A Dialogue of Comfort against Tribulation, by St. Thomas
More, rendered in modern English by Mary Gottschalk, discusses where one can
find true comfort when afflicted by tribulation (pain or sorrow). This post will discuss one of More's comforts
and some related ideas of St. Thomas Aquinas, described by Peter Kreeft in
Practical Theology, his book on the Summa Theologica.
We are all sinners, and More wrote that one type of
tribulation is the pain caused by one’s sins.
This tribulation can be a comfort, however, if one prays for the grace
to endure the pain “meekly and patiently” and also confesses that the pain is
not enough to compensate for the fault.
In that case, one can also ask God to receive the pain as a form of
penance for the sin. More emphasized
that no penance or good work is worth anything without faith and without God’s
grace.
Regarding penance, Aquinas wrote that “the remission of the debt of temporal
punishment belongs to cooperating grace in so far as man, by bearing patiently
with the help of divine grace, is released also from the debt of temporal
punishment.” Kreeft explained that
“accepting the humblings and humiliations that come to us in this life” is a
way to “rehearse” for our role in our sanctification, which of course is a gift
from God.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church states that sin
“injures and weakens the sinner himself” and absolution “does not remedy all
the disorders sin has caused.” By
completing his penance, one can “recover his full spiritual health.” The penance helps “configure us to Christ,
who alone expiated our sins once for all.”
When I sin, I injure God, I injure others, and I injure
myself. The pain I experience because of
the sin can be a comfort if I accept it as a penance for the sin. Then the pain, with God’s grace and
forgiveness, helps restore my spiritual health and my relationship with God.
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