The noble task of man, to pray and to love |
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Consider,
children, a Christian’s treasure is not on earth, it is in heaven. Well
then, our thoughts should turn to where our treasure is.
Man has a noble task: that of prayer and love. To pray and to love, that is the happiness of man on earth.
Prayer is nothing else than union with God. When the
heart is pure and united with God it is consoled and filled with
sweetness; it is dazzled by a marvelous light. In this intimate union
God and the soul are like two pieces of wax molded into one; they
cannot any more be separated. It is a very wonderful thing, this union
of God with his insignificant creature, a happiness passing all
understanding.
We had deserved to be left incapable of praying; but
God in his goodness has permitted us to speak to him. Our prayer is an
incense that is delightful to God.
My children, your hearts are small, but prayer
enlarges them and renders them capable of loving God. Prayer is a
foretaste of heaven, an overflowing of heaven. It never leaves us
without sweetness; it is like honey, it descends into the soul and
sweetens everything. In a prayer well made, troubles vanish like snow
under the rays of the sun.
Prayer makes time seem to pass quickly, and so
pleasantly that one fails to notice how long it is. When I was parish
priest of Bresse, once almost all my colleagues were ill, and as I made
long journeys I used to pray to God, and, I assure you, the time did not
seem long to me. There are those who lose themselves in prayer, like a
fish in water, because they are absorbed in God. There is no division in
their hearts. How I love those noble souls! Saint Francis of Assisi and
Saint Colette saw our Lord and spoke to him as we speak to one another.
As for ourselves, how often do we come to church without thinking what we are going to do or for what we are going to ask.
And yet, when we go to call upon someone, we have no
difficulty in remembering why it was we came. Some appear as if they
were about to say to God: ‘I am just going to say a couple of words, so I
can get away quickly.’ I often think that when we come to adore our
Lord we should get all we ask if we asked for it with a lively faith and
a pure heart.
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