Third Sunday
after Pentecost
Thoughts for the Week - Fr. R. Taouk
30th June 2019
The Will of God in the Present Moment by Rev.
Fr. de Caussade
The present moment is the ambassador of God to declare His
mandates. The heart listens and pronounces its "fiat". Thus
the soul advances by all these things and flows out from its
centre to its goal. It never stops but sails with every
wind. Any and every direction leads equally to the shore of
infinity. Everything is a help to it, and is, without
exception, an instrument of sanctity.
The one thing necessary can always be found for it in the
present moment. It is no longer a choice between prayer and
silence, seclusion and society, reading and writing,
meditation and cessation of thought, flight from and seeking
after spiritual consolations, abundance and dearth,
feebleness and health, life and death, but it is all that
each moment presents by the will of God.
In this is despoilment, abnegation, renunciation of all
things created, either in reality or affectively, in order
to retain nothing of self, or for self, to be in all things
submissive to the Will of God and to please Him; making it
our sole satisfaction to sustain the present moment as
though there were nothing else to hope for in the world. If
all that happens to a soul abandoned to God is all that is
necessary for it, then we can understand that nothing can be
wanting to it, and that it should never pity itself, for
this would be a want of faith and living according to reason
and the senses which are never satisfied, as they cannot
perceive the sufficiency of grace possessed by the soul.
To hallow the Name of God, is according to the meaning of
the Holy Scripture, to recognise His sanctity in all things
and to love and adore Him in them. Things, in fact, proceed
from the mouth of God like words. That which God does at
each moment is a divine thought expressed by a created
thing, therefore all those things by which He intimates His
Will to us are so many names and words by which He makes
known His wishes. His Will is unity and has but one name,
unknown, and ineffable; but it is infinitely diverse in its
effects, which are, as it were, so many different characters
which it assumes.
To hallow the Name of God is to know, to adore, and to love
the ineffable Being whom this Name designates. It was for
this reason that Job blessed the Name of God in his utter
desolation. Instead of looking upon his condition as ruin,
he called it the Name of God and by blessing it he protested
that
the Divine Will under whatever name or form it
might appear, even though expressed by the most terrible
catastrophes,
was Holy.
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