[Life of Father Hecker by Walter Elliott]@TWC D-Link book
Life of Father Hecker

INTRODUCTION
15/26

An honest ballot and social decorum among Catholics will do more for God's glory and the salvation of souls than midnight flagellations or Compostellan pilgrimages.
On a line with his principles, as I have so far delineated them, Father Hecker believed that if he would succeed in his work for souls, he should use in it all the natural energy that God had given him, and he acted up to his belief I once heard a good old priest, who said his beads well and made a desert around his pulpit by miserable preaching, criticise Father Hecker, who, he imagined, put too much reliance in man, and not enough in God.

Father Hecker's piety, his assiduity in prayer, his personal habits of self-denial, repel the aspersion that he failed in reliance upon God.

But my old priest--and he has in the church to-day, both in America and Europe, tens of thousands of counterparts--was more than half willing to see in all outputtings of human energy a lack of confidence in God.

We sometimes rely far more upon God than God desires us to do, and there are occasions when a novena is the refuge of laziness or cowardice.
God has endowed us with natural talents, and not one of them shall be, with His permission, enshrouded in a napkin.

He will not work a miracle, or supply grace, to make up for our deficiencies.


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