Catechesis of the Holy Father
Dear brothers and sisters, good morning!
As we continue our reflection on discernment,
and in particular on the spiritual experience
called “consolation”, which we spoke about the
other Wednesday, we ask: how can we recognize
true consolation? It is a very important
question for a good discernment, so as not to be
deceived in the search for our true good.
We can find some criteria in a passage from the
Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius of Loyola.
“We ought to note well the course of the
thoughts”, says Saint Ignatius, “and if the
beginning, middle and end is all good, inclined
to all good, it is a sign of the good Angel; but
if in the course of the thoughts which he brings
it ends in something bad, of a distracting
tendency, or less good than what the soul had
previously proposed to do, or if it weakens it
or disturbs the soul, taking away its peace,
[taking away the] tranquility and quiet, which
it had before, it is a clear sign that it
proceeds from the evil spirit, enemy of our
profit and eternal salvation” (no. 333). Because
it is true: there is true consolation, but there
are also consolations that are not true. And
therefore, we need to understand well the
process of consolation: how does it come and
where does it lead me? If it leads me to
something wrong, that is not good, the
consolation is not true, it is “fake”, let’s
say.
And these are valuable indications, that merit a
brief comment. What does it mean that the
beginning is inclined to good, as Saint Ignatius
says of good consolation? For example, I have
the thought of praying, and I note that it
accompanies affection towards the Lord and
neighbour, it invites gestures of generosity, of
charity: it is a good beginning. It can instead
happen that such a thought emerges to avoid a
job or task that has been entrusted to me: every
time I have to wash the dishes or clean the
house, I have a strong urge to pray! This
happens, in convents. But prayer is not an
escape from one’s tasks; on the contrary, it us
an aid in realizing the good we are required to
do, here and now. This regards the beginning.
Then there is the middle: Saint Ignatius said
that the beginning, the middle and the end had
to be good. The beginning is this: I want to
pray so as not to wash the dishes: go, wash the
dishes, and then go to pray. Then there is the
middle: that is to say what comes afterwards,
what follows that thought Remaining with the
previous example, if I begin to pray and, like
the pharisee in the parable (cf. Lk 18:9-14), I
tend to be self-satisfied and to disdain others,
perhaps with a resentful and sour spirit, then
these are signs that the evil spirit has used
that thought as a key to enter into my heart and
to transmit his feelings to me. If I go to pray,
and it comes to mind to do so like the famous
Pharisee – “Thank you Lord, because I pray, I am
not like other people who do not seek you, who
do not pray” – that prayer ends badly there.
That consolation of praying is to feel like a
peacock in front of God. And this is the wrong
way.
And then there is the end: the beginning, the
middle and the end. The end is an aspect we have
already encountered, namely: where does a
thought take me? For example, where does the
thought of prayer take me? For instance, it can
happen that I work hard for a good and worthy
task, but this pushes me to stop praying,
because I am busy with many things; I find I am
increasingly aggressive and angry, I feel that
everything depends on me, to the point of losing
confidence in God. Here, evidently, there is the
action of the evil spirit. I start praying, but
then in prayer I feel omnipotent, that
everything must be in my hands because I am the
only one who knows how to get things done:
evidently there is no good spirit there. It is
necessary to examine well the path of our
sentiments, of consolation, at the moment in
which we want to do something; at the beginning,
in the middle, and at the end.
The style of the enemy – when we speak about the
enemy, we speak about the devil, because the
devil exists, he is there! – his style, we know
– is to present himself in a devious, masked
way: he starts from what is most dear to us and
then, little by little, reels us in: evil enters
secretly, without the person being aware of it.
And with time, gentleness becomes hardness: that
thought reveals itself for what it truly is.
Hence the importance of this patient but
indispensable examination of the origin and the
truth of our thoughts; it is an invitation to
learn from experiences, from what happens to us,
so as not to continue to repeat the same errors.
The more we know ourselves, the more we sense
where the evil spirit enters, his “password”,
the entrance to our heart, which are the points
to which we are most sensitive, so as to pay
attention to them in the future. Each one of us
has their more sensitive spots, the weak spots
in their personality: and the evil spirit enters
there, and leads us down the wrong path, or
takes us away from the true, right path. I go
and pray but he leads me away from my prayer.
The examples could be multiplied at will,
reflecting on our days. This is why a daily
examination of conscience is so important:
before ending the day, stop a moment. What
happened? Not in the newspapers, not in life:
what happened in my heart? Was my heart
attentive? Did it grow? Did it go through
everything unaware? What happened in my heart?
And this examination is important, it is the
valuable effort of rereading experience from a
particular point of view. Noticing what happens
is important, it is a sign that God's grace is
working in us, helping us to grow in freedom and
awareness. We are not alone: the Holy Spirit is
with us. Let us see how things went.
Genuine consolation is a sort of confirmation
that we are doing what God wants of us, that we
are walking on his paths, that is, on the paths
of life, joy, and peace. Discernment, in fact,
is not simply about what is good or the greatest
possible good, but about what is good for me
here and now: this is what I am called to grow
on, setting limits to other proposals,
attractive but unreal, so as not to be deceived
in the search for the true good.
Brothers and sisters, it is necessary to
understand, to go ahead in understanding what
happens in my heart. And this is why an
examination of conscience is necessary, to see
what happened today. “Today I got angry, I
didn’t do that…”: But why? Going beyond the
“why” to look for the root of these mistakes.
“But, today I was happy but I was bored because
I had to help those people, but at the end I
felt filled by that help” – and there is the
Holy Spirit. Learning to read what happened
during the day in the book of our heart. Do it:
it will take just two minutes, but it will do
you good, I assure you.
|