On
Cleaving to God Attributed to Albert the Great (Albertus Magnus) |
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The
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Chapter 16 How God's Providence includes everything Certainly if
we are to come directly, safely and nakedly to our Lord God without
hindrance, freely and peacefully, as explained above, and be securely
joined to him with even mind in prosperity or adversity, whether in
life or in death, then our job is to commit everything unhesitatingly
and resolutely, in general and individually, to his unquestionable and
infallible providence. This is hardly surprising since it is he alone
who gives to all things their being, their capacity and their action
- that is, their strength, operation, nature, manner and order in number,
weight and measure. Especially since just as a work of art presupposes
a prior operation of nature, in the same way the operation of nature
presupposes the work of God, creating, sustaining, ordering and administering
it, for to him alone belong infinite power, wisdom, goodness and inherent
mercy, justice, truth, love, and unchanging timelessness and omnipresence.
So nothing can exist or act by its own power unless it acts in the power
of God himself, who is the prime mover and the first principle, who
is the cause of every action, and the actor in every agent. For so far
as the nature of the order of things is concerned, God provides for
everything without intermediary right down to the last detail. So nothing,
from the greatest to the smallest things, can escape God's eternal providence,
or fall away from it, whether in matters of the will, of causal events,
or even of accidental circumstances outside of one's control. But God
cannot do anything which does not fall under the order of his own providence,
just as he cannot do anything which is not subject to its operation.
Divine providence therefore extends to everything, in general and in
particular, even including a man's thoughts. On which subject Scripture
has this to say, Cast all your worries upon him, for he takes care of
you. (1 Peter 5.7) And again the prophet says, Cast your care upon the
Lord, and he will feed you. (Psalm 55.22) And, Look at the nations of
men, my son, and see that no one ever put his trust in the Lord, and
was disappointed. For who has been faithful to his commandments and
been abandoned? (Sirach 2.22) And our Lord himself said, Do not be anxious,
saying, What shall we eat? (Matthew 6.25) So whatever and however much
we can hope from God, we shall undoubtedly receive, as Deuteronomy says,
Every place where you feet tread shall be yours. (Deuteronomy 11.24)
For a man shall receive all that he is able to desire, and so far as
he can reach with his foot of faith, even so much shall he possess.
That is why Bernard says, "God, the maker of everything is so abounding
in mercy that whatever size grace cup of faith we are able to hold out
to him, we shall undoubtedly have it filled." And so Mark has it,
All that you ask in prayer believing that you will receive it, will
be given you. (Mark 11.24) So the stronger and the more vehement our
faith in God is, and the more reverently and persistently it is offered
up to God, the more surely, the more abundantly and the quicker what
we hoped for will be accomplished and obtained. Indeed if in doing this
our faith in God is weak and slow to rise to God on account of the multitude
and magnitude of our sins, we should remember this, that everything
is possible with God, and that what he wishes is bound to take place,
while what he does not wish cannot possibly happen, and that it is as
easy for him to forgive and cancel countless sins, however enormous,
as to do it with a single sin. While a sinner cannot, of himself, rise
from innumerable sins, and free and absolve himself from them, and not
even from just one sin. For we are unable not only to do, but even to
think anything good, of ourselves, but this is from God. Nonetheless
it is much more dangerous, other things being equal, to be ensnared
in many sins than in a single one, since no sin is left unpunished,
and every mortal sin deserves infinite punishment, and this by the rigour
of justice since any such sin is against God who is indeed worthy of
infinite reverence, dignity and honor. What is more, according to the
Apostle Paul, God knows his own (2 Timothy 2.19), and it is impossible
for any of them to perish by the whirlwinds and floods of any error,
scandal, schism, persecution, heresy, tribulation, adversity or temptation,
for he has foreseen from eternity and unchangeably the number of his
elect and the extent of their merits in such a way that everything good
and bad, what is theirs and not theirs, prosperity and adversity, all
work together for them for good, except indeed that they appear even
more glorious and commendable in adversity. So let us commit everything
with full assurance, in general and in particular, confidently and unhesitatingly
to divine providence, by which God permits however much and whatever
sort of evil to happen to us. For it is good and will lead to good,
since he permits it to exist, and it would not exist unless he permitted
it to exist. Nor could it exist otherwise or more than he permits it
to, because he knows how to, has the power to, and wills to change and
convert it into something better. For just as it is by operation of
providence that all good things exist, so it is by its permission that
all bad things are changed into good. In this way in fact God's power,
wisdom and mercy are shown forth through Christ our redeemer - his mercy
and his justice, the power of grace and the weakness of nature, the
beauty of everything in the association of opposites, the approval of
the good, and the malice and punishment of the wicked. Similarly the
contrition of the converted sinner, his confession, and penitence, the
kindness of God, piety, charity and his praise and goodness (all show
forth God's power and wisdom). Yet it does not always lead to good in
those who do ill, but, as is usually the case, to great danger and extreme
evil, in the loss, that is, of grace and their place in glory, and in
the incurring of guilt and punishment, sometimes even eternal punishment,
from which may Jesus Christ defend us. Amen.
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