On
Cleaving to God Attributed to Albert the Great (Albertus Magnus) |
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Chapter 14 That we should seek the verdict of our conscience in every decision While we should
strive for spiritual perfection of mind, purity and peace in God, it
will be found to be not a little beneficial to this that we should return
quietly into the inner secret place of the mind in the face of everything
said, thought or done to us. There, withdrawn from everything else and
completely recollected within ourselves, we can place ourselves in the
knowledge of the truth before us and undoubtedly discover and understand
that it does us absolutely no good, and rather the contrary, when we
are praised or honored by others while we recognize by the knowledge
of the truth about ourselves within that we are blameworthy and guilty.
And just as nothing is any help if externally people praise someone
if his conscience internally accuses him, in the same way on the contrary
it does a man no harm to be despised, maligned and persecuted when he
remains internally just as innocent, blameless and without fault. On
the contrary he has all the more good reason to rejoice in the Lord
with patience, in peace and silence. After all no adversity can do any
harm where evil is not in control, and just as no evil goes unpunished,
so no good goes unrewarded. Nor should we wish a reward with hypocrites
or expect and receive profit from men, but from the Lord God alone,
not in the present, but in the future, and not in fleeting time, but
in eternity. It is clear therefore that nothing is greater, and nothing
better than to enter into the inner secret place of the mind always
and in every tribulation and occurrence, and there to call upon the
Lord Jesus Christ himself, our helper in temptations and tribulations,
and to humble ourselves there by confession of sin, and praise God and
Father himself, the giver of correction and the giver of consolation.
Above all one should accept everything, in general and individually,
in oneself or in others, agreeable or disagreeable, with a prompt and
confident spirit, as coming from the hand of his infallible Providence
or the order he has arranged. This attitude will lead to the forgiveness
of our sins, the deliverance from bitterness, the enjoyment of joy and
security, the outpouring of grace and mercy, introduction and establishment
into a close relationship with God, abundant enjoyment of his presence,
and firm cleaving and union with him. But let us not copy those who
from hypocrisy and Pharisaism want to appear better and different from
what they are, and to make a better impression and appearance before
men of being something special, than they know in truth inside to be
so. For it is absolute madness to seek, hunger for and aspire to human
praise or renown, from oneself or others, when one is in spite of it
all inwardly full of cravings and serious faults. And certainly the
good things we have talked about above will flee him who chases such
vanities, and he will merely bring disgrace on himself. So always keep
your faults and your own incapacity before your eyes, and know yourself,
so that you can be humbled and not try to avoid being held as the lowest,
vilest and most abject scum by everyone when you are aware of the grave
sins and serious faults in yourself. For which reason consider yourself
compared to others as dross to gold, weeds to the wheat, chaff to the
grain, a wolf to the sheep, Satan to the children of God. And do not
seek to be respected by others and given precedence before others, but
rather flee with all your heart and soul the poison of this disease,
the venom of praise, the concern for boasting and vanity, lest, as the
prophet says, The wicked is praised in his own heart's desires, (Psalm
10.4) and Isaiah, They who speak good of you, deceive you and destroy
the way of your feet, (Isaiah 3.12) and the Lord in Luke, Woe to you
when men speak well of you! (Luke 6.26).
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