The Imitation of Christ

 CONTENTS

 THOUGHTS HELPFUL IN THE LIFE OF THE SOUL

 THE INTERIOR LIFE

 INTERNAL CONSOLATION

 AN INVITATION TO HOLY COMMUNION

 BOOK ONE THOUGHTS HELPFUL IN THE LIFE OF THE SOUL

 The First ChapterImitating Christ and Despising All Vanities on Earth

 The Second Chapter Having a Humble Opinion of Self

 The Third Chapter The Doctrine of Truth

 The Fourth Chapter Prudence in Action

 The Fifth Chapter Reading the Holy Scripture

 The Sixth Chapter Unbridled Affections

 The Seventh Chapter Avoiding False Hope and Pride

 The Eighth Chapter Shunning Over-Familiarity

 The Ninth Chapter Obedience and Subjection

 The Tenth Chapter Avoiding Idle Talk

 The Eleventh Chapter Acquiring Peace and Zeal for Perfection

 The Twelfth Chapter The Value of Adversity

 The Thirteenth Chapter Resisting Temptation

 The Fourteenth Chapter Avoiding Rash Judgment

 The Fifteenth Chapter Works Done in Charity

 The Sixteenth Chapter Bearing with the Faults of Others

 The Seventeenth Chapter Monastic Life

 The Eighteenth Chapter The Example Set Us by the Holy Fathers

 The Nineteenth Chapter The Practices of a Good Religious

 The Twentieth Chapter The Love of Solitude and Silence

 The Twenty-First Chapter Sorrow of Heart

 The Twenty-Second Chapter Thoughts on the Misery of Man

 The Twenty-Third Chapter Thoughts on Death

 The Twenty-Fourth Chapter Judgment and the Punishment of Sin

 The Twenty-Fifth Chapter Zeal in Amending our Lives

 BOOK TWO THE INTERIOR LIFE

 The First Chapter Meditation

 The Second Chapter Humility

 The Third Chapter Goodness and Peace in Man

 The Fourth Chapter Purity of Mind and Unity of Purpose

 The Fifth Chapter Ourselves

 The Sixth Chapter The Joy of a Good Conscience

 The Seventh Chapter Loving Jesus Above All Things

 The Eighth Chapter The Intimate Friendship of Jesus

 The Ninth Chapter Wanting No Share in Comfort

 The Tenth Chapter Appreciating God's Grace

 The Eleventh Chapter Few Love the Cross of Jesus

 The Twelfth Chapter The Royal Road of the Holy Cross

 

 BOOK THREE INTERNAL CONSOLATION

 The First Chapter The Inward Conversation of Christ with the Faithful Soul

 The Second Chapter Truth Speaks Inwardly Without the Sound of Words

 The Third Chapter Listen Humbly to the Words of God. Many Do Not Heed Them

 The Fourth Chapter We Must Walk Before God in Humility and Truth

 The Fifth Chapter The Wonderful Effect of Divine Love

 The Sixth Chapter The Proving of a True Lover

 The Seventh Chapter Grace Must Be Hidden Under the Mantle of Humility

 The Eighth Chapter Self-Abasement in the Sight of God

 The Ninth Chapter All Things should be Referred to God as their Last End

 The Tenth Chapter To Despise the World and Serve God is Sweet

 The Eleventh Chapter The Longings of our Hearts Must Be Examined And Moderated

 The Twelfth Chapter Acquiring Patience in the Fight Against Concupiscence

 The Thirteenth Chapter The Obedience of One Humbly Subject to the Example of Jesus Christ

 The Fourteenth Chapter Consider the Hidden Judgments of God Lest You Become Proud of Your Own Good Deeds

 The Fifteenth Chapter How One Should Feel and Speak on Every Desirable Thing

 A Prayer that the Will of God Be Done

 The Sixteenth Chapter True Comfort Is to Be Sought in God Alone

 The Seventeenth Chapter All Our Care is to Be Placed in God

 The Eighteenth Chapter Temporal Sufferings Should Be Borne Patiently, After the Example of Christ

 The Nineteenth Chapter True Patience in Suffering

 The Twentieth Chapter

 Confessing Our Weakness in the Miseries of Life

 The Twenty-first Chapter

 Above All Goods and All Gifts We Must Rest in God

 The Twenty-Second Chapter

 Remember the Innumerable Gifts of God

 The Twenty-Third Chapter

 Four Things Which Bring Great Peace

 A Prayer Against Bad Thoughts

 A Prayer for Enlightening the Mind

 The Twenty-Fourth Chapter

 Avoiding Curious Inquiry About the Lives of Others

 The Twenty-Fifth Chapter

 The Basis of Firm Peace of Heart and True Progress

 The Twenty-Sixth Chapter

 The Excellence of a Free Mind, Gained Through Prayer Rather Than By Study

 The Twenty-Seventh Chapter

 Self-Love is the Greatest Hindrance to the Highest Good

 A Prayer for Cleansing the Heart and Obtaining Heavenly Wisdom

 The Twenty-Eighth Chapter

 Strength Against Slander

 The Twenty-Ninth Chapter

 How We Must Call Upon and Bless the Lord When Trouble Presses

 The Thirtieth Chapter

 The Quest of Divine Help and Confidence in Regaining Grace

 The Thirty-First Chapter

 To Find the Creator, Forsake All Creatures

 The Thirty-Second Chapter

 Self-Denial and the Renunciation of Evil Appetites

 The Thirty-Third Chapter

 Restlessness of Soul -- Directing Our Final Intention Toward God

 The Thirty-Fourth Chapter

 God is Sweet Above All Things and in All Things to Those Who Love Him

 The Thirty-Fifth Chapter

 There is No Security from Temptation in This Life

 The Thirty-Sixth Chapter

 The Vain Judgments of Men

 The Thirty-Seventh Chapter

 Pure and Entire Resignation of Self to Obtain Freedom of Heart

 The Thirty-Eighth Chapter

 The Right Ordering of External Affairs Recourse to God in Dangers

 The Thirty-Ninth Chapter

 A Man Should Not Be Unduly Solicitous About His Affairs

 The Fortieth Chapter

 Man Has No Good in Himself and Can Glory in Nothing

 The Forty-First Chapter

 Contempt for All Earthly Honor

 The Forty-Second Chapter

 Peace is Not to Be Placed in Men

 The Forty-Third Chapter

 Beware Vain and Worldly Knowledge

 The Forty-Fourth Chapter

 Do Not Be Concerned About Outward Things

 The Forty-Fifth Chapter

 All Men Are Not to Be Believed, for It Is Easy to Err in Speech

 The Forty-Sixth Chapter

 Trust in God Against Slander

 The Forty-Seventh Chapter

 Every Trial Must Be Borne for the Sake of Eternal Life

 The Forty-Eighth Chapter

 The Day of Eternity and the Distresses of This Life

 The Forty-Ninth Chapter

 The Desire of Eternal Life the Great Rewards Promised to Those Who Struggle

 The Fiftieth Chapter

 How a Desolate Person Ought to Commit Himself Into the Hands of God

 The Fifty-First Chapter

 When We Cannot Attain to the Highest, We Must Practice the Humble Works

 The Fifty-Second Chapter

 A Man Ought Not to Consider Himself Worthy of Consolation, But Rather Deserving of Chastisement

 The Fifty-Third Chapter

 God's Grace Is Not Given to the Earthly Minded

 The Fifty-Fourth Chapter

 The Different Motions of Nature and Grace

 The Fifty-Fifth Chapter

 The Corruption of Nature and the Efficacy of Divine Grace

 The Fifty-Sixth Chapter

 The Fifty-Seventh Chapter

 A Man Should Not Be Too Downcast When He Falls Into Defects

 The Fifty-Eighth Chapter

 High Matters and the Hidden Judgments of God Are Not to Be Scrutinized

 The Fifty-Ninth Chapter

 All Hope and Trust Are to Be Fixed In God Alone

 BOOK FOUR AN INVITATION TO HOLY COMMUNION

 The Voice of Christ

 The First Chapter

 The Great Reverence With Which We Should Receive Christ

 The Second Chapter

 God's Great Goodness and Love is Shown to Man in This Sacrament

 The Third Chapter

 It Is Profitable to Receive Communion Often

 The Fourth Chapter

 Many Blessings Are Given Those Who Receive Communion Worthily

 The Fifth Chapter

 The Dignity of the Sacrament and of the Priesthood

 The Sixth Chapter

 An Inquiry on the Proper Thing to Do Before Communion

 The Seventh Chapter

 The Examination of Conscience and the Resolution to Amend

 The Eighth Chapter

 The Offering of Christ on the Cross Our Offering

 The Ninth Chapter

 We Should Offer Ourselves and All That We Have to God, Praying for All

 The Tenth Chapter

 Do Not Lightly Forego Holy Communion

 The Eleventh Chapter

 The Body of Christ and Sacred Scripture Are Most Necessary to a Faithful Soul

 The Twelfth Chapter

 The Communicant Should Prepare Himself for Christ with Great Care

 The Thirteenth Chapter

 With All Her Heart the Devout Soul Should Desire Union with Christ in the Sacrament

 The Fourteenth Chapter

 The Ardent Longing of Devout Men for the Body of Christ

 The Fifteenth Chapter

 The Grace of Devotion is Acquired Through Humility and Self-Denial

 The Sixteenth Chapter

 We Should Show Our Needs to Christ and Ask His Grace

 The Seventeenth Chapter

 The Burning Love and Strong Desire to Receive Christ

 The Eighteenth Chapter

 Man Should Not Scrutinize This Sacrament in Curiosity, But Humbly Imitate Christ and Submit Reason to Holy Faith

High Matters and the Hidden Judgments of God Are Not to Be Scrutinized

The Voice of Christ

MY CHILD, beware of discussing high matters and God's hidden judgments -- why this person is so forsaken and why that one is favored with so great a grace, or why one man is so afflicted and another so highly exalted. Such things are beyond all human understanding and no reason or disputation can fathom the judgments of God.

When the enemy puts such suggestions in your mind, therefore, or when some curious persons raise questions about them, answer with the prophet: "Thou art just, O Lord, and righteous are Thy judgments"; and this: "The judgments of the Lord are true and wholly righteous." My judgments are to be feared, not discussed, because they are incomprehensible to the understanding of men.

In like manner, do not inquire or dispute about the merits of the saints, as to which is more holy, or which shall be greater in the kingdom of heaven. Such things often breed strife and useless contentions. They nourish pride and vainglory, whence arise envy and quarrels, when one proudly tries to exalt one saint and the other another. A desire to know and pry into such matters brings forth no fruit. On the contrary, it displeases the saints, because I am the God, not of dissension, but of peace -- of that peace which consists in true humility rather than in self-exaltation.

Some are drawn by the ardor of their love with greater affection to these saints or to those, but this affection is human and not divine. I am He who made all the saints. I gave them grace: I brought them to glory. I know the merits of each of them. I came before them in the blessings of My sweetness. I knew My beloved ones before the ages. I chose them out of the world -- they did not choose Me. I called them by grace, I drew them on by mercy. I led them safely through various temptations. I poured into them glorious consolations. I gave them perseverance and I crowned their patience. I know the first and the last. I embrace them all with love inestimable. I am to be praised in all My saints. I am to be blessed above all things, and honored in each of those whom I have exalted and predestined so gloriously without any previous merits of their own.

He who despises one of the least of mine, therefore, does no honor to the greatest, for both the small and the great I made. And he who disparages one of the saints disparages Me also and all others in the kingdom of heaven. They are all one through the bond of charity. They have the same thought and the same will, and they mutually love one another; but, what is a much greater thing, they love Me more than themselves or their own merits. Rapt above themselves, and drawn beyond love of self, they are entirely absorbed in love of Me, in Whom they rest. There is nothing that can draw them away or depress them, for they who are filled with eternal truth burn with the fire of unquenchable love.

Therefore, let carnal and sensual men, who know only how to love their own selfish joys, forbear to dispute about the state of God's saints. Such men take away and add according to their own inclinations and not as it pleases the Eternal Truth. In many this is sheer ignorance, especially in those who are but little enlightened and can rarely love anyone with a purely spiritual love. They are still strongly drawn by natural affection and human friendship to one person or another, and on their behavior in such things here below are based their imaginings of heavenly things. But there is an incomparable distance between the things which the imperfect imagine and those which enlightened men contemplate through revelation from above.

Be careful, then, My child, of treating matters beyond your knowledge out of curiosity. Let it rather be your business and aim to be found, even though the least, in the kingdom of God. For though one were to know who is more holy than another, or who is greater in the kingdom of heaven, of what value would this knowledge be to him unless out of it he should humble himself before Me and should rise up in greater praise of My name?

The man who thinks of the greatness of his own sins and the littleness of his virtues, and of the distance between himself and the perfection of the saints, acts much more acceptably to God than the one who argues about who is greater or who is less. It is better to invoke the saints with devout prayers and tears, and with a humble mind to beg their glorious aid, than to search with vain inquisitiveness into their secrets.

The saints are well and perfectly contented if men know how to content themselves and cease their useless discussions. They do not glory in their own merits, for they attribute no good to themselves but all to Me, because out of My infinite charity I gave all to them. They are filled with such love of God and with such overflowing joy, that no glory is wanting to them and they can lack no happiness. All the saints are so much higher in glory as they are more humble in themselves; nearer to Me, and more beloved by Me. Therefore, you find it written that they cast their crowns before God, and fell down upon their faces before the Lamb, and adored Him Who lives forever.

Many ask who is the greater in the kingdom of heaven when they do not know whether they themselves shall be worthy of being numbered among its least. It is a great thing to be even the least in heaven where all are great because all shall be called, and shall be, the children of God. The least shall be as a thousand, and the sinner of a hundred years shall die. For when the disciples asked who should be greater in the kingdom of heaven they heard this response: "Unless you be converted and become as little children, you shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven. Therefore, whosoever shall humble himself as this little child, he is the greater in the kingdom of heaven."

Woe to those, therefore, who disdain to humble themselves willingly with the little children, for the low gate of the heavenly kingdom will not permit them to enter. Woe also to the rich who have their consolations here, for when the poor enter into God's kingdom, they will stand outside lamenting. Rejoice, you humble, and exult, you poor, for the kingdom of God is yours, if only you walk in the truth.