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On the Advantages of Tribulations by Saint Alphonsus Liguori
http://copiosa.org/liguori_sermons/liguori_sermon_13.htm ^ | unknown | Saint Alphonsus Liguori

Posted on 06/30/2009 1:00:57 PM PDT by stfassisi

In tribulations, God enriches His beloved souls with the greatest graces. Behold Saint John in his chains comes to the knowledge of the works of Jesus Christ: "When John had heard in prison the works of Christ." Great indeed are the advantages of tribulations. The Lord sends them to us, not because He wished our misfortune, but because He desires our welfare. Hence, when they come upon us, we must embrace them with thanksgiving, and must not only resign ourselves to the divine will, but must also rejoice that God treats us as He treated His Son Jesus Christ, Whose life upon this earth was always full of tribulation. I shall now show, in the first point, the advantages we derive from tribulations; and in the second I shall point out the manner in which we ought to bear them.

First Point On the advantages we derive from tribulations

"What doth he know, that hath not been tried? A man that hath much experience, shall think of many things: and he that hath learned many things, shall show forth understanding." - Sirach 34:9. They who live in prosperity, and have no experience of adversity, know nothing of the state of their souls. In the first place, tribulation opens the eyes which prosperity had kept shut. Saint Paul remained blind after Jesus Christ appeared to him, and during his blindness he perceived the errors in which he had lived. During his imprisonment in Babylon, King Manasses had recourse to God, was convinced of the malice of his sins, and did penance for them. "And after that he was in distress he prayed to the Lord his God: and did penance exceedingly before the God of his fathers" - 2Chronicles 33:12. The Prodigal, when he found himself under the necessity of feeding swine, and afflicted with hunger, exclaimed: "I will arise and go to my father" - Luke 15:18.

Secondly, tribulation takes from our hearts all affections to earthly things. When a mother wishes to wean her infant, puts gall on the paps, to excite his disgust and induce him to take better food. God treats us in a similar manner: to detach us from temporal goods, He mingles them with gall, that by tasting their bitterness, we may conceive a dislike for them, and place our affections on the things of Heaven. "God", says Saint Augustine, "mingles bitterness with earthly pleasures, that we may seek another felicity, whose sweetness does not deceive".

Thirdly, they who live in prosperity are molested by many temptations of pride, of vain-glory, of desires of acquiring greater wealth, greater honors and greater pleasures. Tribulations free us from these temptations, and make us humble and content in the state in which the Lord places us. Hence the Apostle says: "We are chastised by the Lord, that we be not condemned with this world" - 1Corinthians 11:32.

Fourthly, by tribulations we atone for the sins we have committed, much better than by voluntary works of penance. "Be assured", says Saint Augustine, "that God is a physician, and that tribulation is a salutary medicine". Oh! how great is the efficacy of tribulation in healing the wounds caused by our sins! Hence, the same saint rebukes the sinner who complains of God for sending him tribulations. "Why", he says, "do you complain? What you suffer is a remedy, not a punishment". Job called those happy whom God corrects by tribulations, because He heals them with the very Hands with which He strikes and wounds them. "Blessed is the man whom God correcteth . . . For He woundeth and cureth. He striketh, and His Hands shall heal" - Job 5:17-18. Hence, Saint Paul glorified in his tribulations: "Gloriamur in tribulationibus" - Romans 5:3.

Fifthly, by convincing us that God alone is able and willing to relieve us in our miseries, tribulations remind us of Him, and compel us to have recourse to His mercy. "In their affliction they will rise early to me" - Hosea 6:1. Hence, addressing the afflicted, the Lord said: "Come to Me, all you that labor, and are burdened, and I will refresh you" - Matthew 11:28. Hence He is called "a Helper in troubles". "When" says David, "He slew them, then they sought Him: and they returned" - Psalm 77:34. When the Jews were afflicted, and were slain by their enemies, they remembered the Lord, and returned to Him.

Sixthly, tribulations enable us to acquire great merits before God, by giving us opportunities of exercising the virtues of Humility, of Patience, and of resignation to the Divine Will. The venerable John d'Avila used to say that a single Blessed be God, in adversity, is worth more than a thousand acts of thanksgiving in prosperity. "Take away", says Saint Ambrose, "the contests of the martyrs, and you have taken away their crowns". Oh! What a treasure of merits is acquired by patiently bearing insults, poverty, and sickness. Insults from men were the great objects of the desires of the saints, who sought to be despised for the love of Jesus Christ, and thus to be made like unto Him.

How great is the merit gained by bearing with the inconvenience of poverty. "My God and my all", says Saint Francis of Assisi: in expressing this sentiment, he enjoyed more of true riches than all the princes of the Earth. How truly has Saint Teresa said that "the less we have here, the more we shall enjoy hereafter" Oh! how happy is the man who can say from his heart: My Jesus, Thou alone art sufficient for me! If, says Saint Chrysostom, you esteem yourself unhappy because you are poor, you are indeed miserable and deserving of tears; not because you are poor, but because, being poor, you do not embrace your poverty and esteem yourself happy. "Sane dignus es lachrymis ob hoc, quod miserum te existimas, non ideo quod pauper es".

By bearing patiently with the pains of sickness, a great, and perhaps the greater, part of the crown which is prepared for us in Heaven is completed. The sick sometimes complain that in sickness they can do nothing, but they err, for in their infirmities they can do all things, by accepting their sufferings with peace and resignation. "The Cross of Christ", says Saint Chrysostom, "is the key of Paradise".

Saint Francis de Sales used to say, "To suffer constantly for Jesus is the science of the saints; we shall thus soon become saints". It is by sufferings that God proves His servants, and finds them worthy of Himself. "Deus tentavit es, et invenit eos dignos se" - Wisdom 3:5. "Whom", says Saint Paul, "the Lord loveth, He chastiseth; and He scourgeth every son whom He receiveth" - Hebrews 12:6. Hence Jesus Christ once said to Saint Teresa: "Be assured that the souls dearest to My Father are those who suffer the greatest afflictions". Hence Job said: "If we have received good things at the Hand of God, why should we not receive evil?" - Job 2:10. If we have gladly received from God the goods of this Earth, why should we not receive more cheerfully tribulations, which are far more useful to us than worldly prosperity? Saint Gregory informs us that as flame fanned by the wind increases, so the soul is made perfect when she is oppressed by tribulations. "Ignis flatu premitur, ut crescat".

To holy souls the most severe afflictions are the temptations by which the Devil impels them to offend God; but they who bear these temptations with patience, and banish them by turning to God for help, shall acquire great merit. "And", says Saint Paul, "God is faithful, Who will not suffer you to be tempted above that which you are able, but will make issue with the temptation that you may be able to bear it" - 1Corinthians 10:13. God permits us to be molested by temptations, that by banishing them, we may gain greater merit. "Blessed", says the Lord, "are they that mourn, for they shall be comforted" - Matthew 5:5. They are blessed because, according to the Apostle, our tribulations are momentary and very light, compared with the greatness of the glory which they shall obtain for us for eternity in Heaven. "For that which is at present momentary and light of our tribulation, worketh for us above measure exceedingly an eternal weight of glory" - 2Corinthians 4:17.

It is necessary then says Saint Chrysostom, to bear tribulations in peace; for if you accept them with resignation, you shall gain great merit; but if you submit to them with reluctance, you shall increase, instead of diminishing your misery. "Si vero �gre feras, neque calamitatem minorem facies, et majorem reddes procellam". If we wish to be saved, we must submit to trials. "Through many tribulations we must enter into the kingdom of God" - Acts 14:21. A great servant of God used to say that Paradise is the place of the poor, of the persecuted, of the humble and afflicted. Hence Saint Paul says: "Patience is necessary for you; that, doing the will of God, you may receive the promise" - Hebrews 10:36. Speaking of the tribulations of the saints, Saint Cyprian asks: "What are they to the servants of God whom Paradise invites?" Is it much for those to whom the eternal goods of Heaven are promised, to embrace the short afflictions of this life?

In fine', the scourges of Heaven are sent not for our injury, but for our good. "Let us believe that these scourges of the Lord, with which like servants we are chastised, have happened for our amendment, and not for our destruction" - Judith 8:27. "God", says Saint Augustine, "is angry when He does not scourge the sinner". When we see a sinner in tribulation in this life, we may infer that God wishes to have mercy on him in the next, and that He exchanges eternal for temporal chastisement. But miserable the sinner whom the Lord does not punish in this life! For those whom He does not chastise here, He treasures up His wrath, and for them He reserves eternal chastisement.

"Why", asks the prophet Jeremiah, "doth the way of the wicked prosper?" - Jeremiah 12:1. Why, O Lord, do sinners prosper? To this the same prophet answers: "Gather them together as sheep for a sacrifice, and prepare them for the day of slaughter" - ibid verse 3. As on the day of sacrifice the sheep intended for slaughter are gathered together, so the impious, as victims of divine wrath, are destined to eternal death. "Destine them", says Du Hamel, in his commentary on this passage, "as victims of Thy anger on the day of sacrifice".

When, then, God sends us tribulations, let us say with Job: "I have sinned, and indeed I have offended, and I have not received what I have deserved" - Job 33:27. O Lord, my sins merit far greater chastisement than that which Thou hast inflicted on me. We should even pray with Saint Augustine, "Burn - cut - spare not in this life, that Thou mayst spare for eternity". How frightful is the chastisement of the sinner of whom the Lord says, "Let us have pity on the wicked, but he will not learn justice" - Isaiah 26:10. Let us abstain from chastising the impious: as long as they remain in this life, they will continue to live in sin and shall thus be punished with eternal torments. On this passage Saint Bernard says, "Misericordiam hanc nolo, super omnem iram miseratio ista". Lord, I do not wish for such mercy, which is a chastisement that surpasses all chastisements.

The man whom the Lord afflicts in this life has a certain proof that he is dear to God. "And", said the angel to Tobias, "because thou wast acceptable to God, it was necessary that temptation should prove thee" - Tobit 12:13. Hence Saint James pronounces blessed the man who is afflicted; because after he shall have been proved by tribulation, he will receive the crown of eternal life. "Blessed is the man that endureth temptation; for when he hath been proved, he shall receive a crown of life" - James 1:12.

He who wishes to share in the glory of the saints, must suffer in this life as the saints have suffered. None of the saints has been esteemed or treated well by the world - all of them have been despised and persecuted. In them have been verified the words of the Apostle, "All that will live godly in Christ Jesus, shall suffer persecution" - 2Timothy 3:12. Hence Saint Augustine said that they who are unwilling to suffer persecutions have not as yet begun to be Christians. "Si putas non habere persecutiones, nondum coepisti esse Christianus". When we are in tribulation, let us be satisfied with the consolation of knowing that the Lord is then near us, and in our company. "The Lord is nigh unto them that are of a contrite heart" - Psalm 33:19. "I am with him in tribulation" - Psalm 90:15.

Second Point On the manner in which we should bear tribulations

He who suffers tribulations in this world, should, in the first place, abandon sin and endeavor to recover the grace of God; for as long as he remains in sin, the merit of all his sufferings is lost. "If", says Saint Paul, "I should deliver my body to be burned, and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing" - 1Corinthians 13:3. If you suffered all the torments of the martyrs, or bore to be burned alive, and were not in the state of grace, it would profit you nothing.

But to those who suffer with God, and with resignation for God's sake, all their tribulations shall be a source of comfort and gladness. "Your sorrow shall be turned into joy" - John 16:20. Hence after having been insulted and beaten by the Jews, the Apostles departed from the council full of joy because they had been maltreated for the love of Jesus Christ. "And they indeed went from the presence of the council, rejoicing that they were accounted worthy to suffer reproach for the name of Jesus" - Acts 5:41. Hence when God visits us with any tribulations, we must say with Jesus Christ: "The chalice which My Father hath given Me, shall I not drink it?" - John 18:11. It is necessary to know that every tribulation, though it may come from men, is sent to us by God.

When we are surrounded on all sides with tribulations, and know not what to do, we must turn to God, Who alone can console us. Thus King Josaphat, in his distress, said to the Lord: "As we know not what to do, we can only turn our eyes to Thee" - 2Chronicles 20:12. Thus David also in his tribulation had recourse to God, and God consoled him: "In my trouble I cried to the Lord: and He heard me" - Psalm 119:1. We should turn to God and pray to Him, and never cease to pray till He hears us. "As the eyes of the handmaid are on the hands of her mistress: so are our eyes unto the Lord our God, until He have mercy on us" - Psalm 122:2. We must keep our eyes continually raised to God, and must continue to implore His aid until He is moved to compassion for our miseries. We must have great confidence in the heart of Jesus Christ, and ought not to imitate certain persons who instantly lose courage because they do not feel that they begin to pray. To them may be applied the words of the Savior to Saint Peter: "O thou of little faith, why didst thou doubt?" - Matthew 14:31. When the favors which we ask are spiritual, or can be profitable to our souls, we should be certain of being heard, provided we persevere in prayer and do not lose confidence. "All things, whatsoever you ask when ye pray, believe that you shall receive; and they shall come unto you" - Mark 11:24. In tribulations, then, we should never cease to hope with confidence that the divine mercy will console us; and if our afflictions continue, we must say with Job: "Although He should kill me, I will trust in Him" - Job 13:15.

Souls of little faith, instead of turning to God in their tribulations, have recourse to human means and thus provoke God's anger, and remain in their miseries. "Unless the Lord build the house, they labor in vain that build it. Unless the Lord keep the city, he watcheth in vain that keepeth it" - Psalm 126:1. On this passage Saint Augustine writes: "Ipse aedificat, ipse intellectum aperit, ipse ad finem applicat sensum vestrum; et tamen laboramus et nos tanquam operarii, sed nisi Dominus custodierit civitatem". All good - all help must come from the Lord. Without Him, creatures can give us no assistance.

Of this the Lord complains by the mouth of His prophet: "Is not the Lord in Zion? . . . Why then have they provoked Me to wrath with their idols? . . . Is there no balm in Galaad? or is there no physician there? Why then is not the wound of the daughter of My people closed?" - Jeremiah 8:19-22. Am I not in Zion? Why then do men provoke Me to anger by recurring to creatures, which they convert into idols by placing in them all their hopes? Do they seek a remedy for their miseries? Why do they not seek it in Galaad, a mountain full of balsamic ointments, which signify the divine mercy? There they can find the physician and the remedy for all their evils. Why then, says the Lord, do your wounds remain open? Why are they not healed? It is because you have recourse not to Me, but to creatures, and because you confide in them and not in Me.

In another place the Lord says: "Am I become a wilderness to Israel, or a lateward springing land? Why then have My people said: We are revolted, we will come to Thee no more? . . . But My people hath forgotten Me days without number" - Jeremiah 2:31-32. God complains and says: Why My children, do you say that you will have recourse to Me no more? Am I become to you a barren land, which gives no fruit or gives it too late? Is it for this reason that you have so long forgotten Me? By these words He manifests to us His desire that we pray to Him, in order that He may be able to give us His sweet graces; and He also gives us to understand that when we pray to Him, He is not slow, but instantly begins to assist us.

The Lord, says David, is not asleep when we turn to His goodness and ask the graces which are profitable to our souls; He hears us immediately, because He is anxious for our welfare. "Behold He shall neither slumber nor sleep, that keepeth Israel" - Psalm 120:4. When we pray for temporal favors, Saint Bernard says that God "will give us what we ask, or something more useful". He will grant us the grace which we desire, whenever it is profitable to our souls; or He will give us a more useful grace, such as the grace to resign ourselves to the divine will, and to suffer with patience our tribulations, which shall merit a great increase of glory in Heaven.

No Pain . . . . . . No Gain No Guts . . . . . . No Glory No Cross . . . . . No Crown


TOPICS: Catholic
KEYWORDS:
Saint Francis de Sales used to say, "To suffer constantly for Jesus is the science of the saints; we shall thus soon become saints". It is by sufferings that God proves His servants, and finds them worthy of Himself.
1 posted on 06/30/2009 1:00:57 PM PDT by stfassisi
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To: AveMaria1; Friar Roderic Mary; fr maximilian mary; Kolokotronis; Carolina; sandyeggo; Salvation; ...
It is necessary then says Saint Chrysostom, to bear tribulations in peace; for if you accept them with resignation, you shall gain great merit; but if you submit to them with reluctance, you shall increase, instead of diminishing your misery
2 posted on 06/30/2009 1:02:57 PM PDT by stfassisi ((The greatest gift God gives us is that of overcoming self"-St Francis Assisi)))
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To: stfassisi

thanks for posting this, pinging for later reading


3 posted on 06/30/2009 2:08:57 PM PDT by twin2
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To: stfassisi
Roman Catholic tradition BTTT
4 posted on 06/30/2009 2:53:37 PM PDT by vox_freedom (America is being tested as never before in its history. God help us.)
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To: stfassisi
On the Advantages of Tribulations by Saint Alphonsus Liguori
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REDEMPTIVE SUFFERING(Catholic Caucus or by Invitation Only)

5 posted on 06/30/2009 4:08:52 PM PDT by Salvation (With God all things are possible.)
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