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St. Benedict Joseph Labre
The Maxims and Counsels of Saint Benedict Joseph Labre
Thirty useful sentiments of the Servant of God [St] Benedict
Joseph Labre, drawn from the history of his life.
- By the grace of God we can do everything. We can remain unhurt in the
midst of the fire, like the three holy youths in the furnace of Babylon.
- Everything may be done by the help of God, provided we have a sincere
goodwill.
- To communicate through obedience is better and more pleasing to God, than
to abstain from it through humility.
- It is never allowable to use or keep anything when we know it has been
stolen.
- It is never lawful to tell a lie; we ought always to speak the truth,
whatever it may cost us.
- We offend God, because we do not know his greatness.
- He who knows what God is, studies to avoid sin.
- The want of proper examination, true contrition, and a firm purpose of
amendment, is the cause of bad confessions, and of the ruin of souls.
- In this world we are all in a valley of tears. Our consolation is not
here; we shall have it eternally in Paradise, if we suffer tribulations on
earth.
- God afflicts us because he loves us; and it is very pleasing to him, when
in our afflictions he sees us abandon ourselves to his paternal care.
- Where fraternal charity is concerned, everything should be sacrificed.
- Those only are to be called poor and unhappy, who are in hell, who have
lost God for eternity, not those who are poor on earth.
- However much we suffer for the love of Jesus Crucified, it is but little.
- Let him who seeks true humility, employ two means: mental prayer,
meditating on the greatness of God, and his own nothingness; vocal prayer,
asking it of God, through the merits of Jesus and Mary.
- By talking and irreverence in churches, we show disrespect to Almighty God
in his own house.
- Acts of irreverence in churches are sins which greatly displease God; they
horrify the angels, and do great harm to the soul.
- If there were only one person to be condemned, each should fear to be that
one.
- We should often meditate on the pains of hell, in order to abhor mortal
sin, which casts us into it for all eternity; and think of the small number of
the elect, that we may live in fear.
- The Providence of God is never wanting to him who confides in God as he
ought.
- With regard to corporal provision, we should not think of a future day,
according to the advice of our blessed Redeemer: "Be not solicitous for the
morrow." God who provides for today, will also provide for tomorrow.
Particular sentiments concerning true poverty, which the Servant
of God wonderfully loved and practiced.
- The poor should live by alms.
- A little suffices for the support of the body; what is superfluous, will
only serve to furnish the worms with a greater feast.
- A poor man does not seek a bed in order to sleep, he throws himself down
anywhere.
- Conveniences are not for the poor.
- Poor people should not use a loaf; they should be content with fragments.
- The poor should not carry money in their travels.
- The poor should not eat dainties.
- The poor should not be well clad.
- The poor should not drink wine: it is not necessary; water suffices to
appease thirst.
[Antonio Maria Coltraro (d. 1797), The Life of the Venerable
Servant of God, Benedict Joseph Labre. (Oratorian series: "The Saints and
Servants of God.") London. Thomas Richardson and Son. 1850. pp.354-56.]
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