Dialogue of Comfort Against Tribulation eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 366 pages of information about Dialogue of Comfort Against Tribulation.
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Dialogue of Comfort Against Tribulation eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 366 pages of information about Dialogue of Comfort Against Tribulation.

VI

Vincent:  Verily methinketh, good uncle, that this counsel is very good.  For unless a person have first a desire to be comforted by God, I cannot see what it can avail to give him any further counsel of any spiritual comfort.

Howbeit, what if the man have this desire of God’s comfort:  that is, that it may please God to comfort him in his tribulation by taking that tribulation from him—­is not this a good desire of God’s comfort, and a desire sufficient for him who is in tribulation?

Anthony:  No, cousin, that it is not.  I touched before upon this point and passed it over, because I thought it would fall in our way again, and so know I well that it will, oftener than once.  And now am I glad that you yourself move it to me here.

A man may many times, well and without sin, desire of God that the tribulation be taken from him.  But neither may we desire that in every case, nor yet very well in any case (except very few) save under a certain condition, either expressed or implied.  For tribulations are, as you know well, of many sundry kinds.  Some are by loss of goods or possessions, some by the sickness of ourselves, and some by the loss of friends or by some other pain put unto our bodies.  Some are by the dread of losing these things that we fain would save, under which fear fall all the same things that we have spoken of before.  For we may fear loss of goods or possessions, or the loss of our friends, or their grief and trouble or our own by sickness, imprisonment, or other bodily pain.  We may be troubled most of all with the fear of that thing which he feareth least of all who hath most need to do so—­that is, the fear of losing through deadly sin the life of his blessed soul.  And this last kind of tribulation, as the sorest tribulation of all, though we may touch some pieces of it here and there before, yet the chief part and the principal pain will I reserve to treat apart effectually at the end.

But now, as I said, since the kinds of tribulation are so diverse, a man may pray God to take some of these tribulations from him, and may take some comfort in the trust that God will do so.  And therefore against hunger, sickness, and bodily hurt, and against the loss of either body or soul, men may lawfully many times pray to the goodness of God, either for themselves or for their friends.  And toward this purpose are expressly prayed many devout orisons in the common services of our mother Holy Church.  And toward our help in some of these things serve some of the petitions in the Pater Noster, in which we pray daily for our daily food, and to be preserved from the fall into temptation, and to be delivered from evil.

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Dialogue of Comfort Against Tribulation from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.