WHERE HUMILITY AND LOVE ARE ABSENT, EVERYTHING SPIRITUAL IS
ABSENT
You say that you have no humility or love. So long as these
are absent, everything spiritual is absent. What is spiritual is born when they
are born and grows as they grow. They are the same for the soul as mastery of
the flesh is for the body. Humility is acquired by acts of humility, love by
acts of love.
THE MEASURE OF HUMILITY
Keep both eyes open. This is the measure of humility: if a
man is humble he never thinks that he has been treated worse than he deserves.
He stands so low in his estimation that no one, however hard they try, can
think more poorly of him than he thinks himself. This is the whole secret of
the matter.
DEFECTS OF CHARACTER
The Lord sometimes leaves in us some defects of character in
order that we should learn humility. For without them we would immediately soar
above the clouds in our own estimation and would place our throne there. And
therein lies perdition.
THE PATH TO HUMILITY -- OBEDIENCE
There is no need for me to repeat to you that the invincible
weapon against all our enemies is humility. It is not easily acquired. We can
think ourselves humble without having a trace of true humility. And we cannot
make ourselves humble merely by thinking about it. The best, or rather, the
only sure way to humility is by obedience and the surrender of our own will.
Without this it is possible to develop a satanic pride in ourselves, while
being humble in words and in bodily postures. I beg you to pay attention to
this point and, in all fear, examine the order of your life. Does it include
obedience and surrender of your will? Out of all the things you do, how many
are done contrary to your own will, your own ideas and reflections? Do you do
anything unwillingly, simply because you are ordered, through sheer obedience?
Please examine it all thoroughly and tell me. If there is nothing of this type
of obedience, the kind of life you lead will not bring you to humility. No
matter how much you may humble yourself in thought, without deeds leading to
self-abasement humility will not come. So you must think carefully how to
arrange for this.
CONCEIT AND CENSORIOUSNESS
Humbling oneself is not yet humility, but only the desire
and search for humility. May the Lord help you acquire this virtue. There is a
spirit of illusion which in some unknown way deceives the soul by its guile. It
so confuses our thoughts that the soul thinks itself humble, whereas inwardly
it conceals an arrogant and conceited opinion of its own worth. So we have to
go on looking carefully into our heart. External relationships which lead us to
humility are the best means here. You have been somewhat negligent. The fear of God left you,
and soon after that attention left you too, and you fell into the habit of
censuring people. You say that you have sinned inwardly, and this is true.
Repent quickly and beg God's forgiveness. Such a fault as that brings its own
retribution: the fault is inward, and so is the punishment. We can condemn
others not only in words but also with an inner movement of the heart. If the
soul, when thinking of someone, criticizes them adversely, then it has already
condemned them.
TAKING OFFENSE, AND TURNING THE OTHER CHEEK
You say that you are offended. To be offended at lack of
attention is to consider oneself worthy of attention, and consequently to set a
high value upon oneself in the heart; in other words, to have a heart swollen
with pride. Is this good? Is it not our duty to endure wrongful accusation?
Certainly it is. How then shall we start practicing this duty? After all, when
we are commanded to endure, we have to endure every unpleasantness without
exception, and endure gladly, without losing our inward peace. The Lord told
us, when smitten on one cheek, to turn the other also, but we are so sensitive
that if a fly so much as brushes us with its wing in passing we are immediately
up in arms. Tell me, are you prepared to obey this commandment of the Lord
about being smitten on the cheek? You will probably say, Yes, you are prepared.
Yet the instance you describe in your letter is precisely an occasion where
this commandment applies. Being smitten on the cheek should not be taken
literally. We should understand by it any action of our neighbor in which, it
seems to us, we did not receive due attention and respect -- any action by
which we feel degraded, and our honor, as people call it, wounded. Every deed
of this kind, however trivial -- a look, an expression -- is a blow on the
cheek. Not only should we endure it, but we should also be ready for some
greater degradation which would correspond to turning the other cheek. What
happened in your case was a very light slap on one cheek. And what did you do?
Did you turn the other? No; so far from turning it, you retaliated. For you
have already retaliated; you have made the other person feel that you are
somebody, as though saying, "Keep your hands off me!" But what are we
good for, you and I, if we do this? And how can we be regarded as disciples of
Christ if we do not obey His commandments? What you should have done is to
consider: do I deserve any attention? If you had had this feeling of
unworthiness in your heart you would not have taken offense.
TAKE UP THE SWORD OF HUMILITY
Spiritual unrest and passions harm the blood and effectively
damage our health. Fasting and a general abstinence in our daily life are the
best way to preserve our health sound and vigorous. Prayer introduces the human spirit into God's realm where
the rock of life dwells; and the body also, led by the spirit, partakes of that
life. A contrite spirit, feelings of repentance, and tears -- these do not
diminish our physical strength but add to it, for they bring the soul to a
state of comfort. You wish that contrition and tears would never leave you,
but you had better wish that the spirit of deep humility should always reign in
you. This brings tears and contrition, and it also prevents us from being
puffed up with pride at having them. For the enemy manages to introduce poison
even through such things as these. There is also spiritual hypocrisy which may accompany
contrition. True contrition does not interfere with pure spiritual joy, but can
exist in harmony with it, concealed behind it. And what of self-appreciation? Take up the sword of humility
and meekness, hold it always in your hand, and mercilessly cut off the head of
our chief foe.
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