Those admitted to the great wedding feast of heaven
will be there not because they knew all mysteries, did miracles, had
all faith,... but because they possess charity, the white garment of
true love. For this reason, and having spoken on sins of the
tongue, it is fitting to speak on something even more important:
charity, the love of God in the soul.
These following Sunday sermons will reference the work by St. Alphonsus
Liguori written in 1768, “The Practice of the Love of Jesus Christ”
which I recommend to us all.
St. Alphonsus asserts that man has one care in this life: to acquire a
true love for Jesus Christ. And, of all masters, St. Alphonsus
says St. Paul, “the preacher of love,” best teaches us how to practice
true love for Jesus Christ.
In his First Letter to the Corinthians, chapter 13, St. Paul sums the
importance of charity (love),
“If I speak with the tongues of men and angels BUT have not charity - I
am become as sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal.
“If I should have prophecy and should know all mysteries and all
knowledge and if I should have all faith so as to remove mountains, BUT
have not charity - I am nothing.
“If I should distribute all my goods to feed the poor; if I should
deliver my body to be burned, BUT have not charity - it profits me
nothing.”
Restated, St. Alphonsus says that if a person were to distribute all
his goods to the poor, “and even gladly suffer martyrdom, without love,
so that he did it for any other goal than that of pleasing God, it
would be no use to him.” We may add that if a person had all
Catholic Faith, and even gladly handed over his body to be burned,
without love, it would be no profit to him.
In this same letter, St. Paul lists some signs of true love whereby we
might measure ourselves.
“Love is patient; love is kind; love is not envious or boastful or
arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; love is not
irritable or resentful; love does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but
rejoices with the truth. Love bears all things, believes all
things, hopes all things, endures all things.”
Over the coming weeks we will examine each of these articles, these
marks of love in the soul; today we begin with: “Love is patient.”
St. Alphonsus explains this mark of love: The soul that loves Jesus
Christ loves suffering.
He tells us, “This earth is a place for winning merit, and therefore it
is a place for suffering.”
Our life on earth is a warfare. Our true home is paradise, a
place of enduring rest and joy; our present home, more a hotel, is
filled with pain and sorrow. “A mortal, born of woman, few of
days and full of trouble.” (Job 14:1); “Every creature groans and
travails in pain even till now.” (Rm 8-22)
There must be suffering and all must suffer, the good and the bad,
every one must bear a cross. St. Alphonsus says those who bear
the cross without patience, are lost; those who bear the cross
with patience, are saved. “In your patience you shall possess
your souls.” (21:19)
St. Augustine adds that the same toils send some to heaven and
others to hell. Suffering is the winnow which separates chaff
from wholesome grain; St. Alphonsus says those who become haughty, and
so forsake God, become chaff for hell.
If we wish to become a blessed grain of wheat, then we must kneed
ourselves into Jesus Christ, the Bread of Life, “Those whom He
foreknew, He also predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son.”
(Rm 8:29) We know that the Savior’s life was filled with ignominy and
persecution.
But Christ suffered in His life to give us an example... not to be
watched but followed. “What glory is it if sinning and being
buffeted
for it, and endure?; but if doing well you suffer patiently this is
worthy of thanks before God. For unto this are you called: Christ
also suffered for us, leaving you an example that you follow in His
steps.” (I Pt 2:20-21)
And as God treated His Son so He treats all those He loves, “For whom
the Lord loves, He chastises; and He scourges every son whom He
receives.” (Hb 12:6) One day, our Lord told St. Teresa or
Avila, “Know that the souls dearest to my Father are those afflicted
with the greatest sufferings.”
Suffering and the willingness to suffer are both needed. After
the St Teresa’s death, she revealed to a chosen soul, “if I could
possibly desire to return to earth, the only reason would be to suffer
some more for God.” This is the willingness we must strive to
obtain. So that when the Lord says, “let (my disciple) deny
himself and take up his cross daily and follow me” (Lk 9:23), we may
lift up and carry our burdens not by constraint or repugnance but with
humility, patience, and love.
Oh, but why must we suffer?
Without suffering we can not be united to God. St. Catherine of
Genoa put it this way,
“to unite ourselves with God one must have adversities because God uses
these to consume all our evil impulses. Insults, scorns,
infirmities, abandonment by relatives and friends, confusions and
temptations... are all necessary, so that we fight on, until our vile
impulses are extinguished.... as long as they seem bitter and not sweet
for God’s sake, we cannot arrive at the divine union.”
Suffering repels natural man; only the supernatural will see its great
benefits, even in this life. St. Alphonsus says that true peace
of heart cannot be obtained except by those who endure and lovingly
embrace their sufferings to please God.
Yet to patiently embrace the trials sent us in this mortal life, we
need encouragement. The best remedy to overcome our natural fear
of suffering is the frequent meditation on the passion of our
Blessed Savior. A confessor was once asked for an encouragement
to suffer more willingly, he replied, “Inscribe at base of your
crucifix these words: ‘This is how one loves.’”
Finally, at this holy Mass, let us ask our Divine Redeemer for the
grace to suffer well, to suffer without murmurings or complaint, all
that the good God should send us. Let us pray for patience in our
trials. Love is patient. The more patient we are, the more
united we shall be to God, the more sure shall be our happy eternity.
Next week we shall speak on “Love is kind” wherein St. Alphonsus
teaches us that those who love Jesus Christ love gentleness.