Garrigou-Lagrange emphasizes in his text on Providence , the mystery of seeing things as
God sees all things. I have used on this blog the phrase, “putting on the Mind
of Christ” of St. Paul
to say something similar. Here is Garrigou-Lagrange: “In the spirit of faith and by the dim light it sheds let us accustom
ourselves gradually to see all things in God. Let us see in the pleasant events
of our life the token of God’s goodness, and also in the painful and unexpected
afflictions a call to a higher life, as being so many graces sent for our
purification and therefore often more to be prized than consolations. St. Peter
crucified was nearer to God than on Thabor.”
“By thus accustoming ourselves to live by faith and the gift
of wisdom we shall become every day better fitted to enter into that knowledge
which is to be ours at the end of our journey through life. We shall then see
God face to face, and in Him all that emanates from Him, especially those
things we have loved on earth with a supernatural love. St. Francis and St. Dominic thus behold in God the destinies of their
orders, and a Christian mother on entering heaven sees in Him the spiritual
needs of the son she has left on earth and the prayers she must offer up for
him.”
In Providence ,
in the Wisdom of God, is our peace, as the Dominican points out. We may not
feel joy on this earth, but we shall experience God’s peace “which comes from order through union with
God.”