Challoner’s Reflection on The Imitation of Christ
BOOK FOUR: AN INVITATION TO HOLY COMMUNION
CHAPTER XV.: The Grace of Devotion is Acquired Through Humility and Self-Denial
Although we should love God for Himself, we are permitted to desire his gifts, provided that we remain fully submitted to his holy will. The most precious graces are not always the most perceptible, those which, so to speak, inundate the soul with light and with joy. Such may, if we are not on our guard, excite vain self-complaisance. Often it is more sure to walk, in this life, in the obscurities of pure faith; to be proved by sadness, by sufferings, by bitterness, and to bear the Cross interiorly like Jesus, when He cried out: My God, why hast Thou forsaken me? (
Mark 15:34
.) Then all pride is humbled: we find nothing but weakness in us: we humiliate ourselves beneath the hand which strikes, but which strikes in order to heal, and this holy exercise of self-denial, more meritorious for the faithful soul and more agreeable to God than a perceptible fervour, melts the Heavenly Bridegroom and leads him back near unto the Bride, who, deprived of her well-beloved, was watching in her grief, as a sparrow all alone on the house top (Psalms ci. 8). He discovers Himself to her in the Divine Eucharist; He consoles her, dries up her tears, lavishes on her his chaste caresses, inflames her with his love, like the Disciples of Emmaus, when they said: Was not our heart turning within us, whilst he spoke in the way, and opened to us the Scripture? (
Luke 24:32
.)
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