<http://veniaminov.blogspot.com/2008/12/wisdom-from_24.html>Wisdom from...

WALTER HILTON (ca. d. 24 March, 1396): True Lovers of God
Love opens the eyes of the soul to the vision of God, and confirms it 
in the joyous love that springs from that vision. It comforts a man 
so much that he has no anxieties and is quite indifferent to what 
people say or do against him. The greatest harm that could come to 
him would be to forgo the vision of God, and he would suffer any 
injury rather than that.
When a true lover of God suffers at the hands of his fellow men, he 
is strengthened through the grace of the Holy Spirit and is made so 
truly humble and patient and peaceable that, whatever wrong or injury 
he suffers, he always retains his humility. He does not despise his 
persecutors or speak ill of them, but prays for them with pity and 
compassion more tenderly than for those who never harmed him. And he 
does indeed love them more, and more fervently desires their 
salvation, because he sees that he will have such great spiritual 
gain from their evil deed, even though they never intended that he 
should. But this kind of love and humility, which are beyond human 
nature, are only brought about by the Holy Spirit in those whom he 
makes true lovers of God.
(The Scale of Perfection, Book 2, 38.)
Hilton was an Augustinian canon and outstanding mystic at Thurgarton, 
near Newark, in Nottinghamshire, and left a legacy of writings, 
especially The Scale of Perfection (Scala Perfectionis), first 
printed by Wynkyn de Worde in 1494.

ST. AUGUSTINE: Christ Our Way
Jesus said: "I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life." He meant: It is 
by me that you come; it is to me that you come; and it is in me that 
you remain. How do you wish to go? I am the Way. Where do you wish to 
go? I am the Truth. Where do you wish to remain? I am the Life. 
Christ as God is the homeland where we are going. Christ as Man is 
the Way we must travel.
-- Christian Doctrine 1, 34
Prayer. O Lord, my God, you alone do I love; you alone do I follow; 
you alone do I seek. You alone am I prepared to serve.
-- Soliloquies 1, 15
ST. THOMAS AQUINAS: THOSE WHO SAY THE EXISTENCE OF GOD IS 
SELF-EVIDENT, AND THEREFORE CANNOT BE DEMONSTRATED
[1] There are some persons to whom the inquiry seeking to demonstrate 
that God exists may perhaps appear superfluous. These are the persons 
[e.g., St. Anselm of Canterbury] who assert that the existence of God 
is self-evident, in such wise that its contrary cannot be entertained 
in the mind. It thus appears that the existence of God cannot be 
demonstrated, as may be seen from the following arguments.
[2] Those propositions are said to be self-evident that are known 
immediately upon the knowledge of their terms. Thus, as soon as you 
know the nature of a whole and the nature of a part, you know 
immediately that every whole is greater than its part. The 
proposition God exists is of this sort. For by the name God we 
understand that than which a greater cannot be thought [id quo nihil 
maius cogitari possit]. This notion is formed in the intellect by one 
who hears and understands the name God. As a result, God must exist 
already at least in the intellect. But He cannot exist solely in the 
intellect, since that which exists both in the intellect and in 
reality is greater than that which exists in the intellect alone. 
Now, as the very definition of the name points out, nothing can be 
greater than God. Consequently, the proposition that God exists is 
self-evident, as being evident from the very meaning of the name God.

[3] Again, it is possible to think that something exists whose 
non-existence cannot be thought. Clearly, such a being is greater 
than the being whose non-existence can be thought. Consequently, if 
God Himself could be thought not to be, then something greater than 
God could be thought. This, however, is contrary to the definition of 
the name God. Hence, the proposition that God exists is self-evident.
[4] Furthermore, those propositions ought to be the most evident in 
which the same thing is predicated of itself, for example, man is 
man, or whose predicates are included in the definition of their 
subjects, for example, Man is an animal. Now, in God, as will be 
shown in a later chapter, it is pre-eminently the case that His being 
is His essence, so that to the question what is He [quid est]? and to 
the question is He [est]? the answer is one and the same. ...
[5] What is naturally known is known through itself, for we do not 
come to such propositions through an effort of inquiry. But the 
proposition that God exists is naturally known since, as will be 
shown later on, the desire of man naturally tends towards God as 
towards the ultimate end. The proposition that God exists is, 
therefore, self-evident.
[6] There is also the consideration that that through which all the 
rest are known ought itself to be self-evident. Now, God is of this 
sort. For just as the light of the sun is the principle of all 
visible perception, so the divine light is the principle of all 
intelligible knowledge; since the divine light is that in which 
intelligible illumination is found first and in its highest degree. 
That God exists, therefore, must be self-evident.
[7] These, then, and others like them are the arguments by which some 
think that the proposition God exists is so self-evident that its 
contrary cannot be entertained by the mind.
(SCG, I, x)
ST. FRANCIS DE SALES:
At the beginning of each month, ask for divine inspiration and put 
yourself in the presence of God. Imagine yourself to be a poor 
servant sent by God into this world as into His own house. Indeed, it 
is He who put us here, and so we should approach Him with humility. 
He had no need of you, but He put you here to exercise His liberality 
and His goodness toward you, and to give you His paradise. To enable 
you to obtain what He has planned for you, He has given you an 
intellect to know Him, a memory to keep Him in mind, and will and a 
heart to love Him and your neighbor, an imagination to have a picture 
of Him and His gifts, and all your feelings to serve Him and glorify Him.
(Letters O. XXVI, pp. 170-171)

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Lord, may everything we do begin with Your inspiration and continue 
with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.



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Lord, may everything we do begin with Your inspiration and continue 
with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.


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