[Life of St. Francis of Assisi by Paul Sabatier]@TWC D-Link book
Life of St. Francis of Assisi

CHAPTER XI
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In order to truly know such men one must have been able to go with them, to follow Jesus up to the mountain where he passed his nights.

Three favored ones, Peter, James, John, followed him thither one day; but to describe what they saw, all that a manly _sursum corda_ added to the radiance and the mysterious grandeur of him whom they adored, they were obliged to resort to the language of symbols.
It was so with St.Francis.For him as for his Master the end of prayer is communion with the heavenly Father, the accord of the divine with the human; or rather it is man who puts forth his strength to do the work of God, not saying to him a mere passive, resigned, powerless _Fiat_, but courageously raising his head: "Behold me, Lord, I delight to do thy will." "There are unfathomable depths in the human soul, because at the bottom is God himself." Whether this God be transcendent or immanent, whether he be One, the Creator, the eternal and immutable Principle, or whether he be, as say the doctors beyond the Rhine, the ideal objectivation of our Me, is not the question for the heroes of humanity.

The soldier in the thick of battle does not philosophize as to how much truth or falsehood there is in the patriotic sentiment; he takes his arms and fights at the peril of his life.

So the soldiers of spiritual conflicts seek for strength in prayer, in reflection, contemplation, inspiration; all, poets, artists, teachers, saints, legislators, prophets, leaders of the people, learned men, philosophers, all draw from this same source.
But it is not without difficulty that the soul unites itself to God, or if one prefers, that it finds itself.

A prayer ends at last in divine communion only when it began by a struggle.


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