Remember that life is not entirely made up of great evils or heavy trials.
The perpetual recurrence of petty evils and small trials is the ordinary
and appointed way to mature our Christian graces. To bear with the moodiness of
those about us, with their infirmities, their bad judgments, their perverse
tempers; to endure neglect where we feel we have deserved attention, and
ingratitude where we expected thanks--
to bear with the whole company of
disagreeable people whom Divine Providence has placed in our way, and whom God
has perhaps provided on purpose for the trial of our virtues--these are
the best exercises for our graces; and the better because not chosen by
ourselves.
To meekly bear with . . .
continual vexations in our homes,
disappointments in our expectations,
interruptions in our times of
rest,
the follies, intrusions, and disturbances of others;
in short, to
meekly bear with whatever opposes our will and contradicts our desires--is the
very essence of self-denial. These constant, inevitable,
and lesser evils, properly improved, furnish the best moral
discipline for the Christian.
(
Hannah More)
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