Are Your Affairs
going any Better?
Another bad habit which is very common in
homes and among working people is impatience, grumbling, and swearing. Now, my
children, where do you get with your impatience and your grumbling? Do your
affairs go any better?
Do they cause you
any less trouble? Is it not, rather, the other way around? You have a lot more
trouble with them, and, what is even worse, you lose all the merit which you
might have gained for Heaven.
But, you will tell
me, that is all very well for those who have nothing to put up with.... If they
were in my shoes they would probably be much worse....
I would agree with
all that, my children, if we were not Christians, if we had nothing to hope for
beyond what benefits and pleasures we might taste in this world. I would agree
if -- I repeat -- we were the first people who ever suffered anything, but
since the time of Adam until the present, all the saints have had something to
suffer, and most of them far more than have we. But they suffered with patience,
always subject to the will of God, and soon their troubles were finished, and
their happiness, which has begun, will never come to an end. Let us
contemplate, my dear brethren, this beautiful Heaven, let us think about the
happiness which God has prepared for us there, and we shall endure all the
evils of life in a spirit of penitence, with the hope of an eternal reward. If
only you could have the happiness of being able to say in the evening that your
whole day had been spent for God! I tell you that working people, if they want
to get to Heaven, should endure patiently the rigour of the seasons and the ill
humour of those for whom they work; they should avoid those grumbles and bad
language so commonly heard and fulfil their duties conscientiously and faithfully.
Husbands and wives should live peacefully in their union of marriage; they
should be mutually edifying to each other, pray for one another, bear patiently
with one another's faults, encourage virtue in one another by good example, and
follow the holy and sacred rules of their state, remembering that they are the
children of the saints and that, consequently, they ought not to behave like
pagans, who have not the happiness of knowing the one true God.
Masters should
take the same care of their servants as of their own children, remembering the
warning of St. Paul that if they do not have care for them, they are worse than
the pagans, and that they will be more severely punished on the day of
judgment. Servants are to give you service and to be loyal to you, and you must
treat them not as slaves but as your children and your brethren.
Servants must look
upon their masters as taking the place of Jesus Christ on earth. Their duty is
to serve them joyfully, obey them with a good grace, without grumbling, and
look after their well-being as carefully as they would their own.
Servants should
avoid the growth of too-familiar relationships, which are so dangerous and so
fatal to innocence. If you have the misfortune to find yourself in such a
situation, you must leave your employment, no matter what it may cost you to do
so. Here is an example of those very circumstances wherein you must follow the
counsel Jesus Christ gave you when He said that if one's right eye or right
hand should be an occasion of sin, one must deprive oneself of them because it
is better to go into Heaven lacking an eye or a hand than to be cast into Hell
with one's whole body. That is to say, however desirable your position may be,
you must leave it at once; otherwise you will never save your soul. Put the
salvation of your soul first, our Lord Jesus Christ tells us, because that is
the only thing you ought really to have at heart. Alas, my dear brethren, how
rare are those Christians who are ready to suffer rather than to jeopardize the
salvation of their souls!
Photo Credit Hartwig HKD
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