Saturday, August 26, 2006

Feeling Restless?

I could not pass this one up...I've been reading again :0)
From: The Imitation of Mary by Alexander De Rouville
Originally published anonymously in 1768

In all circumstances the Lord can be served.

Mary:
My Child, why do you complain about your state in a situation? You say that in them you cannot serve the Lord as you ought? But heaven is filled with saints who became saints in circumstances like yours.
I found God in Egypt, to which I had to move, just as I had found Him in Judea, and I managed to serve Him as before.
If we can preserve the grace and friendship of God in a situation, then we ought to be content with it.
I found it very hard to leave Israel, as did my husband Joseph, but we felt no regret.
Again, when we were summoned back to our home, the only pleasure we felt was at doing the Lord's will, for that was at all times our only law.
My child, if you seek to do the heavenly Father's will and not your own and are content with the state in which He has placed you, you will desire nothing else.
God has blessed the way each person must travel toward sanctity, and you would err if you thought you could find holiness by choosing some other way.
No one can be holy without the help of grace. Now, God grants His grace to each person according as it is needed for the kind of life to which He calls him and the duties for which He destines him.
One who has withdrawn into solitude should not be saddened at having left the world behind, and one whose duty places him in the world should not say he cannot be saved there. The safest state for each is the one in which God has placed him.
Whatever be the situation in which we find ourselves, our salvation depends on fidelity to grace.
John the Baptist found holiness on the banks of the Jordan, where God wanted him to stay. He did not seek to go elsewhere.
The kind of life led by the Apostles who accompanied Jesus and received His teaching did not seem to them any less suitable than John's for reaching holiness.
No, your state is not of itself a barrier to holiness. For it is not the place nor the occupation that sanctifies a man; it is the man who must sanctify the place and the occupataion.
We often turn our thoughts to some state other than the one in which we are. The reason, however, is not love of goodness but our restlessness.
What gain would you have in changing? Would you be a better person? No: in changing you situation or contition, you might cange your mood, but not your character.
Wherever we go, our defects follow us. My child, what you must change is not your state or your duties but yourself.
Sanctify what you do in your present state by referring it all to God, and you will not have cause to complain that your duties are a source of distraction.
The many tasks required by the administration of a great kingdom did not prevent David from praying and from singing the Lord's praises seven times each day.
Numerous occupations did not prevent the saints from becoming saints; instead, they sanctified their occupations.
Holiness does not consist in serving God where and as you would like, but where and as He wishes.
You will glorify God more on a bed of pain if it be His will that you lie there, than if you were to wear yourself out with hard work in an effort to win souls to Him
.

6 Comments:

At 10:24 AM, Blogger Desert Dreamer said...

Same here MM, I even have fond memories of my grandma taking me out in the cold to use the outhouse! I remember the day that they got their indoor bathroom, it was a day that they called the family together and everyone had a big dinner as the men put in the finishing touches.
I guess I wouldn't really enjoy it if I had to use it every day, but I do enjoy the memories.

 
At 7:20 AM, Blogger Chris Dickson, F.L.A. said...

We still have one at our family farm...a two seater...and a Sears Catalog !!!

 
At 7:39 PM, Blogger Desert Dreamer said...

I look at that as being special even though it might seem silly to some. I don't know why...I guess there's a lot of things in life that we can really do without.

 
At 6:03 AM, Blogger myosotis said...

Hey, can anyone explain how a double decker outhouse works?
I get the feeling it's best not to use the bottom level...
My grandparents were the only ones on our street to put an indoor bathroom (little more than a broom closet under the stairwell) when they repaired the war damage at their house. That was in the late 40's, or early 50's. When I came to Italy the first time, we used to have to use the outhouse for our hygienic necessities when we stayed with various aunts who did not have such commodities...
And as for wells, that was the way to get water back then. Now a lot of people still have wells but they use pumps to get the water out and the water is used for their yards so they don't have to pay for it.

 
At 8:28 PM, Blogger Desert Dreamer said...

Well, when I was younger we went to Silver City and toured a home there. They had a double-decker outhouse and the upper holes were set back farther than the lower ones in the house and there was a chute bilt of wood that carried the waste down to the dirt hole in the bottom. The lower deck went directly to the dirt hole.
Does that help any?
We have a well and use the water. Our water is hard though so we get water from a neighbor that has an artesian well. It's so soft it tastes sweet. We use Reservoir water to irrigate the yard with. It comes from Owyhee Dam and it's what everyone uses to irrigate their crops in this area.

 
At 8:31 PM, Blogger Desert Dreamer said...

Honora,
I suppose that it would be better for some to think of the wells but grandma and grandpa always had running water in the house, just not a toilet. So for me, the outhouse is my memory. Their well was only 27 feet deep and you could practically dig down with a shovel and hit water where they lived. Our neighbor that has such good water drilled over 700 feet to get their water way back when.

 

Post a Comment

<< Home

Free Counters
Counter