第4巻 聖餐への招待

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                           BOOK FOUR

               AN INVITATION TO HOLY COMMUNION


                     The Voice of Christ

COME to Me, all you that labor and are burdened, and I will 
refresh you.[43] The bread which I will give is My Flesh, for the 
life of the world.[44] Take you and eat: this is My Body, which 
shall be delivered for you. Do this for the commemoration of 
Me.[45] He that eateth My flesh, and drinketh My blood, abideth in 
Me, and I in him.[46] The words that I have spoken to you are 
spirit and life."[47]
-----
[43] Matt. 11:28.
[44] John 6:52.
[45] 1 Cor. 11:24.
[46] John 6:57.
[47] John 6:64.



The First Chapter

                      The First Chapter

   The Great Reverence With Which We Should Receive Christ

                        The Disciple

THESE are all Your words, O Christ, eternal Truth, though they 
were not all spoken at one time nor written together in one place. 
And because they are Yours and true, I must accept them all with 
faith and gratitude. They are Yours and You have spoken them; they 
are mine also because You have spoken them for my salvation. 
Gladly I accept them from Your lips that they may be the more 
deeply impressed in my heart.
     Words of such tenderness, so full of sweetness and love, 
encourage me; but my sins frighten me and an unclean conscience 
thunders at me when approaching such great mysteries as these. The 
sweetness of Your words invites me, but the multitude of my vices 
oppresses me.
     You command me to approach You confidently if I wish to have 
part with You, and to receive the food of immortality if I desire 
to obtain life and glory everlasting.
     "Come to me," You say, "all you that labor and are burdened, 
and I will refresh you."[48]
     Oh, how sweet and kind to the ear of the sinner is the word 
by which You, my Lord God, invite the poor and needy to receive 
Your most holy Body! Who am I, Lord, that I should presume to 
approach You? Behold, the heaven of heavens cannot contain You, 
and yet You say: "Come, all of you, to Me."
     What means this most gracious honor and this friendly 
invitation? How shall I dare to come, I who am conscious of no 
good on which to presume? How shall I lead You into my house, I 
who have so often offended in Your most kindly sight? Angels and 
archangels revere You, the holy and the just fear You, and You 
say: "Come to Me: all of you!" If You, Lord, had not said it, who 
would have believed it to be true? And if You had not commanded, 
who would dare approach?
     Behold, Noah, a just man, worked a hundred years building the 
ark that he and a few others might be saved; how, then, can I 
prepare myself in one hour to receive with reverence the Maker of 
the world?
     Moses, Your great servant and special friend, made an ark of 
incorruptible wood which he covered with purest gold wherein to 
place the tables of Your law; shall I, a creature of corruption, 
dare so easily to receive You, the Maker of law and the Giver of 
life?
     Solomon, the wisest of the kings of Israel, spent seven years 
building a magnificent temple in praise of Your name, and 
celebrated its dedication with a feast of eight days. He offered a 
thousand victims in Your honor and solemnly bore the Ark of the 
Covenant with trumpeting and jubilation to the place prepared for 
it; and I, unhappy and poorest of men, how shall I lead You into 
my house, I who scarcely can spend a half-hour devoutly -- would 
that I could spend even that as I ought!
     O my God, how hard these men tried to please You! Alas, how 
little is all that I do! How short the time I spend in preparing 
for Communion! I am seldom wholly recollected, and very seldom, 
indeed, entirely free from distraction. Yet surely in the presence 
of Your life-giving Godhead no unbecoming thought should arise and 
no creature possess my heart, for I am about to receive as my 
guest, not an angel, but the very Lord of angels.
     Very great, too, is the difference between the Ark of the 
Covenant with its treasures and Your most pure Body with its 
ineffable virtues, between these sacrifices of the law which were 
but figures of things to come and the true offering of Your Body 
which was the fulfillment of all ancient sacrifices.
     Why, then, do I not long more ardently for Your adorable 
presence? Why do I not prepare myself with greater care to receive 
Your sacred gifts, since those holy patriarchs and prophets of 
old, as well as kings and princes with all their people, have 
shown such affectionate devotion for the worship of God?
     The most devout King David danced before the ark of God with 
all his strength as he recalled the benefits once bestowed upon 
his fathers. He made musical instruments of many kinds. He 
composed psalms and ordered them sung with joy. He himself often 
played upon the harp when moved by the grace of the Holy Ghost. He 
taught the people of Israel to praise God with all their hearts 
and to raise their voices every day to bless and glorify Him. If 
such great devotion flourished in those days and such ceremony in 
praise of God before the Ark of the Covenant, what great devotion 
ought not I and all Christian people now show in the presence of 
this Sacrament; what reverence in receiving the most excellent 
Body of Christ!
     Many people travel far to honor the relics of the saints, 
marveling at their wonderful deeds and at the building of 
magnificent shrines. They gaze upon and kiss the sacred relics 
encased in silk and gold; and behold, You are here present before 
me on the altar, my God, Saint of saints, Creator of men, and Lord 
of angels!
     Often in looking at such things, men are moved by curiosity, 
by the novelty of the unseen, and they bear away little fruit for 
the amendment of their lives, especially when they go from place 
to place lightly and without true contrition. But here in the 
Sacrament of the altar You are wholly present, my God, the man 
Christ Jesus, whence is obtained the full realization of eternal 
salvation, as often as You are worthily and devoutly received. To 
this, indeed, we are not drawn by levity, or curiosity, or 
sensuality, but by firm faith, devout hope, and sincere love.
     O God, hidden Creator of the world, how wonderfully You deal 
with us! How sweetly and graciously You dispose of things with 
Your elect to whom You offer Yourself to be received in this 
Sacrament! This, indeed, surpasses all understanding. This in a 
special manner attracts the hearts of the devout and inflames 
their love. Your truly faithful servants, who give their whole 
life to amendment, often receive in Holy Communion the great grace 
of devotion and love of virtue.
     Oh, the wonderful and hidden grace of this Sacrament which 
only the faithful of Christ understand, which unbelievers and 
slaves of sin cannot experience! In it spiritual grace is 
conferred, lost virtue restored, and the beauty, marred by sin, 
repaired. At times, indeed, its grace is so great that, from the 
fullness of the devotion, not only the mind but also the frail 
body feels filled with greater strength.
     Nevertheless, our neglect and coldness is much to be deplored 
and pitied, when we are not moved to receive with greater fervor 
Christ in Whom is the hope and merit of all who will be saved. He 
is our sanctification and redemption. He is our consolation in 
this life and the eternal joy of the blessed in heaven. This being 
true, it is lamentable that many pay so little heed to the 
salutary Mystery which fills the heavens with joy and maintains 
the whole universe in being.
     Oh, the blindness and the hardness of the heart of man that 
does not show more regard for so wonderful a gift, but rather 
falls into carelessness from its daily use! If this most holy 
Sacrament were celebrated in only one place and consecrated by 
only one priest in the whole world, with what great desire, do you 
think, would men be attracted to that place, to that priest of 
God, in order to witness the celebration of the divine Mysteries! 
But now there are many priests and Mass is offered in many places, 
that God's grace and love for men may appear the more clearly as 
the Sacred Communion is spread more widely through the world.
     Thanks be to You, Jesus, everlasting Good Shepherd, Who have 
seen fit to feed us poor exiled people with Your precious Body and 
Blood, and to invite us with words from Your own lips to partake 
of these sacred Mysteries: "Come to Me, all you who labor and are 
burdened, and I will refresh you."
-----
[48] Matt. 11:28.



The Second Chapter

                      The Second Chapter

 God's Great Goodness and Love is Shown to Man in This Sacrament

                        The Disciple

TRUSTING in Your goodness and great mercy, O Lord, I come as one 
sick to the Healer, as one hungry and thirsty to the Fountain of 
life, as one in need to the King of heaven, a servant to his Lord, 
a creature to his Creator, a soul in desolation to my gentle 
Comforter.
     But whence is this to me, that You should come to me? Who am 
I that You should offer Yourself to me? How dares the sinner to 
appear in Your presence, and You, how do You condescend to come to 
the sinner? You know Your servant, and You know that he has 
nothing good in him that You should grant him this.
     I confess, therefore, my unworthiness. I acknowledge Your 
goodness. I praise Your mercy, and give thanks for Your immense 
love. For it is because of Yourself that You do it, not for any 
merit of mine; so that Your goodness may be better known to me, 
that greater love may be aroused and more perfect humility born in 
me. Since, then, this pleases You and You have so willed it, Your 
graciousness pleases me also. Oh, that my sinfulness may not stand 
in the way!
     O most sweet and merciful Jesus, what great reverence, 
thanks, and never-ending praise are due to You for our taking of 
Your sacred body, whose dignity no man can express!
     But on what shall I think in this Communion, this approach to 
my Lord, Whom I can never reverence as I ought, and yet Whom I 
desire devoutly to receive? What thought better, more helpful to 
me than to humble myself entirely in Your presence and exalt Your 
infinite goodness above myself?
     I praise You, my God, and extol You forever! I despise myself 
and cast myself before You in the depths of my unworthiness. 
Behold, You are the Holy of holies, and I the scum of sinners! 
Behold, You bow down to me who am not worthy to look up to You! 
Behold, You come to me! You will to be with me! You invite me to 
Your banquet! You desire to give me heavenly food, the Bread of 
Angels to eat, none other than Yourself, the living Bread Who are 
come down from heaven and give life to the world.
     Behold, whence love proceeds! What condescension shines 
forth! What great thanks and praise are due You for these gifts! 
Oh, how salutary and profitable was Your design in this 
institution! How sweet and pleasant the banquet when You gave 
Yourself as food!
     How admirable is Your work, O Lord! How great Your power! How 
infallible Your truth! For You spoke and all things were made, and 
this, which You commanded, was done. It is a wonderful thing, 
worthy of faith, overpowering human understanding, that You, O 
Lord, my God, true God and man, are contained whole and entire 
under the appearance of a little bread and wine, and without being 
consumed are eaten by him who receives You!
     You, the Lord of the universe, Who have need of nothing, have 
willed to dwell in us by means of Your Sacrament. Keep my heart 
and body clean, so that with a joyous and spotless conscience I 
may be able often to celebrate Your Mysteries and to receive for 
my eternal salvation what You have ordained and instituted for 
Your special honor and as an everlasting memorial.
     Rejoice, my soul, and give thanks to God for having left you 
so noble a gift and so special a consolation in this valley of 
tears. As often as you renew this Mystery and receive the Body of 
Christ, so often do you enact the work of redemption and become a 
sharer in all the merits of Christ, for the love of Christ never 
grows less and the wealth of His mercy is never exhausted.
     Therefore, you should prepare yourself for it by constantly 
renewing your heart and pondering deeply the great mystery of 
salvation. As often as you celebrate or hear Mass, it should seem 
as great, as new, as sweet to you as if on that very day Christ 
became man in the womb of the Virgin, or, hanging on the Cross, 
suffered and died for the salvation of man.



The Third Chapter

                      The Third Chapter

         It Is Profitable to Receive Communion Often

                        The Disciple

BEHOLD, I come to You, Lord, that I may prosper by Your gift and 
be delighted at Your holy banquet which You, O God, in Your 
sweetness have prepared for Your poor. Behold, all that I can or 
ought to desire is in You. You are my salvation and my redemption, 
my hope and strength, my honor and glory.
     Gladden, then, this day the soul of Your servant because I 
have raised my heart to You, O Lord Jesus. I long to receive You 
now, devoutly and reverently. I desire to bring You into my house 
that, with Zacheus, I may merit Your blessing and be numbered 
among the children of Abraham.
     My soul longs for Your Body; my heart desires to be united 
with You. Give me Yourself -- it is enough; for without You there 
is no consolation. Without You I cannot exist, without Your 
visitation I cannot live. I must often come to You, therefore, and 
receive the strength of my salvation lest, deprived of this 
heavenly food, I grow weak on the way. Once, most merciful Jesus, 
while preaching to the people and healing their many ills, You 
said: "I will not send them away fasting, lest they faint in the 
way."[49] Deal with me likewise, You Who have left Yourself in 
this Sacrament for the consolation of the faithful. You are sweet 
refreshment to the soul, and he who eats You worthily will be a 
sharer in, and an heir to, eternal glory.
     It is indeed necessary for me, who fall and sin so often, who 
so quickly become lax and weak, to renew, cleanse, and inflame 
myself through frequent prayer, confession, and the holy reception 
of Your Body, lest perhaps by abstaining too long, I fall away 
from my holy purpose. For from the days of his youth the senses of 
man are prone to evil, and unless divine aid strengthens him, he 
quickly falls deeper. But Holy Communion removes him from evil and 
confirms him in good.
     If I am so often careless and lax when I celebrate or 
communicate, what would happen if I did not receive this remedy 
and seek so great a help? Although I am neither fit nor properly 
disposed to celebrate every day, yet I will do my best at proper 
times to receive the divine Mysteries and share in this great 
grace. This, indeed, is the one chief consolation of the faithful 
soul when separated from You by mortality, that often mindful of 
her God, she receives her Beloved with devout recollection.
     Oh, wonderful condescension of Your affection toward us, that 
You, the Lord God, Creator and Giver of life to all, should see 
fit to come to a poor soul and to appease her hunger with all Your 
divinity and humanity! O happy mind and blessed soul which 
deserves to receive You, her Lord God, and in receiving You, is 
filled with spiritual joy! How great a Master she entertains, what 
a beloved guest she receives, how sweet a companion she welcomes, 
how true a friend she gains, how beautiful and noble is the spouse 
she embraces, beloved and desired above all things that can be 
loved and desired! Let heaven and earth and all their treasures 
stand silent before Your face, most sweetly Beloved, for whatever 
glory and beauty they have is of Your condescending bounty, and 
they cannot approach the beauty of Your name, Whose wisdom is 
untold.
-----
[49] Matt. 15:32.



The Fourth Chapter

                     The Fourth Chapter

  Many Blessings Are Given Those Who Receive Communion Worthily

                        The Disciple

O LORD my God, favor Your servant with the blessings of Your 
sweetness that I may merit to approach Your magnificent Sacrament 
worthily and devoutly. Lift up my heart to You and take away from 
me this heavy indolence. Visit me with Your saving grace that I 
may in spirit taste Your sweetness which lies hidden in this 
Sacrament like water in the depths of a spring. Enlighten my eyes 
to behold this great Mystery, and give me strength to believe in 
it with firm faith.
     For it is Your work, not the power of man, Your sacred 
institution, not his invention. No man is able of himself to 
comprehend and understand these things which surpass even the keen 
vision of angels. How, then, shall I, an unworthy sinner who am 
but dust and ashes, be able to fathom and understand so great a 
mystery?
     O Lord, I come to You at Your command in simplicity of heart, 
in good, firm faith, with hope and reverence, and I truly believe 
that You are present here in this Sacrament, God and man. It is 
Your will that I receive You and unite myself to You in love. 
Wherefore, I beg Your mercy and ask that special grace be given 
me, that I may be wholly dissolved in You and filled with Your 
love, no longer to concern myself with exterior consolations. For 
this, the highest and most worthy Sacrament, is the health of soul 
and body, the cure of every spiritual weakness. In it my defects 
are remedied, my passions restrained, and temptations overcome or 
allayed. In it greater grace is infused, growing virtue is 
nourished, faith confirmed, hope strengthened, and charity fanned 
into flame.
     You, my God, the protector of my soul, the strength of human 
weakness, and the giver of every interior consolation, have given 
and still do often give in this Sacrament great gifts to Your 
loved ones who communicate devoutly. Moreover, You give them many 
consolations amid their numerous troubles and lift them from the 
depths of dejection to the hope of Your protection. With new 
graces You cheer and lighten them within, so that they who are 
full of anxiety and without affection before Communion may find 
themselves changed for the better after partaking of this heavenly 
food and drink.
     Likewise, You so deal with Your elect that they may truly 
acknowledge and plainly experience how weak they are in themselves 
and what goodness and grace they obtain from You. For though in 
themselves they are cold, obdurate, and wanting in devotion, 
through You they become fervent, cheerful, and devout.
     Who, indeed, can humbly approach the fountain of sweetness 
and not carry away a little of it? Or who, standing before a 
blazing fire does not feel some of its heat? You are a fountain 
always filled with superabundance! You are a fire, ever burning, 
that never fails!
     Therefore, while I may not exhaust the fullness of the 
fountain or drink to satiety, yet will I put my lips to the mouth 
of this heavenly stream that from it I may receive at least some 
small drop to refresh my thirst and not wither away. And if I 
cannot as yet be all heavenly or as full of fire as the cherubim 
and seraphim, yet I will try to become more devout and prepare my 
heart so that I may gather some small spark of divine fire from 
the humble reception of this life-giving Sacrament.
     Whatever is wanting in me, good Jesus, Savior most holy, do 
You in Your kindness and grace supply for me, You Who have been 
pleased to call all unto You, saying: "Come to Me all you that 
labor and are burdened and I will refresh you."
     I, indeed, labor in the sweat of my brow. I am torn with 
sorrow of heart. I am laden with sin, troubled with temptations, 
enmeshed and oppressed by many evil passions, and there is none to 
help me, none to deliver and save me but You, my Lord God and 
Savior, to Whom I entrust myself and all I have, that You may 
protect me and lead me to eternal life. For the honor and glory of 
Your name receive me, You Who have prepared Your Body and Blood as 
food and drink for me. Grant, O Lord, my God and Savior, that by 
approaching Your Mysteries frequently, the zeal of my devotion may 
increase.



The Fifth Chapter

                      The Fifth Chapter

     The Dignity of the Sacrament and of the Priesthood

                     The Voice of Christ

HAD you the purity of an angel and the sanctity of St. John the 
Baptist, you would not be worthy to receive or administer this 
Sacrament. It is not because of any human meriting that a man 
consecrates and administers the Sacrament of Christ, and receives 
the Bread of Angels for his food. Great is the Mystery and great 
the dignity of priests to whom is given that which has not been 
granted the angels. For priests alone, rightly ordained in the 
Church, have power to celebrate Mass and consecrate the Body of 
Christ.
     The priest, indeed, is the minister of God, using the word of 
God according to His command and appointment. God, moreover, is 
there -- the chief Author and invisible Worker to Whom all is 
subject as He wills, to Whom all are obedient as He commands.
     In this most excellent Sacrament, therefore, you ought to 
believe in God rather than in your own senses or in any visible 
sign, and thus, with fear and reverence draw near to such a work 
as this. Look to yourself and see whose ministry has been given 
you through the imposition of the bishop's hands.
     Behold, you have been made a priest, consecrated to celebrate 
Mass! See to it now that you offer sacrifice to God faithfully and 
devoutly at proper times, and that you conduct yourself 
blamelessly. You have not made your burden lighter. Instead, you 
are now bound by stricter discipline and held to more perfect 
sanctity.
     A priest ought to be adorned with all virtues and show the 
example of a good life to others. His way lies not among the 
vulgar and common habits of men but with the angels in heaven and 
the perfect men on earth. A priest clad in the sacred vestments 
acts in Christ's place, that he may pray to God both for himself 
and for all people in a suppliant and humble manner. He has before 
and behind him the sign of the Lord's cross that he may always 
remember the Passion of Christ. It is before him, on the chasuble, 
that he may look closely upon the footsteps of Christ and try to 
follow them fervently. It is behind him -- he is signed with it -- 
that he may gladly suffer for God any adversities inflicted by 
others.
     He wears the cross before him that he may mourn his own sins, 
behind him, that in pity he may mourn the sins of others, and know 
that he is appointed to stand between God and the sinner, never to 
become weary of prayer and the holy offering until it is granted 
him to obtain grace and mercy.
     When the priest celebrates Mass, he honors God, gladdens the 
angels, strengthens the Church, helps the living, brings rest to 
the departed, and wins for himself a share in all good things.



The Sixth Chapter

                      The Sixth Chapter

     An Inquiry on the Proper Thing to Do Before Communion

                        The Disciple

WHEN I consider Your dignity, O Lord, and my own meanness, I 
become very much frightened and confused. For if I do not receive, 
I fly from Life, and if I intrude unworthily, I incur Your 
displeasure. What, then, shall I do, my God, my Helper and Adviser 
in necessity? Teach me the right way. Place before me some short 
exercise suitable for Holy Communion, for it is good to know in 
what manner I ought to make my heart ready devoutly and fervently 
for You, to receive Your Sacrament for the good of my soul, or 
even to celebrate so great and divine a sacrifice.



The Seventh Chapter

                     The Seventh Chapter

   The Examination of Conscience and the Resolution to Amend

                     The Voice of Christ

ABOVE all, God's priest should approach the celebration and 
reception of this Sacrament with the deepest humility of heart and 
suppliant reverence, with complete faith and the pious intention 
of giving honor to God.
     Carefully examine your conscience, then. Cleanse and purify 
it to the best of your power by true contrition and humble 
confession, that you may have no burden, know of no remorse, and 
thus be free to come near. Let the memory of all your sins grieve 
you, and especially lament and bewail your daily transgressions. 
Then if time permits, confess to God in the secret depths of your 
heart all the miseries your passions have caused.
     Lament and grieve because you are still so worldly, so 
carnal, so passionate and unmortified, so full of roving lust, so 
careless in guarding the external senses, so often occupied in 
many vain fancies, so inclined to exterior things and so heedless 
of what lies within, so prone to laughter and dissipation and so 
indisposed to sorrow and tears, so inclined to ease and the 
pleasures of the flesh and so cool to austerity and zeal, so 
curious to hear what is new and to see the beautiful and so slow 
to embrace humiliation and dejection, so covetous of abundance, so 
niggardly in giving and so tenacious in keeping, so inconsiderate 
in speech, so reluctant in silence, so undisciplined in character, 
so disordered in action, so greedy at meals, so deaf to the Word 
of God, so prompt to rest and so slow to labor, so awake to empty 
conversation, so sleepy in keeping sacred vigils and so eager to 
end them, so wandering in your attention, so careless in saying 
the office, so lukewarm in celebrating, so heartless in receiving, 
so quickly distracted, so seldom fully recollected, so quickly 
moved to anger, so apt to take offense at others, so prone to 
judge, so severe in condemning, so happy in prosperity and so weak 
in adversity, so often making good resolutions and carrying so few 
of them into action.
     When you have confessed and deplored these and other faults 
with sorrow and great displeasure because of your weakness, be 
firmly determined to amend your life day by day and to advance in 
goodness. Then, with complete resignation and with your entire 
will offer yourself upon the altar of your heart as an everlasting 
sacrifice to the honor of My name, by entrusting with faith both 
body and soul to My care, that thus you may be considered worthy 
to draw near and offer sacrifice to God and profitably receive the 
Sacrament of My Body. For there is no more worthy offering, no 
greater satisfaction for washing away sin than to offer yourself 
purely and entirely to God with the offering of the Body of Christ 
in Mass and Communion.
     If a man does what he can and is truly penitent, however 
often he comes to Me for grace and pardon, "As I live, saith the 
Lord God, I desire not the death of the wicked, but that the 
wicked turn from his way and live";[50] I will no longer remember 
his sins, but all will be forgiven him.
-----
[50] Ezek. 33:11.



The Eighth Chapter

                     The Eighth Chapter

      The Offering of Christ on the Cross; Our Offering

                     The Voice of Christ

AS I offered Myself willingly to God the Father for your sins with 
hands outstretched and body naked on the cross, so that nothing 
remained in Me that had not become a complete sacrifice to appease 
the divine wrath, so ought you to be willing to offer yourself to 
Me day by day in the Mass as a pure and holy oblation, together 
with all your faculties and affections, with as much inward 
devotion as you can.
     What more do I ask than that you give yourself entirely to 
Me? I care not for anything else you may give Me, for I seek not 
your gift but you. Just as it would not be enough for you to have 
everything if you did not have Me, so whatever you give cannot 
please Me if you do not give yourself.
     Offer yourself to Me, therefore, and give yourself entirely 
for God -- your offering will be accepted. Behold, I offered 
Myself wholly to the Father for you, I even gave My whole Body and 
Blood for food that I might be all yours, and you Mine forever.
     But if you rely upon self, and do not offer your free will to 
Mine, your offering will be incomplete and the union between us 
imperfect. Hence, if you desire to attain grace and freedom of 
heart, let the free offering of yourself into the hands of God 
precede your every action. This is why so few are inwardly free 
and enlightened -- they know not how to renounce themselves 
entirely.
     My word stands: "Everyone of you that doth not renounce all 
that he possesseth, cannot be My disciple."[51]
     If, therefore, you wish to be My disciple, offer yourself to 
Me with all your heart.
-----
[51] Luke 14:33.



The Ninth Chapter

                      The Ninth Chapter

     We Should Offer Ourselves and All That We Have to God, 
                       Praying for All

                        The Disciple

ALL things in heaven and on earth, O Lord, are Yours. I long to 
give myself to You as a voluntary offering to remain forever 
Yours. With a sincere heart I offer myself this day to You, O 
Lord, to Your eternal service, to Your homage, and as a sacrifice 
of everlasting praise. Receive me with this holy offering of Your 
precious Body which also I make to You this day, in the presence 
of angels invisibly attending, for my salvation and that of all 
Your people.
     O Lord, upon Your altar of expiation, I offer You all the 
sins and offenses I have committed in Your presence and in the 
presence of Your holy angels, from the day when I first could sin 
until this hour, that You may burn and consume them all in the 
fire of Your love, that You may wipe away their every stain, 
cleanse my conscience of every fault, and restore to me Your grace 
which I lost in sin by granting full pardon for all and receiving 
me mercifully with the kiss of peace.
     What can I do for all my sins but humbly confess and lament 
them, and implore Your mercy without ceasing? In Your mercy, I 
implore You, hear me when I stand before You, my God. All my sins 
are most displeasing to me. I wish never to commit them again. I 
am sorry for them and will be sorry as long as I live. I am ready 
to do penance and make satisfaction to the utmost of my power.
     Forgive me, O God, forgive me my sins for Your Holy Name. 
Save my soul which You have redeemed by Your most precious Blood. 
See, I place myself at Your mercy. I commit myself to Your hands. 
Deal with me according to Your goodness, not according to my 
malicious and evil ways.
     I offer to You also all the good I have, small and imperfect 
though it be, that You may make it more pure and more holy, that 
You may be pleased with it, render it acceptable to Yourself, and 
perfect it more and more, and finally that You may lead me, an 
indolent and worthless creature, to a good and happy end.
     I offer You also all the holy desires of Your devoted 
servants, the needs of my parents, friends, brothers, sisters, and 
all who are dear to me; of all who for Your sake have been kind to 
me or to others; of all who have wished and asked my prayers and 
Masses for them and theirs, whether they yet live in the flesh or 
are now departed from this world, that they may all experience the 
help of Your grace, the strength of Your consolation, protection 
from dangers, deliverance from punishment to come, and that, free 
from all evils, they may gladly give abundant thanks to You.
     I offer You also these prayers and the Sacrifice of 
Propitiation for those especially who have in any way injured, 
saddened, or slandered me, inflicted loss or pain upon me, and 
also for all those whom I have at any time saddened, disturbed, 
offended, and abused by word or deed, willfully or in ignorance. 
May it please You to forgive us all alike our sins and offenses 
against one another.
     Take away from our hearts, O Lord, all suspicion, anger, 
wrath, contention, and whatever may injure charity and lessen 
brotherly love. Have mercy, O Lord, have mercy on those who ask 
Your mercy, give grace to those who need it, and make us such that 
we may be worthy to enjoy Your favor and gain eternal life.



The Tenth Chapter

                      The Tenth Chapter

             Do Not Lightly Forego Holy Communion

                     The Voice of Christ

YOU must often return to the source of grace and divine mercy, to 
the fountain of goodness and perfect purity, if you wish to be 
free from passion and vice, if you desire to be made stronger and 
more watchful against all the temptations and deceits of the 
devil.
     The enemy, knowing the great good and the healing power of 
Holy Communion, tries as much as he can by every manner and means 
to hinder and keep away the faithful and the devout. Indeed, there 
are some who suffer the worst assaults of Satan when disposing 
themselves to prepare for Holy Communion. As it is written in Job, 
this wicked spirit comes among the sons of God to trouble them by 
his wonted malice, to make them unduly fearful and perplexed, that 
thus he may lessen their devotion or attack their faith to such an 
extent that they perhaps either forego Communion altogether or 
receive with little fervor.
     No attention, however, must be paid to his cunning wiles, no 
matter how base and horrible -- all his suggestions must be cast 
back upon his head. The wretch is to be despised and scorned. Holy 
Communion must not be passed by because of any assaults from him 
or because of the commotion he may arouse.
     Oftentimes, also, too great solicitude for devotion and 
anxiety about confession hinder a person. Do as wise men do. Cast 
off anxiety and scruple, for it impedes the grace of God and 
destroys devotion of the mind.
     Do not remain away from Holy Communion because of a small 
trouble or vexation but go at once to confession and willingly 
forgive all others their offenses. If you have offended anyone, 
humbly seek pardon and God will readily forgive you.
     What good is it to delay confession for a long time or to put 
off Holy Communion? Cleanse yourself at once, spit out the poison 
quickly. Make haste to apply the remedy and you will find it 
better than if you had waited a long time. If you put it off today 
because of one thing, perhaps tomorrow a greater will occur to 
you, and thus you will stay away from Communion for a long time 
and become even more unfit.
     Shake off this heaviness and sloth as quickly as you can, for 
there is no gain in much anxiety, in enduring long hours of 
trouble, and in depriving yourself of the divine Mysteries because 
of these daily disturbances. Yes, it is very hurtful to defer Holy 
Communion long, for it usually brings on a lazy spiritual sleep.
     How sad that some dissolute and lax persons are willing to 
postpone confession and likewise wish to defer Holy Communion, 
lest they be forced to keep a stricter watch over themselves! 
Alas, how little love and devotion have they who so easily put off 
Holy Communion!
     How happy and acceptable to God is he who so lives, and keeps 
his conscience so pure, as to be ready and well disposed to 
communicate, even every day if he were permitted, and if he could 
do so unnoticed.
     If, now and then, a man abstains by the grace of humility or 
for a legitimate reason, his reverence is commendable, but if 
laziness takes hold of him, he must arouse himself and do 
everything in his power, for the Lord will quicken his desire 
because of the good intention to which He particularly looks. When 
he is indeed unable to come, he will always have the good will and 
pious intention to communicate and thus he will not lose the fruit 
of the Sacrament.
     Any devout person may at any hour on any day receive Christ 
in spiritual communion profitably and without hindrance. Yet on 
certain days and times appointed he ought to receive with 
affectionate reverence the Body of his Redeemer in this Sacrament, 
seeking the praise and honor of God rather than his own 
consolation.
     For as often as he devoutly calls to mind the mystery and 
passion of the Incarnate Christ, and is inflamed with love for 
Him, he communicates mystically and is invisibly refreshed.
     He who prepares himself only when festivals approach or 
custom demands, will often find himself unprepared. Blessed is he 
who offers himself a sacrifice to the Lord as often as he 
celebrates or communicates.
     Be neither too slow nor too fast in celebrating but follow 
the good custom common to those among whom you are. You ought not 
to cause others inconvenience or trouble, but observe the accepted 
rule as laid down by superiors, and look to the benefit of others 
rather than to your own devotion or inclination.



The Eleventh Chapter

                     The Eleventh Chapter

           The Body of Christ and Sacred Scripture 
            Are Most Necessary to a Faithful Soul

                        The Disciple

O MOST sweet Lord Jesus, how great is the happiness of the devout 
soul that feasts upon You at Your banquet, where there is set 
before her to be eaten no other food but Yourself alone, her only 
Lover, most desired of all that her heart can desire!
     To me it would be happiness, indeed, to shed tears in Your 
presence from the innermost depths of love, and like the pious 
Magdalen to wash Your feet with them. But where now is this 
devotion, this copious shedding of holy tears? Certainly in Your 
sight, before Your holy angels, my whole heart ought to be 
inflamed and weep for joy. For, hidden though You are beneath 
another form, I have You truly present in the Sacrament.
     My eyes could not bear to behold You in Your own divine 
brightness, nor could the whole world stand in the splendor of the 
glory of Your majesty. In veiling Yourself in the Sacrament, 
therefore, You have regard for my weakness.
     In truth, I possess and adore Him Whom the angels adore in 
heaven -- I as yet by faith, they face to face unveiled. I must be 
content with the light of the true faith and walk in it until the 
day of eternal brightness dawns and the shadow of figures passes 
away. When, moreover, that which is perfect shall have come, the 
need of sacraments shall cease, for the blessed in heavenly glory 
need no healing sacrament. Rejoicing endlessly in the presence of 
God, beholding His glory face to face, transformed from their own 
brightness to the brightness of the ineffable Deity, they taste 
the Word of God made flesh, as He was in the beginning and will 
remain in eternity.
     Though mindful of these wonderful things, every spiritual 
solace becomes wearisome to me because so long as I do not plainly 
see the Lord in His glory, I consider everything I hear and see on 
earth of little account.
     You are my witness, O God, that nothing can comfort me, no 
creature give me rest but You, my God, Whom I desire to 
contemplate forever. But this is not possible while I remain in 
mortal life, and, therefore, I must be very patient and submit 
myself to You in every desire.
     Even Your saints, O Lord, who now rejoice with You in the 
kingdom of heaven, awaited the coming of Your glory with faith and 
great patience while they lived. What they believed, I believe. 
What they hoped for, I hope for, and whither they arrived, I trust 
I shall come by Your grace. Meanwhile I will walk in faith, 
strengthened by the example of the saints. I shall have, besides, 
for comfort and for the guidance of my life, the holy Books, and 
above all these, Your most holy Body for my special haven and 
refuge.
     I feel there are especially necessary for me in this life two 
things without which its miseries would be unbearable. Confined 
here in this prison of the body I confess I need these two, food 
and light. Therefore, You have given me in my weakness Your sacred 
Flesh to refresh my soul and body, and You have set Your word as 
the guiding light for my feet. Without them I could not live 
aright, for the word of God is the light of my soul and Your 
Sacrament is the Bread of Life.
     These also may be called the two tables, one here, one there, 
in the treasure house of holy Church. One is the table of the holy 
altar, having the holy Bread that is the precious Body of Christ. 
The other is the table of divine law, containing holy doctrine 
that teaches all the true faith and firmly leads them within the 
veil, the Holy of holies.
     Thanks to You, Lord Jesus, Light of eternal light, for the 
table of Your holy teaching which You have prepared for us by Your 
servants, the prophets and Apostles and other learned men.
     Thanks to You, Creator and Redeemer of men, Who, to declare 
Your love to all the world, have prepared a great supper in which 
You have placed before us as food not the lamb, the type of 
Yourself, but Your own most precious Body and Blood, making all 
the faithful glad in Your sacred banquet, intoxicating them with 
the chalice of salvation in which are all the delights of 
paradise; and the holy angels feast with us but with more 
happiness and sweetness.
     Oh, how great and honorable is the office of the priest, to 
whom is given the consecration of the Lord of majesty in sacred 
words, whose lips bless Him, whose hands hold Him, whose tongue 
receives Him, and whose ministry it is to bring Him to others!
     Oh, how clean those hands should be, how pure the lips, how 
sanctified the body, how immaculate the heart of the priest to 
whom the Author of all purity so often comes. No word but what is 
holy, none but what is good and profitable ought to come from the 
lips of the priest who so often receives the Sacrament of Christ. 
Single and modest should be the eyes accustomed to looking upon 
the Body of Christ. Pure and lifted up to heaven the hands 
accustomed to handle the Creator of heaven and earth. To priests 
above all it is written in the law: "Be ye holy, for I, the Lord 
your God, am holy."
     Let Your grace, almighty God, assist us, that we who have 
undertaken the office of the priesthood may serve You worthily and 
devoutly in all purity and with a good conscience. And if we 
cannot live as innocently as we ought, grant us at least to lament 
duly the wrongs we have committed and in the spirit of humility 
and the purpose of a good will to serve You more fervently in the 
future.



The Twelfth Chapter

                     The Twelfth Chapter

The Communicant Should Prepare Himself for Christ with Great Care

                     The Voice of Christ

I AM the Lover of purity, the Giver of all holiness. I seek a pure 
heart and there is the place of My rest.
     Prepare for Me a large room furnished and I with My disciples 
will keep the Pasch with you.
     If you wish that I come to you and remain with you, purge out 
the old leaven and make clean the dwelling of your heart. Shut out 
the whole world with all the din of its vices. Sit as the sparrow 
lonely on the housetop, and think on your transgressions in 
bitterness of soul.
     Everyone who loves prepares the best and most beautiful home 
for his beloved, because the love of the one receiving his lover 
is recognized thereby.
     But understand that you cannot by any merit of your own make 
this preparation well enough, though you spend a year in doing it 
and think of nothing else. It is only by My goodness and grace 
that you are allowed to approach My table, as though a beggar were 
invited to dinner by a rich man and he had nothing to offer in 
return for the gift but to humble himself and give thanks.
     Do what you can and do that carefully. Receive the Body of 
the Lord, your beloved God Who deigns to come to you, not out of 
habit or necessity, but with fear, with reverence, and with love.
     I am He that called you. I ordered it done. I will supply 
what you lack. Come and receive Me.
     When I grant the grace of devotion, give thanks to God, not 
because you are worthy but because I have had mercy upon you. If 
you have it not and feel rather dry instead, continue in prayer, 
sigh and knock, and do not give up until you receive some crumb of 
saving grace.
     You have need of Me. I do not need you. You do not come to 
sanctify Me but I come to sanctify you and make you better. You 
come to be sanctified and united with Me, to receive new grace and 
to be aroused anew to amend. Do not neglect this grace, but 
prepare your heart with all care, and bring into it your Beloved.
     Not only should you prepare devoutly before Communion, but 
you should also carefully keep yourself in devotion after 
receiving the Sacrament. The careful custody of yourself afterward 
is no less necessary than the devout preparation before, for a 
careful afterwatch is the best preparation for obtaining greater 
grace. If a person lets his mind wander to external comforts, he 
becomes quite indisposed.
     Beware of much talking. Remain in seclusion and enjoy your 
God, for you have Him Whom all the world cannot take from you.
     I am He to Whom you should give yourself entirely, that from 
now on you may live, not in yourself, but in Me, with all cares 
cast away.



The Thirteenth Chapter

                    The Thirteenth Chapter

                With All Her Heart the Devout Soul 
       Should Desire Union with Christ in the Sacrament

                        The Disciple

LET it be granted me to find You alone, O Christ, to open to You 
my whole heart, to enjoy You as my soul desires, to be disturbed 
by no one, to be moved and troubled by no creature, that You may 
speak to me and I to You alone, as a lover speaks to his loved 
one, and friend converses with friend.
     I pray for this, I desire this, that I may be completely 
united to You and may withdraw my heart from all created things, 
learning to relish the celestial and the eternal through Holy 
Communion and the frequent celebration of Mass.
     Ah Lord God, when shall I be completely united to You and 
absorbed by You, with self utterly forgotten? You in me and I in 
You? Grant that we may remain so together. You in truth are my 
Beloved, chosen from thousands, in Whom my soul is happy to dwell 
all the days of her life. You are in truth my pledge of peace, in 
Whom is the greatest peace and true rest, without Whom there is 
toil and sorrow and infinite misery.
     You truly are the hidden God. Your counsel is not with the 
wicked, and Your conversation is rather with the humble and the 
simple.
     O how kind is Your spirit, Lord, Who in order to show Your 
sweetness toward Your children, deign to feed them with the 
sweetest of bread, bread come down from heaven! Surely there is no 
other people so fortunate as to have their god near them, as You, 
our God, are present everywhere to the faithful, to whom You give 
Yourself to be eaten and enjoyed for their daily solace and the 
raising of their hearts to heaven.
     Indeed, what other nation is so renowned as the Christian 
peoples? What creature under heaven is so favored as the devout 
soul to whom God comes, to feed her with His glorious Flesh? O 
unspeakable grace! O wonderful condescension! O love beyond 
measure, singularly bestowed upon man!
     What return shall I make to the Lord for this love, this 
grace so boundless? There is nothing I can give more pleasing than 
to offer my heart completely to my God, uniting it closely with 
His. Then shall all my inner self be glad when my soul is 
perfectly united with God. Then will He say to me: "If you will be 
with Me, I will be with you." And I will answer Him: "Deign, O 
Lord, to remain with me. I will gladly be with You. This is my one 
desire, that my heart may be united with You."



The Fourteenth Chapter

                    The Fourteenth Chapter

     The Ardent Longing of Devout Men for the Body of Christ

                        The Disciple

HOW great is the abundance of Your kindness, O Lord, which You 
have hidden from those who fear You!
     When I think how some devout persons come to Your Sacrament 
with the greatest devotion and love, I am frequently ashamed and 
confused that I approach Your altar and the table of Holy 
Communion so coldly and indifferently; that I remain so dry and 
devoid of heartfelt affection; that I am not completely inflamed 
in Your presence, O my God, nor so strongly drawn and attracted as 
many devout persons who, in their great desire for Communion and 
intense heart love, could not restrain their tears but longed from 
the depths of their souls and bodies to embrace You, the Fountain 
of Life. These were able to appease and allay their hunger in no 
other way than by receiving Your Body with all joy and spiritual 
eagerness. The faith of these men was true and ardent -- 
convincing proof of Your sacred presence. They whose hearts burn 
so ardently within them when Jesus lives with them truly know 
their Lord in the breaking of bread.
     Such affection and devotion, such mighty love and zeal are 
often far beyond me. Be merciful to me, O sweet, good, kind Jesus, 
and grant me, Your poor suppliant, sometimes at least to feel in 
Holy Communion a little of the tenderness of Your love, that my 
faith may grow stronger, that my hope in Your goodness may 
increase, and that charity, once perfectly kindled within me by 
tasting heavenly manna, may never fail.
     Your mercy can give me the grace I long for and can visit me 
most graciously with fervor of soul according to Your good 
pleasure. For although I am not now inflamed with as great desire 
as those who are singularly devoted to You, yet by Your grace I 
long for this same great flame, praying and seeking a place among 
all such ardent lovers that I may be numbered among their holy 
company.



The Fifteenth Chapter

                    The Fifteenth Chapter

The Grace of Devotion is Acquired Through Humility and Self-Denial

                     The Voice of Christ

YOU must seek earnestly the grace of devotion, ask for it 
fervently, await it patiently and hopefully, receive it 
gratefully, guard it humbly, cooperate with it carefully and leave 
to God, when it comes, the length and manner of the heavenly 
visitation.
     When you feel little or no inward devotion, you should 
especially humiliate yourself, but do not become too dejected or 
unreasonably sad. In one short moment God often gives what He has 
long denied. At times He grants at the end what He has denied from 
the beginning of prayer. If grace were always given at once, or 
were present at our beck and call, it would not be well taken by 
weak humankind. Therefore, with good hope and humble patience 
await the grace of devotion.
     When it is not given, or for some unknown reason is taken 
away, blame yourself and your sins. Sometimes it is a small matter 
that hinders grace and hides it, if, indeed, that which prevents 
so great a good may be called little rather than great. But if you 
remove this hindrance, be it great or small, and if you conquer it 
perfectly, you shall have what you ask. As soon as you have given 
yourself to God with all your heart and seek neither this nor that 
for your own pleasure and purpose, but place yourself completely 
in His charge, you shall find yourself at peace, united with Him, 
because nothing will be so sweet, nothing will please you so much 
as the good pleasure of His will.
     Anyone, therefore, who shall with simplicity of heart direct 
his intention to God and free himself from all inordinate love or 
dislike for any creature will be most fit to receive grace and 
will be worthy of the gift of devotion. For where the Lord finds 
the vessel empty He pours down His blessing.
     So also the more perfectly a man renounces things of this 
world, and the more completely he dies to himself through contempt 
of self, the more quickly this great grace comes to him, the more 
plentifully it enters in, and the higher it uplifts the free 
heart.
     Then shall he see and abound, then shall his heart marvel and 
be enlarged within him, because the Hand of the Lord is with him 
and in the hollow of that Hand he has placed himself forever. Thus 
shall the man be blessed who seeks God with all his heart and has 
not regarded his soul in vain. Such a one, receiving the Holy 
Eucharist, merits the grace of divine union because he looks not 
on his own thoughts, nor to his own comfort, but above all 
devotion and consolation to the glory and honor of God.



The Sixteenth Chapter

                    The Sixteenth Chapter

     We Should Show Our Needs to Christ and Ask His Grace

                        The Disciple

O MOST kind, most loving Lord, Whom I now desire to receive with 
devotion, You know the weakness and the necessity which I suffer, 
in what great evils and vices I am involved, how often I am 
depressed, tempted, defiled, and troubled.
     To You I come for help, to You I pray for comfort and relief. 
I speak to Him Who knows all things, to Whom my whole inner life 
is manifest, and Who alone can perfectly comfort and help me.
     You know what good things I am most in need of and how poor I 
am in virtue. Behold I stand before You, poor and naked, asking 
Your grace and imploring Your mercy.
     Feed Your hungry beggar. Inflame my coldness with the fire of 
Your love. Enlighten my blindness with the brightness of Your 
presence. Turn all earthly things to bitterness for me, all 
grievance and adversity to patience, all lowly creation to 
contempt and oblivion. Raise my heart to You in heaven and suffer 
me not to wander on earth. From this moment to all eternity do You 
alone grow sweet to me, for You alone are my food and drink, my 
love and my joy, my sweetness and my total good.
     Let Your presence wholly inflame me, consume and transform me 
into Yourself, that I may become one spirit with You by the grace 
of inward union and by the melting power of Your ardent love.
     Suffer me not to go from You fasting and thirsty, but deal 
with me mercifully as You have so often and so wonderfully dealt 
with Your saints.
     What wonder if I were completely inflamed by You to die to 
myself, since You are the fire ever burning and never dying, a 
love purifying the heart and enlightening the understanding.



The Seventeenth Chapter

                   The Seventeenth Chapter

     The Burning Love and Strong Desire to Receive Christ

                        The Disciple

WITH greatest devotion and ardent love, with all affection and 
fervor of heart I wish to receive You, O Lord, as many saints and 
devout persons, most pleasing to You in their holiness of life and 
most fervent in devotion, desired You in Holy Communion.
     O my God, everlasting love, my final good, my happiness 
unending, I long to receive You with as strong a desire and as 
worthy a reverence as any of the saints ever had or could have 
felt, and though I am not worthy to have all these sentiments of 
devotion, still I offer You the full affection of my heart as if I 
alone had all those most pleasing and ardent desires.
     Yet, whatever a God-fearing mind can conceive and desire, I 
offer in its entirety to You with the greatest reverence and 
inward affection. I wish to keep nothing for self but to offer to 
You, willingly and most freely, myself and all that is mine.
     O Lord God, my Creator and my Redeemer, I long to receive You 
this day with such reverence, praise, and honor, with such 
gratitude, worthiness and love, with such faith, hope, and purity 
as that with which Your most holy Mother, the glorious Virgin 
Mary, longed for and received You when she humbly and devoutly 
answered the angel who announced to her the mystery of the 
Incarnation: "Behold the handmaid of the Lord; be it done to me 
according to thy word."[52]
     Likewise as Your blessed precursor, the most excellent of 
saints, John the Baptist, gladdened by Your presence, exulted in 
the Holy Ghost while yet enclosed in the womb of his mother, and 
afterward seeing Jesus walking among men, humbled himself and with 
devout love declared: "The friend of the bridegroom, who standeth 
and heareth him, rejoiceth with joy because of the bridegroom's 
voice,"[53] even so I long to be inflamed with great and holy 
desires and to give myself to You with all my heart.
     Therefore I offer and present to You the gladness of all 
devout hearts, their ardent affection, their mental raptures, 
their supernatural illuminations and heavenly visions together 
with all the virtues and praises which have been or shall be 
celebrated by all creatures in heaven and on earth, for myself and 
all commended to my prayers, that You may be worthily praised and 
glorified forever.
     Accept, O Lord my God, my promises and desires of giving You 
infinite praise and boundless benediction, which in the vastness 
of Your ineffable greatness are justly due You. This I render and 
desire to render every day and every moment of time, and in my 
loving prayers I invite and entreat all celestial spirits and all 
the faithful to join me in giving You praise and thanks.
     Let all people, races, and tongues praise You and with the 
greatest joy and most ardent devotion magnify Your sweet and holy 
name. And let all who reverently and devoutly celebrate this most 
great Sacrament and receive it in the fullness of faith, find 
kindness and mercy in You and humbly pray for me, a sinner. And 
when they have received the longed-for devotion and blissful 
union, and, well consoled and wonderfully refreshed, have retired 
from Your holy, Your celestial table, may they deign to remember 
my poor soul.
-----
[52] Luke 1:38.
[53] John 3:29.



The Eighteenth Chapter

                    The Eighteenth Chapter

     Man Should Not Scrutinize This Sacrament in Curiosity, 
   But Humbly Imitate Christ and Submit Reason to Holy Faith

                     The Voice of Christ

BEWARE of curious and vain examination of this most profound 
Sacrament, if you do not wish to be plunged into the depths of 
doubt. He who scrutinizes its majesty too closely will be 
overwhelmed by its glory.
     God can do more than man can understand. A pious and humble 
search for truth He will allow, a search that is ever ready to 
learn and that seeks to walk in the reasonable doctrine of the 
fathers.
     Blest is the simplicity that leaves the difficult way of 
dispute and goes forward on the level, firm path of God's 
commandments. Many have lost devotion because they wished to 
search into things beyond them.
     Faith is required of you, and a sincere life, not a lofty 
intellect nor a delving into the mysteries of God. If you neither 
know nor understand things beneath you, how can you comprehend 
what is above you? Submit yourself to God and humble reason to 
faith, and the light of understanding will be given you so far as 
it is good and necessary for you. Some are gravely tempted 
concerning faith and the Sacrament but this disturbance is not 
laid to them but to the enemy.
     Be not disturbed, dispute not in your mind, answer not the 
doubts sent by the devil, but believe the words of God, believe 
His saints and prophets and the evil enemy will flee from you. It 
is often very profitable for the servant of God to suffer such 
things. For Satan does not tempt unbelievers and sinners whom he 
already holds securely, but in many ways he does tempt and trouble 
the faithful servant.
     Go forward, then, with sincere and unflinching faith, and 
with humble reverence approach this Sacrament. Whatever you cannot 
understand commit to the security of the all-powerful God, Who 
does not deceive you. The man, however, who trusts in himself is 
deceived. God walks with sincere men, reveals Himself to humble 
men, enlightens the understanding of pure minds, and hides His 
grace from the curious and the proud.
     Human reason is weak and can be deceived. True faith, 
however, cannot be deceived. All reason and natural science ought 
to come after faith, not go before it, nor oppose it. For in this 
most holy and supremely excellent Sacrament, faith and love take 
precedence and work in a hidden manner.
     God, eternal, incomprehensible, and infinitely powerful, does 
great and inscrutable things in heaven and on earth, and there is 
no searching into His marvelous works. If all the works of God 
were such that human reason could easily grasp them, they would 
not be called wonderful or beyond the power of words to tell.


豊かな人生のための四つの法則