PatiencE
out of love for God and in union with
Jesus Christ
Graciously
by Father Mathurin of the Mother of God
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of
the Holy Ghost, and of the Mother of God. Amen.
At the dawn of this New Year, on this first day of
the New Year dedicated to our Heavenly Father, on
our behalf, on your behalf, my brothers and sisters,
we want to present our best wishes to our Heavenly
Father.
We have been chosen to be the praise of His
glory,
1
says Saint Paul. With all the intensity and
fervor of our heart, we will begin by saying to the
Eternal Father that we want to be a praise of glory
for Him, and that for His glory, we want to employ
all that He has created within us: our heart, our
soul, our will, our memory, all our faculties, our
entire being.
Christian Patience
The watchword for this year is patience.
Father Adolphe Tanquerey gives us the definition of
it in his Treatise on Theology: Patience is a
Christian virtue that gives us the strength to
withstand with equanimity of soul, for the
love of God, and in union with Jesus Christ,
all physical and moral sufferings.
2
I wish for you this Christian virtue of patience.
However, there is also a worldly patience in which
someone keeps his composure by a certain
restraint, to create an image and impress his
entourage, to arrive at human, earthly ends. This is
not the kind I am referring to.
The primary intention of the virtue of patience
which we invite you to practice this year is first of
all to give glory to God – but to give Him glory in
a very special manner: by developing a conviction
in our heart that if God sends us something to
suffer, it is because He has an intention, a plan for
His child. It is by a design of His love that
suffering, in all its forms, visits us.
The practice of the virtue of patience is also to
make reparation for sin and to enter into God’s
design through the sufferings and tribulations that
He sends us. Many authors put this motive of
reparation first, but I wanted to begin with a more
positive motive, which is to give glory to God.
Source of suffering
It is not God who made suffering. Suffering is
the fruit of sin. Man was made for God, for the joy
of union with Him. And ever since man, by his sin,
broke this divine project, he suffers, he is
disoriented, he gropes. Man’s intelligence is
obscured, he can no longer see clearly. All his
faculties are in darkness – all of them! – because of
sin.
But by a kind of sleight of hand, we might say,
Infinite Love succeeded in turning suffering, which
came from our sin, into the remedy for our sin.
Man sins, bringing about suffering, and Infinite
Love makes it the remedy for sin. It took God to
think of this! I believe that this is one of the most
beautiful manifestations of His Infinite Love. Our
sin brings about suffering, we are condemned. And
God, in order to manifest His Infinite Love, elevates
the suffering caused by man’s sin to a sublime
dignity, one could say an almost infinite dignity.
Identifying with
Christ
We meditate on this
virtue of patience in
adversity especially
during the Christmas
season. It is first
manifested through
Mary and Joseph:
during the five-day
journey from Nazareth
to Bethlehem and the
rejections in Bethlehem. Contemplate the details of
their comportment, totally imbued with patience.
When Jesus arrives, what meekness He has, what
patience! And the world is already going to pursue
the little Infant. The Holy Family must make haste
to flee into Egypt. Contemplate how they acted
during their journey; they left the grotto of
Bethlehem in the middle of the night, without any
preparation, to undertake a long passage through
the desert in all sorts of difficult conditions. They
took refuge in Egypt, a foreign land. We ought to
contemplate their patience in order to imitate it,
and thus enter into these dispositions of Jesus,
Mary and Joseph.
Since the coming of Jesus, it seems that
suffering is what has the capacity to identify us
most with Jesus, the Christ, the Word of God
incarnate. Go anywhere in the world, with any
denomination – Catholic (it goes without saying)
but also Protestant, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist,
Hindu, pagan – go around the world and show a
cross, just a cross made of two little pieces of wood
or two pencil lines. Everyone will recognize the
sign of Jesus before the word cross is spoken. The
cross is synonymous with Jesus, so much did He
appropriate it to Himself.
I sincerely and deeply believe that the example
of Jesus is what can motivate us the most to
practice patience in the adversities and trials of life;
and there are many! I do not think there is a word
that has more synonyms than suffering: cross,
adversity, tribulation, trials, aches and pains,
infirmity, disease... In each of these synonyms,
God expects His child to receive it with patience as
a gift.
We must be very attentive to the way we receive
suffering. I would like to take this opportunity to
correct an oft-repeated statement: The cross,
suffering, is salvation. This is true, but at the same
time it is inaccurate. There were three crosses on
Calvary. The cross of Jesus, Christ the Redeemer.
He came to save us by means of the deified cross,
precisely by this sleight of hand of His infinite Love.
There is the cross of the good thief, who was
revolted, who grumbled and complained, as the
Gospel relates. But when he contemplated Jesus
crucified next to him, he was converted, he was
transformed, and suffering became redemptive and
salutary for him. On the other hand, the bad thief,
who underwent the same suffering, the same
torment of the cross, became a reprobate, because
he grumbled and complained till the end. He
blasphemed, he cursed his sufferings.
It is a great mystery which Jesus revealed to us,
and which was also partially revealed in the Old
Testament. Let us recall the story of the holy man
Tobias, truly a saint in the Old Testament, who
multiplied his good works in secret, in great
discretion, under the eye of God alone, to glorify
Him. Humanity was still several centuries before
the coming of Christ. As Tobias was taking a nap
under a tree, some bird droppings fell on his eyes
and he became blind for years. Later, thanks to a
cure indicated by the Archangel Raphael, who had
accompanied his son to a distant land, Tobias was
healed of his blindness upon their return. Then the
Angel instructed him on the reason for this trial: “I
will now reveal the truth to you, and I will not hide
the secret from you. Because you were
acceptable to God, it was necessary that you
be tried.”
3
Hearing the statement of this great truth which
the Angel manifests to us in God’s name, we must
be silent and endorse this truth, adhere to it.
Because you were acceptable to God, it was
necessary that you be tried… We might retort that
everyone on earth is tested! And then add that
probably most of these people are not pleasing to
God. Well, I would answer that the mercy of God is
even greater now than it was for Tobias. It is true
that we are not pleasing to God, but He sends us
trials in order to make us pleasing to Him. This is
the purpose of suffering.
The Divine remedy
We are all sinners. Humanity is more sinful
than ever before. God wants to make humanity
pleasing in His sight, humanity which outrages
Him, these Christians who scorn Him and
shamelessly despise His expectations in every way.
In spite of this, God has decided that He will make
humanity pleasing in His divine sight. That is why
we invite you to Christian patience, so that we
sinners may become pleasing to God, along with all
our brothers of the earth.
Not so long ago, concerning the anxiety that we
may feel in these troubled times, I asked the
question: Is God going to close the books? Closing
the books means shutting down the company, it is
all over. Will this be the end of the history of
humanity? From a human point of view, is God not
discouraged, fed up, tired of men? Is He not sick
and tired of the universal evil which knows no
bounds? Is He not weary of being mocked like this
by humans, His creatures? Fortunately, the
sufferings we have experienced in the last few years
have given me hope. One might say that God had
two remaining options: the first one was to close
the books of human history, but it appears He did
not choose this option. Instead, God chose to
employ suffering – suffering which comes from
men, from their sins.
As I said before, it is not God who invented evil.
It is important that we truly understand this: evil
comes from the sins of men. Evil brings about this
desolation, which is becoming increasingly
widespread, which is becoming universal. It is this
same desolation that will be the remedy for all evils
if – hence the reason for the watchword – IF, my
brothers and sisters, in patience, without
complaining, without grumbling, without analyzing
everything – if as sinners, as people who are guilty,
we accept these evils in patience, patience. What a
profound and sublime invention of Infinite Love:
God makes suffering the remedy for evil.
The prophet says of Jesus the Messiah, He was
thought of as a man struck by God and afflicted.
4
Jesus, Innocence itself, was regarded as the vilest of
sinners, struck not by the hand of men but struck
by God Himself. This is how our Redeemer became
our remedy. He took our sins upon Himself. He
atoned for them with all His sufferings and with
His sorrowful Passion. Jesus is the greatest, finest
example we can have of this virtue of patience – a
Christian virtue, that is, a Christlike virtue.
Our Saviour practiced patience in all the
circumstances of His life, from the manger to
Calvary. First, He remained hidden for thirty years
in a life of labor and patience. Then, in His public
life, He was often badly received, confronted with
all sorts of snares that were set for Him, enduring
all sorts of remarks that mocked and ridiculed Him.
What patience!
Patience in the
face of His enemies,
patience with His
friends. His
Apostles, His friends,
did not understand
very quickly. Man
does not understand
the things of God
very quickly.
Patience all around,
and in a sublime
manner during His Passion. It is as if there was
something about patience that charmed Jesus so
deeply that He wanted to come and show us how to
practice it.
The Royal Gift of Infinite Love
My brothers and sisters, we must believe that
trials, tribulations, woes and sorrows are the royal
gift of Infinite Love. Believing it and adhering
to it is perfection. The perfection of a Christian
is to truly believe with his whole soul that suffering
is a royal gift of Infinite Love, and therefore of God
Himself. Whatever the suffering, tribulation,
infirmity, illness, contradiction, setback – and I
have not named all of them yet – we must silence
our little reasoning and enter into the design of God
by views of faith.
Sin has distanced us from God; it has riveted us
to the earth and set us on a path contrary to God. I
insist on this point so that it may be well
remembered: by our sins, we have produced all
evils and tribulations, and God has decided that
these same sufferings produced by our sins would
be the remedy for our sins. That is the divine
remedy, but we must remember it and believe it
when the occasions arise.
Suffering sets all things in order, in their place.
What a mystery! Not only does suffering purify our
souls, but God has made it the condition for the
fulfillment of His greatest designs. And the
ultimate proof of this assertion is the cross. In our
sufferings, may we not forget to unite ourselves to
God’s intention. May we accept them as His will,
for the purification of our soul in order to glorify
Him, to enter into His design.
Let us recall the story of Saint Teresa of Avila,
who traveled by night to establish her Carmelite
convents. She met with a great deal of opposition,
not only from the part of worldly people but even
from the clergy, although it was a time of fervor in
the Church. One winter’s night, a bridge she was
crossing with her sisters gave way under the weight
of the horse-drawn covered cart. Cart and nuns all
fell into the river. With great difficulty, they
managed to climb out of the icy water. Jesus,
smiling, was waiting for Teresa of Avila on the
bank, and He said to her, “This is how I treat My
friends.” And Teresa of Avila jokingly replied in all
simplicity, “I can understand why You have so few!”
We like to laughingly repeat these words in all
kinds of unfortunate situations. But it is really the
truth. We must believe that suffering and setbacks
are the way of God’s friends.
Mysterium fidei
God sends sufferings to those He loves. This
great truth is a component of the mysteries of God’s
love. Here on earth, the love we have for God is not
an emotion, something we can feel. It is a common
error among Christians to want to feel the love of
God – feel a kind of warmth, a palpitation, an
emotion, beautiful tears – it feels so good. That is
not bad, but even in religion, it remains a natural
emotion.
By views of faith, we must believe in the
love of God in trials, in suffering.
My brothers and sisters, this year I invite you
to a practical faith of truly believing that by
way of the evils that already visit us and those
that will come later, it is God who wants to
manifest His love to us and to humanity.
Let me remind you of the Latin formula that
the priest pronounces during the Consecration
at Mass: Mysterium fidei. These words are
employed for the Holy Eucharist, the mystery
of faith. You can apply the same formula in
suffering, hardship, infirmity and illness.
Draw up the very long list of the trials you are
experiencing now and all of those that are
looming on the horizon. You see them
coming. What we have gone through was the
first chapter. What is coming will be a little
more severe, a little more painful. Mysterium
fidei. Believe that this is the manifestation of
the love of God, who has decided to save us.
He needs a little handful of souls motivated by
this faith. Will we be among these souls?
Yes, my brothers and sisters; yes, we will. I
am willing to answer on your behalf because I
truly believe that your heart says yes.
The Eucharist is a mystery of faith. Does the
truth, the reality of Jesus’ presence in the Host
reside in the fact that you feel He is there, that you
have an emotion which reveals to you that, Oh yes!
Jesus is there? No, we believe in His presence
because He revealed it to us and we have faith in
His word. So it is with this other mystery that we
are commenting on today. Suffering is a mystery of
faith, which we must accept just like the mystery of
the Real Presence. And we accept it not because we
have a sweet emotion and we feel that “Yes, it is
true, suffering is beneficial for me.” If we feel sweet
emotions, it is because we are on the way out of the
tribulation. When we are in our trial, there is no
sweet emotion, only pain, sadness,
incomprehension. The less we understand, the
more painful it is. This is the mystery of our
redemption, Mysterium fidei. It is salutary, it is
our sanctification.
Suffering that is accepted turns a sinner
into a saint, by a divine decree. God has so
decided. Our sin produced all the evils, and God
decided that the evils would be our salvation. In
this realm, more than anywhere else, we must be
wary of our senses. All our faculties can deceive us:
intelligence, memory, understanding. When
everything is painful, when we can no longer see
the horizon, let us apply ourselves to submit
entirely to God interiorly, and to adhere. Then,
with gratitude, we will praise God, we will bless
Him, and we will glorify Him by the fervor of our
faith. That is salvation. It is salvation for oneself,
salvation for humanity. That is how the world will
be saved.
This kind of faith has always been
indispensable, but now it is more indispensable
than ever, because the world is going to enter a
time of more intense suffering. Witnesses for God
will be needed, people capable of praising and
glorifying Him by the adherence of their heart.
They will truly be Apostles of Infinite Love because
their heart, in every suffering, every difficulty, every
darkness, always and in all circumstances, will
adore the designs of God.
Our Lady of La Salette said in Her appeal to the
Apostles of the Latter Times: I am with you and in
you, provided that your faith be the light
that enlightens you in these days of woe.
More than anywhere else, it is in suffering that we
must practice faith. And remember: faith is not
about feeling, it is not even about understanding.
Faith means to adhere to a mystery that is
revealed to us, a mystery that is beyond
reason. And the more we are overwhelmed, the
more we are inundated by all kinds of sufferings,
the more our reason and all our senses are at a loss,
then the more also our heart, our innermost being,
adheres to God by faith.
Graciously
It is customary to add a wish to the watchword.
For the year that just ended, the wish you received
was “to follow Jesus, the Truth, and to do it
graciously”. This year, we repeat the same wish of
practicing the virtue of patience graciously, that is,
in such a way that no one realizes that we are
patient. When we show our neighbor that we are
being patient, it means that we are not. We want to
make him feel that he is making us suffer, that he is
exercising us, that he is a cause of suffering for us.
This year, apply yourself to practicing patience
graciously.
In the hymn on patience by Saint Louis Mary de
Montfort, we sing:
What glory for God, our good Father,
To see His dear child laughing,
Humbly kissing and revering
The rod with which He strikes him;
Who amid the blows exclaims:
“Blessed be God! O my God, pardon!
“Father, I give Thee thanks,
“Oh, what a grace! What a great gift.”
The canticle of gratitude
How glorious it is for God to see His child
smiling and thanking Him for the suffering He
sends Him! I am convinced that this is the
summit of religion. Yes, there is nothing greater
here on earth than to accept trials, to thank God in
suffering, to praise and bless Him, not only with
our lips but especially with our heart and from the
depths of our soul, saying to Him, “My God,
nothing better could happen to me, since it is You
who has so decided.” It does not matter what the
tribulation, suffering, trial or evil is. Now, this is
easy to say sitting comfortably in an armchair, but
when suffering visits us, when everything hurts, it
can become heroic to say: “My God, yes! Nothing
better could have happened to me. I glorify You, I
bless You.”
Jesus, Innocence itself, was regarded as a man
struck by God, regarded as the guilty one. But we
are not innocent. And faced with the suffering that
comes our way, we ought to say: “Blessed be God!
O my God, pardon. My God, You have not
forsaken me! You have sent suffering to me, You
have decided to save me. Father, I thank You. Oh,
what a grace! What a great gift!”
I believe that all of Heaven is in suspense upon
seeing a Christian who blesses and thanks God
when his whole being, his heart and soul, is in
trials, in darkness, and is burdened with all sorts of
sufferings. There is nothing rational, it is trials and
nothing but trials, yet this Christian continues to
praise God. When He sees this sentiment in His
child, God puts all of Heaven on hold. He invites
the Angels and the Saints, according to our way of
speaking, and says to them: “Come and see My
child. Come and look at this. Here is one who is
oppressed, who is in darkness, who sees nothing,
understands nothing, is suffering in every way.
And look at how he praises Me, blesses and thanks
Me!”
What a spectacular sight for God, the Angels and
the Saints! Wouldn’t we like to give this glory to
God? I am sure that Heaven pauses to contemplate
such a display, for it is so great, so glorifying to
God. At that moment we might hear Jesus repeat:
Amen I say to you, I have not found such great
faith, not even in Israel!
5
My brothers and sisters, we belong to the Order
of the Magnificat of the Mother of God – the
Magnificat is the Virgin Mary’s canticle of
gratitude. More than anyone else, we must practice
gratitude in trial and sorrow, so that tomorrow, by
our contact, humanity will return to God. Instead
of grumbling, complaining and finding the action of
God deplorable, even detrimental – which amounts
to criticizing God Himself – may souls, by our
contact, praise and bless God by means of their
sufferings. That is the intention of this watchword
and wish.
Let us sing the first three verses of the hymn on
Patience by Saint Louis Mary de Montfort:
I admire a great princess
Who laughs amid her torments,
Who, without grief or sadness,
Turns her woes into delightful pleasure.
This is invincible Patience.
It is the lesson of Jesus as He was dying,
The foundation of all hope,
The strength of the true conqueror.
Is this not the great sacrifice
Of man to the Divinity
To pay back all His justice,
To glorify His goodness,
To rely on His Providence,
To believe in His authority,
To be subject to His power,
To adore His majesty?
What glory for God, our good Father,
To see His dear child laughing,
Humbly kissing and revering
The rod with which He strikes him;
Who amid the blows exclaims:
“Blessed be God! O my God, pardon!
“Father, I give Thee thanks,
“Oh, what a grace! What a great gift.”
Is this not the greatest and finest sacrifice of
man to the Divinity? To pay back all His justice...
It pays for everything, everything! His justice is
satisfied. To glorify His goodness. It is truly a
miracle of His Infinite Love. Sin brought all evils
upon us, and the evils repair sin.
Is this not the great sacrifice
Of man to the Divinity
To pay back all His justice,
To glorify His goodness,
To rely on His Providence…
It is absolutely certain that the plan, the great
design of Divine Providence is being fulfilled in this
manner.
On this first day of the new year, we are going to
offer this first Holy Sacrifice of the Mass along with
Jesus, who is our great model, and who is going to
immolate Himself to His Father on the altar. I ask
our good Jesus, who is going to sacrifice Himself, to
give you an efficacious grace to fulfill the
watchword for this year – Patience out of love for
God and in union with Jesus Christ – so that the
designs of His Providence may be fulfilled by
means of sufferings and trials. I offer this Mass in
your name, including the intention, the desire of
your heart to apply yourself to this. May His design
of love be fulfilled through sufferings, trials, woes
and tribulations because our soul, our heart will
adhere. May we not complain and criticize, but in
all patience, may we praise and glorify Him.
Watchword
and
Wish
for
2023
1.
Cf. Ephesians 1:6, 12
2.
Father Adolphe Tanquerey, P.S.S., The Spiritual Life: Treatise on Ascetical
and Mystical Theology, pp. 511-512, no. 1088.
3.
Cf. Holy Bible, Tobias 12:6-13.
4.
Isaiah 53:4.
5.
St. Luke 7:9.
Articles by Father Mathurin
of the Mother of God