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Abandonment to Divine Providence E-Book

Jean Pierre de Caussade

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Beschreibung

Abandonment, or Absolute Surrender to Divine Providence is a religious classic attributed to Jean Pierre de Caussade, a French Jesuit priest and writer. The author believed that the present moment is a sacrament from God and that self-abandonment to it and its needs is a holy state – a belief which, in the theological climate of France at the time, may have been considered close to Quietist heresy. The book was controversial and the author was charged for heresy, but was eventually acquitted and the book was accepted. Abandonment to Divine Providence has now been read widely and is considered a classic in the spiritual life.

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2023

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Jean Pierre de Caussade

Abandonment to Divine Providence

The Sacrament of the Present Moment
e-artnow, 2023 Contact: [email protected]

Table of Contents

A PREFACE ON THE FOUNDATION AND TRUE NATURE OF THE VIRTUE OF ABANDONMENT, TO EXPLAIN AND DEFEND Father Caussade’s Doctrine.
Book First. The Nature and Excellence of the Virtue of Holy Abandonment.
CHAPTER I. The Sanctity of the Righteous of the Old Law, and of Joseph and of Mary herself, consisted in Fidelity to the Order of God.
CHAPTER II. The Duties of each Moment are the Shadows which veil the Divine Action.
CHAPTER III. How much Easier Sanctity becomes when studied from this Point of View.
CHAPTER IV. Perfection does not consist in knowing the Order of God, but in submitting to it.
CHAPTER V. Reading and other Exercises only sanctify us in so far as they are the Channels of the Divine Action.
CHAPTER VI. The Mind and other Human Means are Useful only in as far as they are the Instruments of the Divine Action.
CHAPTER VII. There is no Enduring Peace but in Submission to the Divine Action.
CHAPTER VIII. The Perfection of Souls and the Excellence of Different States are in Proportion to their Conformity to the Order of God.
CHAPTER IX. All the Riches of Grace are the Fruit of Purity of Heart and Perfect Self-abandonment.
Book Second. The Divine Action and the Manner in which it unceasingly works the Sanctification of Souls.
CHAPTER I. The Divine Action is everywhere and always Present, though only Visible to the Eye of Faith.
CHAPTER II. The Divine Action is all the more Visible to the Eye of Faith when hidden under Appearances most Repugnant to the Senses.
CHAPTER III. The Divine Action offers us at each Moment Infinite Blessings, which we receive in proportion to our Faith and Love.
CHAPTER IV. God reveals Himself to us as Mysteriously, as Adorably, and with as much Reality in the most Ordinary Events as in the great Events of History and the Holy Scriptures.
CHAPTER V. The Divine Action continues in our Hearts the Revelation begun in Holy Scripture; but the Characters in which it is written will be Visible only at the Last Day.
CHAPTER VI. Divine Love is communicated to us through the Veil of Creatures, as Jesus communicates Himself to us through the Veil of the Eucharistic Species.
CHAPTER VII. The Divine Action, the Will of God, is as unworthily treated and disregarded in its Daily Manifestation by many Christians as was Jesus in the Flesh by the Jews.
CHAPTER VIII. The Revelation of the Present Moment is the more Profitable that it is addressed Directly to us.
CHAPTER IX. The Revelation of the Present Moment is an Inexhaustible Source of Sanctity.
CHAPTER X. The Present Moment is the Manifestation of the Name of God and the Coming of His Kingdom.
CHAPTER XI. The Divine Will imparts the Highest Sanctity to Souls; they have but to abandon Themselves to its Divine Action.
CHAPTER XII. The Divine Action alone can sanctify us, for it forms us after the Divine Model of our Perfection.
Book Third.
CHAPTER I. God Himself guides Souls who wholly abandon themselves to Him.
CHAPTER II. The more God seems to withdraw Light from the Soul abandoned to His Direction, the more Safely He guides Her.
CHAPTER III. The Afflictions with which God visits the Soul are but Loving Artifices at which she will One Day rejoice.
CHAPTER IV. The more God seems to take from a Soul wholly abandoned to Him, the more Generous He is to her.
CHAPTER V. The less Capable the Faithful Soul is of defending Herself, the more Powerfully does God defend Her.
CHAPTER VI. The Soul abandoned to the Will of God, so far from resisting her Enemies, finds in them Useful Auxiliaries.
CHAPTER VII. The Soul who abandons Herself to God has no Need to justify Herself by Words or Actions: the Divine Action justifies Her.
CHAPTER VIII. God gives Life to the Soul abandoned to Him by Means which apparently lead only to Death.
CHAPTER IX. Love holds the Place of All Things to Souls who walk in the Way of Abandonment.
CHAPTER X. The Faithful Soul finds in Submission to the Will of God more Force and Strength than the Proudest of those who resist Him.
CHAPTER XI. The Soul abandoned to God learns to recognize His Will even in the Proud who resist Him. All Creatures, whether Good or Evil, reveal Him to her.
CHAPTER XII. God assures to Faithful Souls a Glorious Victory over the Powers of Earth and Hell.
APPENDIX.
I. A very easy Means of acquiring Peace of Heart.
II. On Perfect Abandonment.
III. A Short and Easy Method of making the Prayer of Faith, and of the Simple Presence of God.
IV. Exercise of Loving Union of our Will with that of God.
V. Act of Abandonment.
Another Act of Abandonment.
Another Act of Abandonment.
An Act of Confidence in God.

A PREFACEON THEFOUNDATION AND TRUE NATURE OF THE VIRTUE OF ABANDONMENT,TO EXPLAIN AND DEFENDFather Caussade’s Doctrine.

Table of Contents

There is no truth however clear which does not become error the moment it is lessened or exaggerated; and there is no food however salutary for the soul which may not, when ill-applied, become a fatal poison.

The virtue of abandonment does not escape this danger; the more holy and profitable it is in itself the more serious are the dangers we risk by misunderstanding its just limits.

These dangers, unfortunately, are not mere possibilities. The seventeenth century witnessed the birth of a heresy,—that of the Quietists,—which, while claiming to teach its followers perfect abandonment to God, led them into the most terrible disorders. For a time this sect wrought its ravages in the very capital of Catholicism, and put forth such specious sophistries that the pious Fénelon himself, while abhorring the practical consequences drawn from this teaching, was for a time misled by its false appearance of perfection.

To preserve Father Caussade’s readers from these dangers, we think it well to add to these writings a succinct exposition of the rules which should guide us in a matter so delicate. By the light of the principles jointly furnished us by reason and faith, we shall have no difficulty in determining the just limits which should mark our abandonment to divine Providence; and it will be easy for us afterwards to elucidate the points in our author’s doctrine which might be wrongly interpreted.

I.

Table of Contents

Father Caussade explains very clearly in his “Letters” the two principles which form the unalterable basis of the virtue of abandonment.

First principle: Nothing is done, nothing happens, either in the material or in the moral world, which God has not foreseen from all eternity, and which He has not willed, or at least permitted.

Second principle: God can will nothing, He can permit nothing, but in view of the end He proposed to Himself in creating the world; i.e., in view of His glory and the glory of the Man-God, Jesus Christ, His only Son.

To these two principles laid down by our author we shall add a third, which will complete the elucidation of this whole subject: As long as man lives upon earth, God desires to be glorified through the happiness of this privileged creature; and consequently in God’s designs the interest of man’s sanctification and happiness is inseparable from the interest of the divine glory.

If we do not lose sight of these principles, which no Christian can question, we shall understand that our confidence in the Providence of our Father in heaven cannot be too great, too absolute, too childlike. If nothing but what He permits happens, and if He can permit nothing but what is for our happiness, then we have nothing to fear, except not being sufficiently submissive to God. As long as we keep ourselves united with Him and we walk after His designs, were all creatures to turn against us they could not harm us. He who relies upon God becomes by this very reliance as powerful and as invincible as God, and created powers can no more prevail against him than against God Himself.

This confidence in the fatherly providence of God cannot, evidently, dispense us from doing all that is in our power to accomplish His designs; but after having done all that depends upon our efforts we will abandon ourselves completely to God for the rest.

This abandonment should extend, in fact, to everything—to the past, to the present, to the future; to the body and all its conditions; to the soul and all its miseries, as well as all its qualities; to blessings; to afflictions; to the good will of men, and to their malice; to the vicissitudes of the material, and the revolutions of the moral, world; to life and to death; to time and to eternity.

However, as these different orders of things do not enter in the same manner in the designs of divine Providence, neither should our abandonment in regard to these be practised in the same manner; and the rules which we should follow in the practice of this virtue should be founded on the nature itself of the objects which call it forth. We shall indicate the principal ones.

I. Among all the dispositions to which our abandonment can be applied, there are first, those which depend solely upon God, where human liberty has no part either in producing or averting them. Such are, for example, certain scourges, and vicissitudes of the atmosphere; certain accidents impossible to foresee, certain natural defects of body or soul.

In regard to facts of this order, whether of the past, present, or future, it is evident that our abandonment cannot be too absolute.

There is nothing to do here but to passively and lovingly endure all that God sends us; to blindly accept in advance all that it may please Him to send us in the future. Resistance would be useless, and only serve to make us unhappy; a loving and frequently renewed acceptance, on the contrary, would make these inevitable sufferings very meritorious. And oh, the marvels of God’s goodness! Our abandonment will not only sanctify and fructify real trials; it will enable us to derive great merit from trials to which we shall never be subjected. For, if we lovingly accept these trials when they present themselves to our minds as probable, or simply possible, this willing acquiescence, this fiat uttered in the depths of the heart, cannot fail to please God, and be very useful to our souls. Therefore, in regard to this first order of events, the practice of abandonment cannot but be very sanctifying, as it changes into means of sanctification not only real but even purely imaginary trials.

II. There are other sufferings which come to us through the malice of creatures: persecutions, calumnies, ill-treatment, neglect, injustice, and offences of every kind. What are we to do when we find ourselves exposed to vexatious things of this sort?

1st. We evidently cannot like the offence against God with which they are accompanied; we should, on the contrary, deplore and detest it, not because it wounds our self-love, but because it is an offence against the divine rights, and compromises the salvation of the offending souls.

2d. As for that which concerns us, on the contrary, we should regard as a blessing that which is in itself an evil; and to do this we need only recall the principles previously laid down: not to look only at the creature who is the immediate cause of our sufferings, but to raise our eyes higher and behold God, who has foreseen and permitted them from all eternity, and who in permitting them had only our happiness in view. This thought will be sufficient to dissipate the bitterness and trouble which would take possession of our hearts were we to look only at the injustice of which we are the victims.

3d. In regard to the effects of this injustice already consummated and irreparable, we have only to resign ourselves as lovingly as possible, and carefully gather their precious fruits. It is frequently not difficult to divine the spiritual fruits God destined for us in exposing us to temporal evils: to detach us from creatures; to deliver us from inordinate affections, from our pride, from our tepidity,—veritable maladies of the soul, frequently all the more dangerous that they are less perceptible, and of which the heavenly Physician wishes to cure us, using the malice of our neighbor as a sharp instrument. We do not hesitate to endure much greater sufferings to be delivered from corporal infirmities; then let us gratefully accept the spiritual health, infinitely more precious, which God offers us, however disagreeable the instrument through which He gives it to us.

4th. If it is in our power to avert the consequences of malice and injustice, and if in our true interest, and in the interest of the divine glory, we deem it necessary to take any measures to this end, let us do so without departing from the practice of the holy virtue of abandonment. Let us commit the success of our efforts to God, and be ready to accept failure if God judges it more suitable to His designs and more profitable to our souls. We are so blind that we always have reason to fear being deceived; but God cannot be deceived, and we may be certain, in advance, that what He determines will be best. Therefore we cannot do better than abandon with fullest confidence the result of our efforts to Him.

III. But should this abandonment extend equally to our acts of imprudence, to our faults, and all the annoyances of every kind in which they may result?

It is important to distinguish here two things which self-love tends to confound. In the fault itself we must distinguish what is culpable and what is humiliating. Likewise in its consequences we must distinguish what is detrimental to the divine glory and the confusion inflicted on our self-love. Evidently we cannot hate too much the fault, properly so called, nor regret too keenly the injury done to the divine glory. But as for our humiliation, and the confusion inflicted on our self-love, we should rejoice, and acquiesce in it with complete abandonment. This kind of sacrifice is undoubtedly the best fitted to destroy in us the most secret fibres of self-love, and to cause us to make rapid progress in virtue. To souls who have attained a certain degree of regularity and detachment, exterior humiliations are very little. When we have learned the vanity of human glory, we easily endure the sting of contempt; but we may still unite with this exterior detachment great attachment to our own esteem and approbation, and a wholly egotistical desire of perfection. In this case, self-love, by changing its object, would only become more subtle and more dangerous. To destroy it, there is no remedy more efficacious than the humiliation resulting from our faults; and we cannot, consequently, strive too earnestly to apply the practice of abandonment to this humiliation, endeavoring at the same time to correct the faults themselves.