Prepare
Your Soul For Temptation
You have already been
told about the wicked things shepherds desire. Let us now consider what they
neglect. You have failed to strengthen what was weak, to heal what was sick, and
to bind up what was injured (that
is, what was broken). You did not call back the straying sheep,
nor seek out the lost. What was strong you have destroyed. Yes, you have cut it down and killed
it. The sheep is weak, that is to say, its heart is weak, and so, incautious
and unprepared, it may give in to temptations.
The negligent
shepherd fails to say to the believer: My son, come to the service of God. stand
fast in fear and in righteousness, and prepare your soul for temptation. A shepherd who does say this
strengthens the one who is weak and makes him strong. Such a believer will then
not hope for the prosperity of this world. For if he has been taught to hope
for worldly gain, he will be corrupted by prosperity. When adversity comes, he
will be wounded or perhaps destroyed.
The builder who
builds in such manner is not building the believer on a rock but upon sand. But
the rock was Christ. Christians
must imitate Christ’s sufferings, not set their hearts on pleasures. He who is
weak will be strengthened when told: “Yes, expect the temptations of this
world, but the Lord will deliver you from them all if your heart has not
abandoned him. For it was to strengthen your heart that he came to suffer and
die, came to be spit upon and crowned with thorns, came to be accused of
shameful things, yes, came to be fastened to the wood of the cross. All these
things he did for you, and you did nothing. He did them not for himself, but
for you.”
For the Apostle says: All
who desire to live a holy life in Christ will suffer persecution. But you, shepherd, seek what is yours
and not what is Christ’s, you disregard what the Apostle says: All
who want to live a holy life in Christ will suffer persecution.You say
instead: “If you live a holy life in Christ, all good things will be yours in
abundance. If you do not have children, you will embrace and nourish all men,
and none of them shall die.” Is this the way you build up the believer? Take
note of what you are doing and where you are placing him. You have built him on
sand. The rains will come, the river will overflow and rush in, the winds will
blow, and the elements will dash against that house of yours. It will fall, and
its ruin will be great.
Lift him up from the
sand and put him on the rock. Let him be in Christ, if you wish him to be a
Christian. Let him turn his thoughts to sufferings, however unworthy they may
be in comparison to Christ’s. Let him centre his attention on Christ, who was
without sin, and yet made restitution for what he had not done. Let him
consider Scripture, which says to him: He chastises every son whom he acknowledges. Let him prepare to be chastised, or
else not seek to be acknowledged as a son.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From a Sermon by Saint Augustine on Pastors
Photo
taken from Wikimedia
Commons
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