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THE SPIRIT OF ST. FRANCIS DE SALES THE SPIRIT OF ST. FRANCIS DE SALES JEAN PIERRE CAMUS NEW AND ENLARGED EDITION WITH A PREFACE BY HIS GRACE THE ARCHBISHOP OF WESTMINSTER. TRANSLATED BY J. S. CONTENTS
Preface by the Archbishop of Westminster Sketch of Jean Pierre Camus Bishop of Belley The French Publisher to the reader in 1639 Upon perfect virtue Blessed Francis' estimate of various virtues Upon the lesser virtues Upon increase of Faith Upon temptations against Faith Upon the same subject Upon confidence in God Our misery appeals to God's mercy Upon self distrust Upon the justice and mercy of God On waiting upon God On the difference between a holy desire of reward and a mercenary spirit Continuation of the same subject God should suffice for us all Charity the short road to perfection Upon what it is to love God truly Upon the Love of God in general All for Love of God The same subject continued Upon the Love of God called love of benevolence Disinterested Love of God Upon the character of a true Christian Upon not putting limits to our Love of God Upon the law and the just man Upon desires How Charity excels both Faith and Hope Some thoughts of Blessed Francis on the Passion Upon the vanity of heathen philosophy Upon the pure love of our neighbour Upon bearing with one another Upon fraternal correction Upon finding excuses for the faults of our fellow-men Upon not judging others Upon judging ourselves Upon slander and detraction Upon hasty judgments Upon ridiculing one's neighbour Upon contradicting others Upon loving our enemies Upon forgiving our enemies Upon the virtue of condescension How he adapted himself to times places and circumstances Upon the deference due to inferiors and dependents On the way to treat servants Another instance of his gentleness with his servants His never refusing what was asked of him Upon almsgiving His hopefulness in regard to the conversion of sinners His solicitude for malefactors condemned to death Upon the small number of the elect To love to be hated; and to hate to be loved Upon obedience Upon the obedience that may be practised by Superiors An instance of his obedience Upon the Love of Holy Poverty Upon the same subject Upon poverty of spirit His love of the poor Upon the Christian view of Poverty Upon Prosperity Upon Chastity and Charity Upon purity of heart Upon Chastity and Humility Upon Modesty The contempt he felt for his body Upon his Humility Upon humbleness in speech only Upon various degrees of Humility Upon Humiliation Humility with regard to perfection Upon excuses Upon our good name Upon despising the esteem of men Upon the virtues we should practice when calumniated Upon some spiritual maxims Upon Patience How to profit by bearing with insults Upon bearing with importunities That he who complains sins His calmness in tribulations His test of patience in suffering Upon long illnesses His holy indifference in illness Upon the shape of the Cross A diamond Cross Holy Magdalen at the foot of the Cross Upon the power of gentleness and patience A rejoinder both striking and instructive His favourite beatitude His gravity and affability How he dealt with a criminal who despaired of salvation Upon mortification Upon the same subject Upon fasting Doubts solved as to soldiers fasting The golden mean in dispensations Upon the words "Eat of anything that is set before you" Upon the state of perfection Marks of progress in perfection Upon the perfection aimed at in Religious Houses Upon Frugality His esteem of the virtue of simplicity His love of exactitude The test of Religious Vocation Upon following the common life Upon Vocations Upon Prudence and Simplicity The same subject continued Upon mental prayer Upon Aspirations Upon interior recollection and ejaculatory prayers Upon doing and enduring Upon Mortification and Prayer Upon the Presence of God His unity of spirit with God His gratitude to God for spiritual consolations Upon the shedding of tears Upon joy and sadness On the degrees of true devotion The test of true devotion What it means to be a servant of God That devotion does not always spring from Charity Upon perfect contentment in the privation of all content Upon the Will of God His resignation to the Will of God That we must always submit ourselves to God's holy Will His sublime thoughts on holy indifference Nothing save sin happens to us but by the Will of God Upon the same subject Upon abandoning ourselves to God Upon interior desolation Upon the presence in our souls of the Grace of God Upon our wish to save our soul Upon good natural inclinations How to speak of God Upon eccentricities in devotion Upon Confraternities Upon intercourse with the world Against over-eagerness Upon the same subject Upon liberty of spirit Upon nature and grace Upon exaggerated introspection Upon interior reformation His vision of the Most Holy Trinity His devotion to our Blessed Lady His devotion to the Holy Winding Sheet of Turin Upon merit Upon good will and good desires Against the making of rash vows Upon the pro-passions of Our Lord His victory over the passions of love and anger Upon our passions and emotions How he came to write his Philothea Upon the example of the Saints Upon the love of God's word His love of retirement How he sanctified his recreations What he drew from lines of poetry Upon being content with our condition in life Upon self-sufficiency and contentedness His reverence for the sick Upon the care of the sick Upon speaking well of the dead Upon Death Upon wishing to die Upon the desire of Heaven What it is to die in God Upon length of life Upon Purgatory Upon Penance Upon penitent confusion Upon interior peace amidst anxieties Upon discouragement Upon rising after a fall Upon kindliness towards ourselves Upon imperfections The just man falls seven times in the day Upon the purgative way Upon venial sin Upon complicity in the sins of another Upon equivocating Upon solitude Upon vanity Upon the knowledge which puffs up Upon scruples Upon temptations Upon the same subject Thoughts on the Incarnation Upon Confession and Communion Upon Confession Upon a change of confessor Upon different methods of direction Advice upon having a Director Upon true and mistaken zeal Upon the institution of the Visitation Order His defence of his new Congregation of the Visitation Upon the odour of sanctity He rebukes Pharisaism Upon religious Superiors Upon unlearned Superiors Upon the founding of Convents Upon receiving the infirm into Communities Upon self pity Upon the government of Nuns by religious men That we must not be wedded to our own plans His views regarding Ecclesiastical dignities His promotion to the Bishopric of Geneva and his refusal of the Archbishopric of Paris A Bishop's care for his flock Upon the first duty of Bishops Upon the pastoral charge Upon the care of souls Upon learning and piety Advice to Bishop Camus as to resigning his See The joyous spirit of Blessed Francis Upon daily Mass. His advice to a young Priest A Priest saying Mass should be considerate of others Blessed Francis encourages the Bishop of Belley Upon a compassionate mind Upon doing one's duty without respect of persons The honour due to virtue Upon memory and judgment A Priest should not aim at imitating in his sermons some particular preacher Upon short sermons Upon preaching and preachers Blessed Francis and the Bishop of Belley's sermon Upon controversy The same subject continued Upon reason and reasoning Upon quoting Holy Scripture Upon political diplomacy Upon ambition Upon courts and courtiers Upon the Carnival An instance of his compassion for animals Upon hunting Upon the fear of ghosts His portrait Upon his true charity PREFACE. The Spirit of a Saint we may perhaps regard as the underlying characteristic which pervades all his thoughts words and acts. It is the note which sounds throughout the constant persevering harmony which makes the holiness of his life. Circumstances change. He grows from childhood to boyhood; from youth to manhood. His time of preparation is unnoticed by the world until the moment comes when he is called to a public activity which arrests attention. And essentially he remains the same. In private as in public in intimate conversation as in writings or discourses in the direction of individual consciences as in the conduct of matters of wide importance there is a characteristic note which identifies him and marks him off apart even from other heroes of sanctity. We owe to a keen and close observer a knowledge of the spirit of St. Francis de Sales for which we cannot be too grateful. Let it be granted that Mgr. Camus had a very prolific imagination; that he had an unconscious tendency to embroider facts; that he read a meaning into words which their speaker had no thought of imparting to them. When all such allowances have been made we must still admit that he has given to us a picture of the Saint which we should be loath to lose; and that his description of what the Saint habitually thought and felt has made Saint Francis de Sales a close personal friend to many to whom otherwise he would have remained a mere chance acquaintance. The Bishop of Belley while a devoted admirer was at the same time a critical observer of his saintly friend. He wanted to know the reasons of what he saw he did not always approve and he was sufficiently indiscreet to put questions which probably no one else would have dared to frame. And thus we know more about St. Francis than about any other Saint and we owe real gratitude to his very candid talkative and out-spoken episcopal colleague. Many years ago a brief abridgment of the "Spirit of St. Francis de Sales" was published in English. It served its purpose but left unsatisfied the desire of his clients for a fuller work. To-day the Sisters of the Visitation now established at Harrow-on-the-Hill give abundant satisfaction to this long-felt desire. Inspired by the purpose of the late Dom Benedict Mackey O.S.B. which his premature death prevented him from accomplishing and guided by the advice which he left in writing these Daughters of St. Francis of Sales on the occasion of their Tercentenary give to the English-speaking world a work which in its wise curtailment and still full detail may be called the quintessence of the Spirit of their Master the Founder of their Institute. We thank them for their labour; and we beg God's blessing upon this book that it may be the means of showing to many souls that safe and easy way of sanctification and salvation which it was the special mission of the saintly Bishop of Geneva to make known to the world. FRANCIS ARCHBISHOP OF WESTMINSTER. May 18th 1910. SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF JEAN PIERRE CAMUS BISHOP OF BELLEY. Jean Pierre Camus came of an illustrious and much respected family of Auxonne in Burgundy in which province it possessed the seigneuries of _Saint Bonnet_ and _Pont-carre_. He was born in Paris November 3rd 1584. His grandfather was for some years Administrator of the Finances under King Henri III. Though he had had the management of the public funds during a period when fraud and dishonesty were as easy as they were common he retired from office without having added a single penny to his patrimony. On one occasion having received from Henri III. the gift of a sum of 50000 crowns which had been left by a Jew who had died intestate and without children this upright administrator sent for three merchants who had lost all their property in a fire and distributed it among them. The father of our Prelate inheriting this integrity left an honourable name but few worldly goods to his children. Faithful and devoted to the interests of his king Henri IV. he gave part of his fortune to the support of the good cause the triumph of which he had the happiness of witnessing. He died in 1619. The mantle of paternal loyalty and patriotism undoubtedly descended upon the young J. P. Camus for second only to his love for God and His Church was his devotion to France and its king. On his mother's side as well as on his father's he was well connected. Her family had given to France chancellors secretaries of state and other distinguished personages but noble as were the races from which he sprang their chief distinction is derived from the subject of this sketch. "This one branch" says his panegyrist "bore more blossoms and more fruit than all the others together. In John Peter the gentle rivulet of the Camus' became a mighty stream yet one whose course was peaceful and which loved to flow underground as do certain rivers which seem to lose themselves in the earth and only emerge to precipitate themselves into the waters of the ocean." Books and objects of piety were the toys of his childhood and his youth was passed in solitude and in the practices of the ascetic life. His physical strength as it increased with his years seemed only to serve to assist him in curbing and restraining a somewhat fiery temperament. His wish which at one time was very strong to become a Carthusian was not indeed fulfilled it being evident from the many impediments put in its way that it was not a call from God. Nevertheless this desire of self-sacrifice in a cloistered life was only thwarted in order that he might sacrifice himself in another way namely by becoming a Bishop which state if its functions are rightly discharged assuredly demands greater self-immolation than does that of a monk and is indeed a martyrdom that ceases only with life itself. If he did not submit himself to the Rule of the Carthusians by entering their Order he nevertheless adopted all its severity and to the very end of his life kept his body in the most stern and rigorous subjection. This and his early inclination towards the religious life will not a little astonish his detractors if any such still exist for it is surely a convincing proof that he was not the radical enemy of monasticism they pretend. In his studies he displayed great brilliancy being especially distinguished in theology and canon law to the study of which he consecrated four years of his life. After he had become a Priest his learning piety and eloquence not only established his reputation as a preacher in the pulpits of Paris but soon even crossed the threshold of the Louvre and reached the ears of Henry IV. That monarch moved by the hope of the great services which a prelate might render to the Church even more than by the affection which he bore to the Camus family decided to propose him for a Bishopric although he was but twenty-five and had not therefore reached the canonical age for that dignity. The young Priest was far too humble and also too deeply imbued with a sense of the awful responsibility of the office of a Bishop to expect or to desire to be raised to it. When however Pope Paul V. gave the necessary dispensation M. Camus submitted to the will both of the Pontiff and of the King and was consecrated Bishop of Belley by St. Francis de Sales August 30 1609. The fact that the two dioceses of Geneva and Belley touched one another contributed to further that close intimacy which was always maintained between the Bishops the younger consulting the elder on all possible occasions and in all imaginable difficulties. Bishop Camus had already referred his scruples regarding his youth at the time of his consecration to his holy director. The latter had however reminded him of the many reasons there were to justify his submission viz. the needs of the diocese the testimony to his fitness given by so many persons of distinction and piety the judgment of Henry the Great in fine the command of His Holiness. In consecrating Mgr. Camus St. Francis de Sales seems to have transmitted to the new Prelate some of the treasures of his own holy soul. Camus was the only Bishop whom he ever consecrated and doubtless this fact increased the tender affection which Francis bore him. John Peter was what he loved to call himself and what St. Francis loved to call him the latter's only son. There was between the two holy Prelates a community of intelligence and of life. "Camus" says Godeau the preacher of his funeral discourse "ever sat at the feet of St. Francis de Sales whom he called his Gamaliel there to learn from him the law of God: ...
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