Wednesday 3 January 2018

Devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. 14

by Boudreaux, Florentin, 1821-1894


This double knowledge of God and of ourselves, of His infinite greatness and of our infinite baseness, is the foundation of humility. When our souls are fully informed with this knowledge and as it were permeated by it, pride has received a severe blow within us; the ground gives way under it and it totters to its downfall. This is because pride takes for granted that we are something, even independently of God, and here we see that we are nothing and even less than nothing. Our reason alone then makes it evident that pride should have no place within us. Our eyes are opened, our ideas are corrected; we see things as they are, and esteem them as they deserve. Without this light it would be impossible for us to learn humility ; and we must be thoroughly enlightened by it, if we would succeed in our undertaking. And now we are prepared to proceed in our study. The knowledge we have acquired will enable us to make the proper use of the means for acquiring humility which will be at our disposal. These are indicated by the wise man as above quoted: “endure; ” “in humiliations have patience.” Humiliation then is the path that leads to humility; and this path is neither smooth nor pleasant to walk in. But on the use we make of such humiliations as fall to our lot, it depends whether we shall be humble and meek like the Heart of Jesus and like His Saints, or revengeful and cruel against the source of the humiliation and prouder because we have been humbled. Look at the model before you ; see how Jesus, who was humble of heart for your sake, bore the insults, the slanders, the glaring injustices, to say nothing of coldness or indifference or ingratitude, of which He was the object. “ Endure ” as He did ; “ humble thy heart ” as He did. Be deaf to the clamours of self-love wounded to the quick and crying out that you did not merit such treatment; that this one and that one should have been the last to inflict it upon you ; that your reputation is endangered and you must defend it ; that your position must be maintained and your authority and credit supported for the good of others. “Endure; humble thy heart.” Be silent in your own justification, and you will gradually become humble like the Heart of Jesus. This fruit is bitter to the taste; but its effects are most sweet and wholesome. Our Lord’s reputation was of more importance than yours ; the interests which rested upon His authority were of greater value than any which might suffer by your discredit. Yet He was silent and said never a word. He left His honour in the hands of His Father. “I seek not my own glory, there is One that seeks it and judges ” in His own good time. ( Jn . viii.) He allowed His light to go out in utter darkness, and His life in the most dismal disgrace, that He might enforce by example what He had taught by word when He said : “ Blessed are ye when men shall revile you and speak all that is evil against you.” {Matt, v.) Besides thus humbling our heart and enduring the humiliations which come from others, we must likewise endure such as have their origin in ourselves. Your fortune is humble, your station not honourable; your lot in life is cast with those who do not figure in the world ; or you fail in some enterprise; from a higher position, which you are found unfit to hold, you must descend to a lower; you are blamed where you anticipated approval; you have, in a word, not fulfilled the expectations which were formed of you and which you had formed of yourself. Pride will brood over this as the greatest of evils; it will be miserable and inconsolable; surly and full of bitterness. It covets high stations, splendour and display, it dreads nothing so much as the reproach of failure ; and therefore when it is kept in an inferior sphere or deposed from a higher, when it has begun to build and been unable to finish the work, it is in a mortal agony of vexation and anguish. Humility, on the contrary, comes down gracefully and gladly from the station which it occupied with regret ; it is more contented in a lower grade, because there it finds its own native atmosphere. It is not dejected by want of success, nor abashed by the reproach which it receives. Its serenity is not disturbed; nor is its bosom ruffled with agitation. Is it then so very strange that blindness should stumble, weakness fall before it reaches the goal ? that ignorance should mistake, cowardice tremble and turn back ? that human nature should err? that nothing should come to nothing? We are all that — blindness, ignorance, nothing ; hence we must expect the natural result of such causes. Are you to be always in the right ? Is there no one in the world wiser than you, more enlightened, more prudent, less liable to err? Why then must you have an excuse for every fault ? a reason for every misstep? an argument, whether true or false, to prove that you were not in the wrong? Thus, when pride entered into the world, its first manifestation was an excuse for evil done. Adam was not to blame, because “ the woman gave him of the tree; ” Eve pleaded not guilty and threw the blame on the serpent who deceived her. Yet both were deeply guilty, and their excuses did not save them from the sentence of condemnation. Here then we have another source of humiliation, and therefore other means for acquiring the great virtue of humility. Let us do what we can to comply with our obligations, not to disappoint the hopes built upon us ; let not failure be the result of culpable negligence or sloth. But if, after all our best endeavours, it should please God not to crown us with success, let us not repine, much less accuse others and resort even to falsehood and slander in our own defence. We are eating again of the bitter fruit; but it is gradually transforming our hearts into a resemblance to the humble Heart of Jesus. We are making progress in the science of the Saints; we are laying a solid foundation for the tower of our perfection. And now let us see how to deal with success and prosperity in our undertakings. In this, pride finds its nourishment, its choice morsels; and the danger to humility is neither slight nor easy to avoid. Here our self-knowledge and the knowledge of what is due to God must be our strongest barrier against the inroads of the enemy. If we can do anything, it is certainly not by our own virtue or power. “ Without me,” says our Lord, “you can do nothing.” (Jn. xv.)