On sufferings of different kinds.
My dear Sister,
The sufferings about which you ask my direction are of different kinds. There are great trials, and the vexations of daily, occurrence. These, on account of their multiplicity form the chief part of our treasure if we only know how to take advantage of them. Believe me, inasmuch as it depends on our own efforts it is necessary to bear the little crosses we encounter every day, for by them God will enable us to destroy our self-love. Oh! how happy should we be if we could but get rid of this accursed vanity which embitters us and irritates us about every trifle, makes us commit a thousand faults, and do ourselves great harm by the constant annoyance and interior trouble it causes us. Even should the occasion present itself of having to endure still greater sufferings, remember that they will pass like everything else, and that when they are over we can have no consolation in having borne them badly, and in having derived no advantage from them. On the other hand what a great satisfaction it will be to have made a virtue of necessity. To do this do not speak more than is necessary about them, and then in as few words as possible; do not make a fuss about them, or about the pain they cause you; abandon all to divine Providence who will make everything conduce to your profit if you live by faith. I pray God to make you well understand the great spiritual fruit, and the temporal blessings derived from the holy practice of entire resignation to the holy will of God in all things, and from total abandonment to all that He permits, recognising that without this divine permission not a hair can fall from our heads, nor a leaf in Autumn from all the innumerable trees of the forests. This is of faith. Could Jesus Christ have more clearly expressed than by these words, that there is no event, great or small, in the world which has not been expressly arranged by the sovereign providence of God? Oh my God! how consoling this is, and how easily we could cast off all our cares if, according to Your own words we could learn to look upon You as a loving Father, and upon ourselves as Your children, and to remember that You never show us more love than when You make us take bitter remedies for our cure! Have pity, Father of infinite goodness, on those who are sick, who, in their delirium turn against You, their good Physician, and refuse the medicine which is intended to procure them health and life.
Oh my God! how many blind and senseless people there are in the world who will not even listen to these truths although You have revealed them in the sacred Scriptures for our present consolation and our future salvation!
To Sister Marie-Thérèse de Vioménil. On public calamities and disasters.
The disaster of which you speak is, as you say, a most visible
scourge of God; happy will they be who take advantage of it
to save their souls. These punishments, borne well, as from the
hands of God, are of more value than all worldly prosperity.
At the same time they may be made, by a bad use, the occasion
to some of eternal reprobation. This will be, however, entirely
by their own fault, and their very great fault, for what could be
more reasonable, or easier in a sense than to make, as I said
before, a virtue of necessity? Why make a useless and criminal
resistance to the chastisements of God, who is our Father and
Who strikes us only to detach us from the miserable pleasures of
this world? Could He do us a greater favour than to deliver
us from attaching ourselves to that which would cause us to lose
eternal happiness and our own souls! On such occasions it
is well to think often and attentively of this passage in the writings
of one of the Fathers of the Church. "Such is the goodness
of our heavenly Father that even His anger proceeds from His
mercy, since He only strikes us to withdraw us from sin, and to
save us." Like a wise surgeon He cuts the mortified flesh away
from that which is sound to save the life of the patient, and to