How Death Will Reveal
Theives! by Saint John Vianney
I do not wish to speak to you, my dear brethren, about those who lend at seven, eight, nine, and ten per cent. Let us leave such people to one side. To make them feel the enormity and the heinousness of their injustice and their cruelty, it would be necessary that one of those early usurers, who has been burning in Hell for the past three or four thousand years, should come back and give them a description of all the torments he is enduring and of the many injustices he committed which are the cause of what he suffers. No, these people are not part of my plan of instruction for you. They know very well that they are doing evil and that God will never pardon them unless they make restitution to those whom they have wronged. All that I could say to them would only serve to make them more guilty. So we will go carefully into something which involves an even greater number of people.
I tell you that
wealth unjustly acquired will never enrich him who possesses it. On the
contrary, it will become a source of trouble and evil for all his family. Oh,
dear God, how blind man is! He is perfectly well aware that he is in the world
for a brief space of time only. At every moment he sees people younger and
stronger than himself passing out of it. It is all to no purpose: it does not
help him to open his eyes. The Holy Ghost has told him plainly, through the
mouth of the holy man Job, that he came into this world deprived of everything
and that he will leave it the same way, that all the possessions he has
cultivated will be taken from him at the moment when he least expects it: none
of this serves to halt his progress. St. Paul affirms plainly that it will not
be long before anyone who becomes rich through unjust means goes well astray
onto the road of sin. And what is more, he will never see the face of God.
That is so true
that, without a miracle of grace, a miser, or if you prefer, a person who has
acquired some wealth by fraud or cunning, will hardly ever be converted, so
greatly does this sin blind anyone who commits it.
Listen to what St.
Augustine says to those who have money which belongs to others. You can, he
tells them, go to Confession, you can perform all the penance you like, you can
weep for your sins, but unless you make restitution, whenever you can, God will
never pardon you.... Either give back what is not yours, or you will have to
make up your mind to go to Hell. The Holy Ghost does not stop at merely
forbidding us to take and to covet the wealth of our neighbour -- He does not
wish us even to consider it or dwell upon it, lest we should want to lay our
hands upon it. The prophet Zacharias tells us that the curse of the Lord will
remain on the house of the thief until he is destroyed. And I am telling you
that wealth acquired by fraud or by cunning will not only be of no profit but
it will cause whatever you acquire legitimately to wither away and your days to
be shortened.
My dear brethren,
if I wanted to go into the conduct of all those who are present, I might
perhaps find that I had only thieves. Does that amaze you? Just listen to me
for a moment and you will realise that it is true....
The most common
thefts are those committed in the course of buying and selling. Let us examine
this more closely so that you may recognise the wrong that you do and, at the
same time, see how you can set about correcting it.
When you bring along your produce to sell
it, people ask you if your eggs and your butter are fresh. You hasten to answer
in the affirmative, even though you know that the opposite is the truth. Why do
you say that, unless it is to rob two or three pennies from some poor person
who has had, perhaps, to borrow them to keep her house going? Another time it
will be in the selling of a crop. You will take the precaution of putting the
smallest and the poorest specimens in the midst of the bunch. You will possibly
say: "But if I didn't do that, I wouldn't sell so much."
To put it another
way, if you conducted yourself like a good Christian, you would not rob as you
do. On another occasion, when counting your money, you will have noticed that
you have been given too much, but you have said nothing: "So much the
worse for the person concerned. It's not my fault."
Ah, my dear
children, a day will come when you will possibly be told, and with more reason,
"So much the worse for you! "
Someone wants to
buy corn, or wine, or animals from you.
He asks you if
this corn is from a good year's crop. Without hesitation, you assure him that
it is. You have mixed your wine with another of poorer quality, yet you sell it
as a good and unadulterated wine. If people show signs of not believing you,
you will swear that it is good, and it is not once but twenty times that you
thus give your soul over to the Devil. Ah, my children, there is no need for
you to be overanxious to give yourselves to him -- you have been his for a long
time now! "What about this animal?" someone else will ask you."
Has it any defects? Don't cheat me now. I have only borrowed this money and if
you do I will be in terrible difficulties."
"Oh, indeed
no!" you will break in." This is a very good animal. In fact, I am
very sorry to be selling it. If I could do anything else I would not sell it at
all."
In fact, of
course, you are selling it because it is worth nothing at all and is no longer
of any use to you.
"I do the
same as everyone else. So much the worse for anyone who is taken in. I have
been cheated; I try to cheat in my own turn; otherwise I would lose too
much."
Is it, my
children, that if others are damning themselves, then you must needs damn
yourselves also? They are going to Hell -- must you then go along with them?
You would prefer to have a few extra pennies and go to Hell for all eternity?
Very well.
I am telling you,
though, that if you have sold an animal with hidden faults, you are obliged to compensate
the buyer for the loss which these defects have caused him; otherwise you will
be damned.
"Ah, if you
were in our place you would do the very same as we do."
Yes, my dear
children, without any doubt I would do the very same as you do if, as you do, I
wanted to be damned. But since I want to be saved, I would do the exact
opposite of that.
Photo taken from MorgueFile Photos
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