LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. ^X I75t> Chap. Copyright No... Shelflf a-f3 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. FABRI CONCIONES SERMONS OF REV. M. FABRI, S. J., TRANSLATED FROM THE LATIN By REV. M. J. CONWAY. NEW YORK and SAN FRANCISCO CHRISTIAN PRESS ASSOCIATION PUBLISHING CO. IQOO TWO COPIES RECEIVED, Library of Congret* Ufflco of the ^ y MAY21 1900 i^A(754 hcgittor of Copyrigfct^ f O 8 6 6 4 /la , /d / t?M> SECOND COPY, •rsFa THE SERMONS OF REVEREND M. FABRI, S. J., SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES. THE TRANSLATOR KINDLY ASKS THE INDULGENCE OF THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CLERGY TO WHOM THE WORK IS MOST RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED. Copyright, 1900, By CHRISTIAN PRESS ASSOCIATION PUBLISHING COMPANY. FIRST SUNDAY OP ADVENT. WHAT SHOULD AROUSE US FROM THE SLEEP OF SIN ? I. The vanity of sleep. II. The time of grace. III. The snares of the enemy. IV. The approach of reward. V. Present and future calamities. — -y— ' — -< — — « — , — -*-— n "It is now the hour for us to rise from sleep " (Romans 13 : 11). To-day we begin to expect our Lord who will shortly come to us, and for this reason, Holy Mother Church, to arouse us from the sleep of sin and to urge us to go forth like the pru- dent Virgins, cries out in the words of St. Paul : " Brethren, it is now the hour to rise from sleep, for our salvation is nearer." By these words she means what Christ and John the Bap- tist meant in the beginning of their preaching, namely : " Do penance, for the kingdom of heaven is near at hand." At this time we should strive by all means to have Christ, on the day of his nativity, born in us in a new and spiritual manner ; and to accomplish this we must rise from the sleep of sin. For as when, in the time of Augustus, Christ was born in Bethlehem, the glad tidings were made to those only who were tending and watching their flocks at nia:ht ; so they only will be joyful and partakers of the fruit of Christ's birth who, having risen from the sleep of sin, are watching in pen- ance and works of virtue. " It is now the hour." These were the words that aroused St. Augnstine from the sleep of sin, as he himself says that, having been warned by a divine voice to take up and read, by accident he opened the book at the words: " Not in rioting and drunkenness, not in chamberings and impurities, not in contention and envy. But put ye on the 2 FIRST SUNDAY OF ADVENT. Lord Jesus Christ ; " and at once he was changed into another man. Cannot this same voice arouse other sinners ? I. The vanity and danger of deadly sleep. St. Chrysostom says : "The night is passed ; let us rise from dreams, for, though they be pleasant, they are nevertheless delusions" (Horn. 62 ad Pop.). Sleep indeed brings rest to man but not delight, for its sweetness is not perceived by any one, as then all the powers of body and mind are fast asleep, the imagina- tion only is working, by which the dreamer pictures to himself dignities, honor, delights and wealth, and revels in them as though in actual possession ; but after he has awakened he sees that what he thought was his is a mere illusion and a dream. Such, according to the apostle, is the state of the sinner, whose higher reason, which should attend to eternal and spiritual things, is fast asleep. The lower reason alone, which attends to temporal things, is watchful and delights in the possession of earthly goods ; after awhile it shall awake and clearly see eternal things and shall then understand that all temporal things are vain and imaginary ; the only true and solid ones being eternal. Philip the Good of Belgium very happily illustrates this. Having found a man asleep outside the palace gate he or- dered him brought in and laid on the royal couch. On the following day he had him clothed in princely attire and shown all the honor possible. When night came, the man, being drunk with wine, was clothed in his own garments and placed where at first he had been found. Awaking on the following day, he rightly concluded that the princely life he led was all a dream. The same thing shall happen to sinners and lovers of this world when, on opening the eyes of their higher reason, they behold eternal things, they shall acknowledge that they had been dreaming and that earthly pleasures were mere illusions. (i And as he that is hungry dreameth, and eateth, but when he is awake his soul is empty : and as he that thirsteth dreameth, and drinketh, and after he is awake is yet faint with thirst, and his soul is empty : so shall be the multitude of all the Gentiles that have fought against Mount Sion " (Isaias 29 : 8). These, while they enjoy pleasures, consider themselves blessed and that they are kings and princes, seated in the clouds, and rate all other men as crawling ants. They do not see that they alone are poor and naked and miserable mortals. WHAT SHOULD AROUSE US FROM SLEEP OF SIN? 3 This truth shall be made known to them on the day when naked they shall be returned to mother earth, whence naked they were born ; when they shall open their eyes they shall see how transitory were all earthly things. " They have slept their sleep : and all the men of riches have found nothing in their hands" (Ps. 75 : 6). The danger of this sleep is that through habit it binds men to earth. That is what happened to Sisara, through whose brains, Jahel, Haber's wife, drove nails into the ground : ' ' and so passing from deep sleep to death he fainted away and died" (Judges 4 : 21). Thus he who sleeps with his mind filled with worldly thoughts will soon be nailed to earth by the nail of habit, so that he cannot rise, and in the meantime he dies to awaken in hell. It often happens that, to avoid the heat, one lies down under a tree ; but after an hour or so, the shade is pierced by the rays of the sun, and then his head begins to ache. Sinners make a tree of earthly goods which God has given them ; beneath it they rest and inordinately rejoice, when suddenly the worm of death gnaws at its root and saps its life. Then they experience the burning wind of a bad con- science and see themselves in the flames of hell. This is what happened to the rich man Dives in the Gospel. Looking up from his gloomy prison, he saw Lazarus in the bosom of Abraham. He had followed his lower reason and had sated himself with earthly delights, while the poor man followed his higher reason and looked on all worldly things as illusions. II. The advent of light, that is, Christ in the flesh, or the time of grace : the dawn has appeared and it is time to rise. As the dawn comes between night and the full light of day, so the time of grace comes between the darkness of infidelity and sin and the light of heavenly glory. Before the coming of Christ the Gentiles walked in darkness, not knowing whither they were going — to death or to life. Aristotle, the most learned of philosophers, when dying said : ({ I know not whither I go. I know not if both body and soul shall die ; and if the soul does not die, I know not whither it goes." They could not easily order their lives, since they did not know if the way led to heaven or to hell. The night for them was most obscure. The fathers of the Old Testament lived in darkness, but not altogether obscure, since they were illumined by prophetic lights as by stars ; yet they walked in the shadow of figures and in the expectation of a 4 FIRST SUNDAY OF ADVENT. future light ; nor did they clearly know the road to heaven and the road to hell, for they had the darkness of errors in their ceremonies, laws, traditions, and in the very intellect, because they had not yet seen the Light of the world nor had heard the voice of the unerring guide, Christ. " All were under a cloud/' says St. Paul. The blessed in heaven, in the full light of day, see all things most clearly " face to face." We Christians have the dawn, since we have Christ, and we know with him as leader and guide how we must journey to heaven. We know, also, the way that leads to perdition, although we do not see the end of the road, God and glory, to which we are tending. f < For we know in part and we prophesy in part" (1 Cor. 13). Therefore, when the hour of rising is the dawn, it is time for us to rise from the sleep of sin. What would the Gentiles not have done if they had this light ? The fathers of the Old Testament, beholding and saluting this light from afar only, the nearer they ap- proached it aspired more ardently to every species of perfec- tion. Hence the Church, with St. Thomas, urges us to rise from sin and to strive earnestly for virtue, because the com- ing of the Saviour is nearer than before. What would they have done if they had seen Christ ? Justly, then, will Jew and Gentile condemn the Christian sleeping in sin. It is extremely dangerous to neglect such an opportunity for meriting, as the light is, as the Apostle indicates when he says : " Knowing the time," that is, the time is short. The whole of that time you spend in sin you lose, and you throw away all the good deeds that you could have stored up for yourself. If a rich city were given over to plunder to the soldiers who made all haste to secure the booty, and one of their number lay down to sleep under a tree, saying that he would take another time to secure his portion, would not the others laugh at him and call him a fool ? When at this precious time the kingdom of heaven is given over to us to take away, " for it surfers violence, and the violent take it away," should not every prudent person hasten to share the booty, those heavenly treasures ? The sinner not only loses these treasures, but heaps up for himself most bitter punish- ments. Just as the interest on a loan increases until the debt is paid, so sins not soon wiped out in penance merit greater punishment and easily draw others, and so increase the rate of punishment. WHAT SHOULD AROUSE US FROM SLEEP OF SIN? 5 III. The snares of our enemies. Some are within us, namely, sins which lay siege to the conscience and keep it in a continual state of turmoil, than which nothing in this life seems more atrocious ; nor is there any other way of quieting the enemy but that of penance. Added to these are enemies from without — the devils themselves, who hold the sinner in slavery, and who desire nothing more than that he be taken out of this life or that power would be given them to kill him, lest he should slip from them. If the sinner only knew how they exult over him, and what cunning they use to ensnare him, he certainly would tremble and rise from his sleep immediately. Do we not know the story of Samson and Dalila ? He had slept, and in that sleep she cut off his hair, thus depriving him of his strength and leaving him to the mercy of the Philistines, who plucked out his eyes and cast him into prison (Judges 6). In the same way the sinner, filled with the delights of this world, sleeps in his sins ; then the evil ones surround him on all sides, despoil him of his love of virtue and power of resisting temptation, blind him and drag him into hell. And how easily does the world he loved cast him off and leave him on the broad road to ruin I This twofold enemy the Apostle speaks of in to-day's epistle : ts Let us put off the works of darkness and put on the arms of light" (Rom. 13). What are the works of darkness un- less sins ; the arms of light unless those to be used against the snares of the demons ? IV. The nearness of the promised reward, " for our salva- tion is near at hand." This is the same argument Christ and John used when they said : " Do penance, for the king- dom of heaven is at hand." It is at hand because now, after the coming of Christ, we are not far from the kingdom of heaven ; we are n earing the end of our earthly journey, the gate of heaven has been opened with the key of the cross of Christ, and if there be no obstacle, we can fly there at once, not like our forefathers who died before Christ, for some had to wait in Limbo a hundred — a thousand and more years. Our years on earth are shorter than were those of the patriarchs and prophets. If an exile, after a long ab- sence, on reaching his native land acquires new strength and runs more swiftly ; if horses, though tired, begin to run as they near their stable, should not Christian men rise from their sleep and gain new strength, running more swiftly to blessedness the nearer they come to it ? Since heaven is our 6 FIRST SUNDAY OF ADVENT. true home, should we not strive to hasten thither ? The sinner prefers to be a citizen of this world rather than of heaven ; but since no one can be a citizen of this world for- ever, he will lose both heaven and the world, like the Jews, who, according to St. Augustine (Tract 49 in John), feared to lose their temporal possessions when they said : " The Romans will come, and they will take away our place and race." They did not think of eternal life, and so they lost both. St. Gregory (Book V, Moral. C. 3) says : " Persons dig- ging for a treasure become more excited the nearer they come to it." The treasure hidden in the field of heaven is near the sinner, who can quickly find it by means of the sacrament of Penance. Why, therefore, does he not, filled with joy, go sell all he has and buy that field ? Does he not rather seek the treasure in this world and forget all about that in heaven ? Let him take care that he dig not down to hell, for salvation is no nearer to the just than perdition is to the wicked. If, therefore, the nearness of the heavenly treasure does not move him, at least let the nearness of hell do so. Secondly, the kingdom of heaven is at hand and our sal- vation is nearer, because now the grace and mercy of God, nay, the kingdom of God, which is bought by grace, is most liberally offered to us. Christ says to those seeking that kingdom : " Behold, the kingdom of God is in you" (Luke 17) ; that is, in your hand, in your power, for my grace I liberally offer you, and if you have this in you, you will have the kingdom of God in you ; for this reason the time of the new law is called the time of grace. Why, then, sinner, do you hesitate to rise from sleep ? Did you deny 3^our God ? But Peter denied him three times and returned to grace. The penitent thief found grace with Christ, as did Mary Magdalene, Mary of Egypt, St. Paul and others. V. The calamities of present and future. Boys are accus- tomed to be roused by the rod. God asked Jeremias : " What seest thou, Jeremias ? " And he said : " I see a rod watching." And the Lord said : " Thou hast seen well : for 1 will watch over my word to perform it" (Jer. 1 : 11). According to the Chaldaic : " You have seen the king of the Chaldasans, whom I use to scourge my people because they sleep in their crimes. I shall watch over them and shall arouse them with the rod." What else does God do WHAT SHOULD AROUSE US FROM SLEEP OF SIN ? ? with us now ? Do we not see the watchful rod of wars, pes- tilence and famine ? And why does it watch over us unless because we are sleeping ; it would indeed sleep if we were watching ; but because we sleep it watches. When a boy is slow rising from bed his father shows him the rod, and he rises immediately, otherwise he would not only see it but feel it also. Let no one deceive himself, this rod will watch as long as we are asleep. Shortly after this vision Jeremias saw a boiling caldron, that is, the terrible anger of God, which was poured forth and destroyed Jerusalem. If sin- ners do not rise at the stroke of this rod, it is to be feared that the caldron of fury will be poured on them and finally destroy them. " Unless you do penance, you shall all like- wise perish" (Luke 13). Let us watch, therefore, with the simple shepherds, that we may be worthy to receive the Lord. " Blessed is that servant whom, when the Lord will come, he shall find watching." SECOND SUNDAY OF ADVENT. WHAT MUST BE DONE DURING ADVENT ? I. Mortification. II. Purifying Conscience. III. Meditation on the coming of Christ. IV. Ardent desire to see Christ. V. Almsgiving and preparation for Communion. " Art thou he that art to come ? " (Matt, n : 3). We know what elaborate preparations are made to re- ceive a distinguished visitor. We are expecting now a visit from our great Leader, Christ, who is coming to treat of what should concern us most, namely, our salvation. Let us see what kind of house we prepare for him. Let us hear David, who, when he had gathered a great quantity of gold, silver, precious stones, and woods for the building of the temple, said : " The work is great ; for a house is pre- pared not for man, but for God" (1. Paralip. 29 : 1). If the whole earth were gold or of a more precious metal, and constructed into one magnificent temple, then it would not be a suitable footstool for the Lord and Creator. The soul free from sin is a fit habitation for God. The Church, knowing how basely the Bethlehemites acted who refused admittance to the coming Christ and forced him into a stable, carefully admonishes us not to be guilty of a like con- tempt and receive Christ in the foul stable of our heart, lest we provoke his most just anger. The tabernacle of our hearts will be pleasing to God, if we build it like the one Moses ordered for him. Five things he wished espe- cially in it : in the entrance, an altar of holocausts and a. 8 WHAT MUST BE DONE DURING ADVENT. 9 lavatory where the priests should wash before the sacrifice ; in the tabernacle a candlestick of many branches, an altar of incense and a table. I. First then let us erect an altar of holocausts, which is the heart immolating itself to God by mortification. This ought to be in the entrance that is before we approach the holy of holies. The victims to be immolated are the con- cupiscences, the delights of the body, all worldly cares and desires from which we should withdraw, especially at this time. Holy Church invites us to this, while during this sea- son she omits the canticles of joy : " Glory to God in the highest," and "Holy God, we praise thy name ; " while she clothes her ministers and altars in penitential purple. The example of holy David invites us. He withdrew from the court of King Saul and went to Bethlehem, his own city, "because there were solemn sacrifices there for all his tribe" (1 Kings 20). What would he have done if he knew that there he would find Christ born ? The shepherds who were keeping watch over their sheep invite us. When they had heard the glad tidings of the birth of Christ, they hastened to that ever memorable town saying : " Let us go over to Bethlehem and let us see this word that is come to to pass" (Luke 2). Let us do likewise, put aside all pro- fane delights, all worldly pleasures, and let us go over to Bethlehem and witness the solemn ceremonies. Let us with- draw as much as possible from all worldly business and give more time to the service of God. If our hearts are filled with secular things, schemes of ambition, desires of wealth, etc., how will there be a place for Christ ? Was not Christ excluded from Bethlehem because there was no place in the inn ? And why was the altar of holocaust hollow within, unless that we should learn to make room in our hearts for the reception of Christ ? We should carefully observe the fast prescribed, and also truly deny ourselves some of those things that delight the palate ; and if we are possessed of an abundance, give freely to the poor. II. A brass lavatory, that is, the sacrament of Penance. In this the priests first should wash, then the faithful, who, in a manner, can be called priests and who become partakers in the mysteries of Christ, before they approach the sacri- fice and Communion ; for this reason the lavatory was placed in the entrance. Formerly holy water was placed in 10 SECOND SUNDAY OF ADVENT. front of the churches so that the Christians about to com- municate might wash their hands, which were to hold the Body of Christ. Since, however, we now no longer receive Christ in our hands but only in the mouth, it suffices for us to cleanse the mouth by a sincere confession and by this means the conscience, because through the mouth we trans- mit the holy Eucharist to the heart. To this the Church in- vites us these days, while she assigns three or four weeks before Christmas for us to carefully examine our con- sciences and prepare ourselves for the worthy reception of the Bread of Life. "He made also the laver of brass, with the foot thereof, of the mirrors of the women that watched at the door of the tabernacle" (Exod. 38 : 8). The women held these mirrors so that the priests could see if there were any stains on themselves. St. Gregory says : " These mirrors are the precepts of God, in which holy souls always see themselves, and, if they discover any stains, they wash them away, for they know what is pleasing to God and what displeasing. And not without reason are they called mirrors of women, for women are so given to behold themselves in the mirror, to discover the slightest flaw in their appearance, so the examination of conscience should be carefully made to see if there be any stain of sin, and, if so, to wash it away in penance. The example of the patriarch Jacob invites us. When he was ordered by God to go up to Bethel and there build an altar, he called his household together and commanded them to destroy their strange gods, to wash themselves and to change their clothing. So let every Christian who is called at this time to Bethlehem make an altar of his heart, and call his household together, his will, memory and intellect, his five senses, and if he finds anything contrary to God, let him destroy it. The great St. Augustine on this very Sunday thus addressed his hearers: "With the greatest devotion and with all our energies, we should prepare^ for this holy and desirable, this glorious and singular solemnity — the birth of Christ ; and we should most carefully examine ourselves and see if there be any hidden sin which is silently gnawing our conscience, and which is offensive to the eyes of the Divine Majesty." Although Christ after his passion rose and ascended into heaven, he watches carefully how each one of his servants, without avarice, pride, and anger, strives to pre- pare to celebrate his birth ; and according as he sees each one WHAT MUST BE DONE DURING ADVENT. H adorned with good works will he dispense to him the grace of his mercy. If he should see one drunk, avaricious, or proud, I fear lest he would say what he said in the gospel : " Friend, how have you come here, not having a nuptial garment ?" and then, "Let him be bound hand and foot and cast into exterior darkness." Let each one then care- fully prepare by a good confession to go to Bethlehem. If one is invited to a friend's wedding, how careful he is to appear in his best ; what should one do when he is about to meet his Lord and Saviour ? III. The candlestick of many branches signifies the light of consideration which during these days should burn in our hearts, that we may fully penetrate the excellency and the magnitude of the benefit of the Incarnation. For this rea- son, during Advent, the Church begins the divine office with these words : " Come, let us adore the Lord the King to come." She proposes the gospels about the forerunner of Christ because he was a burning light ; and so she announces to us the magnitude of the King to come, and places before us the figures of this mystery and the prophecies of the Old Testament. The seven branches of the candlestick repre- sent seven circumstances of this benefit : 1. Who will come ? He who is the Son of God. Who is not astounded ? If he had sent one of the lowest order of angels to liberate us, his ene- mies, would it not have been more than enough ? 2. Whence will he come ? From the highest heavens — from a royal throne — from the bosom of the Father — from the company of myriads of angels. 3. Whither will he come ? Into this world — this valley of tears — this prison of captives — into the region of the shadow of death — into the pool of Siloe filled with the suffering and afflicted. 4. To whom will he come? To exiles cast out of the garden of Paradise — to his enemies, slaves of the devil. 5. How will he come ? " Being in the form of God, he debased himself, taking the form of a servant, being made to the likeness of men and in shape found as a man " (Philip. 2). If to free a slave from death an earthly monarch should descend from his throne and be- come a slave, would not the world wonder ? But far greater was God's descent, which no one could merit. It would have been the greatest of all, if in a glorious visible form he had wished to illumine the earth by his presence. 6. Why will he come ? To free us from the power of darkness — to seek his lost sheep — to place him on his shoulder and bring 12 SECOND SUNDAY OF ADVENT. him back to the fold — as a Master to teach us — to give us an example in the pursuit of virtue — to make us his sons and heirs. 7. When did he come ? " When the night is in the midst of her course " (Wisdom 18). When the human race was in the densest darkness of ignorance and the whole world was in odium. IV. The altar of incense on which incense was burned to God, signifies the vows and pious desires with which the ad- vent of Christ should be desired, that he would be born in us and abide with us. As Christ's coming was formerly wished and desired by the Prophets and Patriarchs, so he wishes to be desired by us, that through his grace he may come to us. The Church warns us of this when for eight days before the birth she repeats : (i Wisdom come to teach us the way of prudence— Adonai, come to redeem us — Eoot of Jesse, come to free us — Key of David, come to liberate us — Orient, come to illumine us seated in darkness — King of races, Emmanuel, come to us," etc. In the first place, the faithful should desire Christ to come to them in the Holy Encharist, for those who truly love rejoice in the presence of the one loved, and desire him. To this we should bend all our energy, if we wish to profit with great fruit by the coming of Christ, that is, with great hunger, to seek him, for " he has filled the hungry with good things/' Let us consider the magnitude of this Guest, his dignity, sweetness, beauty, riches — our poverty and weakness. How the Patriarchs and Prophets desired the coming of Christ ! Did not " Abraham rejoice to see that day"? — ''Many kings and prophets wished to see and did not see." How the afflicted tried to come to Christ and touch only the hem of his garment ! Was not the paralytic let down through the roof and placed at the feet, of Jesus ? All who had a great desire to come to Christ were healed. Behold the birds of the air — see the young with open mouths in their nest waiting food from the parent ! Would that we could feel our want — with what appetite we would hasten to Com- munion, and with what fruit we would come back ! V. The table to receive the twelve loaves of propitiation bread signifies, first, almsgiving, which we should specially indulge in during these days to conciliate Christ in his poor. As we show ourselves to the members of Christ, so will he show himself to us. St. Augustin says : " What vanity lost WHAT MUST BE DONE DURING ADVENT. 13 by the palate, let justice through mercy bestow on the poor — « what luxury squandered in this world, let piety restore in heaven, and although we should always give alms, especially during these occasions let us give more freely according to our means. It is not just that some during this holy season should be filled to satiety and others suffering from hunger." Since all are the servants of one God, redeemed with the one price, we have entered this world in the same condition, in the same we will leave it, and if we live righteous lives we shall equally share the same beatitude. And why does not the poor with you receive bread, since with you he will re- ceive the kingdom ? Why does not the poor receive an old garment, since with you he will receive the stole of immor- tality ? Why is not the poor worthy of your bread, since with you he has been worthy to receive the Sacrament of Baptism ? Why is he unworthy to receive the crumbs from your table, since he has been invited to the banquet of Angels ? Let us, therefore, during this season be kind and char- itable to the poor. Secondly, a preparation for Holy Communion. That in- deed was a precious table made of Setim wood, which did not easily decay, and which was superior in solidity and beauty to all other woods. It was inlaid with gold because it was to bear the holy breads. So should our heart be made of Setim wood, that is, a firm resolution to amend our lives, and to this end it should be covered and adorned with the golden virtues of faith, hope, charity, humility, etc. And then that Bread of Life which descends from heaven can be placed in it. These are the things we must do if we wish to prepare for the coming of Christ. It would be better not to receive him than to receive him without honor. " Thou has multiplied the nation, and hast not increased the joy " (Isaias 9:3). In other words : Thou hast illumined many with the splendor of thy nativity, but because many excluded that light, thou hast experienced little joy. The same thing happens if, during these days, many approach Holy Communion — a few only properly prepared — a great nation, not a great joy. That we may add a great joy to a great nation, let there be a great preparation. THIRD SUNDAY OF ADVENT. THE CHEAPNESS OF MAN. L Man is a stranger and a wanderer. II. The guest of a day. III. A blade of grass. IV. A leaf, fearful of uncertain life. V. A fleeing or inconstant shadow. VI. A Universal Vanity. "Who art thou ? " (John 1 : 22). The Delphian philosophers, not without reason, ordered to be inscribed in letters of gold in the temple of Apollo the words: "Know thyself. " This warning was such as of itself to inspire men to strive after happiness. " To know one- self," says St. Clement (Book 3 PecL), " is the greatest and most beautiful of sciences." St. Bernard, in Med. 0. 3, says : " Study to know yourself, for it is much better and more praiseworthy to know yourself than neglecting your- self, you should know the course of the stars, the growth of the plants, the nature of man and beast, the science of things heavenly and earthly." There is nothing very many know so little about or care to know, as themselves. Plato says : "There is scarcely one in ten who knows himself." They simply ask of others, (i Who art thou ?" Astronomers ask of the heavens, philosophers of nature, lawyers of law, doc- tors of sickness, the curious of the world. Let us not be so blind, but rather send our ambassadors, the intellect and senses, not to others, but to ourselves, and ask of ourselves the question, " Who art thou ? " ee I am a voice," replies John. What more fitting answer could he give ? For what is a voice ? Something flowing which flies from place to place ; something momentary which suddenly perishes ; something weak which is easily taken unawares ; something valueless which returns to nothing ; something rough which 14 THE CHEAPNESS OF MAN. 15 has no signification ; something unsteady which decreases by degrees ; something blind which knows not whither it goes. Such is man. Therefore, I. Who art thou? David answers: "I am a stranger with thee, Lord, and a sojourner, as all my fathers were " (Ps. 38 : 13). St. Chrysostom says : " David was a great man who abounded in glory and wealth, and yet he called himself a stranger and wanderer." In so much only was the king loved by God as he was a wanderer on earth : by what reason then shall we call ourselves citizens ? We are wanderers be- cause one after the other we depart hence ; we migrate from age to age. Like all the stars that come from the East, although they are possessed of great brightness, nevertheless they tend to the West, and there, according to different cir- cles, some more slowly, some more swiftly, they hide them- selves from our view ; so also men. The stars seem to us to remain immovable, when, however, they travel most swiftly ; so also the days of man, as Job says, " are swifter than a courier." " They have passed by as ships carrying fruits, as an eagle flying to the prey" (Job 9 :26). No matter how fast a courier may hasten, yet at times he must rest ; but our years do not rest for a single moment. For when we wish to rest in sleep, we do not rest ; but like those sleeping in a ship, we are borne to our death. If, therefore, man, you are not a citizen of this world, but a stranger and a wan- derer, why do you build for yourself as though you were to remain here forever ? What means this accumulation of riches ? this desire for honors ? this love of fine clothes ? What would you say of a traveler who, knowing that he should constantly hasten to his country, in the meantime would invest in houses and lands ? Would you not advise him rather to buy gems and precious stones which he could bring to his home ? For this reason St. Peter admonishes us : " Dearly beloved : I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims to refrain yourselves from carnal desires" (1 Pet. 2:11). Let us as merchants buy what we can bring to heaven, good works — precious gems of virtues. II. Who art thou ? " A guest of one day," says Wisdom (5 : 15). Cicero says the life of man is like a guest. He comes to-day, enjoys himself, and departs on the morrow. When a traveler stops at a hotel (in Europe), he is asked what time he is to be called, and what time the light is to be brought — so man is scarcely born when he is warned of his 16 THIRD SUNDAY OF ADVENT. death — for in baptism, the lighted candle is placed in his hands, warning him to be like the prudent virgins, to be always ready for the last summons. In matrimony we have the words : " Till death do us part." What then are you ? "A guest of one day." How is this shown ? First — Many are sound and healthy to-day — to-morrow they shall be borne to the grave. I am not so old, and yet how many such have I seen ? How many have I heard that others saw ? How often has the blushing bride received her first kiss from death — her orange-blossoms changed to a funeral wreath — her wedding robe to a shroud ! Secondly — How small a portion of time belongs to life, if you take away what belongs to death ! Childhood and youth are not considered the life of man — they are the life of little birds ; besides, sleep consumes a third part of our lives, and is called by poets "the brother of death." How much of life is taken up with cares, trials and afflictions, so that one who lives to seventy can scarcely count twenty of them life. Thirdly — If we compare this life with eternity, it will ap- pear but a day ; and truly our life may be likened to the fish called Day, because it lives but a day, according to Albertus Magnus. How little do we think of the loss of a day ! And yet to that fish a day is everything. Although the compass of the heavens seems so immense, yet it perfects its course in one day ; so man with his life. Life is but a little while, as Christ says : "A little while and you shall not see me." Although you may live a long time and possess the goods of earth, not more than one day at a time is granted you ; only one now for your consolation ; for to-morrow you have not — yesterday still less, for you had it, and of to-day you cannot have more than a single instant at once. If you have great wealth, you cannot use it all at once. Such are things human and carnal, that before they have scarcely come they have van- ished. If, therefore, you are a guest of only a day on this earth, why do you prefer momentary to eternal goods ? If a guest for a day, why for a little pleasure do you purchase eternal torments ? If a guest for a day, why are you impa- tient in carrying your cross ? Why do you not make the best use of time preparing for eternity ? III. Who art thou ? " All flesh is grass, and all the glory thereof as the flower of the field " (Isaias 40 : 6). What is more perishable than grass ? What more feeble than & THE CHEAPNESS OF MAN. 17 flower ? In heat they languish ; in cutting they die. The most delightful thing is a green meadow, the most beautiful is a flower ; but that matters little, because when you take it in your hands it withers. " The grass is withered and the flower is fallen because the spirit of the Lord has blown upon it " (Isaias 40 : 7). The same author also says that the life of man is more frail than the flower or anything else. Glass is frail, but with care it may be kept a long time ; but man, no matter how he is kept, cannot last. The vase is fragile, but it is not broken by the mere touch ; but man perishes by one poisonous touch, one bite of a reptile. The flower is frail, but it is not destroyed by one gust of wind ; man is destroyed by one breath of disease. A bubble is frail, but it is not burst by a look ; yet man often succumbs to a poisonous look and dies. A pestilential odor, an infectious air, a torrid sun, a sharp winter, often take away life. If you ask of what did So-and-so die, you will be told a drink of ice- water, a sunstroke, from fear, from grief, a few drops of poison, a bone in the throat, the bite of a dog, etc., etc., etc. Why do clocks stop so often ? A wheel is out of order. If this happens in works of brass, how much more easily in the delicate mechanism of the human frame ? If, then, man, you are but a blade of grass, a flower, why do you not provide before death cuts you down ? Why do you sleep so long in your sins ? Why do you put off repentance ? If, while standing on a frozen lake, the ice should suddenly give way beneath your feet and you were immersed in the water, would you not cry out for help and seek to be saved, since death was staring you in the face ? You surely would not laugh and jest. Why not then, during life, seek help in penance, since in a most frail body you see yourself daily in danger of death, and nothing between it and you but thin ice? IV. Who art thou ? "A. leaf that is carried away with the wind " (Job 13 : 25) ; that is, living an uncertain and doubtful life. As a leaf always trembles on a tree, and at length falls or is torn from it, so the life of man always fluc- tuates, and in course of time is either violently taken away or quietly ceases. Solomon says : ' ( Man knoweth not his own end ; but as fishes are taken with the hook, and as birds are caught with the snare, so men are taken in the evil time, when it shall suddenly come upon them " (Ecclesiastes 9 : 12). Another wise man says man is a bubble, frail and evanescent. 18 THIRD SUNDAY OF ADVENT. Some linger a while and then vanish to be succeeded by others at intervals. Among men, some die before birth, some in infancy, some in childhood, some in old age. Some die suddenly, some by fire, some by sword, etc, etc. If, there- fore, the end of life is so uncertain, what rashness for us to go on unmindful of the words of Christ : u Watch, because you know not the day nor the hour " (Matt. 24). Why is it that during war sentries are on guard day and night ? To watch for the enemy. And we are waging a continual war for a heavenly crown, and are our sentries always on guard ? — the five senses watching for our arch enemv, the devil ? V. Who art thou ? A fleeing shadow, " Who cometh forth like a flower, and is destroyed, and fleeth as a shadow " (Job 14 : 2). For as a shadow now is great, now medium, now small, and is nothing ; so man now is well, now sick, now joyful, now sad, now quiet, now disturbed, now doubt- ful, now certain, now timid, now bold ; now he laughs, now he weeps, now he wills, now he does not will. As the shadow before noon falls on the right of one facing the meridian, and after noon on the left, so man in the morning is good, and in the afternoon perchance becomes bad, and so will stand on the left of God. As the shadow precedes one receding from the sun, and follows one approaching it, so man in this life, now is exalted and precedes others, again he is humbled and follows others. Among the Eomans, a rod and bell were attached to the victor's car, and a crier followed calling out : " Look behind thee, remember you are a man," to admonish him that should he fall from his high state, he was liable to be put to death if he did not watch himself. The poets say that all men hang from the threads of the fates ; some from strong, others from weak ones ; some from a great height, others nearer the earth ; that is the common lot of all, for the threads to be cut, with this distinction, that the higher one hangs, the greater the tumult caused by his fall. This changeableness and inconstancy of man is known not only by those who serve the world, but even by the Saviour himself, who despised the world. When enter- ing Jerusalem, he was received with loud acclaim ; in the evening he was deserted. The people went before him with green branches, and four days after with these same branches dried they struck him ; they spread their garments in his way, and afterwards stripped him of his own to scourge and THE CHEAPNESS OF MAN. 19 to crucify hini. They cried out : " Blessed is he who cometh in the name of the Lord," and shortly after they called for his death : " Crucify him I" VI. Who art thou ? Universal vanity. " And indeed all things are vanity ; every man living " (Ps. 38 : 6). Man is all vanity, for whatever defects are found in other creatures, they are all found in man. All the imperfections of animate and inanimate creation are found in him. He suffers from heat and cold ; he hungers and thirsts, feels grief and pain. One dies on account of sin, another despair, another grief, another too much joy, another hunger, another fleeing from danger, another seeking dignities, another in battle, another in sleep, another from cold, another from heat, etc., etc. Every man is vanity. The king, surrounded by his sub- jects, the rich reveling in his wealth, the poor begging for bread, the wise man and the ignorant, the strong and the weak. St. Jerome says : " If every man standing and living is vanity, what about the man falling and dying and dead ? " FOURTH SUNDAY OF ADVENT. THE PRECIOUS DEATH OF THE JUST. I. The just freely die. II. They do not dread judgment. III. They joyfully enter heaven. "And all flesh shall see the salvation of God" (Luke 3:6). That which Isaias foretold in to-day's Gospel has already- taken place : " All flesh shall see the salvation of God " ; but it will happen again. It happened in the first coming of Christ, when all who wished saw Christ with their cor- poral eyes. It will happen again in his second coming, with this distinction, however : The just shall see him with the greatest rejoicing ; the wicked with the deepest sorrow. St. Gregory says : " When the heavens are opened, Christ shall appear on his throne of majesty surrounded by ministering angels with his apostles ; all the elect and reprobate alike shall see him — the just rejoicing in the gift of heavenly re- wards without end ; the unjust groaning in punishment for- ever. The same saint says that "the second coming of Christ is represented by that angel who, as a witness of the resurrection of Christ, terrified by the lightning of his coun- tenance the guards of the tomb, and gladdened by his snow- white garments the holy women, according to Matt. 28 : 3, "And his countenance was as lightning, and his raiment as snow." In lightning there is the terror of fear ; in snow the allurement of beauty ; as in the general resurrection Christ will come with the same countenance. " A column of fire by night preceded the people in the desert, and. a column of cloud by day." In fire there is terror, in cloud a gentle blandishment of vision ; day is the life of the just ; 20 THfi PREClOtTS DEATH OF THE JUST. 21 night the life of the sinner. Paul says to converted sinners : " You were darkness before, now you are light in the Lord." During the day the column was shown by a cloud ; during the night by fire ; because the mighty God will appear kind to the just and terrible to the wicked ; kind to those dying well; terrible to those dying without repentance." Thus St. Gregory. There are three gates through which the just enter when they leave this world : the gate of death, the gate of judg- ment, and the gate of heaven. Through the first they enter freely, the second confidently, the third joyfully. In the first gate, the love of the world could deter one, the desire of living, worldly cares, the snares of the devil ; in the second, the fear of judgment ; in the third, the fear of hell ; but none of these disturb the just. First — Through the first gate they freely enter, because there is nothing in this world they loved so much that they were not always ready to lose. Whatever they had in the world no more clung to them than a garment which is easily cast off without any regret. It is one thing to cast off the flesh of the body, another to cast off a garment ; this is done without grief, the former not without great torture. Those tied to the world, when they die, cast it off as though it were their very skin. How great will be their grief ! " Oh death, how bitter is the remembrance of thee, to a man that hath peace in his possessions " (Eccle. 41 : 1). On the other hand, those who love nothing in this world will find no more trouble in laying aside worldly goods than they would an old garment. When Cardinal Pole heard that Henry the Eighth had set fifty thousand pieces of gold as a price on his head, he won- dered at the insanity of the king, since he himself was tired of this life, and would as willingly lay it down as he would an old garment. St. Ambrose, speaking of the words, " Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord," says : " What dead one can die ? No one, unless he has received a soul beforehand. Those truly are blessed and those dead die in the Lord, who die to the world first, and then to the flesh." Secondly — Because they have fulfilled the days which they found full of miseries in this world. Whichever way they turned, they found calamities on all sides ; offenses against God, oppressions of the poor, daily funerals ; groans of the poor, quarrels of the rich ; enmities and strife, 22 FOURTH SUNDAY OF ADVENT. St. John (1 Epist. 5 : 19) says : (l They see the world seated in wickedness ; " that is, filled with every crime, where either the wicked only are, or the good are harassed by evils. Abraham is said to have died full of days, having had enough of living, and desiring to be dissolved. Jacob said : " The days of my pilgrimage are one hundred and thirty years, few and evil " (Gen. 47 : 9) ; that is, full of bitterness, trials and temptations. On the other hand, the wicked never die full of days ; and not in their time, as the Wise man says, for there never is a suitable time for them to die. St. Augustine says : " There are men who die with pa- tience ; but they are perfect, since they live in patience. He who desires that life, when the day of death shall come, patiently tolerates death ; but he who desires to be dis- solved and be with Christ does not die patiently, but lives patiently, and dies with the greatest delight." Thirdly — Because they pass from labor to repose, from war to peace. Not without reason is death often called sleep by the apostles, and by Christ himself when he said that Lazarus and the girl were only sleeping. Also by St. Luke when he wrote that St. Stephen had gone to sleep, and also commonly called by the Christians, who name their burial places cemeteries, that is, dormitories. As one after a day's labor gently rests in sleep, so the saints, after the trying labors of life, in death rest as in sleep. " Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord. From henceforth now, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labors" (Apoch. 14:13). " Sleep is sweet to a laboring man whether he eat little or much ; but the fulness of the rich will not suffer him to sleep " (Ecclesiastes 5 : 11). In like manner the sleep of death is sweet to the just man working well, fatigued by labors, be he rich or poor. To those who do not labor it is difficult and restless. Nor is peace less welcome to the just after so many wars of tempta- tions, who are never out of battle ; for they have either ex- ternal enemies or, where they are wanting, internal ones. " Let peace come, let him rest in his bed that hath walked in his uprighteousness " (Isaias 57 : 2). This we ask when we pray for the dead : ' ' May they rest in peace." The just eagerly look forward to this peace, since it puts an end to all their struggles. Fourthly — Because liberated from prison they fly like THE PRECIOUS DEATH OF THE JUST. 23 little birds to liberty, for the body and the world is a prison to them. There were two captives in the prison of Pharao, a baker and a cnp- bearer, and they were both led forth to torments and death. As different was the leaving of each one, so the will of each was different. The baker went forth unwil- lingly, for he dreamed that he would become the food of crows ; the cup-bearer went forth rejoicing, for he dreamed that he would be restored to his former dignity. So the just willingly " shuffle off this mortal coil," but the wicked with horror and trembling, and only by force. The reason is be- cause the just dream that they will enter into eternal joys, the wicked that they will descend into hell and become sport for the demons : so that sinners, like pigs, must be forced to die. On the contrary, the just are said to prepare for death like Jacob. " He drew up his feet upon the bed and died" (Gen. 49 : 32). God said to Moses, the figure of Christ on Calvary : " Go up into this mountain, and die thou in the mountain " (Deut. 32 : 49). He did not say thou shalt die, but die. In like manner St. John entered his tomb ; St. Peter asked to be released from prison, St. Paul to be dissolved, and St. Francis, in the words of the Psalmist, "Deliver me from this prison to confess thy name ; the just wait for me until thou hast rewarded me." Fifthly — Because they die in peace and great tranquillity of mind. They do not fear the snares of the demons, be- cause they have nothing that can be taken from them. St. Hilarion, falling among robbers, had nothing to fear, be- cause he did not possess anything. So that the just man at the hour of death does not fear the devils, because he is free from sin and all earthly affections. Finally, temporal cares and disturbances of the mind do not oppress them as they do sinners ; so that, like Moses and Aaron, they die on the mountain, that is, in a quiet and peaceful mind ; the wicked, on the contrary, die in the valley of tears, of troubles and temptations. Hence many holy men die while singing. Simeon the just man, having seen the Lord, wishing to die, nay, as though already dying, sang : " Now dismiss thy servant, Lord, according to thy word in peace." St. Bernard's brother Gerard, when dying, sang the words : " Praise the Lord of the heavens, praise him in the highest," according to St. Bernard himself, in his funeral oration. 24 FOURTH SUNDAY OF ADVENT. Blessed Peter Celestine, having resigned the Pontificate, while" dying sang the Psalm : " Let every spirit praise the Lord." Sixthly — Because they suffer the pains of death with resig- nation. They are replenished with divine consolations by which God brings aid to them on their bed of suffering. " Thou has turned all his couch into his sickness " (Ps. 40 : 4). He turns the couch by bringing consolation to the sick. By virtue of the suffrages of the Church and of the sacra- ments, and the more fertile the soil on which they fall, the greater will be the fruit reaped. Possibly David foresaw this when he said : " By the fruit of their corn, their wine and oil, they are multiplied " (Ps. 4:8); in other words, by the fruit of the Holy Eucharist and Extreme Unction, they are strength- ened or grow so that they long for the embrace of death. II. First — They enter the second gate with confidence, because they sleep in the Lord, that is, in grace, and, as it were, in the bosom of God, their friend. " Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord." The angel, having frightened the guards at the tomb of Christ, spoke to the women saying: "Fear ye not!" as though he would say : " Let them fear who do not like the advent of heavenly messengers ; let them fear who, weighed down with carnal desires, despair of ever entering the society of the blessed ; but you, why do you fear since you behold your heavenly companions ? " So the just will have nothing to fear when they approach Christ their judge. If those coming home at night fear not when they can say to the guards : " Friends, we are your friends," so those coming to the gates of heaven, if they can say to the blessed : " We are your friends," will have nothing to fear. Secondly — Because they know that they shall not appear in the presence of God empty-handed, but full of good works. They die full of days, like Abraham, because, says St. Ambrose: "The life of the just has fulness, but the days of the wicked are empty." As Jacob sent gifts of sheep and cows to his brother Esau coming on the way, to appease him, so will the just send good works to meet Christ, the first- born, coming to judge us. Good works precede and follow the just to judgment ; precede with merit, follow with re- ward. Hence St. John : " Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord, for their works follow them" — like servants attending their master. Esau, seeing his brother's house- hold, his power and munificence, runs to embrace him ; so THE PRECIOUS DEATH OF THE JUST. 25 Christ will do with his servants — nay, his brothers. There the angels with all splendor shall exhibit the works of the just to Christ. III. Joyfully they enter through the third gate. They shall pass from a severe winter to a most delightful spring, for the Lord compares that time of transition to spring : " Now learn a parable from the fig-tree ; when its branch is now tender and the leaves come forth, you know that summer is nigh. So also you, when you shall see all these things, know that it is near, even at the doors " (Matt. 24). They cross the Jordan into Palestine ; that is, the river of judgment, into the land of the living. St. Bernard calls the death of the just the " Pasch, or Passover, because they die to the world that they may live to God." Because they pass from labor to reward ; from the battle to victory and triumph; from sowing to harvest. "The life of man upon earth is a warfare, and his days are like the days of a hireling. As a servant longeth for the shade, and as the hireling looketh for the end of his work, so I also have had empty mouths, and have numbered to myself wearisome nights" (Job 7 :l-3). St. Jerome says : " What a glorious day, when the Mother of the Lord, accompanied by a chorus of virgins, shall meet you, when after the Red Sea, and the horse and the rider have been submerged, she shall go before you with timbrel and song : " Let us sing to the Lord, for he is glori- ously honored, he has cast the horse and the rider into the sea ! " Then joyful Theckla shall fly to your em- brace. Then the bridegroom himself shall meet you, say- ing : "Arise, come, my precious one, my dove, because the winter is passed, and storms have disappeared." Then the angels shall say : " Who is he that, looking like the dawn, beautiful as the moon, elevated as the sun ? " Then the daughters and the qneens shall praise you. Then the little ones of whom the Saviour spoke by Isaias : " Behold, I and my little ones, whom the Lord gave me, bearing palms of vic- tory, shall sing: 'Hosanna in the highest: blessed is he who cometh in the name of the Lord/" As often as vain ambition of the world shall delight you, as often as you see anything glorious in this world, go in spirit to paradise, be- gin to be what you will be, and you will hear from your spouse. " Place me as a bower in your heart, as a seal on your arm " (Canticle of Canticles). SUNDAY WITHIN THE OCTAVE OF CHRIST- MAS OR THE NEW YEAR'S DAY. THE DIGNITY AND THE VENERATION OF THE HOLY NAME OF JESUS — THE AVOIDING THE ABUSE OF IT. I. A name full of mysteries. II. A precious name. III. A saving name. IV. A holy name. V. A terrible name. 11 His name was called Jesus, which was called by the angel, before he was con- ceived in the womb " (Luke 2 : 21). If any one receives a valuable gift from a dignitary — for instance a precious ring — he guards it very carefully, places it in an ornate and strong box, wears it and exhibits it with great pride. Thus Moses did when he received the heavenly manna from the hands of angels. He placed a portion of it in the tabernacle as a perpetual memorial and for the con- stant adoration of his people (Exod. 16). Likewise, when he received the tables of the law from God on Mount Sinai, he framed an ark of setim-wood overlaid with purest gold within and without, and there placed them to be preserved with becoming honor (Exod. 25). We have received from God a most valuable gift — a gift above all gifts, the soul- saving name Jesus, which, although belonging to our Divine Eedeemer alone, is communicated to us also. Where is the comparison between the manna, the tables of the law and the name Jesus ? " Your fathers ate manna and are dead ; this is the bread of life coming down from heaven ; if any man eat of this he shall not die" (John 6). The tables of Moses contained the law of God — the name Jesus contains the Lawgiver Himself. The manna and tables were deliv- ered by the hands of angels — the name Jesus was selected by God and announced to us by an angel (Luke 11). We should, therefore, most carefully guard this noblest of names, 26 VENERATION OF THE HOLY NAME OF JESUS. 27 and pronounce it with the greatest reverence. To this the Evangelist adverts in the words of the text. He wishes to say that the mouth pronouncing the name Jesus should be angelical — as it passed first from the mind of God into the mind of the angel, thence into the ears of the most holy Virgin Mary. Therefore the breast in which that name is preserved ought to be most pure and most richly adorned ; the mouth which speaks it ought to be an ark of setim- wood overlaid with the purest gold within and without. I. It is a name in Greek and Hebrew full of mysteries and of wisdom. It establishes us in faith and in every action in faith because it teaches us the mysteries of the Most Holy Trinity, and of the Incarnation. Of the Trinity, as the four- lettered Jehova is the name of God signifying three persons and one Godhead. The first letter is Iod — beginning, and signifies Father ; the second is He — life, and signifies Son, because " in him there was life " says St. John ; the third Vau — link, and signifies Holy Spirit, who is the link binding Father and Son ; the fourth He again, and signifies the unity of essence ; so in the name Jesus the first is Iod, signifying Father ; the second Schin, representing the Word ; the third Vau, representing the Holy Ghost ; the fourth Ain — fountain, representing the Deity, which is the perennial fountain of all those relations and ideas, nay more, of all things. It teaches the mystery of the Incarnation, because it sig- nifies Saviour and hence God Incarnate, for neither God alone nor man alone could properly be the Saviour. Not God alone, for then there would be no one to whom he could offer atonement ; not man alone, for he could not have the means for atonement. Saviour, not as regards one kind only or imperfect redemption, justification and glorification, but all kinds and perfect in every way. The name Jesus, therefore, signifies the most acceptable combination of the Divine nature with the human which the whole world needed so much and which the Prophets so earnestly longed for, as the Spouse in the Canticles says : "Who shall give thee to me for my brother ? " (8 : 1). The other names of God signify Creator — Being of beings — Judge, etc. ; but the name Jesus — God our Brother, Eedeemer, Justifier, Glorifier. It teaches us to direct all our actions, with Christ as our Leader, to our eternal salvation. (i All, whatsoever you do in word or in work, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ" (Coloss. 3:17). Poets tell that 28 SUNDAY WITHIN THE OCTAVE OF CHRISTMAS. Ariadne gave Theseus a thread for a guide lest in wandering in the labyrinth he should be lost. The world indeed is a real labyrinth beset with many and varied dangers, so that if we do not wish to err, if we do not wish to fall from justice and glory, let us carefully study what helps us to our salva- tion, let us follow God. When we pray, let us pray in the name of Jesus. When we desire anything, let us ask for it if it conduces to our salvation. Therefore, since this name is so full of mysteries and saving doctrines it is to be devoutly kissed. If St. Thomas Aquinas did not hesitate to say that he would not exchange St. Chrysostom's book on Matthew for the city of Paris, how much more should we venerate the name Jesus which St. Paul confessed (1 Corinthians, 2 : 2,) was all that he knew. II. It is a precious name. s( For you are bought with a great price. Glorify and bear God in your body " (1 Cor. 6 :20). So is the name Jesus bought by Christ at a great price ; — glorify therefore, and bear it with the greatest love and veneration. For as Jacob was no sooner called Israel, that is, seeing God, when he wrestled with the angel and was wounded by him ; — so Christ was no sooner called Jesus, that is, Saviour, than he was wounded by circumcision and shed his most precious blood for us. Although he lost then but a small quantity, yet it was sufficient for our re- demption ; besides it was a pledge of a more copious redemp- tion to be shown by his atonement and death, hence buy- ing the name at the highest possible price. If Alexander, wounded at the siege of Sicyon, on seeing the blood oozing from his body, exclaimed : "How dearly have you bought a renowned name ! " with how much more justice could Christ nailed to the cross say the same thing ? Who does not know how much more honorable are those names bought by virtue than those acquired by heredity — as the name Germanicus, which Justinian acquired by conquering Germany ; Africanus, which Scipio acquired by conquering Africa. So also the name Jesus, which Christ acquired through his passion and our liberation, for he no sooner received it than he began to suffer. Therefore, Christ is to be more glorified in the name Jesus than if he were simply called the Son of God — or the God of armies — the mighty Jehovah, etc., for these he has received by heredity — the former through the shedding of his most precious blood for us. When prostrate Saul asked the Lord who he was, he did not reply : " I am who J VENERATION OF THE HOLY NAME OF JESUS. 29 am — or I am the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob — but I am Jesus whom thou persecutest." If there is greater glory- in the name Jesus, it surely follows that it is a greater crime to abuse that name. If a precious balsam, ointment or oil, or such as is distilled from gems and pearls, be of such great value as to be kept in gold and silver vases and given drop by drop to the sick, how much more valuable the name Jesus ! ' ' Thy name is as oil poured out " (Cant. 1). Oil indeed drawn from the crucible of the cross ; dripping from the wounds and members of Christ; poured out, because offered and given copiously to the whole world to drink. But where Christ should receive more honor, there he receives less — the more copiously that precious oil is poured out the more it is despised and uttered by the mouths of men in ribald jokes and jests, detractions and blasphemies, as if it cost Christ nothing. " I am poured out as water " (Ps. 21:15). III. It is a salutary name. " For there is no other name under heaven given to men whereby we must be saved" (St. Peter, Acts 4 : 12). " Christ Jesus came into this world to save sinners" (Tim. 1 :15). Although, before the time of Christ, many were called by that name, not, however, as Christ, because neither by an angel nor by reason that they were to save a people from their sins, as the angel had told of Christ ; but on account of some temporal power which placed them over the people, as Joshua, because he was the future ruler of Israel and was to lead the people into the land of promise ; — Joseph, because he had saved a multitude of men from hunger and famine ; but Christ came to lead us to heaven and free us from the pains of hell. When Joseph appeared in royal state, announced by a herald, be- cause he had freed Egypt from the danger of famine, in such great reverence was he held that, wherever he went, all the people bent the knee before him (Gen. 41). "What should we do when it is proclaimed to us that our true and only Saviour is being borne along in that royal carriage of the name Jesus ? " In the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of those that are in heaven, on earth and under the earth" (Philip. 2 : 10). If the angelic choirs and the cohorts of demons, who were not redeemed by Christ as we were, bend the knee at the sound of that name, and adore it, what must be said of men who, when hearing it, not only do not adore it, but bring ridicule on it ? Certainly they must 30 SUNDAY WITHIN THE OCTAVE OF CHRISTMAS. count their salvation of little worth while they so hypocrit- ically carry their Saviour. As a person with a new garment, careless of its value, throws it here and there, unmindful of the cleanness or filth of the place, so does he act who carries the Salutary name with him. The name Jesus is the gar- ment of our salvation, in which only we can be pleasing to God, according to St. Paul : " For as many of you as have been baptized in Christ, have put on Christ " (Gal. 3 : 27). That garment is so precious as to have cost the blood of Christ. Whoever, therefore, despises it cannot fully realize its value. " You are bought with a great price, glorify and carry God in your body." IV. It is a holy name. " Holy and terrible is his name" (Ps. 110). He was so announced by the angel to Mary (Luke 1). "And, therefore, also, the Holy, which shall be born of thee, shall be called the Son of God." For this rea- son the blind man, having once called Jesus Son of David, did not repeat that sacred name, but was content with say- ing : " Son of David, have mercy on me." As the image of a king is to be honored because it repre- sents a king, so also is the name of God to be honored be- cause it represents God. It was the custom among some races to place the letters from their king upon their head and fall on their knees through respect. The Angles, with bowed heads and modest demeanor, paid homage to the empty thrones of their kings. St. Chrysostom says : " Among the Jews the name of God was so sacred that, as it was written on pieces of metal, no one was allowed to carry them around unless the high priest ; now, indeed, we all carry that name as if it were something common. " No one but the high priest, and that only once a year, dared pro- nounce that name ; and when the people heard him, they prostrated themselves on the ground, and whenever they met with it in the sacred writings, on account of their venera- tion, they never pronounced it, but said only Adonai. But the name Jesus represents to us not only the divinity, but also the humanity of God, and thence the benefit of the In- carnation, and in very truth more than the four-lettered Hebrew Jehovah. The Eomans considered it a crime to take the names of their tutelary gods, as Plutarch writes. It would be a crime against injured majesty for one to treat with- out respect the image of his king ; but a greater crime is it to profane with our lips the most sacred name of God — Jesus. VENERATION OF THE HOLY NAME OF JESUS. 31 St. Chrysostom says : " Do you know what God is and how he should be called ? Now how do we use the name which is to be honored above all names, which is the sweet- est to all on earth, which terrifies the listening demons ? " What shall we say of those people who stand with awe in the presence of an earthly ruler and pronounce his name with reverence, and when they hear the name Jesus spoken treat it with contumely, as something filthy and vile ? V. It is a terrible name. Terrible to the demons, who on hearing it flee and tremble. Terrible to all its enemies, as Saul discovered when on his way to Damascus to bind all who invoked that name (Acts 9). He fully understood for the first time what kind of name it was when, prone on the earth, he heard : " I am Jesus whom you persecute." Ter- rible, finally, to all who irreverently use it and take it in vain, as we read in Deuteronomy 5 : " Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain ; for he shall not be unpunished that taketh his name upon a vain thing. - " What an appendage of threatening did God place as he foresaw how prone men would be to this vice, how very com- mon would be the irreverence for this divine name ; there- fore, to deter them, he added threats to his commands. Wisely does Ecclesiasticus admonish us : " Make a balance for thy tongue ; " to weigh, as it were, the words before they leave the mouth, so that we may escape punishment, after the manner of bakers who are bound by law to weigh their loaves of bread before they place them in the oven, that they may be neither heavier nor lighter than is allowed. So ought we weigh our words before they are placed on the tongue and publicly uttered. Consider well how all your idle, jocose and irreverent words are weighed in God's bal- ance and what punishment they deserve. St. Chrysostom tells that a certain preacher, from force of habit, was continually moving his right shoulder, and to cor- rect himself he placed a sharp sword on it, so that the fear of being wounded might prevent him from moving that member. Let us do likewise by placing the sword of God's punishment on the tongue, and thus break ourselves of that filthy and damnable habit of taking the holy name of Jesus in vain. It will not avail you to say that you do this by force of habit, and not with any bad intention, no more than it would excuse the thief, when caught, to say he stole from force of habit. The greater will be his crime the more he 32 SUNDAY WITHIN THE OCTAVE OF CHRISTMAS. has been accustomed to steal. " Be not deceived, God is not mocked. For what things a man shall sow, those also shall he reap" (Gal. 6 : 7,8). If, therefore, by yonr tongue you shall sow scurrilities, blasphemy, contempt of God and derision of divine things, you shall reap the derision of a deriding God. FIRST SUNDAY AFTF EPIPHANY. HOW MUST CHRIST OR HIS LOST GRACE BE SOUGHT ? I. The loss of Christ must be acknowledged. II. We must retrace our steps by the examination of conscience. III. We must grieve for the lost one by contrition. IV. We must return to Jerusalem by a firm purpose of amendment. V. Christ must be sought among the doctors by confession. VI. Three days of satisfaction must be spent. VII. When found, he must be carefully guarded. " Thy father and I have sought thee sorrowing " (Luke 2 : 48). There were two trees in Paradise, by which the life of man was to be either lost or preserved — the tree of death and the tree of life : no one was to die unless he had tasted of the tree of death ; no one was to be saved unless he had tasted of the tree of life. For a like reason there are in the Church two trees as it were, by which the grace of Christ is either lost or found — sin and penance ; Christ cannot be lost except through sin, nor once lost can he be found unless through penance. I. The loss of Christ or his grace must be acknowledged ; sins must be acknowledged. The parents of Christ, although at first they did not notice his absence when they left Jeru- salem, soon, however, perceived it during the homeward journey. For the same reason when we commit sin we do not ordinarily advert to the loss of Christ. Let us at least advert to it afterwards while we are in a position to merit, for when we come to judgment it will be of no avail to ac- knowledge sin. Unless we acknowledge it we will not seek Christ, for no one seeks that which he knows not he has 33 34 FIRST SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. lost. Wisely Seneca remarks : " The knowledge of sin is the beginning of salvation, for he who does not know that he sins is unwilling to be corrected. You should discover before you amend." St. Bernard, in his epistle to Innocent, says : " He does not seek to be released who is ignorant of his captivity." If we do not seek to be released, we do not grieve that we are captives. Secondly, if we do not acknowledge the loss of Christ we will not glorify God nor will we give thanks for graces re- ceived. For this reason Christ asked the blind man what was it he wished, so that before he could be cured he should acknowledge his blindness and the benefit of the cure. Many are spiritually blind and foolish because they do not see their defects. Seneca writes about his foolish wife Har- paste : " She does not know that she is blind, and she asks her preceptor to take her out for a walk, for, says she, ' it is dark/" This same happens to us. No one believes himself avaricious — no one covetous. The blind seek a leader — we wander about without one, saying: "I am not ambitious, but nobody else can live in Rome ; it is not my fault that I am passionate, for I have not yet reached a certain period of life ; youth does these things." How we deceive ourselves ! It is to be regretted that many live not only for a day but for a whole lifetime without Christ ; they never advert to it, never say to themselves : " Is God with us or not ? " Where- fore St. Gregory, commenting on Job 4, says that the wicked are consumed by their sins as a garment is consumed by a moth — without feeling. " They shall be consumed as by a moth." " A moth," he says, "does damage, but makes no noise ; so the minds of the wicked, because they neglect to consider their iniquities, unknowingly lose their integrity." Therefore, do not expect help from Christ, if you do not know you are sick — do not think that you have found Christ, if you do not know that you have lost him. II. We must return by the way we traveled without Christ, that is, our sinful life must be scrutinized by the ex- amination of conscience. The parents of Christ, knowing him to be missing, came a day's journey and sought him among their relations and friends. In the same manner must you traverse the roads of your life on which you have walked, and examine the familiar places in which you have lived, the persons with whom you were accustomed to asso- ciate, — parents, relatives, friends and neighbors. Consider HOW MUST CHRIST OR HIS LOST GRACE BE SOUGHT? 35 what yon said, what yon did, what you thought ; you must travel everywhere, saying with the Spouse in the Canticles : " I will rise and will go about the city, in the streets and the broad highways I will seek him whom my soul loveth." But what need, you will say, of such a rigid examination ? Is it not enough, if I am ready to confess those sins which occur to my mind ? By no means — for we must use all our en- deavors to fathom the most secret sins in our heart, in order to detest them and avoid them for the future ; for how can we entirely destroy that which we know not to be in us ? When you have lost anything in the dark, you procure a light and search everywhere ; you sweep the house as did the woman in the gospel, and you are not happy till you have found that which you had lost. If you knew there were thieves in your house you would not be satisfied with pro- claiming the fact and berating them for their crime, but you would use your utmost endeavor either to banish them or to have them captured. Why do you not act in like manner with your soul ? How can your confessor expel your enemies who are destroying your soul, if you hide them from him ? If we wish to become worthy of the grace, friendship and espousals of God in very truth, we must wash away all the stains on our souls and become most pure and holy like Christ, the Spouse of our souls, and thus more pleasing to him. If maidens use every art to become more pleasing in the eyes of their affianced, what should we not do to make our souls acceptable to Christ, our heavenly Spouse ? If they consume a whole day in adorning themselves, should we not likewise spend an entire day in examining our con- sciences ? " His parents came a day's journey and they sought him sorrowing." III. We must grieve for the loss of Christ by contrition. But why is contrition or sorrow and detestation of sin re- quired ? Is not charity, faith or mercy sufficient ? These are not sufficient ; for charity demands that we grieve for our offense and make reparation to our friend ; faith demands that we seek a remedy through the virtue of Christ, that is, through the sacraments ; mercy demands that each one alleviate his suffering through penance. Therefore, contrition is required, first, that by it and detesting our sins we may repair the injury done to God. Tyrants urged the Christians to detest Christ and his cross, and show themselves his enemies and their idols' friends. Thus 36 FIRST SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. the king orders his subjects to break the treaty they had made with the enemy. Finally, with Job and Jeremiah, we curse the day we were born, that is, when we began to sin. Secondly, that by this grief we may revenge the sins in ourselves and strengthen our hatred toward them. For our heart is the source of sin and we afflict it as the culprit through sadness. For this reason the victorious commander orders all the fortresses in the captured towns to be destroyed. Thy heart, Christian, was the redoubtable fortress from which you waged war against Almighty God ; therefore it must be destroyed if you wish to recover lost grace. IV. We must return to Jerusalem by a firm purpose of amendment. In this way, with the parents of Christ, we ascend to the heavenly Jerusalem, whence we descended, when we promise to return to the path of God's command- ments, which we had before deserted ; so that with the Prodigal Son we can say : "I will arise and go to my father." Through this firm purpose we retrace our steps, which were leading us to hell, and Ave continue on our jour- ney to heaven. But what is the need of this firm purpose of amendment ? First, that we may detest our sins and excite God's mercy, by which he will receive us into his grace ; that, while we cannot offer him any past submission, at least we can offer future submission, as the debtor in the gospel, who was unable to pay the ten thousand talents because he had not them, promised to pay if his lord had patience. (t Have patience with me and I will pay thee all " (Matt. 18). Unruly children about to be punished promise their parents that they will behave in the future and their promise is accepted. Secondly, to prove to God that in the future we will not be enemies, but dutiful and obedient children. So the vic- tors despoil the vanquished of their arms, if they receive them as hostages, and these swear never again to join their enemies. We read that Mary of Egypt, while yet a great sinner, by divine power was barred from entering the Temple of Jerusalem on the feast of the exaltation of the Holy Cross, until she promised the Blessed Virgin that she would aban- don her licentious life. V. We must seek Christ in the temple among the doctors. Thus did his parents whom we will imitate if we hasten to church and tell our confessors, the doctors of the church, by what manner of sinning we have lost Christ. The Spouse seeking her beloved asks the guards of the city: " Have you HOW MUST CHRIST OR HIS LOST GRACE BE SOUGHT ? 37 seen him whom my soul loveth ? When I had a little passed by them I found him whom my soul loveth. " Likely the Blessed Virgin on reaching the gates of Jerusalem asked the guards if they had seen her Son passing through. On receiving a negative answer she entered the city and sought him in the temple in the midst of the doctors, the true guardians of the soul, not of the body, and they showed her Jesus. For this reason pastors and confessors are called guards of the soul. If, therefore, you wish to find Christ, you must seek him through his confessors. And as it is the duty of guards of the city to examine all as to whence they come and whither they go, so is it the office of confessors to examine those who wish to find Christ. But you may say, whjr should they know the secrets of my mind ? The answer is — Christ the Euler of the Church so ordered when he made them guardians of men and gave them the keys of the kingdom of heaven and the power of opening and closing, of binding and loosing. He did this, that by self -accusation we might merit his grace and indulgence. St. Augustine says : i( A humble confession of bad deeds is better than a proud glorying in good ones." By this means we are deterred from sinning. As the thorny hedge surrounding a garden prevents one from entering, so Christ wished to separate our life from sin by the thorny hedge of Confession. e ' I will hedge up thy way with thorns " (Osee. 2.) It is of no use to tell your confes- sor that you are a sinner, or to tell him only a few sins — you must confess all in specie and with their circumstances ; that is the bridle, these the thorns. VI. Three days must be given to seeking, for after three days Christ was found. First day of Contrition ; second of Confession ; third of Satisfaction. As Christ was found be- fore the close of the third day according to the more prob- able opinion of Euthymius and Cajetan, so by Penance Christ is found, although the third partis not yet completed but begun only by the promise of satisfaction. Christ wished that man should add this third day to the labor of penance ; first, that he might fully taste of the bitterness of sin, by which we lose our highest good. " See that it is an evil and a bitter thing for thee to have left thy God" (Jerem. 2). If every offense with its punishment were to be remitted at the first groan, we would not know how much gall and poison were hidden under the honeyed surface of sin. Therefore 38 FIRST SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. we are subjected to various miseries and afflictions so that w© may know, from the little remains of pardoned sin, what a severe punishment awaits those who have not been forgiven. Secondly, that by this means we may radically destroy sin, using the necessary antidotes : — fasting against gluttony, alms-giving against avarice, etc. Confession alone does not destroy these roots nor bad habits. VII. After Christ has been found he must be carefully guarded lest he be lost again. Thus when the Blessed Virgin found her Son she brought him home and never lost him after. In like manner did the Spouse in the Canticles : " I have found him whom my soul loveth, I held him and will not let him go till I bring him into my mother's house and into the chamber of her who bore me." We must establish Christ in our souls — fleeing the occasions of sin, strengthening the mind with serious resolutions and pious thoughts and medi- tations on the love of God and our last end. Let us carefully examine our consciences daily, and if it be necessary to min- gle with the world, let us never go without Christ. What profit will it be, after having with so much labor sought and found Christ, to lose him ? What profit, if you be unable to find him, if he be finally lost ? The blessed cannot lose Christ ; the damned cannot find him ; but we are able to lose, and when lost to find, him. What profit in this life if, preoccupied with the thought of death, we cannot find time for penance ? What profit if, having fallen into the abyss of sin, we neglect to seek him, nay more, if we despise him, as the wise man says: "The wicked man when he is come into the depth of sins con- temneth (Prov. 18). There is an infinite space between Christ and hell — thence no one can return to him, no one seek him, no one find him. Therefore, if at any time we have gone to the tree of death, and there have lost Christ, let us go now to the tree of life — to the tree of penance and there find him ; but in order to hold him we must taste of the fruit of the tree of life — penance. As the tree of life cannot always prolong life unless tasted often, so neither the sacrament of Penance only once received if you should fall again. Frequent confession, then, is the sure means of keeping Christ with us and of receiving the necessary graces for the salvation our souls. SECOND SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. THE MUTUAL OBLIGATIONS OF MARRIED PEOPLE. I. Let the husband be the head of the wife, and the wife obey the husband. II. Let the husband honor the wife, and the wife the husband. III. Love between husband and wife. IV. Mutual help. V. Bear with each other's faults. " Woman, what is it to me and to thee ? (John 2:4). These words of the text our Divine Lord addressed to his mother, that they might serve as a wedding-gift to the newly-married couple. What better manner of speech can a husband use towards his wife than : ' ' Woman, what is it to me and to thee ?" in this sense : What must I do and what must you do ? If married people knew this and carefully pon- dered it, what a happy life they would lead ! In the kingdom of Mogor, on the wedding day, the prospective bride and groom repair to the cemetery and there seriously reflect how they will spend their new life. The cemetery indeed is the best school of discipline ; there is the potter's house (God's), where the Word of God is heard and where each one learns what he has to do (Jer. 18). But we shall conduct married people rather to the garden of paradise. I. St. Paul, 1 Cor. 11 : 3, says : " The man is the head of the woman," that is, he must rule and govern gently as the head rules its members. It directs them by its eyes, it moves and keeps them in place. Woman was made from a rib of man, not from the breast, lest she should precede him ; not from his back, lest as a servant she should follow him ; but from his side so that as one of his members she should obey him as the head. Hence, Adam calls her : " Bone of his bones." This power of head was given to man by God when he created him to his own image and likeness, that he should rule the earth and woman also. Therefore, in order to perform this office, he gave him greater knowledge, 39 40 SECOND SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. strength and power than to woman, to teach her, to rule and keep her in place, and thus he commanded Adam alone not to eat of the forbidden fruit. Adam soon exercised this power in communicating the same command to the woman lest she also should transgress ; also by giving the name to woman as to all other living beings to show that it belonged to the ruler to know the names of all whom he had subject to him and to assign to each one his office. You see, there- fore, by many arguments that man from the beginning was made the ruler and governor of woman ; but, as was said, a gentle one, not a tyrannical one, not against the precepts of God and his Church. Nay more, this power of man over woman is so natural that the contrary is plainly monstrous ; if for instance the woman were to rule the man she would be like those monstrosities of men who have their head below their shoulders, in their breasts ; the woman was made from a rib of man, which should be below his head and shoulders, and not above them. From this it follows that it is a great dis- grace for a man to allow himself to be deprived of his author- ity by his wife, no less than for one to allow himself to be stripped of his sword and wounded by it. To man the sword was given, and not to woman. This is no reason, however., for man to reject the advice of his wife ; it is often very profitable to follow it. If Henry II., King of France, on the occasion of his sister Marguerite's wedding, had taken the Queen's advice to desist and be satisfied with his victories of the preceding day in the tournament, he would not have received a mortal wound, nor would he so truly have foretold his death when sending back word to her he said : " Just for this once and no more." Likewise the wife should be subject to the husband. "Thou shalt be under thy hus- band's power and he shall have dominion over thee " (Gen. 3 :16). " In like manner also let wives be subject to their husbands " (1 Peter 3 : 1). " But I suffer not a woman to teach nor to use authority over the man, but to be in silence " (1 Tim. 2 : 12). "A woman if she have superiority is con- trary to her husband" (Ecclesiasticus 25:30). A woman shows this subjection to her husband by obeying him in all things not contrary to the law of God. II. The husband should honor his wife. " Giving honor to the female as the weaker vessel and as to co-heirs of the grace of life" (1 Peter 3 :7). Although the man may be more distinguished and renowned as regards talent, strength THE MUTUAL OBLIGATIONS OF MARRIED PEOPLE. £1 and power than the woman, though more honored in his creation with many prerogatives, as to some, however, woman surpasses him. He was created outside paradise, she inside it ; she had God for a bridegroom, who iu a separate place from Adam, after he had taken the rib from him, " built the rib into a woman," that is, he constructed it with peculiar artifice and made it more beautiful and afterwards conducted her to Adam as his image, not as a creature of Adam, but as designed for him. By these ceremonies, he wished to show us that woman is not to be despised nor treated contemptuously by man. Finally, with great fitness, he created her from the side of Adam so that she should be his companion, as Adam himself declared : " The woman whom thou gavest me to be my companion, gave me of the tree and I did eat " (Gen. 3 : 13). God did not wish to make her from the head of Adam, lest she should despise him, nor from his feet, lest she should be spurned by him ; but from his side, so as to be his companion. God replaced Adam's flesh after the bone was taken, so that man should clothe himself with fitting meek- ness and moderation towards the woman and not with hard- ness of heart. ' ' Husbands, love your wives and be not bitter towards them " (Coloss. 3 : 19). The best reason, however, is that of St. Peter about weaker vessels ; for although a glass vase is far less valuable than one of gold, nevertheless it must be more carefully handled and guarded than the latter, be- cause it is more fragile. No less do husbands err who on the slightest provocation, with harsh and bitter words, scold their wives, while they gain no glory by railing at the weaker ves- sel, but rather do an injury to God because the wife belongs more to God than to man, who has the use only, not the dominion. Likewise the wife should honor the husband as her head and endowed with greater prerogatives by Almighty God. For this reason she was made, not from the right side of Adam, but from the left, the less honored ; for the same reason Eve was conducted to Adam, not Adam to Eve. Hence it is a reasonable custom for woman to walk on the left ; also for noble women to call their husbands lords ; as Sara obeyed Abraham, calling him lord. They should not complain to others about their husbands, nor expose their faults, nor exaggerate them. In this matter St. Monica, ac- cording to St. Augustine, was an excellent model. Much less should a woman dare to raise her hand against her hus- band ; this would be the same as for a pupil to strike his 42 SECOND SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. teacher, a soldier his captain. " A woman shall not be clothed with man's apparel, neither shall a man use woman's apparel, for he that doeth these things is abominable be- fore God " (Deut. 22 : 5). Is it not to put on man's ap- parel or to act the part of a man for a woman to strike him ? This is an abomination in the sight of God, and is as dis- honorable for the man as for the woman, no less than if a cat attacked a hunting dog. III. A husband should love his wife as part of himself, as his own flesh, even more than his own parents. "He that loveth his wife loveth himself ; for no man ever hated his own flesh ; but nourisheth and cherisheth it as also Christ doth the Church " (Ephes. 5 : 28, 29). As a reminder of this, Eve was made from the left side of Adam, on which side the heart is, so that man should bestow his love on his wife. This love should be genuine and sincere, not founded on the wife's beauty, riches, nobility, etc., for such love is built on sand and is soon swept away. It should be well- ordered — neither too much, nor too little. It will be too much when it is elevated above and against God, as in Adam, who, because of the woman, did eat ; it will be too little when it turns to hatred and is expended on others. It should be strong and brave so that man should be ever ready to expose himself to any danger for the protection of his wife no less than for himself, as Jacob did for his wives when he was going to meet Esau, whom he feared ; for he went a little ahead of them to defend them, as we read in Genesis 33. Likewise, after God, the wife should love only .her husband, and un- flinchingly stand beside him and study to preserve his safety, honor and his very life as the ribs guard and protect the heart. Let her be like Michol, the wife of David, who, know- ing that her husband was to be put to death by her father, persuaded him to flee, and let him down at the window, then placed a wooden image in the bed (1 Kings 19). Let her imitate those noble matrons who, while the Guelph Euler of Bavaria was besieged by Conrad III., besought the Emperor to allow them to leave the city unharmed, prom- ising that they would bear nothing away with them but what they could carry on their shoulders. Imagine his surprise when he saw each one of them, especially the Duchess, bearing her husband on her shoulders. He was so touched at the sight that all anger vanished, and he concluded a treaty of peace and friendship with his bitterest enemy. THE MUTUAL OBLIGATIONS OF MARRIED PEOPLE. 43 IV. The husband should provide for his wife and offspring, by his labor and industry, as St. Paul says : " Every one cherishes and nourishes his own flesh" (Ephes. 5). As the head transmits food to all the members, so should the hus- band to his wife and children. Woman was made from one rib only ; rib signifies fortitude and labor, and as all the ribs of man surpass one rib, so should the labor of the husband exceed that of the wife. For this reason Adam was placed in the garden of paradise to guard and care for it — not so of the woman. Again, woman was made from the weaker side so that man should understand that it belongs to him to provide for her. What a great crime is it then for the husband to throw, not only the greater part of the burden, but even the whole, burden on the wife. How disgraceful it would be for a man on horseback to be led by a woman ! In the flight into Egypt, Joseph is not pictured as seated on the ass, while Mary walked alongside. But rather the contrary. Why should a man marry a woman, if he is unable to support her ? Is he not like the man who started to build a house and was unable to complete it ? " This man began to build and could not finish" (Luke 14). Likewise the wife should be a help to the husband in the support of the family. " Let us make him a help like unto himself" (Gen. 2). The same help that a staff gives to a tired man under a heavy burden, the same should a wife give her husband. Eve was made from Adam asleep, not awake, to show that man has need of rest from his toil ; and the wife in the meantime should watch over him ; and on her devolves the care of the family while he is sick or absent, or even while he is lazy and negligent. Hence woman took her name from man — Isch Ischa-man — masculine woman. It is a great error for those who say : It is enough for me to bear children and then rest ; let the men work. A household with such a spirit reigning will soon come to naught. Such women are like the asses mentioned in Job 1 : "And the oxen were ploughing and the asses feeding beside them, and the Sabeans rushed in and took all away." There is still greater misery in store when the wife becomes worldly and squanders the hard earnings of her husband. Of him it may be said with Aggaeus 1 : " He that hath earned wages, put them into a bag with holes." The spendthrift wife is such a bag whose only desire is the latest fashions, cost what they 44 SECOND SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. will ; who would starve rather than be without the newest bonnet. V. The husband should bear with the defects and infirm- ities of his wife. Let him remember that she was made from his bone, and for this bone he was given flesh, so that he might communicate his strength to her weakness and bear her infirmities. Let him remember that with reason Eve was conducted first to Adam as his betrothed before he married her, as the spouse appears before her beloved that he may deliberate whether he shall take her or not. Therefore, Adam was to blame when he tried to shift the responsibility of his sin by saying : " The woman whom you gave me for a companion, gave me of the tree and I did eat. " Did not the Lord lead her to him, did he not see her before he took her, and did he not then exclaim : " This now is bone of my bones ? " Does not each man freely and of his own accord enter the marriage state ? Let him then carry the cross which he has chosen. Let him overlook the trifling defects of the wife and strive by gentle reasoning to correct the graver ones. Let him answer a quarrelsome wife as Job did his scolding one : ' ( You talk like a foolish woman."" Likewise the wife should bear with the husband as she is subject to him, she should study his wishes as an inferior studies those of his superior. The rib bends itself around the heart ; so should the wife bend her will to that of her husband. The Spouse in the Canticles 8 says : " Put me as a seal upon thy heart." The seal does not accommodate itself so much to the wax as the wax to the seal, whose image it re- ceives because it is soft and impressionable ; in like manner the wife should be subject to the husband, pliable as wax and submissive to his will. This she will do by bearing in silence and patience with his defects and weaknesses. Let her learn a lesson from the lamb, true type of meekness, and be com- forted by the words of Isaias : ' ' In silence and in hope will be your strength." St. Chrysostom says : " The wife should be the port in the storm, but a tranquil port lest there the husband be shipwrecked." Since each has defects, let each bear with the other and, by mutual aid, strive to live happily lest they both come to ruin. Since man and wife are bound irrevocably, the more reason exists for each to study the dis- position of the other. By each one giving way to the other, and not being tenacious of his or her will, there can be no doubt but that harmony will prevail. THIRD SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. WHY GOD EEQUIKES SATISFACTION. I. Lest men should sin too freely. II. That by it they may destroy the roots of sin. III. More is required to repair than to make. IV. Justice demands it. V. Punishment should be commen- surate with sin. VI. Involuntary punishment should be suf- fered for voluntary faults. VII. We must be conformed to Christ. " But go, show yourself to the priest, and offer the gift which Moses commanded " (Matt. 8 : 4). We read in Judges 20 that, notwithstanding the great and repeated slaughters by the tribe of Benjamin, the Israelites came out victorious. How ? They first consulted the Lord whether they should go to battle, and he consented, saying to them : " Let Juda be your leader. " And forthwith they went to battle, and that day the children of Benjamin slew the children of Israel to the number of two and twenty thou- sand. Again Israel consulted the Lord — " yet so that they first went up and wept before the Lord until night." And he answered them : " Go up against them and join battle." Again they were defeated and lost eighteen thousand. " Wherefore all the children of Israel came to the house of God and sat and wept before the Lord : and they fasted that day till evening and offered to him holocausts and victims and peace offerings. And they heard : "Go up, for to- morrow I will deliver them into your hands." And the chil- dren of Israel set ambushes round about the city of Gaba, and they drew up their army against Benjamin the third time as they had done the first and second. And they were victorious. What lesson may we draw from this ? Juda, that is confession, is not sufficient. Confession with tears does not suffice, because satisfaction is wanting, and without 45 46 THIRD SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. which God is not appeased. God commanded you to con- fess your sins, but you do not immediately expiate them ; he commands you to weep for them by contrition, and yet you are not victorious ; it is orJy after you have offered holo- causts and peace-offerings by prayer and fasting aud alms- giving that your efforts will be successfully crowned. This is the lesson of to-day's gospel. The leper is sent to the priest to offer the gift which Moses commanded. Although you are clean, go, for there is yet one thing necessary — after your sin has been for given and your conscience purified, go, offer the gift of satisfaction. But, if by confession and con- trition the conscience is purified, what need is there of satis- faction ? I. Satisfaction is necessary, lest men should more freely sin if there were none enjoined. As those who can heal their wounds by certain drugs or hidden charms rashly fight with every one, and should they forget them are easily van- quished, the same thing would happen if the sinner did not bring with him the special remedy for the wounds of sin, that is, a sense of grief. Who should then be afraid of the dangers of sin, and how many consequently would perish if the remedy without any cost were so easily at hand. The Israelites placed a like foolish confidence in the Ark of the Covenant, as if its presence alone, without any exertion on their part, could destroy their enemies. When they were conquered by the Philistines, they returned to the camp, and the ancients of Israel said : " Why hath the Lord de- feated us to-day before the Philistines ? Let us fetch into us the Ark of the Covenant of the Lord from Silo, and let it come into the midst of us, that it may save us from the hands of our enemies. And when the Ark of the Covenant of the Lord was come into the camp, all Israel shouted with a great shout and the earth rang again/'' While they were shouting in the presence of the ark, instead of buckling on their armor and preparing for the conflict, the Philistines rushed upon them and literally cut them to pieces and cap- tured the ark. The Philistines, on the other hand, when they heard the shout, exclaimed with fear and trembling : " Woe to us ! Who shall deliver us from the hands of these high gods ? " And in the meantime they prepared them- selves for battle, urging each other : " Take courage and be- have like men and fight ; " and in this spirit they fought and were victorious. In like manner, if no satisfaction for WHY GOD REQUIRES SATISFACTION. 47 sins were required, many Christians would say : What use to avoid the graver sins ? Call the confessor and I will tell him all at once. But because the guilt of the temporal punish- ment remains, and must be expiated either in this world or in the next, the way is closed to him by his presumption. When Sennacharib, the king of the Assyrians, confided and gloried too much in his strength, the Lord said to him : " When thou wast mad against me, thy pride came up to my ears, therefore I will put a ring in thy nose " (Isaias 37 : 29). An iron ring is fixed in the nose of a wild ox, and the heavy trunk of a tree is tied to him, which he must drag after him, and by this means he is soon tamed. The Lord very wisely did this same when he fixed in the wicked sinner the ring of penance and tied to him the trunk of satisfaction, to be dragged along after sin had been forgiven. II. Satisfaction is necessary that by its works, as by anti- dotes, the root of sin may be destroyed. Confession indeed destroys sin but it does not uproot the bad habit contracted in the continuance of sinning. Wherefore, as after the disease, the relics and corrupt dispositions remain in the members, so in the sinner the habits formed by many acts remain, and unless they are destroyed by antidotes, easily draw you to your former sins. St. Gregory says : " The heavenly Doctor for each and every vice gives an antidote — for voluptuousness, continency — pride, humility — anger, mildness — avaricious- ness, liberality." Confessors are accustomed to do likewise in imposing penance. The Lord adverted to this when, after having washed the feet of his disciples, he dried them with a towel. A towel is made of three kinds of thread — prayer, fasting and almsgiving. Unless the feet are carefully dried after washing, they are easily soiled again, for the water adhering to the flesh, being mixed with dust, forms mud ; for the same reason, if the root of sin adheres to the affection of the sinner, when you remove the dust, the former objects of sin, instantly you gather mud. With this fruit God seems to have washed David's feet when, having forgiven him the sin of adultery, he delivered the child born of it to death. Why was the son given to death, unless because he too ten- derly loved him and this love might urge him on to other crimes. Therefore, do not wonder if fasting be enjoined for drunkenness, charity for avarice, mortification for carnal pleasures, for these seem to be the suitable remedies for the disease, 48 THIRD SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. III. Because more is required to restore fallen man than to create him. God without any labor created man perfect ; but how much did he suffer to redeem him ? In a short while, seven years, as we read in (3 Kings 6), the temple of Solomon was first built without strife ; but, after it was destroyed by the weighty sins of the Jews, it required forty years to rebuild it and that with armed force, as we read in (2 Esdras 4), that every one with one hand did the work and with the other held a sword. Such is the spiritual edifice, which is built in the salvation of souls, In baptism, regenerated without labor, we become, through the grace of God, his city and house. If, however, afterwards, by the advice of the devil, or by returning to our former sins, we fall again, and the victorious enemy by the fire of vice des- troys the walls of virtue, it is necessary to restore the build- ing of good works by a more earnest application of the sorrow of vigils and of a stricter life. It is more difficult to rid ourselves of known vices than unknown ones, and it is less labor to avoid the unknown pleasures of the flesh than to reject the known. A horse that you have never driven to a certain stable will easily pass it by ; but if you once drive him to it, he will always want to go to it, when you go that way, unless you use the whip. He does not need the whip of penance who has not entered the stable of the devil ; but he is greatly in need of it who has entered only once ; how will you turn away your flesh, untrue horse, unless you use the whip of affliction ? ' ' I will go after my lovers who give me my bread, my water, my wool, my flax, my oil and my drink" (Osee 2 : 5). But listen to God's answer in the next verse : " Wherefore, behold I will hedge up thy way with thorns, and will stop it up with a wall and she shall not find her paths." IV. That judicial process should be observed. For when the sacrament of penance in a tribunal of conscience is ad- ministered, no justice admits that he who trampled on the received grace of Christ should be restored by that sentence of the judge without any punishment, for certainly he has the annexed obligation of satisfaction lest the force of justice be brought to bear. "For whom the Lord loveth he chas- tiseth and he scourgeth every son whom he receiveth " (He- brews 12 : 6). Hence the beautiful distinction as to the man- ner of treating a son who remains faithful and the one who runs away. The father chastises the former, that is, he repre^ WHY GOD REQUIRES SATISFACTION, 49 hends by word, for that is properly to chastise according to Apoc. 3 : 19 : " Such as I love, I rebuke and chastise/' from mere anxiety for the good of the son. The latter is sub- jected to more severe punishment if he returns to his father, for if he is scolded who remains, most justly should he be scourged who deserts him. Wherefore David, although ap- peased, had ordered Absalom to be recalled to Jerusalem, however he would not allow him to appear in his presence for two years. This Absalom looked on as the greatest pun- ishment, so much so that he preferred to be put to death rather than be any longer deprived of the sight of his father. Since it is very ungrateful for a son to leave the best of fathers and go over to the enemy, the indignation of that father is justifiable when he chastises that son on his return. V. Because since there are two things in sin, a turning away from God as our last end and a turning to the creature who is wickedly placed before God ; therefore, besides the punishment inflicted for turning away from the Creator, the punishment of the senses was decreed against the sinner turning to the creature. Listen to Jeremiah speaking in the person of God : "For my people have done two evils. They have forsaken me the fountain of living water, and have digged to themselves cisterns, broken cisterns that can hold no water. . . . Thy own wickedness shall reprove thee, and thy apostacy shall rebuke thee " (2 : 13, 19) ; that is the punishment of the senses and the punishment of the damned. See how a twofold punishment is fitted to a twofold crime. But since, according to St. Augustine, to sin is having spurned the unchangeable good to ad- here to the changeable, how are there two evils, a turning from God and a turning to the creature, and not rather one only ? If a servant flees from his lawful master, he seems to commit only one crime. Certainly so. But if he flees from the best and kindest of masters to the most vile and most cruel ? Does he not double the fault by leaving his lawful master, acting against justice and right, and going to a most contemptible tyrant ? The Lord says : " They have left me their highest good and have gone to idols ; " and since they are nothing they cannot aid them, they only can drink the turbid and fetid water of vice. The Lord said to Adam : " Because thou hast eaten of the tree whereof I commanded thee thou shouldst not eat, cursed is the earth in thy work : with labor and toil shalt thou eat 4 50 THIRD SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. thereof all the days of thy life. Thorns and thistles shall it bring forth to thee " (Gen. 3 :17). If God forgave the sin of Adam, why not also the punishment ? Why did he not leave him in Paradise, unless that it were just that he should taste the fruit of the tree which he had preferred to God ? Thus, when one repents, he eats the bitter fruits of sin — satisfaction, which he himself had chosen. The same thing is seen in David, whose child, born in adultery, the Lord kills as a punishment ; so that in the death of the child David should taste the fruit of his licentiousness, prone on the earth weeping and fasting. Nathan did not say to penitent David : God has remitted thy sin — but he has transferred thy sin from thy eternal death to the temporal death of thy son ; he has changed for thee scorpions into stripes, the ser- pent's poison into wormwood, that at least you should taste the fruit of your sin. VI. That voluntary sin should be atoned for by involuntary punishment, as Gerson says. Although the intellect of man inclines to the honest good and orders it to be chosen, hav- ing put aside the pleasing as noxious ; the sinful will, how- ever, as by mere rashness and lust having left the better, that is, the honest, selects the less good, the pleasing. Wherefore, that this rashness of a depraved will should be deservedly punished it is proper that it be forced to undergo something which it naturally flees from. Balaam's ass was a type of this, for when she saw the angel with a drawn sword on the road, she turned aside and went through the field ; but Balaam beat her till she returned to the road, and there she found the angel again in a narrow place between two walls and she was unable to turn aside. The same with sensuality leading a man to sin against God. When he adverts to the threats of God warning him not to proceed, because its way is perverse and leading from God, what does it do ? It leads him through the field of delightful good so that, in some way having forgotten the injunction of God, he rushes freely into sin. If he returns through penance to the road of virtue, he will find him from whom he fled — the sword of satisfaction, and he will go where he does not wish to, who went where he should not. VII. That we may be likened to Christ, who satisfied for us, and so apply his satisfaction to ourselves. If one wishes to draw to himself the juice of the merits of Christ he should be likened to him in his passion, Christ, without a doubt, WHY GOD REQUIRES SATISFACTION. 51 satisfied for us, but only as to sufficiency, not efficacy, for to this second our cooperation is required. If you wish to drink you must first let down the bucket to draw the water, then pour it into your pitcher, place that on your shoulder and carry it home. Christ has prepared for us a well of saving water to eternal life — a well of his merits, not only sufficient for us, bat over- flowing. But, because you see the well before you, do you immediately drink ? Lower first the bucket of your heart and draw the water of contrition ; then by confession pour forth your heart as water ; finally place it on your shoulder and by satisfaction carry your sin. Christ surely carried your iniquities when he carried the cross ; but do you not read that Simon the Cyrene was forced to carry the cross after Jesus ? as though he lifted the lighter part while Christ had the heavier. Unless you likewise carry it and lift at least the lighter part you cannot apply his passion to yourself. Samuel, by prophetic spirit knowing that Saul was coming to be anointed king, ordered a shoulder of mutton to be kept from his dinner, saying : " Behold, what remains I place before you, eat." The shoulder is the member of labor ; Christ, after the supper of his passion, places it before you to carry the burden of penance. Christ by the cross redeemed all ; but there remained for him, who would be saved and reign with him, to be crucified. " If we suffer with him, we shall reign with him/' says St. Paul. Therefore, if one wishes to obtain a complete victory over sin, his greatest enemy, he must not be content with mere confession, and the shedding of tears of contrition ; he must besides add fasting and other works of satisfaction ; by these sacrifices he pleases God so that, not only the sin itself is remitted, but also the punish- ment due to it. FOUETH SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. THE MISERIES OF HUMAN LIFE. I. Miseries of the body : — Nakedness, weakness, inconstancy, a perpetual wave. II. Miseries of the soul : — Perplexity and in- stability, continual anxiety, ignorance and inconstancy, rebel- lious passions, burden of sin. III. External miseries: — Ca- lamities, snares of the devil, fear of death, fear of judgment of God. " Lord, save us, we perish " (Matt. 8 : 25). We see the state of human life depicted as by an artist's brush in to-day's gospel when we see Christ with his disciples sailing on the sea of Tiberias. What is a boat, but the body of man ? who sails in it, but his soul ? what is the sea, but the world ? what is the port whence we start, but the ma- ternal womb ? what is the port whither we are tending, but the grave ? Wherefore St. Gregory says truly : " Our life is like a sailor." The damned in hell bear testimony to this as we read in the Book of Wisdom (5 : 10) : " As a ship that passeth through the waves, etc., so we also being born forthwith ceased to be." This is confirmed in the very birth of man, in which the umbilical cord, which binds him to the mother as a ship to the shore, is cut. When the ropes are cut the ship sails out into the deep ; so the child goes forth into the world. I. Miseries of the body. When a ship is launched she is without covering, unarmed and empty, without sails, motive power, provisions, etc., so man comes into the world naked and helpless, weak and ignorant ; neither can he speak nor help himself, nor ask help from anyone ; he can only cry out as though declaring his miseries. Other living beings are born with their coverings, some with their scales, some with feathers, some with hair, some with wool, as trees are covered 52 THE MISERIES OF HUMAN LIFE. 53 With bark. Soon after birth they know how to prepare food, they swim, fly, crawl, run, and without any guide they find the mother's breast ; man alone comes into the world naked, exposed to all the storms of heaven ; he cannot eat unless he is taught ; he does not know how to walk, he must be carried ; he does not know his parents ; he does not reach the age of reason till about seven years ; he does not laugh till forty days after birth ; he cannot defend himself till he is in robust health. 2. As a ship is a fragile pile of wood, of beams or joists put together with spikes, a pile that is easily damaged and rent asunder ; so the body of man is made of bones and nerves, as Job says, weak and infirm. A pestilential odor, an infectious air, a burning sun, a fierce winter easily pros- trates it and often causes death. One dies from a drink of cold water, another from too much wine, another from grief, another from imaginary fear, another from the bite of a serpent, etc. I shall say nothing of everyday infirmities, which must be expelled by medecines from the system else death will ensue. 3. As a ship is always restless on the waves, never remaining in a fixed place, so the body of man is subject to change ; in infancy it is four-legged, in old age, three-legged, in middle-life, two-legged ; flourishing and beautiful in youth, fading in manhood, gray-haired and homely in old age. " Man born of woman, living for a short time, is filled with many miseries. Who cometh forth like a flower and is destroyed, and fleeth as a shadow and never continueth in the same state " (Job 14 : 1, 2). Child- hood is weak in both body and mind ; youth is weak in mind, strong in body ; old age is weak in both body and mind ; as a ship is narrow in the bow, wide in the center and narrow again in the stern. Childhood is cunning and sweet, youth and manhood serious, old age morose. 4. As a ship in its course is always tending with utmost speed to its destined port, although the sailors may eat, play or sleep ; so our body is continually tending to death ; and as the ship is propelled by each stroke of the engine, so our body by each, beating of the heart. Hence, St. Gregory says : " He who sails, stands, sits, lies down, walks, because the ship is mov- ing ; so with us, whether asleep or awake, silent or talking, every moment of time, we are moving to our end." In the meantime, deceived by self-love, we do not know that we are rushing to death more swiftly than the east wind ; we think that others will die soon, that we shall live a long time, 54 FOURTH SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. as though our life were at our disposal. St. Jerome says : " Daily we die and daily we are changed, and yet, against faith and experience itself, we believe that we are eternal. There is no one so broken down in old age, who does not be- lieve that he has another year to live. II. If we consider the mind of man, we shall see that it resembles the captain of a ship who rules all on board. He has his own miseries. He has narrow quarters, must be con- tent in a small cabin, even though he were a prince. So the rational mind, born for the highest good, dwells within the narrow confines of the human body and is, therefore, always restless, seeks higher things, envies those who are better, and finally is not satisfied with any created object. No one desires to exchange his state with another ; he thinks that he is happier. Farmers say merchants are happy, and mer- chants say farmers are happy. The private citizen envies the honors of a judge ; the judge envies the rest and quiet of the citizen. Clerics hold that the state of lay people is more secure and tranquil, and lay people hold the opposite. There is no one content with his lot. How many emperors and kings have abdicated the throne ! As the sick are always restless in bed, now turning this way, now that, seeking rest but never finding it, because they do not know that the cause of their unrest is an internal malady, so with mortals. A man says : " And whereas, I have all these things, I think I have nothing, so long as I see Mardochai the Jew sitting before the king's gate" (Esther 5 : 13). Man was born for eternity and therefore cannot be satisfied with the temporal. 2. The captain is always anxious about his ship, how he shall govern it, how provide for the passengers, how defend it against hostile ships, how bring it with its cargo safely into port. So the minds of mortals are continually agitated by fear, sorrow and grief even without cause, so they can say with (Job 7 : 20) : " Why am I become burdensome to myself ? " How many hardships do mortals suffer in earning a living ! Do they not like the spider for years meditate, while they disembowel themselves with varions thoughts how they shall weave the net to capture the prey although it is vile and un- certain ? 3. He is ignorant of many things and for this reason he is upset in his calculations. Often he does not know whither he is going, whether he is to meet friends, or enemies. So also there is little light in the human intellect ; man knows THE MISERIES OF HUMAN LIFE. 55 a few things and is ignorant of a great many ; and what he knows, he soon forgets ; the unknown he learns with diffi- culty ; he desires to know more and this desire becomes a torture ; for the more he knows the more he sees he does not know. What shall I say about his inconstancy ; he changes every hour, he quickly departs from the opinion he had i formed ; when often he is most stupid, he believes himself • most wise ; now sad, now joyful, now calm, now excited, 'now timid, now brave, now he laughs, now he weeps. In a word, as the chameleon changes his color according to the variety of objects, so does man according to the various ideas which present themselves as (Job 14), says: "He never remains in the same state." 4. In olden times slaves were used to ply the oars on the ships, and at times they would mutiny against the captain, overpower him and take command of the vessel. So the human reason has five senses, then rebellious passions bound to the body ; — love prefers itself to some and desperately adores others ; hate scorns salutary things and sometimes it- self and God ; concupiscence revels in harmful, foolish and useless things ; hope promises itself, that which will never come ; fear is dissolved in idleness and dreams of dangers where they are not ; rashness rushes into all dangers of dam- nation ; anger is insane etc., etc. 5. The weight of overloaded merchandise bears heavily on the ship, so that the captain, to save himself and crew, is often obliged to throw it overboard. So the mind of man is op- pressed by the weight of sin, and the heavier it becomes the longer he lives. If he does not wish to imperil his salvation, he should get rid of it by penance, and resolve to lead a new life. Often this load of sin becomes so heavy that some men cannot bear it, and therefore commit suicide and plunge themselves into the dreadful abyss ; others are always in a drunken stupor, so that they cannot see the gravity of their sins ; others, conscious of their crimes, are like fugitives running hither and thither, and even from themselves ; others, overcome by grief, willingly forsake their crimes. III. If we look outside the ship, we shall see dangers. 1. Storms by which the sea is lashed into fury and the ship is hurled on the rocks or driven to hostile shores, or tossed about far from land until provisions give out, and they must fight against hunger and thirst. In like manner external calamities ruffle the life of man : pestilence, wars, 56 FOURTH SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY. hunger, slavery, earthquakes, fires, robberies, etc. But the very calm itself and prosperous winds very often bring dan- ger to him : — plenty, power, health, etc. By these he is carried out into the deep and forgets his God, and at length is shipwrecked ; by these adverse winds he is hurled into the slough of weakness and despair. These two states play with man as the waves with the mariner. 2. Enemies and pirates are met who must be fought, and, therefore, the ship must be well provided with arms and am- munition ; so each one must meet many enemies, who are always dangerous. He meets the pirates, those devils who always infest the sea of life, most cunning, most powerful, and most cruel. Then men themselves who are wolves and cut-throats ; then, not only the larger and more ferocious an- imals, lion, tiger, bear, etc., but the smaller ones, flies, gnats, frogs, etc. 3. The mariner meets rocks and other impediments to re- tard his course. So the life of man is set in the midst of nets, with which the world is so filled, as St. Anthony once saw it that, overwhelmed, he cried out : " Lord, who can escape all these nets ?" Such nets are : honor, money, pleasure, wine, woman and song, which withdraw some from progress in virtue and draw others to themselves and hold them fast, and at length shipwreck them. Hence it is that so many souls perish daily ; there is no security anywhere ; as a ship is perfectly safe only when she is drawn up on the beach, so man is safe only when he has departed this life. 4. The fear of shipwreck is always before the mariner's eyes ; he is only a short distance from death. Certain phil- osophers doubted whether the mariner should be placed in the number of the living or the dead. Another called mar- iners twice dead. For the like reason, it cannot be but that death, than which nothing is more certain, is always before the eyes of man. Shipwreck is certain for him. Some suf- fer it in their mother's womb as in port ; some in infancy when they are launched on the sea of life ; some on the high seas in middle age ; some in old age. And as mariners perish from various causes : rocks, enemies, storms, etc., so mortals from various causes cease to live ; some by a violent death, some by a natural one. As the ship was bare and empty when it was launched, and again was empty when it reached port, so the same is said of man. " As he came forth naked from his mother's womb, so shall he return, and THE MISERIES OF HUMAN LIFE. 57 shall take nothing away with him of his labor" (Eccles. 5 : 14). As a reference to this, of the twelve precious stones placed in the crown of the king of France, the most con- spicuous is the onyx, resembling the color of the earth, that he may know he is to return to earth, whence he came, and that a king is nothing else while he reigns than elevated earth. That is the greatest misery of all when men live so securely as though they were never to die, and they never give death a thought. 5. Mariners arc captives in the hand of God, so that at any moment he can destroy their ship and cast them into the deep, whence they can cry out with Job : " Eemember, Lord, my life is a wind." And although those who sail the seas seem to be exempt from the laws of men because they are out of their sight and power, as the fishes of the deep, yet they are not out of God's sight and power, who is most carefully watching them and all their actions. Jona strove to iiee from the face of G-od and betook himself to a ship, which was soon tossed about by a severe storm, and by the design of God he was cast into the sea and swallowed by a whale. So we are all in the hand of God. G-reat is our misery if we know that our Master is always standing over us with the rod ; greater still if we do not know how easy it is for him to destroy us. Whither shall we flee from the face of him whom we always carry with us ? Since these things are so, it is wonderful how man can be elated. How can one love the world and its miserable life so replete with bitterness ? How can we be without fear who navigate among so many dangers ? How many great reasons there are for us to cry out : " Lord save us, we per- ish ! " How seriously we should labor to have Christ always in our boat and to be constituted in his grace. SEPTUAGESIMA SUNDAY. INDUCEMENTS TO LABOK WELL. I. God animates us as often as he goes out. II. Our Christian profession. III. Good occasions. IV. Grace given for this. V. Reward promised. VI. Punishment for the idle. " Go you also into my vineyard " (Matt. 20 : 4). It is related that the King of Granata, on account of his love for a certain Ethiopian, was exiled to Alpuxara. At times he would stand on a high mountain and turn towards his na- tive land, would fall on his knees and weep most bitterly over the loss of his kingdom. His mother would chide him, saying that it was very proper and just for him and his fol- lowers to weep like women since they did not fight like men. The state of Christians is not unlike that of the unfortunate king. Paradise was formerly ours ; there we had full power ; there we had unalloyed pleasures and delights ; we had no fear of misery and death. But on account of our love for the abandoned Ethiopian — a vile creature — we were expelled from our kingdom and home, and reduced to slavery. There- fore we should often turn to the East, where paradise was, fall on our knees and give vent to our sorrow in groans and tears. This we do to-day while in the Office of the Church we recall the fall of our first parents, and the time of their wandering ; and therefore the canticles of joy ; Te Deum, Gloria and Alleluia are silent ; in the Introit we sorrowfully intone : " The groans of death have surrounded me, the sorrows of hell have surrounded me." And while we are thus lamenting, our Mother the Church, urging us to fight for the recovery of our lost kingdom, proposes to our consideration the story of the laborers in the vineyard. In the Epistle she says : " Thus run, that you may understand ; " and in the 58 INDUCEMENTS TO LABOR WELL. 59 gospel : " Why stand you here the whole day idle ? " why do you weep in vain ? Go to work, take up your spades, take up your arms and use every endeavor to recover your lost country. Unless you do this, you will surely weep like women, because you have not fought like men. Therefore, by a careful study of good works and by spiritual warfare we can recover all that we lost — nay more, a celestial paradise instead of a terrestrial one. I. To this God urges us by so many means and labors. The householder went out five times to seek and conduct la- borers into his vineyard. God goes out when he does any- thing outside himself, when he invites us by various calls, by the Scriptures, sermons, miracles, etc. If these goings-out are not laborious to God, that one was very laborious, in which, by his very self and in his own person, he descended to earth and for thirty-three years did nothing else than seek laborers, never resting from his journeys and even forgetting to eat when he was hungry. (i Jesus being weary with his journey sat thus on the well" (John 4:6). He asked a drink of water from the Samaritan, in the meantime forget- ful of food and drink, because he was seeking laborers. If we would consider all the labors God underwent for our sakes, who would not be animated ? who would not be urged to work well ? and this alone he asks of us. If parents labor so strenuously for the proper bringing up of their children, leaving nothing undone to provide for them, depriving them- selves of even the necessaries of life for their sakes ; should not the children, seeing all this, cheerfully respond and strain every nerve to profit by such noble self-sacrifice ? It often happens that the children of the poor advance more rapidly at school than the children of the rich, because they know how much it costs their parents to keep them there. It is God who with so much labor keeps us in the school of the Church ; who has gathered together all that is necessary for our eternal crown by many journeys, by great fatigue, by hunger and thirst, by his most precious blood ; who went out from heaven to visit us, who goes out often by various inspi- rations, especially in the Holy Eucharist. Should we not then cheerfully respond to such labor undergone by God for us ? If the parents should find that all their labor was in vain, that their children turned out to be lazy, good-for- nothing beings, squandering all they had accumulated in the sweat of their brow ; would they not have just cause for 60 SEPTUAGESIMA SUNDAY, grief ? What are we doing, they would say, for whom are we working, for whom do we suffer hunger and thirst ? Our children are idle, lazy, voluptuous, giving free rein to their passions — to the concupiscence of the flesh, the concupiscence of the eyes and the pride of life. Therefore, God in all truth could say of such children what we read in Eccles. 2 : 18, 21 : " I hated all my application wherewith I had earnestly la- bored under the sun. . . . When a man laboreth in wis- dom and knowledge and carefulness, he leaveth what he hath gotten to an idle man ; so this also is vanity and a great evil." II. Our Christian profession. We are bound by a special obligation to work well for God and to serve him by good works on the strength of our calling, in which we should imitate Christ our master, " who went about doing good and healing all." This is indicated in the gospel while the laborers were gathered together and sent to the vineyard ; for the householder did not select the men at court, the nobles nor the studious who might only walk around the vineyard and amuse themselves eating grapes, but laborers. Now there is no doubt but that we are invited to the vineyard, therefore we must be laborers in it. As Adam was placed in the garden of paradise, ({ that he might guard it and care for it," so we are placed in the Chnrch. What would the lord of the vineyard say if he saw those whom he called lounging around, and not working ? And we wish to be called laborers of God when we spend our lives with our own personal affairs and scarcely once in a day give a thought to our high and noble calling ! Are we ignorant of what God did with the fig tree that bore leaves only and no fruit ? Did he not say to it : "May no man hereafter eat fruit of thee any more forever." This tree is a type of the Christian man. It is more fruitful than other trees, bearing oftener than once a year ; so the Christian above all others should be produc- tive of good works ; otherwise he will be more severely pun- ished by God. After St. Bernard had become a monk, he was wont to ask himself : " Bernard, why have you come here ?" Let us ask ourselves the same question : Why have you come into the vineyard of the Church ? Why are you so taken up with secular pursuits as to be unmindful of your high calling ? Why does the Church prescribe fasts, con- fession, attendance at mass, etc. ? She wishes us to strive earnestly after Christian perfection. It will not suffice to INDUCEMENTS TO LABOR WELL. fa be Christian in name only — the fig tree bore leaves, and yet it was condemned. We must be Christians in deed and show by our earnest labors that we cheerfully respond to the divine call. III. Occasions, opportunities, inducements to work well. In the vineyard of the Church we have the best opportunities for working well. Not so heretics, who are outside the vine- yard. We are indeed the " tree which is planted near the running waters" (Ps. 1), because, placed near the fountains of grace, we can drink in the greatest moisture of merits. What are the sacraments, especially penance and eucharist, sermons, precepts of faith, examples of saints, holy books, masses, indulgences, ceremonies of the Church, sacred im- ages — what are all these but fountains perpetually flowing by our doors, whence, if we will, we can drink to satiety of the waters of life and lay up for ourselves a treasury of merits. Heretics and Jews are not in this vineyard, nor have they such an abundance of graces. More truly can they say than we : " No one invited us/'" If they had the same opportuni- ties we possess, if they had the same fountains and rivers, how earnestly they would labor in the Lord's vineyard ! We have proof of this in what the Lord says in Matt. 11 : ' ( Woe to thee, Corozain, woe to thee Bethsaida : for if in Tyre and Sidon had been wrought the miracles that have been wrought in you, they had long ago done penance in sack-cloth and ashes. But I say unto you, it shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Siclon in the day of judgment than for you." How do you think bad Christians will feel on the day of judgment when they will remember how many rivers of grace they allowed to flow by without deriving any benefit there- from ? Then they will bewail with intensest grief so many opportunities forever lost. IV. Implements to labor with given us by God : grace, knowledge, faith and other virtues. Why is grace given us in baptism, strength in confirmation ? "Why is faith ex- plained to us in sermons, if not to teach us to live by it ? How absurd it would be for a laborer with a spade to go into a vine- yard, and there walk around idly — the same for the Christian who carries with him grace and knowledge and faith and does not use them to his profit. ' ' We do exhort you not to receive the grace of God in vain " (2 Cor. 6). Kings were anointed on the shoulders that they might become strong and valorous. Christian kings are anointed in baptism and con- 62 SEPTUAGESIMA SUNDAY. firmation surely not to remain idle, but to battle bravely for an eternal crown. " By the grace of God I am what I am, and his grace in me hath not been void ; but I have labored more abundantly than all they " (2 Cor. 15). How many carry the sword of grace and never unsheath it ! How many carry the key of knowledge and never use it to unlock the bountiful stores of Scripture ! How many have the oppor- tunity of becoming enlightened in sermons with regard to their duties and obligations and never seize it ! V. Reward promised. There is a vast difference between the laborers of the Lord and our laborers. We give the promised reward to the laborer, but we do not give him the fruit of his labor. If some one sows for you, you do not give him the harvest ; if some one builds for you, you do not give him the house. But God does this. He not only nour- ishes us and rewards us while we labor in his vineyard, but he promises us and gives us the whole fruit of our labor in heaven, because he wants us not to labor for him but for our- selves. " Say to the just man that it is well, for he shall eat of the fruit of his doings. . . . And the Lord of hosts shall make unto all people in this mountain a feast of fat things, a feast of wine, of fat things full of marrow, of wine purified from the lees, he shall cast death headlong down for ever " (Isaias 3 : 25). Here the prophet seems to allude to the wine feast given after the vintage. As the laborers are invited to the feast, so will God invite his laborers to a feast in the mountain of heaven. But there is a great difference in these feasts ; those of men, especially laborers, are not on marrow nor wine with lees, that is simple, pure delight ; for with the delights of this world are mixed many cares, anxieties, vanities, etc. Although they appear pleasant they will not last. But the heavenly banquet will consist of the best and choicest goods — meats, refreshing to behold — all the saints, the angels — Christ himself — the splendor of heaven — a won- derful symphony most pleasing to the ear — the most delici- ous savors — the sweetest odors — the most charming society. A banquet without care and sadness — an everlasting banquet from which no one will ever be ordered to rise. Formerly it was customary among some to place a skull on the banquet table to remind the guests that it was not to last forever. In heaven there will be no such reminder ; for the " Lord shall cast death headlong down forever." Rightly was the reward for the laborers in the vineyard called a denarius, a coin of INDUCEMENTS TO LABOR WELL. 63 ten asses. For denarins is a perfect number representing the observance of the ten commandments ; it is round, sig- nifying eternity ; silver, the excellence of glory ; daily, the shortness of labor, that is of a day ; for this laborious life is as a day compared with the heavenly one ; its dawn is child- hood ; morning, youth ; midday, manhood, and evening, old age. On the coin is stamped the image of the ruler, that is, the beatific vision of God, and although it is the same in all as in the coin, it is participated in in a greater or lesser de- gree by the blessed as the sun is brighter to a clearer eye — in the vineyard some went before, some followed, in receiving their wages. The superscription is all the treasures of wis- dom and knowledge of God. Who will not labor freely in the vineyard of the Lord ? If we labor for a coin for one day, what should we do for an eternal reward ? VI. Punishment for the idle. The lord of the vineyard, Christ, will come and exact from us an account of our labor. Wo to you idle ones, when you shall be found void of gooc!; works ; what will you answer when you hear : " Why stand here the whole day idle ? Why have you passed your whole life without any fruit ? Where are your labors ?" It will not do for you to answer : Lord, we have not destroyed anything in your vineyard ; we have not done harm to any one ; wo did not prevent any one from working. This will be of no avail, for he will not say : Why do you stand here, ye evil doers ? Why did you destroy my vineyard ? but — " Why stand ye here idle ? " For this alone you will be condemned, because you have done nothing good. We have a figure of this in Judges 12 : " And the Galaadites secured the fords of the Jordan by which Ephraim was to return. And when any one of the number of Ephraim came thither in flight and said : I beseech you let me pass, the Galaadites said to him : Art thou not an Ephraimite ? If he said : I am not, they ordered him to say Scibboleth, which is interpreted an ear of corn. But he answered Sibboleth, not being able to express an ear of corn by the same letter. They presently took him and killed him in the very passage of the Jordan." This is what will happen to us. We must all some time cross the Jordan — the river of judgment — doubtful and dan- gerous. The Galaadites guard it — the angels bearing the entire accumulation of testimony against us. Galaad means accumulation of testimony. Therefore, when an Ephraimite — a Christian soul — comes to that river of judgment, the 64: SEPTUAGESIMA SUNDAY. angels will ask, Is it a Christian soul ? It will not suffice to say yes, for then the angels will ask it to pronounce the word Scibboleth — ears of corn of good works, and if unable to do so, wo to that soul, for it will be strangled and cast into everlasting fire. Christ himself assures us that all these things will happen. " So shall it be at the end of the world. The angels shall go out, and shall separate the wicked from among the just. And they shall cast them into the furnace of fire " (Matt. 13 : 49, 50). Christ shall separate the good from the bad, as the shepherd separates the sheep from the goats, and shall say to the wicked: " Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire which was prepared for the devil and his angels : for I was hungry and you gave me not to eat ; I was thirsty, and you gave me not to drink ; I was a stranger, and you took me not in ; naked, and you covered me not ; sick and in prison, and you did not visit me" (Matt. 25 : 41-43). Let us then work faithfully in the Lord's vineyard, so that when evening comes we may hear that sweetest of invita- tions : " Come, ye blessed of my Father, possess the kingdom prepared for you." SEXAGESIMA SUNDAY. MANNEK OF HEARING THE WORD OE GOD. I. Preparatory prayer. II. Preparatory compunction. III. Strict attention. IV. Earnest memory. V. Careful consideration. VI. Thanks. " And other some fell upon good ground, and being sprung up, yielded fruit a hundred-fold " (Luke 8:8). There is a great difference with regard to the seeds men- tioned in to-day's gospel. Some fell by the wayside and were trodden down, some fell on rocks and perished, some fell among thorns and were choked. What is the meaning of these various conditions ? They are not in the sower, who is one and the same, not in the seed, which was equally fruitful. The difference, therefore, is in the soil. From this we learn that the fruitfulness of the word of God depends on the con- dition of the sinner. No matter who the preacher may be so long as he is commissioned by God ; no matter the kind of sermon as long as it is consistent with the word of God — there is little reference to the fruit. Everything depends on the hearer. I. Before planting, the earth is prepared by plowing. Before hearing a sermon, the soul must be prepared by prayer that the heart may become docile, the mind collected, the ears opened. The preacher may fill the minds of his hearers with words, but he cannot open the ears of the heart, that the hearer may believe, receive and apply to himself what is said. Only God can do this. " And a certain woman named Lydia, a seller of purple of the city of Thyatira, one that worshiped God, did hear ; whose heart the Lord opened to attend to those things which were said by Paul " (Acts 1@ : 14). St. Chrysostom says : " Little or no fruit can be derived from sermons without the preparation of prayer." St. Paul, 5 65 66 SEXAGESIMA SUNDAY. always begins his epistles by prayer, that the light of prayer may guide and direct his speech. As the birds of the air, the demons are always laying snares for the word of God, it should be guarded and preserved by prayer, lest we be pre- vented from hearing it, or deprived of its teaching. As crows are driven from the cornfield by the image of a specter, let us at the beginning of a sermon make on our foreheads the sign of the cross to drive away the crows of hell. All good Christians bless themselves and pray before sitting down to meals. Let us do likewise before sitting down to partake of the bread of life. II. Before sowing, the field is cleared of thorns, briars, stubble and stones. So, when you wish to hear the word of God with profit, you must cleanse the soul by compunction and sorrow for sin. For although sinners can and should hear the word of God ; they will hear it, however, with greater benefit, if their hearts are prepared by contrition. (( Break up anew your fallow ground and sow not upon thorns" (Jerem. 4). " Wherefore, casting away all unclean- ness and abundance of naughtiness, with meekness receive the ingrafted word, which is able to save your souls " (James 1). St. Chrysostom says : " If one wishes to pat some precious ointment in a vessel, he sees that it is first per- fectly clean." In what esteem do we hold the word of God, when we allow it to enter an unclean heart ? Before sitting down to table we wash our hands. Sermons are the spiritual food of the soul. The Israelites were ordered to wash their garments before they heard the promulgation of the law (Exod 19). III. The seed is sown in the field and not on the highway ; so the word of God should be received in the heart, with a watchful mind and a silent tongue. St. Chrysostom says : " If when the letters of a king are read, there is profound silence ; all ears are open to hear their contents ; and should any one make the slightest noise, he is in danger ; much more profound should silence be, much more attentive the listeners when there is question of the word of God." St. Augustine requires the same attention in hearing the word of God as in receiving communion lest the particles fall on the ground. He says : " He is no less guilty, who negli- gently hears the word of God, than he who, through careless- ness, lets the sacred Host fall to the earth." Then he adds : " I would like to know if, from the moment one begins to MANNER OF HEARING THE WORD OF GOD. 67 preach, your daughters would stand and receive the most precious jewels and gems we could desire. We, because we cannot and should not offer temporal gifts, are not readily- listened to. He who freely hears the word of God is certain that he receives from heaven most precious gifts for the soul." Therefore, the heart should be opened and the word of God drunk in with the greatest delight as something most precious and necessary ; as the advice of a skilled and learned physi- cian is listened to by his patient. With what attention and care and silence would that physician be heard who would declare with the utmost confidence that he had remedies, not only against all ills, even incurable ones, but also how to ac- quire wealth and successfully offset the machinations of our enemies. But the word of God will do all these things. Magdalene cast herself at her Master's feet, for she knew he was the heavenly physician of her soul. Many hear the word of God with little or no profit because they do not apply it to themselves as they are ignorant of their sickness. They apply what they hear rather to their neighbors. If so and so were here, how nicely the cap would fit him. One would imagine that the preacher knew exactly the mode of living of so and so, so accurately does he depict his actions. I give thee thanks, Lord, that I am not like these poor sinners. Thus they reason with themselves, never for a moment imag- ining that they are in need of any spiritual prescription, and yet they may be suffering from a complication of diseases which requires the tenderest nursing of the Divine Physician himself. They see the mote in their brother's eye and do not see the beam in their own. We must not attend to the art nor the eloquence of the preacher, but to the spirit and the matter itself. Let us pluck the apples and heed not the leaves. We must not make too much of the condiments of speech, which are sometimes used to the delight of the hearer and to help the memory. Otherwise he who prefers the sauce to solid food gives evi- dence of possessing a disordered stomach. At table we neither stand nor walk, but sit, that we may eat with more contentment and at our ease. We are careful about the crumbs that fall from the table, and would consider it a sin to leave them to be trampled on. Is not the bread of the soul of more value than the bread of the body ? IV. The harrow is used to cover the seed and bury it, as it were, in the earth, lest the birds should steal it. So the 68 SEXAGESIMA SUNDAY. word of God should be stowed away in the memory, lest it should soon be forgotten and become a prey to hellish birds. "When the magpie," says Pliny, "sees that her nest is sought by man, she transfers her eggs to another, lest she lose her young." The word of God is a little nest of eggs which the devil assails ; it should be carefully guarded and planted deep in the mind, lest through forgetfulness it be taken from us and that the eggs of good resolutions may never be rejected. David was wont to act this way when he says : " Thy words have I hidden in my heart, that I may not sin against thee " (Ps. 118). The bottle in which distilled water is kept is tightly corked, so that the strength of the water should not evaporate. The same should be done with the word of God. But some one will object that there are too many things in a sermon and that it is impossible to re- member them all. But it is not necessary to retain all ; it suffices that each one select what applies to himself and his needs. As at a banquet there are many kinds of food, yet one is not obliged to partake of them all, he may take what pleases him and leave the rest. When a preacher has a variety of hearers, he places before them a variety of doctrines, not that each one should observe them all, hut that he should take to himself the points which will benefit him. The same may be said of corporal food. After it has been taken the stomach closes itself for digestion, which is a sign of good health ; on the contrary, it is a sign of poor health to reject the food from the stomach. St. Gregory says : ' i The food of the mind is the word of God, and as received food is re- jected from the stomach, the received word of God is not retained in the mind. The one who does not retain nour- ishment is certainly to be despaired of." Only those will derive profit who, with a good heart hearing the word of God, keep it. V. The seed in the field is crushed and in a way dies : so the word of God must be handled with diligent consideration as though it were given up to execution. The Lord ordered the Jews to bind the words of his law to their hands, to med- itate on them when at home, when on a journey, when they went to bed and when they arose ; that they should place them not only in their hearts, but before their eyes, and write them above their doors (Deut. 6 : 11). The Gentiles, in order to be more deeply impressed by their laws and to pre- serve them, formed them into songs and chanted them. Manner of hearing the word of god. C9 What then should Christians do ? Incense does not emit an odor nnless it is put in the fire ; so no sentence of Scripture reveals its strength unless it is thoroughly cooked in the mind. The messengers of God, his words, should be admitted, not only in the door, but even to the innermost recesses of the heart ; therefore, when you hear that one mortal sin merits hell-fire, you should examine whether perchance in you there is only one or more, whether there be some hidden ones you make no account of ; how easily you fall and what would happen if you were to die in your sins. The same thing we can be taught from corporal food ; before we take it with profit, we must first masticate it well, otherwise it will become injurious to us. This is well said in Proverbs : ei A desirable treasure rests in the mouth of a wise man, but a foolish man swallows it." The treasure is the word of God, the mouth in which it rests through consideration is the heart of the wise man. Such was the most wise Mother of Christ, as we read in Luke 2 : " But Mary kept all these words, pondering them, in her heart." She made a careful review of them as diligent students are wont to do after having read some works. The foolish man, who does not use reflection, swallows sermons and derives no benefit from them. VI. The seed committed to the earth is watered by rain and nourished by the heat of the sun. The action of grace, which we can merit through the goodness of God, should so envelope a sermon that an increase from the sown seed should be obtained. So after meals thanks are given to God, by which we express the hope that he will allow us to eat again on the following day. The same thing we do at the end of a sermon, by reciting some prayer, so that the word of God with his blessing may produce great fruit in us. QUINQUAGESIMA SUNDAY. CAUSES OF SPIRITUAL BLINDNESS, WHICH IS UNMLNDFULNESS OF OUR LAST END. I. Craftiness of the devil. II. Incredulity of men. III. Love of self. IV. Presumption. V. Fear of sadness. VI. Supine neglect of salvation. " Lord, that I may see " (Luke 18 : 41). The Egyptian darkness was so dense that no one could see his neighbor ; it lasted for three days and nights and indi- cated the blindness of mind of Pharao and the Egyptians, who, after so many plagues, would not believe in God nor provide against the calamity threatening them. In to-day's gospel we read of the blind man near Jericho, a type of all blind mortals seated by the wayside of salvation near a foolish world. For Jericho, according to St. Gregory, sig- nifies the moon and represents foolishness. Unmindf ulness of our last end is the greatest blindness ; for though we know for a certainty that we shall die and then be judged, yet we make no preparation for these solemn events. The same way, when we know that hell is the place for sinners, we revel in all manners of vice, and sleep securely. What greater calamity could befall us ? If at any other time, now more especially, men are blind so that it may be said with the Wise Man : " The number of fools is infinite. They are a nation without counsel and without wisdom : that they would be wise and would understand, and would provide for their last end " (Deut. 32 :28, 29). On next Wednesday the Church will sprinkle ashes on your heads to remind you of your nothingness, after the example of Christ, who, with clay touched the eyes of the blind man mentioned in another part of the gospel, 70 CAUSES OF SPIRITUAL BLINDNESS. 71 and restored him his sight. Let us weigh well the causes of this wonderful blindness. I. The craftiness of the devil and unceasing study to pre- vent men from remembering their last end. For he well knows the great power of memory. It is related that Getu- lus, a shepherd, seeing a ferocious lion rushing at him and knowing the great strength in his eyes, threw his cloak over the lion's head and thus easily subdued him. The devil knows what strength is in the human eyes when they consider their last end, and therefore he labors strenuously to cover them, and once covered, he has no difficulty in subduing them and bringing them under his sway. Was not Sampson a lion who, while he could see, was not only invincible, but brought terror and destruction to the Philistines ; but when they put out his eyes he became helpless, and they made all kinds of fun of him ? He who is unmindful of his last end walks easily in the circle of his vices, which if he had his sight he would not do, to rejoice in evil things, to spurn salutary advice and to make light of small things. Then the devil persuades him not to listen to the Word of God in sermons ; to read obscene books ; to frequent places of sin ; to give free rein to his passions ; to revel in all kinds of Bacchanalian delights. King Avennir pursued the same policy to prevent his son Josophat from embracing the faith. He provided all kinds of pleasure for him and banished the least indication of gloom and sadness. And he would have succeeded, were it not for St. Barlaam, who, with a wiser cunning, instilled into the mind of the young man serious thoughts of his last end, and finally succeeded in making a great saint of him. So the devil acts with men, keeping the mind fixed on the present and filled with thoughts of pleasure, keeping a telescope be- fore them in which pleasures are magnified and brought nearer ; banishing from the mind all sadness, looking at it through the inverted telescope, which makes it small and as remote as possible. What foolishness to suffer to be blindfolded or to have our eyes plucked out ! We should have our eyes wide open to all the suffering and misery around us ; see the many funerals which pass our door daily ; listen to the Word of God ; read good books ; thus keeping constantly before us the memory of our last end. II. Incredulity. When men see themselves living riot- ously, and when they know from the precept of Catholic doc- trine that, unless they shun the occasions of sin, unless thev 72 QUINQUAGESiMA SUNDAY. do penance and have a firm purpose of amendment, they will suffer eternal torments. When they are unwilling to change their lives and live a life of penance, they begin to persuade themselves that the doctrine of the Church about the severity of judgment and the eternity of hell is entirely false and not consistent with the thought of a merciful God. And they very easily find arguments to confirm them in this belief. How can a most merciful God inflict eternal torments for one or a few light sins ? How can he allow innumerable mortals who are almost all sinners to perish ? These doc- trines are only the bugaboos of preachers and they do not refer to us. At times they are moved by some sorrow, by the death of a relative, etc., but soon the original thought of their incredulity stifles all fear the same as when pigs, hear- ing the gruntings of one of their number that has been stuck with the knife, desert their food, but, when death comes, they forget their fear and return to the troughs. But, if men would consider how grave and dangerous a disease sin is, it would not be difficult to persuade themselves that they deserve eternal punishment even though the whole world should be infected by it. The gravity of sin is such that we cannot comprehend it. It is such that, to conquer it, it was necessary for the Son of God to leave his home in heaven and come to earth. When we hear that some one is so sick as not to be content with the doctors in his own city, so that the most skilful from afar are called in, do we not conclude that he is in a very dangerous condition ? What must we think of sin when no earthly doctor was of any use ; but the Son of God had to be brought from heaven and the most precious medicine made up from his body and blood ? III. Self-love promising a long life. Aristotle says that certain nations attributed all their good deeds to themselves — and all bad deeds and vices to some external cause. If they did anything good, they were anxious to receive reward ; if anything evil, they did not wish to accept punishment. From a like root have sprung certain errors of Christian writers, which are ably refuted by St. Augustine. Some as- serted that Catholic Christians, dying in sin, would not suffer eternal torments ; others held that Heretics, who at some time had been Catholics, would not suffer ; others that after judgment all faithful or unfaithful would be saved, whether by their own merits or by the merits of others, etc. All these errors were caused by a blind self-love. It is this that CAUSES OF SPIRITUAL BLINDNESS. 73 puffs people up and causes them to fall. St. Peter, following Christ and hearing him predict terrible things about his pas- sion, said : " Lord, this will not be so ; " but Christ answered him: " Get thee behind me, Satan, you do not know the things that are of God " (Matt. 16). So reason argues : " Be- hold how soon you will be old ; how soon your days will pass ; how soon you will die ; it may be this day, month or year." But self-love says: " You shall not die ; this shall not be so." But what happened to that rich man who said : "Soul take thy rest, thou hast much goods laid up for many years ? " Did he not hear : " Thou fool, this night do they require thy soul of thee" (Luke 12). Do we not daily hear of sud- den and unprovided deaths ? Babylon was accused : " Thou hast said I shall be a ladv forever : thou hast not laid these things to thy heart, neither hast thou remembered thy last end"(Isaias 47). Of the reprobate : " We have entered into a league with death and we have made a covenant with hell " (Isaias 28). IV. Presumption on divine mercy. They say that the thief found pardon at the last moment ;. that peace was promised to men of good will ; that good will and sorrow for sin are easily compatible ; that God is more prone to be mer- ciful than to punish ; that heaven was made for men and not for geese, etc. Many blind mortals, because they see God rich in mercy, although they know that they have very few good works, but rather many bad ones, think, nevertheless, that he will forgive all or accept a part for the whole. But they deceive themselves. Hear Job, who, though a great friend of God, said : " I feared all my works, knowing that thou didst not spare the offender " (9 : 28). As a king not only does not spare him whom he has exalted and who after- wards becomes rebellious, but is much more incensed against him, so does God act. Did he spare offending angels ? Did he spare his only Son, when through love for us he clothed himself with our infirmities ? By no means. Vain, there- fore, is the presumption of man. For, as God showed his infinite power in the creation of the world and his infinite mercy in redeeming it, lo he will show his infinite justice in judging it. V. Fear of sadness and melancholy, if we keep before our eyes the thought of our last end. Those who argue this way are like Julius Caesar, who, when asked which kind of death he desired, answered : " A sudden death." And this he ac- 74 QUINQUAGESIMA SUNDAY. tually met in the Senate, when pierced with twenty-three wounds, he fell at the base of Pompey's statue, " which all the while ran blood." I should agree with Caesar if there were not a doubtful life after this. But a Christian, unless he is blind, cannot agree with him. There is this difference between a sudden and an anticipated death, that the former comes to one unknowingly, from behind, as it were, and plunges him into untold misery ; the latter appears before his eyes and makes him provide for his safety, and finds him ready. A thief while in prison can more seriously think on means for his release than if he were suddenly brought before the judge ; so they act most prudently who always have their last end before their eyes. The thought of our last end certainly brings with it sadness and fear of death and judgment ; but it does not hasten them, no matter how much you think, as a ship glides on, whether you be asleep or awake. It brings sadness, but not lasting, to those im- mersed in pleasures ; to others a sweet sleep and a longing desire, as to St. Paul, ' l to be dissolved and be with Christ." Such Christians always rejoice and sing with David : " I re- joiced in those things that were said to me. We will go into the house of the Lord." Finally, it brings a salutary fear. i( For although I made you sorrowful by my epistle, I do not repent " (2 Cor. 7 : 8, 9). ' ' Now I am glad : not because you were made sorrowful, but because you were made sor- rowful unto penance." This momentary fear is followed by external joy. VI. Supine negligence, when it is said in Isaias 47 : 7 : " Thou has not laid these things to thy heart, neither hast thou remembered thy latter end," St. Augustine says : " Men die daily, and those who live carry them forth and hold funeral services. No one says : I will amend my life, lest to-morrow I may be dead like he is to-day." Our friends and relatives die around us daily, and we never think that we, too, like they, shall die. Animals pro- vide for coming storms ; sailors provide for them ; life- savers provide for them. Foolish mortals, why do you not provide for eternal storms ? The Lord formerly complained of the Jewish people : " The kite in the air hath known its time : the turtle and the swallow and the stork have ob- served the time of their coming : but my people have not known the judgment of the Lord " (Jer. 8 : 7). Would that this were said against the Jews alone and not against us also ! CAUSES OF SPIRITUAL BLINDNESS. ?5 The birds of the air know their time to come to us and to leave us. In the springtime they come to build their nests and at the approach of winter they seek warmer and more congenial climes. But we miserable mortals do not know the springtime, that is, the opportunity for doing penance, for pieasing God, for accumulating good works while we are strong and able. Let us not wait for the cold and bitter winter of God's wrath. Moses truly called ns a race with- out wisdom, without prudence. Would that they had known and understood and foresaw their last end. St. Bernard says : " Would that you knew the things of God ; that you understood the things of this world ; that you foresaw the torments of hell ; surely you would dread hell, you would seek heaven and despise the world." Let us ask with the blind man first for ourselves : " Lord that I may see ; " let us ask with Eliseus for our blind breth- ren : " Lord, open their eyes, that they may see." When a band of robbers find themselves in a hostile country they flee from it and never return ; so if we could see ourselves in the midst of enemies — an angry God above us, death before us, judgment behind us, hell beneath us, we would forsake all sinful pleasures and give ourselves up entirely to the con- templation of our last end. FIEST SUNDAY OF LENT. WHAT MUST WE DO DUKItfG LENT ? I. Fast. II. Watch. III. Pray. IV. Restrain our desires. V. Study solitude. VI. Fight with the devil. "Jesus was led by the spirit into the desert, to be tempted by the devil " (Matt. 4:1). What spirit led Christ into the desert, unless the spirit which a short while before rested on him in the baptism in the Jordan, and which proceeds from the Father and the Son ? With the greatest promptitude, the greatest alacrity, then, did Christ go into the desert, because as St. Ambrose says : " the grace of the Holy Spirit knows no slow en- deavors." that we would enter Lent with such a spirit of action, that we would not be forced, that we would not be sad, that we would merit to be called really the sons of God, according to the apostle : " For whosoever are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God " (Eom. 8 : 14). I will believe, therefore, that you begin this season filled with the Holy Spirit, if you strive to do those things which Christ himself did in the desert. I. Christ fasted, not as a remedy for himself, but as an ex- ample for us ; for when did Christ need to fast, since he experienced no rebellion of the flesh, much less could he be conquered by it. What the master does for the pupil, Christ does for us. A musician playing for his pupil does not play to learn but to teach the pupil. The harp of the body of Christ is admirably fitted ; there is no want of moderation of the passions, no discord of a rational and sensitive appetite of the flesh and the spirit ; and hence it was prepared to practise all the acts of virtue, and to fulfil all precepts. Not so our bodies, in which there is a contradiction of spirit and flesh, by which we are prevented from running easily in 76 WHAT MUST WE DO DURING LENT? W the way of God's commandments ; the flesh must therefore be crushed ; the chords of the passions must be stretched ; the senses subjected to reason that they may be in accord with the spirit and will of God. For this reason Lent was instituted by the Apostles that we might, during it, prepare to sing afterwards at Easter the joyous Alleluias of the angels. St. Ambrose says : " He who says he is with Christ, should walk as Christ walked ; if, therefore, you wish to be a Christian, you must do what Christ did. He who had no sin fasted forty days and nights ; you who have sinned do not wish to fast during Lent. He had no sin, and, yet, he fasted for our sins. What kind of Christian then are you ? While Christ is suffering from hunger, you eat ; while your Saviour is fasting, you are relishing good things." When Rudolph of Austria was at war with Otto of Bohemia, and suffering greatly from want of water, his soldiers brought him a measure full which they took from a farmer who was carrying it to his men in the field. (i Return the measure/' said Rudolph, " for not for myself was I thirsting, but for my army ;" whereupon the army resolved to suffer every hard- ship for the sake of such a leader. Will we not cheerfully fast with our Leader Christ, since he does so, not for himself, but for us ? II. He watched, because no one sleeping can be said to fast. Christ is said to have fasted forty days and nights, and the tempter did not find him asleep. His only bed being the hard earth, he was easily and very often aroused. The Lord knew that when men wish to live piously, then are to be found the greatest snares. He was not tempted in Bethlehem, nor in the Temple among the Doctors, nor in Nazareth, nor at the time of his baptism ; but during his fasting and aus- tere life ; because then the devil especially ensnares man when by penance and reformation of life, he desires to flee from him. Then did Pharao oppress the Israelites with la- bors and punishments, when they wished to throw off his yoke and sacrifice to the true God in the desert (Exod. 5). We have entered the arena of fasting, and we also will try to throw off the yoke of the devil by penance. He does not leave a stone unturned to prevent us from our good resolve ; he prepares the bed on which we may lie sound asleep in our former sins ; but we must watch and be on our guard, re- calling to mind our manifold sins ; exciting remorse in our- selves and preparing for Confession. Who could sleep if he 78 FIRST SUNDAY OF LENT. knew his house was surrounded by thieves ? Are we not surrounded by legions of devils, who are doing their utmost to rob us of that most precious treasure, our immortal soul ? Should they gain an entrance, eject them through the sacra- ment of Penance. It will help very much to this, if we add to our corporal watching some time spent in pious reading and prayer. How can soldiers be sluggish when their leader is wide awake ? il And Urias said to David : The ark of God and Israel and Juda dwell in tents, and my lord Joab and the servants of my lord abide upon the face of the earth : and shall I go into my house to eat and drink ? " (2 Kings 11 : 11) . He preferred to sleep before the king's gate, although he was commanded to go into his house. III. He prayed and meditated because he was led into the desert by the Holy Spirit, a place most suitable for prayer and meditation ; for the same reason we must give more time now to prayer and meditation as the Church increases the number of prayers ; while she deprives us of bodily food she increases the heavenly food of our souls. Where are we to find the desert to retire into ? The Church is that desert, for it is a most suitable place for prayer. At this time espe- cially it resembles a desert ; it is made dismal by the exposi- tion of the instruments of the passion ; its penitential altars, its hymns of sadness — all which should inspire us with a singular devotion and incite us to sincere compunction and help us to profound meditation. Finally, the Church is called a desert, because, alas, it is too often deserted as the Lord complains : " My house is desolate and you make haste every man to his own house " (Agg. 1). Would that the spirit lead you hither ! But how different are the spirits of many ! The good spirit of Christ leads him to watching, to prayer and to fasting ; the evil spirit of sinners leads them elsewhere ; the spirit of vanity to uncharitable gatherings ; the spirit of gluttony to an inordinate satisfying of the appe- tite ; the spirit of avarice to gambling ; the spirit of intem- perance to the loss of all self-respect, to the utter destruction of both body and soul. These are the spirits that entered into the swine and rushed with them into the sea, according to Matt. 8. St. Augustine says : " Our body is a desert when it is sub- dued by abstinence ; when it appears pallid and wan from thirst ; when the whole appearance of man is disfigured by contempt of human things". Then Christ inhabits the desert WHAT MUST WE DO DURING LENT? ft) of our bosom when he finds onr earth squalid from hunger and dry and parched from thirst." IV. He was with beasts, says St. Mark. But what did he do with them ? There is no doubt but that they all ran to him, crouched at his sacred feet, and obeyed promptly the least expression of his will, as they did Adam in Paradise, as they did many saints — St. Francis, St. Theodore, Father Aviedo in India, etc. There is no doubt they were all gentle, and when he moved about they accompanied him ; when he stood, they stood ; when he lay down, they lay down around him. Would that we could do the same, especially during this season, with our ferocious habits and desires. Our passions are the wild beasts which, before sin, obeyed us and were subject to reason as they were to Adam ; after the sin of Adam they began to rebel against reason, as they did against him, and they roam through our mind, our heart, our very being, like wild animals in a forest. Such beasts are : — love and hatred, sorrow and joy, hope and despair, rashness and fear. These beasts must be conquered and brought under subjection and made obey reason. If you have a roaring lion within yon, that is, a bitter hatred to- wards your neighbor, command him to stand still and obey. If you have a leopard in you that trembles at the voice of a little bird, that is, if you have a fear of the sacrament of penance, command him not to fear ; if you have the wolf of greed and avarice, command him to make restitution ; if you have the panther of gluttony and drunkenness, command him to abstain ; if you have the bear of idleness and sloth, command him to engage in prayer, to receive communion often, to assist regularly at mass, etc. When the gentle St. Francis bade the little birds sing, they warbled delightfully ; when he bade them be silent, they as promptly obeyed. Let us also command our passions : our love to be fixed on God alone ; hatred to be detested as an abominable vice ; sorrow to be borne with the patience of Christ, the Man of sorrows ; rashness to be reprehended publicly ; fear not to be driven away by the difficulty of penance. V. He was alone except with the angels. The rest of the time he lived in cities among men ; now he converses in the desert with angels, for the " angels came to him;" nay, more, they ministered to him, and, according to some writers, they brought food to him. Let us also at this time abstain as much as possible from human conversation, and engage in 80 FIRST SUNDAY OF LENT. angelic in its stead. Man has in his soul something angelic, namely, the superior part of his soul which attends to the affairs of salvation ; and the inferior part, which provides for the temporal concerns ; the former, things angelic ; the latter, things human. During almost the whole year, the inferior is troubled about what we shall eat and drink, what we shall wear, how we shall get rich ; how we shall be ele- vated in the esteem of men ; scarcely ever does the superior part pay heed to these. So now it must be given an oppor- tunity to study how we are to deplore and extirpate our vices ; how we are to implant virtues and to acquire merits. Birds remain nearly always in the air or on the branches of trees ; they do not come down to earth only when they want food. Let us now seek food for our souls, who have been caring for our bodies our whole life. But where ? In the desert and in the solitude of our heart ; let us descend from the society of men ; from the tumult of worldly cares ; let us compose the interior man ; let us watch our footsteps that we may be elevated on high with the angels ; that we may more intimately know the sinful habits and defects of our heart. We spend our lives in the midst of such tumult and noise that we cannot hear ourselves and our conscience calling on us to reform. Let us now go to that solitude of the soul like Daniel, who, when about to pray, entered his house by the windows towards Jerusalem and the temple, the other windows having been barred. Let us also bar our senses, cares and thoughts of the world that lead to Babylon ; for in the tumult of the world we are not allowed to worship God as we should, nor to care for our immortal souls. VI. He fought with the tempter. He is the very same tempter now that tempted Christ, first, with regard to the palate, to break his fast and eat forbidden food. He per- suades many that their delicate complexion or weakened state does not oblige them to fast, to make bread of stones, to do away with the severity of fasting and to indulge in all kinds of food. We are commanded by the second precept of the Church to confess our sins and to receive Holy Communion, but he persuades us to cast ourselves down, that is, without previous examination of conscience, without fear of hell to make light of the Sacraments and to receive them unworthily. We are commanded to renew our lives, to give up our former habits, but he shows us the riches and pleasures of this world ; WHAT MUST WE DO DURING LENT? 81 the riches unjustly acquired, the enmities and the hatreds, and says : What, will you desert us ? if you say good-by to your former sinful companions, how will you do without them ? if you surrender your unjust gains, how can you keep up your former style of living ? who will not scorn you, if you suffer quietly the loss of your good name, and are not revenged on your detractors ? But we must fight against the tempter and use the same weapons Christ used : the sword of the Word of God, pious reading and attentive listen- ing to sermons. How can you argue against him, saying : " It is written," unless you read the Scriptures or hear them expounded by Christ's ministers ? If you are tempted to break the fast, now can you say : " He that does not hear the Church, let him be to thee a heathen and a publican;" also : " NTot in bread alone does man live but in every word that proceeds from the mouth of God." If tempted regarding Confession — ' ' Unless you do penance, you shall all likewise perish." With regard to unjust possession of others' goods, St. Augustine says : " Sin is not remitted unless what is stolen is restored." If tempted to hatred and envy — " he who hates his brother kills his own soul." Secondly, by the exclusion of temptations, saying : " Get thee gone, Satan." " The Lord repulsed the enemy and would not allow him to tempt him further," says Origen. Some order the tempter to go before them and they themselves follow him — those who consent to temptation ; some order him to go alongside, who wish to be delighted by thought only. Others order him to follow behind who do not wish to destroy the roots of temptation, but to remove it from the eyes for awhile and then return to it. Others finally with Christ expel the tempt- er altogether. Do not parley with him, lest like Eve you be deceived. Whoever will observe these things during Lent will advance rapidly in the study of virtue, and at the last day will be joyfully received by the angels coming to him, bearing him the palm of victory. They will announce to the world on our resurrection day : " He is not here, he has risen from his sins, he has conquered his enemies, his passions, and the tempter — behold his crown of reward ' 6 SECOND SUNDAY OF LENT. THE FOURFOLD TRANSFIGURATION OF MAN. I. From the state of grace to the state of sin. II. From the state of sin to the state of grace. III. From the delights of this world to hell. IV. From the miseries of this life to eternal joys. " He was transfigured before them " (Matt. 17 : 2). When a great prince in gorgeous array prepares for a solemn occasion, a wedding for instance, all his courtiers and vassals put aside their ordinary attire and bedeck themselves in their finest costumes. To-day our Lord the King of all earthly kings appears as a " Spouse coming forth from his Chamber," clothed in a new and wonderful garment, beauti- ful before the eyes of men while transfigured on the mount he shows his glory. What then remains for us who are in bis court, the Church, having put off the old man, but to put on the new, that we may be transfigured with him and become like him ? Moses and Elias, who were present at the glory of the transfiguration, "appearing in majesty," are certainly an example for us. We must remember that Satan also transfigured himself into an angel of light and uses every means to have courts and liveried courtiers glittering like himself. We must be careful not to be transformed into that species which pleases rather the devil than Christ our King. Let us see the twofold transfiguration of evil as well as of good. For a double reason man is transfigured either with Christ or the devil — partially and completely. Partially with Christ, when he passes from the state of sin to that of grace — com- pletely, when he passes from this troublesome world to heav- enly glory. With the devil partially, when he passes from the state of grace to that of sin — completely, when he passes from the delights of earth to hell-fire. Who will deny that these changes can be called transfigurations wonderful and great ? 83 THE FOURFOLD TRANSFIGURATION OF MAN. 83 I. Transfiguration from the state of grace to that of sin is to be feared. This God has pathetically shown the world in Nabuchodonosor, King of Babylon, whose arrogance he pun- ished with a remarkable humiliation, so that cast out from among men, he wandered through the woods as a beast for seven years (Dan. 4). First, deprived of the use of reason, he used only the im- agination and that vitiated, by which he considered himself changed into an ox, and those things only belonging to an ox, he revolved in his mind. In like manner, the sinner is deprived of supernatural light, while he indulges in what are vile and hurtful and counts them good and beautiful ; nor does he see the danger of his state who does not fear God his Judge ; nor does he seek what is law- ful, he dreams of sinful pleasures only ; wherefore St. Paul calls sinners darknesses : " For ye were, heretofore, dark- ness " (Ephes. 5 : 8). Secondly, he took on a beastly appearance, because the temperament of his body was so changed and became so savage that he inclined only to beastly actions and pleasures. In like manner, the sinner, especially from the custom and habit of sinning, becomes so degenerate, that he should be regarded more as a brute than a man on account of his dis- torted and depraved will ; and hence no longer is he called man by God, but flesh, as we read in Genesis 6 : " My spirit shall not remain in man forever, because he is flesh . . . for all flesh had corrupted its way upon the earth." In other places men are called different beasts, on account of their different evil habits which liken them to such beasts. Thirdly, they do not utter human articulate sounds, but beastly ones, for the speech follows the imagination. Where there is a beastly imagination, there also is beastly speech. What sinners are always meditating, the same they give expression to. The ambitious — honors ; the avaricious — money and wealth ; drunkards — their cups ; gluttons — banquets and feasts, etc. These things they speak of in their sleep, when sober, and sometimes at the hour of death. Fourthly, they walk after the manner of a beast rather than of a human being : with a deformed face, a sharp and hardened skin, nails of an eagle, long and unkempt hair ; as to the other members, they are naked and exposed to all the elements ; finally crawling on hands and feet on the ground. 84 SECOND SUNDAY OF LENT. He seems to call all these to witness when he says : ee My figure has been restored to me." A manner very similar to this is noticed in man deformed by sin. For you see in him the face of conscience so deformed that he does not see the stains of his crimes, or, if he sees them, he hides it in drunk- enness or worldly affairs that he may not be forced to behold it. He has a skin so hard and impenetrable that it cannot be pierced by exhortations, prayers, threats or wounds ; such a skin as the Ethiopian bulls have, with the hardness of flint throwing off every weapon. Claws of an eagle, to seize the things which appeal to the appetite. Hairs of perpetually fluctuating thoughts, with which all shaggy he is covered from head to foot ; a body so deprived of all comeliness, so depraved and so intent on passing goods, that at one time by pride he exposes himself to be laughed at by others ; urged by avarice, he lives in hunger and want ; by excesses, he des- troys his health ; he is consumed by anger and hatred ; by gluttony and intemperance, he becomes so enervated that he can scarcely walk. Fifthly, he ate grass like a cow, and this the sinner does, when, despising the good and solid food prepared for him — the Word of God, the Sacraments — he seeks animal food and feasts his mind on the vilest things, such as splendor of dress and gold, the pleasures of wealth, obscene conversations, de- tractions and calumnies, etc., these are his food ; and finally, man, who in baptism was consecrated to God, degenerates and is changed into a wild beast ; from the temple of God, he becomes the cave of robbers ; from the house of God, the house of vanity. II. From the state of sin to the state of grace. A type of this we have in Joseph, who was freed from prison, into which he had been cast without any fault of his, by Pharaoh, and raised to the dignity of a prince. He, who a short time before, bound, hand and foot, sat in a loathsome dungeon, squalid and unkempt, suddenly, by order of the king, is led forth, washed and robed in a new garment and crowned with great honors. "And he took his ring from his own hand and gave it into his hand : and he put upon him a robe of silk, and put a chain of gold about his neck ; and he made him go up into his second chariot, the crier proclaiming that all should bow their knee before him ; and he called him the Saviour of the world " (Gen. 41). What a great and sudden change from the deepest misery to the highest happiness on THE FOURFOLD TRANSFIGURATION OF MAN. 8§ earth. Such a change is noticed in man when he is Con- verted and repents of his sins. He who before was bound by the chains of sin, in the darkness of ignorance ; under the power of the demon, squalid and deformed from the habit of sinning so that, as we saw before, he becomes beastly, he by penance is entirely changed into another man. Treed from the prison of the devil, washed from the squalor and filth of his former vices, deprived of the hairs of worldly thoughts and desires, he is endowed with the wonderful gifts of grace. He is clothed with a silken robe — grace — which, as a most gorgeous garment made by the hands of God alone, so adorns and embellishes man that the splendor of all nature, though it be as great as in the angels themselves, is scant and paltry compared with that of grace. No stars can adorn the heavens, no gems a crown, no gold, no purple and fine linen a king as grace adorns the soul ; and if we could contemplate it here, we would prefer, with St. Catherine of Sienna, to die a thousand times, to be even crucified, if we could enjoy the sight of it. He receives a golden ring while he is busy exercising works of virtue, which, with the aid of grace, be- come golden, agreeable to God and meritorious of eternal life. So he, who before was a thief, now gives freely to the poor ; he who was ready to murder, now bears with his enemy and does good for evil ; he who reveled at the ban- quet of vice, now wears sackcloth and ashes and crucifies his flesh : he who was a drunkard, chastises himself by fasting ; he who cursed and swore, appeases God by many prayers, etc., etc. He receives a golden chain around his neck be- cause all the merits, which before were as dead through sin, are now given life and restored to him. These merits, linked together like golden rings, form a most beautiful chain, and gently and without weight bend down the soul with the hope of eternal reward and display it to the admira- tion of angels. He is seated in the royal carriage, which is peace and tranquillity gently bearing the soul ; which " peace," says St. Paul, "surpasses all understanding." Certainly, whoever finds this peace in himself would not exchange it for all the crowns and scepters of kings. St. Augustine says : " How delightful it suddenly became for me to want for vain pleasures and joys ; and which there was fear before of losing, now there is joy in abandoning." His praises are sung by all, and he acquires not only fame, lost py sin, but also a glorious name, as in the case of Mary Mag? 86 SECOND SUNDAY OF LENT. dalene, who from the greatest sinner became the greatest lover of Christ, and whose praises are on the tongues of all. The same of Matthew, Paul, Zachseus, Mary of Egypt, etc., the stains of whose former lives were not only washed away, but converted to their glory. And this is the change of which Amos speaks : " Seek the Lord, converting darkness into morning" (5 : 8). For what is the sinner but darkness, or the inhabitant of a dark dungeon? However, by pen- ance, he is changed and is converted into a most beautiful golden aurora. We have an example of this change in the Prodigal Son, who, having returned to himself and to his father, is clothed in royal raiment. " But the father said to his servants: Bring forth quickly the first robe and put it on him, and put a ring on his hand, and shoes on his feet ; and bring hither the fatted calf and kill it, and let us make merry" (Luke 15 : 22). III. Prom the joys of this present life to hell — the most terrible transformation of all. A type of this we have in Sampson, who, as long as he nurtured his hair according to the rite of the Nazarenes, was most powerf uland an invincible ter- ror to his enemies ; but when, through the deception of Dali- lah, his head was shaved, at the same time his strength was lost to him ; then with great fury the Philistines rushed upon him, and at first put out his eyes, because, says St. Jerome, " he used his sight badly," for " he had looked on other wo- men and had loved them." And for that brief pleasure he suffered perpetual darkness by the loss of his sight. And this is the first grade of hellish transformation — most dense darkness, or as the Lord calls it "exterior," into which the damned fall after they have been deprived of life and handed over to the power of the demons ; because here they loved the internal darkness of the mind, and the works of darkness ; because moreover, they used the light of their eyes most criminally for their vicious desires. They led him to the strong city of Gaza, the most famous and most remote of all, because it was most strongly fortified, and because he had brought great disgrace on it when he carried away its gates. In the same manner the reprobate are led to the city of the demons — hell — most remote from heaven, and most strongly fortified. What mountains and valleys surround it ! Hear what Abraham says to the rich man in hell : " Between us and you there is fixed a great chaos, so that they who would pass from hence to you cannot, nor from thence come hither THE FOURFOLD TRANSFIGURATION OF MAN. 87 (Luke 16 : 26). They bonnd him with chains and threw him into prison. Such is the fate of the damned, who are bound with chains in a space so confined that they cannot move about. They made him turn the grindstone, a punishment inflicted on the most miserable culprits ; but that is nothing compared with the grindstone which the damned are com- pelled to turn in hell. Who can count the stripes and blows and the burnings with hot irons they receive ? Who can count the revolutions of that stone throughout eternity ? The anger of God will perpetually pursue them, and that cursed stone will revolve forever. " The voice of thy thunder in a wheel," says David ; that is, that voice shall thunder against them forever who are turning the wheel of eternity. They led him with great shouts to his deep disgrace ; for they were not satisfied to lead him blind to Gaza, where before he had sinfully looked upon strange women and where they deceived him, but, on account of this, they held sacrifices and ban- quets. Who will explain the shame of this great hero ? What a concourse of hostile people while he is led bound ; what rejoicings ; what reproaches hurled at him ; what scof- fings at his hair ; what vituperations against him and his God ! And perhaps they led him through the very entrance, which he before had destroyed, to insult him the more ; urging him, if he were a man, to repeat his former feat. Greater by far and more bitter than these will be the impre- cations and derisions hurled at the damned by their victorious enemies, the demons. What a transfiguration, from the child of God to the plaything of demons ! IV. From the miseries and calamities of this world to ce- lestial glory — the happiest of all ; which change only the just are to expect, according to St. Paul (1 Cor. 15 : 51): "We shall all indeed rise again : but we shall not all be changed." Christ in his transfiguration is a type of this change. In it, his face shone as the sun, denoting the beatific vision, by which the blessed are so refreshed and satiated that in it alone they will be happy, and will possess everything they desire. His garments became white as snow ; by which we understand the adornments of body and soul in the blessed. The voice of his Father was heard saying : " This is my be- loved Son," etc. ; representing the delights of the senses in the blessed. Moses and Elias appeared talking with him ; so it will be in heaven — a great society of the blessed, varied, most resplendent and most delightful. A bright cloud over- 88 SECOND SUNDAY OF LENT. shadowed them, denoting the royal bine heavens, the most clear, the most serene, most secure and most ornate. There- fore, the elect, on the day of resurrection, will be greatly transfigured with Christ, when they will pass from darkness to the sight of eternal light — God ; when they will receive, for the filth of a mortal body, a glorified one, that is, bril- liant, subtle, agile and immortal ; for sorrow and anguish they will experience all the delights of the senses ; they will pass from the society of persecutors and reprobates to the most agreeable companionship of the blessed ; finally, they will desert this valley of tears for the eternal mansions of heaven, where there are many nobles whose possession is called paradise, whose tabernacles are made of light, whose life is God, whose conversation is immortal, whose garments are sprinkled with the blood of the Lamb, on whose heads are placed crowns of purest gems and gold ; and the King of that region is most powerful, whose name is the God of Gods and the Lord of Lords ; whose messengers are called Angels, whose garments are all alike and whose touch is as a burning fire. The city of this king is most renowned and is called the kingdom of Christ ; its wall is made of the purest gold, having twelve gates ; in each of these hangs a priceless pearl ; and these gates are named for the twelve apostles. There is a most wonderful temple there containing the Holy of holies, and a golden altar before which stands a remarkable man, holding a harp and exhorting all to join in the praises of the King : " Praise ye the Lord from the heavens, praise ye him in the high places. Praise ye him all his angels : praise ye him all his hosts" (Ps. 148). And this man's name is David, son of Jesse. And the streets of this city are paved with the purest gold ; its river flows with eternal life ; its trees bear fruit every month, and their leaves produce a soothing balm for souls ; its light is unerring, and its gates are never closed ; there, there is no night, no darkness ; but always joy and perpetual peace. May Christ Jesus, who was transfigured to- day, deign to lead us to this transfiguration ! THIRD SUNDAY OP LENT. 1 i 'WATCHFULNESS OF THE DEVIL, BY WHICH HE GUARDS SINNERS, HIS SLAVES. I. He entangles them in sin. II. He does not harass them. III. He flatters them. IV. He occupies them with secular pursuits. V. He prevents them from wishing to be converted. VI. He afflicts them about to reform. VII. When converted, he insults them. VIII. When free, he again ensnares them. " When a strong man armed keepeth his court, those things are in peace which he possesseth " (Luke 11 : 21). It is related that the devil, having taken possession of a certain holy man, when asked his name, replied : "We are three who live in this man, and I am called ' closing the heart ' ; my business is to close the heart of the sinner against contrition. If, by chance, he escape me, and is filled with sorrow for sin, I have another companion called i the mouth ; ' whose office is to persuade the sinner against confession ; if he fails, I have another called ' closing the purse/ who ad- vises the sinner after confession not to restore ill-gotten goods, and consequently not to comply with that part of the Sacrament — Satisfaction." Those demons were very much like the ones mentioned in the gospel, which, according to Luke, made the man dumb, and according to Matthew, both blind and deaf. Blind, lest he should consider the enormity of his sins ; dumb, lest he confess them, and deaf, lest he listen to the advice of his confessor warning him to make restitution, not to bear malice, to give up his sinful mode of living. The devil fortifies himself after the manner of a tyrant after he has occupied a fortified town. He knows that, especially during the holy season, a bitter war will be waged against him and that he will be overthrown ; and therefore the Church places to-day's gospel before us to in- struct us in the wiles and snares of the devil, and to warn us 89 90 THIRD SUNDAY O? LENT. from becoming his willing slaves. In the same gospel, two captains are fighting for our sonls — Christ and the devil. Christ has conquered the demon and has ejected him from his stronghold ; and this he will readily do for all sinners, if they faithfully co-operate with him. Let us see how the devil works to keep his slaves in subjection. I. After the devil has brought any one under his power by the commission of mortal sin, he labors to entangle him, and in a certain way binds him, lest he retrace his footsteps. "The spirit has bound him in his toils/' says Osee 4, as the King of Babylon did with King Mannasses, who says : " I was so bent with the weight of iron chains, that I could not raise my head." Thus also he bound David, who laments : " The cords of the wicked have encompassed me" (Ps. 118). " And behold there was a woman who had a spirit of infirm- ity eighteen years and she was bowed together ; neither could she look upwards at all " (Luke 13 : 11). The sinner is bound while he adds sin to sin, until he no longer fears it. The devil urges him to repeat again and again a sin commit- ted, until little by little, a habit is formed from which it be- comes almost impossible to extricate himself. The habit of sin is a strong rope, which is composed of many slender cords, each of which may be easily broken, but woven to- gether readily resist the ordinary strength of man, as St. Augustine knew and lamented. The devil uses many other means to ensnare the sinner ; some he joins to evil societies, which strongly hold them ; others to great dignity and honors, which through shame they will not give up. As the spider, when he sees the poor fly caught in the net, enwraps his body with more web, and leaves him there secure until he is ready to devour him, so the devil acts with the sinner. But the sinner must not, therefore, be cast down and dis- couraged — as St. Augustine broke his chains, so can the sinner by the grace of God, as Sampson did with the ropes that bound him. Confide strongly in God, and, fortified by the hope of his assistance, do what is in your power. He will help you. How often have we not seen good come from evil! II. He does not injure them after he has them in his net ; nor does he afflict them with temptations, but leaves them in tranquillity and peace. The reason is, because he is in full possession of them ; as a dog neither barks at nor bites those m the house — only strangers. Hunters do not trap domestic animals — but wild ones. So does the devil with men. He WATCHFULNESS OF THE DEVIL. 91 has despoiled them of everything — there is nothing more to take from them. St. Chrysostom says : " Sailors with an empty vessel do not fear pirates, for they do not labor to destroy an empty ship ; but if it be loaded with a precious cargo — gold and valuable gems then there is every fear that all will be lost ; so the devil does not pursue the sinner but the just because the prize is more valuable. He bitterly as- sails and tempts the just. He tries hard to occupy the house already cleaned and adorned. In this way he afflicted holy Job. III. He flatters them and fills their ears with his seductive words that they sleep securely. If their conscience begins to trouble them he quiets them by telling them that allowance will be made for youth ; that death is a long way off ; that there are many others like them ; that God is merciful, etc. He proposes many fictitious pleasures never to be had, and often promises mountains of gold. So the servants of Pharao assisted Abraham, while they brought his wife to Pharao. The fisherman, when the fish is hooked, does not immedi- ately draw him out but reels off the line until he is sure that he is safely hooked ; so the devil acts. The Babylonians ordered the captive Israelites to sing with their harps, so that they might forget their country. In like manner the devil urges us by various flatteries to forget our former state in which we lived piously ; but if you are wise you will answer with the Israelites : " If I forget thee, Jerusalem, may my right hand be forgot." As the glories of the sunset disap- pear when night sets in, so shall the glories and splendor of this world when death arrives. Then he persuades them that death is far off ; they have a long time yet to live and many opportunities for repentance. Of him God says to Job : " His eyes are like the eyelids of the morning " (41). His eyes are the counsels and thoughts which he suggests to his slaves ; they are not like the shades of even, but like the early dawn, because he does not suggest them in the evening of life, at the hour of death, but as soon as they arrive at the use of reason — in the dawn of life while there is a long day before them, and thus it is not difficult to hold them captives in sin c IV. He keeps the mind and intelligence busily occupied with worldly affairs. So the hawker plucks out the eyes of the hawk lest he fly away ; so did the Philistines with Samp- §on ? and then made sport of him. So does the devil with 92 THIRD SUNDAY OF LENT. the sinner — he plucks out his eyes that he may not consider his last end — may not turn away from the foulness of his sins — may think nothing of the future, but everything of the present. He destroys their hearing that they may hear neither the Word of God nor the voice of conscience. "When the followers of Moloch were sacrificing boys to the idol, they sounded the drums lest the cries of the children should be heard by their parents ; so the devil fills the ears with all worldly sounds, lest they hear the threats of an angry God, and the cries of a stricken conscience deploring its lost vir- tue. He deprives them of the power of speech, especially in confession, lest they tell their sins. In the life of St. Francis we read that there was a Brother renowned for his sanctity, and so careful about the observance of silence, that he would confess only by signs. St. Francis, one day hearing him highly commended by the others, said : " Let him be ad- monished to confess ordinarily once or twice a week ; if he does not, then it is a temptation of the devil and a fraudu- lent deceit." When they advised him so he placed his hand on his mouth, and shaking his head, he refused to make an oral confession. What happened ? After a few days he re- turned to his wicked life and died a miserable death. V. To those desiring conversion, he proposes and exagger- ates the gravity of sin, the difficulty of conversion, the sever- ity of penance, the ineffable delights of sin, etc. When the mourners were bewailing the daughter of Jairus as dead, the Lord said : " She is not dead but sleepeth ; " so, when the devils can succeed in no other way, they fill the soul with despair, and sing a requiem over it as though it were lost forever. How, they say, will you confess such a sin ; how can you ever repeat it, how can you with such shame leave that sinful company ? St. Augustine says that trifles of trifles and vanities of vanities fought against him while he was considering his conversion. So the devil held Judas, having urged him to sin and afterwards so exaggerated his crime, as to finally cast him into despair. You must answer the devil : " Depart from me ! my soul is not dead, but sleeps in the Lord, by whose grace it can be quickened ! " Then, again, he urges delay from day to day and in the mean- time, he is devising means to more surely secure his victim. VI. He afflicts those about to leave him, as Pharao did the Israelites, with labors and stripes. The weight of the bucket is not felt until it is drawn from the well, so the weight ol WATCHFULNESS OF THE DEVIL. 93 sin at the beginning of conversion. With what difficulty you confess — how irksome to give up the long-contracted habit of sinning. This is shown in the life of St. Basil, where there is mention of a youth who had sold himself to the devil, and when he desired to be converted, he was filled with un- earthly shouts and yells. A cat does not harass the mouse in her possession, but plays with it ; but if it tries to run away, then she follows it and seizes it with her sharp claws. How many experience this when they wish to join the Church — to leave the world and enter religion — to give up a life of shame ! So that unclean spirit, when Christ threatened him, cried out and tore the boy so fiercely before he left him, that every one thought he was dead. So the devil acts with the sinner ; he does not trouble him when he has him ; but when about to depart, forced by divine power, he suggests to the mind most filthy thoughts. Let us despise the insults of the demon and persevere in our good resolutions and works of piety. The devil may terrify, but he cannot con- quer unless we wish it. VII. He insults the newly converted through detractors and backbiters, as the Jews did, saying to the paralytic : iC It is the Sabbath : you are not allowed to take up your bed." So they treated the blind man whom the Lord had healed, throwing him out of the synagogue, and heaping insults upon him. This they did to Zacchasus, Matthew and Mary Magdalene after their conversion. VIII. He lays snares for the newly converted, taking with him seven more devils worse than himself, as the Lord says ; and if he sees them negligent, throwing aside all care of salvation, giving up good works and taking delight in the pursuit of vanity ; again he besieges the lost castle and easily recovers it to himself. Therefore, after our hard-earned victory, let us watch carefully and always be on our guard, lest we lose what cost us so much. FOURTH SUNDAY OP LENT. PKEBOGATIVES OF THE SEEVAHTS OF GOD ON EARTH. I. Interior light is not found in the wicked. II. Divine protection is not found in them. III. Sufficient corporal sustenance is not found in them. IV. Hearing of prayers is not found in them. V. Health of soul is not found in them. VI. The odor and authority of a good name are not found in them. VII. Joy in passing from this life is not found in them. " The men therefore sat down in number, about five thousand " (John 6 : 10). Among other causes which we saw last Sunday why many serve the world and its vices, neglecting God and virtue, this is not the least : a certain general error in which men live obstinately persuaded that all reward for serving God is post- poned to a future state — none whatever in this life. They, therefore, consider the way of virtue hard, and devoid of any good or consolation. " For as the king insulted over holy Job : so his relations and kinsmen mocked at his life saying : where is thy hope for which thou gavest alms, and buriest the dead " (Tobias 2 : 15, 16) ? So the wicked in Malachy 3 : 14 : " He laboureth in vain that serveth God, and what profit is it that we have kept his ordinances, and that we have walked sorrowful before the Lord of hosts ? " The Church truly refutes this pernicious error, especially on this Sunday, when she orders the servants of God in the midst of their fast to be joyful and cheerful. " Eejoice, Jerusalem, and make a compact all you who love her, rejoice with great joy ! " The history of to-day's gospel refutes it, in which Christ feeds his followers in the barren desert. The history of the march of the Israelites from Egypt through the desert to the promised land refutes it, and this history the Church begins to read to-day. In that bitter and prolonged journey, 94 PREROGATIVES OF THE SERVANTS OF GOD. 95 God showed many signs of his goodness to his people, by which they were so wonderfully refreshed and comforted that they preferred traveling and solitude to Egyptian slavery. As this journey of the Hebrews represents the road of virtue which the just follow, departing from the slavery of this world ; so the benefits which God showered on the Hebrews on that journey truly represent the graces which God will give to those who will faithfully follow him through this weary life. I. A pillar of fire led them through the unknown desert and warned them when to proceed and when to rest — it pre- ceded them when they were to go forward, and stood still when they were to rest. Nor did it lead them through the land of the Philistines, lest being overpowered by the hosts of their enemy they should be returned to Egypt (Exod. 13). An angel directed that pillar of fire. So the servants of God have an interior light by which they can see clearly what they should see : God and his attributes, his benefits, his providence in governing the world — in sending good and evil. They know themselves, their defects, their weakness against which they may safely guard. They know the things necessary for salvation, what they should believe, what they should do. They know the gravity of sin, its wiles, dangers and temptations. They know those things that belong to their state and office. They consider their last end and pre- pare for it. _ Finally, they know how to apply the remedies in time to their defects and falls. Whence they are represented in the Apocalypse 4, by those animals that have eyes before and behind. " A net is spread in vain before the eyes of them that have wings" (Prov. 1 : 17). Those having wings are the saints and elect of God who have the wings of faith, hope and charity and of the other virtues by which they fly to the contemplation of heavenly things ; they have spiritual eyes with which they watch out for the snares of the old enemy, and thus avoid sin. In vain is the net spread, that is, the net of snares of the devil, before the eyes of the holy, because they can easily conquer him, because their conver- sation is about heavenly things. For they do not see the face of sin but its back ; they pay no attention to the pleas- ures it proposes, but to the evils which follow it : grief, shame, the worm of conscience, judgment and hell. The guardian angel is wont to ilia mine them and direct them in their acts, as St. Frances of Eome well knew, who consulted 96 FOURTH SUNDAY OF LENT. him as her teacher in all things. The servants of the devil have not this light. " We have groped for the wall, and, like the blind, we have groped as if we had no eyes ; we have stumbled at noonday as in darkness, we are in dark places as dead men " (Isaias 59 : 10). What can be greater blindness than to sell eternal goods for temporal gain and paltry, evanescent pleasure ; to see death so often and riot to provide against it ; not to fear hell ; to groan under the yoke of sin and not throw it off ? to be covered with wounds and not seek a remedy ? The Egyptians lived in such utter darkness that no one dared move from his place ; while the Hebrews, however, lived in light — so the wicked in this world live in darkness — the just in light. II. By the pillar of cloud he protected them partly from the enemy, as when he enclosed the Hebrews and repulsed the attack of the pursuing Egyptians, covering these with darkness and illuminating the former. Partly from the heat of the sun, which in the desert was very great (Deut. 32). God as an eagle flew above them, and spread his wings over them, and carried them on his shoulders. In the same man- ner he hovers about the just, and as the eagle directs his eyes to the nest and its young, so the eyes of the Lord are fixed on the just. Hence the just are always joyful and glad, because they know they are under the shadow of God's pro- tection. When Pharao could not follow with his chariots and horse, the Hebrews with uncovered heads went forward. So the just live in this world with uncovered heads, and in the midst of dangers : they need no head-covering, since they know they are under the shadow of the wings of God. When St. Martin fell among thieves who were to put him to death, he said he feared nothing, since he knew he w T as in the power of God. Other examples : the three boys in the fiery fur- nace, Daniel in the lion's den, Susanna, Job, Tobias, Abra- ham, Isaac, Joseph, David, etc., etc. The just have in themselves present and ready a reserve of many soldiers for all dangers. When the heart is afflicted, the blood from all parts rushes thither to lend aid ; so when the soul of the just is hard pressed, all the virtues rush to her assistance and force the enemy to capitulate. Now faith excites it, now charity, now hope, again obedience, patience, etc. Faith teaches to rely on God for the saving medicine ; hope shows that in a short while they shall be free from PREROGATIVES OF THE SERVANTS OF GOD. 97 this wicked world ; charity shows that they are become like Christ ; obedience subjects the will to the divine will ; pa- tience consoles, etc. The wicked, on the other, hand are de- prived of this good, because they are without God's help ; and hence they are exposed to the enemy and to the heats of temptation. So of the impious Chanaans say Caleb and Josue : " Fear ye not the people of this land, for we are able to eat them up as bread. All aid is gone from them ; the Lord is with us, fear ye not" (Numbers 14:9). They are as a flock without a shepherd, a ship without a captain, an army without a general. They have not in themselves the help of virtues ; but are found weak and exhausted from many temptations and trials and are easily overcome ; and by impatience, double the weight of their crosses, and, like bread, are devoured by the devil. III. He supplied what was necessary for the sustenance of the body : as the manna from heaven, the water from the rock. " Your garments are not worn out, neither are the shoes of your feet consumed with age" (Deut. 29 : 5). So, also, whatever is necessary for the bodies of the just, God does not permit to be wanting ; and although ordinarily there is no abundance, for that would be dangerous, how- ever he supplies sufficient ; as he gave the manna to the Israelites, and forbade them to collect more than they could eat ; nor should they keep any for the following day. "Fear not, my son ; we have indeed a poor life, but we shall have many good things if we fear God and depart from all sin and do that which is good" (Tobias 4 : 23). " Fear the Lord all ye his saints, for there is no want to them that fear him ; the rich have wanted and have suffered hunger ; but they that seek the Lord shall not be deprived of any good" (Ps. 33). " Better is a little to the just than great riches of the wicked ; for the arms of the wicked shall be broken in pieces" (Ps. 36). Because the former trust in the Lord; they are not avaricious nor prodigal ; they do not abuse the gifts of God ; the wicked trust to lying and fraud and are always in want. He adds : " They shall not be confounded in the evil time, and in the days of famine they shall be filled." Again : "I have been young and now am old, and I have not seen the just forsaken, nor his seed seeking bread." We, therefore, see the difference between the good and the wicked with regard to the necessaries of life. But some may say it often happens that the good must go beg- 7 05 FOURTH SUNDAY OF LENT. ging and the wicked have plenty. As to begging, David speaks of those who took pity on others by giving alms ; as to sustenance, the just were not deprived of that. But you say many suffer from extreme poverty. But what if they are not just ? Surely God has not promised the necessaries to sinners — only to the good. " Seek first the kingdom of God and his justice, and all these shall be added to you " (Matt. 6 : 33). Very many beggars have nothing of divine things because they do not take care of them ; what wonder if ■ earthly things are not added to them. If they are just, they will at least be patient and as content in their poverty as Lazarus was. The poverty and want of the wicked are fully shown in the siege of Jerusalem by Titus. IV. As often as they asked anything God heard their prayers ; to their desires and complaints he listened ; he made the bitter waters sweet ; gave them food from heaven, water from the rock, and cured them of the serpent's bite. He was so kind to them that Moses said : " Neither is there any other nation so great that hath gods so nigh them as our Lord is present to all our petitions" (Deut. 4 : 7). He acts the same way towards the just who in all their trials have ready recourse to him. They have the express promise of Christ : " If you abide in me and my words abide in you, you shall ask whatever you will, and it shall be done unto you " (John 15 : 7). " What else is this," says Cardinal Bellarmine, " than to constitute the just man lord of crea- tion, and to give to him the keys of heavenly treasures, and to make him in a measure omnipotent." David proves that the just man has life and good days, because "the eyes of the Lord are on the just, and his ears open to their prayers." If they foresee evil coming, they cry out to God, and they find his ears open. If they do not foresee the danger, God watches over them, and either warns them to cry out or by j some other means averts the impending danger. David says : "The just cried out and the Lord heard them." Joshua made the sun stand still ; Elias suspended the waters in the clouds, and released them at will. Many saints in the New Law also did wonderful things. But you say : " Why do not I and so many others experience this good ? " Because you are not just. " And when you stretch forth your hands, I will turn away my eyes from you : and when you multiply prayer, I will not hear you : for your hands are full of blood " (Isaias 1 : 15). If you were good you would receive PREROGATIVES OF THE SERVANTS OF GOD. 99 "what you ask. He adds : " Wash yourselves, be clean, take away the evil of your devices from my eyes ; and then come and accuse me, saith the Lord ; and if your sins be as scar- let, they shall be made white as snow." V. He preserved them strong and in good health during the whole journey. " There was not among their tribes one that was feeble " (Ps. 104). They needed this strength on account of the journey. Otherwise in the just it is not often found, because they do not need it ; they are compensated by a better health, which is security of conscience and tran- quillity of soul, by which they despise and even make sweet the bitter ; they spurn dangers, laugh at the tempestuous waves of the world, and know not fear. St. Chrysostom says : (< As he who on a rock laughs at the waves as he sees them break with mighty force on the shore and dissolve into foam, so the good man, secure in virtue, fears not the rag- ings of hell itself, but is tranquil and composed." As in famine, war, tempest, sickness or death itself, he is calm, according to Pro v. 12 : (l Nothing shall sadden the just whatever shall happen to him." The wicked, on the other hand, are disturbed in mind whenever they are sick, when they read of accidents, whenever it thunders, when there is lightning, when they see death, when they think of their last end, as Felix, who was terrified when he heard St. Paul speaking of the last judgment (Acts 24). From this good follows peace of heart and liberty of mind, which the wicked have not ; who are ever at war with themselves ; who obey their evil inclinations, and are held captive by them. For this Diogenes chided Alexander the Great, saying that he himself served the gods, and Alexander served his cupidi- ties ; by far a worse slavery. The just man loves nothing so much that he is not ready to lose it ; the wicked fears noth- ing so much that he is not ready to embrace and follow. VI. He gave them fame and esteem before all peoples ; also authority and terror with the races (Deut. 2 ; Jos. 2, 9, 11). Balaam, who was called to curse them, could only bless them. (( How beautiful are thy tabernacles, Jacob, and thy tents, Israel ! " As woody valleys, as gardens irrigated near thy streams, and tabernacles which the Lord has placed as cedars near the waters. In the same way, God procures for his servants, if not suddenly, at least by degrees, the good esteem and the odor of a good name, and even terror with the wicked, so that they are unwilling, LifC. 100 FOURTH SUNDAY OF LENT. if they wished to be honored, and are forced to be made great of. The just are, as Balaam says, " like cedars near the waters," always green and decked with leaves ; that is, preserving their reputation, as David also says : i( He shall live like a tree that is planted near running waters, which shall bring forth its fruit in due season ; and his leaf shall not fall off, and all whatsoever he shall do shall prosper " (Ps. 1). They are feared by the wicked as Moses was feared by Pharao, because he was a great man in the land of Egypt and among its people (Exod. 11). John the Baptist was feared by Herod (Mark 6) ; Jacob by the Ohanaans (Gen. 35). So that God makes those who fear him terrible to all. The wicked are like the dust which the wind drives from the face of the earth — they do not preserve their foliage — an honor- able fame ; but at length lost by their vices they become the ridicule of men ; and the wind of evil rumor robs them of honor and scatters their leaves to the earth and so they be- come dust. The dust is caught up by the wind, and flies through the air for awhile, but soon falls to earth and be- comes mud, to be trampled on by the feet of men. "The glory of the sinner is dung and worms : to-day he is lifted up, and to-morrow he shall not be found, because he is returned into his earth " (1 Maccab. 2 : 62, 63). VII. He strengthened them by the hope of the promised land ; for when they were not far off, he showed them the fruits of it, from which they could know his goodness, espe- cially by that great bunch of grapes. So the just are ani- mated by and rejoice in the hope by which, as by a ring, they see and judge the goods promised them in heaven. Hence, in all their necessities, they comfort and strengthen them- selves, as an anchor a ship. "Who have fled for refuge to hold fast the hope set before us. "Which we have as an anchor of the soul, sure and firm " (Heb. 6 : 18, 19). As an anchor holds and preserves unharmed the ship in the raging waves, so hope holds firm the soul in the midst of the agita- tions of this world. Only when the anchor is in the depths of the sea, is it of avail ; so hope only in the highest heaven. God shows to his elect very often some signs of predestina- tion, by which they are encouraged and stimulated to progress in virtue. Sometimes he gives them a tasto of eternal hap- piness. Finally, the just would not exchange this hope for all the wealth of the world. Hence Job, 19, joyfully exclaims: " This my hope is laid up in my bosom." The wicked have PREROGATIVES OF THE SERVANTS OF GOD. 101 not this anchor. " For the hope of the wicked is as dust, which is blown away with the wind, and as a thin froth which is dispersed by the storm, and a smoke, that is scat- tered abroad by the wind" (Wisdom 5). VIII. He gave them a most happy and most joyful entry into Palestine, while he led them on dry land through the Jordan ; such a joyous spectacle that David (Ps. 113) says : " The mountains skipped like rams, and the hills like the lambs of the flock." The mountains and hills laughed at the sea and Jordan, for he adds : " What ailed thee, sea, that thou didst flee : and thou, Jordan, that thou wast turned back ?" Snch will be the joyful exit of the just from this life. They will enter Jordan, the river of judgment, without fear ; they shall laugh at death saying with the Apostle : " O grave, where is thy victory : death, where is thy sting ? " PASSION SUNDAY. MOTIVES FOR CONTRITION FOR THOSE WHO ARE AFFLICTED WITH SIN. I. God convinces the sinner. II. Christ convinces the sinner. III. His neighbor convinces the sinner. IV. All creatures con- vince the sinner. " Which of you shall convince me of sin ? " (Jno. 8 : 46;. In the forty-fourth chapter of Genesis we read that, after Joseph had filled with corn the sacks of his brethren, he ordered his steward to place his silver cup in the month of Benjamin's sack and when they were on their journey to pursue them and accuse them of having stolen the cup. He did so and they became indignant. " They speedily took down their sacks to the ground, and every man opened his sack." When the cup was found in Benjamin's sack, "they rent their garments, and, loading their asses again, returned into the town." Who cannot readily imagine the fear that filled their souls ? But, while they, though innocent, acknowl- edged their fault and prostrated themselves before Joseph, they were most kindly received by him. It seems to me that at this time our true Joseph, Christ the Saviour, does the same thing, not because he accuses us of a feigned theft, but because he very well knows that we carry thefts of sin — the sacks of our consciences. Wherefore he himself, especially at this time to restore us to his friendship, sends his stewards of the Church, the priests, to examine our sacks and to search our consciences. Which one of us can say that he has no theft in his sack ? Who will dare say with Christ : " Which of you shall convince me of sin ? " Immediately John will accuse us when he says : " If we say that we have no sin, 102 MOTIVES FOR CONTRITION. 103 we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us." (1 Epist. 1 : 8). It remains, therefore, for us with Joseph's brethren to rend not only our garments but our hearts, as Joel says : " Eend your hearts and not your garments " (2 : 13). Let us rend them by true contrition and compunction of heart, and with this contrition let us return to our Saviour by oral con- fession that we may merit to receive from him the much coveted friendship. But, as many like those brethren will not acknowledge their faults, I shall accuse them that they may understand what a grave and deplorable thing sin is. I. God accuses you against whom you have especially sinned, whose glory and regal crown you have stolen and to whom in consequence you have done the greatest injury. You ask how you have done this ? Listen. Have you not done it when contrary to the express will and command of God you have adhered to creatures and worshiped them above all else, you have preferred them to God and placed them on his throne ; have you not by this driven God, your legitimate King, from his throne, while you rebelled against him and acted in direct opposition to his will ? For : " Is not he thy father, that hath possessed thee, and made thee and created thee?" (Dent. 32:6). How would you feel, if unknowingly you had killed your father and afterwards found that it was he ? Oh, if we only had eyes to see who he is against whom we have sinned ! We knowingly, will- ingly and with malice have offended God our Father, who is our greatest benefactor. How do we live, move and have our being unless from him ? Are these not continuous ben- efits of God : the earth which nourishes us, the air which we breathe, the bread and water which sustain us, the sun which illumines us, the fire which warms us ? " And if these things be little, I shall add far greater things unto thee," as Nathan said to David (2 Kings 12:8). And you will not repent of having offended such a benefactor ? Out on you, and go to the lions ! John Osorius narrates that in Spain a certain lion was very fond of his keeper and lovingly ad- mitted him to his cage. One day when the keeper appeared in a strange garb the lion, not recognizing him, attacked him and tore him to pieces. At length, perceiving that it was his keeper he had killed, the lion became inconsolable and refused all kinds of food. What shall we say to this ? The lion knows and grieves for having offended his keeper ; and man will not grieve for having offended his preserver ? 104: PASSION SUNDAY. blind and miserable mortals, if you did not know when yon sinned ; behold now and contemplate him. Is it not he who nourishes you and clothes you, enriches you, makes you rulers of all creatures, and gives you angels for guardians ? You have broken his laws, you have burst his bonds ; you have stolen his glory and given it to Mammon and Bacchus. " Know thou and see that it is an evil and a bitter thing for thee, to have left the Lord thy God " (Jer. 2 : 19). More bitter indeed than to have been left by God (if however you love God). For who will doubt that it is more bitter for the lover to have offended the beloved than to have been offended by him ? St. Paul said he was ready to become an anathema for his brethren, to be separated from them ; but he never was ready to desert Christ, nor cease to be loved by him. " Who then shall separate us from the love of Christ ? . . . Neither death, nor life, nor angels, etc. (Eom. 8 : 35, 38). II. Christ accuses you ; for, sinner, you have stolen his cup, the merit of his passion, which he himself called his chalice. Christ would not listen to Peter, who with drawn sword wished to prevent him from undergoing his passion. " The chalice which my Father hath given me, shall I not drink it ?" (John 18 : 11). More keenly will Christ feel it, if after having drained that chalice on the cross he finds that his blood was shed in vain. It is a greater injury to steal from one a thing already bought than a thing yet to be paid for. Eecount, sinner, what Christ spent for you and for me, what he did and what he suffered ; and see if you have not reason to deplore your prodigality. Did he not for our sakes descend from heaven ? did he not clothe himself with our frailty ? did he not seek our salvation in many journeys ? did he not preach and show us the way to heaven ? did he not suffer all kinds of torments, crucifixion and finally death itself ? and you despise and make light of all these, and do not weep over your madness ? If two brothers were held cap- tives by the Turks with the understanding that within a certain time they would be put to death unless a large ransom were paid for them, and their father hearing this should travel near and far begging the money and then bring it them to obtain their freedom ; if those captives should begin to indulge in revelry and spend the money with the Turks, their enemy, until there was nothing left for their ransom, would not this be an enormous crime ? would it not be the basest kind of ingratitude to so good a father ? "When their day of MOTIVES FOR CONTRITION. 105 death was drawing near should they not with the prodigal son enter into themselves and bitterly bewail their ingrati- tude and folly ? What else did Christ do for thirty-three years but collect the price of our redemption ? How many calumnies, injuries, insults and torments did he suffer for our sakes Y And what do sinners do ? They indulge in for- bidden pleasures, squander the price of redemption, nay, even cast it away. " But they have thought to cast away my price : I ran in thirst" (Ps. 61 : 5). Enter into yourselves then, sinners, and see what and how much you have lost, what kind of father you have offended. Say to your- selves : Was I baptized in vain ? confirmed in vain ? did I confess in vain ? are all those things which Christ did, said and suffered of no benefit to me ? am I to remain a captive of the devil ? Alas, what have I done ? But this is not enough for many sinners. They repeatedly by the commis- sion of new sins crucify Christ. " They have added to the grief of my wounds " (Ps. 68 : 27). unheard of ingrati- tude ! " Who hath trodden under foot the Son of God, and hath esteemed the blood of the testament unclean " (Heb. 10 : 29). " Crucifying to themselves the Son of God, and making a mockery of him" (Heb. 6 : 6). They act as the soldiers did on Calvary when they rudely stripped Christ of his garment, thus re-opening his wounds and adding new torture. Alexander the Great in one of his drunken revels transfixed with a spear his deliverer, Clytus, who had cut off the hand Ehosacer, striving to slay his master. Becoming sober and seeing the body of Clytus, he was so overcome with grief as to wish to kill himself with the same spear. Pre- vented from doing this, he shut himself up for three days, refusing all food and wishing to starve to death. Infinitely more do we owe to Christ, who restrained the sword of an angry God about to slay us, and who by his merits returned it to its scabbard. How, therefore, does the sinner feel who remembers too late that he has afflicted his preserver, and, as far as he could, has slain him ? III. Your neighbor accuses you, whom you have afflicted with many injuries and from whom in a manner you have stolen a cup. First, by doing him bodily injury. Examine your conscience and it will tell you. Some by chance poor in the goods of this world I have defrauded ; by strength or fraud I have extorted from them what they did not owe me ; to other poor ones seeking my aid I not only have given 106 PASSION SUNDAY. nothing when I could but have added to their affliction by opprobrium and calumny ; the good name and esteem of others I have striven to lessen and to render them hateful and despicable before God and man. Secondly, in the goods of the soul. How often by my crimes have I provoked others to sin ? How often was I a stone of offense and a rock of scandal to others, when it would have been better for me, with a stone about my neck, to be cast into the sea ? How often were my parents, children, brothers or neighbors pun- ished for my sins ? for often many are punished for the sins of one. And what is greatest of all is that perhaps even now some are in hell, whose damnation I was the cause of or whom, at least, I helped to be damned. How often have I seen some one rushing headlong to hell whom I might have saved by good advice ? what should be my feelings if I were to understand that even one was burning in hell on my ac- count ? Could I easily expiate that sin ? Judas, having be- trayed Christ and seeing him condemned, was struck with remorse, returned the thirty pieces of silver and went and hanged himself. So great did he regard his sin, and what kind of condemnation was it ? To a temporal death which Christ freely invited ; and yet his traitor despaired on ac- count of his crime. What do you say who by your bad ex- ample, teaching and deceit have betrayed not one, but many, to eternal death ? Will any one, on your account, be pun- ished in hell fire for all eternity ? Have you caused any evil that can never be repaired for all eternity ? Will you go to heaven, who have cast another into hell ? Do you not fear for having been the cause of so many suffering in Purgatory ? How many parents cry out from that fire against their chil- dren, through whose fault they are there ? how many chil- dren against parents ? Are you not that wicked servant, who, unwilling to have pity on his fellow-servant, choked him ? While you have despoiled your brother of his goods ; or persecuted him with hatred and envy ; or led him into sin, in so much have you choked him and sent him to hell. IV. All creatures accuse you, from whom you in a man- ner steal the silver cup, that is, that order and natural in- clination, which they have to serve their Creator " For all things serve thee" (Ps. 118 : 91). When you withdraw them from their Creator and force them to serve you contrary to the will of their legitimate Lord ; such your intellect, strength, form, wealth, dignities, the mixed elements, the MOTIVES FOR CONTRITION. 107 stars, all creatures. " For the creature was made subject to vanity, not willingly, but by reason of him that made it sub- ject, in hope ; because the creature, also, itself shall be de- livered from the servitude of corruption into the liberty of the glory of the children of God. For we know that every creature groaneth, and is in labor even till now" (Rom. 8 : 20-22). Therefore creatures groan because, unwilling, they are subject to the sinner : why not rather the sinner groan, who brings such misery on harmless creatures ? By his rebellion against God he causes for himself and others storms, wars, plagues, etc. Are not these miseries sadly de- plored by all ? Much more so should sins, the cause of those, be deplored. Let us therefore open the sacks of our con- sciences and behold the thefts we have committed against God, Christ, our neighbor and all creatures, that we may rend and crush our hearts. David opened his sack and watered his couch with his tears. The Publican opened his sack and struck his breast, nor did he dare to raise his eyes to heaven. Magdalene opened her sack and she washed the feet of Christ with her tears and dried them with her hair. Peter opened his sack and going out he wept bitterly. And so it shall finally happen that after our error is known by the heavenly Joseph, Christ, we shall be admitted to his most loving embrace. PALM SUNDAY. THE PKOXIMATE PREPARATION FOR HOLY COMMUNION. I. Cleanness of heart. II. Spiritual hunger. III. Reverence. IV. Humility. V. Thanksgiving. " Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord " (Matt. 21 : 9). When I behold the triumphal pomp of Christ in to-day's Gospel, I seem to see the same Christ the Lord coming to us from heaven in the Holy Eucharist. Everywhere I see the profoundest humility joined with the highest glory. The profoundest humility of Christ appears when seated on an ass he descends from Mount Olivet to Jerusalem ; his highest glory appears while the multitude strew the way with their garments and palm branches, crying out : " Hosanna to the Son of David." What emperor ever triumphed on an ass ? who was ever received with such honor ? Now let us see Christ coming in the Eucharist. Does he not there descend from heaven to us on earth, hiding under the small species of the Sacrament, conspicuous with no external splendor ? And yet however before him in the Eucharist, Kings and Popes with the universal Church prostrate themselves. Most fittingly therefore while the Holy Eucharist is being con- secrated and elevated that same hymn is sung which the multitude sang in his former triumph : "Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord : Hosanna in the highest." Since at this time the same victor enters our hearts in Holy Communion ; it remains for us to see with what reason, what honor, we receive him. This to-day's multitude shall teach us. L They divested themselves of their garments and spread 108 PREPARATION FOR HOLY COMMUNION. 109 them in the way by which he was to pass lest he should be soiled with filth and mud. What else does this mean, unless that we should cleanse our heart, in which we are to receive the Lord, from all stain not only of mortal sins (which is absolutely necessary) but, as far as we can, of venial also ; likewise of all inordinate affection to the former sins, sen- sual desires and secular thoughts ; so that we may not only show the honor due our heavenly guest but that we may also merit to receive from him the celestial reward for entertaining him. For since he loves purity in the highest degree, the purer we are the more worthy shall we be of such a guest and of the grace he brings with him. Let us hear St. Augustine : " I ask you, brethren, is there any one who would place his garment in a filthy chest ? And if a pre- cious garment is not placed in such a chest, how is it that the Eucharist is received into the soul, foul with the filth of sins ?" What did God wish to indicate when he ordered the loaves of propitiation to be made of the whitest flour, to be placed on the purest of tables and the most fragrant in- cense to be burnt before them ? Was it not because those loaves were a type of the Eucharist, as Sts. Jerome, Cyril and Damascene declare ? " Thou shalt set over against the table the candlestick" (Exod. 26 : 35). The lights were to be of the purest oil and the candlestick the cleanest. Should he not be the purest and free from all stain who wishes to place that heavenly bread in his heart ? Why was it that the Manna fell only in the early morning while the earth was covered, as it were, with a white cloth ? Moreover, he should be pure who wishes to be intimately joined to the most pure Son of the Virgin. Note that after Christ had instituted the Eucharist he chose clean receptacles for his body. The dining- room in which the Eucharist was instituted was furnished. The winding-sheet was clean ; the sepulcher was new, and no one had been placed in it before. What is the mystery in all this ? Christ indicated that after that time he wished to dwell among faithful friends who would receive him with honor and in a pure heart. Let it be enough for us to know that that immaculate Lamb was born in a stable, nourished in a poor dwelling, clothed in poor garments ; that he often slept on the hard ground, that he was thrown into a foul prison, that he was crucified on Calvary ; now is the time to receive him in a more magnificent place ; such is the soul pure and free from all contagion of sin. Let there be no one HO PALM SUNDAY. who will not cast aside his garment, the old man and the de- sires of the flesh. II. And they went forth to meet him. Those who anx- iously expect a friend are accustomed to go to meet him. This we shall do, if with great desire and spiritual hunger we approach Christ's banquet ; for by this we shall show our great love for him and shall dine with him with greater pleasure and profit. But how shall we excite this hunger, this desire in ourselves ? Surely if we consider who and how great Christ is who comes to us and how much we need his presence. The Samaritan woman, when she knew Christ and tasted a little of the living water, leaving the well, ran to the city and urged all to go and see him. But the same Lord comes to us in the Eucharist bringing with him living water flowing to life eternal. Oh, if you knew the gift of God and who it is that comes to us, you would run to the city of your heart and exhort all your powers to go and meet your Lord. With what desire does a poor, desolate spouse await her rich beloved one returning with precious gifts from a far off country ! But your soul is such a miser- able and deserted spouse when deprived of Christ. Will she not therefore rejoice when she learns the beloved one is com- ing ? We know that Christ with the greatest desire pre- pared the table of the Eucharist for us : " With desire I have desired to eat this pasch with you " (Luke 22 : 15). Let us not be slower to receive than he was to give. Let us consider on the one hand the diseases and miseries of our souls, on the other the excellency and efficacy of the medicine which Christ gives us in Holy Communion. The Eucharist is a kind of hospital where all the diseases can be healed ; the deaf will hear : he thou opened ; the lame : walk ; the blind : heboid ; the lepers : he cleansed ; the dead : rise, if, however, we frequently and in the proper spirit approach it. The Lord erected it at the greatest expense, namely, his pre- cious blood. Will he not be offended if we though afflicted do not frequent it, or unwillingly approach it ? III. " And they cut boughs from the trees, and strewed them in the way," a mark of veneration lest he should walk on the bare earth. We also shall do this if with fear and reverence we approach Holy Communion. That consists, first, in a modest composition of the body ; if before Christ we fall on our knees, cast our eyes down and remain in a position of humble adoration. For thus the boughs of trees, PREPARATION FOR HOLY COMMUNION. HI that is, the pride of man, we shall cut down and strew it be- fore Christ, thus we shall decorate the earth with the leaves of our body. Kings and queens took off their crowns and prostrated themselves in the presence of the Holy Eucharist. Was it wonderful that they should do so before the King of heaven and earth ? The lowest angel in heaven is by far nobler than all the kings of earth. " And one of the Sera- phim flew to me, and in his hand was a live coal, which he had taken with the tongs off the altar. And he touched my mouth " (Isaias 6 : 6, 7). Surely not because he would burn his hand (flesh only can be burnt, not spirit), but because that live coal was a type of the Eucharist as St. John Damascene when he says : " Coal is not simple wood, but united to fire ; so the bread of Communion is not simple bread, but united to the divinity. " Since, therefore, one of the highest angels treated with such reverence a type and shadow of the Eu- charist, consider what honor should be shown to the Eu- charist itself. Secondly, it consists in a reverential fear lest perchance anything should be found in us which would offend the eyes of the divine majesty. For we know that Oza sud- denly fell dead because he had touched the Ark irreverently, although his intention was good, namely, of supporting it, " because the oxen kicked and made it lean aside " (2 Kings 6 : 6). We know that God slew the Bethsamites by the thou- sand because they had looked on this same ark with curiosity (1 Kings 6 : 19). Besides, the high priest groaning and with a heavy heart was accustomed to enter the Holy of holies, fearing lest, on account of some hidden sin, he might be killed by God. In the same manner our priests, about to approach the altar, pray : ( ' Take away from us, we beseech thee, Lord, all our iniquities ; that with pure minds we may merit to enter into the Holy of holies/ 7 All these show us with what fear and reverence it behooves us to appear in the presence of Christ our Lord. IV. The whole city was moved at the coming of Christ, saying : Who is this ? This shall be the case with us if we consider the majesty of the coming Lord and our own lowli- ness. For who is he that comes ? He it is before whom "the pillars of heaven tremble" (Job 26 : 11). "Whom the morning stars praised together and whose beauty the sun and moon admire " (Job 38). " For the whole world before thee is as the least grain of the balance, and as a drop of the 112 PALM SUNDAY. morning dew " (Wisdom 11 : 23). And who are we ? We are a shadow, dust, nothing. Will we not therefore exclaim with the humble Francis : " My God and my all, who art thou, and who am I ? And with the humble Baptist al- though the greatest among those born of woman : " And you come to me ? I need to come to you." And with the humble Miphiboseth who when he heard from David : " Thou shalt eat bread at my table always," said : Who am I thy servant that thou shouldst look upon such a dead dog as I am ? " (2 Kings 9 : 7, 8). How much greater is our Lord than his servant David ? how much more precious than his table ? Let us imitate St. Jerome who, when about to receive the Eucharist for the last time, ordered that he should be taken from his bed and placed on the ground ; then kneeling erect, he struck his breast several times, ex- claiming : " Thou art my Lord and my God." It is related that even Henry VIII. , King of England, though cut off from the Church, had the greatest affection and reverence for the Holy Eucharist, for shortly before his death he said : " If I were to cast myself not only on the earth but even under the earth I would not seem to give sufficient honor to this Holy Sacrament." V. They sounded the praises of Christ and cried out : " Hosanna ; blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord." In like manner after Holy Communion, thanks should be given to God for this heavenly benefit. We said before that the High Priest of the Hebrews was accustomed to enter the sanctuary (only once a year) in fear and trem- bling ; after the service he ordered a banquet to be given his friends in thanksgiving, for his safe return from the Holy of holies. Let us order a like banquet after Communion and let us invite all the powers of our body and soul to give thanks to God and say with St. Monica : " My heart and my flesh have rejoiced in the living God." And first let us in- vite our intellect by acknowledging and pondering the gift received, and saying with the Israelites : What is this ? what kind of manna ? what kind of bread ? whence has it been sent to us ? by whose hands was it made ? Or with Daniel : " Thou hast remembered me, God ; who hast fed me with milk, with a wonderful gruel." Or with Paul the Hermit: "Behold, the Lord has sent us a dinner, truly pious, truly merciful ! What thanks would we give, if like those, we received bread from heaven, from an angel, from a PREPARATION FOR HOLY COMMUNION. 113 crow ? But the eucharistic bread is from heaven and from God, nay more, it is God himself. Let us then invite our memory : let us be mindful of this great benefit ; let us remember that manna ; let us inscribe on our soul : " I am the dwelling-place of the great God inaccessible to the world, the flesh and the devil." Let us invite our will by offering ourselves and all we have to the will and direction of God, so that for the future he may rule supreme in us. Let us in- vite the powers of the body and our senses that they may all serve Christ and admit nothing that might be offensive to our guest. What would you say if your friend, whom you traveled a long way to see, should receive you kindly indeed, but shortly after, going out the back door, leave you alone, or what is worse still should turn you out of his house ? The Jews certainly did this who in the morning with loud acclaim received Christ ; in the evening deserted him and after five days put him to death. What benefit was it to them to have led him through the city with all honor and pomp, since afterwards they crucified him on Calvary ? What benefit was it to them to have cut boughs from trees and spread them beneath him, since afterwards they gathered thorns and a reed with which they tortured and mocked him ? What benefit was it to them to have asked : " Who is this?" since afterwards they cried out: " He is worthy of death ? " Therefore through love for that poor king, who during these days will come to you in the humble species of eucharistic bread, I beg of you not to imitate Juda nor the versatile Jews ; but rather the disciples and innocent children of Christ. 8 EASTER SUNDAY. CHRIST THE LION IN HIS RESURRECTION. I. With regard to the sleep of death. II. With regard to his rais- ing himself. III. With regard to the glory of the rising one. IV. With regard to his power. V. With regard to his liberality. " Behold the lion of the tribe of Juda hath prevailed " (Apoc. 5 : 5). Although those four animals seen by Ezechiel — the man, the calf, the lion and the eagle — are commonly held to represent the four Evangelists ; nevertheless St. Jerome and other commentators teach that they are figures of Christ the Lord. Because by man his humanity is shown ; by the calf his priesthood ; by the lion his kingdom, and by the eagle his divinity. Because Christ in his incarnation was man ; in his passion the calf, as it is the animal of sacrifice ; " for Christ our pasch is sacrificed " (1 Cor. 5 : 7) ; in his ascension the eagle, that flies highest of all ; in his resurrection truly the lion ; this the prophecy of Jacob to Juda intimates, for Christ was of the tribe of Juda : " Juda is a lion's whelp ; to the prey, my son, thou art gone up : resting, thou hast couched as a lion, and as a lioness who shall rouse him ? " (Gen. 49 : 9). Lion because he is king of heaven and earth ; whelp of the lion because, according to divine nature, he is of the same divinity and majesty with the Father ; according to human nature, he is less than the Father. Let us see by what reason Christ is a lion, especially in his resurrection. I. With regard to the sleep preceding death. " Resting, thou hast couched as a lion." The lion, having broken the bones of his prey, lies down before he begins to eat ; so also on the cross, Christ, having bowed his head, gave up the ghost ; that is, bowing down he invited death to come, which otherwise would not dare to approach, according to Anastasius 114 CHRIST THE LION IN HIS RESURRECTION. H5 Synaita. St. Gregory says: