Saint Paul of the
Cross Quotes
Lord, dispose of me as Thou wiliest; let me
be tormented as much as Thou pleasest; I will never, on any account, separate
myself from Thee. Do with me according to Thy good pleasure; I wish to draw
nearer and nearer to Thee.
My heart breaks when
I think of the sorrows of the most holy Virgin. Oh tender Mother, unutterable
was Thy grief in finding Thyself deprived of your dear Son, and then in
beholding Him dead in Thy arms! Ah! who can realize the sadness of Mary when
She returned to Bethany after the burial of her
Son? Jesus expires on the cross! He is dead that we may have life. All creation
mourns: the sun darkens, the earth trembles, the rocks burst, and the veil of
the temple is rent in twain; my heart alone remains harder than a rock!
All I say to you now is, console the poor Mother of Jesus. It is a miracle that She does not die; She is absorbed in the sufferings of Jesus. Imitate Her, and ask the Magdalen and the beloved disciple St. John what are their sentiments.
All I say to you now is, console the poor Mother of Jesus. It is a miracle that She does not die; She is absorbed in the sufferings of Jesus. Imitate Her, and ask the Magdalen and the beloved disciple St. John what are their sentiments.
How beautiful to look upon is the starry
firmament! Yet it is only the portal of the blessed country where I hope to go
one day.
Build an oratory
within yourself, and there have Jesus on the altar of your heart. Speak to Him
often while you are doing your work. Speak to Him of His holy love, of His holy
sufferings and of the sorrows of most holy Mary
Beginners in the
service of God sometimes lose confidence when they fall into any fault. When
you feel so unworthy a sentiment rising within you, you must lift your heart to
God and consider that all your faults, compared with
divine goodness, are less than a bit of tattered thread thrown into a sea of
fire.
Suppose that the whole horizon, as far as you can see from this mountain, were a sea of fire; if we cast into it a bit of tattered thread, it will disappear in an instant. So, when you have committed a fault, humble yourself before God, and cast your fault into the infinite ocean of, charity, and at once it will be effaced from your soul; at the same time all distrust will disappear.
As soon as we know the will of God, we
ought without delay to follow it.
O souls! seek a refuge, like pure doves, in
the shadow of the crucifix. There mourn the Passion of your divine Spouse, and
drawing from your hearts flames of love and rivers of tears, make of them a
precious balm with which to anoint the wounds of your Saviour.
From
this valley of tears, turn your gaze continually to God, ever awaiting the
moment when you will be united to Him in heaven. Often contemplate heaven, and
fervently exclaim: 'What a beautiful abode there is
above! It is destined for us!
Sigh
longingly after its possession. Sometimes say, while your eyes are moist with
tears:
'Nothing in this world pleases me; I no longer care for anything but my God. Yes, I hope, yes, I wish to possess Him, and I hope this of the mercy of God, through the merits of my Saviour's Passion and the sufferings of my good Mother Mary.
'Nothing in this world pleases me; I no longer care for anything but my God. Yes, I hope, yes, I wish to possess Him, and I hope this of the mercy of God, through the merits of my Saviour's Passion and the sufferings of my good Mother Mary.
When you behold a
beautiful landscape, say: 'Heaven is more beautiful than that! Above there are
true delights and holy pleasures!
Let
us live, then, absorbed in the thought and the desire of that immense ocean of felicity which we are
to enjoy in heaven.
I would believe myself damned if I robbed God of one atom of His glory. I would believe myself more wicked than Lucifer if I had anything else in view but God.
You should not pay so much attention to or dwell on certain gifts, but rather go to the Divine Source whence they proceed.
Sometimes, in prayer, God communicates to the soul, all at once, His treasures of lights and heavenly graces. Imagine that you have in your hand a golden dish, that you pour into it the extract of the rarest and most exquisite perfumes, and that you steep into it a fine cambric handkerchief; this handkerchief will yield a delicious and inexplicable odor, composed of all the perfumes. It is thus my soul feels when I receive those intimate and hidden communications.
Tell me: what would you fain have done were
you to die now? Would you have lived in luxury, which usually leads to grievous
sins, and be cast into hell, or would you rather have led a poor life, and wing
your flight to heaven?
Oh my God! teach me
how to express myself. I wish that I were all aflame with love! More than that:
I wish that I could sing hymns of praise in the fire of love, and extol the
marvellous mercies that uncreated Love has bestowed on us! Is it not truly a
duty to thank God for His gifts? Yes, for sure, but I know not how. I wish to
do so, and I know not how. To faint away with the desire to love this great God
more and more is little. To consume ourselves for Him is little. What shall we
do? Ah! we shall live for that divine Lover in a perpetual agony of love. But,
do you think that I have said enough? No; I would say more if I knew how. Do
you know what consoles me somewhat? To know that our great God is an infinite
good, and that nobody is capable of loving and praising Him as much as He
deserves.
Prayer is never more perfect than when it
ascends from the very depth and essence of the soul; we pray, then, in the
spirit of God. This is a sublime language, but when God wills, He makes even
the stones speak. Let the sovereign God reign in your spirit; there ought to be
a reciprocal repose: God in you, and you in God. O sweet, O divine operation!
'O amiable Goodness! O infinite Charity! O
my God and my All! O supreme Sweetness! Make these aspirations, or any others,
as God will inspire you; but remember that if, in making one of these short
prayers of love, your soul regain her peace and recollection in God, it is
unnecessary to make a second; continue, rather, this silence, this repose of
the soul in God, which includes excellently all the acts that we can ever
make.' - St. Paul of the Cross
Fly from the world, and commence by
trampling under your feet all human respect. Do not blush to be a servant of
Christ. Regard this world with the same horror that the sight of a criminal
suspended from a gibbet would awaken in you. Know that the atmosphere of the
world is polluted with the foul odor of thousands of sins that are constantly
committed, and which can be washed away only by tears of blood.
God created the fish dumb because they are
to live in the waters. By this He teaches us that he who lives amid the
tempests of this world ought to be mute, as if he had no tongue, never
complaining or justifying himself.
In times of aridity
arouse your spirit gently, by acts of love; then rest in the will of God. It is
thus that the soul gives the strongest proof of her fidelity to God. Make a
bouquet of the sufferings of Jesus, and place it on the bosom of your soul, as
I have told you. You can from time to time call them to mind, and say sweetly
to your Saviour: 'Oh good Jesus, how swollen, bruised, and defiled with spittle
do I behold Thy countenance! Oh my Love! why do I see Thee all covered with
wounds? Oh Infinite Sweetness! why are Thy bones laid bare? Ah, what
sufferings! what sorrows! O my God! for what are Thou all wounded! Ah, dear
sufferings! dear wounds! I wish to keep you always in my heart'.
I exhort you, though you live in the world,
to communicate often, but with piety.
When you are alone
in your room, take your crucifix, kiss its five wounds reverently, tell it to preach
to you a little sermon, and then listen to the words of eternal life that it
speaks to your heart; listen to the pleading of the thorns, the nails, the
precious Blood. Oh, what an eloquent sermon!
Suppose that you had fallen into the river,
and that a charitable person threw himself into the water to save you. What
would you say to such kindness? Moreover, suppose that, hardly drawn from the
water, you had been attacked by assassins, and that your rescuer again came to
your assistance, and saved your life at the risk of his own. What would you do
in return for such friendship? It is certain that you would do all in your
power to heal the bruises he received on your account. So ought we to act towards
Christ: we must contemplate Him engulfed in an ocean of sorrows to save us from
the eternal abyss; consider Him all covered with wounds and bruises to purchase
for us eternal life. Then let us make His pains our own, sympathize with His
sorrows, and consecrate to Him all our affections.
Make a nosegay of the sufferings of Jesus,
and wear it on your bosom, or else keep yourself absorbed in God in pure faith;
let your soul be rapt in the thought of His sufferings and His love. Remain in
this sacred silence, in this holy admiration, which increases the love of God.
O Jesus, my Sovereign Good, when Thou wert
scourged, what were the sentiments of Thy most holy Heart! O dear Spouse of my
soul, how greatly did the sight of my sins and my ingratitude afflict Thee! O
my Love! would that I could die for Thee!
God's ways are incomprehensible. He uses
very sharp files, which penetrate the heart and remove the rust. His files are
all spiritual.
On awaking, keep
your heart under control, by the remembrance of God, your Love, your only Good.
When God inspires you with a sentiment of love, stop and taste it, as the bee
sips the honey.... Ah! when I reflect that
my soul is the temple of God, that God dwells in me, how my heart rejoices! All
sufferings and afflictions appear to me sweet and light.... What a fruitful
source of meditation!
Live in the joy and the peace of the divine Majesty. Live lost in divine love. Live for divine love and of divine love. Oh cherished cross! Through thee my most bitter trials are replete with graces!
The
Mass is the most favorable occasion to speak with the eternal Father, because
then we offer Him His only Son as a victim for our
salvation. Before celebrating, reflect on the sufferings of your Redeemer,
commune peaceably with Him, even in the midst of dryness; carry to the altar
the needs of the entire world.
The
feast of the Blessed Sacrament is the feast of love. Oh, what great love! what
immense charity! The moth is drawn to the light, and burns itself in it. May
your soul likewise draw near to the divine Light! May it be reduced to ashes in
that sacred flame, particularly during this great and sweet octave of Corpus
Christi. Ah! eat, drink, run, sing, rejoice in honor of your divine Spouse.
How
wonderful are the treasures which are enclosed in the divine Eucharist! I
exhort you, even though you live in the world, to receive Communion often, but
with piety. Holy Communion is the most efficacious means of uniting one's self
to God. Always prepare yourself well for this sacred banquet. Have a very
pure heart, and watch over your tongue, for it is on the tongue that the Sacred
Host is laid. Carry Our Lord home with you after your thanksgiving, and let
your heart be a living tabernacle for Jesus. Visit Him often in this interior
tabernacle, offering Him your homage, and the sentiments of gratitude with
which divine love will inspire you. Preserve carefully the sentiments of love
with which you are filled after Communion.
Have
you ever noticed rocks in the sea, beaten by the tempest? A furious wave dashes
against the rock, another and yet another does likewise, yet the rock is
unmoved. But look at it after the storm has subsided,
and you will see that the flood has but served to wash and purify it of the
defilement it had contracted during the calm. Hereafter I wish you to be as a
rock.
A wave dashes against you? Silence! It assails you ten, a hundred, a thousand times? Silence! Say, at most, in the midst of the storm, "My Father, my Father, I am all Thine! Oh dear, O' sweet will of God, I adore Thee !
Celebrate the feast of Christmas every day, even every moment in the interior
temple of your spirit, remaining like a baby in the bosom of the heavenly
Father, where you will be reborn each moment in the Divine Word, Jesus
Christ.
Wealth, unless it be devoted to good works, will become to its possessor only a source of endless torment in hell.'
Wealth, unless it be devoted to good works, will become to its possessor only a source of endless torment in hell.'
One day the Lord caused me to hear these
words at the foot of the tabernacle: "My son, he who embraces Me embraces
thorns." Oh, what a grace! Oh, what a gift!
The life of the servants of God is a
continual death. For you are dead and your life is hid with Christ in God. I
wish you to die this mystical death. We have just celebrated the birth of Our
Lord, and I am confident that you are born mystically in Christ daily, more and
more; and I desire you to die in Him in a mystical manner, from day to day,
more perfectly, and to dissipate, in the abyss of the Divinity, all those
little distractions that annoy you.
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