Seven
Quick Takes is hosted at This Ain’t the Lyceum.
I’d
been thinking about these for a while, and it seemed time to haul this growing
list out, inasmuch as Lent is upon us.
Some of these may be worth a post to themselves … sometime. Meanwhile …
1. The
problem with “forgive and forget” isn’t that it’s always wrong, but rather that
it’s not always right—that is, it isn’t always the healthiest response to an injury. Sometimes, forgetting is not possible. And sometimes, it’s not even preferable:
sometimes, coming to understand the injury from a supernatural perspective
really is better than forgetting that it ever occurred.—Riffing off a good
Jesuit’s homily-in-brief.
2. “Sometimes
you don’t have time for meditation, or a rosary, or reading anything. Do you have a crucifix on your wall,
somewhere where you see it often? Good. Then try just to look at the crucifix when
you can during the day. That is
enough.”—Paraphrase of confessional advice to a mother of a newborn.
3. “The
sorrow of the world worketh death, says the Apostle; we must, therefore,
Theotimus, carefully avoid and banish it as much as we can. If it be from
nature, we must repulse it by contradicting its movements, turning it aside by
the practices suitable to that purpose, and using the remedies and way of life
which physicians themselves may judge best. If it come from temptation, we must
clearly open our mind to our spiritual father, who, will prescribe for us the
method of overcoming it, according as we have said in Part IV. of the
Introduction to the Devout Life. If it arise from circumstances, we will have
recourse to the teaching of Book VIII., in order to see how grateful
tribulations are to the children of God, and how the greatness of our hopes for
eternal life ought to make all the passing events of the temporal almost
unworthy of thinking about.
“And last, in all the sadness which may come upon us,
we must employ the authority of the superior will to do all that should be done
in favour of divine love. There are indeed actions which so depend upon the
corporal disposition and constitution that we have not the power to do them
just as we please: for the melancholy-disposed cannot keep their eyes, or their
words, or their faces, in the same good grace and sweetness as they would do if
they were relieved from this bad humour; but they are quite able, though
without this good grace, to say gracious, kind, and civil words, and, in spite
of inclination, to do what reason requires as to words and works of charity,
gentleness and
condescension. We may be excused for not being always bright, for one is not master of cheerfulness to have it when one will; but we are not excusable for not being always gracious, yielding and considerate; for this is always in the power of our will, and we have only to determine to keep down the contrary humour and inclination.”—Francis de Sales, Treatise on the Love of God., book 11, chapter 21, conclusion.
condescension. We may be excused for not being always bright, for one is not master of cheerfulness to have it when one will; but we are not excusable for not being always gracious, yielding and considerate; for this is always in the power of our will, and we have only to determine to keep down the contrary humour and inclination.”—Francis de Sales, Treatise on the Love of God., book 11, chapter 21, conclusion.
4. “The bees gather honey from the lily, the flag, the
rose; yet they get as ample a booty from the little
minute rosemary flowers and thyme; yea they draw not only more honey, but even
better honey
from these, for in these little vessels the honey, being more closely locked
up, is kept better. Truly, in the low and little works
of devotion, charity is not only practised more frequently, but ordinarily
more humbly too, and consequently more usefully and more holily.
“Those condescensions to the humours of others, that
bearing with the clownish and troublesome actions and
ways of our neighbour, those victories over our own humours and passions, those
renouncings
of our lesser inclinations, that effort against our aversions and repugnances,
that heartfelt
and sweet acknowledgment of our own imperfections, the continual pains we take
to keep our
souls in equality, that love of our abjection, that gentle and gracious welcome
we give to the contempt and censure of our condition, of our life, of
our conversation, of our actions:—Theotimus, all these
things are more profitable to our souls than we can conceive, if heavenly love
have the management
of them. But we have already said this to Philothea.”—Francis de Sales, Treatise on the Love of God., book 12,
chapter 6, conclusion.
5. God
answers all prayers. Sometimes He says
yes, and sometimes He says no.
6. God
answers all prayers. Sometimes He says
yes, sometimes He says no, and sometimes He says “You’ve got to be kidding me!”
7. God
answers all prayers. He never says
no. His answers are Yes, Wait, and For you, I have something even better.
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