But oh, I see that by speaking in this manner of all in general, I am missing my point. So let us apply this truth to various states, and you will understand that you must either throw away reason, experience and the common sense of the faithful, or confess that the greater number of Catholics is damned. Is there any state in the world more favorable to innocence in which salvation seems easier and of which people have a higher idea than that of priests, the lieutenants of God? At first glance, who would not think that most of them are not only good but even perfect; yet I am horror-struck when I hear Saint Jerome declaring that although the world is full of priests, barely one in a hundred is living in a manner in conformity with state; when I hear a servant of God attesting that he has learned by revelation that the number of priests who fall into hell each day is so great that it seemed impossible to him that there be any left on earth; when I hear Saint Chrysostom exclaiming with tears in his eyes, "I do not believe that many priests are saved; I believe the contrary, that the number of those who are damned is greater."
Look higher still, and see the prelates of the Holy
Church, pastors who have the charge of souls. Is the number of those who are
saved among them greater than the number of those who are damned? Listen to
Cantimpre; he will relate an event to you, and you may draw the conclusions.
There was a synod being held in Paris, and a great number of prelates and
pastors who had the charge of souls were in attendance; the king and princes
also came to add luster to that assembly by their presence. A famous preacher
was invited to preach.
While he was preparing his sermon, a horrible demon
appeared to him and said, "Lay your books aside. If you want to give a
sermon that will be useful to these princes and prelates, content yourself with
telling them on our part, 'We the princes of darkness thank you, princes,
prelates, and pastors of souls, that due to your negligence, the greater number
of the faithful are damned; also, we are saving a reward for you for this
favor, when you shall be with us in Hell.'"
Woe to you who command others! If so many are damned
by your fault, what will happen to you? If few out of those who are first in
the Church of God are saved, what will happen to you? Take all states, both
sexes, every condition: husbands, wives, widows, young women, young men,
soldiers, merchants, craftsmen, rich and poor, noble and plebian.
What are we to say about all these people who are
living so badly? The following narrative from Saint Vincent Ferrer will show
you what you may think about it. He relates that an archdeacon in Lyons gave up
his charge and retreated into a desert place to do penance, and that he died
the same day and hour as Saint Bernard. After his death, he appeared to his
bishop and said to him, "Know, Monsignor, that at the very hour I
passed away, thirty-three thousand people also died. Out of this number,
Bernard and myself went up to heaven without delay, three went to
purgatory, and all the others fell into Hell."
Our chronicles relate an even more dreadful
happening. One of our brothers, well-known for his doctrine and holiness, was
preaching in Germany. He represented the ugliness of the sin of impurity so
forceful that a woman fell dead of sorrow in front of everyone. Then, coming
back to life, she said, "When I was presented before the Tribunal of
God, sixty thousand people arrived at the same time from all parts of
the world; out of that number, three were saved by going to Purgatory,
and all the rest were damned."
O abyss of the judgments of God! Out of thirty
thousand, only five were saved! And out of sixty thousand, only three went to
heaven! You sinners who are listening to me, in what category will you be
numbered?... What do you say?... What do you think?...
I see almost all of you lowering your heads, filled
with astonishment and horror. But let us lay our stupor aside, and instead of
flattering ourselves, let us try to draw some profit from our fear. Is it not
true that there are two roads which lead to heaven: innocence and repentance?
Now, if I show you that very few take either one of these two roads, as
rational people you will conclude that very few are saved.
And to mention proofs: in what age, employment or
condition will you find that the number of the wicked is not a hundred times
greater than that of the good, and about which one might say, "The good
are so rare and the wicked are so great in number"? We could say of
our times what Salvianus said of his: it is easier to find a countless
multitude of sinners immersed in all sorts of iniquities than a few innocent
men.
How many servants are totally honest and faithful in
their duties? How many merchants are fair and equitable in their commerce; how
many craftsmen exact and truthful; how many salesmen disinterested and sincere?
How many men of law do not forsake equity? How many soldiers do not tread upon
innocence; how many masters do not unjustly withhold the salary of those who
serve them, or do not seek to dominate their inferiors?
Everywhere, the good are rare and the wicked great in number. Who does not know that today there is so much libertinage among mature men, liberty among young girls, vanity among women, licentiousness in the nobility, corruption in the middle class, dissolution in the people, impudence among the poor, that one could say what David said of his times: "All alike have gone astray... there is not even one who does good, not even one."
Everywhere, the good are rare and the wicked great in number. Who does not know that today there is so much libertinage among mature men, liberty among young girls, vanity among women, licentiousness in the nobility, corruption in the middle class, dissolution in the people, impudence among the poor, that one could say what David said of his times: "All alike have gone astray... there is not even one who does good, not even one."
Go into street and square, into palace and house,
into city and countryside, into tribunal and court of law, and even into the
temple of God. Where will you find virtue? "Alas!" cries
Salvianus, "except for a very little number who flee evil, what is the
assembly of Christians if not a sink of vice?" All that we can find
everywhere is selfishness, ambition, gluttony, and luxury. Is not the greater
portion of men defiled by the vice of impurity, and is not Saint John right in
saying, "The whole world – if something so foul may be called –
"is seated in wickedness?" I am not the one who is telling
you; reason obliges you to believe that out of those who are living so badly,
very few are saved.
But you will say: Can penance not profitably repair
the loss of innocence? That is true, I admit. But I also know that penance is
so difficult in practice, we have lost the habit so completely, and it is so
badly abused by sinners, that this alone should suffice to convince you that
very few are saved by that path. Oh, how steep, narrow, thorny, horrible to behold
and hard to climb it is! Everywhere we look, we see traces of blood and things
that recall sad memories. Many weaken at the very sight of it. Many retreat at
the very start.
Many fall from weariness in the middle, and many give
up wretchedly at the end. And how few are they who persevere in it till death!
Saint Ambrose says it is easier to find men who have kept their innocence than
to find any who have done fitting penance.
If you consider the sacrament of penance, there are
so many distorted confessions, so many studied excuses, so many deceitful
repentances, so many false promises, so many ineffective resolutions, so many
invalid absolutions! Would you regard as valid the confession of someone who
accuses himself of sins of impurity and still holds to the occasion of them? Or
someone who accuses himself of obvious injustices with no intention of making
any reparation whatsoever for them? Or someone who falls again into the same
iniquities right after going to confession? Oh, horrible abuses of such a great
sacrament! One confesses to avoid excommunication, another to make a reputation
as a penitent. One rids himself of his sins to calm his remorse, another
conceals them out of shame. One accuses them imperfectly out of malice, another
discloses them out of habit.
One does not have the true end of the sacrament in
mind, another is lacking the necessary sorrow, and still another firm purpose.
Poor confessors, what efforts you make to bring the greater number of penitents
to these resolutions and acts, without which confession is a sacrilege,
absolution a condemnation and penance an illusion?
Where are they now, those who believe that the number
of the saved among Christians is greater than that of the damned and who, to
authorize their opinion, reason thus: the greater portion of Catholic adults
die in their beds armed with the sacraments of the Church, therefore most adult
Catholics are saved? Oh, what fine reasoning! You must say exactly the
opposite. Most Catholic adults confess badly at death, therefore most of them
are damned. I say "all the more certain," because a dying person who
has not confessed well when he was in good health will have an even harder time
doing so when he is in bed with a heavy heart, an unsteady head, a muddled
mind; when he is opposed in many ways by still-living objects, by still-fresh
occasions, by adopted habits, and above all by devils who are seeking every
means to cast him into hell. Now, if you add to all these false penitents all
the other sinners who die unexpectedly in sin, due to the doctors' ignorance or
by their relatives' fault, who die from poisoning or from being buried in
earthquakes, or from a stroke, or from a fall, or on the battlefield, in a
fight, caught in a trap, struck by lightning, burned or drowned, are you not
obliged to conclude that most Christian adults are damned?
That is the reasoning of Saint Chrysostom. This Saint
says that most Christians are walking on the road to hell throughout their
life. Why, then, are you so surprised that the greater number goes to hell? To
come to a door, you must take the road that leads there. What have you to
answer such a powerful reason?
The answer, you will tell me, is that the mercy of
God is great. Yes, for those who fear Him, says the Prophet; but great is His
justice for the one who does not fear Him, and it condemns all obstinate
sinners.
So you will say to me: Well then, who is Paradise
for, if not for Christians? It is for Christians, of course, but for those who
do not dishonor their character and who live as Christians. Moreover, if to the
number of Christian adults who die in the grace of God, you add the countless
host of children who die after baptism and before reaching the age of reason,
you will not be surprised that Saint John the Apostle, speaking of those who
are saved, says, "I saw a great multitude which no man could number."
And this is what deceives those who pretend that the
number of the saved among Catholics is greater than that of the damned... If to
that number, you add the adults who have kept the robe of innocence, or who
after having defiled it, have washed it in the tears of penance, it is certain
that the greater number is saved; and that explains the words of Saint John,
"I saw a great multitude," and these other words of Our Lord,
"Many will come from the east and from the west, and will feast with
Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven," and the other
figures usually cited in favor of that opinion. But if you are talking about
Christian adults, experience, reason, authority, propriety and Scripture all
agree in proving that the greater number is damned. Do not believe that because
of this, paradise is empty; on the contrary, it is a very populous kingdom. And
if the damned are "as numerous as the sand in the sea," the
saved are "as numerous at the stars of heaven," that is, both
the one and the other are countless, although in very different proportions.
One day Saint John Chrysostom, preaching in the
cathedral in Constantinople and considering these proportions, could not help
but shudder in horror and ask, "Out of this great number of people, how
many do you think will be saved?"
And, not waiting for an answer, he added, "Among
so many thousands of people, we would not find a hundred who are saved, and I
even doubt for the one hundred." What a dreadful thing! The great
Saint believed that out of so many people, barely one hundred would be saved;
and even then, he was not sure of that number. What will happen to you who are
listening to me? Great God, I cannot think of it without shuddering! Brothers,
the problem of salvation is a very difficult thing; for according to the maxims
of the theologians, when an end demands great efforts, few only attain it.
That is why Saint Thomas, the Angelic Doctor, after
weighing all the reasons pro and con in his immense erudition, finally
concludes that the greater number of Catholic adults are damned. He says,
"Because eternal beatitude surpasses the natural state, especially
since it has been deprived of original grace, it is the little number that are
saved."
So then, remove the blindfold from your eyes that is
blinding you with self-love, that is keeping you from believing such an obvious
truth by giving you very false ideas concerning the justice of God, "Just
Father, the world has not known Thee," said Our Lord Jesus Christ. He
does not say "Almighty Father, most good and merciful Father."
He says "just Father," so we may understand that out of
all the attributes of God, none is less known than His justice, because men
refuse to believe what they are afraid to undergo.
Therefore, remove the blindfold that is covering your eyes and say tearfully: Alas! The greater number of Catholics, the greater number of those who live here, perhaps even those who are in this assembly, will be damned! What subject could be more deserving of your tears?
Therefore, remove the blindfold that is covering your eyes and say tearfully: Alas! The greater number of Catholics, the greater number of those who live here, perhaps even those who are in this assembly, will be damned! What subject could be more deserving of your tears?
King Xerxes, standing on a hill looking at his army
of one hundred thousand soldiers in battle array, and considering that out of
all of them there would be not one man alive in a hundred years, was unable to
hold back his tears. Have we not more reason to weep upon thinking that out of
so many Catholics, the greater number will be damned? Should this thought not
make our eyes pour forth rivers of tears, or at least produce in our heart the
sentiment of compassion felt by an Augustinian Brother, Ven. Marcellus of St.
Dominic?
One day as he was meditating on the eternal pains,
the Lord showed him how many souls were going to hell at that moment and had
him see a very broad road on which twenty-two thousand reprobates were running
toward the abyss, colliding into one another. The servant of God was stupefied
at the sight and exclaimed, "Oh, what a number! What a number! And
still more are coming. O Jesus! O Jesus! What madness!" Let me repeat
with Jeremiah, "Who will give water to my head, and a fountain of tears
to my eyes? And I will weep day and night for the slain of the daughter of my
people."
Poor souls! How can you run so hastily toward hell?
For mercy's sake, stop and listen to me for a moment! Either you understand
what it means to be saved and to be damned for all eternity, or you do not. If
you understand and in spite of that, you do not decide to change your life
today, make a good confession and trample upon the world, in a word, make your
every effort to be counted among the littler number of those who are saved, I
say that you do not have the faith. You are more excusable if you do not
understand it, for then one must say that you are out of your mind. To be
saved for all eternity, to be damned for all eternity, and to not make your
every effort to avoid the one and make sure of the other, is something
inconceivable.
St. Leonard of Port Maurice
St. Leonard of Port Maurice
Photo
taken from Wikimedia Commons
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