I pray and many times it is hard to keep praying. I get
tired. Prayer becomes wearisome. I worry that if I say the same things daily,
my mind and heart will not be in the prayer, but far away, as I cannot always
focus.
Focusing takes practice, but also good health. There are so
many people who think that the very sick or those in pain can pray. It is very
hard to pray when one is ill and tired.
To teach the young to pray well, when they are healthy and
full of energy is an excellent thing. Prayer must be habitual. Yes, sometimes
habit becomes boring, but if one is faithful, God will reward persistence.
The message of the chapter on a happy death is one of
persistence in prayers and good works. We must never give up the fight.
Remember St. Francis’
comment, “My God never says, ‘Enough’”.
“This is indeed the
greatest of all graces, the grace of the elect; and if at the last moment we
unite ourselves by an intense act of love with Christ’s sacrifice perpetuated
on the altar, we may even obtain remission of the temporal punishment due to
out sins and thus be saved from purgatory.”
Garrigou-Lagrange writes that we should pray in the Name of
Jesus Christ specifically for a happy death; that we should united ourselves
with the Eucharistic consecration, “the
essence of the sacrifice of the mass, pondering on the four ends of sacrifice:
adoration, supplication, reparation, and thanksgiving. Let us bear in mind that
in this continuous oblation of Himself, our Lord is offering, as well the whole
of His mystical body, especially those who suffer spiritually and thereby share
a little in His own suffering. This is a path that will carry us far if only we
follow it perseveringly.”
Perseverance cannot be emphasized too much. Persevere in
prayer, in attending Mass, in Adoration.
Again, there is great wisdom in one of the footnotes. In a
book on the foundress of the Carmelit convent of Fontainebleau , Mere Elizabeth de la Croix,
Garrigou-Lagrange found this about her visions of Christ. Christ said to this
nun that “The two chief motives that led Me
to acquiesce in Pilate’s condemnation of Me were the will and glory of My
Father and a hunger for the salvation of men. Your whole life, in its smallest
details, should be dominated by these two sentiments. Take upon yourself My own
sufferings…”
Are we generous enough to do so?
To be continued…