SERMONS OF THE CURE OF ARS - EXCERPTS

 THE DREADFUL STATE OF THE LUKEWARM SOUL

 HAVE YOU RELIGION IN YOUR HEART?

 LOST WORKS

 WE ARE WRETCHED CREATURES

 ROUTINE FOLLOWERS

 THE WORLD IS EVERYTHING AND GOD IS NOTHING!

 FOLLOW ONE MASTER ONLY

 THEY ARE FOR THE WORLD

 WE ARE EXTRAORDINARILY BLIND

 NOT LIKE THE OTHERS

 THE EVIL TONGUES

 A PUBLIC PLAGUE

 YOUR HEART IS BUT A MASS OF PRIDE

 THE TONGUE OF THE SCANDAL-MONGER

 OH, EVERYONE SAYS SO!

 ST. NICHOLAS AND THE THREE GIRLS

 THE SEWER OF HELL

 A CURSE WILL FALL

 ARE YOUR AFFAIRS GOING BETTER?

 BAD COMPANY

 ANGER DOES NOT TRAVEL ALONE

 HOW DEATH WILL REVEAL THIEVES!

 IF YOU KNOW HOW TO GIVE, YOU MUST KNOW HOW TO PAY BACK

 WINE IS HIS GOD

 THE DUTIES OF THE PREGNANT WOMAN

 THE DUTIES OF THE MOTHER

 THE DUTIES OF PARENTS

 YOU WILL ANSWER FOR THEIR SOULS

 TO THEIR SHAME IT MUST BE SAID

 GETTING TO KNOW THE RIGHT PEOPLE

 YOU NO LONGER CONTROL THEM

 HE WILL HELP US

 WE MUST EXPECT TEMPTATION

 WE ARE NOTHING IN OURSELVES

 BEWARE IF YOU HAVE NO TEMPTATIONS

 THE BAD DEATH

 HIS PRAYER IS A LIE

 HOW BLIND THE SINNER IS!

 PRISONERS OF SIN

 YOU CAN BECOME A GOOD TREE

 WHERE ARE YOU GOING?

 ANNUAL CONFESSIONS

 REPAIRING THE WRONG DONE

 RENOUNCE SIN FOR GOOD AND ALL

 MERIT ABSOLUTION

 PRAYER COMMANDS ALL

 YOU HAVE NOT THE TIME

 I COME ON BEHALF OF GOD

 YOU SHOULD COME EARLIER

 IT IS NECESSARY TO BE CONVERTED

 HAVE A CLEAN FACE

 MODEL YOUR DEATH

 ON THAT OF JESUS CHRIST

 IF MAN KNEW HIS RELIGION

 THOUGHTS ON THE WAY TO CHURCH

 YOU ARE SURPRISED, BUT NOT I!

 WHEN YOU GO BACK HOME

 CLEAR YOUR MINDS

 WE ARE KEEPING A FEAST

 BE RELIGIOUS OR BE DAMNED!

 YOUR PRAYERS ARE ONLY AN INSULT

 PURITY IS NOT KNOWN

 THE SERVICE OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN

 OUR INCONSISTENCY

 LOVE OF OUR NEIGHBOUR

 WHO HAS CHARITY?

 PRAYING, FASTING, AND PLEASING OURSELVES

 DO YOU WANT TO BE HAPPY?

 THE GIFT OF EVERY DAY

 THE PUBLIC CROSSES

 THE CROSSES WHICH ARE WORN

 HARVEST CROSSES

 THE ARMED CROSSES

 THE BELOVED CROSSES

WE ARE KEEPING A FEAST

In the early days of the church, the faithful of one province, or district, used to come together publicly on the feast day of a saint in order to have the happiness of participating in all the graces which God bestows on such days.

The office of the vigil was started. The evening and night were spent in prayer at the tomb of the saint. The faithful heard the word of God. They sang hymns and canticles in honour of the saint. After passing the night so devoutly, they heard Mass, at which all those assisting had the happiness of going to Holy Communion. Then they all withdrew, praising God for the triumphs He had accorded the saint and the graces He had bestowed in response to the latter's intercession. After that, my dear brethren, who could doubt but that God pours out His graces with abundance upon such a reunion of the faithful and that the saints themselves are happy to be the patrons of such people. That was the way in which the feast days of patron saints were celebrated in olden times.

What do you think of that? Is it thus that we celebrate such feasts today? Alas! If the first Christians were to come back upon this earth, would they not tell us that our feasts are no different from those that the pagans kept? Is it not the general rule that God is most seriously offended on these holy days?

Does it not seem, rather, that we combine our money and our energies together to multiply sin almost to infinity?

What are we concerned with on the vigil of such feasts, and even for several days beforehand? Is it not with spending foolish and unnecessary money? And all this time poor people are dying of hunger and our sins are calling down upon us the anger of God to the point where eternity would not be sufficient to satisfy for them. You should pass the night in repentance and remorse, in considering how very little you have followed the example of your patron saint. And yet you consecrate that time to preparing everything that will flatter your gluttony! Might it not be said that this day is one for pure self-indulgence and debauchery? Do parents and friends come, as in former times, to enjoy the happiness of participating in the graces which God bestows at the intercession of a patron saint? They come, but only to pass this feast day almost wholly at the table. In former times, the religious services were much longer than they are today, and still they seemed always too short. Nowadays you will see even fathers of families who, during the performance of the offices, are at table filling themselves with food and wine. The first Christians invited each other in order to multiply their good works and their prayers. Today it seems rather as if people invite each other so that they can multiply the sins and the orgies and the excesses in which they indulge in eating and drinking. Does anyone think God will not demand an account of even a penny wrongly spent? Does it not seem that we celebrate the feast only to insult our holy Patron and to increase our ingratitude?

. Let us look a little closer, my dear brethren, and we shall realise that we are far from imitating Him whom God has given us for a model. He passed His life in penance and in sorrow. He died in torments. What is more, I am sure that there are parishes where more sins are committed on those days than during all the rest of the year. The Lord told the Jews that their feasts were an abomination and that He would take the filth of their feasts and throw it in their faces. He wished to make us understand by this how greatly He is offended on those days which should be passed in weeping for our sins and in prayer.

We read in the Gospel that Jesus Christ came on earth to enlighten souls with the fire of divine love. But we can believe that the Devil also roams around on earth to light an impure fire in the hearts of Christians and that w hat he promotes with the greatest frenzy are balls and dances. I have debated for a long time whether I should speak to you about a matter so difficult to get you to understand and so little thought upon by the Christians of our days, who are blinded by their passions. If your faith were not so weak that it might be extinguished in your hearts in the blink of an eye, you would understand the enormity of the abyss towards which you precipitate yourselves in giving yourselves over with such abandon to these wretched amusements. But you will tell me. For you to talk to us about dances and about the evil that takes place at them is just a waste of time. We will indulge neither more nor less in them. I firmly believe that, since Tertullian assures us that very many refused to become Christians rather than deprive themselves of such pleasures.