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1 Henri Marie Boudon Devotion to the Nine Choirs of Holy Angels
Potosi, WI 53820 USA St Athanasius Press 2009 0981990169 / 978-0-9819901-6-3 Softcover NEW 
$19.99 This translation of what may, perhaps, be called the most popular of all Boudon's works, was undertaken with the desire of furthering the holy object for which it was written, in the way which the venerable author specially recommended; for one of the means, and, indeed, one of the chief means, which he prescribes for spreading devotion to the Holy Angels, is the distribution of well selected books on the subject." This means," he writes, "includes almost all the others, since it both gives them honor and teaches it." It is superfluous to add that the doctrines it contains are not the offspring of the writer's imagination, or his mere private opinions, but that they rest on the solid basis of Catholic theology, and are in faithful accordance with the teaching of the Church.

CONTENTS.

Preface 3

Dedication to Our Lady of the Angels 22

Dedication to my Good Guardian Angel 23

Exhortation to Love and Devotion for the Holy Angels 28

It is the property of great things to be indescribable. The excellences of the angels cannot worthily be expressed. All possible motives urge us to love them. Men are moved to love by different considerations; and all these considerations oblige us to love the angels. Every kind of good is to be found in their love. Their friendship is incomparable. Their love pursues us everywhere. Yet devotion to them is rare. This is owing to the absence of the interior life. The more exalted the angels are, the great their love and their power. The author’s desire to rouse men from their insensibility. The world’s forgetfulness of God; and of God’s angels. The language of the Fathers respecting them. The author calls upon all sorts of men to love all the nine choirs with a particular love. He invokes the blessing of God upon all who practice devotion to them.

PART I. 46

Motives for this Devotion

FIRST MOTIVE. 46

THE ADMIRABLE PERFECTIONS OF THESE SUBLIME INTELLIGENCES.

The greatness of the angels beyond the thought of man to conceive. They are spirits pure and bright. Why they are called Intelligences. How they are represented in Scripture. Their marvelous power. Their enchanting beauty. Everything about them enrapturing. They are the mirrors of God’s perfections. Called by the name of God in Scripture.

SECOND MOTIVE. 52

THE INCOMPARABLE GOODNESS OF THESE SPIRITS OF LOVE.

Angels the kings of heaven. They love us with every variety of love. Their love untiring and unchangeable. They are our best and oldest friends. Yet they meet with nothing but ingratitude and contempt from men. Hence their love for men is past understanding.

THIRD MOTIVE. 56

ALL THE HOLY ANGELS ARE ENGAGED IN THE SERVICE OF MEN.

All the angels are ministering spirits; even the highest and most exalted. Proofs of this from Scripture. Their numbers exceedingly great. What gratitude we ought to feel to these princes of heaven, and what joy and confidence in their friendship.

FOURTH MOTIVE. 60

ALL MEN ARE ASSISTED BY THE HOLY ANGELS.

The love of God to man has no other motive but itself. The smallest sin has in it something terrible and abominable: the angels clearly discern this, yet cease not to assist sinners. Heretics and unbelievers have their protecting angels; even Antichrist will have a guardian-angel. No excess of malice and ingratitude prevents these beings of heavenly purity from devoting themselves to the service of men.

FIFTH MOTIVE. 65

THE HOLY ANGELS DO ALL THAT IS POSSIBLE TO BE DONE FOR THE GOOD OF MEN.

Angels have assumed visible forms in the service of men. They accompany us everywhere, despite our folly and vileness. The princes of Paradise are our servants and slaves. They watch over everything belonging to us. Scripture instances. The whole world is full of them,

SIXTH MOTIVE. 71

THE HOLY ANGELS ASSIST US IN TEMPORAL THINGS.

Their considerate kindness and liberality. They have care of our bodily nature and sustenance; and confer all sorts of benefits upon us. Instances of this from Scripture and the Lives of Saints. They deliver us from all kinds of evil, and assist us in all our distresses. Instance of the pillar of cloud and of fire that accompanied the people of Israel

SEVENTH MOTIVE. 77

THE HOLY ANGELS RENDER US GREAT SERVICES FOR ETERNITY.

The affair of eternity the one great affair. The zeal which the angels show to procure men the life of grace. The care they take to maintain and increase it. They instill a love of all virtues, and especially of purity. They inspire men with love for Jesus and Mary. An incident in the life of St Dominic. They communicate light to the understanding and pious impulses to the heart. They preserve from sin, and deliver from it. They animate and encourage in labors and sufferings

EIGHTH MOTIVE. 85

THE PROTECTION OF THE HOLY ANGELS AGAINST THE DEVILS, WITH PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO THEIR DIFFERENT TEMPTATIONS, WHICH ARE HERE TREATED OF.

Life one long temptation. We are weak, and our enemies are mighty. The devils cruel in their rage. Their formidable strength. Their subtle machinations. The devil ever busy in laying snares. Baits them cunningly. Attacks if he cannot seduce. Chooses well his time. Feigns to retreat. Amuses with a false peace. These wicked spirits mislead souls in the ways of grace. Turn men aside from their true vocation. Tempt them to frustrate God’s intentions. Delude them in the matter of prayer, confession, and communion. The artifices they employ in the highest paths of grace. They tempt to presumption, impatience, weariness, despair. Distort the imagination even of good people. Take advantage of their smallest imperfections. Present false notions of devotion. Insinuate a censorious and critical spirit. Raise persecutions against the servants of God. Promote scandals and abuses. Some persons their special instruments. The devils find their stronghold in heresy. They are indefatigable in pursuit. They penetrate everywhere. Their assaults more violent in proportion to our love of God. Their number beyond conception. Our blindness and insensibility. The power of humility and of self mistrust. We must avoid occasions of temptations; and be prompt in resisting. When chastity is assailed the only safety is in flight. Remedies to be adopted in case of other interior sufferings; scruples, or other disquietudes; temptations to blasphemy, or the idea of reprobation. Living by faith the sure rule of the spiritual life. It is one of the devil’s stratagems to make us be occupied with anything but what we ought to be about. Another is to give us a taste for occupations which are not suitable to our state. Against all the artifices of hell God has given us the defense of His holy angels. Instances of their protecting power. The devils have a great dread of them.

NINTH MOTIVE. 132

THE GREAT ASSISTANCE WHICH THE HOLY ANGELS AFFORD US AT THE HOUR OF DEATH, AND AFTER DEATH.

On the moment of death hangs the sentence of eternity. The thought of God’s judgments terrible. The angels our friends when creatures abandon us. Blessed are they who have been devout to them during life. The angels present our souls before the tribunal of God.

TENTH MOTIVE. 136

DEVOTION TO THE HOLY ANGELS IS A MARK OF A HIGH PREDESTINATION.

That which passes away deserves only our contempt. The human heart is made for great things. The joys of the blessed in heaven are unequal. We ought to strive after the highest honors for the sake of the greater glory of God. Devotion to the angels contributes wonderfully to the perfection of divine love, and therefore to the increase of heavenly glory. The higher the angels the more of God there is in them. Our devotion rarely extends beyond those of the lowest choir.

ELEVENTH MOTIVE. 141

THE GLORY OF THE MOST HOLY VIRGIN.

The glory of the Blessed Mother of God a powerful motive. The zeal of the angels for the interests of their Queen. Therefore the motive of her glory is one of the most powerful in promoting devotion to the angels. The several titles which belong to her in connection with these heavenly spirits. The angels are the “friends “ of the spouse in the Canticles.

TWELFTH MOTIVE. 144

GOD ONLY.

God all in all to the soul that loves with a pure love. It cares for nothing save His sacred interests; self-interest is an abomination to it. God only forms the whole occupation of a glorious eternity. Very few love God after a perfect manner. We must love the angels only in God and for God. Illustration taken from the spouse in the Canticles. Pure love a state of universal death to everything.

PART II. 154

Practice of this Devotion

FIRST PRACTICE. 154

TO HAVE A PARTICULAR DEVOTION TO THE ANGELS, ARCHANGELS, AND PRINCIPALITIES.

The different offices of these three orders. We ought to have a singular devotion to our Angel-Guardians. We ought also to be devout to the Guardian Angels of our friends. Among our friends our spiritual directors ought to hold a prominent place. We must honor also the angels of our benefactors, of our enemies, of the prelates of the Church, especially the Sovereign Pontiff, as also of temporal princes. The Archangels of kingdoms and provinces, of towns and villages, must be objects of our devotion. Churches and altars have their Guardian Angels. The author laments the profanations committed against the Blessed Sacrament; carelessness in giving communion; penuriousness in providing altar furniture. He invokes the assistance of the holy angels in remedying these evils, and entreats pious souls to seek their aid. Not only dioceses, but communities and confraternities have their angels. Special virtues to be acquired through these three orders.

SECOND PRACTICE. 170

TO HONOR ESPECIALLY THE POWERS, THE VIRTUES, AND THE DOMINATIONS.

The different offices of these three orders. We are apt to mistake our own will for the will of God. Devotion to the Dominations a great remedy to this disorder. We are easily led by our inclinations. Devotion to the Virtues our resource. The Virtues ought to be invoked in times of public calamity. To the Powers, God has given a special strength against the might and malice of the devils. Their aid to be sought to protect the Church against her enemies.

THIRD PRACTICE. 174

TO HAVE A PROFOUND REVERENCE AND EXTRAORDINARY LOVE FOR THE THRONES, CHERUBIM, AND SERAPHIM.

The Seraphim excel in the pure love of God. Eight properties of this love. The special attribute of the Cherubim is light. The Thrones are in close vicinity to the glory of God, and repose upon Him. The peace which passes understanding is to be sought through their ministry. The science of Heaven, which is the science of the Saints, is to be learned at the feet of Jesus Crucified through the teaching of the Cherubim. The hatred which the devils bear to directors who inculcate this science. The Seraphim are the sacred ministers of divine love. The Carmelite order destined, by their super-excellent grace, to fill the seats of the apostate spirits of this choir.

FOURTH PRACTICE. 182

TO HAVE A GREAT DEVOTION TO ST MICHAEL, ST GABRIEL, ST RAPHAEL, AND THE FOUR OTHER ANGELS WHO ARE BEFORE THE THRONE OF GOD.

St Michael, the great saint of the cause of God and of God Incarnate. The meaning of the title Archangel as applied to the highest princes of Heaven. St Gabriel negotiated the mystery of the Incarnation. St Raphael, the great benefactor of men. Emblems of the seven angels. They will obtain us the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit, and grace to avoid the seven deadly sins

FIFTH PRACTICE. 188

TO HOLD INTERIOR CONVERSE WITH THE HOLY ANGELS.

Our conversation ought to be heavenly; therefore we ought to converse frequently with these spirits of Heaven. Men live in oblivion of the world of grace. Where there are numbers of people there are also numbers of angels; yet we take no notice of them. Our neglect of our angel-guardian. We ought to converse habitually with him. We need never feel solitary. We may visit in spirit heathen and heretical lands, and converse with their angel-guardians. It is a laudable practice to salute the angels of those we meet. These practices may be unusual, but they ought to be common.

SIXTH PRACTICE. 199

TO PERFORM NOVENAS IN HONOR OF THE NINE CHOIRS OF ANGELS.

This practice an efficacious means for obtaining the assistance of Heaven in times of distress. God employs these blessed spirits to work wonders. Directions how to employ each day of the novena. Public calamities the effects of God’s anger. This devotion a fitting preparation for the feasts of our Lord and His Blessed Mother. Pious exercises to be used.

SEVENTH PRACTICE. 204

TO TAKE CERTAIN DAYS EVERY MONTH AND EVERY WEEK FOR THE PURPOSE OF HONORING MORE ESPECIALLY THE HOLY ANGELS, AND TO CELEBRATE THEIR FEASTS WITH ALL POSSIBLE DEVOTION.

How to dedicate every day in the week to their honor. We may make our birthday a feast of our angel-guardian. Feasts of St Michael. Pilgrimages to his Mount in Normandy. His apparitions. Legend of his slaying the dragon. St Gaudentius: invention of his body and miracles wrought at his tomb. Feasts of St Gabriel, St Raphael, and the Guardian Angels. The rosary of our angel-guardian. How to honor the angel-guardians of the Saints.

EIGHTH PRACTICE. 215

TO VISIT CHURCHES AND ORATORIES DEDICATED TO GOD IN HONOR OF THE HOLY ANGELS.

Certain localities honored by God with special favors. Pilgrimages approved by the Church, and highly esteemed by Saints. It is a pious practice to visit some chapel or altar dedicated to the angels. Revival of devotion to St Michael in the city of Rouen blessed by God. Visits of devotion during nine succeeding days.

NINTH PRACTICE. 218

TO PLACE GREAT CONFIDENCE IN THE PROTECTION OF THE HOLY ANGELS, AND TO HAVE RECOURSE TO THEM IN ALL OUR NECESSITIES, BODILY AND SPIRITUAL.

The angels are as impregnable bulwarks to those who trust in the Lord. How great, then, ought to be our confidence. The blindness of men exemplified in the conduct of Eliseus’s servant. The little confidence they place in the protection of Heaven. Revelations which Saints have had of the presence and ministrations of angels. Our Lord employed their ministry.

TENTH PRACTICE. 225

TO LABOR FOR THE CONVERSION OF SOULS, AND FOR THEIR RELIEF IN THE FLAMES OF PURGATORY, IN HONOR OF THE HOLY ANGELS.

The angels do all for the glory of God; and we ought to labor with them for the interests of God in souls. The extravagance of men where self is concerned; their niggardliness when God’s interests are at stake. The example of the angels a powerful motive for succoring souls. Like them we ought to assist the souls in Purgatory. Pious practices for this end. Our forgetfulness of the dead. Revelations of the interest taken by angels in suffering souls.

ELEVENTH PRACTICE. 233

TO PRACTICE SOME VIRTUE, OR ABSTAIN FROM SOME VICE, IN HONOR OF THE HOLY ANGELS.

If we desire to love the angels, we must love what they love and hate what they hate. Miraculous deliverance of a young nobleman. Humility, purity, and prayer the virtues dearest to the angels. Their jealousy for the Divine interests. Instance of this. We must be careful not to do anything to offend them. Plato’s doctrine on the subject.

TWELFTH PRACTICE. 239

TO PROMOTE IN ALL KINDS OF WAYS DEVOTION TO THE NINE CHOIRS OF HOLY ANGELS.

Our gratitude to these heavenly spirits ought to be as comprehensive as our duties towards them. The great thing is to have a real love. One means of honoring them is to distribute pictures of them, and books composed in their honor. The rich can erect churches, or chapels, or altars to them. Preachers ought to instruct the people in devotion to them. Bishops and superiors can recommend it to pastors and flocks. Pious persons can confer together to promote it.

CONCLUSION OF THIS LITTLE WORK BY THE PLAN OF AN ASSOCIATION IN HONOR OF THE NINE CHOIRS OF ANGELS.

Associations instituted for various objects. The object of this association would be to hasten the reign of Jesus and Mary. The members should make a general confession. Special times for communion. Daily, monthly, and yearly observances. Other practices of piety and virtue. The associates must have a great horror of sin, and especially of impurity. In towns a solemn novena may be kept.

A Prayer To The Nine Choirs Of Holy Angels 254

Postscript 256

Litany Of The Holy Angels 258

A Prayer To All Angels 264

Litany Of Our Holy Angel-guardian 265

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2 Henri-Marie Boudon The Holy Ways of the Cross or A Short Treatise on the Various Trials and Afflictions, Interior and Exterior to Which the Spiritual Life is Subject
Potosi, WI USA St Athanasius Press 2010 0976911876 / 978-0-9769118-7-6 Paperback NEW 
$19.99 Amid the present darkness and distress this little book may help to minister consolation and inspire drooping hearts with courage, by reminding them that suffering is the Church's heritage, the very condition of her well-being, nay, her highest privilege, inasmuch as it renders her most like to her Divine Spouse and is the pledge and surety of her triumphs. As of the Lord Himself (Luke 24:26), so of His Church it may be truly said that she ought to suffer these things and so to enter into her glory. Her most signal successes have been preceded, and indeed attended, by humiliations and apparent failures, and have been accomplished, like all the great designs of God, under the heavy weight of the Cross. It is not, however, of exterior trials and sufferings that the author principally treats, or of those obvious temptations to which all Christians are exposed, but of those deep interior miseries, those subtle devices of self-love, those illusions and preternatural assaults of the evil one, which, in some form or other, they must be prepared to encounter who strive to pursue the arduous paths of spiritual perfection. And if testimony were wanted to the high character and the great practical usefulness of the work, it might be sufficient to cite the words of the doctors in theology who were commissioned to examine and report upon its contents previous to its publication in the year 1671. From the terms in which their approbation is couched, it will be seen that the doctrine which the treatise enforces, as it is necessary for all times, so is particularly applicable to our own, when men who profess to represent the highest intellects of this boasted age of progress are inviting Christian people to exchange the truths of divine faith and the life-giving lessons of the Cross for the base, uncertain tenets of a sensual philosophy and of a false and godless science. " It is a book," say they, " as full of instruction for souls which desire to rise to perfection as for those whose office it is to direct them on their way. We have found in it a teaching all divine, which the light of faith alone is capable of rendering intelligible to those who read it, and which divine love alone can enable them to relish. It is a knowledge which God hides from worldlings who allow themselves to be guided by their senses, and from men of mundane policy who regulate their actions by the sole light of human reason. This science of the Cross, unhappily, is ignored, neglected, or despised by the greater part of men, comprising even a number of the learned, who, devoting all their life to the study of the speculative sciences, pay no regard to the science and the maxims of Jesus Crucified, ' in whom' nevertheless ' are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge' (Col. 2:3). It may be hoped," they add, " that the reading of this book will inspire those who peruse it with the desire of dying wholly to themselves and following Jesus Christ, seeing that it is replete with the unction of the Spirit of God." 218 pages.

Table of Contents

Advertisement page 3

Dedication To Our Lady Of Pity 20

Dedication To St. John The Evangelist And The Blessed Maries On Calvary 22

PART I.

The Science of the Cross.

CHAPTER I. 25

THE SCIENCE OF THE CROSS IS A HIDDEN MYSTERY.

This mystery was hidden from Jews and Gentiles; and even from Christ’s own disciples. It is unintelligible to the wise of this world; however great their learning. It is opposed to worldly pride and delicate living. Many professedly devout persons ignorant of it. To be learnt only by Christian simplicity and mortification

CHAPTER II. 29

WHETHER IT BE PRUDENT TO WRITE RESPECTING THE WAYS OF THE CROSS.

A counter opinion stated. This opinion opposed to the practice of the doctors and masters of the spiritual life. The Lives of the Saints abound in relations of interior trials. The ill use made of such reading no argument against the treatment of the subject. The knowledge of it necessary in many cases. The valuable instruction thereby afforded. The compassion due to souls so terribly afflicted

CHAPTER III. 34

THE WAY OF THE CROSS IS THE ROYAL HIGH ROAD TO A BLESSED ETERNITY.

It is the road by which all Saints have passed. Examples from Holy Scripture. Security of those who walk therein. The ways of consolation full of peril: by-paths at best, from which it is easy to go astray. The way of the Cross is rough but safe

CHAPTER IV. 38

WE MUST OF NECESSITY WALK IN THE WAY OF THE CROSS.

Crosses are inevitable on the way to Heaven. Sin must be punished. As the Head suffered, so must the members. Our Lord preached the doctrine of the Cross openly and to all; and pressed it-on His disciples. To be a Christian and to be crucified one and the same thing

CHAPTER V. 41

THE HAPPINESS OF A CHRISTIAN CONSISTS IN SUFFERING IN THIS WORLD. REPLY TO CERTAIN OBJECTIONS.

Several reasons given for this assertion. In particular, the grace of Jesus is a crucifying grace. Most crosses sent to those whom God loves most. Testimonies to the blessedness of suffering from Scripture and revelations made to Saints. Suffering necessary to draw man out of his state of corruption. Life a state of warfare, and therefore of suffering. Crosses necessary for perfecting the soul. They endure throughout life, and, if withdrawn for a while, are given back. Crosses are profitable, and even necessary, in order— 1. To satisfy the Divine Justice; 2. To purge the soul of its imperfections; 3. To humble us; 4. To increase our grace and merit; 5. To bring us into closer conformity to Christ. How God refreshes His elect. The joy that is promised and enjoined not a sensible joy; but that which resides in the superior region of the soul. Abuses and faults may occur in the holiest states, but do not detract from the perfection of those states. The dangers of spiritual consolations. Jesus the true pattern of the elect; His refusal of joys and satisfactions. Ought, then, guilty man to be exempt from suffering? The value of suffering taught by Christ’s example. The true import of His teaching. Testimonies thereto from Scripture and maxims of Saints

CHAPTER VI. 59

CROSSES ARE A MARK OF PREDESTINATION, AND OF A HIGH PREDESTINATION.

The thought of Eternity; how little pondered. Suffering the portion of the elect. Express testimonies of Scripture to this truth. It is a law which knows no exception. The greatest Saints have borne the heaviest crosses. Sufferings serve to the increase of eternal glory

CHAPTER VII. 63

CROSSES EXALT TO MATCHLESS GLORY.

No glory to be compared with that of the Cross. Remarkable language of St. John Chrysostom and St. Augustine. Our Lord’s own words, and those of St. Paul. The suffering and the indigent exhorted to recognize the exceeding privileges of their state

CHAPTER VIII. 66

CROSSES ARE THE EARTHLY PARADISE.

No Paradise without God; crosses unite to God. This union the source of solid happiness. Often more perfect the less it is felt and known. No rest save in God alone. Happy effect of meditating on crosses

A Prayer To The Blessed Virgin, Queen or All The Holiest Lights Of Grace 69

PART II.

Exterior Trials.

CHAPTER I. 70

THE WAYS OF THE CROSS ARE VARIOUS

All true Christians walk by the way of the Cross; but not all alike. Great variety of sufferings; the creature bound to submit to the Creator’s behests. Our Lord’s whole life one continued suffering

CHAPTER II. 73

EVERYONE MUST BEAR HIS OWN CROSS, AND IN THE MANNER GOD WILLS.

All who belonged to Christ have borne their cross. Three things of which we must beware:—1. Not to procure ourselves crosses by our own faults; 2. Not to occupy ourselves with desiring other crosses than those we have; 3. Not to delude ourselves with desiring to bear our cross in a different way from that which God appoints. We must turn our crosses to the best account. To which end we must look simply to the will of God

CHAPTER III. 77

WE MUST BEAR OUR CROSSES IN THE MANNER GOD WILLS.

The soul must blindly follow God’s will, and not make reflections on itself. Disquietude of mind a stratagem of the devil. Sensible repugnance to suffering no proof of unwillingness to suffer. Impossible to escape temptations by our own efforts. Self-abandonment necessary in order to attain to perfect indifference. God never refuses His aid. In the strength of Jesus we shall be able to endure and to overcome. We must not relax in our spiritual exercises although we feel nothing but repugnance to them

CHAPTER IV. 82

CORPORAL INFIRMITIES.

Bodily defects a favor of Heaven. Bodily ailments a great grace, which must be utilized for Eternity. Pretexts of self-love. Incalculable blessings obtained by suffering souls. God, who wills infirmities, wills also the inconveniences and afflictions which they entail. Persons of very great virtue often so sensitive to pain as to be constrained to cry aloud from their excessive sufferings

CHAPTER V. 86

THE LOSS OF HONOR.

Without contempt of worldly honour there can be no perfect union with God. Our Lord’s abhorrence of it shown in the circumstances of His Birth and of His whole Life. How He was judged by the people; by priests and doctors of the law; and by civil governors. His guilt inferred from the conduct of His disciples; and His dereliction on the Cross. Loss of reputation knows no exceptions. To be despised by men a state very precious in the spiritual life

CHAPTER VI. 91

PERSECUTIONS ON THE PART OF MEN.

As the world persecuted our Lord, so it will not spare His disciples. Its rash and cruel judgments. Its ingenuity in inventing, misrepresenting, and exaggerating. An instance in the case of Father Baltasar Alvarez. The interior life itself condemned by the world. Creatures nothing before God; their judgment therefore less than nothing. They who take pains to please people are not exempt from wounds and fall into many sins. Practical conclusions

CHAPTER VII. 97

CONTRADICTIONS ON THE PART OF THE GOOD.

Some good people harass others from pure but mistaken motives. But in many cases the corruption of nature mixes itself up with good intentions. Examples. All the great designs of God accomplished under the weight of the Cross. Condemnation by the good and virtuous permitted for the more perfect abasement of the elect. The use made thereof by the devil

CHAPTER VIII. 101

ABANDONMENT BY CREATURES AND PARTICULARLY BY FRIENDS.

The being forsaken by friends a grievous affliction; but in losing friends the true Christian finds God. No one so utterly forsaken as Jesus. The thought of this excites a holy desire of being abandoned by all; the vastness of the subject. Blessed exchange: God instead of creatures. Interior abandonments most profitable

Prayer To The Most Holy Virgin, Consoler Of The Afflicted 105

PART III.

Interior Trials.

CHAPTER I. 106

OF INTERIOR SUFFERINGS; AND FIRST OF TEMPTATIONS TO UNBELIEF AND BLASPHEMY.

These sufferings far surpass all exterior sufferings. Temptations against faith most terrible. Many Saints have endured them; examples. We must not argue with such temptations; danger of so doing. Heresies come from the exercise of private judgment; duty of sincere submission to the Pope and the Church. The remedy against such temptations lies in avoiding all voluntary reflections. Acts of faith real, though unconscious; proofs of this. Temptations to blasphemy frighten more than they hurt; resistance mistaken for consent. The Lord Himself thus tempted. Sentiments of St. Teresa on this subject

CHAPTER II. 112

TEMPTATIONS TO DREAD OF REPROBATION, DESPONDENCY, AND DESPAIR.

Many holy souls have been thus afflicted. God desires our salvation more than we do ourselves; proof in the Incarnation, Crucifixion, and Blessed Eucharist. The remedy is to abandon ourselves to Divine Providence; an heroic act of love. Our God Infinite Goodness. Frequent falls no ground of discouragement. These interior sufferings the chastisement of sin: this of itself a motive for courage. Temptation a sign of election; the devil assails those who are the true servants of God

CHAPTER III. 117

OF DRYNESS, DARKNESS, DISTRACTIONS, AND REPUGNANCE TO PIOUS EXERCISES.

Instances of holy persons who have been tried by spiritual dryness. How St. Catherine of Genoa suffered from interior darkness. Saints not exempt from painful distractions; striking confessions of St. Jerome and others. States in which the soul becomes devoid of feeling. That which renders us pleasing to God is, not feeling or the want of feeling, but the free action of the will. Remarkable instance in the person of Father Jognes. How we ought to deal with distractions. Consoling thoughts under such affliction.

CHAPTER IV. 123

OF TEMPTATIONS AGAINST PURITY.

Exciting causes of such temptations. They may be made the occasions of great victories and great rewards. This consideration a consolation to souls so afflicted. Such trials contribute much to spiritual advancement; examples from the Lives of Saints. Chastity does not consist in insensibility but in resistance. Remedies recommended.

CHAPTER V. 127

OF DOUBTS AND SCRUPLES.

No temptations can sully the soul so long as they are displeasing to it; the doubt whether we have consented itself a mark of not having consented. Origin and occasions of scruples. Need of a charitable and enlightened director. St. Ignatius most severely tried. Persons so afflicted ought not to repeat their confessions. Neither ought they to confess their temptations or sins about which they have a doubt; they ought to avoid long examinations of conscience, and abide by the judgment of their director. Submission of spirit absolutely necessary; subtle inventions of self-love. We must combat ‘our scruples with courage; instances of peace of mind being restored by simple obedience.

CHAPTER VI. 136

OF SUFFERINGS CAUSED BY THE DEVIL.

Instances of ordinary temptations. Persons of extraordinary virtue tempted by the devils in an extraordinary way. These eminent souls the special objects of their malice. Their efforts to deter persons from practicing mental prayer, and especially the highest order of prayer. Instances of exterior diabolical assaults. Their interior assaults most formidable. The craft and subtlety of these spirits of hell. Remedies against these temptations, ordinary and extraordinary. Directors of souls so terribly tried ought to be men of great enlightenment. In cases of possession, the exercise of the will not free; although the sufferers maybe obstinate in declaring that they consent with full deliberation. This state most humiliating, but one of the most effectual for attaining a high degree of sanctity. The devil flees before resolute souls. He has no power to force the will. Holy Communion the most effectual defense against his attacks. His efforts to prevent persona from communicating.

CHAPTER VII. 150

OF SUPERNATURAL SUFFERINGS.

These come immediately from God, and are most terrible. Father Simon de Bourg’s description of such trials: the soul deprived, not only of reflective acts, but of the power of making many direct acts. St. Teresa’s more detailed account of these suffering states. Similar reflections of another spiritual writer. Mysterious dealings of God with certain souls. Case of an innocent soul afflicted with all the effects and emotions of sin. “The exile of the heart”: these words of “ The Following of Christ” very little understood.

CHAPTER VIII. 156

THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED.

These extraordinary sufferings inflicted by God in order to perfect the soul in virtue and defeat the artifices of self-love. Divine annihilations; none comparable to that of Jesus. These crosses reserved for God’s dearest friends. Signs which distinguish a passive state of suffering. What a soul so afflicted must do. The immense advantage of these interior pains.

Prayer To Our Lady Of Martyrs 163

PART IV.

The Value of Crosses.

CHAPTER I. 164

OF THE CAUSES OF CROSSES.

Crosses are sent to punish us for our sins. To purge us of our faults, and especially our secret faults. To sanctify our souls. In fine, we suffer because we are members of Jesus Crucified.

CHAPTER II. 167

WHY GOD OFTEN DOES NOT HEARKEN TO US WHEN WE PRAY HIM TO DELIVER US FROM OUR SUFFERINGS.

All crosses come from God, and God is Sovereign Reason; they are therefore always just. They are also always profitable, however painful. Dereliction of our Blessed Lord upon the Cross; revelations to Saints

CHAPTER III. 169

OF THE ENEMIES OF THE CROSS, AND OF THE STRATAGEMS OF WHICH SELF-LOVE AND THE PRUDENCE OF THE FLESH MAKE USE TO ESCAPE FROM ITS WAYS.

St. Paul could not speak of these enemies without weeping. Mortification necessary for understanding the spirit of the Cross. Covert enemies of Evangelical perfection; the great evil they do. The plausible reasons they adduce; their terrible responsibility. Their maxims condemned by the conduct of Jesus. All great religions successes effected by suffering

CHAPTER IV. 174

WE OUGHT TO HAVE A HIGH ESTEEM FOR THE CROSS, AND TO DEEM OURSELVES UNWORTHY OF IT.

The value of crosses beyond all price. The heaviest crosses reserved for God’s special favorites. Our unworthiness to suffer: remarkable testimonies thereto. The reverence due to suffering. Few even among the pious really share it. Few look to God alone; to do so demands magnanimity and courage. Church history abounds in examples of this generous Christian spirit. St. Paul’s warm appreciation of it

CHAPTER V. 181

WE OUGHT TO LOVE CROSSES.

Jesus loved them with an ardor inconceivable. Proofs of this from the Gospels. Example of St. Andrew in his martyrdom

CHAPTER VI. 184

WE OUGHT TO ACCEPT CROSSES WITH JOY, WITH THANKSGIVING, WITH ASTONISHMENT.

Exhortations of our Lord and His Apostles to rejoice in suffering. This rejoicing compatible with extreme sadness in the sensitive region of the soul. How holy persons have evinced their gratitude for being visited with afflictions. These heavy blows ought to be received as strokes of divine grace and regarded with astonishment

CHAPTER VII. 188

WE MUST CARRY OUR CROSS WITH ALL ITS DIMENSIONS.

St. Paul’s language respecting these dimensions. The mystery of the Cross not to be comprehended without the special aid of the Holy Spirit. By its breadth are meant all its circumstances, effects, and consequences. Our crosses those which our Lord wishes us to bear, and not those which we figure to ourselves. The grievous trial of Blessed Robert d’Artus. The length of the cross is its duration: examples of our Blessed Lord, His holy Mother, and certain Saints. Holy souls even distressed at the thought of losing their cross. The height of the cross is the many afflictions of which it is composed. Its depth, the intensity of the suffering it causes. Holy souls thirst for suffering, while we do all we can to avoid it

CHAPTER VIII. 195

THE PERFECT CROSS, AS EXEMPLIFIED IN THE PERSON OF THE SERAPHIC ST. TERESA.

Few crosses are completed. St. Teresa a prodigy of grace. The vastness of her cross; constructed of such a variety of materials. Her body one whole cross. Her own testimony to this. The sufferings of her soul intense, beyond description. The divine favours she received afforded her no consolation. The saint’s own description of her torments; for which she found no relief. The opposition she encountered almost universal. She is rebuked by her confessors, threatened by magistrates, insulted by the populace, upbraided by her own friends, denounced by prelates, condemned by doctors. The slanders, ridicule, and ill-treatment to which she was subjected. She is falsely accused before the superiors of her Order, and the authorities of the Inquisition; her own General forsakes her. Her exalted virtues declared to be fictitious. The reasoning of human prudence. How they are refuted and stultified by Almighty Wisdom; example of the Patriarch Joseph. St. Teresa sorely tried by evil spirits. Sufferings the means by which the saints are made partakers of Christ’s glory

Prayer To The Most Holy Virgin, The Crowning Perfection Of God’s Works 212

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