ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN PRODUCTION NOTE University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library Brittle Books Project, 2014.COPYRIGHT NOTIFICATION In Public Domain. Published prior to 1923. This digital copy was made from the printed version held by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. It was made in compliance with copyright law. Prepared for the Brittle Books Project, Main Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign by Northern Micrographics Brookhaven Bindery La Crosse, Wisconsin 2014THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY From the collection of Julius Doerner, Chicago Purchased, 1918, 2.30 L33dLE 1684-Univ£Rsi LtedAHy Of TH£ ft orTHE YEN. JOHN BAPTIST DE LA $ALLE,A CHRISTIAN'S DUTY TOWARDS GOD. r \V THE VENERABLE J. iifHK LA SALLE. t » " 1( OUNDEll OF THE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS, Translated from the Original, with Notes and Other Additions> " Skilful alike with tongue and pen, He preached to all men, everywhere, The Gospel of the Golden Rule, The New Commandment given to men. With reverent feet the earth He trod, Nor banished Nature from His plan; But studied still with deep research To build the Universal Church, Lofty as is the Love of God, And ample as the wants of man."—Longfellow. new york: DE LA SALLE INSTITUTE, 48 Second Street. 1884,Entered according to Act of Congress in tiie year 1884. by JOHN P. MURPHY, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. Electrotyped and Printed at The New York Catholic Protectory, West Chester, N. Y.7L"iO L3iJ £ I 4Sf Archbishop of Nezv York. 680185PREFACE. What amI! What Shall Become of Me f These are such serious and important questions, that a sensible man will never treat them inconsiderately •; fully persuaded that a mistake in such a matter may be fatal, and be followed by irreparable consequences. The idea of my existence is so closely bound up with that of Godr that I cannot reflect upon the former with- out being immediately struck by the latter. Nothing exists, save by Him who Is, and who is of Himself It is in Him that we have being, motion, life and reason. By His power He created us 5 by His goodness He pre- serves us; by His Providence He governs us. He ought, then, to be honored. This is a natural sequence. His existence supposes His worship, A God 5 a rational man \ a religion—one cannot exist without the other. The idea of religion is as natural to man as that of God Himself. A child receives this impression with docility ; the old man is -nearly always compelled to return to it. Let passion be hushed, and all mankind range themselves beneath Religion's banner.vi PREFACE. In order that we may be useful to all, we have publish- ed this Treatise of a Christian's Duty toward God. and the means of performing it. Each one will find the rea- sons for his belief, and of his future destiny, firmly estab- lished. He will see, by the examples accompanying the explanation of the truths of faith, and religious duties, that nothing is impossible to him who wills ;—to him who responds to grace, and the aid which God imparts to a good will.INTRODUCTION. *i The victory is most sure For hiin wlio, seeking faith by virtue, strives To yield entire submission to the law Of Conscience; Conscience reverenced and obeyed As God's most intimate Presence in the Soul. Endeavor thus to live." (1) Necessity of Religion, and the Obligation of Studying It. The existence of the universe, and the order which reigns in it, necessarily suppose a ivise and potent Cause. This Cause is God. It is He who has created all things, and governs all things according to the eternal laivs of His divine wisdom. t . . . Amid all the beings which we behold, Man alone is en- dowed with intelligence and freedom. He alone is ca- (1) The efforts of materialism seem to be to destroy any difference between man and the brute. Yet the truth can never be talked into falsehood. "Truth, crushed to earth, will rise again: The eternal years of G-od are hers." Therefore, the truth that man is man, and not first cousin to a beast, will remain, for something innate in us repels the gross theories of materialism. Man cannot be content with the "miserable pres- ent." As one who was no friend of religion has said, in exquisite verse: " We looli before and after, , And sigh for what is not; Oursincerest laughter With some pain is fraught : Our sweetest songs are those Which tell of saddest thought."viii INTRODUCTION. pable of discerning, of willing, and loving. But God, who is wisdom itself, could only have bestowed these faculties upon man, that he might employ them for His glory. These facts, which none can call in question, fully prove the necessity of religion^ 1)—that is, a relation- ship of obedience and love on the part of the intelligent creature toward his Creator. Vainly is it asserted that God is too exalted in His greatness to care for the honor we render to Him. Undoubtedly, God has no need of our homage. But, being just, He must desire that which is conformable to reason and order. Now, it is according to order that the creature should honor his Creator, and should show to Him his love and gratitude. Has any father the power to exempt his children from the love and respect which they owe him ? God is our Father ; we are bound to love Him. He is infinitely good 5 we are bound to eling to Him. He is all-powerful and just, and we are bound to fear and respect Him. It is He who has created us? and preserves to us life and be- ing. We receive at His bountiful hands all the ad- vantages which we enjoy. He prepares for us infinitely more precious benefits than those which He has already conferred. (2) He wishes to make us eternally happy. It is therefore only reasonable that He requires from us religious worship.(8) This worship ought to be internal, comprising all the powers of the soul. It ought to be external also, in or- der that the body may concur after its manner in the honor (1) Religion : from religio, to bind anew. (2) " Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath it entered ^ito the heart of man, what things God hath prepared for them that love Him."—I. (br. ii. 9. (3) Worship: honor, accompanied with dependence.INTRODUCTION. ix which man pays to God. It must also be public ; for men, destined to live together, ought to unite in blessing and adoring together Him who created them.(l) Without a settled and unvarying form of worship, re- ligion could not long subsist among mankind. They re- quire mutually to edify one another, and to stimulate one another to the practice of duty. Hence from the begin- ning men have united together to pay their homage to the Lord. Everywhere we discover public worship ren- dered to the Deity. The same light which reveals to man a Being upon whom he is dependent, reveals to him also the obligation of honoring Him. And although this instinct of worship has strayed with the heathen, it has always had the same source(2)—that is, the necessity of honoring a Supreme Power; a Creating and Preserv- ing God j a Providence that ordereth all things. So true it is that man forever hears an interior voice exclaim- ing: Homage to the Master of Hfe.(3) To believe in the existence of God, in the immortality of the soul, the rewards and punishments of another (1) Naught but a worship spiritual and pure, Profound, habitual, strong through loving awe, A true heart's tribute to the God of Truth, From selfishness redeemed, and so from sense Secured, though conversant with shapes of sense,— . Naught but such worship, with spontaneous force From our whole being equally descending, As odor from a flower, or fount's clear breath, Redeems us from idolatry."—Sir Aubrey de Vere. (2) " Lo! the poor Indian, whose untutored mind Sees God in clouds and hears Him in the wind."—Pope. (3) " Sighs now breathed unutterable, While the spirit of prayer, inspired, And winged for Heaven with speedier flight Than loudest oratory."—Milton.X INTRODUCTION. world, and yet to live as if we were persuaded of the con- trary , is an inconsistency which can only spring from ignorance or licentiousness. .. Hence religion has no enejnies so much to be feared as blindness of mind and depravity of heart. There woidd be f eiver unbelievers if religion were better known. There would not exist one, if men were divested of passions. But neither the culpable negligence of the one nor the cor- ruption of the other can make that to be which is not. Now, the unanimous consent of all peoples, the. inmost consciousness of each individual, the universe, and all that it contains, are so many witnesses to attest the existence of God.(l) The memory, the will, the intelligence of the soid, are so many proofs of its spirituality, and consequently of its immortality. How unaccountable, then, is the stupid in- difference of him who dares to advance fearlessly and without any precaution toward that fatal bourne which must decide his whole eternity ! He says to himself, ".I do not know what will become of me one day. All that I can say is, I shall die. And, on quitting this world, I shall either fall into nothingness, or into the hands of God to be judged. I know that if there be a God, He must p mish those who, like myself, have been at no pains to serve Him. Everything tells me that there is a God. But, since this belief thwarts my inclinations, I prefer to believe nothing until I see it. It may be that there will (1) "Man's plea to man is, that he.never more Will beg, and that he never begged before ; Man's plea to God is, that he did obtain * A former suit, and therefore sties again. How good a God we serve, that, when we sue, Makes His old gifts the examples of His new !" — Quarles, "Emblems."INTRODUCTION. XI then be no longer any chance to repent. The testimony of faith, and of the universe, yea, of my own conscience it* self, assures me so. But no matter : despite the evidence, I trust there will be nothing." , Can any one account for the blindness of him who thus sports with his eternal destiny ? For, can he in good faith really think that the destiny of the perverse can possibly be the same as that of the virtuous ? Will the God of all justice look with the same eye upon vice and virtue; (1) upon the wicked who blasphemes, and the righteous who adores in holy fear ? Of all the sciences, therefore, Religion is the most impor- tant to man. It moderates his prosperity, and sustains him in adversity. It teaches him that time is nothing, but that eternity is all. It secures the quietude of states, by teaching us obedience to powers established by God, not merely from fear of punishment, but from conscientious obligation. It makes the prince clement, and the subject loyal; the master just, and the servant honest; the mag- istrate upright, and the friend reliable. It not only forbids the appropriation of another's goods, but it forbids us to covet them. It goes even farther. It would have us share our bread with Mm who is in want. It not only con- demns murder and revenge, but commands us to forgive injuries and to love our enemies. It will have us do good to those who do us evil and pray for those who persecute us. Struck with these truths, Montesquieu exclaims: "Astonishing fact ! Religion, which appears only designed for another world, makes man's happiness in this." Even (1) " If there's a power above us (And that there is, all Nature cries aloud Through all her works), He must delight in virtue : And that which He delights in must be happy. "—Addison.xii INTRODUCTION, the infamous Voltaire acknowledges that u society with- out religion would be but a den of wild beasts."(1) Nothing is more important to man than the study of re- ligion. It makes its study obligatory. The first duty which it imposes is the study of its precepts. And if it demands belief in its mysteries, it would also have us rec- ognize the arguments which prove their existence. Woe, then, to the wicked, who, blaspheming that which he is ig- norant of, dares to treat with contempt, and as vulgar prejudices, the most positive and venerable truths !—truths which men of the greatest genius have acknowledged, after having most carefully examined them ; and, for the sake of which, upon a thorough conviction of their Talue, they have sacrificed their dearest affections. Young men about to enter the world, never forget the precepts of the Church ! Be loyal to your duty. Never allow yourselves to be drawn away by the scoffs or the ex- ample of those who have, cowardlike, abandoned the path of virtue. Read only good books, in order to become more learned in the truths of religion. The more instructed you are, the stronger you will be in the Faith. The more you study religion, the more you will discover its divine character. (2) Never let yourselves be dazzled by the sophistries of ir- religion. Never mistake blasphemies for arguments, nor jests for proofs. Shun bad company. It u corrupts good manners." Flee from vice, and you will preserve your faith. (1) Robespierre also remarked upon the need of religion to society, " If there is no God, we ought to make one, for one we must have," (2) " " Religion, in her proper robes attired, Needs only to be seen to be admired."—Pope,INTRODUCTION, xiii If, hpwever, you have the misfortune to go astray, return unto Him who opens wide His arms to you. He re- jects none who implore His clemency. 0 sacrifice not your eternity to a vile and contemptible human respect! An unhappy person, who retained nothing of Christi- anity but Baptism, and who had either never learned his Catechism, or had forgotten it, made it his particular re- quest (doubtless from a sentiment of humility, the fruit of a sincere conversion) that the following epitaph should be engraved on his tombstone : a Here lies a fool, who de- parted this world without ever having sought to know why he had been sent into it." (1) A distinguished officer of the United States7 Army, who passed for an atheist, had a daughter dangerously ill. The poor girl had apparently only a few moments to live. She called for her father, and, clasping his hands in hers, said in most touching accents : " Dearest father, I am about to expire ; tell me, then, 1 beseech you, whether I am to believe what I have so frequently heard you af- firm—that there is neither a God, a Heaven, nor a hell; or to believe the consoling truths of the Catechism which I have learned from the lips of my beloved mother." The officer, struck with amazement at these words, remained for some time in melancholy silence. At length, leaning over the bed of his dying child, he said, in a voice broken with sobs : u My daughter, my own darling daughter, believe that alone which thy mother taught thee." The astonish- ment of the bystanders, many of whom were infidels, can be easily imagined. One of them, who had long since ab- jured his religion, having been asked what he thought of (1) Catechism of the Churches of France.INTRODUCTION. the matter, gravely replied that it was more agreeable to live according to his new religion, but much safer to die in the old. Such is the idea the impious themselves form of religion at the dreadful hour of death. ' One of the most celebrated philosophers of our time, M. Jouffroy, although, unhappily, far from practising Chris- tianity, has nevertheless written these remarkable words : 1 u There is a tiny book taught to children, upon which they are questioned at church. Read this little work, which is the Catechism, and you will find therein the so- lution of the questions I have proposed ; of all without ex- ception. Ask the Christian whence comes the human race ;—he knows. Whither it goes ;—he knows. How it goes;—he knows. Ask that poor little child—who in all his life could never have dreamt it—why he is here be- low, and what will become of him after death, and he will give you a sublime reply. The origin of the world and of man j man's destiny in this life and in another ; dealings of man with Grod; duty of man toward his fellows j the rights of man in relation to others and to the creation at large—he knows all about it. And when he is grown up, he will be equally clear about natural rights, political rights, and the rights of the people. For all this flows clearly and by itself from the Catechism. This is what I call a grand religion. I recognize it by this token—that it leaves none of the questions that interest humanity unanswered." u In this little book " (the Catechism), says Bossuet, "the smallest village child holds in his hands more of essential 'truth than was ever lisped by Plato or Pythagoras.3? (!) j (1) "Each little voice in turn > Some glorious truth proclaims , What sages would have died to learn Now taught by cottage dames."—Keble.INTRODUCTION. XV About twenty years ago, the Archbishop of B— was taking the benefit of the waters at Aix-les-Bains, in Savoy. During his stay he was called to see a dying person, the daughter of a general celebrated in the wars of. the First Empire. In his conversation with her, the prelate could not help shedding tears of compassion on hearing her speak of religion as few persons know how. In his astonish- ment he asked her where she had obtained her instruc- tion. u My lord," she replied, u after God, I owe my in- formation to the Emperor Napoleon. I dwelt with my family in the island of St. Helena. One day, when I was ten years old, the Emperor said to me, 1 My child, you are young, and many dangers await you in the world. What will become of you, if you are not armed and pro- tected by religion ? Your father has none, and your mother still less. I will take upon myself the duty which weighs upon them. To-morrow I will give you your first lesson.7 And during two consecutive years I went to Catechism at the Emperor's several times a week. He made me read each lesson, and then explained it. When I had reached the age of twelve to thirteen, he said to me, c Now, my child, you are sufficiently instructed. You must think seriously about your First Communion. I shall get a priest to come from France, to prepare you for this great act, and me for death.7 And the Emperor kept his word." Exebcises.—What lessons do yon derive from contemplating the universe ? Is religion a necessity, and why ? What are the charac- teristics of worship ? What are the most formidable enemies of relig- ion ? What proof have you of the soul's immortality ? Why is relig- ion the most important of the sciences ?CHRISTIAN'S DUTY. BOOK FIRST. OF THE KNOWLEDGE AND LOYE OF GOD. PART FIRST. OF THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD. CHAPTER I. The Apostles' Creed. 18 We agree in one Inseparable communion, If the true light be in our hearts—the faith, Which not to want is death ; To want is penance ; to desire Is purgatorial fire ; To hope is Paradise ; and to believe, Is all of Heaven that earth can e'er receive."—Ooleridge. It was necessary that the faithful should possess a form of profession of faith, short, simple, easily remembered, and everyivhere the same.( 1) To this end the Apostles, ere separa- ting to preach the Gospel, dreio up the symbol which bear.s (1) Homage to this fact is paid by secret societies all over the world, who adopt a common sign of recognition, rules, etc., well knowing that without these unity is impossible. Man's mind naturally rebels against restraint, and, in an erroneous belief in its own capabilities, exalts its own judgment in matters of faith. This is the origin of all heresy, Modern Protestantism prefers "views " to creeds. 78 a christian's duty. their name, and to I tick tradition has constantly assigned to them. The word symbol signifies a sign, or an abridgment. It is so called because the profession of faith made by re- citing it serves to distinguish those who are Christians from those who are not, and because it contains in an abridged form all the truths which a Christian is bound to believe to his salvation. Although the Apostles7 Creed is but a summary of what we ought to believe, yet, like ua spring whose seemingly narrow bed will give birth to ample rivers " (as St. Chrys- ostom remarks), it contains the whole extent of the Cath- olic Faith, To young minds it presents the milk of doctrine, while those of larger growth and more infor- mation may always find matter for meditation and instruc- tion. It contains twelve articles, which divide themselves into three principal parts. The first part consists of the first article, concerning God the Father, and the. Creation of the world. The second comprises the six articles next following. These treat of the Son of God, of the Redemption of man- kind, and the General Judgment. The third consists of the five concluding articles. These set forth truths of Faith concerning the Holy Spirit, the Church, the forgiveness of sins, the general resurrec- tion, and the rewards or punishments reserved for man- kind after death, according to the good or evil which they have done. (1) (1) "The number of the articles composing the Creed contains an admirable mystery. The number three is found four times, and the number four, three times. Does not this signify that the Apostles were to preach to the East and to the West, to the North and to the South, the glory of the Most Holy Trinity, and faith in this ineffable mystery hidden in the depths of eternity T'—JRefjrwjd.THE APOSTLES' CREED. 9 To repeat (1) the Apostles? Creed is to make as many acts offaith as it contains truths. For this reason, it is very profitable to recite it often. But especially on rising in the morning.(2) First, to testify before God that we desire to live like Christians during the day. Secondly, up- on retiring to rest, to dispose ourselves to die in the Faith, if death surprises us during sleep. (3) The Church commands all Christians to commit it to mem- ory. Parents are obliged to teach it to their children. A tyrant, having exhausted promises and threats to induce some Christians to renounce their religion, fi- nally said to them, u What is it you believe ? v One of their number replied, 66 Listen : I will make my profes- sion of faith and he began tc recite in a firm voice, u I believe in God " etc. Christians have been heard to exclaim, in the midst of frightful torments inflicted upon them for the truth's sake, " 1 believe; I am a Christian; death rather than apos- tasy! v The holy martyr, Peter of Verona, was the child of par™ ents who had apostatized. While still very young, they asked him what he learned at school. He replied, u I learned our Creed, which teaches us all that a good Catholic ought to believe.97 The child grew up, and became suc- cessively priest, religious, preacher and martyr. While (1) Because repetition is the only sure way of fixing anything in the memory. (2) "Now that the daylight fills the sky, We lift our hearts to God on high," —Breviary Hymn at Prime (' 'Jam lucis "). (3)" "When the soft dews of kindly sleep My weary eyelids gently steep, Be my last thought, how sweet to rest Forever on my Saviour's breast."10 a christian's duty. his persecutors struck him with poniards, and he suc- cumbed to his wounds, he cried out, " I believe in God, the Father Almighty, " etc., and recited the entire Creed. At length, when bathed in his blood, and on the point of expiring, the holy martyr, unable to speak, dipped his finger in his blood and wrote upon the ground the last cry of his soul, u I believe ! ,?(1) St. Augustine says, " Forget not to recite the symbol of your faith, either at rising, or retiring to rest. Bead it often, that you may never lose, sight of any one of the truths it contains. Say not, * I repeated it yesterday, or the day before, or to-day even,' or i I repeat it daily, and know it thoroughly.' With your souFs eye fixed upon your profession of faith, consider what your past life has been. Let the Creed be a mirror, ever before your eyes. Examine if you really believe what you profess. Therein lies your wealth, your everyday attire. For, do you not dress yourself every day on rising ? The prayer of your profession of faith is your soul's garment, of which it ought never to be deprived by any unpardon- able forgetfulness on your part/7 Exercises.—Why is it necessary to have one form of profession of faith which all men are bound to believe ? What is the Apostles' Creed? Why should it be often repeated? What is the command of the Church respecting it ? What does tradition say of each Apostle's contribution to the Creed? Give a resume of the contents. How many articles in each part ? What is said in the Manual of Politeness t about the Imitation of Christ? How is the Creed a mirror ? How many acts of faith do we make by reciting the Creed ? Relate, in your own words, how the martyrs used the Creed during their sufferings. Ask your teacher to relate the beautiful account of St. Peter of Verona's (Peter Martyr) martyrdom given in the Meditations of the Venerable De La Salle. (1) " Blessed is that simplicity which leaves the difficult ways of dis- pute and goes on in the plain and sure path of God's commandments." "Imitation" Book IV.} chap. 18.THE NECESSITY OF REVELATION, 11 CHAPTER II. Of God and Creation. " I BELIEVE IN GOD, THE FATHER ALMIGHTY, CREATOR OF HEAVEN AND EARTH." The Necessity of Revelation. "Our mirror is a blessed book, Where out, from each illumined page, * We see one glorious Image look, All eyes to dazzle and engage: The Son of God, and that indeed We see Him as He is, we know; Since in the same bright glance we read The very life of things below."—Keble. Maris chief concern is to know the end for which he is sent into the ivorld, and what will become of him after death. But his mind being very limited, he can only form a very imperfect idea of spiritual things j conse- quently he must have recourse to the knowledge which God has Himself imparted through revelation. Of the truths thus revealed, part are contained in the Holy Scriptures, and the remainder have come down to us by means of tradition. The Scriptures are divided into the Old arid the New Testa- ment. The former comprises all the books written from the time of Moses to that of Jesus Christ; the latter, those which were composed by the Apostles or their disciples. All these books were written by divine inspiration, and their authen- ticity is incontestable. No one can doubt that they were written by those whose names they bear, that they have been preserved with religious veneration, and have been transmit- ted to us continuously and uninterruptedly.12 a christian's duty. From the time of the Exodus, the Israelites possessed the books of Moses. They were read every day. Par- ents handed them on to their children as a most precious heritage. The original text was most carefully pre- served in the Tabernacle. Its words, and even letters, were counted. It would therefore have been impossible to introduce the slightest alteration without exciting the protests of a multitude of persons conscientiously in- terested in the integrity of the facts which they con- tained. The Pentateuch, which consists of the first five books of the Bible, has always been attributed to Moses by an en- tire people, whose religion, civil customs and constitu- tion were based upon those books ; so that it is « impossi- ble to deny that Moses was their author, without denying the existence of this race ; which would be a manifest absurdity. The other books of the Bible have the same evidence of authenticity. They are all so closely bound together, that the facts recorded in the last neces- sarily pre-suppose the events recorded in those preceding them. Those who ivrote these books have proved their divine mission by the most startling prodigies, and by prophecies fulfilled to the very letter. They were therefore sent of God. The miracles which testified to the authenticity of the sacred books were so strongly proved that deception was impossible. At one time it is an entire kingdom smit- ten at intervals with ten plagues. At another, the sea opens to give passage to the Hebrews, while it engulfs Pharaoh and all his host. A vast multitude is fed during forty years with manna that fell from Heaven, sup- plied with water drawn from the heart of the rock,THE NECESSITY OF REVELATION. 13 sheltered by a cloud from the ardent sun, and illumined with a pillar of fire by night ; Jordan is divided to make a path for them,(l) the sun's course is suspended to afford them time to gain a victory, and a host of one hundred and eighty-five thousand men is struck dead in a single might under the walls of Jerusalem. All these prodigies, and a thousand others of like nature, to perpetuate the memory of some of which solemn festivals were established, could not be misunder- stood by the most ignorant, or called in question by the most incredulous. Hence the people were so convinced that they accepted the law imposed upon them, despite its numberless exactions, and the, terrible punishment which it inflicted upon transgressors.(2) The proof resulting from the prophecies is no less pow- erful. We behold in the sacred writings a number of men who speak without doubt, or hesitancy, or conjecture. They publicly and confidently declare that such events will positively happen at the time, and in the place, and with all the circumstances they specify. And what events ! The most detailed, the most important, the most interesting to the nation, but, at the time they were pre- dicted, the most improbable. Such was the carrying away of the Jews to Babylon, after the conquest and destruction of the then prosperous Jerusalem. The precise term of sev- enty years is set down as the length of their captivity; and their glorious return to their own land is clearly foretold. Cyrus, (3) their deliverer, is spoken of by name more than (1) " The might of the Gentile, unsmote by the sword, Hath melted like snow at the glance of the Lord."—Byron. (2) The Old Testament is also a most striking monument of Israel's sins, and anything but flattering to their vanity. (3) Isaiah xliv. 28; xlv. 1, where a remarkable feature of the siege of Babylon is minutely foretold.14 a christian's duty. two hundred years before his birth. The succession and order of the four great Empires are laid down- Two of them, the Persian and the Grecian, are named, (1) al- though at that time the latter were confined to a corner of the globe and divided into several petty states. How were these prophets enabled to penetrate the future ? Who could have made known to them such distant events —events so little likely to transpire, if not He who is the Lord of time and has fixed all things in His eternal decrees? Hence, the sacred writers have always been regarded as messengers of God ; hence their books have merited reverence as divine, and as containing the very word of God. The authority of the New Testament rests upon the same basis, and is equally irrefutable. It contains the history of the life, miracles, and teachings of the Son of God. It was written by His disciples, all contempora- neous authors, whose testimony is similar, (2) and who relate what they heard with their ears and saw with their eyes. From the beginning of Christianity, these books were cited, and even copied, by the greatest of men, who had seen the Apostles. The enemies of Christianity, such as Julian the Apostate, Celsus, and Porphyry, never raised the least doubt as to their authorship. Yet they were very near to the time of the Apostles, and conse- quently able to ascertain the truth. The heretics who (1) Daniel x. 20. " It is probable that the Greeks were hardly known by name at this period."—Pusey, " Lectures on Daniel" (2) "The manner in which the Evangelists relate all these great things bears in itself the stamp of truth. They differ from each other, but do not contradict each other : their candor and simplicity are re- markable. Such is always the testimony of truthful persons who all relate the same events. e*|ph one according to his style."—Shouppe. " It would be more inconceivable that several men had conjointly fabricated this book, than that a simple person could have furnished the subject. The Gospel has in it characters so great, so striking, and so perfectly inimitable, that he who could invent them would be greater than its heroes."—Rousseau.THE NECESSITY OF REVELATION. 15 had the greatest reason for disputing the authority of these divine books, have openly recognized them. They have been compelled merely to doubt their meaning. The Church in all ages has shown the greatest veneration for these boohs. She has read them publicly in all her relig- ious assemblies ; she has ahvays regarded them as the work of the Holy Spirit, as the ivord of God ; she has ahvays been persuaded that nothing can be added to them or taken from them without impiety and sacrilege. Then? if these books are authentic and divine, the facts contained in them must be true. And if these facts be true, then we may justly assert that God Himself has spoken to mankind. Let us, then, treat all doctrine opposed to that taught in Holy Scripture as illusory, false and erroneous. Let us, by the word of God, resist the audacious license of the wicked and unbelieving. Let us never forget that, if our faith ought to be rational, (1) by an examination of the reality of the facts upon which it is based, it can- (1) We must remember that the Church is not dependent on the Bible for her authority. This is the common error of all sects ot Prot- estants. The Church existed before a line of the New Testament was written. For more than three centuries she had no Bible as we un- derstand the word now. During this period, many writings passed in some churches as inspired, and were read as such, notably the Epistle of Clement, and the Epistle of Barnabas. At length, in the year 325 A. D., the first General Council of Nice, assembled in the' Holy Ghost, determined what were the inspired writings. The num- ber accepted by the Council was called the Canon, and pronounced un- alterable. The Church is not dependent on it for her authority, but upon the indwelling presence of the Holy Ghost, speaking through her appointed head. The decision of the Council of Nice is accepted by all Protestants. " Almighty God influences us and works in us through our minds, not without them or in spite of them. And what is true of God's dealings with our minds generally, is true in particular as regards our reasoning powers. His grace does not supersede them, but uses them and renews them by using.^ We gain truth by rea- soning, ^whether implicit or explicit, in a state of nature ; we gain it in. the same way in a state of grace."—J. II. Newman, " University Ser- mons" p, 281,16 a christian's duty. not be too humble in its submission to revealed Truth, (1) and to the expositions given of it by the Church. A number of persons waited upon a philosopher and said to him : u We are sent to you to beg of you to tell us more clearly who God is." The philosopher replied : "I will think about it ; come again in eight days." The eight days being expired, the deputies returned, and again he said, u Come in eight days." Eight days later they received the same reply ; they then requested to know how long they would be told to return in eight days. He replied: u I shall give the same answer as long as vou ask the same question. I know well enough that God is; I know that He exists; but I cannot say what He is, and I shall never be able to do so." Who can teach what God is but God himself 1 Saint Augustine, before his conversion, frequented church as often as his engagements permitted. He never failed to go on Sunday to hear the discourses of St. Am- brose, Archbishop of Milan. " They were," said he, "ex- cellent expositions of the Word of Truth, and, by dint of hearing them, my heart, touched by the eloquence of this holy man, opened itself to the truth, little by little." After his conversion he Says, "How much, O God, did I weep on hearing Thy hymns and canticles ! being exceedingly moved by the harmonious voices of Thy Church. Their enchanting sounds charmed mine ears, as Thy truth distilled into my heart, whence arose the af- fection of devotion, and sweet tears flowed from my eyes which yielded me much comfort."(2) The same holy doctor has said, " That which touches (1) "All Holy Scripture ought to bo read with that spirit with which it was made."—uImitation," Book I., ch. v. (2) 44 Confessions," Book VIII., c. vi.THE NECESSITY OF REVELATION. 17 me most upon earth, 0 my God, is to hear Thy voice in the divine books of Holy Scripture. This pleasure sur- passes all others. (1) Grant, Lord, that I may be de- liciously nourished with Thy holy word, since its delica- cies are always pure and holy. Grant also that it may never happen to me to deceive myself, or others, by mis- taking its meaning." u What books do you read? said Saturnin, Proconsul under the Emperor Severas, to Sperat, a confessor of the faith. The latter answered : u The four Gospels of Our Lord Jesus Christ, and the Epistles of the Apostle St. Paul." Exercises.—What is man's first and chief concern? What do you mean by revealed truth ? How do you prove the authenticity of the Scriptures? How has the Church always regarded these books? Show by the fourth and eighth lines of Keble's stanzas that the study of the world's creation Surprises, interests and instructs. What do the Holy Scriptures and tradition contain? Show from Jewish customs and Christian records how tradition is reliable. Give some instances where the Holy Bible does not flatter Jewish vanity. Com- pare your Ancient History with what is here said about great names of antiquity. Ask your teacher to relate something about Julian the Apos- tate, Celsus and Porphyry; also to tell you about John Henry Newman, —his learning, conversion, raising to the Cardinalate; about his latest contribution to the Nineteenth Century, on this very subject of " Holy Scripture" (March No., 1884). How many names< of distinguished converts can you recall? Relate any pleasant thing you remem- ber about their conversion. Have you, or father and mother, read Ives' Trials of a Mind, Faber's Life and Letters, and similar books, in which the history of such conversions is so charmingly given ? What makes Rousseau's evidence in favor of the Sacred Writings so valu- able ? Show how this tallies with Christ's declaration : Out of thine own mouth I condemn____etc. (1) "Eye of God's word, where'er we turn, Ever upon us ! Thy keen gaze Can all the depths of sin discern, Unravel every bosom's maze, " Who that hath felt Thy glance of dread Thrill through his heart's remotest cells, About his path, about his bed, Can doubt what spirit in Thee dwells ? "—Keble.18 a christian's duty. CHAPTER III. " I BELIEVE IN GOD." Of the Existence of God. " There is a power, all other powers, above, Whose name is Goodness, and His nature Lovo: Who called the infant universe to light i From central nothing and circumfluent night. On His great Providence all worlds depend, As trembling atoms to their centre tend; In Nature's face His glory shines confess'd, She wears His sacred Image on her breast; His Spirit breathes in every living soul; His bounty feeds, His presence fills the whole. Though seen, invisible ; though felt, unknown ; All that exist, exist in Him alone."—Montgomery. There is a God. This is a truth which presents itself to the mind, so to speak, naturally. We have but to open our eyes and reflect a moment, in order to perceive it. All that is external to ourselves, as well as all that is in ourselves, proves it. Look upon the heavens : ivhat a magnificent sight! Who has made this immense vault, and suspended in it oil these sparkling orbs ?(1) The sun, ivhich everywhere diffuses his light and heat ; the moon and the stars, ivhich shine in the fir- mament nightly, recommencing each day their majestic course with such truly admirable regularity. (2) (1) " The spacious firmament on high. With all the blue, ethereal sky, And spangled heavens, a shining frame, Their great Original proclaim."— Addison, (2) " The sad and solemn night Hath yet her multitude of cheerful fires: The glorious hosts of light Walk the dark hemisphere till she retires; All through her silent watches, gliding slow, Her constellations come, and climb the heavens, and go." —Bryant.THE EXISTENCE OF GOD. 19 Look again at the earth, and consider the innumerable mul- titude of animals with which it is inhabited ; the infinite va- riety of trees, plants and fruits which cover it; the prodigious quantity of fish which the sea contains. Who is the author of all these wonders, if it be not God ? Would it not be the height of extravagance to attribute all this to chance ? At sight of a splendid palace, we unhesitatingly judge that it has had a skilled architect who designed it, and in- telligent workmen to carry out his plans. If we see a beautiful picture, we doubt not that some excellent paint- er conceived the design and executed it. And if some one were to tell us that this was all the result of chance ; that the stones of the edifice were chiselled and arranged by themselves ; that the colors of the picture came and ar- ranged themselves upon the canvas, shading themselves in such beautiful order, and completing such a regular design ;—should we not regard such an one as mad ? What, then, is the folly of him who looks upon the uni- verse as the work of chance ! (1) In short, let us contemplate ourselves.(2) Look at this body, composed of such an astonishing multitude of muscles and organs, arranged ivith such admirable regularity. Everywhere we perceive a special plan,. We see that He who willed to call man into existence, desired to give him a manif est proof of His infinite ivisdom. What other than God could have made so wonderf ul a ivork ?(3) (1) " When infidels find in the strata of the earth's crust some fragments of flintstone bearing the form of an arrowhead or spearhead, of a knife or a scraper, they exclaim: ' Behold the work of design ! These weapons must have been shaped by the hand of man.' Why, then, should they discover no trace of design in the admirable order which pervades the universe V'—Jouin. (2) The inscription on the Temple of Philosophy at Athens is, " Know Thyself." (3) The admirable work of Sir Charles Bell on The Human Hand may be most profitably studied in tliis connection.20 a christian's duty. And we have not a body only: we have also a soul. This soul is immaterial; for matter is incapable of thought. It must, then7 be a spirit. It is meanwhile united to the body, and this union is so close, that when the body is in good condition a sweet joy diffuses itself through the soul, and when it is ailing, the soul suffers also.(l) Who but God could have thus joined two such opposing substances, and established between them such an admirable relation f These feelings of joy or sorrow that we experience are a fresh proof of the existence of a God, for these feelings are independent of ourselves. If we could procure them, or avoid them, we should always be in joy, and never ex- perience sorrow. We have, then, a sovereign and all-powerful Master, up- on whom we depend, and who disposes of us as He wills. This supreme Master is God. Hence the cry, " My God!" which escapes us in any unforeseen or unexpected sor- row—an indeliberate expression, which is not the result of reflection, but the testimony of a soul by nature Chris- tian, as Tertullian remarks. It is therefore true that tve carry ivithin us the impress of divinity (2) stamped in indelible characters. Hence there has never been a people, however savage and barbarous, but has acknowledged a Deity. Races are found without the smallest acquaintance with the arts and sciences, but none have been discovered without a God. Very many have gone astray in substituting idols for the true God, but all have felt the necessity of recognizing a divinity. (1) Alluded to by Juvenal : "Mens sana in corpore sano "A sound mind in a healthy body.' (2) "Whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire, . This longing after immortality ? 'Tis the Divinity that stirs within us; 'Tis Heaven itself that points out a hereafter, And intimates eternity to man."—Addison.THE EXISTENCE OF GOD. 21 This universal agreement between all men, of all coun- tries, in all ages, so widely differing in genius and man- ners, and separated by immense intervals of time and place, cannot be merely arbitrary. It can only proceed from the u light which enlighteneth every man/7 aiad which God has placed in the soul in such visible characters that even the simplest cannot mistake them. "The heavens declare the glory of God, and the fir- mament proclaims the wonders of His power." Who besides He could have said to the sun, u Come forth from nothingness, and preside over the day" ? Who else could have said to the moon, " Appear, and be the torch of night" ? (1) All creatures tell us that they were not made of themselves, but by God. Who but He could make the seed to germinate in the womb of earth, giving it increase, regulating the succession of days and nights, and fixing the unvarying order of the seasons f All these proclaim the existence of God. A wicked young man, as frivolous in his reasoning as in his person, presented himself one day before that learned and pious ecclesiastic, M. Oudin. li Sir/' said he, abruptly, u I feel much pleasure in in- forming you that I am an atheist." At these words the man of God recoiled with horror, and, taking up an eye- glass which was handy, he fixed his gaze upon this insane youth. " What are you staring at, sir?" asked (1) " Thou sun, of this great world both eye and soul, Acknowledge Him thy Creator ; sound His praise In thy eternal course. Moon, that now meet'st the orient sun*, now fly'st With the fixed stars, fixed in their orb that Hies : Join voices now with living souls."—Adapted. " Earth with her thousand voices praises God." w- .......—Coleridge.22 a christian's duty. the latter. u I am looking/' said the priest, u at the strange being called an atheist, which I have never seen before." Disconcerted at this remark, the youth disap- peared. (1) La Bruyere remarks, " I should like to see a sober, moderate, chaste and upright man say that there is no God. He would speak disinterestedly ; but such a man is not to be found." u He who says there is no God, ought logically to add at the same time, 6 All men, of all times and in all places, except myself, have been wrong. I have more sense thai* all of them together.' In other words, 'I have no common sense for common sense is nothing less than the common and universal sentiment of the entire world. A man who doubts the existence of God is therefore with- out common sense. This is scarcely tempting.77 (2) One of the most illustrious naturalists, the immortal Linnseus, after a vast and profound study of Nature, (3) exclaims: iCl have beheld the shadow of a God, eternal, boundless, all-powerful, supremely intelligent, and I was as- tounded. I have followed the track of His footsteps in the wild: what strength, what wisdom, what immeasurable perfection in His works, even in the very least of them, and in such as have barely any existence !'7(4) (1) Merault. (2) De Segur. (3) System of Nature. (4)" If we contemplate any natural object, especially any part of an- imated Nature, fully, and in all its bearings, we can arrive only at tliis conclusion : that there is design in the mechanical construction, benevolence shown in the living properties, and that good predom- inates."—Sir Charles Bell, M. D., on "The Hand, Its Mechanism, etc.* as Evincing Design." This simple argument disposes effectually of the Monad theory of Buffon, and the Atomic theory as well. # It is impossible to prove the absence of design and adaptation even in an atom.—See Tyndall, Lecture on Dust.THE UNITY OF GOD. 23 Exebcises.—What proofs of God's existence are found in the heavens and on the earth ? Can the formation of the human body be the result of chance ? What proof of God's existence is found in the soul ? What do you learn from the fact that no nation is found without some divinity ? What does Dr. Bell say about the human hand ? Ask your teacher to tell you what Chateaubriand says about this in his Genius of Christianity. What do you mean by monad and atomic ? Who says in his heart that there is no God ? Show how all worlds de- pend upon God's great providence. What do you mean by " all worlds"? What does another Reader in this series tell about Ad- dison's selection given above ? What comparison is made between the works of a clock and the portions of which the world is made ? How do young people come to talk so glibly about religion, etc. ? Relate the interview between the "strange creature" and M. Oudin. Do you remember the story told in another Reader about "why the finger moves "? Tell it. CHAPTER IV. u I BELIEVE IN GOD/7 ETC. Of the Unity of God. " And I have felt A presence that disturbs me with the joy Of elevated thoughts : a sense sublime Of something far more deeply interfus'd, Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns, And the round ocean and the living air, And the blue sky, and in the mind of man : A motion and a spirit, that impels All thinking things, all objects of all thought, And rolls through all things."—Wordsworth. Faith and Reason, which teach us that there is one God, also teach us that there can be but one ; that there cannot be several, because there is but one Being who is self-existent, and independent of all causes. And is it not evident that, being supremely great, He must24 a christian's duty. be One ? for if He had an equal, He would no longer be the Supreme Being. (1) All God's perfections prove Iiis oneness. There can be only one boundless Being—that is to say, but one who fills all things, and out of whom nothing exists ; there can be but one Being infinitely perfect—that is to say, one possessing all perfection, and out of whom there is no per- fection but is derived from Him. The Divine Majesty can have no equal, because it con- tains in itself all the plenitude of greatness. It is doubt- less matter of astonishment that a truth so clear should have been at one time unknown; and that peoples other- wise much enlightened should have adored a great num- ber of divinities. This gross error was the result of sin. (2) When God created man, He made Himself known to him. From that moment, man was aware that there was but one Supreme Being, the Creator of all things, upon whom all things depended. This pure and holy re- ligion was transmitted by man to his posterity, which (l)uC'est Dieu qui rernplit tout. Le monde, c'est son temple ! (Euvre vivante oil tout l'ecoute et le contemple ! Tout Lui parle et le chante. II est seul, II est Un ! Dans Sa creation tout et joie et sourire : L'etoile qui regarde et le fleur qui respire Tout est flamme ou parfum."—Victor Hugo. (2) " Vanity of men introduced idols into tlie world." (Wisdom xiv. 14.) 11 There were two causes for idolatry : one on the part of man ; the other on the part of the devils. Three things disposed man to idolatry —1st. Irregularity in the affections (Wisdom xiv. 15); 2d. Natural love for statues and pictures.—Gross minds adored as divinities works of art which represented men under striking characters (Wisdom xiii. 11); 3d. Ignorance of the true God. Not considering the excellence of the divine perfections, men withheld from the Supreme Being honors which they proffered to creatures whose beauty and virtue they ad- mired (Wisdom xiii. 1). Thus disposed, men fell easily into the snares of devils. These latter, giving responses in idols, and perform- ing works which were considered miraculous, proposed themselves to the adoration of men ; thus it is written : * All the gods of the Gentiles are devils '(Ps. xcv. 5Thomas, " Sermons."THE UNITY OF GOD. 25 preserved it for awhile. The men of the first age needed only the testimony of their sires to know the existence and unity of God. This tradition was, besides, so conformable to reason, that it seemed as though it could never have been for- gotten or obscured. But Religion demanded sacrifices, and the corruption of human nature gained every day a fresh empire. Thus, in measure as they receded farther from the origin of things, the greater part of men jum- bled together the ideas which they had received from their ancestors, and would no longer worship anything but visible objects. The idea of God was confounded with that of the creature. Hence all objects indicative of some extraordinary power, or from whom anything was to be hoped or feared, were worshipped. The stars were the first objects of this ungodly worship. And soon great kings, conquer- ors, and learned men received divine honors. Such a great evil made strange progress. Men went so far as to adore beasts and reptiles, and, among the majority of men, everything was God save God Himself. In the midst of so much darkness men worshipped even the work of their own hands. They believed themselves able to enclose the Divine Spirit within a statue, and so deeply forgot that God had made them, that, in their turn, they believed themselves able to make God! Every nation had its particular gods. Some presided over the heavens, others over the sea and rivers, others over hell. Nor did they stop here, for soon vices and passions had their altars. It was not rude and barbarous nations only that gave themselves up to this excess of folly and blindness. It26 a christian's duty. was nations the most polished and enlightened on all other points, such as the Egyptians, the Greeks, and the Romans, These nations surpassed all others in their light and knowl- edge, but they were none the less blind in matters of re- ligion. We behold among them great orators, celebrated poets, excellent historians—in a word, the rarest genius of every order.(l) Yet, meanwhile, these nations were in the pro- foundest ignorance respecting the nature of the Deity. And, what would be difficult of belief if unsupported by facts, is, that their errors on this point, although the most absurd of all, were not only the most universal, but also the most deeply rooted and incorrigible. If some sages among them arrived at the knowledge of the oneness of God, they never dared to teach it publicly. Man would never have issued from the darkness of idola- try had no supernatural light come to the aid of Reason, and had not God spoken Himself to man, to teach him what Re is, and how He wills to be honored. We ourselves should be plunged in this blindness, if the Lord had not deigned to en- lighten us also. But, thanks to His goodness, the very first lessons taught us in infancy caused us to learn more than the sages of paganism ever knew. Epictetus, on being asked what God was, replied: u If I could tell you what God is, God would not be what He is, and I should be God. God alone can say what He is." (1) 4' The invisible things of Him, from the creation of the world, are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made : His eternal power also and divinityRomans i. 20. Why, t ieij, were they so blind in matters of religion ? St. Paul an- swers " As they liked not to have God in their knowledge, God de- livered them up to a reprobate sense."—Ibid. i. 28.THE PERFECTIONS OF GOD. 27 The belief in one only God, although a verity conceived by reason, is, above all, based upon revelation : "Hear, 0 Israel, the Lord our God is One." There is but 66 One Lord ; one faith ; one Baptism ; one God and Father of all, who is above all." Exercises. - What do Faith and Reason teach us concerning God ': Could man have emerged from idolatry unaided ? Show to what ex- cesses ad vanced pagan nations gave way. What is a rare genius ? Name some of ancient times. Bee how many quotations from Holy Scrip- ture you can give speaking of God, the Most Blessed Trinity, the Di- vine Persons, etc. Name some plants, animals,or planets that have been adored by the ancients. Relate, or ask your teacher to relate, some amusing stories about the Egyptians, Persians, and others. Why have so many nations, converted first, since fallen away so sadly ? What is meant by saying that religion demands sacrifices ? What sacrifice must we offer to be true Christians ? Show how the missionaries in Amer- ica induced the Indians to make great sacrifices. Have you read any pleasant sketches about saints among the savages ? Try to get Miss Dor- sey's stories on this subject. Ask your teacher to relate some pleas- ant stories about the Indians and the Blackgowns, CHAPTER V. UI BELIEVE IN GOD," ETC. The Perfections of God. " God is a spirit, veil'd from human sight In secret darkness of eternal light; Through all the glory of His works we trace The hidings of His counsel and His face; Nature and time, and change and fate fulfil, Unknown, unknowing, His mysterious will; Mercies and judgments mark Him every hour Supreme in grace and infinite in power." —Montgomery. God is so gyeat, and our minds are so limited,, that it is 'impossible for us to comprehend what He is. We can only know Him intperfectly by the light of faith and reason.28 A CHRISTIAN S DUTY. Nevertheless, this knowledge, all imperfect though it be, suffices man in this life. Nothing conveys a grander idea of God than that which He has said Himself: u 1 am who am ! v that is, the Being by excellence, the source of all that is, and upon whom all things depend. It results from this that God possesses all perfections, and in a su- preme degree. God is a spirit—that is, a pa re intelligence, without either body, form, or color. He resembles nothing of all the ob- jects that surround us and strike the senses. All that we see and handle is material, and an infinitely perfect Being is immaterial. The angels, and our own souls, are intelligences, but their knowledge and ours is limited and imperfect. That of God embraces everything. God is eternal. He was before all things, since He created all. He was before all time, and had no begin- ning, and will never have an end. Ere the birth of the O 7 a«:es, God existed in Himself, and there was none but o 7 ' Him alone. God is Almighty.(1) He can do all things; He does all things that He wills. By His word He drew forth from nothing all creatures ; and He could create a thou- sand other worlds if He deemed it suitable. u He,'7 says the Apostle, " calleth those things that are not as those that are," and they obey His voice. Nothing, there- fore, is impossible to Him; nothing is even difficult. The orbs of heaven are hung in space without other sup- port than His will. The sea respects His behests and never oversteps the bounds which He has prescribed. (1) " How dread are Thine eternal years, 0 everlasting Lord! By prostrate spirits day and night Incessantly adored.'' - Faber.THE PERFECTIONS OF GOD. 29 All Nature follows the laws imposed upon it by Him. Fire, and wind, and tempest, obey His voice. (1) It is He who covers the heavens with clouds, and prepares the rain to water the earth. It is He, in short, who every year presents to our admiring gaze the resurrection of en- tire Nature. - God is independent. The source of all that is, He holds His Being from Himself alone. The inexhaustible source of all good, He distributes His gifts to whom He pleases. Supremely happy, He has need of none : He suffices to Himself. Absolute master of all things, He has neither superior nor equal. As for ourselves, we are in a state of continual dependence upon God. It is Hex who preserves and sustains us. Without Him, we should fall at any moment into the nothingness from which He drew us. Without His aid we could do nothing. God is immutable. That which He is, He has always been, and will be forever. u I am Jehovah ; I change not." Man is never in a fixed and permanent condition. His body, subject to the revolutions of different ages, pass- es successively from strength to weakness, from health to sickness, from life to death.(2) His will changes, whether by inconstancy, or because he discovers motives for aban- doning that which he«ought, or to seek what he neglected. (1) ''They know the Almighty's power, Who, when the whirlwinds rock the topmost grove, Stand in the shade and hear The tumult, with a deep, exultant fear; How, in their fiercest sway, Curb'd by some power unseen, they die away ; Like a bold steed that owtis his rider's arm, Proud to be check'd and soothed by that o'ermastering charm." — Christian Year (2) It is pretended that the entire body of man changes or renews its substance every seven years.30 a christian's duty. But in God there is no change, nor even the " shadow of alteration." God is infinite : that is, His essence and perfections are unlimited. He has every perfection, and in Him each per- fection is infinite. It is His nature to be supremely perfect Hence God is not only good, but infinitely good; He is not only just, but infinitely just. And so on with all His other perfections ; as nothing can limit their number, so nothing can limit their greatness. " Thou roouldst be very small, 0 my God" says St. Francis de Sales, "if Thou couldst be comprehended by minds so small as ours" God is immense, because He is in Heaven, upon earth, and everywhere. It is He who animates all thing, sustains all things, and imparts to all things life and motion. He is in all things, or, rather, all things are in Him. His Presence stretches beyond the confines of the Universe. He might create another, and, if He did, this new uni- verse would be within the extent of His immensity. It is therefore certain that we are continually beneath the eye of God. He hears all our words, sees all our actions 5 he is even at the bottom of our hearts, and knows 'all our thoughts and all our desires. When we do wrong, we do it in His presence. The thickest darkness cannot hide us from His gaze; the profour^est night with Him is as bright as day. The evidence of this truth is even imprinted on our own hearts. For, whence proceeds that' remorse which agitates us when we have committed some evil deed, although unperceived by any one ? Whence come those reproaches, so keen and bitter, which con- science makes at such a time?.(l) In vain the sinner (1) 4' The averted cheek, in loneliest dell, Is conscious of a gaze it cannot bear : The leaves that rustle near us seem to tell Our heart's sad secret to the silent air."—Keble,THE PERFECTIONS OF GOD. 31 strives to appease it ; the piercing cry of that inner voice overcomes all opposition. Vainly he flies from his own heart, and hastens to escape from himself, in order not to be overwhelmed with confusion before a judge which re- proaches him with his crime w7herever he goes. He is seized with fear and covered with shame before this un- seen censor, (1) always active in presenting to him the hid- eousness of his sin, in order to bring him to detest it. Let us never forget that God is always with us? and that we are never alone. However far from the sight of men, in the most retired spot, in the profoundest soli- tude, we have an invisible witness who accompanies us and marks all our actions. This thought will estrange us from evil. The enemy of our soul will become weakened, and his efforts will be powerless, so long as we maintain the remembrance of the presence of God. And how can we dare commit sin be- neath His eye ! Shall we have the temerity to do in His presence what we would not do in the sight of a father or a master? This was the lesson which Tobias gave of old to his son. "My son," said he, u all the days of thy life have God in thy mind." And St. Augustine gives the same advice : u If any one would lead thee into sin, say to him, 6 Find me a place where God will not behold me ; but since there is no place where He is not pres- ent, say no more to me ; I am not so wicked as to offend beneath His eyes.' v This thought, God sees me, willsus- (1) . " Shut up as in a crumbling tomb, Girt round with blackness as a solid wall : * * •* * * * * * * She howled aloud, ' I am on fire within!' There came no echo of reply; t What is it that will take away my sin, And save me, lest I die?' "—Tennyson.32 a christian's duty. tain us against the attacks of Satan. It will give us strength to overcome him, and encourage us to fulfil our duties faithfully. God governs all things. He takes care of all His crea- tures, and this care is called Providence. (1) Nothing takes place in this world without His command or by His permission. The good which occurs is done by His order. God approves of it. He wills it, ordains it, and will re- ward it. The evil which takes place is not by His com- mand. He forbids it, and will punish it. (2) But He does not hinder it, because He will not fetter our liberty, and because He is sufficiently powerful to bring good out of evil itself. Think not then that God abandons His crea- tures to chance, after having made them. Since He has condescended to create them, it is not beneath Him to govern them. This Providence not only watches over empires and kingdoms : its attention is directed to every creature. " Not a sparrow falls to the ground without the order of your heavenly Father —"The very hairs of your head are all numbered," says Our Lord Himself. It is this Providence which every year covers the earth with har- vests, makes the plants to grow, loads the trees with fruit, and watches over all the requirements of His creatures with a truly paternal care. (3) It feeds the birds of the (1) '"'Tis Thine whate'er is pleasant, good, or fair ; All Nature is Thy province, life Thy care "—Dryden. (2) "Who shall say to Thee : What hast Thou done ? or who shall withstand Thy judgment ? or who shall come to be a revenger of wicked men ? or who shall accuse Thee if the nations perish, which Thou hast made ? For there is no other God but Thou, who hast care of all, that Thou shouldst show that Thou dost not give judgment unjustly."—Wisdom xii. 12-13. (3) " Thou art as much His care as if, beside, Nor men nor angels lived in Heaven or earth. Thus sunbeams pour alike their glorious tide To light up worlds, or wake an insect's mirth. They shine and shine with unexhausted store : Thou art thy Saviour's darling : wish no more.Keble.THE PERFECTIONS OF GOD. 33 air, the fishes in the sea, and every animal upon the globe.(1) Let us not, however, suppose that this attention costs God anything, or that His unalterable repose is disturbed. Everything is equally easy to an infinite wisdom and pow- er. If a king only busies himself with great matters, with- out going into the details of the smaller things which tran- spire in his kingdom, it is because a king, having but a limited understanding, could not occupy himself with smaller matters without neglecting the greater. But God's wisdom, being infinite, embraces all without effort or trouble. From this principle of a Providence proceed two im- portant duties for man. The first is,:—to submit unreservedly to the guidance of this Providence. We should worship it alike in the evil that befalls us as in the good ; in adversity as in pros- perity, in sickness and suffering as in health and joy. We should then say, u God wills it, and He only wills it for my good j may His holy name be praised ! " If sometimes He permits the good man to be in misery while the wicked enjoys abundance, it is that He may test his virtue in order to reward it magnificently in another life. It is because He knows that this passing affliction is but a means of securing his eternal salvation. (2) (1) "Take Thou my cup, and it With joy or sorrow fill, As seemeth best to Thee ; Choose Thou my good or ill."—Bonar. ('2) "I think, if thou couldst know, O soul that will complain, What lies concealed below Our burden and our pain; How just our anguish brings Nearer those longed-for things We seek for now in vain. — I think thou wouldst rejoice and not complain.34 A CHRISTIANS DUTY. The second duty is to trust in Providence and to ex- pect from God's goodness, without anxiety, all that is need- ful for this life and the next. " Consider the birds of the air," says Our Lord; " they sow not, neither do they reap ; yet God feedeth them. Are ye not of much more value than they ? Behold the lilies of the field how they grow ; they labor not, neither do they spin ; but I say unto you that not even Solomon, in all his glory, was arrayed as one of these. And if God doth so clothe the grass of the field, which is to day, and to-morrow is cast into the oven, how much more care will He take of you who are His chil dren ! " It would be an insult to Him to be disquieted, and to lack confidence in His paternal bounty. Let us then adore His Providence, whatever happens us. Our destiny cannot be in better hands. Such a kind Father will never forsake the children who confide in His pater- nal Providence. " X think, if thou couldst see, With thy dim mortal sight, How meanings, dark to thee, Are shadows hiding light: Truth's efforts crossed and vexed, Life's purpose all perplexed, — If thou couldst see them right, I think that they would seem Ail clear, and wise, and bright. "And yet thou canst not know, And yet thou canst not see; Wisdom and sight are slow In poor humanity. If thou couldst trust, poor soul, In Him who rules the whole, Thou wouldst find peace and rest ; Wisdom and sight are well, but trust is best." — Procter. " jO Lord ! how happy should we be If we could cast our care on Thee, If we from self could rest, And feel at heart that One above, In perfect wisdom, perfect love, Is working for the best ! "• —Faber.THE PERFECTIONS OF GOD. 35 In a rather crowded gathering, an inconsiderate young man said to a child who had just returned from Cate- chism : "I will give you a picture if you will tell me where God is." The child replied, u And I will give you two if you will tell me where He is not." Every one ap- plauded this sally, at which the young man was slightly disconcerted. The Holy Scriptures are full of admirable instances of the goodness of God toward His creatures. We may cite the amiable familiarity with which He deigned to con- verse with Abraham, with Moses, with Jonas • the as- tonishing wonders which He performed for the Israelites in the desert; or rather, we may cite all the economy and all the mysteries of religion, which are so many traits of the ineffable goodness of our God. Flatterers were praising Canute, King of England. What did this wise prince do ? He seated himself on the seashore when the tide was coming in, and commanded the impetuous element to respect him. We can easily imag- ine that he was not . obeyed. Turning then to his cour- tifers, he exclaimed, u You see how much power I have." Mons. de Chantal, having been mortally wounded while hunting, through the carelessness of a friend, com- forted him by saying, " My friend, that dart had been sent from on high ere it was shot by thy hand." (1) Madame de Sevigne, speaking of Turenne, says that u the cannon which killed that great man had been load- ed from all eternity." This thought is as true as it is energetically expressed. (2) (1 j Life of St. Francis de Chantal. (2; Letters of Madame de Serigne.36 a christian's duty. Exercises, —Can we comprehend what God really is?—and why not ? What do we know of God? Why do you say that God is infinite? Does God govern all things ?—and if so, why is evil permitted in the world ? Why must God be immutable ? What causes the sinner con- tinual worry ? Relate St. Augustine's experience in reference to God's presence. Show how far God's providence extends. Give some Scrip- ture proofs. What duties are imposed by our belief in Divine Provi- dence ? Give King Canute's wise reply to his flatterers in your own words. What celebrated Congregation of ladies did St. Jane Frances de Chantal found ? What Saint helped her? Do you know anything about St. Francis de Sales ? If not, ask your teacher to tell you. CHAPTER VI. u i believe in god," etc. Mystery of the Most Holy Trinity. " Three in One, and One in Three, Ruler of the earth and sea, Hear us while we lift to Thee Holy chant and psalm. " Light of Light, with morning shine, Lift on us Thy light divine, And let charity benign Breathe on us her balm. '' Light of Light, when falls the even, Let it close o'er sins forgiven, Fold us in the peace of Heaven, Shed a holy calm. " Three in One, and One in Three, Dimly here we worship Thee ; With the Saints, hereafter, we Hope to bear the palm." —Caswell. Although God in His nature is One, there are nevertheless in God, three Persons, the Father, the Son, and the, Holy Ghost. This is what is called the. mystery of the Most Holt Trinity.MYSTERY OF THE MOST HOLY TRINITY. 37 God Himself revealed this mystery in a sensible manr ner at the Baptism of Jesus Christ. Then the voice of the Father was heard publicly recognizing him as His be- loved Son, and the Holy Spirit was seen descending upon Him in the form of a dove. Jesus Christ also declared it, when He commanded His Apostles to baptize all nations in the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, thus indicating that these three persons are but one God. This is confirmed by St. John's words, u There are three which bear witness in Heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost, and these three are one.77 This mystery is the greatest object of our faith. There is none other in our religion of wThich we so fre- quently recall the remembrance. All our prayers begin and end with the invocation of the Most Holy Trinity. The sign of the Cross, which so often recurs in the ser- vices of the Church, and in the private acts of Christians, is made in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. While we must not divide the Divine Nature, which is One, we must also avoid the confusion of Persons, which are distinct one from the other. The Son is the same God as the Father, but He is not the same person ; the Holy Spirit is the same God as the Father and the Son, but He is also not the same person. These three persons are not three Gods, but one only God. They have but one and the same Divinity, one and the same Nature. It follows, therefore, that these three persons are equal in everything, and that one is not greater, nor more powerful, nor more ancient than the88 A CHRISTIAN S DUTY. other two, since they are all three of the same greatness, power and eternity.(1) This mystery, that is incomprehensible truth, is above our reason 5 but it is not contrary to reason. We do not say three Gods make only one God, but three persons make but one God. Nor must we imagine three persons in body and soul like ourselves. The three persons in God are purely spiritual. The first person of this adorable mystery is the Father ; the second is the Son, begotten of the Father from all eternity; the third is the Holy Spirit, u who proceedeth from the Father and the Son." This is all that it has pleased God to reveal to us respect- ing the mystery of the Holy Trinity—a mystery so sublime that the human mind cannot grasp it. (2) But God, who is Truth itself, and who can neither be deceived, nor deceive us, hath revealed it to us. We ought therefore to believe it upon the infallible authority of His word. Nothing is more reasonable than to submit our reason to the (1) As far as definition of this dogma can be given, St. Athanasius, its special champion (whose symbol is so much abhorred by certain heretics), has given us decidedly the best, both for brevity and or- thodoxy. He hints at the modern heresy of the Swedenborgians in these words : " Neither confounding the Persons nor dividing the substance." This summary can never be bettered : " The Father is made of none, neither created nor begotten ; the Son is of the Father alone, neither made nor created, but begotten ; the Holy Ghost is of the Father and the Son, neither made, nor created, nor begot- ten, but proceeding. And, in this Trinity, none is before or after another, none is greater or less than another but the whole three Persons are co-eternal together and co-equal."—Creed of St. Athci- nashis' (from the Greek). (2) " Mysteries: Truths of religion inaccessible to reason, which God has revealed. There are such mysteries : truth is co-extensive with being ; being is infinite, truth is likewise infinite. We must admit truths surpassing our understanding : else the finite would be the measure of the infinite. '' God can reveal mysteries, for He must have the power of communi- cating truth to rational beings, and man; as a rational being, can re- ceive this knowledge."—Adapted from Jouin.MYSTERY OF THE MOST HOLY TRINITY. 39 authority of God; for it is not in relation to God alone that our reason is faulty. How many natural things there are that we cannot understand, and ivhich are none the less sure and certain ! Can we understand how a grain of wheat east into the ground can produce a multitude of others ? how from a dry trunk there can spring forth leaves and flowers in endless variety, fruits of exquisite flavor, and a thousand other phenomena which Nature presents to us daily? When a learned astronomer speaks to his pupils of the immensity of the heavens, the number of the stars, their greatness, their distance, and the velocity of their mo- tion ; when he tells them, for instance, that the sun is 1,400,000 times larger than the earth, and that his dis- tance from us is 95,000,000 miles, they cannot under- stand him. Bat, reflecting that they are only children, they believe it upon the word of a man in whom they have confidence. In respect to the nature of God all men are but as children. (1) One day they will attain to the fulness of perfect years; then the darkness will be dissipated, and they will see clearly all which they can- not now either penetrate or comprehend. (2) Saint Au- gustine says, " It is a temerity to try to solve this mys- tery during the present life. 'To believe it by the light of faith is the result of piety ; to contemplate it in another life is supreme felicity." There is one image of the Trinity which shines re- splendent in our souls. Like to the Father, the soul possesses being; like the Son, intelligence; like the (1) "And men But children of a larger growth."—Dryden. (2) "Now we see in a mirror darkly , but then face to face "—I Cor x Hi. 12.40 a christian's duty. Holy Ghost, love. Like the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, it possesses in its being, its intelligence and love, the same felicity and the same life. And these three things, being, intelligence, and will, form but one substance, one only soul, as the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost form but one only God. And, to com- plete the resemblance, the intelligence is born of being, as the Son is begotten of the Father ; love proceeds from being and intelligence, as the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son. Two men, blind from birth, were conversing together. One was pious and well informed, the other ignorant and godless. The following conversation ensued : First blind man. I should like to know what God was doing for all eternity before He created the world. Second. And what shall I gain by a useless inquiry into what you were doing before I knew you ? God was occu- pied with Himself, and thought about digging a hell for those who will not believe in Him, or refuse to serve Him. First. How can there be three persons in God, of which each one is God, although there is but one God ? That is quite beyond me, and it is folly to believe what one does not understand. Second. I firmly believe that there is but one God in three persons really distinct, who are God, and in doing so I am not acting like a fool, but a wise man. First. Prove that, and I will make you a present of my stick, which is very durable and, they tell me, very fine. Second. How do you know that your stick is fine ? Does a blind man understand what beauty is ? We blind un- derstand nothing of what is called color. Who could makeMYSTERY OF THE MOST HOLY TRINITY. 41 us understand the difference between red and yellow, green and blue ? Are we to deny that there are colors, and that there is a difference between them, until such time as we are able to understand all about it ? First. No ; because we have so many reasons for be- lieving it. All men who are not blind say so. Second. Men tell us there are colors, and we believe them; God reveals His mysteries, and we will not believe Him. Have we not more reason for belie ving in the Holy Trinity and the other mysteries, than in the existence of col- ors ? The Christian religion, which teaches us these mys- teries, is proved to be divine. Inform yourself about it. Let us believe, and live till we die Christian-like, and we shall go to Heaven. When we get there, we shall be blind no longer ; we shall see God as He is, u face to face." " To seek to gauge the mystery of the Most Holy Trin- ity is a dangerous curiosity. To admit it and believe it, as the Catholic Church does—this alone can afford us cer- tainty. To contemplate this mystery in all its profundi- ty and beauty, will be the highest degree of the beatitude of eternity.?,(l) * Supplementary Note. The instance of St. Patrick teaching the Celts this mys- tery by means of the shamrock is well known. But there is another and still more beautiful illustration of tri-unity. All the colors of the prism may be resolved into three primary ones, which again form the pure white light. It is safe always to reason from the lesser to the greater. This dogma is a mystery ; the Church does not attempt to (1) St. Bernard.4:2 a christian's duty. explain it. This attempt has led to no end of heresies, nota- bly Arianism, the parent of modern IJnitarianism. We ac- cept facts with unquestioning adhesion which are equally incapable of proof. For instance, we believe that we live, but no one has ever been able to demonstrate ivhat life ?s.(l) We believe in pain, and can trace its cause, but this is all we know. There is really more evidence logi- cally of the existence of the Trinity than of the existence of life and pain. They are all beyond reason, but not con- trary to it. Exekcises. —What do you understand by the mystery of the Holy Trinity ? Is there any difference between the Divine Persons ? Is this mystery contrary to reason? Is it proper to submit our reason to authority, and why ? How and when was the Most Blessed Trinity sensibly made known? What is the difference between being above reason and contrary to reason? Give some examples of the difference. What does Dryden mean by saying that men are " but children of a larger growth " ? Give the blind men's dialogue in your own words. Ask your teacher to relate the legend of the child trying to empty the ocean with a shell ; and the reply St. Bernard's young brother gave to those who were about entering a monastery. CHAPTER VII. " i believe in god, the father almighty, creator of heaven and earth. Of the Creation. " God's world is bathed in beauty, God's world is steeped in light, It is the self-same glory That makes the day so bright, Which thrills the earth with music, Or hangs the stars in night. (1) This is shown with wonderful force in the late Lord Lytton s A Strange Story, where the supposition of Leibnitz that life is a gas is ably reviewed,THE CREATION. 48 44 Hid in. earth's mines of silver. Floating on clouds above, Kinging in Autumn's tempests, Murmured by every dove, One thought fills God's creation: His own great name of Love. 4 God's w'orld has one great echo ; Whether calm blue mists are curled, Or lingering dewdrops quiver, Or red storms are unfurled : The same deep love is throbbing Through the great heart of God's world." ■—Procter. The world which we behold has not always existed. The evidence of its newness is palpable ; it bears mani- fest signs of it. If we ascend toward the epoch which the sacred writings fix upon as that of the creation of the world, we find all things start from that date—arts, science, nations, empires. No monument, no fact, no history, de- monstrates that the world existed previously. The book which fixes this date for the creation of the world is the most ancient of all books. It is also, like the rest of the Bible, the most authentic and worthy of credence. The first words of this book are: "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth ; " that is to say, out of nothing He made all things. (1) God existed by Him- self, and nothing existed besides Him. At a moment chosen by Himself, the heavens and the earth issued forth from nothingness. He created them by His sole word, by (1) "Pantheists assert that creation is impossible because we cannot form a conception of it. That we cannot lorm a representation, a picture in the mind, of the creation, is true ; but who cannot conceive of something which, though not now existing, may be made to exist by some power ? This power ultimately is God, the Self-Existent Being, Now, God cannot produce the creature by drawing it out of Himself or by dividing Himself, because He is a pure spirit, and is not subject to cftange. Hence the creature can owe its existence only to the om- nipotent act of the will of God."—Jouin,44 a christian's ditty. His simple will. " God spake the word and it was done ; He commanded, and they were created." The voice of God is His Almighty Will, Let us transport ourselves in spirit to the moment of the world's creation. What astonishment would have seized upon us, on beholding, at each word of the Almigh- ty, a crowd of such beautiful and perfect creatures appear ! God spent six days at this great work. He might have done it in an instant, but He designed to teach us that He is supremely free, and acts unconstrainedly and as He pleases. Upon the first day He created the heavens, the earth, and the waters. Then He said, "Let there be light, and light was." A simple word, (1) yet full of majesty and power. Upon the second day He created the firmament—that is to say, the vast vault wrhich we call the sky. u Let there be a firmament,'7 said the Lord, "and it was so." The firmament was then unillumined ; the sun and the stars which now render it so brilliant did not exist. It was an immense tent, unadorned. Upon the third day God gathered the waters, which were spread everywhere, into one place, and commanded the earth to produce plants and trees. At His word, an arid and sterile plain suddenly became sown with laughing meadows, rich valleys, mountains and hills, forest-crowned, gemmed with flowers and fruits of every kind. And what is still more marvellous is, that each plant at the same (1) Infidels accuse the Church of changing her lines by assigning a meaning of indefinite periods to the expression day in the first chap- ter of Genesis. But the Church has never defined in what precise meaning this word, as found in Genesis, is to be taken. St. Augustine, well nigh fifteen centuries ago, gave to this word an allegorical mean- ing, and his interpretation has never been censured. Catholic writers were always at liberty to assign to this word that signification which they looked upon as more closely in accordance with the sacred text. So long, therefore, as the lately discovered fossil remains did notTHE " CREATION. 45 time received the power of reproduction bv self-contained seed. The fourth day, God created the sun and the moon, adorning the firmament with that multitude of stars which charm our eyes and astonish our imagination. The fifth day God created the fishes and the birds 5 say- ing : u Let the waters bring forth abundantly the creeping creature having life, and fowl that may fly over the earth under the firmament of Heaven." And this word filled the sea with inhabitants, and peopled the air with an infinite number of birds. The sixth day, God created the animals : u Let the earth bring forth the living creature in its kind, cattle and creeping things and beasts of the earth, according to their kinds, and it was so.'' Thus were created the innumerable animals that inhabit the earth, from the tiniest worm to] the enormous elephant; from the bee in our gardens to the mountain eagle ; from the insignif- icant reptile' to those monstrous serpents which are the terror of the desert ; from the imperceptible an- imalcule to those moving mountains which agitate the deep. What an admirable variety in their form and disposition ! To some is given strength, to others in- dustry ; to all, the qualifications necessary to fulfil their destiny. At length, all other creatures being named, afford any motive for attributing to th e term day a meaning at variance with the usual one, Catholics commonly accepted it in this obvious way, for it is in conformity with a general rule wisely followed, that Scriptural words ought to be taken in their literal sense, unless there be valid grounds for another interpretation. It is enough for us that the word day, in the first chapter of Genesis, may have the signification of period, without any violence to the sacred text, and that the Church is far from forbidding such an explanation.—See Lvell, Molloy, Wal- worth, Chateaubriand and Jouin.46 A CHRISTIANS DUTY. God willed to give them a master, and so created the first man, whom He called Adam. Nothing can be more ridiculous than the system of the ancient philosophers respecting the creation of the world. Some believed the world to be eternal; others ascribed its formation to chance. Democritus, who retired to the tombs in order not to be disturbed by the traffic of the living, attributed the creation of the world, and even human freedom, to a fortuitous concurrence of atoms. This system, which was also that of Epicurus and Lucre- tius, dishonors the mind of man. According to Thales, the origin of all things is water. Anaximenes thought it was air, and Heraclitus, fire. One philosopher pretends that man was born of the sea-foam warmed by the sunbeams, and another that he descended from the oyster. The oyster, in its perfection, became a fish, the fish became an amphibious animal, the amphibious animal a quadruped, the quadruped a monkey, and the latter, at its perfect development, be- came a man. (i) Of what delirium is not man capable, when unenlight- ened and guided by Faith, and possessing no other light bat reason ! Exercises.—Has the world always existed ? Relate in order the work of the six days of Creation. During geography or Catechism, some time, ask your teacher to give you the two views of the duration, or meaning of ''days," as found in The Genius of Christianity, by Chateaubriand, and The Gentle Skeptic, by Rev. F. Walworth. It you are sufficiently advanced, study and find the sameness existing between those old-time theories about man, and what so-called phil- osophers of to-day advance. (See Note 4.) (1) The Venerable author here anticipates Darwinism, so widely discussed in our day."Ai® WMEfdg ©HAS ©puBoVi, a KINEHL ©©WMj MOlfSI^QKI© AM® KHKgKW V® PB^YEB, ©©QKHrffKM© ffMEIrJE 0© WOfKIQIK] W WgASRP WMQ@K! "ffBOJlS SHE W30E) A®? TOEKEa'''THE ANGELS. 47 SECTION II. OF ANGELS AND OF MEN. Angels and men are the most perfect creatures which God has created, because they alone are endowed with intelligence, and capable of knowing and loving their Creator, and were made to be eternally happy in the possession of Him. CHAPTER I. Of the Angels. " And is there care in Heaven, and is there love In heavenly spirits to these creatures base, That may compassion of their evils move ? \ There is ; else much more wretched were the case Of men than beasts. But oh ! the exceeding grace Of highest God, that loves His creatures so, And all His works with mercy doth embrace ; That blessed angels He sends to and fro To serve to wicked men, to serve His wicked foe ! How oft do they their silver bowers leave, To come to succor us that succor want ! How oft do they with golden pinions cleave The flitting skies, like flying pursuivant, Against foul fiends to aid us militant ! They for us fight: they watch and duly ward, And their bright squadrons round about us plant ; And all for love and nothing for reward : Oh, why should heavenly God to man have such regard ? —Spenser. Although there is no mention of the angels in the ac- count of the Creation, it is nevertheless believed that they were created on the first day, when God said, u Let there be light !,? This is the opinion of St. Augustine.48 a christian's duty. God made the angels in Heaven, says the Holy Scripture, and created an innumerable multitude. The angels are pure spirits—that is, intelligences, not intended, like our souls, to be united to a body. The name angel signifies messenger. (1) The Scriptures give us a great number of examples where these blessed spirits were sent to men. The Archangel Gabriel was sent to Zachariah and the Most Holy Virgin, and Raphael to Tobit. Abraham, Jacob, Gideon, Moses, and a great number of Old Testament personages, were also favored with angelic visions. Angels are represented with wings, to mark with what promptitude they execute the orders of God. (2) All the angels were created free ; ail could have re- mained faithful, and have merited the happiness for which they were created. But the first among them, called Lucifer, because of the splendor of light with which God had endowed him, forgot what he owed to his Maker, and desired to place himself on an equality with Him. A great number of the heavenly host followed his exam- ple ; (3) but a still greater number joined themselves to the Archangel Michael, who blasted the rebels, exclaiming, " Who is like unto God ? Who like Him is great, power- ful, holy, just and good V7 Thus these evil angels were cast into hell, where they will suffer horrible penalties throughout eternity. In (1) In the New Testament it is used for Bishops and pastors of church- es ; as Apoc. i. 20 : "The seven stars are the angels of the seven churches." Also ii. 1, 8, 12, 18, etc. "Angels he calls you ; be your strife To live on earth an angel's life." (2) " The helmed cherubim and winged seraphim." —Milton. (3 "Him long of old repel Thou didst, and down from Heaven cast, With all his army."—Milton.THE ANGELS. 49 order to afford us an occasion to prove our love to Him, and merit a greater reward, God permits these spirits of darkness (called also demons) to tempt us and incline us to evil.(l) But, at the same time, He affords us the grace which is necessary to resist them. We can anticipate their attacks by prayer and watchfulness, and overcome them by the grace which Jesus Christ hath merited and acquired for us by His sufferings and His death. Those angels who remained loyal were established in grace. They entered into the joy of the Lord, with which they shall be eternally satiated, in the contemplation of His adorable perfections. There are three hierarchies (2) of those blessed spirits, and in each, three distinct orders. The first hierarchy comprises the Cherubum, the Seraphim, and the Thrones ; the second, Dominations, Virtues, and Powers ; the third, Principalities, Archangels, and Angels. We know from the Holy Scriptures that the occupation of the angels is to sing the praises of God ; (3) to adore Him; to present our prayers to Him, and to protect those who invoke their aid. We ought to have a great respect for all these blessed spirits, but we ought specially to honor our holy Angel Guardians. (1) " The power of devils is not so great as to enable them to tempt us as much and as long as they please. Of this we have a conspicuous example in Job; the devil could have tpuched nothing belonging to him if God had not said: < Behold all that he hath is in thy hand whilst,on the other hand,he and his children, and all that he possessed, would have been entirely and at once destroyed by the devil if God had not said: 'Only put not forth thy hand upon his person.' "—Cate- chism of the Council of Trerd. (2) "Angels, by imperial summons called, Forthwith from all the ends of Heaven appeared, Under their hierarchs in order bright."—Milton. (3) " Speak ye who best can tell, ye sons of light, Angels ! for ye behold Him, and, with songs And choral symphonies, day without night, Circle His throne rejoicing."—Milton.50 a christian's dutt. We know, from the lips of Jesus Christ Himself, that the very smallest child has one of these heavenly spirits to guard him. What a sweet consolation it is for us to be assured that we have ever beside us a protector sent by God from Heaven, who watches over us day and night, to prevent the angel of darkness from hurting us ! In him we have a real friend, equally faithful, wise, en- lightened, and powerful; a safe guide, ever ready to direct us in the way that leads to Heaven. Can we forget what the holy angels do for us ? And ought not this recol- lection to open our hearts to sentiments of fear, of grati- tude, of confidence, and of love? Ought it not to make us docile to their inspirations, to pray to them frequently, and always with fervor, and to imitate their fidelity ? u Behold, I will send mine angel before you, saith the Lord. Beware of him and obey his voice, for he will not pardon your transgressions, because My Name is in him. But if ye will o&ey his voice, and keep My com- mandments, I will be an enemy to thine enemies, and I will afflict them that afflict thee." (1) Scripture is full of exafnples of the charity of the angels for man. Hagar, driven forth from Abraham's household, and reduced to despair in the wilderness, was comforted by an angel. By the ministry of angels, Lot and his family were snatched from the guilty city about to become a prey to the flames. Daniel was saved by an angel from the jaws of the lions. An angel enabled Judith to gain the victory over Holofernes. It was an angel that came to Peter in prison, broke his chains, deceived the vigilance of his guards, rescued (1) Exodus xxiii.THE ANGELS. 51 him from the fury of Herod, and restored him to the prayers of the Church. Only three angels are mentioned in Scripture by their proper names : St. Michael, St. Gabriel, and St. Raphael. The name of the first signifies, Who is like unto God f— words which he uttered when opposing the rebel angels. That of Gabriel signifies the strength of God, and that of Raphael, God's remedy, or, GodJs medicine. "The Lord,'7 says the Psalmist, "has ordained His angels to keep us in all our ways. They shall bear thee in their hands, lest thou hurt thy foot against a stone." Exercises. —What was the cause of the fall of the angels, and how were they resisted ? What are demons ? How are we to resist their attacks ? What are the three hierarchies of angels ? How do we know that we have an Angel Guardian, and what does he do for us? Does any pupil remember the lesson about angels in one of the earlier Read- ers in this series ? Repeat it, if known. Let the teacher give some spe- cial reward to any pupil who will recite the subjoined poem correctly. Or, how would it be to learn it just to please your dear Guardian Angel ? Would that not be sufficient inducement and reward ? To Our Guardian Angels. " Angels of light, spread your bright wings and keep Near me at morn : Nor in the starry eve, nor midnight deep, Leave me forlorn. " From all dark spirits of unholy power Guard my weak heart ; Circle around me in each perilous hour, And take my part. " From all foreboding thoughts and dangerous fears Keep me secure ; Teach me to hope, and through the bitterest tears Still to endure. " Should my heart faint at its unequal strife, Oh, still be near ! Shadow the perilous sweetness of this life With holy fear, " Then leave me not alone in this bleak world, Where'er I roam ; And at the end, with your bright wings unfurled, Oh, take me home."—Procter.52 A chbistian's duty. CHAPTER II. Of Man. " What a piece of work is man! How noble in reason ! how in- finite in faculty ; in form and moving how express and admirable ! in action how like an angel! in apprehension how like a god! The beauty of the world, the paragon of animals !"—Shakespeare. " How poor, how rich, how abject, how august, How complicate, how wonderful, is man! How passing wonder He who made him such!" — Young. God, being desirous of distinguishing man from the rest of visible creatures, seems to have reflected within Himself at the moment of his creation : 66 Let us make man in Our own Image, after Our Likeness." He formed his bodv of the earth, and animated it with an intelligent soul capable of thinking, willing, and loving. It is in this respect that man is made in the image of God ; and He will possess Him eternally if he proves himself worthy of this happiness by the practice of virtue. The first man needed a companion. She was taken from himself, and received the name of Eve ; and thus Marriage was instituted. (1) ' * All mankind are born of these first parents. They ought, therefore, ever to be only one family, and to love each other as the children of the same father. Man is not formed of body only : he has a soul capable of think- (1) u The pure, open, prosperous love, That, pledged on earth and sealed'above, Grows in the world's approving eyes, In friendship's soul and home's caress: Collecting all the heart's sweet ties Into one knot of happiness."—Jfoore.OF MAN. 53 ing and loving,a soul which in its nature is incorruptible and immortal. (1) A Roman emperor had a stag that had become tame. It was fed at the palace, to which it returned daily after visiting the adjacent woods. This animal was a favorite of the Emperor, who, fearing lest in the journeys which it made outside it might be pursued and wounded, caused a collar of gold to be made for it, upon which he engraved these words, " Touch me not : 1 belong to Ccesar*v We came from God; we belong to Him; we are Plis. He therefore marks us with His seal. Our soul, with its faculties, our body, and all the organs of the senses, bear the impress of Deity. Let us not, then, allow ourselves to be seduced by bad examples, led away by passion, and reduced to slavery by the malign spirit who is our worst foe. Exeecises. - -How did the" Almighty distinguish man from the rest of His creatures ? How was Eve formed ? Show that the poet Young's description of man is correct, by pointing out: 1. Three ways in which he is poor; '2. Three ways in which he is rich; 3. Two ways in which he is or may be abject ; 4. Two ways in which he is or may be august: 5. Three ways in which he is complicate or wonderful, (1) " The soul, uneasy and confined from home, Rests and expatiates in the life to come/'—Pope.54 a christian's duty. CHAPTER III. Of the Spirituality and Immortality of the Soul. f' Now, traveller in this vale of tears, To realms of everlasting light, Through Time's dark wilderness of years Pursue thy flight ; u The soul, of origin divine, God's glorious image, freed from clay, In Heaven's eternal sphere shall shine, A star of day. The sun is but a spark of fire, A transient meteor in the sky ; The soul, immortal as its Sire, Shall never die.'v—Montgomery. The faithful under the New Covenant are not the only persons who have professed to believe in the immortality of this soul of ours. The ancient Patriarchs and Prophets, and all worshippers of the true God, have equally believed it and made it the motive of their conduct. The great sages of antiquity, Plato, Aristotle, Cicero, and a multi- tude of others, by the light of reason, aided by some traditional recollections, have recognized that death is not the end of the entire man, but that his real self will still survive after experiencing this catastrophe, which is nothing more than the separation of two substances, the soul and the body, which make up his nature. We can no more doubt the presence of two sub- stances within us, than we can doubt our own existence ; for that within us which thinks, which meditates, calcu- lates, compares, reflects—that which is capable of such a great variety of knowledge and feeling—cannot be material. But the dogma of the immortality of the soul is not founded merely upon simple conjectures or a few prob-OF MAN. 55 abilities. Primeval revelation; the general persuasion of the human race ; the ideas which God lias given us of His goodness. His power, and -His Justice, are the foun- dations of a verity as comforting to the good man as it is terrifying to the wicked. (1) After his sin, man was condemned to death ; his body was to return to the dust from which it had been taken. But if his soul was to perish with his body (2) if that prin- ciple of life which emanated from the Creator was to be annihilated, the promise of a Redeemer was motiveless and absurd. Hence the dogma of a future life, and, con- sequently, of the immortality of the soul, has always been one of the fundamental articles of primitive religion. It was the hope of our first parents ; as it will be ours, if we faithfully observe the precepts which the Lord has given us. The belief in a future life, and, necessarily, of the im- mortality of the soul, has been generally received by all the nations of the universe. Idolatry, far from destroying it, gave it a fresh force ; or rather, it was the very abuse of this belief that became one of the sources of idolatry. The apotheosis of great men, and the divine honors paid to them after death, could never have been established if they had believed that man wholly died. In creating a being of a capacity as vast as that of our souls, God could have had no other aim in view than to render it happy by the possession of a good worthy of it- self, worthy of His works. Can this happiness be found in the world ? Is the most virtuous man always the most (1) " Our own brief life should teach us this: That life shall live for evermore ; Else earth were darkness at the core, And dust and ashes all that is."—Tennyson. (2) " Dust thou art, to dust returnest, Was not spoken of the soul."--Longfellow,56 a christian's duty. fortunate ? Alas ! the experience of every day tells us only too much that the contrary is the fact. Divine Justice is still another proof of the immortality of the soul. Often in this world we behold virtue hum- bled and vice triumphant. It is necessary, then, that or- der should be re-established, that vice should be punished, and virtue rewarded. But how is this order to be re-es- tablished, and how is Divine Justice to exercise its rights, if the soul is not immortal ? It may perhaps be said that remorse is the punishment of crime ; but what is remorse without faith ¥ (1) We fearlessly assert that to deny the spirituality and consequent immortality of the soul, is to give the lie not only to the common belief of all peoples, but also to sound reason and common sense. This truth, professed in all ages and by nearly all man- kind, is, no doubt, terrible to the wicked. It follows him every where, (2) and rends his heart, despite all his efforts to calm it. The free rein which he has given to his passions makes him dread eternity, because he has nothing to expect which will be profitable to him. He would like not to believe it; but remorse pursues him : he doubts, or rather believes despite himself. His incredulity, ofteti as- (1) " Remorse is as the heart in which it grows : If that be gentle, it drops balmy dews Of true repentance ; but if proud and gloomy, It is a poison-tree that, pierced to the inmost, Weeps only tears of blood."- Coleridge. (2) "As one that on a lonely road Walketh in fear and dread, And having once turned round to look, Doth turn no more his head, Because he knows a frightful fiend Doth close behind him tread."—Coleridge.OF MAN. 57 sumed, reveals the guilty heart. u When the thought of the future comes to the unbelieving/' says Young, " they cringe, they tremble, they doubt, they believe." The righteous, On the contrary, finds in this truth the strength he needs to endure the ills of this present life. More than this, it is his hope for eternity.(l) u Why has God willed," asks St. John Chrysostom, u that our bodies, after death, should become so horrible and deformed ? The eyes are extinct, the cheeks pale, the lips livid, the hands nerveless, and all the members are given over to corruption and the worm. Is it not to make us feel that this body, while living, did not derive its beauty from itself?—that the nobleness of this brow, the brilliancy of these eyes, the vermilion of these cheeks, the majesty of this countenance, and the gracefulness of this form, proceeded from some other source than itself— that is to say, from the soul, which must consequently be more beautiful, more vigorous and noble ? "(2) A few hours before his death, Bernardin de Saint Pierre, author of Etudes de la Nature, seeing his children weeping around him, addressed them in these touching words : u This is but a separation of a few hours ; do not make it so painful to me. I feel that I quit the world, but not life. Adieu, my dear friends ! Avoid evil, do good, live Christian-like, and we shall meet again one day." (3) (1) " What hope of answer or redress ? Behind the veil! Behind the veil ! "—Tennyson. (2) Thoughts of Pere Lajeune. (3) Compare the eloquent description of the death of St. Francis Xavier by one of the ablest historians (a Protestant, too):—58 a chbistian's dutst. Exercises.—Have any besides Christians recognized the immortality of the soul ? What is the foundation ol our belief in the immortality of the soul ? In what way is Divine Justice a proof of a future state ? In what beautiful prayer to our Blessed Lady is the earth called "a valley of tears"? Repeat that portion. What promise made to Christian teachers says that they shall be as •' a star of day " ? Repeat the last lines of "The Psalm of Life," from which Note 2 is taken, and show how we are there taught belief in "labor here, rest beyond the grave." What words of Holy Writ prove what the poet Young says : the wicked "tremble, they believe"? Give the words of St. John Chrvsostom on the body after death in your own language. Write it as a home exercise. CHAPTER IV. The Fall of Man, " Of man's first disobedience, and the fruit Of that forbidden tree whose mortal taste Brought death into the world and all our woe, Sing, heavenly Muse."—Milton. " See here the fruit of wandering eyes, Of worldly longings to be wise, Of passion dwelling on forbidden sweets ; Ye lawless glances, freely rove : Ruin below, and wrath above, Are all that now the 'wildering fancy meets."—Keble. When man came forth from his Creator's hands He was just, holy, happy, and adorned with excellent gifts ; his " The angel of death appeared with a summons, for which, since death first entered our world, no man was ever more triumphantly prepared. It found him on the vessel, on the point of departing for Siam. At his own request he was removed to the shore, that he might meet his end with the greater composure. Stretched on the naked beach, with the cold blasts of a Chinese winter aggravating his pains, he contended alone with the agonies of the fever which wasted his vi- tal powers. It was a solitude thronged by blessed ministers of peace and consolation, visible in all their bright and lovely aspects to the now unclouded eye of faith ; and audible to the dying martyr through the yielding bars of his mortal prison-house, in strains of exulting joy till then unheard and unimagined. Tears burst from his fading eyes —tears of an emotion too big for utterance. In the cold collapse of death, his features were for a few brief moments irradiated as with the first beams of approaching glory. He raised himself on his crucifix, and, exclaiming, ' In Te Domine, speravi, non con fundar in wternum,' he bowed his head and died."—Sir James Stephen, D. 0. L.} " Essays."THE FALL OF MAN. 59 mind was illumined with divine light, which showed him all that he ought to know. He needed neither books nor mas- ters to become instructed ; his will was upright, and without any bias to evil; nothing disturbed the peacefulness of his soul} he suffered neither pain nor inconvenience in the body ; and he was not to die. Meanwhile, God owed it to His Majesty to require from man the devotion of his heart and proofs of his love and obe- dience, This is why, after placing him in the terrestrial Paradise, He forbade him to touch a particular fruit, while permitting him the use of all the rest. This command, which was so easy of fulfilment, especially to man, inno- cent and inclined to good,(l) was accompanied by a most terrible threat—the penalty of death. But, despite God's benefits and threatenings, the woman allowed herself to be seduced by the demon, who had assumed the form of a serpent. After eating the forbidden fruit, she presented it to Adam, and involved him in her disobedience. In that hour everything became changed for them. (2) They lost all the advantages which God had given them at creation ; thick darkness enveloped their minds ; (1) "What cause Moved our grandparents, in that happy state, Favored of Heaven so highly, to fall off From their Creator, and transgress His will ?— For one restraint, lords of the world besides." —" Paradise LostBook 1. (2n •4 Up they rose, As from unrest ; and each the other viewing, Soon found their oyes how opened, and their minds . How darkened ; innocence, that as a veil Had shadowed them from knowing ill, was gone ; Just confidence, and native righteousness, And honor, from about them, naked, left To guilty shame. They destitute and bare Of all their virtue, silent, and in face Confounded ; long they sat as stricken mute." —" Paradise Lost " Book IX.60 a christian's duty. their will became depraved; passion obscured the light of reason ; their inclinations were corrupted and inclined to evil. On losing holiness and separating themselves from God they Became subject to eternal condemnation. Their bodies were doomed to toil, sickness, and death. The frightful consequences of Adam's sin have descended to all his posterityf because his very sin has descended to all men born of his line- In disobeying God he ruined him- self and the whole human race, of which he was the sire. We inherit his disgrace and sin, as we should have in- herited his innocence and happiness. (1) All have sinned through the first man, all have disobey- ed by him. His sin having thus become ours, it follows that we are all guilty, even before we are born. This is- an incomprehensible truth^ which Religion does not permit us to doubt. It is a fundamental dogma of the Christian Faith. The whole of it turns upon this tenet, since this sin, which was the source of all evils, was also the primary cause of our need of a Mediator and a Saviour who should reconcile us with God, and^ by expiating our sins, ransom us from slavery. That all men are guilty, even before they are born, is a dogma very clearly maintained in Holy Scripture. The holy King David says himself, " I was shapen in iniquity, (1) " All men are born, therefore, guilty and children of wrath. They bear in their souls, which were created to the image and likeness of God, a mark of the Evil One which obscures the image of the Creator. They also inherit all the effects of sin. These effects consist in losses and punishments. 1st. Man lost by sin all the gratuitous benefits with which his nature was endowed in the persons of our first parents- sanctifying grace, original justice, as well as the celestial glory of which this grace was the pledge; and in the natural order he forfeited corporal felicity and immortality. 2d. He merited positive penalties —the anger and indignation of God and the shameful slavery and tyr- anny of the devil. Moreover, fallen from his primitive felicity, man has impaired his condition both of body and soul. His body has be- come subject to death, to sickness and pains, and to all those miseries which nature transformed into an enemy, ever inflicts on Jiim. His soul also has been attacked and wounded deeply."—Shouppe.THE FALL OF MAN. 61 and in sin did my mother conceive me and the Apos- tle St. Paul says, " By one man sin entered th^ world, and death by sin : and So death passed upon all4 men, be- cause all have sinned." The pagan philosophers themselves were able, by the sole aid of reason, if not exactly to know this truth, at least to suspect that man was born guilty of some crime.(1) The spectacle of the miseries to which he is exposed from his cradle, had brought them to this conclusion. In fact, without belief in original sin, man is in himself a most incomprehensible mystery ; for how are we to explain all the contradictions which we find in him? At one and the same time so much grandeur and so much meanness ; so much light and so much darkness ; such a lively incli- nation for happiness, and yet such profound misery! He approves the good, but does it not; he condemns the evil, and commits it. (2) Only the belief in original sin can ex- plain these difficulties and reconcile these contradictions. Whatever there remains of goodness and light in man comes from God, and the first institution of his nature. They are the beautiful remains of a grand edifice fallen into ruin. Ignorance and vice are begotten of sin, which has marred the work of God, and so defaced His image that it is almost unrecognizable. We may see an example of this rigorous justice in a (1) " By what incomprehensible destiny does man form an exception to this law (of conformities), so necessary for the order, the preserva- tion, the peace and the welfare, of beings ? As obvious as this har- mony of qualities and movements appears in the rest of nature, so striking is their discordance in man. There is a perpetual collision between his understanding and his will, between his reason and his heart. When he attains the highest degree of civilization, he is at the lowest point in the scale of morality; when free, he is barbarous; when refined, he is bound with fetters. Does he excel in the sciences ? his imagination expires. Does he become a poet ? he loses the faculty of profound thought." -ChateaubriancVs " (ronhis of (Christianity." (2) The grandeur of man's nature before the Fall may be inferred62 A CHRISTIAN'S DUTY. king who punishes a rebellious subject by degrading him and all his posterity. But comparisons drawn from human things are always imperfect. The regulations of human justice are but a shadow of those of Divine Jus- tice. They may assist our faith, but they cannot lay bare the bottom of this impenetrable mystery. God created man that he and all his posterity might be eternally happy. He was just and holy when he issued from God's hands ; it depended upon himself alone to pre- serve these precious privileges, and transmit them to his children. And to do this he had but to remain faithful. Had he persevered in righteousness, he would have com- municated the same happiness to all his descendants, and assured to them an eternal felicity. But his disobedience forfeited everything. The consequences of his sin— that is, ignorance, a predisposition to evil, the miseries of life, the death of the body, and the loss of the soul—have descended even to us. We should, therefore, have been shut out of Heaven, if God in His infinite mercy had not provided a remedy for all our woes by sending us a Redeemer. A great lord had a castle with magnificent gardens. His gardener was a great favorite with his master, who allowed him, with his wife and children, to reside with him, permitting him to work when inclined, and placing the horses and servants at his disposal. u I make only one condition,77 he added ; u it is, that you watch with great care over some trees which are from his power of doing evil. The magnitude of his crimes, wars, etc., argues a vast capacity, though perverted. He seems still "archangel ruined."THE FALL OF MAN. 63 very dear to me. You will try with all your power to prevent their fruit from being stolen; and I forbid either you or your wife to taste it, for special reasons, of which I will one day inform you. But take care : if you eat of this fruit I shall eject you and all your family. You have . full liberty to eat of all the other fruits and vegetables as much as you please.'7 The gardener promised to execute the orders given him; and he had not much to complain of, surely. If you had been in his place, would you not have been satisfied ? A few days passed happily. The gardener and his wife were contented, for a prosperous future presented itself to them and their children. One day the wife was walking in the garden, very happy, when she perceived a man close to the choice trees. This man was an old servant who had been turned away for disobedience. He began to talk to the woman, who had the imprudence to listen to his conversation. At first she talked in- cessantly of their master's kindness, and of the happiness which she experienced- The old servant, jealous that others had filled his place, began by paying her compli- ments, and then, little by little, spoke very ill of her mas- ter. Unhappily, she listened to him. The domestic per- ceived that she was curious and weak, probably, too, slightly gluttonous. Said he, " You don't know why your master has forbidden you to eat this fruit ? It is because it is the best of all the lot, and prevents one from dying. You see how beautiful it is; but its beauty is nothing compared to its flavor. I have eaten it, and found it delicious." So saying, he gathered one and presented it to the woman. She blushed and was disturbed ; but64: a christian's duty. weakness, fear of man, and gluttony, carried her away. She tasted it, and found it delightful j then she hastened to carry some to her husband, who, out of kindness, aje it too. Just then their master arrived, and caught them in the act. They were immediately turned out. They cried bitterly, and made many promises for the future, but they were still ejected. Certainly, they were very guilty, and, in turning them out, their master only-did what they deserved. If, poor unfortunates, they were subsequently homeless, dying of cold and hunger, they had only themselves to blame. This parable can be very easily applied to the condition of Adam's sad family. Exercises.—In what state was man created? Describe the history and consequences of the Fall. What would have been the conse- quences had man persevered in righteousness? Why did God re- quire a proof of obedience from Adam and Eve ? Show how Baptism helps us to overcome the three great results of Adam's sin. Mention some circumstances in which there is contradiction between man's words, sentiments, and actions. Of what is this a proof? Give the ancient philosophers' views on this point in your own words.THIS IB MY BELOVED SON.....HEAR YE HIM.THE PROMISE OF A REDEEMER. 65 SECTION III. ARTICLE II.-" AND IN JESUS CHRIST, HIS ONLY SON, OUR LORD." CHAPTER I. The Promise of a Redeemer. "All the souls that are were forfeit once, And He who might the vantage best have took, Found out the remedy."—Shakespeare. "We, by rightful doom remediless. Were lost in death, till He that dwelt above, High throned in secret bliss, for us, frail dust, Emptied His glory."—Milton. Man ivas lost without remedy had God not pitied himr He had offended an infinite Majesty, and consequently ivas incapable of repairing his sin, since he could offer no satis- faction equal to the offence. But by an entirely gratui- tous mercy, whose effects are as incomprehensible as His justice, even before He pronounced against Adam the sentence of doom, God had given him the hope of a Me- diator. In cursing the serpent which the demon had made use of to deceive our first parents, He said, u I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and be- tween thy seed and her seed ; she shall crush thy head." From which our first parents were led to believe that from them would be born a Deliverer, who should destroy the power of Satan. (1) This promise was fulfilled, but only after the lapse of four thousand years. God developed it during this long (1) Genesis iii. 15, " She shall crush," is sometimes rendered, "He shall," etc. The meaning is, however, the same, since it was by the seed of the woman—i. e., Christ—that she was to crush the serpent's head.66 a christian's duty. interval, and reiterated it with greater distinctness and more detail. In fact, the promise which God had made to Adam was subsequently confirmed by that made to Abraham, destined to be the root and father of a people specially consecrated to the worship of God. " Get thee out of thy country/' said the Lord, u and from thy kin- dred, and from thy father's house, and come into a land which I will show thee. And I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee and magnify thy name. And in thee shall all the kindred of the earth be blessed."(l) The promise was renewed almost in the same terms to Isaac and to Jacob. The latter, divinely enlightened, pre- dicted more clearly the coming of the Deliverer promised at the beginning of the world. Upon his deathbed, addressing his assembled sons, by the Holy Spirit, upon those things which should happen to their posterity in the course of time, he spake to Judah, his fourth son, these remarkable words : "Judah, thee shall thy brethren praise ; thy hands shall be on the necks of thy enemies ; the sons of thy father shall bow down to thee. The sceptre shall not be taken away from Judah, nor a ruler from his thigh, till He come that is to be sent, and He shall be the expectation of nations."(2) Thus was the promise origi- nally made to Adam and Abraham explained and enlarged. The Saviour was to be born of the family of Judah. The time of His coming is indicated, namely, when the sceptre, the pre-eminence and principal authority, was taken from Judah. (1) Genesis xii. 1. (2) Genesis xlix. 8, 10, This prophecy met with a literal fulfilment. It was in consequence of the enrolment ordered by Augustus Caesar that Joseph went up to Bethlehem. This census was a manifest proof of the conquest of Judaea and its absorption as a province into the Bo- man Empire.THE PROMISE OF A REDEEMER. 67 Three centuries after Jacob's death, God, willing to de- liver His people from the oppressive Egyptian yoke, raised up Moses, whom He filled with His spirit and endowed with the gift of miracles. This holy man, having conduct- ed the people to the confines of the country which they were about to possess, and feeling himself about to die, assembled the Israelites, and renewed to them the promise of the coming of a Deliverer more potent than himself— One alone able to introduce them into the real promised land, of which Canaan was but a type. Thus God kept alive among His people the expectation of the promised Messiah. (1) This Prophet, greater than Moses, the Saviour of His people, Author of a new law, Mediator of a new covenant, before whom Moses himself must be silent, and who alone must be listened to when He speaks, is the Saviour of the world. His doctrine was destined one day to enlighten the world, and God Himself was to say of Him : u This is my beloved Son : hear ye Him ! " (2) Until His coming, there was to appear in Israel no prophet equal to Moses, to whom God spake face to face, and who gave a law to his people. One day that Daniel poured out his soul before God, and offered up fervent prayers for his people, the Angel Gabriel by divine command appeared to the prophet and instructed him as to the period of Messiah's coming. He (1) Dent, xviii £5-20. The remembrance of this prophecy, and the expectation of its fulfilment, were lively at the time of Our Lord's advent; for one of the questions of the Pharisees to John the Baptist was, " Art thou the prophet ?" (John i. 21.) Afterward they applied it to Christ, to whom alone it was due : " This is the prophet(John vi. 14.) (2) St. Matt. xvii. 5; iii. 17.68 A CHRISTIANAS DUTY. calls Him the Eternal Justice and the Holy of Holies, and tells him of the time decreed of God when he should appear upon earth and be put to death. He informed him that God vouchsafed him this signal favor because he was "a man of desires." (1) Exerciser.—What would have become of man had not the Messiah appeared ? Under what circumstance did God make the first an- nouncement of a Messiah ? What promise was afterward made to Abraham?' Mention the prophecy of Jacob. Did Moses foretell the Messiah ? CHAPTER II. Development of the Promises.—Future Conversion of the Gentiles. " Hark ! a glad voice the lonely desert cheers: ' Prepare the way ! A God, a God appears !' ' A God, a God !' the vocal hills reply, The rocks proclaim the approaching Deity. The Saviour comes ! by ancient bards foretold, Hear Him, ye deaf, and all ye blind, behold ! # # * * # # # # * * Rise round with light, imperial Salem, rise ; Exalt thy towery head and lift thy eyes ! See a long race thy spacious courts adorn ; See future sons and daughters yet unborn, In crowding ranks on every side arise, Demanding life, impatient for the skies I See barbarous nations at thy gates attend, Walk in thy light, and in thy temple bend ; See Heaven its sparkling portals wide display, And break upon thee in a flood of day."—Pope. Excepting the Jews, all other peoples were plunged in darkness and the disorders of idolatry. God was pro- (1) Daniel ix. 23."Z~*r 1 t' "\ ,1 -,u' ^ i. v,^>£^±r^Km^ ')11 AND THINE OWN SOUL A SWORD SHALL PIERCE,DEVELOPMENT OF THE PROMISES. 69 foundly forgotten. The demon was adored under various guises. This impious worship was maintained through a long succession of ages. Ail the passions to which it was specially favorable lent it their support. It seemed as if recovery from an error so ancient and universal was well nigh impossible. Meanwhile, God had resolved to destroy the empire of Satan, as He had promised to Adam, and to recall mankind to the knowledge of the truth. Such a great renovation was to be the work of Messiah. And one of the most appreciable signs of His coming was to be, that He was to convert the nations by enlightening them. God had not ceased to announce this event, so favorable to the Gentiles. (1) The prophets had foreseen it through the divine illu- mination, and had predicted it in a thousand different ways many centuries ere its accomplishment, and in periods when it seemed incredible. They all announced that Messiah would dissipate the darkness which before His coming covered the whole earth ; that he should be a light to the Gentiles ; that He should also be the Deliverer of the Jews, and form of both but one people, worshipping the true God. These prophets were the forerunners(2) of the great King, (1). 4< GentilesAll who were not Jews were termed Gentiles. But it is generally used in Scripture to denote the heathen at large. The Hebrew word is translated in the Vulgate 45 gentes," Greek ed»a)v, and in English heathen,' peoples, nations. Thus Psa. cxvi, 1: "Praise the Lord, all ye nations fomnes gentes), praise him, all ye people." The same Hebrew word is nere rendered nations and people. " All the kingdoms of the Gentiles shall adore." (Psa. xxi. 28.) 4'0 God, the heathens are come into Thine inheritance.'' (Psa. lxxviii.) (2) "Forerunners." The neglected state of the roads in Palestine rendered it necessary to "prepare the way " for the progress of any prince. This is described in Isaias lxii. 10 and xl. 3-4. It is still cus- tomary for great potentates to announce to neighboring states when they are about to travel. The prophets, notably St. John the Baptist (specially called the Precursor), by an apt figure of speech were termed the forerunners of Messiah, preparing the way of His coming.70 a christian's duty. sent before His Son to keep men in expectancy of His coming. God indicated all the characteristics which were to unite in the person of the Saviour. He caused all the cir- cumstances which were to accompany His life, death and resurrection to be foretold. The Saviour's history was al- ready written ere His appearance in this world. David, that saintly King inspired of God, is one of those who have spoken the clearest. He calls Messiah his Lord, (1) and recognizes Him as the son of God. He predicts that His rule shall extend over all nations and* be only commensurate with the universe. He announces His ignominies, His cruel death, and the manner of-tor- ment He was to suffer. He beheld His hands and feet pierced ; His body violently suspended ; His thirst quench- ed with gall and vinegar; His garments divided ; and His vesture drawn by lot. But at the same time he announces that He would not experience the corruption of the tomb, and would come forth from it glorious. This prediction is all the more remarkable as it was made more than a thousand years before its fulfilment. Isaiah speaks of Messiah quite as clearly. He beheld Him come of the family (2) of Jesse, and born of a Virgin Mother. He calls Him u Admirable," u Father of the world to come,". u Prince of peace," a Emmanuel," God with us. a His kingdom shall be eternal," says the same prophet; " all nations shall bow down before Him. At His word the lame shall walk, the deaf bear, the dumb speak, the blind shall see and the dead be raised." (1). This and the other prophecies of David alluded to are found as follows:—Psalm cix. 1 ; lxxi. 17? 19; xxi. 17, lxviii. 22; xxi. 19; xv. 10. (2) The following are the passages alluded to : Isaias yii. 14 ; xi. 1,10 ; ix. 6; xxxv. 6; iiii, 2, 3 ; lii. 14 ; liii. 7 to end; Ix, 3.DEVELOPMENT OF THE PROMISES. 71 But having spoken of Messiah's glory, he speaks also of His humiliations. He is represented disfigured, un- known, despised as the vilest of men. He calls Him a man of sorrows, loaded with infirmities, because He took our iniquities upon Him, which he expiated by His sufferings. "They will spit in His face, says he ; u He will be treated as a criminal ; dragged to execution in company with the wicked, giving Himself up to death, and enduring it as meekly as a lamb." The prophet adds that by His death He will become the chief of a numer- ous posterity. He is confident that the Gentiles will flock from all quarters to follow Him, while the Jews, with the exception of a small number, will be rejected for their unbelief. What can be more minute, unless it be the Gospel, and the very history of the Saviour ? Yet this prediction was made more than seven hundred years be- fore our Lord's coming. (1) Other prophets saw the mystery of Messiah no less clearly. One predicted that Bethlehem, the smallest town in Juda, should be rendered illustrious by His birth ; an- other, that He should be sold by one of His disciples for thirty pieces of silver, and sees even the Potter's field in the purchase of which the money was to be used. The same prophet represents Him as a king, but a poor king. An ass was to serve as His steed at His entry into Jerusa- lem. The prophet Aggeus proclaims the glory of the (1) It may be remarked that the Jews have never disputed that Isaias liii, is a special prophecy of Messiah. They lost sight of His sufferings, which are as clearly predicted as His triumphs. The well- known Abbe Ratisbonne has said that he converted more Jews through this chapter than through any other means. He pointed out to them that if Christ be not Messias, the world has had no medium of " receiving forgiveness of sins since the abolition of the Temple sacri- fices. There is scarcely a Jew who remembers this.72 a cheistian's duty, second temple, because Messiah, the Desire of all nations, was to hallow it with His presence. The prophet Daniel determines the precisa epoch of His coming. While this prophet is occupied with the captivity of his people, and the seventy years that it was to last, he is suddenly elevated by the Spirit of God to the highest contemplations. He predicts that at the end of seventy weeks of years, that is to say, after four hundred and ninety years, a still more awful captivity would ter- minate, and the human race would be released by the death of Christ a deliverance consisting in the remission of sins, and the eternal reign of righteousness. He announces that, in the last.week, the Christ should be put to death, a new covenant confirmed, and the ancient sacrifices abolished. After the death of Christ, he adds, there will only be horror and confusion. The holy city and the sanctuary will be destroyed, the people who had refused to acknowledge Him will be His people no longer, the abomination will be seen in the Temple, and a desola- tion without an end. In short, Malachy the last of the prophets, predicts that, instead of the ancient sacrifices, a pure offering shall be presented to the Lord, not only in the Temple of Jerusa- lem, but in all places, from the rising of the sun to the going down of the same ; not only by the Jews, but by the Gentiles, among whom God's Name was to be great. These prophecies are all contained in those holy books whose authenticity is attested by the unsuspected testimony of an entire race. This is the Jewish people, the declared enemies of Christians, who are forced to treat these writ- ings with respect, although they find in them their own condemnation. It is from the Jews that we have re-DEVELOPMENT OF THE PROMISES. 73 ceived them ; and it seems as if God had preserved this race, amid the ruin of all others, to compel them to ren- der to these holy books a striking testimony above all sus- picion of unfaithfulness and alteration. To convince the mind most incredulous about the di-» vinity of Jesus Christ, and to prove that this Divine Saviour is really the Messiah promised by the prophets, we need only to compare the tokens which were to charac- terize the Desire of all Nations with the events which took place at the advent of Jesus Christ upon earth. Ap- proximate the predictions and the facts; take in one hand the Old Testament and in the other the New, and the picture will be so exact that it will be impossible to mis- take. In the first place, it is conceded that, at the epoch of the birth of Christ, the expectation of Messiah was gen- erally spread abroad, not only in Judea, but throughout the East. It is a fact attested even by pagan authors themselves. u It was," says Suetonius, u an ancient and invariable opinion throughout the East, that at that pe- riod conquerors would come forth from Judea who should become masters of the world." Tacitus relates the same thing. u Many," says he, u were persuaded that at that time men would come out of Judea who would become masters of the world." This general expectancy was founded upon Jacob's celebrated prophecy, which had predicted that Messiah should come when the Jews ceased to be governed by a chief of the tribe of Juda; also, upon that of Daniel, who had fixed the date of the coming of Messiah at the end of four hundred and ninety years. The carnal Jews and pagans took these statements lit« erally, and confounded Messiah?s spiritual empire with-74 a' christian's duty. the domination of a conqueror. Still, the prophecy is none the less real? and facts prove that the Apostles who came forth from Judea subjugated the nations to the law of Jesus Christ. (1) The Gospels show us the fulfilment of all the prophecies which were to characterize the coming of Messiah. He was born in Bethlehem ; He gave a new Jaw ; He per- formed the most striking miracles; Pie sanctified the Temple by His presence ; He died amid the sorrows and ignominies of the Cross ; He rose again the third day, etc. The knowledge of the true God was preserved in the Kingdom of Ethiopia. Candace, who was its queen in the times of the Apostles, sent one of her officers to present her offerings in the Temple of Jerusalem, and to adore the Lord. This wise minister, having accomplished his mission, upon his return journey read the prophecy of Isaiah. The Lord commanded St. Philip the deacon to run after him. The official read this part of the prophe- cy : u He was led as a lamb to the slaughter.77 " Do you understand what you are reading ? 77 asked the man of God. "How can I,7' replied the official, u unless some one would guide me 177 Having invited Philip tcf get up into his chariot, he begged of him to tell him whether the prophet spake of himself, or of some other man. Philip seized the occasion to proclaim Jesus Christ, and the necessity of Baptism. The official believed in the word of the Lord; and the chariot having reached a spot (1) Respecting the prophecies of David, as St. Peter showed (Acts ii.), they never came true in his own person. If they did not come true in Christ, to whom they apply with great exactness; they have never been fulfilled at all.DEVELOPMENT OF THE PROMISES. 75 where there was water, he caused it to stop, and asked what could hinder him from being baptized. Philip hav- ing replied that there was no hindrance if he believed with all his heart, the officer made his profession of faith in these terms, u I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God." Then they went down into the water, and Philip baptized him. As soon as he was baptized Philip disappear- ed, and the officer went on his way wondering at what had happened unto him, and glorifying the Lord for the grace which he had just received. ' It is assumed with reason that this personage made Jesus Christ known to his people, and so became their apostle. Exercises.—What was the condition of the world before the coming of Christ ? Who were the. prophets^ and what did they testify ? What did David prophesy ? Mentior, some of the circumstances tore- told fey other prophets. Do the Gospels prove the fulfilment of these prophecies? Who were the ancient bards" mentioned by Pope? Show how the sixth line of first quotation was realized. Quote the words of Scripture. Ask your teacher to show that the Divine Office of "Ad- vent uses words almost identical with the last two lines from Pope. How were ailing or deformed children treated before the comma of Christ? b76 A CHRISTIAN S DUTY. SECTION IV. Of the Incarnation, Birth and Life of Our Lord Jesus Christ. CHAPTER I. *e WHO WAS CONCEIVED BY THE HOLY GHOST : BORN OF THE VIRGIN MARY." The Mystery of the Incarnation. Be still, ye clouds of heaven ! Be silent, Earth I And hear an angel tell Of Jesus' birth ; " While she whom Gabriel hails As full of grace, Listens with humble faith In her sweet face. " ' Hail Mary !' Lo ! it rings Through ages on ; ' Hail Mary !' it shall sound Till time is done. {Hail Mary T infant lips Lisp it to-day; 4 Hail Mary !' with faint smile , The dying say. '' Hail Mary !' many a heart, Broken with grief, In that angelic prayer Has found relief; And many a half-lost soul, When turned at bay, With those triumphant words Has won the day."—Procter. The Word, the only Son of God, who was from all eter- nity in the bosom of the Father, humbled Himself evenAND B011N OF THE VIIIGIN MARY.THE MYSTERY OF THE INCARNATION. 77 to assume a soul and body like our own. It was not the Father who became man, nor yet the Holy Spirit. It was the Son, the Second Person of the Most Holy Trini- ty- The way in which this mystery was accomplished can neither be conceived by the human mind, nor expressed in words. But here is what the Gospel tells us about it: When the period determined upon in the divine counsels had fully arrived, an angel presented himself before the Most Holy Virgin. He saluted her with the title u full pf grace," and informed her that she would become a Mother without ceasing to be a virgin ; and that He who would be born of her should be the Son of the Highest, and the work of the Holy Ghost. The Most Holy Virgin believed in the message of the celestial envoy, and gave her consent. At this moment the mystery of the Incarnation was accomplished; the Holy Spirit formed in her the body of Jesus Christ, and united to it a soul. At the same time, that indissoluble union of the human and divine natures was formed in the Person of the Son of God. Thus the only Son of God be- came man, without ceasing to be God. From which it follows that the Most Holy Virgin is really Mother of God, having conceived and borne a God- Man. In becoming a mother, Mary ceased not to be a virgin : Jesus Christ, her Son, being conceived by the operation of the Holy Ghost. Hence Jesus Christ as man had no father ; God only permitted Joseph to be the husband of Mary in order to hide this mystery under the veil of a chaste marriage. But, as God, Jesus Christ has a Father, by whom He was begotten from all eternity, and to whom78 A CHRISTIAN S DUTY. He is equal. There is in Jesus Christ but one only Per- son, but there are two distinct natures—the divine nature, by which, like His Father, He is God ; the human nature, by which He is man like ourselves, possessing all the fac- ulties proper to our nature. Although this mystery infinitely exceeds the capacity of the human mind, we ought, nevertheless, firmly to be- lieve it, because God, who is the Supreme Truth, has re- vealed it. Besides, it is in nowise contrary to reason. We have in ourselves an image which, although imperfect, may assist our faith. Our soul, which has a spiritual and incorruptible nature, is joined to a body material and cor- ruptible ; and the union of these two substances, so wide- ly differing, constitutes but a single man. He is at once soul and body, incorruptible and corruptible, mind and matter. In the same way, the divinity of the Word, and the nature of man, united without being confused, form but one only Jesus Christ, true God and true man, be- gotten of His Father from all eternity, yet surrounded as a man with weaknesses; for, with the exception of sin, and the inseparable consequences of sin, such as ignorance and concupiscence, Our Lord was subjected to all our miseries. He suffered hunger and thirst; He was liable to fatigue, to sleepiness, and to all the infirmities of our nature ; with this only difference—that He suffered them because He chose, and we because we cannot help it. But let us take care not to imagine that the divine nature was in any way changed in the Incarnation.. God, without ceasing to be that which He is in Himself, deign- ed to unite Himself to human nature. He lost nothing by this union. His humiliation and sufferings only fell upon human nature. It was as man that Jesus Christ suffered ;THE MYSTERY OF THE INCARNATION. 79 it was as God that he imparted an infinite value to His sufferings. It was as man that He became a little child, to be the pattern of all succeeding ages ; it was as God- Man that he became the Saviour of the human race. An heretical disciple of Eutyches, (1) meeting in soci- ety a child who had been carefully educated, wished to make him believe that there was but one only nature in Jesus Christ. To convince him, he took two pieces of iron, and heated them in a fire, and then joined them together &o as to form but one piece. "It is thus," said he, "that the divine and human natures united in Jesus Christ form in His person but one only nature/7 " But," replied the child, "if you put an ingot of gold in the place of this piece of iron, and then fuse them together, and make but one piece, will that piece be entirely iron, or entirely gold ? Will not each piece remain that which it was previously !—that is, the one will always be an ingot of gold, and the other a bar of iron, although joined together. Doubtless you cannot deny it. Here, then, are two pieces of metal, one of gold and the other of iron, which, distinct as they are the one from the other, yet form but one sole piece. Thus," concluded the child, " the divine and human natures, although distinct the one from the other, nevertheless form but^one single person in Jesus Christ." —Edifying Letters. Exercises,—By what mystery did God fulfil His promise to Adam after his fall? How many natures are there in Jesus Christ ? Can any image of the Incarnation be found in man? Is the divine nature altered in this mystery ? (1) A Greek prelate who taught that there is but one nature in Jesus Christ. His sect is represented by the modem Unitarians-80 A CHRISTIAN",S DUTY. CHAPTER II. The Incarnation and Its Results. " The people that in darkness sat, A glorious light have seen ; The Light has shined on them who long In shades of death have been. " For nnto us a Child is born, To us a Son is given, And on His shoulder ever rests All power in earth and Heaven. " His name shall be the Princo of Peace, The Everlasting Lord, The wonderful, the Counsellor, The God by all adored." The Son of God became man to ransom us from the slavery of sin, and the pains of hell, and to merit eternal life for us, to which we had no claim, both on account of the original sin and our own transgressions. We had offended a God of infinite majesty. His jus- tice could not be satisfied, save by a reparation propor- tioned t