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This Is My FriendLet me tell you how I made His acquaintance:I had heard much of Him, but took no heed.He sent daily gifts and presents, but I never thanked Him.He often seemed to want my friendship, but I remained cold.I was homeless, and wretched, and starving and in perilevery hour; and He offered me shelter and comfort and food and safety; but I was ungrateful still.At last He crossed my path and with tears in His eyes He besought me saying, Come and abide with me.Let me tell you how he treats me now.He supplies all my wants.He gives me more than I dare ask.He anticipates my every need.He begs me to ask for more.He never reminds me of my past ingratitude.He never rebukes me for my past follies.Let me tell you further what I think of Him.He is as good as He is great.His love is ardent as it is true.He is as lavish of His promises as He is faithful in keepingthem.He is as jealous of my love as He is deserving of it.I am in all things His debtor, but He bids me call Him Friend.
PART I: Christ in the Interior SoulGeneral: Genesis 2:18It is not good for man to be alone. - Genesis 2:18The emotion of friendship is amongst the most mighty and the most mysterious of human instincts ... It is not a manifestation of sex, for David can cry to Jonathan "Thy love to me was wonderful, passing the love of women"; it is not a sympathy arising from common interests, for the sage and the fool can form a friendship at least as strong as any between two sages or two fools; it is not a relationship based on the exchange of ideas, for the deepest friendships thrive better in silence than in speech. "No man is truly my friend," says Maeterlinck, "until we have each learned to be silent in one another's company..." ...[Yet] there is hardly any experience more subject to disillusionment. It deifies beasts, and is disappointed to find them human after all. When my friend fails me at a crisis or when I fail my friend, there is hardly any bitterness in life so bitter. And again; while friendship itself has an air of eternity about it, seeming to transcend all natural limits, there is hardly any emotion so utterly at the mercy of time. We form friendships, and grow out of them. It might almost be said that we cannot retain the faculty of friendship unless we are continually making new friends: just as, in religion, in proportion as we form inadequate images and ideas of the divine which for the time we adore, and presently change for others, we progress in the knowledge of the True God. I cannot retain true Childhood unless I am continually putting away childish things.Here then is one of the more princely passions which, while feeding upon earthly things are continuously dissatisfied with them; which, themselves white-hot, are never consumed - one of the passions that make history, and therefore look always to the future and not to the past - a passion which, perhaps above all others, since in its instance it is impossible to resolve it into earthly elements points to eternity only for the place of its satisfaction, and to the Divine Love for the answering of its human needs. There is but one intelligible explanation then for the desires which it generates yet never fulfills; there is but one supreme friendship to which all human friendships point; one Ideal Friend in whom we find perfect and complete that for whichwe look in type and shadow in the faces of our human lovers.It is at once the privilege and the burden of Catholics that they know so much of Jesus Christ. Is it their privilege, since an intelligent knowledge of the Person and the attributes and the achievements of Incarnate God is an infinitely greater wisdom than all the rest of the sciences put together. To have a knowledge of the Creator is incalculably a more noble thing than to have a knowledge of His Creation. Yet it is a burden as well; for the splendour of this knowledge may be so great as to blind us to the value of its details. The blaze of the Divinity to him who sees it may be so bright as to bewilder him with regard to the humanity. The unity of the wood vanishes in the perfection of the trees.Catholics then, above all others, are prone - through their very knowledge of the mysteries of faith, through their very apprehension of Jesus Christ as their God, their High Priest, their Victim, their Prophet and their King - to forget that His delights are to be with the sons of men more than to rule the Seraphim, that, while His Majesty held Him on the throne of His Father, His Love brought Him down on pilgrimage that He might transform His servants into His friends. For example, devout souls often complain of their loneliness on earth. They pray, they frequent the sacraments, they do their utmost to fulfill the Christian precepts; and, when all is done, they find themselves solitary. There could scarcely be a more evident proof of their failure to understand one at least of the great motives of the Incarnation. They adore Christ as God, they feed on Him in Communion, cleansethemselves in His precious Blood, look to the time when they shall see Him as their Judge; yet of that intimate knowledge of and companionship with Him in which the Divine Friendship consists, they have experienced little or nothing. They long, they say, for one who can not merely remove suffering, but can himself suffer with them, one to whom they can express in silence the thoughts which no speech can utter; and they seem not to understand that this is thevery post which Jesus Christ Himself desires to win, that the supreme longing of His Sacred Heart is that He should be admitted, not merely to the throne of the heart or to the tribunal of conscience, but to that inner secret chamber of the soul where a man is most himself, and therefore most utterly alone.
Wow! So beautiful! Thank you so much for sharing this!
AMDG, Msgr. Robert Hugh Benson also wrote Children's books includingA Child's Rule of Life andOld Testament RhymesYou will love them.He also writes great novels for the big kids.like Come Rack, Come rope.He has featured in a few threads on CI.