TO HAVE THE TRUE SENTIMENT
WHICH WE OUGHT TO HAVE IN THE CHURCH MILITANT
Let the following Rules be observed.
First Rule.
The first: All judgment laid aside, we ought to have our mind ready and prompt to obey, in all, the true Spouse of Christ our Lord, which is our holy Mother the Church Hierarchical.
Second Rule.
The second: To praise confession to a Priest, and the reception of the most Holy Sacrament of the Altar once in the year,
and much more each month, and much better from week to week, with the conditions required and due.
Third Rule.
The third: To praise the hearing of Mass often, likewise40 hymns, psalms, and long prayers, in the church and out of it; likewise the hours set at the time fixed for each Divine Office
and for all prayer and all Canonical Hours.
Fourth Rule.
The fourth: To praise much Religious Orders, virginity and continence, and not so much marriage as any of these.
Fifth Rule.
The fifth: To praise vows of Religion, of obedience, of poverty, of chastity and of other perfections of supererogation.
And it is to be noted that as the vow is about the things which approach to Evangelical perfection, a vow ought not to be
made in the things which withdraw from it, such as to be a merchant, or to be married, etc.
Sixth Rule.
To praise relics of the Saints, giving veneration to them and praying to the Saints; and to praise Stations, pilgrimages,
Indulgences, pardons, Cruzadas, and candles lighted in the churches.
Seventh Rule.
To praise Constitutions about fasts and abstinence, as of Lent, Ember Days, Vigils, Friday and Saturday; likewise penances,
not only interior, but also exterior.
Eighth Rule.
To praise the ornaments and the buildings of churches; likewise images, and to venerate them according to what they represent.
Ninth Rule.
Finally, to praise all precepts of the Church, keeping the mind prompt to find reasons in their defence and in no manner
against them.
Tenth Rule.
We ought to be more prompt to
find good and praise as well the Constitutions and recommendations as
the ways of our Superiors.
Because, although some are not or have not been such, to speak
against them, whether preaching in public or discoursing before
the common people, would rather give rise to fault-finding and
scandal than profit; and so the people would be incensed against
their Superiors, whether temporal or spiritual. So that, as it
does harm
to speak evil to the common people of Superiors in their
absence, so it can make profit to speak of the evil ways to the
persons themselves who can remedy them.
Eleventh Rule.
To praise positive and
scholastic learning. Because, as it is more proper to the Positive
Doctors, as St. Jerome, St. Augustine
and St. Gregory, etc., to move the heart to love and serve God our
Lord in everything; so it is more proper to the Scholastics,
as St. Thomas, St. Bonaventure, and to the Master of the
Sentences, etc., to define or explain for our times41
the things necessary for eternal salvation; and to combat and explain
better all errors and all fallacies. For the Scholastic
Doctors, as they are more modern, not only help themselves with
the true understanding of the Sacred Scripture and of the
Positive and holy Doctors, but also, they being enlightened and
clarified by the Divine virtue, help themselves by the Councils,
Canons and Constitutions of our holy Mother the Church.
Twelfth Rule.
We ought to be on our guard in
making comparison of those of us who are alive to the blessed passed
away, because error
is committed not a little in this; that is to say, in saying, this
one knows more than St. Augustine; he is another, or greater
than, St. Francis; he is another St. Paul in goodness, holiness,
etc.
Thirteenth Rule.
To be right in everything,
we ought always to hold that the white which I see, is black, if the
Hierarchical Church so decides
it, believing that between Christ our Lord, the Bridegroom, and
the Church, His Bride, there is the same Spirit which governs
and directs us for the salvation of our souls. Because by the same
Spirit and our Lord Who gave the ten Commandments, our
holy Mother the Church is directed and governed.
Fourteenth Rule.
Although there is much truth in the assertion that no one can save himself without being predestined and without having
faith and grace; we must be very cautious in the manner of speaking and communicating with others about all these things.
Fifteenth Rule.
We ought not, by way of
custom, to speak much of predestination; but if in some way and at some
times one speaks, let him
so speak that the common people may not come into any error, as
sometimes happens, saying: Whether I have to be saved or condemned
is already determined, and no other thing can now be, through my
doing well or ill; and with this, growing lazy, they become
negligent in the works which lead to the salvation and the
spiritual
42 profit of their souls.
Sixteenth Rule.
In the same way, we must be
on our guard that by talking much and with much insistence of faith,
without any distinction
and explanation, occasion be not given to the people to be lazy
and slothful in works, whether before faith is formed in charity
or after.
Seventeenth Rule.
Likewise, we ought not to speak so much with insistence on grace that the poison of discarding liberty be engendered. So that of faith and grace one can speak as much as is possible with the Divine help for the greater praise of His Divine
Majesty, but not in such way, nor in such manners, especially in our so dangerous times, that works and free will receive
any harm, or be held for nothing.
Eighteenth Rule.
Although serving God our
Lord much out of pure love is to be esteemed above all; we ought to
praise much the fear of His
Divine Majesty, because not only filial fear is a thing pious and
most holy, but even servile fear—when the man reaches nothing
else better or more useful—helps much to get out of mortal sin.
And when he is out, he easily comes to filial fear, which
is all acceptable and grateful to God our Lord: as being at one
with the
Divine Love.
Link (here) to CCEL
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