Life of Father Hecker eBook

Walter Elliott
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 639 pages of information about Life of Father Hecker.

Life of Father Hecker eBook

Walter Elliott
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 639 pages of information about Life of Father Hecker.

The foregoing must be understood in the sense of good works hindering better works.  Isaac Hecker felt his noblest aspirations to be, for the moment at any rate, towards solitude and the passive state of prayer; and in this he was hindered by the urgency of his zeal for the propagation of philanthropic schemes and his great joy in communing with men whom he hoped to find like-minded with himself.  The time came when he was able to Join the two states, the inner purifying the outer man and directing his energies by the instinct of the Holy Spirit.  This entry goes on as follows: 

“By practice of our aspirations, ideals, and visions, we convert them into real being.

“We should be able to say, ‘Which of you convinceth me of sin?’ before we are fit to preach to others in such a way that our preaching may have a practical effect upon society.

“Did all our efforts flow into realizing the teachings of the Spirit, we should do much more good and be greater in the sight of God than we are now by so much speaking and writing.  But let us be watchful that the pride of good works does not take the place of that of speaking and writing.

“By our sins and many weaknesses we are prevented from entering the Promised Land, and must die just in sight of it.  Instead of being humble, willing, and self-denying in our youth, and being led by the Spirit of God, we keep on in the spirit of the world and give all the substance of our being to its service.  And when we are nearly worn out we flee to God, and die, perhaps, in sight of heaven, instead of having been among its inhabitants, living in it upon earth, in the full bloom of our youthful joy of life. . . .

“The Lord has been good to me and my heart is filled with His warm love.  Blessed be Thou, O God! for Thou hast given me a taste of Thy sweetness.  Thou hast given me gratitude and thankfulness and an overflowing heart of praise.  I would stand still and shout and bless God.  It is God in us that believes in God.  Without the light of God we should be in total darkness, and He is the only source of light.  The more of God we have in us, the more we see beyond us.

“Thy inspiration, O God! is love and wisdom.  In Thee they are one, as light and warmth are in the fire.

“Thou art the true, eternal food of life, and he that has tasted Thee can never be at rest until he is wholly filled with Thee.  Lord, when we are without Thee we are lost, dead, in darkness.  It is in and by Thy presence that we live and move and have our being.

“Ever more, O Lord, increase Thy Spirit in us until between as there is no more we or Thee, but Thou, O Father, art all!

“Like the fixed light in a crystal which flashes back the light of the sun, so does the soul of man reflect God.

“A good life consists in passive as well as active virtues.

“O Lord, so fill me that nothing shall be left but Thee, and I may be no more.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Life of Father Hecker from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.