The Moral Reflections on Job by Pope St Gregory the Great
The interior witness |
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"Job Rebuked by His Friends" |
He who is mocked by his friend as I am will call on God, and God will answer him.
Often the frail mind, when it gains a good reputation among people for
the good actions it has performed, dissipates itself in outward
delights, thus putting to one side what it inwardly desires and
sprawling happily in the luxury of hearing good things said about it.It
is not becoming blessed that makes it happy, but being called blessed by
other people. As it longs for the applause, so it abandons the very
thing it was beginning to be. What made it deserving of praise in God
ended up separating this weak soul from God.
Sometimes, on the other hand, the soul perseveres in
good works with constancy, and yet is buffeted by derision; it does
great things but receives only abuse for them. In the end he who might
have come out of himself, given praise, is thrown back into himself by
insults. Thus he establishes himself more firmly in God, since outside
there is no rest for him. All his hope is fixed in his creator and
amongst external ridicule and abuse he wants only the good opinion of
the interior witness. The further he is pushed out of human favor, the
closer a neighbor he becomes to God. He pours himself out in prayer
and, under attack from without, is refined with a more perfect purity so
as to enter more deeply into all that is interior.
Job Mocked by his Wife |
So it is well said that He who is mocked by his friend as I am will call on God, and God will answer him.
The good may be reproached by the wicked, yet they are showing them
whom to seek as witness of their actions. While the soul is
strengthening itself in prayer, it is uniting itself within itself in
the hearing of the Most High by the very act which severs it from the
approval of those around it.
But that “mocked by his friend as I am” is
important. Some people are indeed downcast at the ridicule of their
fellow-men, but not as Job was: they are not the kind of men to be heard
by the ears of God. When the ridicule they receive comes from their sin
and not their virtue, they will get no virtuous merit from that
derision.
For the righteous man’s simplicity is laughed to scorn.
It is the wisdom of this world to conceal one’s feelings behind pretense and veil one’s meaning with words, to show things that are
false to be true and to show what is true to be fallacious.
It is the wisdom of the righteous, on the other hand,
to have no pretense, to use words to mean and not to hide meaning, to
love the truth as it is and to avoid falsehood; to do good free of
charge and to bear evil more gladly than to do evil; to treat a bad
reputation resulting from faithfulness and truth as a reward and not a
curse. But this simplicity of the righteous is laughed at, because the
virtue of purity is considered to be folly by the wise of this world.
Whatever is done in innocence seems to them to have been done in
foolishness, and whatever act is commended by faithfulness seems nothing
but weakness in the sight of worldly wisdom.
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