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From “A Treatise on the Knowledge and Love of Our Lord Jesus Christ” by Fr Jean-Baptiste Saint-Jure SJ:
Let a man ask with faith, says St James, nothing wavering. Our prayers are ordinarily ineffectual, because we are wanting in this confidence; while the prayers of the Saints were omnipotent, because they were animated with it; hence God, when He wished to punish sinners, told the Saints not to impede Him by their prayers in the execution of His design. Thus, He warned Moses to desist, saying, Let me alone (Exodus 32:10); because prayers full of confidence cause the arms to fall from His hands. It is, then, very advantageous before, and even after, our prayers to form acts of heroic confidence in God, believing that we shall certainly obtain what we ask, if it be expedient for us: we should even, after the example of the Saints, be as sure of it as if we had already received it. Lord, said the Royal Prophet, let Thy mercies be upon us, distribute Thy gifts to us, according to our hope in Thee; that is, as Theodoret explains, according to the greatness of our hope in Thee, that our hopes may be the measure of Thy liberality: regulate according to it Thy acquiescence in our demands. We must ask of God great things for ourselves and for others, because they cost Him no more than little things, and, besides, the greater the things we ask, the higher become our ideas of His goodness and power. We can ask Him, for instance, to make us very noble instruments of His glory in this life and in the next, to give us grace to do great things for His service, to give us deep humility, founded on our knowledge of His greatness and our nothingness, heroic patience to bear up under our afflictions, unutterable meekness to support injuries tranquilly, perfect submission of will and judgment to our superiors, a great spirit of prayer, but of that kind of prayer which will render us better, more mortified, more detached from creatures; above all, an ardent love for God and our neighbor; that he would make us die to the movements of corrupt nature, and be most submissive to those of His grace. Let us tell Him, as we make each petition, that we expect this favor of His goodness, and though He may not accord us the high degree of virtue we ask, because this might not be what His Providence has designed for us, our confidence will, nevertheless, oblige Him to give with greater abundance than He had otherwise done.
Let a man ask with faith, says St James, nothing wavering. Our prayers are ordinarily ineffectual, because we are wanting in this confidence; while the prayers of the Saints were omnipotent, because they were animated with it; hence God, when He wished to punish sinners, told the Saints not to impede Him by their prayers in the execution of His design. Thus, He warned Moses to desist, saying, Let me alone (Exodus 32:10); because prayers full of confidence cause the arms to fall from His hands. It is, then, very advantageous before, and even after, our prayers to form acts of heroic confidence in God, believing that we shall certainly obtain what we ask, if it be expedient for us: we should even, after the example of the Saints, be as sure of it as if we had already received it. Lord, said the Royal Prophet, let Thy mercies be upon us, distribute Thy gifts to us, according to our hope in Thee; that is, as Theodoret explains, according to the greatness of our hope in Thee, that our hopes may be the measure of Thy liberality: regulate according to it Thy acquiescence in our demands. We must ask of God great things for ourselves and for others, because they cost Him no more than little things, and, besides, the greater the things we ask, the higher become our ideas of His goodness and power. We can ask Him, for instance, to make us very noble instruments of His glory in this life and in the next, to give us grace to do great things for His service, to give us deep humility, founded on our knowledge of His greatness and our nothingness, heroic patience to bear up under our afflictions, unutterable meekness to support injuries tranquilly, perfect submission of will and judgment to our superiors, a great spirit of prayer, but of that kind of prayer which will render us better, more mortified, more detached from creatures; above all, an ardent love for God and our neighbor; that he would make us die to the movements of corrupt nature, and be most submissive to those of His grace. Let us tell Him, as we make each petition, that we expect this favor of His goodness, and though He may not accord us the high degree of virtue we ask, because this might not be what His Providence has designed for us, our confidence will, nevertheless, oblige Him to give with greater abundance than He had otherwise done.
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