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It is one of the most firmly established and most consoling of the
truths that have been revealed to us that (apart from sin) nothing
happens to us in life unless God wills it so. Wealth and poverty
alike come from Him. If we fall ill, God is the cause of our
illness; if we get well, our recovery is due to God. We owe our
lives entirely to Him, and when death comes to put an end to life,
His will be the hand that deals the blow. But should we attribute
it to God when we are unjustly persecuted? Yes, He is the only
person you can charge with the wrong you suffer. He is not the
cause of the sin the person commits by ill-treating you, but He is
the cause of the suffering that person inflicts on you while
sinning. God did not inspire your enemy with the will to harm you,
but He gave him the power to do so. If you receive a wound, do not
doubt but that it is God Himself who has wounded you. If all living
creatures were to league themselves against you, unless the Creator
wished it and joined with them and gave them the strength and means
to carry out their purpose, they would never succeed. You would
have no power over me if it had not been given you from above, the
Savior of the world said to Pilate. We can say the same to demons
and men, to the brute beasts and to whatever exists -- You would
not be able to disturb me or harm me as you do unless God had
ordered it so. You are sent by Him, you are given the power by Him
to tempt me and to make me suffer. You would have no power over me
if it had not been given you from above. If from time to time we
meditated seriously on this truth of our faith it would be enough
to stifle all complaint in whatever loss or misfortune we suffer.
What I have the Lord gave me, it has been taken away by Him. It is
not a lawsuit or a thief that has ruined you or a certain person
that has slandered you; if your child dies it is not by accident or
wrong treatment, but because God, to whom all belongs, has not
wished you to keep it longer. Trust in God's Wisdom It is then a
truth of our faith that God is responsible for all the happenings
we complain of in the world and, furthermore, we cannot doubt that
all the misfortunes God sends us have a very useful purpose. We
cannot doubt it without imputing to God a lack of judgment in
deciding what is advantageous for us. It is usually the case that
other people can see better than we can ourselves what is good for
us. It would be foolish to think that we can see better than God
Himself, Who is not subject to any of the passions that blind us,
knows the future and can foresee all events and the consequences of
every action. Experience shows that even the gravest misfortunes
can have good results and the greatest successes end in disaster. A
rule also that God usually follows is to attain His ends by ways
that are the opposite to those human prudence would normally
choose. In our ignorance of what the future holds, how can we be so
bold as to question what comes about by God's permission? Surely it
is reasonable to think that our complaints are groundless and that
instead of complaining we ought to be thanking Providence. Joseph
was sold into slavery and thrown into prison. If he had felt
aggrieved at these apparent misfortunes, he would really have been
feeling aggrieved at his happiness for they were the steps to the
throne of Egypt.
Let us consider some excerpts from this wonderful work: Nothing
happens in the universe without God willing and allowing it. This
statement must be taken absolutely of everything with the exception
of sin. 'Nothing occurs by chance in the whole course of our lives'
is the unanimous teaching of the Fathers and Doctors of the Church,
'and God intervenes everywhere.' To the question, "In what things
should we practice conformity to the will of God?" there can be
only one answer: "In everything." The first thing that God asks of
us is that we should faithfully keep His commandments and those of
the Church, humbly obey those who have authority over us, and
carefully fulfill the duties of our state. Thereafter we should
desire what God does and accept with filial submission all that is
decided by His Providence. Let us now see some of the circumstances
which may arise. It is clear then that we do not receive anything
because we do not ask enough. God could not give us little, He
could not restrict His liberality to small things without doing us
grave harm. Do not misunderstand me. I am not saying that we offend
God if we ask for temporal benefits or to be freed from misfortune.
Obviously prayers of this kind can rightly be addressed to Him by
making the condition that they are not contrary to His glory or our
eternal salvation. But as it is hardly likely that it would redound
to His glory for Him to answer them, or to our advantage to have
them answered if our wishes end there, it must be repeated that as
long as we are content with little we run the risk of obtaining
nothing.
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