presence of God even while sleeping
“To keep ourselves in the presence of God and to place ourselves in the presence of God are, in my opinion, two different things. For to place ourselves in this presence it is necessary to recall our minds from every other object and render it actually attentive to the divine presence, as I say in my book.
But after placing ourselves in the presence of God, we keep ourselves there by making certain acts toward God, either by understanding or by will. We can make these acts by looking at Him or by looking at some other thing for love of Him.We can make them by looking at nothing, and instead by speaking to Him. Lastly, we can make them by neither looking nor speaking, but simply by staying where He has put us, like a statue in its niche.
When there is added to this simple staying some feeling that we belong completely to God, and that He is our all, we must indeed give thanks to His goodness. If a statue that had been placed in a niche in some room could speak and was asked, “Why are you there?” it would say, “Because my master has put me here.”
“Why don’t you move?”
“Because he wants me to remain immovable.”
“What use are you there; what do you gain by being so?”
“It is not for my profit that I am here; it is to serve and obey the will of my master.”
“But you do not see him.”
“No, but he sees me, and takes pleasure in seeing me where he has put me.”
“Would you not like to have movement, so that you could go nearer to him?”
“Certainly not, except when he might command me.”
“Don’t you want anything, then?”
“No; for I am where my master has placed me, and his good pleasure is the unique contentment of my being.”
My God! What a good prayer and a good way to keep in the presence of God, to keep ourselves in His will and His good pleasure! I think that Magdalen was a statue in her niche, when without speaking, without moving, and perhaps without looking at Him, she listened to what our Lord said, seated at His feet. When He spoke she heard; when He paused from speaking, she ceased to listen, and still stayed ever there.
A little child who is on the bosom of its sleeping mother is truly in its good and desirable place, although it says no word to her nor she to it.
My God! How glad I am, my child, to speak a little of these things with you! How happy we are when we will to love our Lord! Let us, then, love Him well. Let us not set ourselves to consider too exactly what we do for His love, provided we know that we will to do nothing but for His love.
For my part, I think we keep ourselves in the presence of God even while sleeping. For we go to sleep in His sight, by His will, and at His pleasure; and He puts us there like statues in a niche. And when we wake we find that He is there near us; He has not moved any more than we; we have then kept in His presence, but with our eyes shut and closed. . . .”
– By Saint Francis de Sales “We must remain in the presence of God” To Jane de Chantal, on prayer Letter 838 to Jane de Chantal, 1611-1612
This photographic work is dedicated to the Public Domain.




Wonderful!
Comment by mrs jackie parkes — December 1, 2007 @ 10:41 am
I have a site that i am trying to promote and I as am sure you know, it is not that easy when one starts off. I was wondering if you would consider giving me a link on your site. you will find my site at.
http://jesuscalling.blogspot.com/
May God bless you.
yours in Jesus
Brian.
Comment by Brian — December 1, 2007 @ 6:53 pm
How very comforting this post is, Aeternus. To be a child, resting on the bosom of the Lord, no words necessary. This is the essence of contemplative prayer, And to be in His presence, even while sleeping. How could we ask for anything more.
Comment by Gabrielle — December 1, 2007 @ 11:08 pm
What a beautiful photograph … thank you!
Saint Francis de Sales is a marvelous gift to us …. on a day when I was experiencing a great deal of anxiety I was led to a prayer by Saint Francis that helped me a great deal ….
http://www.stblogsparish.com/2007/10/god_touches_our_lives_i n_many.php
Thank you for a wonderful post …
Comment by John — December 3, 2007 @ 4:36 pm
John,
Thank you for visiting the aeternus blog. I read your passage about St. Francis and it is just wonderful. I am glad that you found consolation in his message. His words are so consoling…
“The everlasting God has in his wisdom foreseen from eternity, the cross he now presents to you as a gift from his innermost heart. This cross he now sends you he has considered with his all-knowing eyes, understood with his divine mind, tested with his wise justice, warmed with loving arms and weighed with his own hands to see that it not be one ounce too heavy for you. he has blessed it with his holy name, anointed it with his grace, perfumed it with his consolation, and taken one last glance at you and your courage – has sent it to you from heaven, a special greeting from God to you, an alms of the merciful love of God.” - St. Francis deSales
Comment by aeternus — December 5, 2007 @ 8:33 am
Thank you for this–St. Francis de Sales is one of my favorite saints. I’m enjoying your blog. I’ve added it to my blogroll. Stop by mine, if you like!
http://claresiobhan.stblogs.com/
You can also get to it through a link I posted in the comments section of your Phillip Pullman post.
Clare, trying to stay like a statue in its niche, but I’m interiorly very squirmy, like a first-grader…
Comment by claresiobhan — December 10, 2007 @ 10:25 pm