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Book XII
CONTAINING CERTAIN COUNSELS FOR THE PROGRESS OF THE SOUL IN HOLY LOVE.
CHAPTER VI. THAT WE ARE TO EMPLOY IN THE PRACTICE OF DIVINE LOVE ALL THE OCCASIONS THAT PRESENT THEMSELVES.
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There are souls that make great projects to do excellent services for Our
Saviour, by eminent actions and extraordinary sufferings, but actions and
sufferings of which there is no opportunity, and perhaps never will be, and
who upon this apprehend they have done a great matter in love, in which they
are very often deceived as appears in this, that embracing in desire, as
seems to them, great future crosses, they anxiously avoid the burden of such
as are present, which are less. Is it not an extreme temptation to be so
valiant in imagination, and so cowardly in execution?
Ah! God preserve us from those imaginary fervours, which very often breed a
vain and secret self-esteem in the bottom of our hearts. Great works lie not
always in our way, but every moment we may do little ones with excellence,
that is, with a great love. Behold that Saint, I beg you, who bestows a cup
of cold water on the thirsty traveller; he does but a small matter in
outward show, but the intention, the sweetness, the love, with which he
animates his work is so excellent, that it turns this simple water into
water of life, and of eternal life.
The bees gather honey from the lily, the flag, the rose; yet they get as
ample a booty from the little minute rosemary flowers and thyme; yea they
draw not only more honey, but even better honey from these, for in these
little vessels the honey, being more closely locked up, is kept better.
Truly, in the low and little works of devotion, charity is not only
practised more frequently, but ordinarily more humbly too, and consequently
more usefully and more holily.
Those condescensions to the humours of others, that bearing with the
clownish and troublesome actions and ways of our neighbour, those victories
over our own humours and passions, those renouncings of our lesser
inclinations, that effort against our aversions and repugnances, that
heartfelt and sweet acknowledgment of our own imperfections, the continual
pains we take to keep our souls in equality, that love of our abjection,
that gentle and gracious welcome we give to the contempt and censure of our
condition, of our life, of our conversation, of our actions Theotimus, all
these things are more profitable to our souls than we can conceive, if
heavenly love have the management of them. But we have already said this to
Philothea. [593]
[593] Devout Life, iii. 35.
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