Chapter I The Necessity of Prayer

by Saint Alphonsus Liguori
Doctor of the Church
1759

Prayer is a means necessary to Salvation
One of the errors of
Pelagianism was the assertion that
prayer is not
necessary for salvation. Pelagius, the
impious author of that
heresy, said that
man will only be damned for
neglecting to know the
truths necessary to be
learned. How astonishing! Saint Augustine said: 'Pelagius discussed everything
except how to pray,' though, as the saint held and taught,
prayer is the only
means of acquiring the science of the saints; according to the text of Saint
James: "If any man lacks wisdom, let him ask of God,
Who gives to all abundantly,
and upbraides not" - James 1:5. The Scriptures are clear enough in pointing out,
how necessary it is to pray, if we would be
saved. "We ought always to pray, and
not to faint" - Luke 18:1. "Watch and pray, that you enter not into temptation"
- Matthew
26:41. "Ask, and it shall be given you" - Matthew 7:7 . The words 'we ought,'
'pray,' 'ask,' according to the general consent of theologians,
impose the
precept, and denote the necessity of prayer.
Wickliffe said that these texts are
to be understood, not precisely of prayer, but only of the necessity of
good
works, for in his system, prayer was only
well-doing; but this was his error, and
was expressly condemned by the
Church. Hence Lessius wrote that it is
heresy to
deny that prayer is necessary for
salvation in adults; as it evidently appears
from Scripture that prayer
is the means, without which we cannot obtain the
help necessary for
salvation.
The reason of this is evident. Without the assistance of
God's grace we can
do no good thing: "Without
Me, you can do nothing" - John 15:5. Saint Augustine
remarks on this passage, that Our Lord did not say,
Without Me, you can complete
nothing, but Without Me, you can
do nothing; giving us to understand that
without grace we cannot even
begin to do a good thing. Nay more,
Saint Paul
writes, that of ourselves we cannot even have the
wish to do good.
"Not that we are sufficient to think any thing of
ourselves, as of
ourselves; but our sufficiency is from God" - 2Corinthians 3:5. If we cannot even
think a good thing, much less can we
wish it. The
same thing is taught in many other passages of Scripture: "God works all in all"
- 1Corinthians 12:6. "I will cause you to walk in
My commandments, and to keep My
judgments, and do them" - Ezekiel 36:27. So that, as Saint Leo I says,
"Man does no
good thing, except that which God, by His grace, enables him to do", and hence
the Council of Trent says: "If anyone shall assert that without the previous
inspiration of the Holy Spirit, and His assistance, man can believe, hope, love
or repent, as he ought, in order to obtain the grace of justification, let him
be anathema".
The author of the Opus Imperfectum says that God has given to some animals
swiftness, to others claws, to others wings, for the preservation of their life;
but He has so formed
man, that God Himself is
his only
strength. So that man is
completely unable to provide for his own safety, since
God has willed that
whatever he has, or can have, should come entirely from the
assistance of His
grace.
But this grace is not given in
God's ordinary Providence, except to those who
pray for it; according to the celebrated saying of
Gennadius, "We believe that
no one approaches to be saved, except at the invitation of God; that no one who
is invited works out his salvation, except by the help of God; that no one
merits this help, unless he prays". From these
two premises, on the one hand,
that we can do nothing without the assistance of grace; and
on the other, that
this assistance is only given ordinarily by
God to the man that
prays, who does
not see that the consequence follows, that prayer is absolutely necessary to us
for salvation? And although the
first graces that come to us without any
cooperation on our part, such as the call to faith or to
penance, are, as Saint
Augustine says, granted by God even to those who do
not pray; yet the saint
considers it certain that the other graces, and specially the
grace of
perseverance, are not granted except in answer to
prayer: "God gives
us some things, as the beginning of faith, even when we do not pray. Other
things, such as perseverance, He has only provided for those who pray".
Hence it is that the generality of theologians, following Saint Basil,
Saint
Chrysostom, Clement of Alexandria, Saint Augustine, and other
Fathers, teach that
prayer is necessary to adults, not only because of the obligation of the precept
(as they say), but because it is necessary as a means of
salvation. That is to
say, in the ordinary course of Providence, it is
impossible that a
Christian
should be saved without recommending himself to
God, and asking for the
graces
necessary to salvation. Saint Thomas teaches the same:
"After baptism, continual prayer is necessary to man,
in order that he may enter heaven; for though by baptism our sins are remitted,
there still remain concupiscence to assail us from within, and the world and the
Devil to assail us from without". The reason
then which makes us certain of the necessity of prayer is shortly this, in order
to be saved we must contend and conquer:
"For he also that striveth for the mastery, is not
crowned, except he strive lawfully" - 2Timothy 2:5. But without the
divine
assistance we cannot resist the might of so many and so powerful
enemies: now
this assistance is only granted to
prayer; therefore without
prayer there is no
salvation.
Moreover, that prayer is the only ordinary means of receiving the
divine
gifts is more distinctly proved by Saint Thomas in another place, where he says
that whatever graces God has from all
eternity determined to give us,
He will
give only if we pray for
them. Saint Gregory says the same thing:
"Man by prayer merits to receive that which God had
from all eternity determined to give him".
Not, says Saint Thomas, that prayer is necessary in order that
God may know our
necessities, but in order that we may know the
necessity of having recourse to
God to obtain the help necessary for our
salvation, and may thus acknowledge
Him
to be the Author of all our
good. As, therefore, it is
God's law that we should
provide ourselves with bread by sowing corn, and with wine by planting vines; so
has He ordained that we should receive the
graces necessary to
salvation by
means of prayer: "Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and you shall find"
- Matthew 7:7.
We, in a word, are merely beggars, who have nothing but what
God bestows on
us as alms: "But I am a beggar and poor"
- Psalm 39:18. The Lord, says Saint
Augustine, desires and
wills to pour forth His graces upon us,
but will not give
them except to him who
prays: God wishes to give,
but only gives to him who
asks. This is declared in the words, Seek, and it shall be given to you. Whence
it follows, says Saint Teresa, that he who seeks not, does not receive. As
moisture is necessary for the life of plants, to prevent them from drying up,
so, says Saint Chrysostom, is prayer necessary for our
salvation. Or, as he says
in another place, prayer
vivifies the soul, as the
soul vivifies the
body: "As the body
without the soul cannot live, so the soul without prayer is dead and emits an
offensive odor". He uses these words, because the man who
omits to
recommend himself to God,
at once begins to be
defiled with sins.
Prayer is also
called the food of the soul, because the
body cannot be supported without food;
nor can the soul, says Saint Augustine, be kept alive without
prayer: "As the
flesh is nourished by food, so is man supported by prayers". All these
comparisons used by the holy Fathers are intended by them to teach the absolute
necessity of prayer for the
salvation of everyone.
Without Prayer it is Impossible to Resist Temptations
and to Keep the Commandments
Moreover, prayer is the most necessary weapon of defense against our
enemies;
he who does not avail himself of it, says Saint Thomas, is
lost. He does not doubt
that Adam fell because he did not recommend himself to
God when he was tempted:
"He sinned because he had not recourse to the divine
assistance". Saint Gelasius
says the same of the rebel angels: "Receiving
the grace of God in vain, they could not persevere, because they did not pray".
Saint Charles Borromeo, in a
pastoral letter, observes, that among all the means of salvation recommended by
Jesus Christ in the Gospel, the
first place is given to
prayer; and He has
determined that this should distinguish His Church from all
false religions,
when He calls her
the house of prayer. "My
house shall be called the house of prayer" - Matthew
21:13. Saint Charles concludes that prayer
is the beginning and progress and the
completion of all virtues. So that in darkness,
distress, and danger, we have
no other hope than to raise our eyes to
God, and with fervent prayers to beseech
His mercy to save us:
"As we know not", said king Josaphat,
"what to do, we can only turn our eyes to Thee"
- 2Paralipomenon 20:12. This also was David's practice,
who could find no other means of safety from his
enemies, than continual prayer
to God to deliver him from
their snares: "My eyes are ever towards the Lord; for
He shall pluck my feet out of the snare" - Psalm 24:15. So he did nothing but
pray: "Look upon me, and have mercy on me; for I am alone and poor"
- Ibid. 16. "I
cried to Thee, save me; that I may keep your commandments" - Psalm 118:146.
Lord, turn Your eyes to me, have
pity on me, and save me; for I can do nothing,
and beside You there is none that can
help me.
And, indeed, how could we ever resist our enemies and observe
God's precepts,
especially since Adam's sin, which has rendered us so
weak and infirm, unless we
had prayer as a means whereby we can obtain from
God sufficient light and
strength to enable us to observe
them? It was a blasphemy of
Luther's to say
that after the sin of Adam the observance of
God's law has become absolutely
impossible to man. Jansenius also said that there are some
precepts which are impossible, even to the
just, with the power which they actually have, and so
far his proposition bears a good sense; but
it was
justly condemned by the
Church for the addition
he made to it, when
he said that they have
not the grace
to make the precepts possible. It is true, says
Saint Augustine, that man, in
consequence of his
weakness, is unable to fulfill some of
God's commands with
his
present strength and the ordinary grace given to
all men; but
he can easily, by
prayer, obtain such further
aid as he requires for
his salvation:
"God commands
not impossibilities, but by commanding He suggests to you to do what you can, to
ask for what is beyond your strength; and He helps you, that you may be able".
This is a celebrated text, which was afterwards adopted and made a
doctrine of
faith by the Council of Trent. The holy Doctor immediately adds,
"Let us see
whence?" (i.e., how man is enabled to do that which he cannot). "By
medicine he can do that which his natural weakness renders impossible to him". That is, by
prayer we may obtain a
remedy for our weakness; for when we
pray, God gives us
strength to do that which we cannot do of ourselves.
We cannot believe, continues Saint Augustine, that
God would have imposed on us
the observance of a law, and then made the
law impossible. When, therefore,
God
shows us that of ourselves we are unable to observe all
His commands it is
simply to admonish us to do the easier things by means of the
ordinary grace
which He bestows on us, and then to do the more
difficult things by means of the
greater help which we can obtain by
prayer. "By the
very fact that it is absurd to suppose that God could have commanded us to do
impossible things, we are admonished what to do in easy matters, and what to ask
for in difficulties". But
why, it will be asked, has God commanded us to do things
impossible to our
natural strength? Precisely for this, says Saint Augustine, that we may be incited
to pray for help to do that which of ourselves we cannot do.
"He commands some
things which we cannot do, that we may know what we ought to ask of Him". And in
another place: "The law was given, that grace might be
sought for; grace was given that the law might be fulfilled". The
law cannot be kept without
grace,
and God has given the
law with this object, that we may always ask
Him for grace
to observe it. In another place he says: "The
law is good, if it be used lawfully; what, then, is the lawful use of the law"? He answers:
"When by the law we perceive our own weakness, and ask
of God the grace to heal us". Saint
Augustine then says: We ought to use the law; but for what purpose? To learn by
means of the law, which we find to be above our strength, our own inability to
observe it, in order that we may then obtain by prayer the divine aid to cure
our weakness.
Saint Bernard's teaching is the same: "What are we, or what is our strength,
that we should be able to resist so many temptations? This certainly it was that
God intended; that we, seeing our deficiencies, and that we have no other help,
should with all humility have recourse to His mercy".
God knows how useful it is
to us to be obliged to pray, in order to keep us
humble, and to exercise our
confidence; and He therefore permits us to be
assaulted by enemies too mighty to
be overcome by our own strength, that by prayer we may obtain from
His mercy aid
to resist them; and it is especially to be remarked that
no one can resist the impure temptations of the flesh
without recommending himself to God when he is
tempted. This foe is so
terrible that, when
he fights with us,
he? as it were,
takes away all light;
he makes us forget all our meditations, all our
good
resolutions; he makes us also
disregard the truths of faith, and even almost
lose the fear of the
divine punishments. For
he conspires, with our natural
inclinations, which drive us with the greatest violence to the
indulgence of sensual pleasures. He who in such a moment does not have recourse to
God is
lost. The only defense against this
temptation is prayer, as
Saint Gregory of
Nyssa says: "Prayer is the bulwark of chastity"; and before him
Solomon: "And as
I knew that I could not otherwise be continent, except God gave it, . . . I went to the
Lord and besought Him" - Wisdom 8:21.
Chastity is a virtue which we have
no strength to practice, unless God gives us; and
God does not give this strength
except to him who asks for it. But whoever prays for it will certainly obtain
it.
Hence Saint Thomas observes (in contradiction to
Jansenius) that we ought not
to say that the precept of chastity, or any
other, is impossible to us; for
though we cannot observe it by our own strength, we can by
God's assistance. "We
must say that what we can do with the divine assistance is not altogether
impossible to us". Nor let it be said that it appears an injustice to order a
cripple to walk straight. No, says Saint Augustine, it is
not an injustice,
provided always means are given him to find the
remedy for his lameness; for
after this, if he continues to go crooked, the
fault is his own:
"It is most wisely commanded that man should walk
uprightly, so that when he sees that he cannot do so of himself, he may seek a
remedy to heal the lameness of sin".
Finally, the same holy Doctor says, that he will never know how to live well who
does not know how to pray well. "He knows how to live aright who knows how to
pray aright"; and, on the other hand, Saint Francis of Assisi says that
without prayer you can never
hope to find good fruit in a
soul.
Wrongly, therefore, do those
sinners excuse themselves who say that
they have
no strength to resist temptation. But if you have not this
strength, why do you
not ask for it? is the reproof which Saint James gives them:
You have it not,
because you ask it not. There is no doubt that we are too
weak to resist the
attacks of our enemies. But, on the other hand, it is
certain that God is
faithful, as the Apostle says, and will not permit us to be
tempted beyond our
strength: "God is faithful, Who will not suffer you to be tempted above that
which you are able; but will make also with the temptation issue, that you may
be able to bear it" - 1Corinthians 10:13. "He
will provide an issue for it", says Primasius, "by the protection of
His grace, that you may be able to withstand the temptation". We are
weak, but
God is strong; when we ask
Him for aid,
He
communicates His strength to us, and we shall be able to do all things, as the
Apostle reasonably assured himself: "I can do all things in
Him Who strengtheneth
me" - Philippians 4:13. He, therefore, who
falls has no excuse (says Saint Chrysostom),
because he has neglected to
pray; for if he had
prayed, he would not have been
overcome by his enemies:
"Nor can anyone be excused who, by ceasing to pray, has
shown that he did not wish to overcome his enemy".
Invocation of the Saints
Is it useful to have recourse to the saints?
Here a question arises, whether it is necessary to have recourse also to the
intercession of the saints to obtain the grace of God.
That it is a lawful and useful thing to invoke the saints, as
intercessors,
to obtain for us, by the merits of
Jesus Christ, that which we, by our
demerits,
are not worthy to receive, is a doctrine of the Church, declared by the
Council
of Trent: "It is good and useful to invoke them by supplication, and to fly to
their aid and assistance to obtain benefits from God through His Son Jesus
Christ".
Such invocation was condemned by the
impious Calvin, but most illogically.
For if it is lawful and profitable to invoke living saints to aid us, and to
beseech them to assist us in prayers, as the
prophet Baruch did: "And pray ye for
us to the Lord our God" - Baruch 1:13); and Saint Paul:
"Brethren, pray for us" - 1Thessalonians
5:25; and as God Himself commanded the friends of Job to recommend themselves
to his prayers, that by the
merits of Job,
He might look favorably on them:
"Go to
my servant Job,...and my servant Job shall pray for you; his face I will accept"
-
(Job 42,8); if, then, it is lawful to recommend ourselves to the
living, how can
it be unlawful to invoke the saints who in heaven enjoy
God face-to-face? This
is not derogatory to the
honor due to God,
but it is doubling
it; for it is
honoring the King not only in
His person, but in
His servants. Therefore, says
Saint Thomas, it is good to have recourse to many saints, "because
by the prayers of many we can sometimes obtain that which we cannot by the
prayers of one". And
if anyone objects, But why have recourse to the saints to pray for us, when they
are already praying for all who are worthy of it? The same Doctor
answers, that no one can be said to be worthy that the saints
should pray for him; but that
"he becomes worthy by having recourse to the saints
with devotion".
Is it good to invoke the souls in purgatory?
Again, it is disputed whether there is any use in recommending one's self to
the souls in Purgatory. Some say that the
souls in that state
cannot pray for
us; and these rely on the authority of Saint Thomas, who says that those
souls,
while they are being
purified by pain, are inferior to us, and therefore
"are
not in a state to pray for us, but rather require our prayers". But many other
Doctors, as Bellarmine, Sylvius, Cardinal Gotti, Lessius,
Medina and others
affirm with great probability, that we should piously believe that
God manifests
our prayer to those
holy souls in order that they may
pray for us; and that so
the charitable interchange of mutual prayer may be kept up between
them and us.
Nor do Saint Thomas' words present much difficulty; for, as
Sylvius and Gotti say,
it is one thing not to be in a state to pray, another
not to be able to pray. It
is true that those souls are not in a
state to pray, because, as Saint Thomas
says, while suffering they are inferior to us, and rather
require our prayers;
nevertheless, in this state they are
well able to pray, as
they are friends of
God. If a father keeps a son whom he tenderly loves in
confinement for some
fault; if the son then is not in a
state to pray for himself, is that any reason
why he cannot pray for others? and may he not expect to obtain what he asks,
knowing, as he does, his father's affection for him? So the
souls in Purgatory,
being beloved by God, and
confirmed in grace, have absolutely no
impediment to
prevent them from praying for
us. Still the Church does not invoke
them, or
implore their intercession, because ordinarily
they have no cognizance of our
prayers. But we may
piously believe that God makes our
prayers known to them;
and then they, full of
charity as they are, most assuredly do not omit to
pray
for us. Saint Catharine of Bologna, whenever she desired any favor, had recourse
to the souls in Purgatory, and was
immediately heard. She even testified that by
the intercession of the souls in
Purgatory she had obtained many
graces which
she had not been able to obtain by the intercession of the saints.
Our duty to pray for the souls in purgatory
Here let me make a digression in favor of those
holy souls. If we desire the
aid of their
prayers, it is but fair that we should mind to
aid them with our
prayers and good works. I said it is
fair, but I should have said it is a
Christian duty; for charity obliges us to
succor our neighbor when he requires
our aid, and we can help him without grievous inconvenience. Now it is certain
that amongst our neighbors are to be reckoned the souls in
Purgatory, who,
although no longer living in this world, yet have not left the
communion of
saints. "The souls of the pious dead", says
Saint Augustine, "are not separated from the
Church", and Saint Thomas says more to our purpose, that the
charity
which is due to the dead who died in the
grace of God is only an extension of
the same charity which we owe to our neighbor while living:
"Charity, which is the bond which unites the members of
the Church, extends not only to the living, but also to the dead who die in
charity". Therefore, we ought to succor,
according to our ability, those holy souls as our neighbors; and as
their
necessities are greater than those of our other neighbors, our duty to
succor them seems also to be
greater.
But now, what are the necessities of those
holy prisoners? It is certain that
their pains are immense. The fire that
tortures them, says Saint Augustine, is
more excruciating than any pain that man can endure in this life:
"That fire will be more painful than anything that man
can suffer in this life". Saint Thomas
thinks the same, and supposes it to be identical with the
fire of Hell:
"The damned are tormented and the elect purified in the
same fire". And this only
relates to the pains of
sense. But the
pain of loss (that is, the
privation of
the sight of God ), which those
holy souls suffer, is much greater; because not
only their natural affection, but also the
supernatural love of God, wherewith
they burn, draws them with such
violence to be united with
their Sovereign Good,
that when they see the
barrier which their
sins have put in the way,
they feel a
pain so acute, that if
they were capable of death,
they could not live a moment.
So that, as Saint Chrysostom says, this pain of the deprivation of
God tortures
them incomparably more than the
pain of sense: "The flames of a
thousand hells together could not inflict such torments as the pain of loss by
itself". So that
those holy souls would rather
suffer every other possible
torture than be
deprived for a single instant of the
union with God for which
they long. So Saint
Thomas says that the pain of Purgatory exceeds anything that can be endured in
this life: "The pain of Purgatory must exceed all pain
of this life". And
Dionysius the Carthusian relates, that a dead person,
who had been raised to
life by the intercession of Saint Jerome, told Saint Cyril of Jerusalem that
all the
torments of this earth are refreshing and
delightful when compared with the very
least pain of Purgatory: "If
all the torments of the world were compared with the least that can be had in
purgatory they would appear comfortable". And he adds,
that if a man had once tried those torments, he would rather
suffer all the
earthly sorrows that man can endure till the
Day of Judgment, than suffer for
one day the least
pain of Purgatory. Hence Saint Cyril wrote to
Saint Augustine:
"That as far as regards the infliction of suffering, these pains are the same as
those of Hell -- their only difference being that they are not eternal". Hence
we see that the pains of these
holy souls are excessive, while, on the other
hand, they cannot
help themselves; because as
Job says: "They shall be in chains, and be bound
with the cords of poverty" - Job 36:8.
They are destined to reign with
Christ; but
they are withheld from taking possession of
their kingdom till the
time of their purgation is accomplished. And
they cannot
help themselves (at
least not sufficiently, even according to those theologians who assert that
they
can by their prayers gain some
relief,) to throw off their chains, until
they
have entirely satisfied the
justice of God. This is precisely what a Cistercian
monk said to the sacristan of his monastery: "Help
me, I beseech you, with your prayers; for of myself I can obtain nothing". And this is consistent with the
saying of Saint Bonaventure: "Destitution
prevents solvency". That is, those souls
are so poor, that they have
no means of making satisfaction.
On the other hand, since it is certain, and even of
faith, that by our
suffrages, and chiefly by our
prayers, as particularly recommended and practiced
by the Church, we can
relieve those holy souls, I do not know how to excuse that
man from sin who neglects to give
them some assistance, at least by his
prayers.
If a sense of duty will not persuade us to succor
them, let us think of the
pleasure it will give
Jesus Christ to see us endeavoring to deliver
His beloved
spouses from prison, in order that
He may have them with
Him in Paradise.
Let us
think of the store of merit which we can lay up by practicing this
great act of
charity; let us think, too, that those souls are
not ungrateful, and will never
forget the great benefit we do
them in relieving
them of their pains, and in
obtaining for them, by our
prayers, anticipation of
their entrance into glory;
so that when they are
there
they will never neglect to
pray for us. And if
God
promises mercy to him who practices
mercy towards his neighbor --
Blessed are
the merciful for they shall obtain mercy - Matthew 5:7 -- he may reasonably expect
to be saved who remembers to
assist those souls so
afflicted, and yet so dear to
God. Jonathan, after having saved the
Hebrews from ruin by a victory over their
enemies, was condemned to
death by his father Saul for having tasted some honey
against his express commands; but the people came before the king, and said,
Shall Jonathan then die, who hath wrought this great salvation in Israel?
- Samuel 14:45. So may we expect that if any of us ever obtains, by his
prayers,
the liberation of a
soul from Purgatory, that
soul will say to God:
"Lord, suffer not him who has delivered me from my
torments to be lost". And if Saul
spared Jonathan's life at the request of his people,
God will not refuse the
salvation of a Christian to the
prayers of a soul which is
His own spouse.
Moreover, Saint Augustine says that God will cause those who in this life have
most succored those
holy souls, when they come to Purgatory themselves, to be
most succored by others. I may here observe that, in practice, one of the
best suffrages is to hear
Mass for them, and during the
Holy Sacrifice to recommend
them to God by the
merits and passion of
Jesus Christ. The following form may be
used: "Eternal Father, I offer you this Sacrifice of the body and blood of Jesus
Christ, with all the pains which He suffered in His life and death; and by His
passion I recommend to you the souls in purgatory, and especially that of..."
etc. And it is a very charitable act to recommend, at the
same time, the souls
of all those who are at the point of death.
Is it necessary to invoke the saints?
Whatever doubt there may be whether or not the souls in
Purgatory can pray
for us, and therefore whether or not it is of any use to recommend ourselves to
their prayers, there can be
no doubt whatever with regard to the saints. For it
is certain that it is most useful to have recourse to the
intercession of the
saints canonized by the Church, who are already enjoying the
Vision of God. To
suppose that the Church can
err in canonizing, is a
sin, or is heresy, according
to Saint Bonaventure, Bellarmine, and others; or at least next door to
heresy,
according to Suarez, Azorius, Gotti, etc.; Because the Sovereign Pontiff,
according to Saint Thomas, is guided by the infallible influence of the
Holy
Spirit in a special way when canonizing the saints.
But to return to the question just proposed: Are we obliged to have recourse
to the intercession of the saints? I do not wish to meddle with the decision of
this question; but I cannot omit the exposition of a doctrine of Saint Thomas. In
several places above quoted, and especially in his Book of Sentences, he
expressly lays it down as certain that everyone is bound to
pray; because (as he
asserts) in no other way can the graces necessary for
salvation be obtained from
God, except by
prayer: "Every man
is bound to pray, from the fact that he is bound to procure spiritual good for
himself, which can only be got from God; so it can only be obtained by asking it
of God". Then, in another place of the same
book, he proposes the exact question, "Whether we are bound to pray to the
saints to intercede for us"? And he answers as follows -- in order to catch his
real meaning, we will quote the entire passage: "According to Dionysius, the
order which God has instituted for His creatures requires that things which are
remote may be brought to God by means of things which are nearer to Him. Hence,
as the saints in heaven are nearest of all to Him, the order of His law requires
that we who 'remaining in the body are absent from the Lord', should be brought
to Him by means of the saints; and this is effected by the divine goodness
pouring forth His gifts through them. And as the path of our return to God
should correspond to the path of the good things which proceed from Him to us,
it follows that, as the benefits of God come down to us by means of the
suffrages of the saints, we ought to be brought to God by the same way, so that
a second time we may receive His benefits by the mediation of the saints. Hence
it is that we make them our intercessors with God, and as it were our mediators,
when we ask them to pray for us". Note well the words -- 'the order of God's law
requires'; and especially note the last words -- 'as the benefits of God come
down to us by means of the suffrages of the saints', in the same way we must
'be
brought back to God, so that a second time we may receive His benefits by the
mediation of the saints'. So that, according to Saint Thomas, the order of the
divine law requires that we
mortals should be
saved by means of the
saints, in
that we receive by their intercession the help necessary for our
salvation. He
then puts the objection, that it appears superfluous to have recourse to the
saints, since God -- is
infinitely more merciful than
they, and more ready to
hear us. This he answers by saying: 'God has so ordered, not on account of any
want of mercy on His part, but to keep the right order which He has universally
established, of working by means of second causes. It is not for want of His
mercy, but to preserve the aforesaid order in the creation'.
In conformity with this doctrine of Saint Thomas, the Continuator of Tourneley
and Sylvius write that although God only is to be
prayed to as the Author of
grace, yet we are bound to have recourse also to the
intercession of the saints,
so as to observe the order which God has established with regard to our
salvation, which is, that the inferior should be
saved by imploring the aid of
the superior. "By the law of nature we are bound
to observe the order which God has appointed; but God has appointed that the
inferior should obtain salvation by imploring the assistance of his superior".
The Intercession of the Blessed Virgin
And if this is true of the
saints, much more is it true of the intercession
of the Mother of God,
whose prayers are certainly of more value in
His sight
than those of all the rest of the inhabitants of
heaven together. For Saint Thomas
says that the saints, in proportion to the merits by which they have obtained
grace for themselves, are able also to
save others; but that
Jesus Christ, and
so also His Mother, have
merited so much grace that they can
save all men. "It
is a great thing in any saint that he should have grace enough for the salvation
of many beside himself; but if he had enough for the salvation of all men, this
would be the greatest of all; and this is the case with Christ, and with the
Blessed Virgin". And Saint Bernard speaks thus to
Mary: "Through you we have
access to your Son, O discoverer of grace and Mother of salvation, that through
you He may receive us, Who through you was given to us". These words signify
that as we only have access to the Father by means of the
Son, Who is the
Mediator of Justice, so we only have access to the
Son by means of the
Mother,
who is mediator of
grace, and who obtains for us, by
her intercession, the
gifts
which Jesus Christ has
merited for us. And therefore Saint Bernard says, in
another place, that Mary has received a
twofold fullness of grace. In the
first
was the Incarnation of the Word,
Who was made Man in
her most holy womb; the
second is that fullness of grace which we receive from
God by means of her
prayers. Hence the saint adds: "God has placed the fullness of all good in Mary,
that if we have any hope, any grace, any salvation, we may know that it
overflows from her who 'ascends abounding with delights'".
She is a garden of
delights, whose odors spread abroad and abound; that is, the
gifts of graces. So
that whatever good we have from
God, we receive all by the intercession of
Mary.
And why so? Because, says Saint Bernard, it is God's will:
"Such is His will, Who would have us receive everything
through Mary". But the more precise reason is
deduced from the expression of Saint Augustine that
Mary is justly called our
Mother, because she cooperated by
her charity in the birth of the
faithful to
the life of grace, by which we become members of
Jesus Christ, Our Head:
"But
clearly she is the mother of His members (which we are); because she cooperated
by her charity in the birth of the faithful in the Church, and they are members
of that Head". Therefore, as Mary cooperated by
her charity in the
spiritual
birth of the faithful, so also God willed that
she should cooperate by
her
intercession to make them enjoy the
life of grace in this world, and the
life
of glory in the next; and therefore the Church makes us call
her and salute her,
without any circumlocution, by the names, Our Life,
Our Sweetness and
Our Hope.
Hence Saint Bernard exhorts us to have continual recourse to the
Mother of God,
because her prayers are certain to be heard by
her Son:
"Go to Mary, I say, without hesitation; the Son will
hear the Mother". And then he says: "My
children, she is the ladder of sinners, she is my chief confidence, she is the
whole ground of my hope". He calls her 'ladder', because, as you cannot mount
the third step except you
first put your foot on the
second, nor can you arrive
at the second except by the
first, so you cannot come to
God except by means of
Jesus Christ, nor can you come to
Christ except by means of
His Mother. Then
he
calls her his greatest security, and the whole ground of
his hope; because, as
he affirms, God wills that all the
graces which He gives us should pass through
the hands of Mary. And he concludes by saying, that we ought to ask all the
graces which we desire through
Mary; because she obtains whatever
she seeks, and
her prayers cannot be resisted.
"Let us seek grace, and let us seek it through Mary;
because what she seeks she finds and she cannot he disappointed". The
following saints teach the same as Saint Bernard: Saint Ephrem, "We have no other
confidence than from you, O purest Virgin"! Saint Ildephonsus,
"All the good
things that the divine Majesty has determined to give them, He has determined to
commit to your hands; for to you are entrusted the treasures and the wardrobes
of grace". Saint Germanus, "If you desert us, what will become of us, O life of
Christians"? Saint Peter Damian, "In
your hands are all the treasures of the mercies of God". Saint Antoninus,
"Who seeks without her aid, attempts to fly without
wings". Saint Bernardine of Sienna, "You
are the dispenser of all graces; our salvation is in your hands". In another place, he not only says that all
graces are transmitted to us by means of
Mary, but also asserts that the
Blessed
Virgin, from the time she became
Mother of God, acquired a certain jurisdiction
over all the graces that are given to us: "Through the Virgin the vital graces
are transfused from Christ, the Head, into His mystical body. From the time when
the Virgin Mother conceived in her womb the Word of God, she obtained a certain
jurisdiction (if I may so speak) over every temporal procession of the Holy
Spirit; so that no creature could obtain any grace from God, except by the
dispensation of His sweet Mother". And he concludes, "Therefore all gifts,
virtues, and graces are dispensed through her hands to whom she wills, and as
she wills". Saint Bonaventure says the same: "Since the whole divine nature was in
the womb of the Virgin, I do not fear to teach that she has a certain
jurisdiction over all the streams of grace; as her womb was, as it were, an
ocean of the divine nature, whence all the streams of grace must emanate". On
the authority of these saints, many theologians have piously and
reasonably
defended the opinion, that there is no grace given to us except by means of the
intercession of Mary; so Mendoza, Vega,
Paciucchelli, Segneri, Piore, Crasset
and others, as also the learned Alexander Natalis who says: "It is God's will
that we should look to Him for all good things, to be procured by the most
powerful intercession of the Blessed Virgin, when we invoke her, as it is fit".
And he quotes in confirmation the passage of Saint Bernard: "Such is
His will, Who
has determined that we should receive all through Mary". Contenson says the
same, in a comment on the words addressed by Jesus on the
Cross to Saint John,
"Behold thy Mother" - John 19,27; as though
He had said, "No one shall be partaker
of My blood except by the intercession of My Mother. My wounds are fountains of
grace; but their streams shall flow to no one, except through the canal of Mary.
O My disciple John, I will love you as you love her"! For the rest, it is
certain that if God is pleased when we have recourse to the saints,
He will be
much more pleased when we avail ourselves of the intercession of
Mary, that she,
by her merits, may compensate for our
unworthiness, according to the words of
Saint Anselm: "That the dignity of the intercessor may supply for our poverty. So
that, to invoke the Virgin is not to distrust God's mercy, but to fear our own
unworthiness". Saint Thomas, speaking of
her dignity, calls it, as it were,
infinite: "From the fact that she is the Mother of God, she has a certain
infinite dignity". So that it may be said with
reason, that the prayers of
Mary
have more power with God than those of all
Heaven together.
Conclusion - Chapter 1
Let us conclude this first point by giving the gist of all that has been said
hitherto. He who prays is certainly
saved. He who prays
not is certainly damned.
All the blessed (except infants) have been
saved by prayer. All the
damned have
been lost through not
praying; if they had
prayed, they would
not have been
lost. And this is, and will be,
their greatest torment in
Hell, to think how
easily they might have been
saved, only by asking God for
His grace; but that
now it is too late, -- the
time of prayer is
over.

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