Repairing
the Wrong Done
Having made satisfaction to god, we must then make satisfaction to our neighbour for the wrong which-either in his body or in his soul -- we have done him. I say that it is possible to wrong him in his body, that is to say, in his person, by attacking him either by injurious or insulting words or by bad treatment. If we have sinned against him by injurious words, then we must apologise to him and make our reconciliation with him. If we have done him some wrong by belabouring his animals, as sometimes happens when we find that they have been doing damage among our crops, we are obliged to give him all that we have been the cause of his losing: we could have got compensation without maltreating these animals. If we have done any harm, we are obliged to repay as soon as we can; otherwise we will be gravely at fault. If we have neglected to do that, we have sinned and we must confess it.
If you have done
wrong to your neighbour in his honour, as, for instance, by scandalous talk,
you are obliged to make up by favourable and beneficent talk for all the harm
you have done to his reputation, saying all the good of him which you know to
be true and concealing any faults which he may have and which you are not
obliged to reveal. If you have calumniated your neighbour, you must go and find
the people to whom you have said false things about him and tell them that what
you have been saying is not true, that you are very grieved about it, and that
you beg them not to believe it.
But if you have
done him harm in his soul, it is a still more difficult thing to repair, and
yet it must be done as far as possible; otherwise God will not pardon you.
You must also
examine your conscience as to whether you have given scandal to your children
or to your next-door neighbours. How many fathers, mothers, masters, and
mistresses are there who scandalise their children and their servants by not
saying their prayers morning or evening or by saying them when they are
dressing or sitting back in a chair, who do not even make the Sign of the Cross
before and after a meal? How many times are they heard swearing, or perhaps
even blaspheming?
How many times
have they been seen working on Sunday morning, even before Holy Mass?
You must consider,
too, whether you have sung bad songs, or brought in bad books, or whether you
have given bad counsel, as, for instance, advising someone that he should take
his revenge on someone else, should exact satisfaction by force.
Consider, too,
whether you have ever taken anything from a next-door neighbour and neglected
to pay it back, whether you have neglected to give some alms which you had been
told to give or make some restitution which your parents, who are dead, should
have made. If you wish to have the happiness of having your sins forgiven, you
must have nothing belonging to anyone else which you should and could pay back.
So if you have sullied your neighbour's reputation, you must do all in your
power to repair the damage. You must be reconciled with your enemies, speak to
them as if they had never done you anything but good all your life, keeping
nothing in your heart but the charity which the good Christian should have for
everyone, so that we can all appear with confidence before the tribunal of God.
That is the happiness that....(sentence is incomplete - Trans.)
By
Saint John Vianney
Photo
taken from MorgueFile Photos
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