The Only Remedy For All Our Ills
1. Life is a continual battle. “Is not man's life on earth a drudgery?”
(Job 7:1) If we consider only the material aspect of this battle, we
are all among the vanquished. Admittedly, there is some joy and some
victory. But our pleasures are as short-lived as the flowers of the
field; they are soon “withered and dried up like grass.” (Cf. Ps. 101:5)
Our conquests are also very
insignificant; they can inflate us for a while, but they do not last
long and cannot satisfy us. After death only our triumphs in virtue will
persist. Moreover, whereas the joys of this life are few and fleeting,
the physical and moral sufferings are innumerable. Sometimes they are so
heavy and overwhelming that they cause us to despair. But surely there
is a remedy for all the evils which afflict us? God is infinitely good,
and He has permitted suffering. Will He not give us the means of
enduring it and the medicine to cure it? In fact, Our Lord has given us a
remedy for all our ills, even for the most distressing. It is a bitter
medicine, but it will heal anyone who has the courage to swallow it, and
it will give him perfect peace of soul. The treatment consists of three
stages: (1) Doing the will of God in all things with complete
resignation. (2) Doing everything for the love of God. (3) Doing
everything and enduring everything for the love of God alone. When a man
reaches this highest peak of the spiritual life, he acquires that
perfect peace of soul which the Saints possessed.
2. The first
stage consists in doing God's will generously on all occasions. Will God
give us a little happiness and satisfaction in the present life? Let us
accept whatever He allows us without becoming excessively attracted by
it. Let us never lose our hearts in earthly pleasures, but let us
preserve them intact for Jesus. Then the joys and honours of this world
will not disturb our souls nor keep them apart from God. Will God send
us suffering and privation? Let us accept these with resignation to His
holy will. Our final end, which is eternal life, can be achieved equally
well by means of joy or sorrow as long as we accept everything from
God's hands and offer it to Him in accordance with His will. Let us
remember that we have to do the will of God in any case, whether
willingly or unwillingly. The only difference is that if we do it
willingly we shall gain peace and merit in the sight of God. If we do it
unwillingly, we can expect no reward and shall increase the weight of
sin upon our shoulders.
3. We should not stop short at doing
the will of God with resignation, but should aim at doing it from the
motive of love. We should perform all our most ordinary actions and
accept physical and moral suffering purely for the love of God. Then we
shall have peace both in joy and in sorrow, and we shall be happy. Only
the Saints fully understood this great principle of doing and enduring
everything for the love of God alone. They made it their basic rule of
life. If Jesus granted them consolation and favours, they thanked Him.
If He sent them severe sufferings and spiritual desolation, they were
equally grateful. “To me to live is Christ,” (Phil. 1:21) said St. Paul.
Jesus Christ must reign supreme in my will and in my heart and in all
my actions. Then sorrow and suffering will be all the same to me and I
shall possess the peace and happiness of the Saints.
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