Uniformity With God’s Will - pt. 1
The time of spiritual desolation is also a time for being resigned. When a soul begins to cultivate the spiritual life, God usually showers his consolations upon her to wean her away from the world; but when he sees her making solid progress, he withdraws his hand to test her and to see if she will love and serve him without the reward of sensible consolations. “In this life,” as St. Teresa used to say, “our lot is not to enjoy God, but to do his holy will.” And again, “Love of God does not consist in experiencing his tendernesses, but in serving him with resolution and humility.” And in yet another place, “God’s true lovers are discovered in times of aridity and temptation.”
Let the soul thank God when she experiences his loving endearments, but let her not repine when she finds herself left in desolation. It is important to lay great stress on this point, because some souls, beginners in the spiritual life, finding themselves in spiritual aridity, think God has abandoned them, or that the spiritual life is not for them; thus they give up the practice of prayer and lose what they have previously gained. The time of aridity is the best time to practice resignation to God’s holy will. I do not say you will feel no pain in seeing yourself deprived of the sensible presence of God; it is impossible for the soul not to feel it and lament over it, when even our Lord cried out on the cross: “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me[3]?” In her sufferings, however, the soul should always be resigned to God’s will.
The saints have all experienced desolations and abandonment of soul. “How impervious to things spiritual, my heart!” cries a St. Bernard. “No savor in pious reading, no pleasure in meditation nor in prayer!” For the most part it has been the common lot of the saints to encounter aridities; sensible consolations were the exceptions. Such things are rare occurrences granted to untried souls so that they may not halt on the road to sanctity; the real delights and happiness that will constitute their reward are reserved for heaven. This earth is a place of merit which is acquired by suffering; heaven is a place of reward and happiness. Hence, in this life the saints neither desired nor sought the joys of sensible fervor, but rather the fervor of the spirit toughened in the crucible of suffering. “O how much better it is,” says St. John of Avila, “to endure aridity and temptation by God’s will than to be raised to the heights of contemplation without God’s will!”
But you say you would gladly endure desolation if you were certain that it comes from God, but you are tortured by the anxiety that your desolation comes by your own fault and is a punishment for your tepidity. Very well, let us suppose you are right; then get rid of your tepidity and exercise more diligence in the affairs of your soul. But because you are possibly experiencing spiritual darkness, are you going to get all wrought up, give up prayer, and thus make things twice as bad as they are?
Let us assume that this aridity is a punishment for your tepidity. Was it not God who sent it? Accept your desolation, as your just desserts and unite yourself to God’s holy will. Did you not say that you merited hell? And now you are complaining? Perhaps you think God should send you consolations! Away with such ideas and be patient under God’s hand. Take up your prayers again and continue to walk in the way you have entered upon; for the future, fear lest such laments come from too little humility and too little resignation to the will of God. Therefore be resigned and say: “Lord, I accept this punishment from thy hands, and I accept it for as long as it pleases thee; if it be thy will that I should be thus afflicted for all eternity, I am satisfied.” Such a prayer, though hard to make, will be far more advantageous to you than the sweetest sensible consolations.
It is well to remember, however, that aridity is not always a chastisement; at times it is a disposition of divine providence for our greater spiritual profit and to keep us humble. Lest St. Paul become vain on account of the spiritual gifts he had received, the Lord permitted him to be tempted to impurity: “And lest the greatness of the revelations should exalt me, there was given me a sting of my flesh, an angel of Satan to buffet me[4].”
Prayer made amid sensible devotion is not much of an achievement: “There is a friend, a companion at the table, and he will not abide in the day of distress[5].” You would not consider the casual guest at your table a friend, but only him who assists you in your need without thought of benefit to himself. When God sends spiritual darkness and desolation, his true friends are known.
More tomorrow…
Saint Alphonsus de Ligouri Chapter 6 — Spiritual Desolation.
“Perfection is founded entirely on the love of God: ‘Charity is the bond of perfection;’ and perfect love of God means the complete union of our will with God’s.”
– St. Alphonsus
Translated by Thomas W. Tobin, C.SS.R
- [3] Matt. 27:46.
[4] 2 Cor. 12:7.




Very thought- provoking. I certainly know from experience how luke- warm my prayer life can be, but the answer is perseverance and trust rather than throwing in the towel and looking for something else. I’ll come back tomorrow….
Comment by ann — June 18, 2008 @ 11:08 am
I think it’s so important, though, for people to understand that lack of “sensible” consolations does not mean that they are not being drawn into and experiencing contemplative prayer. If one thinks that their prayer is contemplative only when they “feel” something, then they are confusing prayer and consolations.
I have a question regarding the quote from St. John of Avila, Aeternus. He writes, “O how much better it is…to endure aridity and temptation by God’s will than to be raised to the heights of contemplation without God’s will!” I don’t really understand the last part; can anyone be raised to the heights of contemplation without God’s will?
Comment by Gabrielle — June 19, 2008 @ 8:29 am
Hello Gabrielle.
I think you have a very good question here. Saint Alphonsus is certainly talking very high level spirituality here and it is quite easy to get confused. My understanding of this quote from St. John of Avila is this… it is better to be in the doldrums of prayer where nothing is pleasant is experienced (and to remain in this state for an entire lifetime if necessary) than to rouse our own emotion falsely (through some sort of spiritual thrill ride we partake in - there are many different ways this can be done) in trying to reach God. The soul who is true to God WAITS on God to communicate to it His Holy Will and, if so God Wills, His most Holy Consolations in contemplative prayer.
As I was trying to think of an example I thought of the Polar Bear Society. You know those men who in the dead of Siberian Wintertime go to the beach, peel off their clothes down to their speedos and throw themselves into the frigid waters? These folks are trying to wake themselves up and gain some sort of strength through this practice and gain some physical thrill in the meantime! If we were talking prayer instead of Polar Bears, we might say, “gee, they should sit on the beach patiently until God decided to have a wave come by and pull them in for a swim!”
Anyway, I suppose I think that is what John is saying here. We should not try to rouse ourselves and our prayer. We must wait, patiently, silently, lovingly while gaining no sensible fervor for God whatsoever. There is strength in this desolation. It is the darkness of night. Nothing will rouse the soul except God.
The trick is, not to let go in these times and abandon prayer…
Comment by aeternus — June 19, 2008 @ 8:46 am
Thanks, Aeternus. I was thinking later that maybe it is also a question of a little something being lost in the translation. Perhaps the original said something along the lines of one should not seek to be raised to the heights of contemplation if it is not God’s will…who knows…but thank you…
Comment by Gabrielle — June 22, 2008 @ 6:33 pm