ride, which is to be feared under the cloak of sanctity
itself. The foundation of Christian perfection is a love of humiliation,
a sincere spirit of humility. The heroic practice of virtue must be
undertaken, not because it is a sublime and elevated state, but because
God calls us to it, and by it we do his will, and become pleasing to
him. The path of the cross, or of contempt, poverty, and sufferings, was
chosen {093} by the Father for his divine Son, to repair his glory, and
restore to man the spiritual advantages of which sin had robbed him. And
the more perfectly we walk in his spirit, by the love and esteem of his
cross, the greater share shall we possess in its incomparable
advantages. Those who in the practice of virtue prefer great or singular
actions, because they appear more shining, whatever pretexts of a more
heroic virtue, or of greater utility to others they allege, are the
dupes of a secret pride, and follow the corrupt inclinations of their
own heart, while they affect the language of the saints. We are called
to follow Christ by bearing our crosses after him, leading at least in
spirit a hidden life, always trembling in a deep sense of our frailty,
and humbled in the centre of our nothingness, as being of ourselves the
very abstract of weakness, and an unfathomed abyss of corruption.
Footnotes:
1. Act. Mart. T. 2, app {}.
2. Lettres edifiantes et curieuses.
3. Don Claude Leaute, a Benedictin monk of the congregation of St.
Maur, in 1731, when he was about fifty-one years of age, had fasted
eleven years, without taking any food the whole forty days, except
what he daily took at mass; and what added to the wonder is, that
during Lent he did not properly sleep, but only dozed. He could not
bear the open air; and towards the end of Lent he was excessively
pale and wasted. This fact is attested by his brethren and
superiors, in a relation printed at Sens, in 1731; and recorded by
Dom L'Isle, in his History of Fasting; and by Feyjoo, in his Theatro
Critico Universal.
4. Evagrius, l. 1, c. 13, 14.
5. Monsignor Majelli, a domestic prelate to pope Benedict XIV., in his
dissertation on the _Stylites_, or religious men living on pillars,
represents the pillar of St. Simeon enclosed with rails around the
top. Whenever he slept a little he leaned on them, or his staff.
This author shows the order of the Stylites to have been propagated
in the East from
|