Final Perseverance
by St. Bonaventure
"I have fought a good fight, I have
finished my course, I have kept the faith" (2 Timothy 4:7).
It is
not enough to be virtuous. To be firmly rooted in
virtue, to possess virtuous habits, does not render us
glorious in God's sight. Something else is still
wanting. To be an object of glory to the eye of God we
must possess the culminating virtue, the crown and
consummation of all virtues: perseverance. No mortal
being whatever, no matter how perfect He may seem,
should be praised whilst he lives. Let a man be praised
not because he has begun a good work but because he has
brought it to a good and happy completion. "Perseverance
is the end, acme and crown of the virtues, it nurtures
and fits one for merit, it leads to and culminates in
reward." Hence St. Bernard says: "Take away perseverance
and nothing remains. For the fulfilment of duty, the
performance of good deeds and the exercise of fortitude
will not procure the grace sufficient to obtain eternal
praise".
It
will avail a man little to have been a religious, to
have been patient and humble, devout and chaste, to have
loved God and to have exercised himself in all the
virtues, if he continues not to the end. He must
persevere to win the crown. In the race of the spiritual
life all the virtues run, but only perseverance
"receives the prize". It is not the beginner in virtue
but "he that shall persevere unto the end, he shall be
saved" (Matt. 10:22). "What is the use of seeds
sprouting if afterwards they wither and die?" asks St.
Chrysostom. None whatever!
If then, your virtues
are productive of good works, be sure to continue in
your good practices. Persevere in your virtuous habits.
Make it a practice ever and constantly to increase in
the performance of good works. Wage the war of Christ
with all your might. Practise and increase in virtue up
to the very moment of death. Then, when your last moment
comes and your life is brought to a close, God will give
you the crown of honour and glory as the prize and
reward of your labour. Your best Beloved Lord Jesus
Christ has assured you of this. These are His words,
written for your instruction by the inspired writer of
the Apocalypse: "Be thou faithful unto death, and I will
give thee the crown of life" (Apoc. 2:10). What is this
crown if not the reward of eternal life? The heart of
every Christian ought to burn with the desire of winning
this reward. In value there is nothing comparable to it,
it is priceless. It surpasses the mathematician's power,
says St. Gregory, to count its varying parts and
manifold possibilities. There is no limit to its
duration. It is to be enjoyed eternally. It can never
cease. Jesus Christ invites you to win this prize, to
gain this crown!