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BEWARE if you have no temptations!
The
following is an excerpt from a Sermon of St. John Vianney, the Cure
of Ars
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Whom does the devil pursue most?
Perhaps you are thinking that it must be those who
are tempted most; these would undoubtedly be the habitual drunkards,
the scandalmongers, the immodest and shameless people who wallow
in moral filth, and the miser, who hoards in all sorts of ways.
No, my dear brethren no, it is not these people. On the contrary,
the Devil despises them, or else he holds onto them, lest they not
have a long enough time in which to do evil, because the longer
they live, the more their bad example will drag souls into Hell.
Indeed, if the Devil had pursued this lewd and shameless old fellow
too closely, he might have shortened the latter's life by fifteen
or twenty years, and he would not then have destroyed the virginity
of that young girl by plunging her into the unspeakable mire of
his indecencies; he would not, again, have seduced that wife, nor
would he have taught his evil lessons to that young man, who will
perhaps continue to practice them until his death.
If the Devil had prompted this thief to rob on
every occasion, he would long since have ended on the scaffold and
so he would not have induced his neighbour to follow his example.
If the Devil had urged this drunkard to fill himself unceasingly
with wine, he would long ago have perished in his debaucheries,
instead of which, by living longer, he has made many others like
himself. If the Devil had taken away the life of this musician,
of that dancehall owner, of this cabaret keeper, in some raid or
scuffle, or on any other occasion, how many souls would there be
who, without these people, would not be damned and who now will
be? St. Augustine teaches us that the Devil does not bother these
people very much; on the contrary, he despises them and spits upon
them.
So, you will ask me, who then are the people most tempted?
They are these, my friends; note them carefully. The people most
tempted are those who are ready, with the grace of God, to sacrifice
everything for the salvation of their poor souls, who renounce all
those things which most people eagerly seek. It is not one devil
only who tempts them, but millions seek to entrap them.
We are told that St. Francis of Assisi and all his
religious were gathered on an open plain, where they had built little
huts of rushes. Seeing the extraordinary penances which were being
practiced, St. Francis ordered that all instruments of penance should
be brought out, whereupon his religious produced them in bundles.
At this moment there was one young man to whom God gave the grace
to see his Guardian Angel. On the one side he saw all of these good
religious, who could not satisfy their hunger for penance, and,
on the other, his Guardian Angel allowed him to see a gathering
of eighteen thousand devils, who were holding counsel to see in
what way they could subvert these religious by temptation. One of
the devils said: "You do not understand this at all. These
religious are so humble; ah, what wonderful virtue, so detached
from themselves, so attached to God! They have a superior who leads
them so well that it is impossible to succeed in winning them over.
Let us wait until their superior is dead, and then we shall try
to introduce among them young people without vocations who will
bring about a certain slackening of spirit, and in this way we shall
gain them."
A little further on, as he entered the town, he saw a devil, sitting
by himself beside the gate into the town, whose task was to tempt
all of those who were inside. This saint asked his Guardian Angel
why it was that in order to tempt this group of religious there
had been so many thousands of devils while for a whole town there
was but one -- and that one sitting down. His good angel told him
that the people of the town had not the same need of temptations,
that they had enough bad in themselves, while the religious were
doing good despite all the traps which the Devil could lay for them.
The first temptation, my dear brethren, which the Devil tries on
anyone who has begun to serve God better is in the matter of human
respect. He will no longer dare to be seen around; he will hide
himself from those with whom
heretofore he had been mixing and pleasure seeking. If he should
be told that he has changed a lot, he will be ashamed of it! What
people are going to say about him is continually in his mind, to
the extent that he no longer has enough courage to do good before
other people.
If the Devil cannot get him back through human respect,
he will induce an extraordinary fear to possess him that his confessions
are not good, that his confessor does not understand him, that whatever
he does will be all in vain, that he will be damned just the same,
that he will achieve the same result in the end by letting everything
slide as by continuing to fight, because the occasions of sin will
prove too many for him.
Why is it, my dear brethren, that when someone gives no thought
at all to saving his soul, when he is living in sin, he is not tempted
in the slightest, but that as soon as he wants to change his life,
in other words, as soon as the desire to give his life to God comes
to him, all Hell falls upon him?
Listen to what St. Augustine has to say: "Look
at the way," he tells us, "in which the Devil behaves
towards the sinner. He acts like a jailer who has a great many prisoners
locked up in his prison but who, because he has the key in his pocket,
is quite happy to leave them, secure in the knowledge that they
cannot get out. This is his way of dealing with the sinner who does
not consider the possibility of leaving his sin behind. He does
not go to the trouble of tempting him. He looks upon this as time
wasted because not only is the sinner not thinking of leaving him,
but the Devil does not desire to multiply his chains. It would be
pointless, therefore, to tempt him. He allows him to live in peace,
if, indeed, it is possible to live in peace when one is in sin.
He hides his state from the sinner as much as is possible until
death, when he then tries to paint a picture of his life so terrifying
as to plunge him into despair. But with anyone who has made up his
mind to change his life, to give himself up to God, that is another
thing altogether."
While St. Augustine lived in sin and evil, he was not aware of anything
by which he was tempted. He believed himself to be at peace, as
he tells us himself. But from the moment that he desired to turn
his back upon the Devil, he had to struggle with him, even to the
point of losing his breath in the fight. And that lasted for five
years. He wept the most bitter of tears and employed the most austere
of penances: "I argued with him," he says, "in my
chains. One day I thought myself victorious, the next I was prostrate
on the earth again. This cruel and stubborn war went on for five
years. However, God gave me the grace to be victorious over my enemy."
You may see, too, the struggle which St. Jerome endured when he
desired to give himself to God and when he had the thought of visiting
the Holy Land. When he was in Rome, he conceived a new desire to
work for his salvation. Leaving Rome, he buried himself in a fearsome
desert to give himself over to everything with which his love of
God could inspire him. Then the Devil, who foresaw how greatly his
conversion would affect others, seemed to burst with fury and despair.
There was not a single temptation that he spared him. I do not believe
that there is any saint who was as strongly tempted as he. This
is how he wrote to one of his friends: "My dear friend, I wish
to confide in you about my affliction and the state to which the
Devil seeks to reduce me. How many times in this vast solitude,
which the heat of the sun makes insupportable, how many times the
pleasures of Rome have come to assail me! The sorrow and the bitterness
with which my soul is filled cause me, night and day, to shed floods
of tears. I proceed to hide myself in the most isolated places to
struggle with my temptations and there to weep for my sins. My body
is all disfigured and covered with a rough hair shirt. I have no
other bed than the naked ground and my only food is coarse roots
and water, even in my illnesses. In spite of all these rigors, my
body still experiences thoughts of the squalid pleasures with which
Rome is poisoned; my spirit finds itself in the midst of those pleasant
companionships in which I so greatly offended God.
In this desert to which I have condemned myself to avoid Hell, among
these sombre rocks, where I have no other companions than the scorpions
and the wild beasts, my spirit still bums my body, already dead
before myself, with an impure fire; the Devil still dares to offer
it pleasures to taste. I behold myself so humiliated by these temptations,
the very thought of which makes me die with horror, and not knowing
what further austerities I should exert upon my body to attach it
to God, that I throw myself on the ground at the foot of my crucifix,
bathing it with my tears, and when I can weep no more I pick up
stones and beat my breast with them until the blood comes out of
my mouth, begging for mercy until the Lord takes pity upon me.
Is there anyone who can understand the misery of my state, desiring
so ardently to please God and to love Him alone?
Yet I see myself constantly prone to offend Him. What sorrow this
is for me! Help me, my dear friend, by the aid of your prayers,
so that I may be stronger in repelling the Devil, who has sworn
my eternal damnation."
These, my dear brethren, are the struggles to which God permits
his great saints to be exposed. Alas, how we are to be pitied if
we are not fiercely harried by the Devil! According to all appearances,
we are the friends of the Devil: he lets us live in a false peace,
he lulls us to sleep under the pretense that we have said some good
prayers, given some alms, that we have done less harm than others.
According to our standard, my dear brethren, if you were to ask,
for instance, this pillar of the cabaret if the Devil tempted him,
he would answer quite simply that nothing was bothering him at all.
Ask this young girl, this daughter of vanity, what her struggles
are like, and she will tell you laughingly that she has none at
all, that she does not even know what it is to be tempted. There
you see, my dear brethren, the most terrifying temptation of all,
which is not to be tempted.
There you see the state of those whom the Devil is preserving for
Hell.
If I dared, I would tell you that he takes good
care not to tempt or torment such people about their past lives,
lest their eyes be opened to their sins.
The greatest of all evils is not to be tempted because there are
then grounds for believing that the Devil looks upon us as his property
and that he is only awaiting our deaths to drag us into Hell. Nothing
could be easier to understand. Just consider the Christian who is
trying, even in a small way, to save his soul.
Everything around him inclines him to evil; he can hardly lift his
eyes without being tempted, in spite of all his prayers and penances.
And yet a hardened sinner, who for the past twenty years has been
wallowing in sin, will tell you that he is not tempted! So much
the worse, my friend, so much the worse! That is precisely what
should make you tremble -- that you do not know what temptations
are. For to say that you are not tempted is like saying the Devil
no longer exists or that he has lost all his rage against Christian
souls.
" If you have no temptations," St. Gregory
tells us, "it is because the devils are your friends, your
leaders, and your shepherds. And by allowing you to pass your poor
life tranquilly, to the end of your days, they will drag you down
into the depths."
St. Augustine tells us that the greatest temptation is not to have
temptations because this means that one is a person who has been
rejected, abandoned by God, and left entirely in the grip of one's
own passions.

A note from us:
If
you are being tempted, take comfort in the fact that you must be
growing closer to God! satan (notice the small "s"..he
deserves NO respect!) is furious! Of course, do not give into the
temptation or satan has won!
Most
importantly, let us go to confession regularly to live in a state
of grace.
We must
avoid the pains of the everlasting pit of hell!
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