S
Shin
Guest
'The** false love** of the flesh destroys the true charity which we owe to ourselves: inordinate compassion towards the body is** full of cruelty**, because by indulging the flesh it kills the soul. Speaking of sensualists who deride the mortifications of the saints, the same Father says: “If we are cruel in crucifying the flesh,** you by sparing it are far more cruel.” **
Yes, for by the pleasures of the body in this life you shall merit for soul and body inexpressible torments forever in the next.
St. Alphonsus Maria de Liguori
‘Woe to the religious who loves health more than sanctity.’
St. Joseph Calasanctius
'If, then, we wish to be saved, and to please God, we must take pleasure in what the flesh refuses, and must reject what the flesh demands. Our Lord once said to St. Francis of Assisi: “If you desire my love, accept the things that are bitter as if they were sweet, and the things that are sweet as if they were bitter.”
Some will say that perfection does not consist in the mortification of the body, but in the abnegation of the will.
To them I answer with Father Pinamonti, that the fruit of the vineyard does not consist in the surrounding hedge; but still if the hedge be taken away, you will seek in vain for the produce of the vine.
Where there is no hedge, says the Holy Ghost,** the possession shall be spoiled.’**
St. Alphonsus Maria de Liguori
‘We leave the choir, to-day, because the head aches; on to-morrow, because it has ached; and on the day after, lest it should ache. . . You have entered religion not to indulge the flesh but to die for Jesus Christ. If we do not resolve to disregard the want of health, we shall do nothing. What injury will death do us? How often have our bodies molested us? Shall not we torment them in return?’
St. Teresa of Avila
'Mortifications raise the soul to God. St. Francis de Sales used to say, that a soul cannot ascend to the throne of God unless the flesh is mortified and depressed. There are many beautiful remarks on this subject in the works of St. Teresa: “It would be folly,” says this great saint, “to think that God admits to his familiar friendship those who seek their own ease.” Sensuality and prayer are incompatible. Souls who truly love God cannot desire repose."
. . . all the elect must be martyrs, either by the sword of the tyrant or by the voluntary crucifixion of the flesh.’
St. Alphonsus Maria de Liguori
Yes, for by the pleasures of the body in this life you shall merit for soul and body inexpressible torments forever in the next.
St. Alphonsus Maria de Liguori
‘Woe to the religious who loves health more than sanctity.’
St. Joseph Calasanctius
'If, then, we wish to be saved, and to please God, we must take pleasure in what the flesh refuses, and must reject what the flesh demands. Our Lord once said to St. Francis of Assisi: “If you desire my love, accept the things that are bitter as if they were sweet, and the things that are sweet as if they were bitter.”
Some will say that perfection does not consist in the mortification of the body, but in the abnegation of the will.
To them I answer with Father Pinamonti, that the fruit of the vineyard does not consist in the surrounding hedge; but still if the hedge be taken away, you will seek in vain for the produce of the vine.
Where there is no hedge, says the Holy Ghost,** the possession shall be spoiled.’**
St. Alphonsus Maria de Liguori
‘We leave the choir, to-day, because the head aches; on to-morrow, because it has ached; and on the day after, lest it should ache. . . You have entered religion not to indulge the flesh but to die for Jesus Christ. If we do not resolve to disregard the want of health, we shall do nothing. What injury will death do us? How often have our bodies molested us? Shall not we torment them in return?’
St. Teresa of Avila
'Mortifications raise the soul to God. St. Francis de Sales used to say, that a soul cannot ascend to the throne of God unless the flesh is mortified and depressed. There are many beautiful remarks on this subject in the works of St. Teresa: “It would be folly,” says this great saint, “to think that God admits to his familiar friendship those who seek their own ease.” Sensuality and prayer are incompatible. Souls who truly love God cannot desire repose."
. . . all the elect must be martyrs, either by the sword of the tyrant or by the voluntary crucifixion of the flesh.’
St. Alphonsus Maria de Liguori