Of bearing injuries, and who shall be approved as truly patient
1. "What say you, My Son? Cease to complain; consider My
suffering and that of My saints.You have not yet resisted unto
blood. It is little which you suffer in comparison with
those who have suffered so many things, have been so strongly
tempted, so grievously troubled, so manywise proved and tried. You ought therefore to call to mind the more grievous
sufferings of others that you might bear your lesser ones more
easily, and if they seem not to you little, see that it is not your impatience which is the cause of this. But whether they be
little or whether they be great, study to bear them all with
patience.
2. "So far as you set yourself to bear patiently, so far you
do wisely and are deserving of the more merit; you shall also
bear more easily if your mind and habit are carefully trained
hereunto. And say not 'I cannot bear these things from such a
man, nor are things of this kind to be borne by me, for he has
done me grievous harm and imputes to me what I had never
thought: but from another I will suffer patiently, such things as
I see I ought to suffer.' Foolish is such a thought as this,
for it considers not the virtue of patience, nor by whom that
virtue is to be crowned, but it rather weighs persons and offenses against self.
3. "He is not truly patient who will only suffer as far as
seems right to himself and from whom he pleases. But the
truly patient man considers not by what man he is tried,
whether by one above him, or by an equal or inferior, whether by
a good and holy man, or a perverse and unworthy; but
indifferently from every creature, whatsoever or how often soever
adversity happens to him, he gratefully accepts all from the
hand of God and counts it great gain: for with God nothing
which is borne for His sake, however small, shall lose its
reward.
4. "Be therefore ready for the fight if you will have the
victory. Without striving you cannot win the crown of
patience; if you will not suffer you refuse to be crowned.
But if you desire to be crowned, strive manfully, endure
patiently. Without labor you draw not near to rest, nor
without fighting come you to victory."
5. Make possible to me, O Lord, by grace what seems impossible
to me by nature.You know how little I am able to bear, and
how quickly I am cast down when a like adversity rises up
against me. Whatsoever trial of tribulation may come to me, may
it become unto me pleasing and acceptable, for to suffer and be
vexed for Your sake is exceeding healthful to the soul.
IMAGE: Giovanni Battista Langetti, The Patience of Job
IMAGE: Giovanni Battista Langetti, The Patience of Job
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