And further, w r e know not by what particular means we are to execute these two great works of the glory of God and our own beatitude ; God alone knows this ; he alone knows in what manner he desires to be served and glorified in you and by you, and to what measure of grace and happiness he has predestined you ; and likewise, he alone knows by what means you are to reach it. The only means capable of procuring him that particular glory he desires and expects from you, and of bringing you to the degree of grace, perfec- tion, and eternal felicity he has assigned you, are your body and soul just as he has made them, the dispositions of light or of darkness, of consolation or of desolation, of unction or of dryness, of peace or of disquiet and temp- 82 Practice of Union with Our Lord tation, in which he puts you to-day, at this hour and moment, and the present condition, office, and employment to which he has called you. Therefore, as God truly present and dwell- ing in us, constantly creates for his own glory our bodies and souls in all the various disposi- tions of nature and grace wherein they are at each moment, and refers them to his honor and praise, thus making for himself in us per- petual sacrifices, and taking infinite compla- cency in all these dispositions because he creates them, according to the words of the Prophet king : " The Lord shall rejoice in his works," (Ps. ciii. 31) and because in their vari- eties they are the true and only means by which he gains from us the particular honor he requires at that moment ; we should unite ourselves to him dwelling in us, and should, as it were, second him, agreeing to all that he does in us for his glory and with him taking pleasure in it, esteeming ourselves happy to be able to concur with him in so noble a de- sign, and very frequently referring our bodies and souls in all their states to his honor. Let us in this imitate our Lord in whom the Divinity, sanctifying and deifying the human- ity by its personal union with it, consecrated For the Season of Advent. 83 and applied it to its own glory ; and that most sacred humanity referred to and em- ployed for the same end without any intermis- sion, its soul, its body, its essence, its faculties, its operations, and its whole being. The last thing that we must understand is the practice of this divine glorification in us and by us. It consists, first, in accepting and bearing with a great desire and an ardent zeal for God's glory, all the dispositions and changes that he produces in us, in our bodies and souls, in whatsoever manner they may come to us. Secondly, in accepting and bearing them in a spirit of faith, with a sentiment of esteem and approbation of his will ; with submission, with humility and great respect, with patience and fortitude, with silence, with love, and with joy- Thirdly, in referring very frequently during the day our body and soul, our being, our powers, our actions, and all that we are to God's glory, uniting ourselves to him in order that he in us may refer them to that end, im- itating the example our Lord has given us of this. The more frequently, the more perfectly, 84 Practice of Union with Our Lord that is, with the more zeal, the more faith, and the more of the other virtues, we shall do this, the more excellently we shall glorify God and the greater honor we shall render him. In conclusion, remember that as God's will is always invariably fixed to desire and claim his glory, the shortest, easiest, and surest way of glorifying God is to will precisely all that he wills ; and in proportion as we do this with more or less resignation, abandonment, and destruction of our own will, the glory we ren- der to God will be greater or less. j. Self -Abasement. Our Lord annihilated himself in order to unite himself to us and to raise us to the de- gree of honor we now enjoy. " Seme tip sum cxinanivit" says St. Paul. Therefore, let us annihilate ourselves for him, let us labor to destroy and annihilate in us all that is ever so slightly contrary to his glory and our perfec- tion ; let us annihilate our spirit, our judg- ment, our will, our desires, our inclinations and humors, and let us undertake this task courageously and faithfully. And truly, if he who is All and Sovereign Majesty was pleased to become nothing, and to humble himself For the Season of Advent. 85 infinitely that he might make us something great and exalted, we who intrinsically are nothing, are under all imaginable obligations to abase and annihilate ourselves for him, at least so far as nothing can abase itself. To incite you to this, keep continually in your mind, and very frequently on your lips, these words, %i semetipsnm exinanivit" he debased himself, he annihilated himself. IV.— MEDITATIONS. V.— READING. (Under these two headings Father Saint- Jure suggests matter for meditation and read- ing,, taken from pious books of his own com- position, or from other authors ; but as they are not all easily to be found in English, we shall generally omit what comes under these titles.) VI.— ASPIRATORY VERSES. These verses, together with those scattered through our pages, may serve to fix the mys- tery in our memories, to bind our spirits to it, and to help us to inhale our Lord and draw him into us ; for this reason we should during 86 Practice of Union with Our Lord. the day frequently repeat them, now one, now another, according to our dispositions. ,v The Word was made flesh and dwelt among us." (Jno. i. 14.) These words should be repeated with faith, love, and reverence, and sometimes with bended knee as the Church requires of her priests when they repeat them in the Mass. u Lord, what is man, that thou art mindful of him ? or the son of man, that thou visitest him ?" (Ps. cxliii. 3.) Lord, what is man that thou shouldst make thyself known to him, even visibly and in his own nature ? And the son of man that thou shouldst have regard to him ? If thou consultest thy own knowledge thou wilt find that man is only vanity, homo vanitati siniilis f actus est. " Semctipsum exinanivit, he emptied him- self." (Philipp. ii. 7.) He annihilated himself. CHAPTER IV. PRACTICE OF UNION WITH OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST FROM CHRISTMAS TO LENT. I.— THE SUBJECT. The practice for this season will have for its subject the mysteries of our Lord's nativi- ty, his circumcision, the adoration of the kings, the offering his holy Mother made of him to God his Father in the temple, his flight into Egypt and his dwelling there, and all his hid- den life. We must regard with the eyes of faith, with a simple and attentive gaze, our Lord in the stable, laid in the manger upon the straw, with our Lady and St. Joseph and an ox and an ass for his company ; we must behold him suffering the wound of a sharp knife and testi- fying the violence of his pain by his tears ; and so on, we must study him in the other mysteries of this season. II.— THE AFFECTIONS. The affections and interior acts we should conceive toward our Lord in these sacred mysteries are the same that moved the shep- 88 Practice of Union with Our Lord herds and the royal magi ; and, to seek still more perfect models of these sentiments, the same that filled the hearts of our Lady and St. Joseph. /. Faith. Our first sentiment should be a lively faith that this little Child is the true God, that beneath this lowliness and this mean appear- ance is concealed the full glory of the Divin- ity, that under this feebleness lies the strength of the Omnipotent, under this silence the Eternal Word and the wisdom of the Father ; that in this little child, weeping and shivering with cold, is contained the joy of the angels and of all the blessed, and in this little crea- ture the Creator of the universe. Thus, looking at this Child in the manger on the straw, we will not confine our gaze to his flesh nor to his miserable surroundings, but, enlightened by a strong faith, we will, with piercing glance, penetrate the depths of the mystery and discover there the Divinity re- splendent with glory, though enveloped with the cloud of this sacred humanity, and we Will exclaim with St. Thomas, but in a spirit of more perfect faith : " Dominns mens ct Dens metis — My Lord and my God !" (jno. xx. 28.) From Christmas to Lent. 89 Yes, this little Child is my God, and I desire no other besides him, even as there is no other. Yes, this little Child is my God, my true and legitimate Lord ; this Child who weeps is my joy and my beatitude ; this Child so poor and destitute of necessary things is all my treasure ; this Child so tender and feeble is all my strength ; this Child so humiliated and abased is my sovereign glory ; this Child who utters not a word is my master and my wis- dom ; this Child of a day is my Eternal Crea- tor : Dominus mens et Dens mens — he is my Lord and my God. 2. Adoration. After the act of faith we must make an act of adoration. This will naturally and easily follow the act of faith ; when you firmly be- lieve that a person to whom you are presented is your king, this belief immediately produces in your mind an impression of respect for his person, and impels you to bow profoundly before him ; you find no difficulty in doing this, because it appears to you so just and reasonable. After your act of faith you will experience the same reverence toward our Lord, and you will adore him with the Blessed Virgin, with St. Joseph, with the magi, and 90 Practice of Uviion with Our Lord with the angels who received, St. Paul says, the command to adore him at the moments of his incarnation and his birth. And again, when he bringeth in the first-begotten into the world, he saith : " And let all the angels of God adore him." (Heb. i. 6.) If the Seraphim and Cherubim adore him, and through reverence bow down before his majesty, how much more reason have not we who are but dust, and besides are under far greater obligations to our Lord than the angels are, since, as the apostle says, he did not take their nature to save them, but ours to save us — how much more reason have not we to adore him, to humble and abase and annihilate ourselves in his presence ? There- fore, let us say to him : I adore thee, O little Child and great God ; I adore and honor thee in union with the Blessed Virgin, St. Joseph, the magi, and the angels, with sentiments of the deepest respect and profoundest reverence I am capable of. And as the angels adore thee in heaven in the bosom of thy Father and on the throne of thy glory, with humiliations and abasements that exceed our thoughts and words, I adore thee in the crib and on the bosom of thy Mother, From Christmas to Lent. 91 with, at least in desire, the same respect and submission. 3. Admiration. It is a spectacle worthy of extreme admira- tion to see the Eternal the child of a day, the Immense reduced to limits, the Impassible suffering, the Immortal subject to death, the Rich needy, Joy weeping, Beatitude miser- able, Speech dumb, Light unillumined, Authority submissive, Wisdom taught, Power supported, and God, before whose Majesty the Seraphim and Cherubim are but atoms, lying in a manger upon straw between two animals. St. Bernard, beholding the sight, cries out : " Who will not admire, and who can suffi- ciently admire a thing so admirable and strange ? God eternal, Son of the Most High, begotten before ages, is born a little Child." And the prophet Habacuc, fainting from astonishment, says to this Child: "Lord, I have considered thy works and was afraid." (Habac. hi. 2.) Seeing thee not in heaven among the angels, but in a stable between two animals. 4. Gratitude. Words are inadequate to express how much gratitude we owe our Lord for having come 92 Practice of Union with Onr Lord down to earth for our sake and placed him- self as we see him in the stable. He said of himself, M I came forth from the Father, and am come into the world." (Jno. xvi. 28.) Be- hold two terms, two places, two conditions, widely different — that he left, the bosom of the Father, the splendor of glory, majesty adored by angels, the state of infinite beati- tude — and that to which he came, a stable, a manger, poverty, contempt, and misery ! When we think of St. Alexis whom the Church calls the most noble of Romans, when we think of him in his father's house abundantly provided with all his heart could desire, and on his marriage-day loaded with favors and honor, and then a few years later sleeping under the steps of his father's palace, unknown, poor, scorned, and mocked by his own servants, we are greatly surprised to see the same person voluntarily in two such different conditions. But in our Lord we see a change still more extraordinary, and which caused his Father to* say by the prophet Abdias : "Behold I have made thee small among the nations. Thou art exceeding con- temptible." (Abd. i. 2.) This change accepted for our sake by the Son of God, demands in return a most un- From Christmas to Lent. 93 bounded gratitude. If a king should come from the ends of the earth to visit you, you would consider yourself under obligations to thank him ; and if in coming he had suffered very much, you would feel yourself under still greater obligations ; and if he came to deliver you from most serious evils that were afflicting you, and to bestow upon you all sorts of favors, you would deem yourself less than the brutes if you were not overwhelmed with gratitude. Oh ! what sentiments of gratitude ought we then to have toward our Lord ! what thanksgivings we should offer him, since he is far more exalted than any king, and comes from a much greater distance than the ends of the earth, and endures excessive sufferings in order to deliver us from our evils and to enrich us with blessings that are in- comparably more precious than those any earthly king could bestow ! 5. Love for our Lord. The mere sight of what takes place in the stable should fire our hearts with love for our Lord. God, knowing that so long as he re- mained invisible and insensible, man, who in his operations depends greatly upon the senses, would always have much difficulty in 94 Practice of Union with Our Lord loving him, to take away this difficulty and remove all the obstacles to the love he re- quires of man, made himself visible and sen- sible in the most lovable and charming manner possible, by becoming a man like unto us ; he made himself our Brother and our Spouse, titles most powerful to attract and oblige us to love. What is more, God became a creature, God is a little child, God lies upon the straw be- tween two animals, God is miserable, and for us ! After that we do not love him ? Has not St. Paul good reason to say : " If any man love not our Lord Jesus Christ, let him be anathema?" (i Cor. xvi. 22.) If any one after such obligations does not love our Lord, let him be anathema. And the mark of the sinner that he takes in his circumcision, and the precious blood that he painfully spills in that mystery, and with such extreme ignominy, and so soon ! Does not this force us to love him ? St. Bernard ex- claims in admiration : " The Son of God found himself on the day of his birth less than the angels, because he found himself man ; this is wonderful. But on the day of his circumcision I see something more admirable and more astonishing still, because in that mystery he From Christmas to Lent. 95 made himself less than the angels by taking, besides the nature of man, the form of sinful man." (Serm. 3, de Circumcis.) Thus Holy Church says on the feast of the Circumcision : rt Propter nimiam cJiaritatem stiam, qua dilexit 110s Dens, Filium suum nisit in similitndinem earuis peccati. On account of the excessive charity with which he loved us, God sent his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh." Our Lord, both as God and man, was abso- lutely impeccable, and there is nothing so contrary to God as sin. Riches are certainly opposed to poverty, greatness to littleness, joy to sorrow, and life to death ; but sin is still more opposed to God. God easily brought together and united in his person those first things, though so different from him ; but he could not do the same with the last — sin. We have seen him at once rich and poor, great and small, happy and miserable, immortal and subject to death ; but we never saw him holy and a sinner. Hence, the more sin is contrary to him and the more he is the enemy of sin, the more plainly he has declared the excess of his love for us by deigning to take the mark of sin, and doing so willingly and lovingly in the desire rather to compromise his own honor than not remedy our ills. 96 Practice of Union zvith Our Lord Truly, it is going very far in the way of love that the Son of God should not be content to prove his affection for us by becoming man, by being born a little child, poor, contemned, and subject to every discomfort ; but that he should desire to appear that which he is not, and which he can never be, a sinner, and to bear the vile character and the shameful mark of sin, which he holds in horror and cannot endure. Being unable to be a sinner, for our salvation he assumes the appearance of one. Oh ! what love, and what benevolence ! Who can describe the good will and the ardent affection with which in the temple he offered himself to God his Father for us, and offered himself to be scourged, crowned with thorns, and crucified ? What a wonderful proof of love thus to give himself to us, and to allow us to possess him in exchange for so little, for the sigh of a repentant heart, for a morsel of bread and a cup of cold water given to a beggar ! while to purchase and possess us, though there is no comparison between his value and our worthlessness, he gave all his blood and sacrificed his life, so great was his desire to give himself to us and to win us to him ! All these proofs our Lord has given us of From Christmas to Lent. 97 his love, demand of us for him all the love our hearts are capable of. The prophet Isaiah said to him that if he should make himself man and should descend to such abasements for us, and should work those miracles of love that are seen in his nativity, the most obsti- nate would be unable to withstand his efforts, but would surely melt into tears ; the haugh- tiest spirits would humble themselves, hearts of stone would break, and the coldest souls would enkindle with his love with so much the more ardor as he lowered himself for them to depths so unworthy of his Majesty. " The mountains would melt away at thy presence, they would melt as at the burning of fire ; the waters would burn with fire ; when thou shalt do wonderful things we shall not bear them." (Is. lxiv. I, 2, 3.) "The more he abased himself for me," says St. Bernard, "the dearer he is and the more I love him, because he has made himself more amiable." (Serm. 1, in Ephiph.) St. Paul, to move us to this love, says that "The goodness and kindness of God our Saviour appeared," (Tit. iii. 4) when, to show his love for men, he appeared to them clothed with their nature, lying in a manger, and bear- ing the mark cf sin. Commenting upon which 98 Practice of Union with Onr Lord words of the apostle, St. Bernard adds : " How could our Lord display more plainly his good- ness than by uniting himself with my flesh ? Was -there a means of showing more clearly his mercy than by assuming our miseries ? And what more certain proof of his benev- olence could he give than to reciuce him- self, the Word of God, for our sake, to the condition ot the grass of the field ? " Who that believes these truths and reflects upon them with any degree of attention, can fail to consider himself under positive obliga- tions to love our Lord with all his heart, and to prove his love by deeds, just as our Lord proved his for us, not by words, but by wondrous works ? God the Father, on the day wheri his Son was presented to him in the temple in his own name and in ours, and in that of all the human race, gave him back to his holy Mother, to let us know that it is to her he gives him, that she must give him to us, that to her we must address ourselves if we will have him, that without her he shall never be possessed by us. To her, therefore, we are indebted for Jesus Christ, since she is his Mother, ana without her consent to the pro-. posal the Archangel Gabriel made her in From Christmas to Lent. 99 God's name, on the day of the Annunciation, a consent she was free to give or to refuse, we would never have obtained him, and consequently we would never have had a a Saviour nor a salvation. On the feast of the Purification she receives him anew from God the Father in order to again give him to us. Therefore, we possess Jesus Christ, and in him all our happiness, only through the Blessed Virgin, and but for her he would not be ours. St. Bernard says: " God has so decreed that we can possess nothing that we do not receive from Mary's hands." Hence we must infer that w T e are also under infinite obligations to honor her, to love her, and to render her endless thanksgivings and every possible homage. We should make our offering of the Son to God the Father in the dispositions of the Blessed Virgin, with a most profound interior and exterior humility, with singular reverence, with great devotion, with cordial tenderness, with unspeakable gratitude for having given him to us, with ardent zeal for his glory, and with all other affections ; w r e should offer him as the dearest and most precious thing we possess, to be our mediator with the Father, IOO Practice of Unio7i with Our Lord our advocate, our pledge, our ransom, our sacrifice of glorification to procure infinite glory to God, our sacrifice of propitiation to obtain the pardon of our sins, our eucharistic sacrifice to thank him for his benefits, and our sacrifice of impetration to obtain fresh benefits, in fine, to be before the throne of God our all. God the Father having received his Son from us, gives him .back to us to be our Saviour, our Redeemer, our protector, our consoler, our physician, our model, our strength, our wisdom, our riches, our glory, our peace, our joy, and our all. "Christ is all, and in all," says St. Paul. fColoss. iii. 2.) Our life should be a continual exercise of offering and giving with these sentiments, Jesus Christ to God his Father, and of receiv- ing him from God ; and as he is given to us with infinite love, let us receive him with most ardent love. Then, enjoying your happiness and the in- estimable favor that is done you, with the holy old man Simeon, take the dear child in your arms, and gazing upon him with faith, respect, gratitude, joy, hope, and love, remem- ber that even as that holy old man could not From Christmas to Lent. ioi die until he had first seen Jesus Christ accord- ing to the promise he received from the Holy Ghost : " He had received an answer from the Holy Ghost, that he should not see death before he had seen the Christ of the Lord ;" (Luke ii. 26,) and as he sang : " Nunc dimittis servum tuum, Domine, secundum verbum tuum in pace ; now thou dost dismiss thy servant, O Lord, according to thy word in peace," (lb. ii. 29,) only when he held him in his arms pressed close to his heart ; so it is impossible for you to die to your vices, to your bad incli- nations and your corrupt nature, or to sing your nunc dimittis, that is, to bid a last fare- well to them all, and to enjoy the peace of the children of God and true rest of spirit, until you hold Jesus Christ in your arms, which will only be when you are united eter- nally and intimately with him, in your under- standing by meditating upon his mysteries, and in your will by loving him. i 6. Joy. If the possession of a good be the legitimate object of joy, a joy that goes on increasing in proportion as the good is greater and the pos- session of it more secure, our Lord's nativity should be to us a cause of inexpressible joy on 102 Practice of Union zvith Our Lord account of the infinite blessings it brings us, and which are so securely ours that no one in all the world can steal them away without our consent.* Isaiah, referring to this mystery, says : •'The people that walked in darkness have seen a great light ; to them that dwelt in the region of the shadow of death, light is risen." (Is. ix. 2.) They that were shrouded in dark- ness and that fainted with weariness in the regions of death, found the day in their midst when the Sun of Justice who came to give them life was born. At the rising of this Sun the angel said to the shepherds : " Behold I bring you good tidings of great joy that shall be to all the people ; for this day is born to you a Saviour who is Christ the Lord." (Luke ii. 10, n.) There is born to you, to you who w^ere con- demned and lost, a Saviour ; to you who were t sold, a Redeemer ; to you who were captives, a liberator ; to you w 7 ho w r ere sick, a physi- cian ; to you who were afflicted, a consoler, and the One who will deliver you from all evils and bestow upon you every blessing. " Let us rejoiee, my brethren," says St. Leo, •'because our Saviour is born this day; for From Christmas to Lent. 103 there is no place for sadness where life has birth." (Serm. 1, in Nat. Dom.) Let us conclude with the sweet and forcible words of the eloquent St. Bernard : " We have heard in our land a glad voice, a voice of ex- ultation and salvation has resounded in the tents of sinners ; we have heard a good word, a word of consolation that should cause us great joy, and that is worthy of being well received. "Praise God with joy and gladness, O ye mountains ! and you, O ye forests and woods, shake your branches as though clapping your hands in the presence of the Lord because he is come ! Hearken, ye heavens, and thou, O earth, lend thine ear, and let all creatures in the universe break forth into canticles of won- der and thanksgiving ! But thou, O man, sing louder still, for Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is born in Bethlehem of Juda ! "Is there a heart so hard as not to be melted by the sweetness of these words ? What more welcome news could be brought to us ? What more agreeable could be told us ? When has the world ever heard, or seen, or received the like ? Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is born in Bethlehem of Juda ! O short sentence, but filled with heavenly delight." 104 Practice of Union with Our Lord (Serm. I, in Vigil. Nat. Dom.) Thus St. Ber- nard discourses on the birth of our Lord, and the great cause of joy which it should be 'to us. Let us, then, rejoice, but in a holy man- ner, and so let us accomplish what the angel said to the shepherds, and to us in their persons 7. Hope. As these reasons well considered are suffi- cient to fill our hearts with a torrent of delight, they should also fill them with a great hope in our Lord as the remedy for all our ills. It is true we have many, both spiritual and cor- poral ; . sin has loaded us down with them ; still, since the coming of our Lord they have ceased .to be ills, because we have in him a powerful remedy for them, which, instead of longer afflicting ourselves, we should think cnly of making use of. If a person who is worth a hundred millions of dollars owes five cents, he does not worry about his debt, be- cause he knows he has most ample means with which to discharge it. The means which we possess in Jesus Christ for deliverance from all our miseries are incomparably more ample. Therefore the angel says to us as well as to the shepherds : " Fear not, for this day is born From Christmas to Lent. 105 to you a Saviour who is Christ the Lord." (Luke ii. 10.) He is called Jesus, that is Saviour, because, as the angel explained to St. Joseph, he will save men and deliver them from their sins, and consequently from all their miseries, of which their sins are the true and only causes. This divine Saviour is born for us ; he is ours. " A Child is born to us, and a Son is given to us," says the prophet Isaiah. (Is. ix. 6.) A little Child is born for our sal- vation, the Son of God is given to us by his Father to ransom us from our captivity and to enrich us with all his treasures. Our Lord himself says : " God so loved the world as to give his only begotten Son." (Jno. iii. 16.) God loved men to such a degree that he gave them his Son. The word give is used, not lend, nor sell, nor exchange ; by the absolute title of gift Jesus Christ is ours, he belongs to us, he is our property, and in such a way that there is nothing we possess more entirely than we do him ; no power, neither of angels, nor of men, nor of demons, can take him from us without our consent ; God himself, omnipotent as he is, cannot deprive us of him, because he has given him to us, and God's gifts are on his part irrevocable. 106 Practice of Union with Onr Lord Our Lord being ours, all his treasures belong to us, since, according to a just rule, the accessory follows the principal ; he who gives the tree, gives likewise the fruit. Hence St. Paul having said that God gave us his Son, adds : " How hath he not also, with him, given us all things?" (Rom. viii. 32.) Thus it is that we have in Jesus Christ, who is Lord of the whole universe, a superabundant re- medy for all our miseries, and we are infinitely enriched in him and by him. " You are filled in him who is the head of all principality and power." (Coloss. ii. 10.) "In all things you are made rich in him, so that nothing is want- ing to you in any grace, (r Cor. i. 5, 7.) From this we must be certain that our Lord is our chief hope, that he is the efficacious remedy for all our miseries, the cure for all our ills, the sovereign balm for all our wounds, and the true consolation for all our sorrows. Therefore we must have recourse to him in all our necessities, we must go to him freely, frankly, and with the simplicity and confidence of a child, of a brother, and of a friend. If we go in this spirit, he will not fail to deliver us from the evils that afflict us ; or, if deliver- ance be not for our good, he will give us what will be much better, patience, resig- From Christmas to Lent. 107 nation, and strength to bear our burdens to the end. Look at our Lord in his crib as upon one of the thrones of his mercy, and say to him : O dear and divine Infant ! thou art my hope ; thou, the only Son of God, the omnipotent Creator of the universe, the treasury of all blessings, thou art my hope, thou art my refuge, my support, and my whole confidence. Thou hast taken my flesh to remedy its infirmities and weaknesses ; thou hast taken my soul to release it from its sins and deliver it from all the defects to which it is subject ; thou hast taken poverty to make me look to thee for aid in my tem- poral necessities ; I behold thee shedding tears because thou dost desire to wipe mine away and to console me in my sorrows. O divine Infant ! Thou art indeed my sweetest hope! 8. Sorrow for our sins. If the birth of our Lord is a mystery of joy, it is also a mystery of sadness ; and if the angel said that he announced^ a subject of great joy, he might have added that he gave us a motive of lively sorrow for our sins. Truly, could there be anything more capable io8 Practice of Union zvitli Our Lord of exciting in our hearts an intense regret for our sins, than the frightful extremity to which for their atonement we have reduced the divine Majesty? than a sight of the Son of God, the Creator of heaven and earth, becom- ing a creature, becoming a man, a miserable man ? than to behold him born in a stable, laid in a crib between two animals, poor, contemned, and destitute of every comfort ? than to see God a little child, God lying upon the straw, God weeping, God chilled by the cold, in order to appease the anger of the Father irritated, against us, to satisfy the divine justice and pay our debts ? We may say to him in the words of the prophet Abdias, though using them in a different sense : "Behold I have made thee small among the nations ; thou art exceeding contemptible." (Abd. 2.) Alas ! Why are w r e so unfortunate as to have reduced God to this ? If it w r ere necessary for the expiation of a crime committed by one of the people that the king,. the queen, the princes, and all the chief personages of a kingdom, should weep bitterly, should traverse the streets with naked feet and clothed in sackcloth, and should fast on bread and water for an entire year, and the offender, witnessing all, were From Cliristmas to Lent. 109 not sorry for his fault, would it not be a sign that he was out of, his senses ? How then can we, if we have our reason, not regret our sins which have brought Infinite Majesty to the strange necessity of covering itself with the sackcloth of our mortality, of being born; in a stable like a beast, and of suffering all that it has ? This is why we should testify to God ex- treme regret for our offences which have reduced him to such a lamentable state, and with all the earnestness of which we are capable should beg him to pardon them. As- suredly, as children easily forgive, this divine Infant will forgive us. p. Desires and Petitions. May our Lord be born in us, may he accom- plish in our hearts his spiritual circumcision, may he impress upon them his other mysteries, may he give us the grace and spirit of those mysteries ! such should be our aspiration, and to attain it we should seek to draw him into us in all his states. It is necessary that the birth of our Lord,, his circumcision, his poverty, the- contradic- tions, the scorn, the persecutions, and the other characteristics of his life on earth, should 10 1 1 o Practice of Union with Our Lord be reproduced in his elect while they are pil- grims here below. The gre-at St. Leo, speak- ing of the birth of Christ, says : " The genera- tion of Jesus Christ is the generation of all Christians, the birth of the head is the birth of the body ; even as w r e have been crucified with our Lord in his passion, have risen with him in his 'resurrection, and have ascended with him to the right hand of God his Father ■in his ascension, w r e were born with him in his birth." This is to be understood not only of the natural and moral union which we have with our Lord, but still further and more par- ticularly of the care we should take to engrave upon both our interior and exterior the virtues and features of his mysteries. We must have great desires for this and must pray for it earnestly and continually, and thereby attract our Lord into our souls to produce this effect in them. III.— THE VIRTUES. 7. Professed imitation of onr Lord. One of the chief reasons w r hy the Son of God was pleased to clothe himself with a human nature and dwell visibly among men, was to teach them the just value of things From Christmas to Lent. 1 1 1 which they were very ignorant of, and the road to salvation which they traveled but blindly. This office belonged to him more particularly than to the Father or the Holy Ghost, because he is by his personal perfection uncreated wisdom and truth itself, and by his mercy incarnate wisdom, to which properly belongs the teaching office. For this reason the prophet Malachi calls him the Sun of Justice (Mai. iv. 2), who would by the rays of his example and words show justice to men ; that is to say, in the first place, what virtue and perfection are, and in the second place, the relative value of heaven and earth, the soul and the body, eternal and temporal blessings, riches and poverty, honor and op- probrium, prosperity and adversity, and the measure of esteem we should have for these things. And Christ, speaking of himself, calls himself the Light of the world : " I am the Light of the world." (Jno. viii. 12.) And again: " I am come a light into the world, that whosoever believeth in me may not re- main in darkness." (Jno. xii. 46.) I am come to make known to men what is true and what is false, what is good and what is bad, what is precious and what is vile, what should be carefully treasured and what should be scorn- 1 1 2 Practice of Union with Our Lord ed and avoided. Behold why I have come. In another place he says : " Neither be ye called masters ; for one is your master, Christ." (Matt, xxiii. 10.) Be not ambitious to be called doctor and master ; for you have a doctor and a master, who is Jesus Christ. If Jesus Christ is the master and doctor, he must have a school and a chair. Where then is his school, where is his chair ? His school is the stable of Bethlehem ; the crib is the chair whence this divine Doctor, this admir- able Master teaches men and appoints their lessons. Yes, but from that chair he utters not a word. True ; but in his silence he speaks much, and even more than he could say in words, because his doctrine is not speculative but practical ; he has not come to teach us to talk well, but to do well, and this is learned much better from works than from words. As St. Bernard says : " He does not speak, his tongue is not yet loosened, for he is a child only just born ; nevertheless, all that is in him speaks, crys, and proclaims, his doctrine." (Serm. 3, Nat. Dom.) But what is his doctrine ? What does he teach ? He teaches things which are diamet- rically opposed to the opinions of men. The From Christmas to Lent. 113 same Father says : "In omnibus ninndi judi- cium arguitur, stibvertihir, confictaturr (Serin. 3, Nat. Dom.) The judgment which men form of the value of things, is condemned, over- thrown, and destroyed by all that is seen in our Lord in the crib. It should be remarked that men from the beginning of the world always esteemed riches more than poverty, honors rather than oppro- brium, pleasures before pains ; the Eternal Wisdom came to eradicate these old opinions, to make them understand that they were false, and to impress upon their minds very different ideas. It would have been just as easy for the Son of God to be born in a magnificent palace as in a stable, to be laid in a cradle of gold studded with diamonds as in a manger upon straw, to have kings and princes around him instead of an ox and an ass ; he could have chosen to be born in summer rather than in winter, at noon instead of at midnight, and in the midst of every comfort and luxury rather than in the greatest destitution. It was not his will ; on the contrary, he wished to appear to our eyes poor, contemned, weeping, and trembling with cold, in order to show us our wrong estimate of temporal things, and to give us a knowledge of their true value. It is 114 Practice of Union with Our Lord as clear as the sunlight that God, wise and blessed as he is, would never have suffered"in his person so much pain and sorrow, and abased himself to the humiliations of the stable which were so unworthy of his divine Majesty, merely to deceive us and persuade us of a falsehood. Therefore let us stand firmlv, and although the world continues to persevere in its old opinions and errors, let us believe that it deceives itself, since Eternal truth thus assures us of it by his actions. Let us remember the argument of St. Bernard, to which there is no reply : " Either our Lord or the world is mistaken ; now it is impossible that Wisdom should be mistaken, otherwise it would not be wisdom ; hence we must conclude that it is the world that is mistaken. Still further, the prudence of the flesh is called in the Holy Scriptures folly, seeing that Jesus Christ who is uncreated and incarnate wisdom, and who consequently cannot be deceived, has chosen that which is most distasteful to the flesh, we must necessarily infer that it is the best and most useful for man and what he ought to choose ; and, that whosoever shall teach or persuade us of the contrary must be shunned as a seducer and a cheat." (Serm.de Nat.) From Christmas to Lent. 115 I et us then picture to ourselves our Lord in the stable and in the manger as our divine Doctor and only Master in his school and in his pulpit, giving us his lessons and addressing to us by his works these words of Isaiah : "This is the way ; walk ye in it and go not aside, neither to the right hand, nor to the left." (Is. xxx. 20.) This is the way to sal- vation, to perfection, and to heaven ; if you turn from it, you will fall into precipices. Look upon him who is the King of kings to whom belongs the entire universe, and who is the Creator of all the riches of the world. He has been pleased to be born poor and in want of the most necessary things, to teach us how he esteems poverty more than riches, and how we, after his example, should esteem it ; to reprove us for our excessive affec- tion for earthly blessings, and our undue care to provide for our needs, and our impatience and murmurings when we have not all we desire. Look upon him who is the God of glory and the Infinite Majesty, in the state of extreme humiliation and annihilation to which he has reduced himself, to teach us humility, and to reprove our pride, our vanity, and our open and hidden seeking after the honors of the Il6 Practice of Unio7i zvitli Our Lord world and the esteem of men. Thinking" of this, St. Bernard asks : " How can it be that man, who is but a worm of the earth, has not courage to humble himself in presence of the divine Majesty so deeply humbled ?" (Serm. I, in Epiph.) See him, even while he governs with sover- eign authority and infinite wisdom all creatures in heaven and earth, see him in the arms of his Mother permitting her to move him, place him, handle him as she thinks best ; and this, that he may persuade us to allow ourselves to be guided without resistance by our superiors, and by his providence, in all things whether agreeable or not, and to reprove our want of submission. Behold the instructions which this heavenly Doctor gives us in the crib ! Behold what he teaches us ! It now remains for you who wish to pass for his disciples, to be so in reality, and, renounc- ing the false opinions of corrupt nature, to make open profession of believing his doctrine and putting it in practice. There is no im- posture to be feared in following Truth, no dishonor in imitating the Son of God ; on the contrary, we can do nothing which will be more useful and glorious to us ; and cer- tainly we cannot depart from the way of truth From Christmas to Lent. 117 without entering into that of deceit, nor can we leave wisdom without falling into folly. 2. Contempt of the World. What we are about to remark will confirm what we have just said. It is a strange thing to see the extreme contempt which our Lord expressed for all earthly grandeur, and how at his first entrance into the world, at the first step he takes, he tramples under foot all that men esteem and admire, honors, riches, repu- tation, and pleasures, teaching us by this example how we are deceived in our judg- ment of the value of these things, and how rather we should regard them. The star of the Magi gives us great light on this subject. St. Matthew relates how this miraculous star appearing to the princes in their own country, caused them to start forth and led them to Judea and to Jerusalem ; how they inquired boldly where the King of the Jews was born ; how the star was eclipsed while they remained in Jerusalem, and when they were about departing from that city, reappeared, guided them to Bethlehem, and stopped over the stable where the child was. How many mysteries and excellent instruc- tions this narrative contains for us ! 1 1 S Practice of Union with Our Lord First, the star, that is to say the light and the guides that God gives us to direct us in the path of our salvation and bring us to the perfection to which he calls us, should cause us to leave our country, in other words our- selves, and go to Jesus Christ. "The star went before them until it came and stood over where the child was." (Matt. ii. 9.) It guided them so far, and did not pass beyond. Even so all right direction and all good guides lead always to Jesus Christ ; they teach, they incite, they continually encourage and persuade us to go to him, to love him, to think of him, to unite ourselves to him, to imitate him as closely as the condition of each one of us will permit, and to make this the foundation and main part of all our devotions ; because he is our Saviour, our Redeemer our Last End and our road to reach it, our beatitude and our means of attaining it, and finally our all for our salvation. The star then guided the Magi to Jesus Christ. But in what state, and in what place ? To Jesus Christ a child. And where ? To Jesus Christ not radiant on a throne of glory, but hidden in a stable and couched in a manger, in a state of extreme poverty and humility, to teach us that God's true lights From Christmas to Lent. 119 lead to the infancy of our Lord, to the sim- plicity, docility, submission, faith and inno- cence of children ; and to make us understand that all our lights, our knowledge, our science, our devotions, and our good direction, should lead to Jesus Christ, poor, humiliated and scorned, that we may esteem, adore, and honor him in that condition which he has assumed for us, and then imitate him. It was there that the star guided the Magi, and not elsewhere ; it even obscured itself above the rich and proud city of Jerusalem. It is there the Magi, that is the wise, go fear- lessly, not repulsed by this poor and abject exterior. But why ? Because they know that the present life is a life of faith and consequently a life hidden, rather than plainly manifested. The shep- herds were told by the angel in precise words that they should find "the Infant WTapped in swaddling clothes and laid in a manger" (Luke ii. 12), to signify to us that in this world we see our Lord and his mysteries through a veil, not openly, face to face. Secondly, because they know that this life is a life of merit, and that we must gain our beatitude as a reward, and therefore we must labor ; for there is no reward without merit, 120 Practice of Union with Qjir Lord and no merit without labor. We must labor, that is we must exercise acts of virtue, of poverty, of humility, of submission, and others of which our Lord has given us an example. Finally, because they understand that man is completely ruined in soul and body by sin, and that all that is in him is, owing to the vicious inclination of his corrupt nature, either the concupisence of the flesh for pleasures, or the concupisence of the eyes for riches, or the pride of life for honors,* as is declared by St. John (i Jno. ii. 16) ; it is impossible for man to become virtuous unless he is changed, neither can he be made capable of the happi- ness which God prepares for him if he does not correct his vices. But how shall he correct them ? By their opposites. It is a general principle of medi- cine that diseases cannot be cured except by remedies opposed to them ; reason and expe- rience demonstrate this truth ; we never see like destroy its. like; heat does not banish heat ; cold is not chased away by cold, but clings to it as its friend, and by the union of the same natures increases it ; it is cold which, by the difference and hostility of its nature, extinguishes heat, and heat by the same law of opposition drives away cold. From Christinas to Lent. 12 r Thus we must not expect that our proud and ambitious nature will ever be cured by glory, dignity, and praise, which serve as food for pride and ambition ; but only by humilia- tions and abasements, w T hich are the contraries of those passions! Our irregular affection for riches will not be corrected by possessing them, but by poverty as the right salve for the wound. Our inclination for pleasures will be nourished and increased by the enjoyment of them, and can be destroyed only by con- trarieties and sufferings. You are too fond of creatures ; it will not be their conversation and attention that will deliver you from this defect, but rather their neglect and con- tempt. Such, then, are the medicines for our diseases, and without using them we can- not be healed. Even when human nature has not been spoiled and corrupted by sin, as in the Blessed Virgin ; and when it has been but very slightly, as in St. John the Baptist ; and when it has suffered to the degree that is ordinarily wit- nessed in men, though afterward restored miraculously, and receiving a most powerful grace which renders it invulnerable to mortal sin, as in the apostles, it must still be pre- served, nourished, and strengthened by these 11 122 Practice of Union zcith Our Lord same medicines — so true it is that our evils and vices must be treated and cured in one manner, and that no other will be efficacious. Our Lord who had no need for himself of these remedies, his nature being infinitely holy and absolutely impeccable, and who came to sanctify our nature, approved them, esteemed them, loved them, sought and made use of them, in order to teach us that they are the true and only ones which we must employ to recover spiritual health. He also made use of them to purify them, to sanctify and deify them in his person, and thus to sweeten for us their bitterness and render it easier for us to use them. This is why the kings, the magi, the wise, and all men, should go to the stable and the crib to learn the method of their cure ; and those whose condition does not permit them to leave their honors and riches to imitate cur Lord, should know that they must at least renounce their affection for them ; let them listen to the warning which David, a great king, gives them in these words : "If riches abound, set not your heart upon them." (Is. lxi. II.) The same warning applies to honors and pleasures. But as, in consequence of the weakness of From Christmas to Lent. 123 our nature and the powerful attraction of sensible things, it is very difficult to keep our hearts detached from them, and very unusual to be surrounded by worldly glory without being a little vainglorious, to be among vani- ties without being vain, among pleasures without taking pleasure in them, to possess riches without in some degree loving them — in short, to be truly poor in spirit, we ought to consider it a great grace and a singular bless- ing from God when he takes from us such occasions of falling and places us, as regards the things of this world, in a state where our feeble virtue is not in such danger and can be more easily sustained and strengthened. Therefore, let us go with the magi, following the star of our Lord's example ; let us boldly enter Jerusalem and ask where the King of the Jews is born, without minding what the world will say about us ; let us with head erect enter the stable, let us adore the Child in the crib without being repulsed by its mean exterior ; on the contrary, let us, like those wise men, count it our greatest wisdom and our highest prudence to recognize and adore the Divinity in that poverty and lowliness, seeing in the poverty our treasures, in the lowliness our exaltation, and in the opprobrium our glory. 124 Practice of Union zvitli Onr Lord Let us, after the model which our Lord gives us, scorn this inferior and visible world where we are to abide but for a little time, and where things are but shadows ; and let us unceas- ingly aspire to the superior and invisible world which will be our eternal dwelling, and where true riches, true honors, and true pleasures await us. Let us constantly mistrust this w*orld as a deceiver, and no matter what it presents for our enjoyment let us suspect it as we would the offerings and gifts of an enemy. St. Am- brose says (Lib. de Virgin.) that as poison is always disguised with honey or sugar, other- wise it would not be taken, so vices would not tempt us if they showed themselves in their natural ugliness and revealed the evils that follow them ; the world and the flesh could not deceive us — the one w T ith its vanities, the other with its pleasures — if they did not dis- guise themselves and hide their consequences. J. Mortification, exterior and interior. As an example of exterior mortification, we see our Lord born in the darkest hour of the night and in the severest month of the winter ; on the eighth day spilling his blood from a most sensitive wound, the apprehension of From Christmas to Lent. 125^ which at so tender an age and in so delicate a body, injured him as much as the incision caused him pain ; then suffering excessively the greatest inconveniences in a strange coun- try ; whence he says by his prophet: "In laboribus a juventnte pied? (Ps. lxxxvii. 16.) " I am poor, and in labors from my youth." For interior mortification, our Lord was circumcised before he received the sacred name of Jesus, which means Saviour, to teach us that the circumcision of the spirit which consists in the retrenchment of thoughts, desires, affections, words, and all other super- fluous things, is necessary to receive the effects of the name of Jesus, which are grace, peace, joy, salvation, and perfection. Oh ! how important, if we would belong to Jesus in this world and in the other; is this circumcision of the spirit of which that of the body was only the -figure ! It must necessarily be effected in you if you wish to be saved, and to be sprinkled with the blood that Jesus Christ shed for men in this mystery. This is win- we are told : " Circumcidimini Domino ." (Jer. iv. 4.) "Be circumcised to the Lord." Practice circumcision in your interior where God dwells, as in his temple, and where he should be honored ; and be careful, if you 126 Practice of Union with Our Lord would bear his mark, as he is not a body but a spirit, to retrench the uncleanness of your heart and the foolishness of your spirit. Thus St. Paul says: "We are the circum- cision." " Nos sumus circitmcisior (Philipp. iii. 3.) We are circumcised as well as the Jews ; but while the Jews, in their gross and carnal law, were circumcised only according to the flesh, we, in our law, which is spiritual and perfect, are circumcised in a more excel- lent and noble manner — in the spirit. And addressing all true Christians in the persons of those who were at Colossae, he says : "You are circumcised with circumcision' not made by hand in the despoiling of the body of the flesh, but in the circumcision of Christ." (Coloss. ii. 1 1.) 41 Thy head is like Carmel," (Cant. vii. 5) says the divine Spouse to all souls who are, or who desire to be his spouses; "thy head should be like the mountain of Carmel," which signifies, according to the interpreta- tion of St. Jerome, the science of circumcision. Your first and principal exercise should be to practice well the circumcision of the spirit. Jesus will not be given to you unless you are circumcised ; he gives himself only after cir- cumcision, but then he gives himself in reality. From Christmas to Lent. 127 Undertake, then, this spiritual circumcision, with a resolution gently strong and constant, retrenching from your interior and exterior, cutting down your affections, your desires, your words, your clothes, your table, your furniture, your amusements — in a word, all those superfluities which the doctrine of the Gospel cannot endure, nor the eye of faith behold unpained after having seen our Lord in the stable, in Egypt, in Nazareth, and on the Gross. ^. Esteem and love of the hidden life. Retreat, silence, and prayer have been sin- gularly prominent in these mysteries ; and by that secret and retired life, by that life of silence and prayer which our Lord led for so long a time and almost always, he has clearly shown us how much he prized and loved it, and how after his example we ought to hold it in high esteem and practice it constantly. Assuredly it is in solitude, in silence, in separation from creatures and in communion with God, who is wisdom, purity, and sanctity itself, that we will become wise, pure, and holy ; while in intercourse with men we will continue to be only like men, and frequently like something lower than men. Converse 128 Practice of Union zvith Our Lord "with men usually distracts, weakens, dissipates, embarrasses, and stains the soul ; but converse with God produces in it quite contrary effects. As a means of enkindling our love for this secret and hidden life we must reflect how the Divine Word dwelt for an eternity hidden in the bosom of his Father without producing himself exteriorly; and when with his Father and the Holy Ghost he had accomplished the work of creation, he still remained, for four thousand years shut up and concealed without manifesting himself; and when he did manifest himself and appeared in person to the eyes of men, it was under the cloak of our nature, which disguised him so completely that he was taken for another. Still more, though he came to teach, he passed thirty years without saying a word save on one single occasion, and that at an age when men would be un- likely to pay much heed to his instructions ; and when at last he was pleased to teach men and converse with them, he was always a hidden and an unknown God. (Is. xlv. 15.) It is remarkable that our Lord, the Word of God, the Incarnate wisdom and the Doctor of men, who could have told us so many beautiful and good things, and who could not have told us a single bad one, lived thirty years without From Christmas to Lent. 129 telling us anything excepting once by the way as it were ; moreover, that God willed that all his words and actions during that long period, which undoubtedly were most excellent, should be almost entirely unknown to us ; it teaches us liow much our Lord loved silence and sepa- ration from creatures, and how we should love the same silence and separation. There is nothing which consists less in words than Christianity ; it is formed entirely of effects. "The kingdom of God is not in speech, but in power," says the Apostle. (1 Cor. iv. 20.) And this is evident from the manner of preaching followed by our Lord and his apostles ; it was very simple and very popular. Whence St. Paul, the greatest preacher of the Church, writing to the Corin- thians who prided themselves upon their fine language, tells them : "When I came to you I came not in loftiness of speech or of wisdom, declaring unto you the testimony of Christ. For I judged not myself to know anything among you, but Jesus Christ and him crucified. And I was with you in weakness, and in fear, and in much trembling ; and my speech and my preaching was not in the persuasive words of human wisdom, but in the showing of the spirit and power." (1 Cor. ii. I, 2, 3, 4.) 130 Practice of Union with Our Lord Among the Gentiles speech was a power ; the eloquence of Demosthenes and Cicero produced marvelous effects in their republics. But before God, and among true Christians, works have the greatest weight ; works are praised or blamed, are rewarded or punished, according to their merit ; thus our Lord says that on the day of judgment "he will render to every man according to his works." (Matt, xvi. 27.) It is in the hidden life, the life of silence and prayer, that we will grow with our Lord, of whom St. Luke says, that he " advanced in wisdom, and age, and grace w T ith God and men." (Luke ii. 52.) The characteristic of the just is to grow, to advance constantly from good to better without stopping. David says the just " shall go from virtue to virtue " (Ps. lxxxiii. 8), they will make each day new progress on the road of their salvation. David's son compares them to the light which appear- ing at morning in the horizon, goes on increas- ing continually until it reaches its perfection at mid-day. (Prov. iv. 18.) The wicked, on the contrary, remain always in the same place, as David well expressed when he said : 4< The wicked walk round about." (Ps. xi. 9.) The impious, that is those who make profession of From Christmas to Lent. 131 piety but practice it badly, walk found about like animals that turn wheels, and after having made five hundred turns and getting tired during the whole day, are at night just where they began in the morning ; these unfortunate Christians after many turns and circles of their practices of devotion, of their commu- nions, their prayers, etc., during the course of several years, find themselves at the same degree of humility, of patience, of obedience, and of virtue, as they were at first. But the just, after the example of our Lord, who is their great pattern, advance constantly. At the same time we must remember, with the holy Fathers, that our Lord's advance- ment in wisdom and grace was only exterior and in the eyes of men, who saw every day new effects of increased wisdom and stronger grace, and not interior and in the depths of his being, where his wisdom, his grace, and his other perfections could not receive any increase ; and he was in that, as in many other things like the sun, which possesses as much light and heat when it rises in the morning as at noon, though we say that in proportion as it shines higher and higher above our heads it increases in light and heat, not in itself, but in regard to us, by bestow- 132 Practice of Union with Our Lord ing upon us a more abundant measure of these effects. Still we may say, with St. Thomas and the theologians, that our Lord really advanced every day in the experimental knowledge of things, as well as in age. The Just, imitating our Lord, grow in wis- dom, in grace, and in virtue, not only by producing, as he did, the exterior effects, but by acquiring in their souls and contracting the habits of w f isdom, grace, and virtue. In order now to know how and in what w T ay the just advance, I say that it is just as our bodies advance or grow. We sometimes see a child of whom we remark : " There is a child that is growing finely." Why ? Because his body grows larger visibly, his members become stronger and more robust every day. In the same way the just grow and advance when they become greater in thoughts, in affections, and in designs for God ; when they have more strength to bear adversities and persecutions, and more courage to resist sin and practice virtue. They grow when they watch over their ex- terior to regulate it well, and still more over their interior to have a firmer faith, a more filial hope, a more ardent charity, a more pro- found humility, a more constant patience, a From Christmas to Lent. 133 more submissive obedience, a more attentive spirit of prayer, and purer intentions. They grow when they labor to destroy the old man that dwells in the members of their bodies and in the faculties of their souls, and to make the new man live in them. "Strip- ping yourselves," says St. Paul, " of the old man with his deeds, and putting on the new." (Col. iii. 9.) For this the just must watch over and do violence to themselves ; otherwise it is not possible to reform corrupt nature. The old man will never willingly depart to give place to the new; he must be chased out by vio- lence ; whence were written these celebrated words: "You will advance in virtue only in proportion to the violence you do yourself." (De Imit. Christi, L. I., c.xxv. 11.) The efforts you make and the victories you gain over yourself, will be the rule and measure of your advancement. He who desires to advance and to destroy a vice must understand a most important and absolutely necessary thing, namely, that he must be attentive to himself and watch over his actions. Without this attention and vigi- lance, his nature, prone to that vice, will never correct itself, because it will infallibly follow 12 1 34 Practice of Union zvitli Onr Lord its inclination if not restrained, as we see in all natural things. Do not expect a river to leave its bed and change its course ; of itself it will always follow its own current. Our nature will do the same in regard to all its inclinations and habits if it is not prevented ; and this can be done only by vigilance and attention to ourselves. Therefore, rest all the hope of your advance- ment, after the assistance of God, first on watching over your actions* to restrain your nature in its bad inclinations ; and then on the violence which you must do yourself in order to urge it to good. Thus you will grow ; in any other way you will remain at the same point entire years with all your exercises of devotion, and never pass beyond. Let us then grow with our Lord in his growth, drawing him into us to help us in this plan of spiritual advancement. " We may in all things grow up in him," says St. Paul. (Ephes. iv. 15.) Let us grow up in him ac- cording to all the dimensions of virtue. See how the flowers, the trees, the animals con- stantly grow until they reach the highest degree of their perfection. You yourself grow every day as regards your body which contin- From Christmas to Lent. 135 ually increases in height, size, and strength, until it attains its full natural proportions. Seeing this, would it not be a great shame for you if your soul, that is incomparably nobler than your body, did not grow in like manner, but should remain always in the same state of littleness and childhood. If your body should be as small and have as diminu- tive members at the age of thirty years as when you were but three months old and were still wrapped in swaddling clothes, you would feel extreme confusion to be thus formed and to see yourself a child in size when you should be a man. You would certainly be considered a monstrosity, and people would pay money to look at you. Now, what is not the misfortune of your body is the misfortune of your soul when it does not grow in virtue, but ever remains stunted, puny, and weak in the practice of virtue and in the government of your passions. Therefore, be terrified at seeing in yourself this monstrous disposition, endeavor to cast it off and to grow up from it. IV.— MEDITATIONS. These should be drawn from the mysteries of the season. You may take them from the books that suit you best, or may derive them 136 Practice of Union with Our Lord from what we have said, dwelling chiefly upon the affections that attract you most, and upon the virtues most necessary to you. V.— READING. See what has been said under this heading in the last chapter. VI.— ASPIRATORY VERSES. " If any man love not our Lord Jesus Christ, let him be anathema, maranatha," (1 Cor. xvi. 22) — cursed because our Lord is come and is made man for him ! " My soul hath fainted after thy salvation ; and in thy Word I have very much hoped." (Ps. cxviii. 81.) My soul hath fainted from the strength of its love for thy incarnate Son whom thou hast sent here below r to save us, and I have steadfastly placed in him all my hopes. "Thy eyes shall see thy teacher, and thy ears shall hear the word of one admonishing thee behind thy back : ' This is the way, walk ye in it, and go not aside, neither to the right hand, nor to the left." (Is. xxx. 20, 21.) Thy eyes shall see thy Preceptor and thy Master in the crib as in his pulpit, and thy ears shall hear him telling thee : " Behold From Christmas to Lent. 137 the right way, walk in it ; by it you must reach your salvation and your perfection ; turn neither to the right nor the left, if you would not be lost. "Arise, be enlightened, O Jerusalem; for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee." (Is. lx. 1.) Arise, Jeru- salem, above the earth and above low and human views ; open thy eyes to the light that is sent thee ; behold the day appears and the Sun of Justice will illumine thee ; behold the glory of the Lord shown to thee in the stable. 44 You are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God." (Col. iii. 3.) You ought to be dead, and to lead a life retired and hidden in God, after the pattern of that which Christ led. CHAPTER V. PRACTICE OF UNION WITH OUR LORD FOR THE SEASON OF LENT. I.— THE SUBJECT. As the holy season of Lent is especially consecrated to the remembrance of the suffer- ings and death which our Lord was pleased to endure for us, the practice will be to inhale him and draw him into us in his suffering and dying states, to unite ourselves closely with him in the dispositions of those states, and to enter into the spirit of his cross if we desire to share its fruits and merits. I have already said that if we seriously desire to be saved, our greatest care and the object of all our devotions should be to unite ourselves to our Lord in his mysteries, and in everything. I say. it again, and it is most certain, because our salvation, our perfection, all the grace, all the glory, and generally all the blessings that we can ever possess in this life and in the other, depend upon this union ; for, as the holy Precursor says: "Of his full- ness we have all received, and grace for grace." For the Season of Lent. 139 (Jno. i. 16.) We have all drawn from his source, and all our graces are only drops and little rivulets which flow to us from the streams that were given him without measure for himself and for us. Now, if we ought to unite ourselves with our Lord in all his mysteries, I add here that it is in the mystery of his passion and death that we ought chiefly to do so, and that it is with him suffering and dying that we should form our principal and closest ties. In the same manner as our body, while it is united in all its members to our soul as the principle of its life, is in a more intimate manner in the nobler parts, and especially in the heart ; whence Aristotle says that the heart is the part of the body which receives life first and loses it last. Even so we should be united to our Lord in all his mysteries, and in a most especial manner in that of his cross, because it is in his cross and by his cross that he has planned and decreed our predestination, that he has obtained our conversion, that he has secured our justification, that he has paid our debts, merited for us all the gifts of grace and glory we shall ever receive, and negoti- ated and concluded the whole business of our salvation. This is why our salvation and our 140 Practice of Union with Our Lord happiness are attached to our union with him in this mystery. To be predestined and saved it is necessary to be united with our Lord not only when he has the power and the will to predestine and save, but when he actually does predestine and save, offices which he properly and only exe- cuted on the cross ; for, as theologians, sup- ported by the Sacred Writings, teach, while all our Lord's acts, even the least, were of an infinite excellence on account of the infin- ite dignity of his person, they were not infin- itely meritorious to acquire for men the blessings. of grace and glory, nor infinitely satisfactory to discharge their debts towards the Divine Justice, until they had been sprink- led with his blood and consummated by his death, to which God his Father had attached the salvation of the human race as to the perfection and crowning of the whole great work. (Cs. Becan. Part iii., c. 14.) Isaiah says : " If he shall lay down his life for sin, he shall see a long-lived seed, and the will of the Lord shall be prosperous in his hand." (Is. liii. 10.) If he gives his life for the remission of sin, he shall see a long line of the just, and God's design to save men shall be executed bv his hands nailed to the cross. For the Season of Lent. 141 "We have redemption through his blood," says St. Paul. (Eph. i. 7.) We are purchased with the price of his blood. And St. John declares : "Jesus Christ loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own blood. " (Apoc. i. 5.) The whole Church militant proclaims the same truth when she says in the preface of the Mass of the Holy Cross : "Who didst effect the salvation of mankind on the wood of the Cross." And the Church triumphant sings to our Lord, according to the narrative of St. John : " Thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God in thy blood." (Apoc. v. 9.) Thou wast put to death, and, .by the merit of thy death and of thy blood, thou hast purchased us and acquired for us the eternal blessings we now enjoy. God might have pardoned men their sins in a thousand other ways, but he preferred the way of the Cross, as being to him and even to his Son incomparably more honorable, and to us more useful. Inasmuch as God had been dishonored and offended by the sins of men it was necessary that his honor should be restored and his justice satisfied. This un- doubtedly was accomplished more fully and with an infinitely greater advantage by the sufferings and death of his Son, than if he 142 Practice of Union with Our Lord had refused to accept anything, or had de- manded the death of criminal men or the destruction of innocent angels, because there is nothing which as a reparation could com- pare with the death of a God ; still more, because the Son of God in dying surmounted forever his enemies, sin and the devil, and triumphed over them gloriously, and by his victory made us his booty and his conquest and acquired us to himself, and gave us many more reasonsto honor him, to thank him, and to love him, than if he had not suffered for us. The blessings which we derive from our Lord's death are infinite, because by it he has delivered us from the servitude of sin and given us our liberty ; he has trampled the devil under his feet, so that, unless we are willing, he can no longer injure us ; he has closed the gates of hell and opened to us those of paradise ; and he has shown his great regard for us and the perfect love he bears us, by buying us so dearly and giving infinitely more than was necessary, since he might have ransomed us with a single glance of his eye or one word from his lips. A man who gives a hundred thousand dollars for something which he might buy for one cent, shows in the strongest man- For the Season of Lent. 143 ner his high estimate of it, his deep affection for it, and his violent desire to possess it. Therefore we must infer that the mystery of the Cross is the mystery of predestination, of justification, of salvation, and of the entire happiness of mankind ; it is there, in it, that our Lord became truly ours and made us his ; it is in it that he espoused the Church, "which he hath purchased with his own blood," as St. Paul declares. (Acts xx. 28.) There he made himself our Head and us his members ; there he pours upon us his salutary influences and exercises, in a most admirable manner, his functions as Chief, and desires that we should acquit ourselves of the submission and other duties that followers owe their Chief. When St. Paul speaks of the body of the Church, and of our Lord's union with the faith- ful as the Head with the members, (Rom. vi. 5 ; Gal. ii. 19 ; Coloss. i. 24.) he almost always makes mention of the Cross and death of our Lord as the means and bond of this union, just as our members are united with the head by the nerves and muscles. From this we should conclude that we ought to exert our- selves to our utmost to unite ourselves with our Lord, especially in this mystery of his passion, and that it should be the part of our 144 Practice of Union zvith Our Lord devotions to which we should apply ourselves more than to all the rest. Let us imitate St. Paul, who, writing to the Corinthians, said : "I judged not myself to know anything among you but Jesus Christ, and him crucified." (i Cor. ii. 2.) To this I reduced all my science. And let us copy St. Bernard, who, speaking of our Lord's death and passion, renders this testimony of him- self :" I believed that true wisdom consisted in meditation on the sufferings and death of my Saviour ; I chose it as the most efficacious means to acquire virtues and attain perfection ; I relied upon it for the completion of my knowledge, for the riches of my salvation, and for the abundance of my merits. Behold my highest philosophy, to know Jesus Christ, and Jesus Christ crucified." (Serm. 43, in Cant.) In order to practice this most important exercise and unite yourself with our Lord crucified, you must perform carefully and with great earnestness what w r e shall now direct ; taking for the food of your understanding and the occupation of your will, not the whole together, but sometimes one thing and some- times another, according as you feel disposed, dwelling upon it until it makes an impression For the Season of Lent. 145 on your soul, or you find it powerless to move you, when you may pass to another point that may produce more effect upon you. II.— THE AFFECTIONS. Taking it for granted that the soul has a. lively faith and a perfect conviction that he who was fastened to the Cross for us is the true and only Son of God, which faith and conviction must be the foundation and basis of all the rest, the first affection will be : . 1. Admiration. As what is great, new, and strange, excites admiration and astonishment in the beholder, and in the same proportion in which it is great, new, and strange, so we cannot doubt that the first affection that should touch our hearts at this holy time should be extreme admiration and profound astonishment at seeing God fastened to a gibbet and dying upon it. God fastened to a gibbet ! God dying ! What an object ! What a spectacle ! Neither eternity nor time has ever seen, or will ever see, anything like it, or that ap- proaches a resemblance to it. Truly here we should cry out with the Prophet : " Who bath 13 T46 Practice of Union with Our Lord ever heard such a thing ? and who hath seen the like to this ?" (Is. lxvi. 8.) The friends of Job seeing- that holy man fallen from a high and happy position into an abyss of misery, and seated upon a dunghill scraping with a piece of pottery the matter •which flowed from the sores on his body, were •so terrified that for seven days they were quite out of their senses and powerless to address .'him a single word. Yet he was only a man, and his afflictions were but figures and shadows of those of the Son of God. ■ Therefore what should be our astonishment, and with what awe should we not be filled at >the sight of the Creator of heaven and earth, the King of kings, the Lord of lords, the God of glory, the Infinite Majesty and Holiness itself, taken as a criminal, treated as a male- factor, cruelly cut with whips at a pillar, and made frightful with his own blood, crowned w r ith sharp thorns, struck, his face spat upon, the hair plucked from his head and his beard torn, all imaginable outrages heaped on him, and then dying upon an infamous cross be- tween two thieves ! God suffering such indig- nities and dying in such a manner ! Is it not enough to cause our hearts to faint and our souls to sink to nothingness ? For the Season of Lent. 147 The prophet Daniel having" seen only in the person of an angel a figure of this truth, and heard from his lips some words which gave him a knowledge of it, says of himself : 4 ' There remained no strength in me, and the appearance of my countenance was changed in me, and I fainted away and retained no strength. And I heard the voice of his words ; and when I heard I lay in a consternation upon my face, and my face was close to the ground." (Dan. x. 8, 9.) If the figure made so powerful an impression upon a man of the Old Law, what may not, and what ought not the reality to effect upon us in the New Law ? To speak with all reason, there is nothing in the passion and death of the Son of God, the consideration of which is not capable of ravishing our souls, and of plunging and engulfing them in an abyss of astonish- ment, because all in this mystery is of unpre- cedented grandeur ; the dignity of the Person who suffers is infinite ; the torments of body and soul which he endures are innumerable and excessive ; the insignificance and the lack of merit of those for whom he suffers is extreme, and the love with which he suffers 148 Practice of Unio?i with Oar Lord is boundless. If we do not admire these won- ders, what shall we admire ? 2. Compassion. It would be terrible for us to have no com- passion for our Lord's woes, since the elements and inanimate things had so much ; we must indeed be heartless if we can look upon his horrible sufferings without pity. The afflictions of an amiable and beloved person move us to compassion and excite our pity. If w r e should see a young prince, eighteen or twenty years of age, of an ex- tremely delicate and sensitive constitution, beautiful as the day, faultlessly gentle and gracious, liberal, magnanimous, who had never injured any one, but had ever done good to all, and who was innocent of any crime, ex- tended upon a wheel and an executioner breaking his arms and legs, would it be pos- sible, even if our heart were like a rock, to witness such a sight without experiencing deep emotions and shedding an abundance of tears ? Most men would not even have the courage to be present at so painful an .execution and to behold so lamentable an object. Now, all these qualities are found in unequaled perfection in the person of our For the Season of Lent. 149 Lord, whose sufferings consequently ought to touch us far more and to make incomparably deeper impressions upon our souls. Let us represent to ourselves this only Son of God, this Sovereign Monarch of the uni- verse, in the Garden praying under circum- stances so pitiful that the consideration of them must needs move the hardest hearts. Let us see him prostrate with his face to the earth before his Father angered against us ; let us hear the words he utters in the extrem- ity of his weariness and distress: "My soul is sorrowful even unto death !" And then let us behold issuing from his whole body that bloody sweat which makes him an object of extreme commiseration, and obliges his Father to send one of his angels to comfort him. Or let us contemplate him bound, naked, to a column, and exposed to the gaze of a crowd of insolent spectators ; executioners enraged and animated by the devils, discharge furi- ously and with all their might a shower of blows upon that virginal flesh and that most delicate body, sparing neither the limbs, nor any part which they do not bruise to blood, and upon which they do not leave horrible marks of their cruelty and diabolic rage. Or again, let us look upon him hanging 150 Practice of Union zvitJi Our Lord from a gibbet between two thieves, rendering up his soul in a depth ot opprobrium, of anguish, and of every species of suffering ; and as the crown of all, let us remember that we are the cause of his sufferings, that he endures them for our sakes, and that it is his perfect love for us which has brought him to this extremity. Is it possible that not being able to see a man broken upon the wheel, nor even, which is much less, a beast suffer and moan, without being moved to pity, we can look tearlessly and without emotion upon the inexplicable sufferings of our Lord, sufferings v/hich we have caused him ? The sight is so touching that the prophet Isaiah says it causes even the angels to weep. " Behold they that see shall cry without, the angels of peace shall weep bitterly." (Is. xxxiii. 7.) Behold the angels who enjoy perfect peace in their beatitude, are troubled, if w r e may so say, and though far removed from tears by the happiness of their condition, shed them in torrents when they contemplate the Son of God dishonored, bathed in blood, torn, and outraged to the degree that he was throughout the course of his passion ; that is, they would melt into tears if they were capable of them and if their For the Season of Lent, 151 nature were like ours, although they are not, as we are, the subject and cause of our Lord's sufferings. It is true that the love the angels have for our Lord contributes much to their compas- sion ; for if one loves, one has pity for the woes of the person beloved, pity which in- creases in proportion to the love. Thus a mother cannot see her only son whom she greatly loves, suffer even a pain in the end of his finger without sharing that pain ; and if his affliction is more serious, she feels her whole soul moved and fainting ; she sighs, she weeps, she laments, she is inconsolable, she looks at her dear son with pitying eyes, she mourns over him with bitter words, and she comforts him as best she can — all this she would not do if she did not love him. Alas ! if we loved our Lord nearly as much as we ought we w r ould not be so indifferent and insensible to his afflictions and sorrows, but they would certainly pierce our hearts, while now we see representations and hear descriptions of them and are not touched ever so slightly, because we do not love him. Let us begin to love him, and compassion for his excessive woes which he suffers through us and for us, will soon follow, and will 152 Practice of Union with Our Lord enable us to fulfill the famous prophecy of Zachariah through whom our Lord says : " They shall look upon me whom they have pierced, and they shall mourn for me as one mourneth for an only son." (Zach. xii. 10) They shall look upon me fastened to the Cross, and considering who I am and what I suffer, from whom and for whom, that it is they themselves who have brought me to this state, and that I submit to it for their salvation, they will break forth into great lamentations and will weep as bitterly as a mother who has lost her only son. J. Regret for Sin. It will be very easy as a consequence of our compassion and the reasons we have con- sidered in order to excite ourselves to it, to conceive an extreme regret and to have a true contrition for our sins. We are the cause of all the woes and tor- ments which our Lord suffered ; our sins produced his pains, and apart from them he would not have endured his passion and death. The Prophet tells us : " He was wounded for our iniquities, he was bruised for our sins." (Is. liii. 5.) He was stricken for our ini- quities ; for our crimes he was seized, buf- For the Season of Lent. 153 feted, scourged, torn with rods, crowned with thorns, and crucified. Is this not sufficient, and more than sufficient, to transpierce our hearts with sorrow and to chill our souls with regret for having sinned ? We have caused the Son of God to suffer, to be scourged, buffeted, crucified. We are the reason why the Infinite Majesty before whom the highest Cherubim and Seraphim prostrate themselves in adoration, has been dishonored, why Sanctity itself has been counted among criminals, Innocence con- demned, Wisdom taken for folly, and the Living God reduced to that extremity which terrified the whole universe, of dying ignomin- iously and cruelly on a gibbet between two thieves. Alas ! if on our account and for some fault committed by us the meanest slave should be whipped, or have his hand cut off by an exe- cutioner, or even if through carelessness we should break a dog's leg and should hear him howl, it would be impossible for us not to be sorry, and not to regret the harm we had done. This is why the afflicted prophet Jeremiah thinking of this incomparable subject for regret, exclaims in his Lamentations: "Let tears run down like a torrent day and night ; 154 Practice of Union with Our Lord give thyself no rest, and let not the apple of thy eye cease." (Lam. ii. 18.) My heart, be filled with sadness and weariness, break with sorrow ! And you, my eyes, open to torrents of tears which shall never cease, that you may regret and mourn for my sins that have caused the sufferings and death of the Son of God ! Even the Jews, who were the immediate- cause of our Lord's death, and who were pres- ent at it with the pagan officers of justice, returning from Calvary beat their breasts, touched with sadness and repentance for the evil deed they had just accomplished. (Luke xxiii. 48.) But, to enter still further and more perfectly into the spirit of regret for our sins, we ought for several consecutive days during this season of Lent, which is properly the season for peni- tence, to unite ourselves with particular care to our Lord sorrowing and afflicted for our sins, and to inhale him and draw him into us in this disposition. In order to understand this well we must know that among the most remarkable acts that our Lord performed for our salvation, one was the extreme affection with which he gave himself up to obtain the pardon of our sins and to reconcile us with his Father. We had For the Season of Lent. 155 all offended God ; we were all loaded with crimes ; and for this the Divine Justice had condemned us to eternal flames without hope of ever being able to enter paradise. God regarded us as his enemies upon whom he was to exercise his vengeance forever, when his Son through a goodness and love for which we can never throughout all eternity be sufficiently thankful, undertook to restore us to friendship with his Father, to induce that Father to for- get his injuries and pardon us our offences, so that he might receive us again into his favor, and from the enemies we were make of us his children and open to us his paradise instead of the hell we had merited. St. Paul says : "When we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son." (Rom. v. 10.) Though we were enemies of God, we have been happily reconciled to him and re- stored to his favor by the mediation of his Son and the merits of his death. And again : <( God hath reconciled us to himself by Christ. God indeed was in Christ reconciling the world to himself, not imputing to them their sins." (2 Cor. v. 18, 19.) God has restored us to his friendship by means of Christ, in whom he worked this ^reat undertaking of l 56 Practice of Union until Our Lord the reconciliation of mankind with himself and of the forgiveness of their sins. For this object our Lord did four things : first, he took our sins upon himself; second, he exercised deep sorrow and perfect contri- tion for them ; third, he begged God, his Father, to forgive them ; and fourth, he performed a terrible penance for them. As regards the first of these things, it is most certain and an article of our faith that the Son of God took our sins upon himself. Isaiah says : " Surely he hath borne our ini- quities and carried our sorrows. The Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all. He hath borne the sins of many." (Is. liii. 4, 6, 12.) He has in reality, not merely in appear- ance, taken upon himself our weaknesses, our sorrows, and our miseries ; he has charged himself with our faults, our crimes, all that makes us sinners and consequently displeas- ing to his Father, who has laid on him our iniquities in order to relieve us of them. As a figure of this the prophet Zachariah saw the high-priest Jesus, son of Josedech, who represented our Lord, according to the explanation of Tertullian, Origen, St. Am- brose, St. Jerome, and several other Fathers, covered with a miserable robe full of stains £or the Season of Lent. 157 and clothed in a tattered and filthy garment. " The Lord showed me Jesus, the high-priest ; and Jesus was clothed with filthy garments." (Zach. iii. I, 3 — 2 cf. Cornel, a Lap. Ibid.) This filthy robe covered with stains and dirt, sig- nifies our sins that Christ took upon himself. " Delieta meet" says St. Jerome, " appellantilr vestimenta sordida." And St. Ambrose, " Stabat Jesns et Jiabebat vestimenta sor- dida ; me a enim peccata portabat!' (Hieron. lb., Ambr. in Ps. cxviii.) That soiled garment that Jesus had on his shoulders, was my sins with which he charged himself. And the Prince of the Apostles says the same thing : "Peccata nostra ipse pertulit in cor pore sno super lignum" "Who his ownself bore our sins in his body upon the tree." Or, as the Syriac version gives it : " Bajidavit omnia pec- cata nostra, eaque sustidit in corpore sno ad crucem." (1 Pet. ii. 24.) He took upon him- self our sins, that is the punishment due them, and by the torments he suffered in his body and on the cross, he satisfied for us the Divine justice. And when he went to Calvary, bear- ing his cross, we should see in that cross all our sins which he carried and which weighed him down, and which he was going to wash and efface in the streams of his blood. 14 158 Practice of Union ivith Our Lord That mysterious goat spoken of in the Book of Leviticus (Levit. xvi.), on the head of which the priest placed both his hands while making a public confession of all the sins of the people with which he charged it, and which was then led away into the desert to be torn to pieces by wild beasts and expi- ate by its blood and death in some manner the sins of the people, was a visible picture of this truth. For this reason our Lord, in the Psalms, calls our sins his sins, our offences his offences, (Ps. xxi., xxxix., lxviii.,) not in the sense of having committed them, but because he has charged himself with them and made them his own burden ; just as a person who has become security for another makes the debts of that other his own, and is the one to whom the creditor applies, forcing him to pay instead of the real debtor. As to the second point, our Lord's sorrow and contrition for our sins, it is to be remarked that the first obligation of every man who has committed a fault is to regret that fault and repent of it. Therefore, our Lord, who took upon himself all our faults and all our sins, and all the consequences of them, experienced the same sorrow and repentance for them For the Season of Lent. 159 as if he had himself committed them. " Him, that knew no sin, for us he hath made sin, (2 Cor. v. 21, cf. Corn, a Lap. Ibid.) says St. Paul. Likewise the prophet Isaiah says, according to the Septuagint version: "He bears our sins, and has regret and sorrow for them." (Is. liii. 4.) And St. Ambrose says : "Our Lord having nothing in himself to regret, regretted my sins." (Ambr. in c. 22, Luke.) Now, this regret and sorrow our Lord had for our sins was a true and continual act of most lively, most intense contrition, a contri- tion so deep as to have no parallel, and which without a miracle would have caused his death each moment of the day. Assuredly if, as we read, several famous penitents unable to bear their excess of sorrow, died of grief for their sins, we may with much greater reason say that the same thing would have happened to our Lord if he had not by his omnipotence prevented it in order to reserve himself for his last sacrifice. The reason of this is evident. Sorrow is greater in proportion as the evil that causes it is greater and afflicts a being dearer and more tenderly beloved. Our Lord's sorrow was for sin, which is the greatest of all evils, 160 Practice of Union with Oztr Lord the sovereign evil ; the sins of men, countless as they are in- number, offend the Divine Majesty which he loved with an infinite love and which he knew to be worthy of infinite honor and respect, and are besides injurious to men whom he loved most ardently and earnestly desired to save. Therefore, his sorrow and contrition for our sins exceeded anything that we can conceive ; on account of its bitterness and abundance, Jeremiah com- pared it to the sea : "Great as the sea is thy destruction." (Lam. ii. 13.) Thy contrition. It was this sorrow that caused the Son of God to weep frequently and bitterly, it was this contrition for our sins that drew rivers of tears from his eyes and sobs from his heart. He says, by Jeremiah : " My eyes have failed with weeping" (Lam. ii. 11) ; and by David : " My life is wasted with grief, and my years in sighs." (Ps. xxx. 11.) In the third place, we cannot doubt that our Lord asked pardon for us of God his Father, since Isaiah says : " He hath borne the sins of man)^ and hath prayed for the transgressors." (Is. liii. 12.) And St. Paul : 44 Who in the days of his flesh with a strong cry and tears offering up prayers and suppli- cations" to God his Father. (Heb. v. 7.) For the Season of Lent. 161 He prayed for us often during the whole of his life from the moment of his concep- tion to his death, because from that first moment he had a perfect knowledge of all the sins of men, of the dishonor God would receive from them and the misfortunes they would bring on men ; this knowledge fur- nished him a subject of continual regret, of unceasing prayer for pardon for us. And even now in Heaven, seated at the right hand of his Father he still intercedes for us, show- ing his wounds and recalling his merits. St. Paul says : " He maketh intercession for us " (Rom. viii. 34) ; and, as St. John says (1 Jno. ii. 1), " he is our advocate, pleading our cause." But he prayed in an especial manner on the Cross where he said : \' Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do " (Luke xxiii. 34) ; and St. Paul declares that he said it "with a strong cry and tears." (Heb. v. 7.) These words of St. Paul must refer to our Lord's prayer on the Cross, as the Evangel- ists relate that he died "crying with a loud voice" (Matt, xxvii. 50), and that as he yield- ed up his spirit he bowed his head (Jno. xix. 30), as if to render his prayer more effectual. An ancient Father tells us that "all the acts of Jesus Christ during his mortal life were as 162 Practice of Union with Our Lord so many prayers and supplications to God his Father for the sins of the human race, and the blood he shed had a strong voice and a powerful clamor to obtain their pardon, and did truly obtain it." (Primas. lb.) Notice his prayer in the Garden of Olives. With what affection, with what earnestness, with what gestures, and in what a posture he prays ! How sad and imploring is his prayer ! He prays to his Father not alone for himself, but for us ; he kneels, bows his head even to the earth, humbles himself as deeply as pos- sible in body and still more in soul ; he is seized with an extreme sadness and weariness which are like the pangs of death and causes him to sweat blood. He is in some sort like a poor father, who, seeing his only son, the object of all his affections, condemned to death for a crime, is transported with sorrow for his son's misfortune and guilt ; his grief is inexpressible. What does he not do, what does he not say to the king to obtain the son's pardon ? With what entreaties, what supplications and pleadings, with what emo- tions and floods of tears, does he not beg for mercy ? Even thus our Lord prayed to his Father for us in the Garden. The prophet Jeremiah says of him : " He shall put his For the Season of Lent. 163 mouth in the dust, if so there may be hope.'' (Lam. iii. 29.) He will bow his head to the ground and put his mouth in the dust, to see if in that posture he may find hope. Fourthly, our Lord, having loaded himself with our sins, not only had sorrow for them and prayed his Father to forgive them, but he performed penance for them during his whole life and especially in his passion and death. " He was wounded for our iniquities, he was bruised for our sins," says Isaiah. (Is. ■ liii. 5.) He was wounded for our sins, he suffered ex- cruciatingly to obtain the remission of our crimes, he performed for them a most severe penance. St. Bonaventure says likewise : " He was by nature the son of the house, and through goodness he made himself the servant ; and he was not content to take the form of a servant to obey, but he took the form of a wicked servant to be beaten and scourged ; and he made himself not only the servant of the servants of God, as his Vicar on earth calls himself, but still more the servant of the servants of the devil, rendering service to the vilest of sinners, in order to expiate our sins by his sufferings and death." (Bonav. de Perf. vit. c. 6.) 164 Practice of Union zvith Onr Lord St. John Climacus mentions (Jno. Clim. Grad. 5.) some illustrious penitents whose violent regret for their sins, and extreme desire for pardon and penance, enabled them to do things truly most terrible ; but after all, their penances bore no comparison with our Lord's. For what a penance was it not for him, the only Son of God, to be born a little child in a stable in the depth of winter, to be laid in a manger upon straw, and to be deprived of every comfort ! to be circumcised the eighth day and spill his blood with excessive pain and extreme dishonor ! to suffer all that he suffered in his flight into Egypt and his tarry- ing there ! What a penance was it not for him to lead a hidden and laborious life for thirty years, exercising the trade of a carpen- ter and gaining his bread by the labor of his hands and the sweat of his brow ! But finally what a penance did he not per- form for our sins in his passion and death, when he was taken and bound as a malefac- tor, cruelly scourged at a pillar, crowned with sharp thorns, mocked, buffeted, and then fas- tened to a gibbet to die amid inexpressible torments between two thieves ! The prophet Isaiah says: "There is no beauty in him nor comeliness ; and we have For the Season of Lent. 165 seen him, and there was no sightliness — de- spised, and the most abject of men, a man of sorrows and acquainted with infirmity/' (Is. liii. 2, 3.) He was so disfigured and so hideous to look upon on account of the stripes he had received, his wounds, the plucking out of his hair and beard, the blows that had been given him, the spittle with which his face was smeared, the blood, partly flowing, partly congealed, that covered his whole body, that he was unrecognizable ; we saw him in a most contemptible condition, and we took him for the most afflicted of all mankind, a man filled with sorrows, and who well knew from his own experience what it is to suffer. What a penance ! Jesus Christ, the only Son of God, and perfect Innocence, dying, dead upon a gibbet ! What a penance ! Jesus Christ performing penance, and such a penance, for our sins ! Is it not most just that we who have committed them, should have some part in it ? Represent to yourself our Lord clothed in that miserable robe that Zachariah saw, and loaded with our vanities, our bursts of anger, our intemperances, and all our sins ; he feels unceasingly a deep regret and extreme dis- pleasure for them ; without intermission and 1 66 Practice of Union zvitJi Our Lord with inconceivable vehemence he implores God his Father to pardon us, and he per- forms a frightful penance in our behalf. Seeing our Lord in this state for you, what should be your sentiments ? What should you say? What should you do? Should you be insensible and stupid, doing nothing? Or should you not endeavor to imitate him, to experience according to your capacity his feelings, and to participate in the penance he performed for you ? If you do otherwise you will be very unfortunate. And what a reason for terror you will have when he shall in his character as your security demand of you all he has paid in discharge of your debts ! Rest assured that it is to you he has said : " Ex- cept you shall do penance, you shall all like- wise perish" (Luke xiii. 5), and that it is for this that God his Father has appointed him the Judge of mankind. Therefore, as our Lord being loaded with your sins had his heart filled with sorrow and repentance for you, enter into that afflicted heart, and uniting your heart with it conceive a true sorrow, and produce acts of perfect contrition for all your sins. If you should see your friend, your brother, or the son of the king, sad and desolate, shed- For the Season of Lent. 167 ding copious tears for a fault you had com- mitted and that had deserved the penalty of death, would your eyes remain dry, would you be unmoved ? Consider now that you owe much more to our Lord, who is afflicted and weeping for your sins. He has asked pardon of God his Father ; ask it also with him. " Mercy prays," says St. Augustine, " misery does not pray. Inno- cence implores pardon for guilt, guilt utters not a word. He w T ho has not sinned assumes the posture of a suppliant, and the sinner loaded with crimes does not prostrate himself to the earth." (Aug. I. de orat. Dom.) Surely the criminal son of that poor afflicted father of whom we have spoken, and who asked the king to pardon his son, would if he were at liberty follow his father, be sad and afflicted with him, weep with him, pray with him, and do all he could according to his age to help the father obtain his pardon. In the same manner, in union with our Lord, ask God his Father for the remission of your sins, ask it in his light, not in your own — that is to say, in his perfect knowledge of their multitude and enormity which is quite different from what you think ; for, as to the multitude of your sins, if you are aware 1 68 Practice of Union ivitli Onr Lord of one there are fifty you do not see ; and to understand their enormity, you should know- how great God is, because the offence derives its magnitude chiefly from the greatness of the person offended. Finally, do penance for your sins with our Lord, practising in union with him the pain- ful exercises of Lent, the fasts, the longer prayers, the greater silence, the withdrawal from society and seeking of solitude in order to dwell more with God, the greater watch- fulness over yourself, the combat of your passions, and the giving of alms. And after all this offer to God the sorrow and repentance which our Lord had for your sins, the prayers he addressed to his Father to obtain your pardon, and the long and rude penance he performed to appease him "and to make up for your deficiencies in prayer and penance. Say to him with David : " Look on the face of thy Christ." (Ps. lxxxiii. 10.) Cast thine eyes upon the face of thy Son ; see the sad- ness of his heart and his regret for my sins ; hearken to the prayers he offered with tears to obtain my pardon. I know I do not deserve that thou shouldst hear me ; but he is infin- itely worthy to receive what he asks, because For the Season of Lent. 169 he asks what he has dearly bought and at a price vastly more than its worth, and because he loves thee with an infinite love, and is by nature sovereignly elevated and of an abso- lutely infinite excellence. Wherefore the Apostle says that when he prayed to thee for sinners, thou didst render him the respect to hear his prayer : " He was heard for his reverence." (Heb. v. 7.) Consider all he has suffered to move thee to have mercy upon me. In his heart, repentant and stung with remorse for my offences, I am deeply sorry for them ; I ask thee pardon through his lips, and I perform my penance in. that he was pleased to perform for their expiation. ^ Hope. The Cross is our great hope, and Jesus Christ crucified is our strongest support. This is why the Church sings : " O crux aye y spes unica" I salute thee, O Cross, my only- hope ! And St. Crysostom calls it " the hope of Christians, the safety of the world, the guide of the blind, the right road of travelers, the riches of the poor, the sword, the shield, the offensive and defensive arms of soldiers, the bulwark of the assailed, and the glorious trophy of the victory which the Son of God 15 170 Practice of Union with Our Lord gained over the devil and all our enemies." (Crysost. Or. in Cruc. et Serm. 8 et 22, de Div.) The reason on which this hop$ is founded, is the fact that our Lord paid our ransom on the Cross, and paid infinitely more than was necessary to discharge all our debts and remedy all our miseries. If our debts are paid we no longer owe anything ; nothing can be demanded of us if the satisfaction of this payment has been truly applied to us. St. Paul says, in this sense, that God "hath delivered us from the power of darkness, and hath translated us into the kingdom of the Son of his love." (Coloss. i. 13.) God has rescued us from the tyrannical power of the prince of darkness, and has placed us in the blessed state and kingdom of his beloved Son who bought us with his blood, the least drop of which is of an infinite value and conse- quently more than sufficient to efface all our sins, to deliver us from all our miseries, and to acquire for us every blessing. On this subject, Father Avila wrote to an afflicted person as follows: "We ought to establish our -hope in the passion and death of our Lord, and trust ourselves to his merits, banishing from our spirits all uneasiness, and For the Season of Lent* 171 closing our eyes to all occasions for mistrust ; because our merits are as great as is the virtue of his passion and death, since it is ours and he has given it to us, having suffered for us. In this I confide, here I place my salvation ; here I take courage and mock at my enemies ; here, offering to the Eternal Father his Son, I ask whatsoever I need ; here I pay what I owe, and have something left besides ; and although my miseries are numerous and ex- cessive, I nevertheless find here a most potent remedy and a subject of joy greater than is that of my grief." And to another the same Father writes this advice: " Do not forget that our Lord Jesus Christ as our Mediator, stands between the Eternal Father and us, and that for his sake we are beloved and bound to his Father by so close a tie of perfect charity, that nothing could loosen it did not man himself cut it with the blade of a mortal sin. Have you ceased to remember that the blood of Jesus Christ cries for mercy for us, and that it cries so loud that it drowns the noise of our sins and prevents their being heard ? Do you not know that if our sins are still in existence, the death of Jesus Christ who died to kill them, must be of little worth since it could 172 Practice of Union with Our Lord not destroy them ? Try to impress this truth deeply upon your mind, that Jesus Christ took upon himself the affair of our redemp- tion and salvation as his own business, and that we are so closely united with him that he and we must be loved or hated together ; and as it is not possible that being what he is he should be hated by his Father, so also it is not possible that we should be if we remain united to him by faith and charity. On the contrary, as he is loved and cherished we are also in him and by him, and with reason, because he weighs more in the balance of Divine Justice to make us loved than we do to make him hated. Undoubtedly the Father has more love for his Son than he has hatred for sinners who are converted to him. May Jesus Christ be praised and blessed forever, he who is, and whom we can with a loud voice call our hope ; there is nothing in the world, that can- intimidate and terrify as so much as he can reassure us.'' Thus says Father Avila. Of a truth it is easy for a sick man to form a strong hope of his cure when he knows he has a sovereign remedy vastly more powerful than his disease, and that the one who ad- ministers it has a great love for him and a For the Season of Lent. 173 wondrous desire for his recovery. We have all this, and much more, in Jesus Christ. This is why when you behold him attached to the Cross you ought to gaze upon him with eyes full of trust, and say to him with David : " My mercy, and my refuge ; my support, and my deliverer ; my protector, and I have hoped in him." (Ps. cxliii. 2.) Behold my mercy and my refuge, my support and my liberator ; behold my great confidence. It is upon this Cross, upon this dear crucified One, that I found all my hope. Say to him again with the same David : In thee, Lord, have I hoped. My lots are in thy hands." (Ps. xxx. 2, 16.) Yes, my Lord, in thee I hope, and all my confidence is in thy hands pierced and nailed to the Cross for my salvation. 5. Dwelling in the wounds of our Lord ; and particidarly in that of his side. The Holy Ghost, speaking in the Canticle of the just soul, says : " My dove in the clefts of the rock." (Cant. ii. 14.) My dove dwells in the clefts of the rock. This rock is Jesus Christ, according to these words of St. Paul : ''And the rock was Christ." (1 Cor. x. 4.) 174 Practice of Union ivith Our Lord And the clefts are his wounds. St. Bernard, explaining this passage, says : " The dove hides herself there as in a safe place, and looks without danger or fear at the hawk flying around her ; the sparrow builds there her nest, and the turtle-dove also, and there hatches and nourishes her little ones." The just soul takes pleasure in dwelling in the wounds of her Saviour, because they are magnificent palaces, cities of refuge, impreg- nable fortresses, boxes of precious perfumes, gates of salvation, sources of graces, tribunals of mercy, fountains of life, mines of gold, furnaces of charity and of the charms of benevolence. And she dwells in them m her thoughts and affections, producing acts of faith in their excellence and necessity for our salvation, in their priceless value and infinite merit ; acts of admiration, adoration, gratitude, hope, joy, love of her Saviour who was pleased to re- ceive them for her sake, and prayers to him to apply to her their fruits. But she makes her most usual and most agreeable dwelling in the wound of his side, because it is the wound of love ; since it was received in the heart, for love, after his death, to show that his death and his life and all his For the Season of Lent, 175 mysteries had love and charity for their prin- ciple and their end, proceeding from the love he bears our souls- and tending to make him loved by them in return. Still more, it is not only the most loving place, but the most delightful, and the strongest and most secure ; so that the just soul says what St. Elzear sent as a message to St. Delphina, his wife : " If you want to find me you must seek me in the wound of our Lord's side, for it is there I dwell." It is there the soul exercises all the func- tions of the purgative, the illuminative, and the unitive life. It is there she ponders, ex- amines, and weeps for her sins, and in that Heart which once conceived an inexplicable regret and was pierced with sorrow for them, she implores God to pardon them. It is in that infinitely pure and holy Heart that holds in aversion and extreme horror the smallest venial sin, that she avoids the least offences and the lightest faults. It is in that penitent and afflicted Heart that she performs her mortifications and penances. It is in that generous and invincible Heart that she at- tacks her vices, combats her evil inclinations, resists the assaults of her enemies, and gains glorious victories. And if sometimes she falls 176 Practice of Union with Our Lord into desolation and aridity, into weariness ?nd heaviness of spirit, she suffers as she should in that Heart which in the Garden of Olives was desolate and weighed down with sadness even unto death. It is in that most humble, most patient, and most perfect Heart that she exercises humility, patience, virtues and good works ; there she prays mentally and vocally, there makes her preparation for Holy Communion and her thanksgiving afterward, being unable to select a holier, a more devotional and more recollected oratory. It is in that Heart, all burning with love for men, that she loves her neighbor, that she bears the imperfections of his body and soul, and suffers the injuries he does her, imitating St. Paul, who wrote to the faithful of Philippi : " God is my witness, how I long after you in the bowels of Jesus Christ." (Philipp. i. 8.) God is my witness how I love you all in the bowels and in the Heart of Jesus Christ. It was thence he, the Apostle, spoke to them, wrote to them, instructed them, reproved them, consoled them, and treated with them in everything ; and consequently he acted in a holy and godlike manner, tracing for us an For the Season of Lent. ijj excellent pattern for our intercourse with our neighbor. Finally, it is in that Heart, in perfect sub- mission to its inspirations and motions, that: the just soul performs all her actions both interior and exterior, with moderation, meek- ness, calmness, and pure intentions. It is also in that Heart, as in the true sanc- tuary and home of the unitive life, that she practices its peculiar functions, that she pro- duces the acts of the love of choice, the love of complacency, the love of good-will, the love of preference and of aspiration ; that she makes acts of adoration, glorification, praise, purity of intention, gratitude, offering of self, abandonment to the guidance of God, detach- ment of affection from all creatures, and elevation above all the things of earth, and that she possesses and enjoys repose and delight in God as in her centre. Behold the occupation of the soul in the wound of the Heart. Like one admitted into some beautiful palace, looking curiously above, below, and all around him, at the rare and wonderful treasures, she considers attentively what she finds in that Heart, remarks therein hatred for sin, the price of her salvation, our Lord's esteem for her, the love he has shown 178 Practice of Union with Our Lord her, and a thousand other admirable and most beautiful things. Therefore let us go to that Side pierced for us, let us enter that Heart burning with love for us, let us dwell there night and day, never coming out, and let us there perform all our actions. " This is the gate of the Lord, the just shall enter into it" (Ps. cxvii. 20), says David. Behold the gate of the Lord, the wound of his side ; the just shall be careful to enter and make there their dwelling. 6. Jear. As the Cross of Christ is the surest founda- tion of our hopes, it is also the greatest source of our fears. The Cross will be the infallible cause of our salvation if we live well ; but if we live an evil life and do not correct our vices, it will be the certain instrument of our ruin. Our Lord's death is the mystery of our redemption and of our condemnation, and it is by the Cross that both the predestined and the reprobate insure their end, according as they make use of it. To speak truly, what could the Eternal Father have given us more precious and more efficacious for our salvation, than his Son ? And what could the Son have done and For the Season of Lent.- 179 suffered greater and more difficult than he did do and suffer ? Could the Father and the Son have shown more clearly the excess of the infinite love they bear us, and have given us more positive proofs of their extreme desire to save us ? Had the Father aught more per- fect and that he loved more dearly than his Son, and the Son anything better, and that he valued more than his honor, his life, and himself? By the prophet Isaiah they ask us : "Now judge between me and my vineyard. What is there that I ought to do more to my vineyard that I have not done to it ?" (Is. v. 3, 4.) What more could I have given men, what more could I have endured to procure their salvation ? Therefore, what must remain for those who refuse to profit by the goodness of God, unless it be his justice ; for those who abuse the Cross as a means of their salvation, unless it be to experience it as the instrument of his vengeance and of their damnation ? This is what St. Paul very plainly shows us in his Epistle to the Hebrews, where he says : " Having therefore, brethren, a confidence in the entering into the Holies by the blood of Christ ; a new and living way which he hath dedicated for us through the veil, that is to 180 Practice of Union with Our Lord say, his flesh." (Heb. x. 19, 20.) We have a hope of one day entering the sanctuary of God which is in Heaven, and of enjoying the felicity of the Saints through the merits of the blood of Jesus Christ, provided that to attain it we follow the path he has marked for us by his life while here below clothed with our flesh. " But, if we sin wilfully after having received the knowledge of the truth, there is now left no sacrifice for sins ; but a certain dreadful expectation of judgment, and the rage of a fire which shall consume the adver- saries." (lb. x. 26, 27.) If after the know- ledge of so important a truth, after so perfect a love, so great a mercy, and so powerful a remedy, Ave take no thought of saving our- selves, but continue to offend God, we may look forward to being infallibly lost ; we may consider our salvation gone, because we can- not expect a new Saviour, we have no right to hope that the Son of God will come again for us ; that he will be seized, scourged, nailed to a cross, and spill his blood again for our sins. He has done this once — it is more than enough ; he will not do it a second time. This is why, if we are not witling to make a good use of his death, we must hold it a certain thing that we will be judged by God with . For the Season of Lent. \ o ( extreme severity and terrible rigor, and con- demned with all his enemies to eternal flames. And let no one say that this punishment is. too great ; for the Apostle adds : '■ A man making void the law of Moses, dieth without any mercy under two or three witnesses. How much more do you think he deserveth worse punishments, who hath trodden under foot the Son of God, and hath esteemed the blood, of the testament unclean by w T hich he was sanctified ? It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God." (Heb. x. 28, 29, 31.) If the breakers of the law of Moses convicted by two or three witnesses, found no- mercy, but were put to death without leniency, how much more rigorously should not he be punished, who through an execrable impiety tramples under foot the blood of the Son of God that was spilled to wash away his sins,. to sanctify and save him ? Oh ! w r hat a ter- rible thing it is to fall into the .hands of the living God when he is angered by the abuse of such mercy, and by contempt of the death of his Son ! Jesus going to Calvary said to the weeping women : " Daughters of Jerusalem, weep not over me, but weep for yourselves and for your children. For if in the green wood they do 16 1 82 Practice of Union zvith Our Lord these things, what shall be done in the dry ?' ! (Luke xxiii. 28, 31.) If they treat so rudely the green wood which is still alive and there- fore should be preserved, what will the}' do to the dry wood which is dead and is no longer •good for anything but the fire ? If the father chastise so severely his only and innocent ::son for the sake of his wicked and rebellious slave, with what severity and fury will he not 'Chastise the slave himself if he does not correct his faults ? Not wishing to fall into the hands of God avenging the death of his Son, and being wise betimes, let us think seriously of making an excellent use of that death and applying to ourselves its merits and fruits, so that what is -the basis of our salvation may not become the ■ occasion of our ruin. "When our Lord shall come to judge us," says St. Augustine, ''he will surely give us what he has promised, but he will likewise demand an account of what ihe has already given us and of what he has 'done to redeem us. Remember that having been ransomed with mercy you will be judged with justice." (Aug. Serm. xliv. 8.) For the Season of Lent. 183 7. Prayers and requests. Since the Cross is the mystery of our salva- tion, the arsenal that contains our arms, and the treasury whence we must draw our riches, we should constantly beseech our Lord to attach us to it, to communicate to us its salutary effects and impress upon us its grace and spirit ; we should very frequently breathe and inhale our Lord suffering, dying, dead for us. And as we are in a life w T here there is much to suffer, every day, and in many ways, why should we not fulfill the words of our Lord: "If any man will come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross daily, and follow me." (Luke ix. 23.) If any one would be my disciple he must renounce him- self and carry his cross each day, and in that manner follow me. Moreover, if our cross is not well carried, and our sufferings well borne, instead of being useful to us, they will be injurious ; but our Lord's cross and sufferings are able to sanctify ours and render them salutary. We ought in our crosses, in our trials, both interior and exterior, in our sick- nesses, and still more in our death, to take great pains to unite ourselves to our Lord afflicted, suffering and dying, and to beg him 184 Practice of Union with Our Lord to bless, to purify, to sanctify and deify our afflictions and sufferings. We ought to conjure him to distil from his sufferings over ours, and from his death ovcr our death, a spirit of salvation, grace and life ; to shed upon us a dew cf patience, fortitude, humility, respect, submission, devotion, silence, love, and joy ; so that we may suffer and die in a certain degree as he did, that our suffer- ings may be, to speak with St. Paul, the filling up of his (Coloss. i. 24), and our death as it were a sequel and continuation of his ; that as we are dead in his death and in him as in our head, so he may also die in our death and in us as in his members. This prayer is of very great importance, because our death is the decisive point of our salvation and the grand moment on which depends our eternal happiness or misery ; for this reason it will be very w r ell to repeat it frequently during the whole time of Lent, and still more frequently during Holy Week, espe- cially on Good Friday, which is particularly consecrated to the remembrance of our Lord's death. When in the morning service of that day you adore the Cross, recollect yourself and summon all your powers to the performance For the Season of Lent. 185 of that devotion, bend the knees of your body and still more those of your soul before that sacred wood, and beholding upon it the image of a crucified One, make first a great act of faith in the truth that he who was fastened to the cross, whose representation you see, is the true God and your sovereign Lord whom you worship. Secondly, make an act of sincere regret for your sins, recognizing and avowing that t hex- were the cause of his torments and death ; that it was your offences much more than the executioners that bound him to the column and tore him with scourges, that crowned him with thorns, that gave him blows and spat in his face, and that finally nailed him to the gibbet and caused his death. Conceive a penetrating sorrow 7 and perfect repentance, and earnestly beg his forgiveness ; say to him with the prophet : "What are these wounds in the midst of thy hands ?" (Zach. xiii. 6.) Why these wounds in thy hands ? Wherefore these torments and this death ? Is it not to. efface my sins, to pardon them ? Then, I beseech thee, efface them, and pardon me ! Thou dost sacrifice thyself for me ; thou givest me thy blood and thy life ; I cannot give thee nearly so much ; but at least I give thee 1 86 Practice of Union with Our Lord a heart contrite and humbled, and a soul grieved at having offended thee. "A con- trite and humble heart, God, thou wilt not despise." (Ps. 1. 19.) Behold the sacrifice thou dost ask of me, and which I give thee with a firm resolution of never offending thee again, but of loving thee with all my strength, since I am so strictly bound to do so. In the third place, offer your crucified Lord countless acts of thanksgiving for all the trouble he has taken, all the evils he has suffered for your salvation, without which you would inevitably be lost forever, and through which you may be eternally happy if you desire. In the fourth place, hope from his bounty the grace and all the aids you need ; and then in detail ask them of him, recommend- ing to him your salvation and the hour of your death, and supplicating him by his wounds, his blood, and his death, to apply their virtue and merits to yours and to render it pleasing to him — to render it for you the gate of lite and the entrance into that abode where you can honor him, adore him, praise him, love him, and thank him eternally for all he has done and suffered for you. After this, in the •same spirit of faith, adoration, repentance, For the Season of Lent. 187 love, gratitude, hope, and supplication, kiss his sacred wounds. III.— THE VIRTUES. i. Imitation. It would be something terrible indeed, and worthy of severe punishment if, after God has taken so much pains, and has been pleased to suffer so many evils to give us examples and patterns of virtue, we should pass them by, caring not to make use of them. This is why we are exhorted to " Look, and make it according to the pattern that was shown thee in the mount." (Exod. xxv. 40.) Look, look attentively at what is passing on the mountain of Calvary, and imitate as closely as thou canst what is there shown thee. Con- sider the excellence of the model, the perfec- tion of the acts he shows thee, the mercy with which he shows them, and his design. His excellence is infinite since he is God ; the perfection of what he shows, of the virtues he teaches, is complete in every way ; his mercy is extreme since it moved him to sub- ject himself to so much misery and to endure so many sufferings ; and his design is thy salvation and beatitude. " Jesus Christ," says 1 88 Practice of Unioii zvith Our Lord St. Peter, " suffered for us, leaving you an example that you should follow his steps." (I. Pet. ii. 21.) It is a sovereign honor to imitate God be- cause he is the most excellent model that can be proposed ; if there is more glory in painting after an Apelles or a Raphael than after an ignoble artist, it is certainly infinitely more honorable to take our Lord for our pattern than man in whom there must always be some fault. Moreover, it is infinitely useful and advan- tageous to us to follow such a model, not only because there is nothing in him for us to fear, he being the highest degree of all possible perfection/but also because he inspires us with the strength and gives us the skill to imitate him ; still further, because the sign and assur- ance of our predestination and salvation con- sist in our resemblance to our Lord, and particularly to our Lord crucified who has merited for us on the cross the graces of pre- destination and salvation, and all the blessings we shall ever possess. St. Paul says : "May I be found in him . . . being made con- formable to his death." (Phil. iii. 9, to.) If I would find myself in Jesus Christ and have in him my salvation and my beatitude, I must For tJie Season of Lent. 189 assume the figure of his death, I must bear the likeness of his passion, I must exhibit in myself the virtues he practiced on the cross. This is absolutely necessary to whosoever desires to be saved, and it is the reason why the same Apostle wrote to the Romans : ki Heirs indeed of God, and joint heirs with Christ ; yet so if we suffer with him, that we may be also glorified with him." (Rom. viii. 17.) You have received in baptism the spirit of adoption of the children of God, of whom consequently you are heirs, and co-heirs with his Son Jesus Christ, provided always that you suffer with him, for except on this condition the thing is impossible. And St. Paul writes the same thought to his disciple Timothy : "A faithful saying. For if we be dead with him, we shall live also with him. If we suffer, we shall also reign with him." (II. Tim. ii. 11.) It is an indisputable truth and one of the chief articles of our faith, that if we die to sin with Jesus Christ we shall live gloriously with him, if we share his sufferings we shall be admitted to the enjoyment of his blessings. St. John says the same: " Partner in trib- ulation, and in the kingdom and patience in Christ Jesus." (Apoc. i. 9.) Participating in the tribulation and in the kingdom ! These 190 Practice of Union zvitli Our Lord two things are inseparable, the one from the other ; the first cannot be without the second, nor the second without the first. Tribulation borne in the patience of Jesus Christ leads most surely to the kingdom, and the kingdom surely follows tribulation well borne. This should greatly console and strengthen us in our sufferings. See, then, the union of the cross and salva- tion, the participation of the afflictions and blessings, the pains and pleasures, the infamies and honors of our Lord, necessary to be mem- bers of such a head and to bear the marks of cur predestination and eternal happiness. We must be crucified with him, we must say with St. Paul : " With Christ I am nailed to the cross/' (Gal. ii. 19.) I am crucified with Jesus Christ as a member is with the head. When our Lord was fastened to the cross, his whole body was fastened to it ; not only his head was upon the cross, but his arms, his legs, all his members, not excepting a single one. The same thing holds with his mystical body ; all its members must be crucified with him, and consequently you, too, unless you would re- nounce the glorious quality of being of the number of his members. For the Season of Lent, 191 2. Humility. Our Lord on the cross has given us most excellent and finished patterns of all the vir- tues, as is easy for any one willing to pay ever so slight attention to remark ; but I shall confine myself to the four principal ones, hu- mility, obedience, patience, and charity, which St. Bernard says correspond to the four ex- tremities of the cross — humility to the foot, obedience to the right arm, patience to the left, and charity to the top. To commence with humility which St. Paul calls the particular virtue of Jesus Christ. Was it not unequaled in him when he abased himself at the feet of his apostles, and yet more, at the feet of a traitor, to wash them ? when he was seized and sold for only thirty pieces of silver, and thus was horribly con- temned since the least thing in him was worth more than all imaginable worlds, was of a value absolutely infinite on account of the infinite dignity of his person ? when he was placed beneath Barabbas, when the people cared more for an infamous murderer than for him who was innocence and sanctity ? when they gave him blows which are the most cut- ting insults a man of position and spirit can 1 92 Practice of Union with Our Lord receive ? when they plucked out his beard as though he were a knave who did not de- serve to be a man nor to bear the sign of manhood ? when they bandaged his eyes to tell him that, instead of being the prophet he thought himself, he could not see further than his nose ? when they put on his shoulders an old scarlet robe and in his hand a reed, making him appear a ridiculous mock king whose king- dom was a true reed, frail, shaky, and hollow ; and then a white robe as though he were a fool of whom they were making a plaything ? when they put on his head a crown of thorns as painful as it was infamous ? when they bent their knees before him to mock him with gro- tesque salutations ? when they harshly struck him on his head with the reed, addressing him insolent and coarse words ? when they spat in his face, and offered him all the other indigni- ties their enraged hearts could invent ? Finally, they nailed him to a gibbet, which was the most ignominious of all punishments and deaths ; and this on the Feast of the Passover, the most solemn feast of the year, in presence of an almost innumerable multi- tude of spectators, not in a prison but on a mountain, not at night and by the light of torches, but at noon in the full light of mid- For the Season of Lent. 193 day ; and between two thieves as though he were the most unworthy, the most criminal, and the most wicked of all men. Behold a part of the humility our Lord prac- ticed in his passion ! Reflecting upon it St. Paul had good reason to say u He humbled himself." (Philipp. ii. 8.) And our Lord him- self, speaking by the mouth of David, says : " I am a worm, and no man ; the reproach of men, and the outcast of the people." (Ps. xxi. 7.) Seeing me so abused and disgraced, who would take me for a man ? Isaiah calls him "the most abject of men (Is. liii. 3), be- cause he was abased and humiliated more than any man of any condition ever was before. And has not our Lord performing such pro- digious acts of humility and lowering himself to such depths, a good right to say to us : " Learn of me, because I am meek and humble of heart ?" (Matt. xi. 29.) And have not we a strict obligation to imitate him ? If we do not, are we not worthy of severe punishments ? God humbled himself and put himself beneath all to give us an example, and w T e still wish to raise ourselves up ? What pride can be found in any human heart that the humility of a God cannot cure ? "When," says St. Bernard speaking to our 17 TQ4 Pi' act ice of Union zvith Onr Lord Lord and then to us, W when, my Lord, thou didst kneel before Judas who thou didst know had formed the horrible design of betraying thee and plotting thy death, and with thy most holy hands didst touch, didst bathe and wipe his accursed feet that w r ere impatient to go to shed thy blood — O man ! O dust ! O ashes, who seest this ! canst thou yet be proud and have a haughty spirit ? Consider Jesus Christ, the Creator of the universe and the dread Judge of the living and the dead, in his humility and meekness bending the knee, prostrating himself before a man, the most villainous, the most perfidious of all men, the man who betrayed him ; learn how he is truly meek and humble of heart, and be confused at thy pride." Thus discourses St. Bernard. (Bern. Serm. de Passione.) In another place, considering the power of our Lord's humility to make us embrace that virtue, he says: "Why, think you my bre- thren, did the God of Majesty humble and annihilate himself, if it were not to oblige you to do the same ? Therefore I earnestly entreat you not to permit that he should give you use- lessly so precious an example, but to endeavor to form yourself upon it. Love humility which is the foundation and guardian of all the vir- For the Season of Lent. 195 tues ; practice it in your thoughts, your affec- tions, your words and works, not letting it appear that man should find it difficult .to humble himself when God stooped so low." (Bern. Serm. I. in Nat. Dom.) Our Lord after having humbled himself before his apostles, and having washed their feet, said to them: "I have given you an example, that as I have done to you, so you do also. Amen, amen, I say to you, the serv- ant is not greater than his lord" (Jno. xiii. 15, 16.); neither are you more exalted than I. Likewise St. Paul says : " Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus." (Philipp. ii. 5.) Adopt the sentiments of humility which Jesus Christ had, follow the example he has given you, repeat frequently to yourself these words : " He humbled himself." (Philipp. ii. 8.) See him in his humiliations, see him loaded with opprobrium and contempt, and realize that he says to you again and again : " Learn of me, because I am meek and humble of heart " (Matt. xi. 29), in order that you should do your best to imitate me. j. Obedience. Saint Paul speaking of the obedience our Lord practiced in his passion, says: " He 196 Practice of Union with Our Lord humbled himself, becoming obedient unto death, even the death of the cross." (Philipp. ii. 8.) See in what manner, and how far our Lord teaches us to obey. He obeyed his Father so far as to suffer death, which is what nature dreads most ; and not an ordinary death, but the most frightful of all, the death of the ci oss. He obeyed most wicked judges, doing and enduring what- ever they commanded ; he obeyed the soldiers and executioners, going and coming as they wished, standing or sitting according to their pleasure, giving his hands, his feet, his head, his shoulders, and all parts of his body without any resistance, for them to exercise upon them all their rage could suggest. Whence he tells us by Isaiah : " The Lord God hath opened my ear, and I do not resist ; I have not gone back. I have given my body to the strikers, and my cheeks to them that plucked them. I have not turned away my face from them that rebuked me and spit upon me." (Is. 1. 5, 6.) The Lord God has opened my ear as the organ of obedience to hear his will and exe- cute it ; he has made me know he desired that after having suffered extreme agonies, I should die on a gibbet for his glory and the salvation For the Season of Lent. 197 of men. I have heard with respect this de- cree ; although so terrible I have not contra- dicted nor opposed it, but have received it with submission, and have accomplished it heartily. I have abandoned my soul to sad- ness, my body to torments, my brow to thorns, my shoulders to scourges, my eyes to tears, my ears to insults, my tongue to gall, my hands and feet to nails, and I have not turned away my face from those that spat upon it and covered it with blows, "becoming obedi- ent unto death, even the death of the cross. " (Philipp. ii. 8.) Adam would not obey God his Creator and his Sovereign Lord, by abstaining from a for- bidden fruit, though in the midst of an abund- ance of others the use of which was permitted him. The Son of God obeyed wicked judges and cruel executioners even to suffering all possible severities, even to death, and to the death of the cross ; he obeyed so far for love of us. After this, ought we to find any difficulty in obeying, and submitting for love of him to small and reasonable requirements ? St. Ber- nard says on this subject : " Learn, O man, to obey ; learn, O earth, to submit thyself ; learn, O dust, to do the will of others ! God has 198 Practice of Union with Our Lord done man's will, and thou desirest to rule ! And by this means thou presumest to prefer thyself to thy Creator, since he humbled him- self beneath man!" ''Would to God," con- tinues this saint, " that as often as I have the accursed thought of esteeming myself more than others, of preferring myself to any one, our Lord would make me the reproach he made his apostle : ' Go behind me, Satan, because thou savorest not the things that are of God.'" (Matt. xvi. 23.) Let us learn, then, from the example of our Lord to subject ourselves ; and when an occa- sion presents itself of performing an act of obedience, and we find it difficult either on the part of our judgment or our will, or as regards the exterior execution, let us* represent to ourselves our Lord submissive and obedient. Let us breathe him into us in his heroic prac- tice of that virtue, and let us stifle all our feelings- of resistance by the strength and sweetness of these words which we should repeat many times : " He humbled himself, becoming obedient unto death, even the death of the cross" (Philipp. ii. 8), and that for me. Let us accustom ourselves to break our will in everything, disregarding its tenacity ; let us look upon it as our most dangerous enemy, as For the Season of Lent. 199 the source of all our troubles, the principle of all our sins, and the root of all our evils. v 3. Prayer. O my Lord ! grant me the grace not to be a citizen of this world, as thou dost under- stand it ; and as a sign, not to excuse nor defend myself when I shall be blamed or accused either justly or wrongfully ; that I may imitate thee, O my divine Exemplar, who being so falsely and dangerously accused be- fore Pilate, preferred to be silent rather than justify thyself; and that I may suffer this humiliation courageously for love of thee. Amen. 4.. Aspiratory Verses. u In silence and in hope shall your strength be." (Is. xxx. 15.) Your strength when you are accused and calumniated, shall be in keep- ing silence and hoping in God. For the Season of Lent. "DP V s Thy kingdom come." (Matt. vi. 10.) May thy kingdom, the kingdom of thy grace and glory, come to us. FOUR O'CLOCK. Jesus Christ before Herod. I. The Mystery. Pilate having learned that our Lord was a; Galilean, sent him to Herod, the tetrarch of Galilee (who had come to Jerusalem, as well as the other Jews, for the feast), as being his legitimate subject. This prince, who was very wicked, and guilty of the death of St. John the Baptist, and cor- rupted by infamous pleasures, was glad to see our Lord whom he had long desired to meet, hoping he would work some miracle in his presence. But so far from being willing to satisfy this vicious and curious man and thus gain some consideration from him, our Lord would not even answer a single word to the many questions Herod asked him. " He an- swered him nothing." (Luke xxiii. 9.) Neither would he utter a syllable in denial of the crimes the Jews with stubborn hatred and rage, kept on urging against him. So Herod, losing his esteem for him, joined with the cour- 22 254 Practice of Union with Our Lord tiers in contemning him, and as a mark of scorn, and a sign that he took him for a fool and an idiot who had not sense enough to speak, had a beautiful white robe put on him as if he were a person of rank, and then mocked him. After this he sent him back to Pilate. " He mocked him, putting on him a white garment, and sent him back to Pilate." (lb. xxiii. II.) 2. The Virtue. It is to suffer meekly after our Lord's exam- ple, contempt that may be shown you for your mind, your judgment, your knowledge and your talents, remembering that our Lord, the uncreated and incarnate Word in whom are contained, as St. Paul says (Col. ii. 3), all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge, was treated as an idiot and a fool. It is also not to desire, nor seek, nor procure in any way, the reputation of being a person •of intelligence, possessed of good judgment, wise, learned, skillful, and industrious, but to renounce all such desires of reputation and esteem ; and to believe that without contra- diction he has the best spirit who has the spirit of God, which consists in humility, sim- plicity, innocence, holiness, and elevation For 'the Season of Lent. 255 above the things of earth, recalling how our Lord said to his Father : " I praise and bless thee because thou hast hidden thy mysteries and secrets from the prudent and wise of the world, and hast discovered then\ to the little and humble." j. Prayer. O Word of the Father and Eternal Wisdom, who keeping silence before Herod wast taken by him for a fool ! grant me the grace to understand in what a good mind and judg- ment truly consist, to contemn the false wis- dom of the world, and to highly esteem and embrace with all my heart thy wise folly, and clothe myself with its precious garments which are humility, simplicity, and innocence. Amen. /f.. Aspiratory Verses. " The simplicity of the just man is laughed to scorn. The lamp despised in the thoughts of the rich, is ready for the time appointed." (Job. xii. 4, 5.) The simplicity of the just is derided, it passes for an extinguished lamp in the opin- ions of rich worldlings ; but it will not be always thus, it will give light at its appointed time. 256 Practice of Union with Onr Lord 44 1 am become a laughing-stock all day; all scoff at me." (Jer. xx. 7.) I have served as a subject for ridicule all the day long ; they all have mocked me. FIVE O'CLOCK. Jesus Christ again before Pilate, and Esteemed less than bar abb as. i. The Mystci-y. Pilate seeing our Lord brought back to him, told the Jews that they might know very well he was innocent since neither he himself, nor Herod, had found him guilty of any crime de- serving death ; and as he must, according to custom, release a prisoner for the feast of the Passover, he would give them their king, would set him at liberty. The Jews imme- diately cried out that they did not want him, and demanded Barabbas, a famous criminal, who in a riot had committed murder. After a great deal of contesting on both sides, Pilate desiring to deliver our Lord, and the Jews re- fusing to receive him, Pilate finally granted them Barabbas. 2. The Virtue. It is to conduct yourself as a true disciple of Jesus Christ when in questions of preference For the Season of Lent. 257 and precedence, others are placed before you ; when more account is made of your equals and even of your inferiors than of you, and offices and charges are conferred upon them which you w r ould be much more capable of filling ; when they are put forward and you are kept back ; when they are talked of, and not a word is said about you ; when all they do is approved and praised, and some fault is found with all you do. In these trials of your virtue and perfection, think of the Incarnate Wisdom, the Sanctity of our Lord, and how with horrible contempt, with extreme injustice and fearful blindness, Barabbas, an infamous robber and notorious murderer, was preferred to him. 3. Prayer. O my sovereign Lord, who didst teach that if we would be exalted, we must humble our- selves, and that to be great v/e must become the least of all ! (Matt, xxiii. 12 ; Luke xxii. 26.) I beg thee by the merit of thy abase- ment below Barabbas, that, when in any man- ner I am less preferred than others, I may conduct myself with the patience, silence, and humility, necessary to make me thy imitator and thy disciple. Amen. 25S Practice of Union with Our Lord 4.. Aspiratory Verses. "To whom have you likened God?" (Is. xl. 18.) "To whom have you likened me, or made me equal, saith the Holy One ?" (lb. xl. 25.) "To whom have you likened me, and made me equal, and compared me, and made me like ?" (lb. xlvi. 5.) To whom have you likened God ? Is there anything that is not infinitely below him? To. whom have you compared me and made me equal, saith the Holy One, the Infinite Sanctity ? you have made me equal to Barabbas, you have even esteemed me less than him. " Death shall be chosen rather than life by all that shall remain of the wicked kindred in all places." (Jer. viii. 3.) All those that shall remain of that most wicked race, shall choose death rather than life, a homicide rather tha.n the Saviour. SIX O'CLOCK. Jesus Christ Taken and Scourged. I. The Mystery. Pilate, seeing that the Jews were eager for the death of our Lord, to satisfy them and in some degree appease their fury, condemned him to the scourge. For the Season of Lenti 259 This punishment caused our Lord extreme suffering- : first ; by reason of his very delicate and sensitive constitution ; secondly ; on ac- count of the cruelty of the instruments used, which were, it is said, of three kinds — cords armed at the ends with little bones shaped like stars, cords made of ox hides, and rods covered with thorns; thirdly; from the pro- digious number of blows he received, which, it is believed, amounted to five thousand. Our Lord endured this horrible and long torture without complaining, without mur- muring, and without manifesting the least sign of irritation ; but, on the contrary, with meekness, tranquility, and invincible patience, thinking meanwhile of you, and offering to God his Father those streams of blood that were drawn from his torn body, for the pardon of your sins. 2. The Virtue. It is mortification of the flesh, which con- sists in performing corporal penances with courage accompanied by discretion ; in not dreading so much bodily pains and discom- forts, and not taking such care to avoid them ; in not being so eager and active when we do suffer them, to get rid of them, but in bearing 260 Practice of Union ivitk Our Lord them with a patient and calm spirit, in imita- tion of our Lord, and for the sake of enduring something for his love,- to offer him in some degree suffering for suffering, and to expiate the disorders of our senses and the sins com- mitted by our flesh. Behold how rigorously our Lord treated his flesh which was most pure, most innocent and holy, and • learn how you should act toward yours which is full of corruption, and has caused you to commit so many faults. You should regard it as the enemy of your salva- tion, as a domestic thief, as a furnace of wick- edness, a principle of irregularity, a source of corruption, a vestment of ignorance, and a dark veil that hinders you from perceiving and tast- ing the things of God, and you should govern it as the slave of the dwelling, which it is, and should train it to its duty. J. Prayer. O my dear Saviour, who wast willing that thy most sacred body and thy virginal flesh should be torn with whips for my salvation ! I beg thee to apply to my flesh the merit of .that precious blood thou didst shed to ex- piate the disorders of my senses, and to was: out all the sins of which they ever have been For the Season of Lent. 261 the instruments. I implore thee to purify my senses, to sanctify my body, and to grant that it may no longer be an obstacle, but rather a means and an aid to my salvation and perfec- tion. Amen. ^. Aspiratory Verses. it They that are Christ's have crucified their flesh with the vices and concupiscences." (Gal. v. 24.) Those that belong to Jesus Christ, and are his true disciples, have crucified their flesh with its vices and concupiscences. " Always bearing about in our body the mortification of Jesus, that the life also of Jesus may be made manifest in our bodies." (il Cor. iv. 10.) Let us practice and bear about continually the mortification of Jesus in our bodies, so that they may reflect his life. SEVEN O'CLOCK. Jesus Christ Crowned with Thorns and Outraged in Several Other Ways. I. The' Mystery. Pilate understanding that the enraged Jews were not satisfied with the cruel punishment he had just condemned our Lord to suffer, were not satiated with the quantity of blood 262 Practice of Union with Our Lord the scourges had drawn from him, but desired his last drop, to appease still more their diabol- ical animosity, abandoned him to the soldiers who, calling all their comrades at the time on duty, crowded around him like so many wolves about an innocent lamb, and began to laugh at and mock him whom the angels adore and salute as the King of kings and the Creator of the universe. Each tried to find words more insulting to address him, acts more outrageous to inflict on him. They first despoiled him of his garment, and this not without tearing off the skin in several places, because the blood he had just shed in such abundance had dried the gar- ment to the skin ; then they threw over his shoulders a miserable old cloak of faded pur- ple, and placed on his head a crown woven of very sharp thorns, pressing it down so that the points pierced his brows, causing him in- expressible suffering ; and for a sceptre they put a reed in his right hand, thus making him a comedy king, to signify that he was a fan- tastic and ridiculous sovereign, and that his royalty was like thorns and reeds, satirical, void, and useless. "And bowing the knee before him, they mocked him, saying : ' Hail, king of the For the Season of Lent. 263 Jews.' And spitting upon him, they took the reed, and struck his head." (Matt, xxvii. 29, 30.) Having thus arrayed him, they knelt before him as though in adulation ; then burst- ing into shouts of laughter, exclaimed : " All hail, King of the Jews!" at the same time spitting in his face, and striking him on the head with the reed, each blow renewing and increasing the torture of his crown. 2. The Virtue. Our Lord manifested in his endurance of all these sufferings and insults, an invincible pa- tience, made more resplendent by a singular meekness and a wondrous submission in per- mitting them to do with him" whatever they would, never complaining, murmuring, or ex- pressing any emotion. They pressed the thorns into his brows, and he said not a word ; they presented him a reed for a sceptre to mock him, and he did not refuse it, did not draw back his hand indignantly, as our corrupt natures would have done ; but he took it in his blessed hand, and grasped it with rever- ence and love, as the cherished instrument of his opprobrium. Oh ! what a model of pa- tience, and how admirably does such an ex- ample instruct us in that virtue ! 264 Practice of Union with Our Lord Patience is what is most necessary in suf- ferings and adversities ; it is a virtue of which we have extreme need by reason of the mise- ries with which this life is filled ; it consists in not permitting the understanding to conceive any thought, the will to produce any emotion, the tongue to utter any word, nor the whole person that suffers, to manifest any sign of impetuosity, impatience, indignation, or vexa- tion, as though unwilling to suffer, but to receive and bear the suffering peacefully and with a quiet spirit. Thus Tertullian describing patience and painting it in his own colors, says : " It has a countenance mild and tranquil, a brow serene and unfurrowed by any wrinkle made by sad- ness or 'anger, lips sealed with the seal of a wise and honorable silence, and a com- plexion such as we see in persons who are innocent and confiding." (Tert. 1. de Patient.