Catechism on The Holy Spirit
http://www.ewtn.com/library/CATECHSM/CATARS.htm
by Saint John Vianney

O my Children, how beautiful it is! The Father is our Creator, the 
Son is our Redeemer, and the Holy Ghost is our Guide. . . . Man by 
himself is nothing, but with the Holy Spirit he is very great. Man is 
all earthly and all animal; nothing but the Holy Spirit can elevate 
his mind, and raise it on high. Why were the saints so detached from 
the earth? Because they let themselves be led by the Holy Spirit. 
Those who are led by the Holy Spirit have true ideas; that is the 
reason why so many ignorant people are wiser than the learned. When 
we are led by a God of strength and light, we cannot go astray.

The Holy Spirit is light and strength. He teaches us to distinguish 
between truth and falsehood, and between good and evil. Like glasses 
that magnify objects, the Holy Spirit shows us good and evil on a 
large scale. With the Holy Spirit we see everything in its true 
proportions; we see the greatness of the least actions done for God, 
and the greatness of the least faults. As a watchmaker with his 
glasses distinguishes the most minute wheels of a watch, so we, with 
the light of the Holy Ghost, distinguish all the details of our poor 
life. Then the smallest imperfections appear very great, the least 
sins inspire us with horror. That is the reason why the most Holy 
Virgin never sinned. The Holy Ghost made her understand the 
hideousness of sin; she shuddered with terror at the least fault.

Those who have the Holy Spirit cannot endure themselves, so well do 
they know their poor misery. The proud are those who have not the Holy Spirit.

Worldly people have not the Holy Spirit, or if they have, it is only 
for a moment. He does not remain with them; the noise of the world 
drives Him away. A Christian who is led by the Holy Spirit has no 
difficulty in leaving the goods of this world, to run after those of 
Heaven; he knows the difference between them. The eyes of the world 
see no further than this life, as mine see no further than this wall 
when the church door is shut. The eyes of the Christian see deep into 
eternity. To the man who gives himself up to the guidance of the Holy 
Ghost, there seems to be no world; to the world there seems to be no 
God. . . . We must therefore find out by whom we are led. If it is 
not by the Holy Ghost, we labor in vain; there is no substance nor 
savour in anything we do. If it is by the Holy Ghost, we taste a 
delicious sweetness . . . it is enough to make us die of pleasure!

Those who are led by the Holy Spirit experience all sorts of 
happiness in themselves, while bad Christians roll themselves on 
thorns and flints. A soul in which the Holy Spirit dwells is never 
weary in the presence of God; his heart gives forth a breath of love. 
Without the Holy Ghost we are like the stones on the road. . . . Take 
in one hand a sponge full of water, and in the other a little pebble; 
press them equally. Nothing will come out of the pebble, but out of 
the sponge will come abundance of water. The sponge is the soul 
filled with the Holy Spirit, and the stone is the cold and hard heart 
which is not inhabited by the Holy Spirit.

A soul that possesses the Holy Spirit tastes such sweetness in 
prayer, that it finds the time always too short; it never loses the 
holy presence of God. Such a heart, before our good Saviour in the 
Holy Sacrament of the Altar, is a bunch of grapes under the wine 
press. The Holy Spirit forms thoughts and suggests words in the 
hearts of the just. . . . Those who have the Holy Spirit produce 
nothing bad; all the fruits of the Holy Spirit are good. Without the 
Holy Spirit all is cold; therefore, when we feel we are losing our 
fervour, we must instantly make a novena to the Holy Spirit to ask 
for faith and love. . . . See, when we have made a retreat or a 
jubilee, we are full of good desires: these good desires are the 
breath of the Holy Ghost, which has passed over our souls, and has 
renewed everything, like the warm wind which melts the ice and brings 
back the spring. . . . You who are not great saints, you still have 
many moments when you taste the sweetness of prayer and of the 
presence of God: these are visits of the Holy Spirit. When we have 
the Holy Spirit, the heart expands--bathes itself in divine love. A 
fish never complains of having too much water, neither does a good 
Christian ever complain of being too long with the good God. There 
are some people who find religion wearisome, and it is because they 
have not the Holy Spirit.

If the damned were asked: Why are you in Hell? they would answer: For 
having resisted the Holy Spirit. And if the saints were asked, Why 
are you in Heaven? they would answer: For having listened to the Holy 
Spirit. When good thoughts come into our minds, it is the Holy Spirit 
who is visiting us. The Holy Spirit is a power. The Holy Spirit 
supported Saint Simeon on his column; He sustained the martyrs. 
Without the Holy Spirit, the martyrs would have fallen like the 
leaves from the trees. When the fires were lighted under them, the 
Holy Spirit extinguished the heat of the fire by the heat of divine 
love. The good God, in sending us the Holy Spirit, has treated us 
like a great king who should send his minister to guide one of his 
subjects, saying, "You will accompany this man everywhere, and you 
will bring him back to me safe and sound. " How beautiful it is, my 
children, to be accompanied by the Holy Spirit! He is indeed a good 
Guide; and to think that there are some who will not follow Him. The 
Holy Spirit is like a man with a carriage and horse, who should want 
to take us to Pans. We should only have to say "yes, " and to get 
into it. It is indeed an easy matter to say "yes"!. . . Well, the 
Holy Spirit wants to take us to Heaven; we have only to say "yes, " 
and to let Him take us there.

The Holy Spirit is like a gardener cultivating our souls. . . . The 
Holy Spirit is our servant. . . . There is a gun; well you load it, 
but someone must fire it and make it go off. . . . In the same way, 
we have in ourselves the power of doing good. . . when the Holy 
Spirit gives the impulse, good works are produced. The Holy Spirit 
reposes in just souls like the dove in her nest. He brings out good 
desires in a pure soul, as the dove hatches her young ones. The Holy 
Spirit leads us as a mother leads by the hand her child of two years 
old, as a person who can see leads one who is blind.

The Sacraments which Our Lord instituted would not have saved us 
without the Holy Spirit. Even the death of Our Lord would have been 
useless to us without Him. Therefore Our Lord said to His Apostles, 
"It is good for you that I should go away; for if I did not go, the 
Consoler would not come. " The descent of the Holy Ghost was 
required, to render fruitful that harvest of graces. It is like a 
grain of wheat--you cast it into the ground; yes, but it must have 
sun and rain to make it grow and come into ear. We should say every 
morning, "O God, send me Thy Spirit to teach me what I am and what Thou art. "


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