Excerpt from The Imitation of Christ
“My son, says the Lord, listen to my words, the most delightful
of all words, surpassing all the knowledge of the philosophers and wise men of
this world. My words are spirit and life
and cannot be comprehended by human senses alone.
They are not to be interpreted according the vain pleasure
of the listener, but they must be listened to in silence and received with all
humility and great affection.
And I said: Blessed is
the man whom you teach, Lord, and whom you instruct in your law; for him you
soften the blow of the evil day, and you do not desert him on the earth.
The Lord says, I have instructed my prophets from the
beginning and even to the present time I have not stopped speaking to all men,
but many are deaf and obstinate in response.
Many hear the world more easily than they hear God; they
follow the desires of the flesh more readily than the pleasure of God.
The world promises rewards that are temporal and
insignificant, and these are pursued with great longing; I promise rewards that
are eternal and unsurpassable, yet the hearts of mortals respond sluggishly.
Who serves and obeys me in all matters with as much care as
the world and its princes are served?
Blush, then, you lazy, complaining servant, for men are
better prepared for the works of death than you are for the works of life. They
take more joy in vanity than you in truth.
Yet they are often deceived in their hope, while my promise
deceives no one, and leaves empty-handed no one who confides in me. What I have
promised I shall give; what I have said I will fulfill for any man who remains
faithful in my love unto the very end. I am the rewarder of all good men, the
one who rigorously tests the devoted.
Write my words in your heart and study them diligently, for
they will be absolutely necessary in the time of temptation. Whatever you fail
to understand in reading my words will become clear to you on the day of your
visitation.
I am accustomed to visit my elect in a double fashion, that
is, with temptation and with consolation. And I read to them two lessons each
day: one to rebuke them for their faults; the other to exhort them to increase
their virtue.
He who possesses my
words yet spurns them earns his own judgment on the last day.”
~Thomas à Kempis
“The whole work... is a sustained irritant which preserves us... from sinking back into relaxation: from self-conceit, self-pity, self-love. It
offers consolation here and there, but always at the price of fresh exertion... Heaven help us if we find easy reading in The
Imitation of Christ.”
~Ronald Knox
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