CHAPTER 11 : Catechism on the Real Presence
OUR LORD is hidden there, waiting for us to come and visit
Him, and make our request to Him. See how good He is! He accommodates Himself
to our weakness. In Heaven, where we shall be glorious and triumphant, we shall
see him in all His glory. If He had presented Himself before us in that glory
now, we should not have dared to approach Him; but He hides Himself, like a
person in a prison, who might say to us, "You do not see me, but that is
no matter; ask of me all you wish and I will grant it. " He is there in
the Sacrament of His love, sighing and interceding incessantly with His Father
for sinners. To what outrages does He not expose Himself, that He may remain in
the midst of us! He is there to console us; and therefore we ought often to
visit Him. How pleasing to Him is the short quarter of an hour that we steal
from our occupations, from something of no use, to come and pray to Him, to
visit Him, to console Him for all the outrages He receives!
When He sees pure
souls coming eagerly to Him, He smiles upon them. They come with that
simplicity which pleases Him so much, to ask His pardon for all sinners, for
the outrages of so many ungrateful men. What happiness do we not feel in the
presence of God, when we find ourselves alone at His feet before the holy
tabernacles! "Come, my soul, redouble thy fervour; thou art alone adoring
thy God. His eyes rest upon thee alone. " This good Saviour is so full of
love for us that He seeks us out everywhere.
Ah! if we had the eyes of angels with which to see Our Lord
Jesus Christ, who is here present on this altar, and who is looking at us, how
we should love Him! We should never more wish to part from Him. We should wish
to remain always at His feet; it would be a foretaste of Heaven: all else would
become insipid to us. But see, it is faith we want. We are poor blind people;
we have a mist before our eyes. Faith alone can dispel this mist. Presently, my
children, when I shall hold Our Lord in my hands, when the good God blesses
you, ask Him then to open the eyes of your heart; say to Him like the blind man
of Jericho, "O Lord, make me to see!" If you say to Him sincerely,
"Make me to see!" you will certainly obtain what you desire, because
He wishes nothing but your happiness. He has His hands full of graces, seeking
to whom to distribute them; Alas! and no one will have them. . . . Oh,
indifference! Oh, ingratitude! My children, we are most unhappy that we do not
understand these things! We shall understand them well one day; but it will
then be too late!
Our Lord is there as a Victim; and a prayer that is very
pleasing to God is to ask the Blessed Virgin to offer to the Eternal Father her
Divine Son, all bleeding, all torn, for the conversion of sinners; it is the
best prayer we can make, since, indeed, all prayers are made in the name and
through the merits of Jesus Christ. We must also thank God for all those
indulgences that purify us from our sins. . . but we pay no attention to them.
We tread upon indulgences, one might say, as we tread upon the sheaves of corn
after the harvest. See, there are seven years and seven quarantines for hearing
the catechism, three hundred days for reciting the Litany of the Blessed
Virgin, the Salve Regina, the Angelus. In short, the good God multiplies His
graces upon us; and how sorry we shall be at the end of our lives that we did
not profit by them!
When we are before the Blessed Sacrament, instead of looking
about, let us shut our eyes and our mouth; let us open our heart: our good God
will open His; we shall go to Him, He will come to us, the one to ask, the
other to receive; it will be like a breath from one to the other. What
sweetness do we not find in forgetting ourselves in order to seek God! The
saints lost sight of themselves that they might see nothing but God, and labor
for Him alone; they forgot all created objects in order to find Him alone. This
is the way to reach Heaven.
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