Continued....
If it is a boy, he will be dreaming about passing pleasures and so on. The lukewarm soul shuts God up in an obscure and ugly kind of prison. Its possessor does not crucify Him, but God can find little joy or consolation in his heart. All his dispositions proclaim that his poor soul is struggling for the breath of life.
St. John Vianney
Photo taken from MorgueFile Photos
The Dreadful State of
the Lukewarm Soul Part II
It is like someone who is envious of anyone who is on top of the world but who
would not deign to lift a foot to try to get there himself. It would not,
however, wish to renounce eternal blessings for those of the world. Yet it does
not wish either to leave the world or to go to Heaven, and if it can just
manage to pass its time without crosses or difficulties, it would never ask to
leave this world at all. If you hear someone with such a soul say that life is
long and pretty miserable, that is only when everything is not going in
accordance with his desires. If God, in order to force such a soul to detach
itself from temporal things, sends it any cross or suffering, it is fretful and
grieving and abandons itself to grumbles and complaints and often even to a
kind of despair. It seems as if it does not want to see that God has sent it
these trials for its good, to detach it from this world and to draw it towards
Himself.
What has it done to deserve these trials? In this
state a person thinks in his own mind that there are many others more
blameworthy than himself who have not to submit to such trials.
In prosperous times the lukewarm soul does not go so
far as to forget God, but neither does it forget itself. It knows very well how
to boast about all the means it has employed to achieve its prosperity. It is
quite convinced that many others would not have achieved the same success. It
loves to repeat that and to hear it repeated, and every time it hears it, it is
with fresh pleasure. The individual with the lukewarm soul assumes a gracious
air when associating with those who flatter him. But towards those who have not
paid him the respect, which he believes, he has deserved or who have not been
grateful for his kindnesses, he maintains an air of frigid indifference and
seems to indicate to them that they are ungrateful creatures who do not deserve
to receive the good which he has done them....
If I wanted to paint you an exact picture, my
brethren, of the state of a soul, which lives in tepidity, I should tell you
that it is like a tortoise or a snail. It moves only by dragging itself along
the ground, and one can see it getting from place to place with great
difficulty. The love of God, which it feels deep down in itself, is like a tiny
spark of fire hidden under a heap of ashes.
The lukewarm soul comes to the point of being
completely indifferent to its own loss. It has nothing left but a love without
tenderness, without action, and without energy which sustains it with
difficulty in all that is essential for salvation. But for all other means of
Grace, it looks upon them as nothing or almost nothing. Alas, my brethren, this
poor soul in its tepidity is like someone between two bouts of sleep. It would
like to act, but its will has become so softened that it lacks either the force
or the courage to accomplish its wishes.
It is true that a Christian who lives in tepidity
still regularly -- in appearance at least -- fulfills his duties. He will
indeed get down on his knees every morning to say his prayers. He will go to
the Sacraments every year at Easter and even several times during the course of
the twelve months. But in all of this there will be such a distaste, so much
slackness and so much indifference, so little preparation, so little change in
his way of life, that it is easy to see that he is only fulfilling his duties
from habit and routine .... because this is a feast and he is in the habit of
carrying them out at such a time. His Confessions and his Communions are not
sacrilegious, if you like, but they are Confessions and Communions which bear
no fruit -- which, far from making him more perfect and more pleasing to God,
only make him more unworthy. As for his prayers, God alone knows what --
without, of course, any preparation -- he makes of these.
In the morning it is not God who occupies his
thoughts, nor the salvation of his poor soul; he is quite taken up with
thoughts of work. His mind is so wrapped up in the things of earth that the
thought of God has no place in it. He is thinking about what he is going to be
doing during the day, where he will be sending his children and his various
employees, in what way he will expedite his own work. To say his prayers, he
gets down on his knees, undoubtedly, but he does not know what he wants to ask
God, nor what he needs, nor even before whom he is kneeling. His careless
demeanor shows this very clearly. It is a poor man indeed who, however
miserable he is, wants nothing at all and loves his poverty. It is surely a
desperately sick person who scorns doctors and remedies and clings to his
infirmities.
You can see that this lukewarm soul has no
difficulty, on the slightest pretext, in talking during the course of his
prayers.
For no reason at all he will abandon them, partly at
least, thinking that he will finish them in another moment. Does he want to
offer his day to God, to say his Grace? He does all that, but often without
thinking of the one who is addressed. He will not even stop working. If the
possessor of the lukewarm soul is a man, he will turn his cap or his hat around
in his hands as if to see whether it is good or bad, as though he had some idea
of selling it. If it is a woman, she will say her prayers while slicing bread
into her soup, or putting wood on the fire, or calling out to her children or
maid. If you like, such distractions during prayer are not exactly deliberate.
People would rather not have them, but because it is necessary to go to so much
trouble and expend so much energy to get rid of them, they let them alone and
allow them to come, as they will.
The lukewarm Christian may not perhaps work on Sunday
at tasks which seem to be forbidden to anyone who has even the slightest shred
of religion, but doing some sewing, arranging something in the house, driving
sheep to the fields during the times for Masses, on the pretext that there is
not enough food to give them -- all these things will be done without the
slightest scruple, and such people will prefer to allow their souls and the
souls of their employees to perish rather than endanger their animals. A man
will busy himself getting out his tools and his carts and harrows and so on,
for the next day; he will fill in a hole or fence a gap; he will cut various
lengths of cords and ropes; he will carry out the churns and set them in order.
What do you think about all this, my brethren? Is it not, alas, the simple
truth? ....
A lukewarm soul will go to Confession regularly, and
even quite frequently. But what kind of Confessions are they? No preparation,
no desire to correct faults, or, at the least, a desire so feeble and so small
that the slightest difficulty will put a stop to it altogether. The Confessions
of such a person are merely repetitions of old ones, which would be a happy
state of affairs indeed if there were nothing to add to them. Twenty years ago
he was accusing himself of the same things he confesses today, and if he goes
to Confession for the next twenty years, he will say the same things. A
lukewarm soul will not, if you like, commit the big sins. But some slander or back-biting,
a lie, a feeling of hatred, of dislike, of jealousy, a slight touch of deceit
or double-dealing -- these count for nothing with it. If it is a woman and you
do not pay her all the respect which she considers her due, she will, under the
guise of pretending that God has been offended, make sure that you realize it;
she could say more than that, of course, since it is she herself who has been
offended. It is true that such a woman would not stop going to the Sacraments,
but her dispositions are worthy of compassion.
On the day when she wants to receive her God, she
spends part of the morning thinking of temporal matters. If it is a man, he
will be thinking about his deals and his sales. If it is a married woman, she
will be thinking about her household and her children. If it is a young girl,
her thoughts will be on her clothes.
If it is a boy, he will be dreaming about passing pleasures and so on. The lukewarm soul shuts God up in an obscure and ugly kind of prison. Its possessor does not crucify Him, but God can find little joy or consolation in his heart. All his dispositions proclaim that his poor soul is struggling for the breath of life.
After having received Holy Communion, this person
will hardly give another thought to God in all the days to follow. His manner
of life tells us that he did not know the greatness of the happiness, which had
been his.
A lukewarm Christian thinks very little upon the state of his poor soul and almost never lets his mind run over the past. If the thought of making any effort to be better crosses his mind at all, he believes that once he has confessed his sins, he ought to be perfectly happy and at peace. He assists at Holy Mass very much as he would at any ordinary activity. He does not think at all seriously of what he is doing and finds no trouble in chatting about all sorts of things while on the way there. Possibly he will not give a single thought to the fact that he is about to participate in the greatest of all the gifts that God, all-powerful as He is, could give us. He does give some thought to the needs of his own soul, yes, but a very small and feeble amount of thought indeed. Frequently he will even present himself before the presence of God without having any idea of what he is going to ask of Him. He has few scruples in cutting out, on the least pretext, the Asperses and the prayers before Mass. During the course of the service, he does not want to go to sleep, of course, and he is even afraid that someone might see him, but he does not do himself any violence all the same. He does not want, of course, to have distractions during prayer or during the Holy Mass, yet when he should put up some little fight against them, he suffers them very patiently, considering the fact that he does not like them. Fast days are reduced to practically nothing, either by advancing the time of the main meal or, under the pretext that Heaven was never taken by famine, by making the collation so abundant that it amounts to a full meal. When he performs good or beneficial actions, his intentions are often very mixed -- sometimes it is to please someone, sometimes it is out of compassion, and sometimes it is just to please the world. With such people everything that is not a really serious sin is good enough. They like doing good, being faithful, but they wish that it did not cost them anything or, at least, that it cost very little. They would like to visit the sick, indeed, but it would be more convenient if the sick would come to them. They have something to give away in alms, they know quite well that a certain person has need of help, but they wait until she comes to ask them instead of anticipating her, which would make the kindness so very much more meritorious. We will even say, my brethren, that the person who leads a lukewarm life does not fail to do plenty of good works, to frequent the Sacraments, to assist regularly at all church services, but in all of this one sees only a weak, languishing faith, hope which the slightest trial will upset, a love of God and of neighbour which is without warmth or pleasure. Everything that such a person does is not entirely lost, but it is very nearly so.
A lukewarm Christian thinks very little upon the state of his poor soul and almost never lets his mind run over the past. If the thought of making any effort to be better crosses his mind at all, he believes that once he has confessed his sins, he ought to be perfectly happy and at peace. He assists at Holy Mass very much as he would at any ordinary activity. He does not think at all seriously of what he is doing and finds no trouble in chatting about all sorts of things while on the way there. Possibly he will not give a single thought to the fact that he is about to participate in the greatest of all the gifts that God, all-powerful as He is, could give us. He does give some thought to the needs of his own soul, yes, but a very small and feeble amount of thought indeed. Frequently he will even present himself before the presence of God without having any idea of what he is going to ask of Him. He has few scruples in cutting out, on the least pretext, the Asperses and the prayers before Mass. During the course of the service, he does not want to go to sleep, of course, and he is even afraid that someone might see him, but he does not do himself any violence all the same. He does not want, of course, to have distractions during prayer or during the Holy Mass, yet when he should put up some little fight against them, he suffers them very patiently, considering the fact that he does not like them. Fast days are reduced to practically nothing, either by advancing the time of the main meal or, under the pretext that Heaven was never taken by famine, by making the collation so abundant that it amounts to a full meal. When he performs good or beneficial actions, his intentions are often very mixed -- sometimes it is to please someone, sometimes it is out of compassion, and sometimes it is just to please the world. With such people everything that is not a really serious sin is good enough. They like doing good, being faithful, but they wish that it did not cost them anything or, at least, that it cost very little. They would like to visit the sick, indeed, but it would be more convenient if the sick would come to them. They have something to give away in alms, they know quite well that a certain person has need of help, but they wait until she comes to ask them instead of anticipating her, which would make the kindness so very much more meritorious. We will even say, my brethren, that the person who leads a lukewarm life does not fail to do plenty of good works, to frequent the Sacraments, to assist regularly at all church services, but in all of this one sees only a weak, languishing faith, hope which the slightest trial will upset, a love of God and of neighbour which is without warmth or pleasure. Everything that such a person does is not entirely lost, but it is very nearly so.
See, before God, my brethren, on what side you are.
On the side of the sinners, who have abandoned everything and plunge themselves
into sin without remorse? On the side of the just souls, who seek but God
alone? Or are you of the number of these slack, tepid, and indifferent souls
such as we have just been depicting for you? Down which road are you
traveling?
Who can dare assure himself that he is neither a
great sinner nor a tepid soul but that he is one of the elect? Alas, my
brethren, how many seem to be good Christians in the eyes of the world who are
really tepid souls in the eyes of God, Who knows our inmost hearts....
Let us ask God with all our hearts, if we are in this
state, to give us the grace to get out of it, so that we may take the route
that all the saints have taken and arrive at the happiness that they are
enjoying. That is what I desire for you....
Photo taken from MorgueFile Photos
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