Prayer of Saint Peter Damian to the Blessed Virgin Mary
In the course of this year, in this month, on this very
day, your life may end. What follows from this? Do as St. Peter did: be
solicitous for your salvation. Employ well the short and uncertain time. What
you think necessary for your salvation defer not to a future, uncertain time.
The hope of having plenty of time to work out their salvation has deceived
many, to their eternal ruin. Keep watch that you do not deceive yourself by
such a doubtful, dangerous hope. Life is short and uncertain. "Man knoweth
not his own end: but as fishes are taken with the hook, and birds are caught by
the snare, so men are taken in the evil time, when it shall suddenly come upon
them." Thus speaks Holy Writ. Again, what have we to deduce from this?
Nothing, but what is further said: "Whatsoever thy hand is able to do, do
it earnestly; for neither work, nor reason, nor wisdom, nor knowledge, shall be
in the grave, whither thou art hastening" (Eccl. ix.). This plainly
declares that when you are dead you can no longer work out your own salvation.
Therefore, set to work now, without loss of time, without delay, without
hesitation, as it is unknown to you when your end will come. Take this
admonition of God to your inmost heart. Add to it the words of St. Paul:
"Therefore, whilst we have time, let us work good" (Gal. vii.). Why?
"Time is short," says the same holy Apostle. And when you have
trifled away this time, you cannot, in all eternity, repair the loss; as time,
once gone, is irrecoverable. "If the time which Divine goodness has
bestowed upon us to do penance and work out our salvation is once lost,"
says St. Bonaventure, "it cannot be recalled in all eternity." ~ F.
X. Weninger [1877]
2 comments:
"Continue, O fool, says St Peter Damian (speaking to the unchaste), continue to gratify the flesh; for the day will come in which thy impurities will become as pitch in thy entrails, to increase and aggravate the torments of the flame which will burn thee in Hell. The day will come, yea rather the night, when thy lust shall be turned into pitch, to feed in thy bowels the everlasting fire."
Behold, O Lord, one of those madmen who so often has lost his soul and Thy grace, in the hope of recovering it! And if Thou hadst taken me in that moment, and in those nights when I was in sin, what would have become of me? I thank Thy mercy which has waited for me, and which now makes me sensible of my folly. I see that Thou desirest my salvation, and I desire to be saved. I repent, O Infinite Goodness, of having so often turned my back on Thee; I love Thee with my whole heart. I hope, through the merits of Thy Passion, O my Jesus, to be no longer so foolish; pardon me speedily, and receive me into Thy favour, for I wish never more to leave Thee. – St. Alphonsus
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