Page:Complete ascetical works of St Alphonsus v6.djvu/337

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CHAP. IV.]
Remedies against Lukewarmness.
335

and renders pain more light:"[1] on the one hand it gives strength to walk towards perfection, and on the other hand it lightens the fatigue of the journey. He who has a real desire of perfection fails not to advance continually towards it; and so advancing, he must finally arrive at it. On the contrary, he who has not the desire of perfection will always go backwards, and always find himself more imperfect than before. St. Augustine says, that "not to go forward in the way of God is to go backward."[2] He that makes no efforts to advance will find himself carried backward by the current of his corrupt nature.

They, then, who say "God does not wish us all to be saints" make a great mistake. Yes, for St. Paul says, This is the Will of God, your sanctification.[3] God wishes all to be saints, and each one according to his state of life: the religious as a religious; the secular as a secular; the priest as a priest; the married as married; the man of business as a man of business; the soldier as a soldier; and so of every other state of life.

Most beautiful, indeed, are the instructions which my great patroness St. Teresa gives on this subject. She says, in one place, "Let us enlarge our thoughts; for hence we shall derive immense good." Elsewhere she says: "We must beware of having poor desires; but rather put our confidence in God, in order that, by forcing ourselves continually onwards, we may by degrees arrive where, by the divine grace, so many saints have arrived."[4] And in confirmation of this she quoted her own experience, having known how courageous souls make considerable progress in a short period of time.

  1. "Vires subministrat, poenam exhibet leviorem."—De Disc. mon. c. 6.
  2. "Non progredi, jam reverti est."Ep. 17, E. B. app.
  3. "Hæc est voluntas Dei, sanctificatio vestra."—1 Thess. iv. 3.
  4. Life, ch. 13.