On false spiritual peace |
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True Peace can only come from the Holy Spirit |
The
man who finds fault with himself accepts all things cheerfully –
misfortune, loss, disgrace, dishonour and any other kind of adversity.
He believes that he is deserving of all these things and nothing can
disturb him. No one could be more at peace than this man.
But perhaps you will offer me this objection: “Suppose
my brother injures me, and on examining myself I find that I have not
given him any cause. Why should I blame myself?”
Certainly if someone examines himself carefully and
with fear of God, he will never find himself completely innocent. He
will see that he has given some provocation by an action, a word or by
his manner. If he does find that he is not guilty in any of these ways,
certainly he must have injured that brother somehow at some other time.
Or perhaps he has been a source of annoyance to some other brother. For
this reason he deserves to endure the injury because of many other sins
that he has committed on other occasions.
Someone else asks why he should accuse himself when he
was sitting peacefully and quietly when a brother came upon him with an
unkind or insulting word. He cannot tolerate it, and so he thinks that
his anger is justified. If that brother had not approached him and said
those words and upset him, he never would have sinned.
This kind of thinking is surely ridiculous and has no
rational basis. For the fact that he has said anything at all in this
situation breaks the cover on the passionate anger within him, which is
all the more exposed by his excessive anxiety. If he wished, he would do
penance. He has become like a clean, shiny grain of wheat that, when
broken, is full of dirt inside.
The man who thinks that he is quiet and peaceful has
within him a passion that he does not see. A brother comes up, utters
some unkind word and immediately all the venom and mire that lie hidden
within him are spewed out. If he wishes mercy, he must do penance,
purify himself and strive to become perfect. He will see that he should
have returned thanks to his brother instead of returning the injury,
because his brother has proven to be an occasion of profit to him. It
will not be long before he will no longer be bothered by these
temptations. The more perfect he grows, the less these temptations will
affect him. For the more the soul advances, the stronger and more
powerful it becomes in bearing the difficulties that it meets.
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