The Few Number Who
Are Saved
by
Saint Leonard of Port Maurice
was a most holy Franciscan friar who lived at the monastery of Saint Bonaventure
in
The Immaculate Conception of the
Blessed Virgin, the adoration of the Blessed Sacrament and the veneration of
the Sacred Heart of Jesus were his crusades. He was in no small way responsible
for the definition of the Immaculate Conception made a little more than a
hundred years after his death. He also gave us the Divine Praises, which are
said at the end of Benediction. But
One of Saint Leonard of Port
Maurice's most famous sermons was "The Little Number of Those Who Are
Saved." It was the one he relied on for the conversion of great sinners.
This sermon, like his other writings, was submitted to canonical examination
during the process of canonization. In it he reviews the various states of life
of Christians and concludes with the little number of those who are saved, in
relation to the totality of men.
The reader who meditates on this
remarkable text will grasp the soundness of its argumentation, which has earned
it the approbation of the Church. Here is the great missionary's vibrant and
moving sermon.
Introduction
Thanks be
to God, the number of the Redeemer's disciples is not so small that the
wickedness of the Scribes and Pharisees is able to triumph over them. Although
they strove to calumniate innocence and to deceive the crowd with their
treacherous sophistries by discrediting the doctrine and character of Our Lord,
finding spots even in the sun, many still recognized Him as the true Messiah,
and, unafraid of either chastisements or threats, openly joined His cause. Did
all those who followed Christ follow Him even unto glory?
Oh, this is where I revere the
profound mystery and silently adore the abysses of the divine decrees, rather
than rashly deciding on such a great point! The subject I will be treating
today is a very grave one; it has caused even the pillars of the Church to
tremble, filled the greatest Saints with terror and populated the deserts with
anchorites. The point of this instruction is to decide whether the number of
Christians who are saved is greater or less than the number of Christians who
are damned; it will, I hope, produce in you a salutary fear of the judgments of
God.
Brothers, because of the love I
have for you, I wish I were able to reassure you with the prospect of eternal
happiness by saying to each of you: You are certain to go to paradise; the
greater number of Christians is saved, so you also will be saved. But how can I give you this sweet assurance
if you revolt against God's decrees as though you were your own worst enemies?
I observe in God a sincere desire to save you, but I find in you a decided
inclination to be damned. So what will I be doing today if I speak clearly? I
will be displeasing to you. But if I do not speak, I will be displeasing to
God.
Therefore, I will divide this
subject into two points. In the first one, to fill you with dread, I will let
the theologians and Fathers of the Church decide on the matter and declare that
the greater number of Christian adults are damned;
and, in silent adoration of that terrible mystery, I will keep my own
sentiments to myself. In the second point I will attempt to defend the goodness
of God versus the godless, by proving to you that those who are damned are
damned by their own malice, because they wanted to be damned. So then, here are
two very important truths. If the first truth frightens you, do not hold it
against me, as though I wanted to make the road of heaven narrower for you, for
I want to be neutral in this matter; rather, hold it against the theologians
and Fathers of the Church who will engrave this truth in your heart by the
force of reason. If you are disillusioned by the second truth, give thanks to
God over it, for He wants only one thing: that you give your hearts totally to
Him. Finally, if you oblige me to tell you clearly what I think, I will do so
for your consolation.
The Teaching of the Fathers
of the Church
It is not vain curiosity but
salutary precaution to proclaim from the height of the pulpit certain truths
which serve wonderfully to contain the indolence of libertines, who are always
talking about the mercy of God and about how easy it is to convert, who live
plunged in all sorts of sins and are soundly sleeping on the road to hell. To
disillusion them and waken them from their torpor, today let us examine this great
question: Is the number of Christians who are saved greater than the number of
Christians who are damned?
Pious souls, you may leave; this
sermon is not for you. Its sole purpose is to contain the pride of libertines
who cast the holy fear of God out of their heart and join forces with the devil
who, according to the sentiment of Eusebius, damns
souls by reassuring them. To resolve this doubt, let us put the Fathers of the
Church, both Greek and Latin, on one side; on the other, the most learned
theologians and erudite historians; and let us put the Bible in the middle for
all to see. Now listen not to what I will say to you – for I have already told
you that I do not want to speak for myself or decide on the matter – but listen
to what these great minds have to tell you, they who are beacons in the Church
of God to give light to others so that they will not miss the road to heaven.
In this manner, guided by the triple light of faith, authority and reason, we
will be able to resolve this grave matter with certainty.
Note well that there is no
question here of the human race taken as a whole, nor of all Catholics taken
without distinction, but only of
Catholic adults, who have free choice and are thus capable of cooperating
in the great matter of their salvation. First let us consult the theologians
recognized as examining things most carefully and as not exaggerating in their
teaching: let us listen to two learned cardinals, Cajetan
and Bellarmine. They teach that the greater number of Christian adults are damned, and if I had the time
to point out the reasons upon which they base themselves, you would be
convinced of it yourselves. But I will limit myself here to quoting Suarez.
After consulting all the theologians and making a diligent study of the matter,
he wrote, "The most common sentiment which is held is that, among Christians,
there are more damned souls than predestined souls."
Add the authority of the Greek
and Latin Fathers to that of the theologians, and you will find that almost all
of them say the same thing. This is the sentiment of Saint Theodore, Saint
Basil, Saint Ephrem, and Saint John Chrysostom. What
is more, according to Baronius it was a common
opinion among the Greek Fathers that this truth was expressly revealed to Saint Simeon Stylites
and that after this revelation, it was to secure his salvation that he decided
to live standing on top of a pillar for forty years, exposed to the weather, a
model of penance and holiness for everyone. Now let us consult the Latin
Fathers. You will hear Saint Gregory saying clearly, "Many attain to faith, but few to the heavenly kingdom." Saint
Anselm declares, "There are few who are saved."
The Words of Holy Scripture
But why seek out the opinions of
the Fathers and theologians, when Holy Scripture settles the question so
clearly? Look in to the Old and New Testaments, and you will find a multitude
of figures, symbols and words that clearly point out this truth: very few are
saved. In the time of Noah, the entire human race was submerged by the Deluge,
and only eight people were saved in the Ark. Saint Peter says, "This ark was the figure of the Church,"
while Saint Augustine adds, "And these eight people who were saved
signify that very few Christians are saved, because there are very few who sincerely renounce the world, and
those who renounce it only in words do not belong to the mystery represented by
that ark." The Bible also tells us that only two Hebrews out of
two million entered the Promised Land after going out of
I would not finish if I had to
point out all the figures by which Holy Scripture confirms this truth; let us content
ourselves with listening to the living oracle of Incarnate Wisdom. What did Our
Lord answer the curious man in the Gospel who asked Him, "Lord,
is it only a few to be saved?" Did He keep silence? Did He
answer haltingly? Did He conceal His thought for fear of frightening the crowd?
No. Questioned by only one, He addresses all of those present. He says to them:
"You ask Me if there are only few who are
saved?" Here is My answer: "Strive
to enter by the narrow gate; for many, I tell you, will seek to enter and will
not be able." Who is speaking here? It is the Son of God,
Eternal Truth, who on another occasion says even more clearly, "Many are called, but few are chosen."
He does not say that all are called and that out of all men, few are chosen,
but that many are called; which means, as Saint Gregory explains, that out of
all men, many are called to the True
Faith, but out of them few are saved. Brothers, these are the words of Our
Lord Jesus Christ. Are they clear? They are true. Tell me now if it is possible
for you to have faith in your heart and not tremble.
Salvation in the Various
States of Life
But oh, I see that by speaking
in this manner of all in general, I am missing my point. So let us apply this
truth to various states, and you will understand that you must either throw
away reason, experience and the common sense of the faithful, or confess that
the greater number of Catholics is damned. Is there any state in the world more
favorable to innocence in which salvation seems easier and of which people have
a higher idea than that of priests, the lieutenants of God? At first glance,
who would not think that most of them are not only good but even perfect; yet I
am horror-struck when I hear Saint Jerome declaring that although the world is
full of priests, barely one in a hundred is living in a manner in conformity
with state; when I hear a servant of God attesting that he has learned by
revelation that the number of priests
who fall into hell each day is so great that it seemed impossible to him that
there be any left on earth; when I hear Saint Chrysostom
exclaiming with tears in his eyes, "I do not believe that many priests are
saved; I believe the contrary, that the number of those who are damned is
greater."
Look higher still, and see the
prelates of the
Woe to you who command others!
If so many are damned by your fault, what will happen to you? If few out of
those who are first in the
Our chronicles relate an even
more dreadful happening. One of our brothers, well-known for
his doctrine and holiness, was preaching in
O abyss of the judgments of God!
Out of thirty thousand, only five were saved! And out of sixty thousand, only
three went to heaven! You sinners who are listening to me, in what category
will you be numbered?... What do you say?... What do you think?...
I see almost all of you lowering
your heads, filled with astonishment and horror. But let us lay our stupor
aside, and instead of flattering ourselves, let us try to draw some profit from
our fear. Is it not true that there are two roads which lead to heaven: innocence and repentance? Now, if I
show you that very few take either one of these two roads, as rational people
you will conclude that very few are saved. And to mention proofs: in what age,
employment or condition will you find that the number of the wicked is not a
hundred times greater than that of the good, and about which one might say,
"The good are so rare and the
wicked are so great in number"? We could say of our times what Salvianus said of his: it is easier to find a countless
multitude of sinners immersed in all sorts of iniquities than a few innocent
men.
How many servants are totally
honest and faithful in their duties? How many merchants are fair and equitable
in their commerce; how many craftsmen exact and truthful; how many salesmen
disinterested and sincere? How many men of law do not forsake equity? How many
soldiers do not tread upon innocence; how many masters do not unjustly withhold
the salary of those who serve them, or do not seek to dominate their inferiors?
Everywhere,
the good are rare and the wicked great in number. Who does not know that today
there is so much libertinage among mature men, liberty among young girls,
vanity among women, licentiousness in the nobility, corruption in the middle
class, dissolution in the people, impudence among the poor, that one could say
what David said of his times: "All
alike have gone astray... there is not even one who does good, not even one."
Go into street and square, into
palace and house, into city and countryside, into tribunal and court of law,
and even into the
But you will say: Can penance
not profitably repair the loss of innocence? That is true, I admit. But I also
know that penance is so difficult in practice, we have lost the habit so
completely, and it is so badly abused by sinners, that
this alone should suffice to convince you that very few are saved by that path.
Oh, how steep, narrow, thorny, horrible to behold and hard to climb it is!
Everywhere we look, we see traces of blood and things that recall sad memories.
Many weaken at the very sight of it. Many retreat at the very start. Many fall
from weariness in the middle, and many give up wretchedly at the end. And how
few are they who persevere in it till death! Saint Ambrose says it is easier to
find men who have kept their innocence than to find any who have done fitting
penance.
If you consider the sacrament of penance, there are so many
distorted confessions, so many studied excuses, so many deceitful repentances,
so many false promises, so many ineffective resolutions, so
many invalid absolutions! Would you regard as valid the confession of someone who accuses
himself of sins of impurity and still holds to the occasion of them, or someone
who accuses himself of obvious injustices with no intention of making any
reparation whatsoever for them? Or someone who falls again into the same
iniquities right after going to confession? Oh, horrible abuses of such a great
sacrament! One confesses to avoid excommunication, another to make a reputation
as a penitent. One rids himself of his sins to calm his remorse,
another conceals them out of shame. One accuses them imperfectly out of malice, another discloses them out of habit. One does not
have the true end of the sacrament in mind, another is lacking the necessary
sorrow, and still another firm purpose.
Poor confessors, what efforts
you make to bring the greater number of penitents to these resolutions and
acts, without which confession is a sacrilege, absolution a condemnation and
penance an illusion?
Where are they now, those who
believe that the number of the saved among Christians is greater than that of
the damned and who, to authorize their opinion, reason thus: the greater
portion of Catholic adults die in their beds armed with the sacraments of the
Church, therefore most adult Catholics are saved? Oh, what fine reasoning! You
must say exactly the opposite. Most
Catholic adults confess badly at death, therefore most of them are damned.
I say "all the more certain," because a dying person who has not
confessed well when he was in good health will have an even harder time doing
so when he is in bed with a heavy heart, an unsteady head, a muddled mind; when
he is opposed in many ways by still-living objects, by still-fresh occasions,
by adopted habits, and above all by devils who are seeking every means to cast
him into hell.
Now, if you add to all these
false penitents all the other sinners who die unexpectedly in sin, due to the
doctors' ignorance or by their relatives' fault, who die from poisoning or from
being buried in earthquakes, or from a stroke, or from a fall, or on the
battlefield, in a fight, caught in a trap, struck by lightning, burned or
drowned, are you not obliged to conclude that most Christian adults are damned?
That is the reasoning of Saint Chrysostom. This Saint
says that most Christians are walking on the road to hell throughout their
life. Why, then, are you so surprised that the greater number goes to hell? To
come to a door, you must take the road that leads there. What have you to
answer such a powerful reason?
The answer, you will tell me, is
that the mercy of God is great. Yes, for those who fear Him, says the Prophet;
but great is His justice for the one who does not fear Him,
and it condemns all obstinate sinners.
So you will say to me: Well
then, who is
And this is what deceives those
who pretend that the number of the saved among Catholics is greater than that
of the damned... If to that number, you add the adults who have kept the robe
of innocence, or who after having defiled it, have washed it in the tears of
penance, it is certain that the greater number is saved; and that explains the
words of Saint John, "I saw a
great multitude," and these other words of Our Lord, "Many will come from the east and from the
west, and will feast with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven,"
and the other figures usually cited in favor of that opinion. But if you are
talking about Christian adults, experience, reason, authority, propriety and
Scripture all agree in proving that the greater number is damned. Do not
believe that because of this, paradise is empty; on the contrary,
it is a very populous kingdom. And if the damned are "as numerous as the sand in the sea,"
the saved are "as numerous at the
stars of heaven," that is, both the one and the other are
countless, although in very different proportions.
One day Saint John Chrysostom, preaching in the cathedral in Constantinople
and considering these proportions, could not help but shudder in horror and
ask, "Out of this great number of people, how many do you think will be
saved?" And, not waiting for an answer, he added, "Among so many thousands of people, we would
not find a hundred who are saved, and I even doubt for the one hundred."
What a dreadful thing! The great Saint believed that out of so many people,
barely one hundred would be saved; and even then, he was not sure of that
number. What will happen to you who are listening to me? Great God, I cannot
think of it without shuddering! Brothers, the problem of salvation is a very
difficult thing; for according to the maxims of the theologians, when an end
demands great efforts, few only attain it.
That is why
So then, remove the blindfold from
your eyes that is blinding you with self-love, that is keeping you from
believing such an obvious truth by giving you very false ideas concerning the
justice of God, "Just Father, the
world has not known Thee," said Our Lord Jesus Christ. He does not say
"Almighty Father, most good and
merciful Father." He says "just Father," so we may understand
that out of all the attributes of God, none is less known than His justice,
because men refuse to believe what they are afraid to undergo. Therefore,
remove the blindfold that is covering your eyes and say tearfully: Alas! The
greater number of Catholics, the greater number of those who live here, perhaps
even those who are in this assembly, will be damned! What subject could be more
deserving of your tears?
King Xerxes, standing on a hill
looking at his army of one hundred thousand soldiers in battle array, and
considering that out of all of them there would be not one man alive in a
hundred years, was unable to hold back his tears. Have we not more reason to weep
upon thinking that out of so many Catholics, the greater number will be damned?
Should this thought not make our eyes pour forth rivers of tears, or at least
produce in our heart the sentiment of compassion felt by an Augustinian
Brother, Ven. Marcellus of St. Dominic? One day as he
was meditating on the eternal pains, the Lord showed him how many souls were
going to hell at that moment and had him see a very broad road on which
twenty-two thousand reprobates were running toward the abyss, colliding into
one another. The servant of God was stupefied at the sight and exclaimed,
"Oh, what a number! What a
number! And still more are coming. O Jesus! O Jesus! What madness!"
Let me repeat with Jeremiah, "Who
will give water to my head, and a fountain of tears to my eyes? And I will weep
day and night for the slain of the daughter of my people."
Poor souls! How can you run so
hastily toward hell? For mercy's sake, stop and listen to me for a moment!
Either you understand what it means to be saved and to be damned for all
eternity, or you do not. If you understand and in spite of that, you do not
decide to change your life today, make a good confession and trample upon the
world, in a word, make your every effort to be counted among the littler number
of those who are saved, I say that you do not have the
faith. You are more excusable if you do not understand it, for then one must
say that you are out of your mind. To be saved for all eternity, to be damned for all
eternity, and to not make your every effort to avoid the one and make sure of
the other, is something inconceivable.
The Goodness of God
Perhaps you do not yet believe
the terrible truths I have just taught you. But it is the most
highly-considered theologians, the most illustrious Fathers who have spoken to
you through me. So then, how can you resist reasons supported by so many
examples and words of Scripture? If you still hesitate in spite of that, and if
your mind is inclined to the opposite opinion, does that very consideration not
suffice to make you tremble? Oh, it shows that you do not care very much for
your salvation! In this important matter, a sensible man is struck more
strongly by the slightest doubt of the risk he runs than by the evidence of
total ruin in other affairs in which the soul is not involved. One of our
brothers, Blessed Giles, was in the habit of saying that if only one man were
going to be damned, he would do all he could to make sure he was not that man.
So what must we do, we who know that the greater number is going to be damned,
and not only out of all Catholics? What must we do? Take the resolution to
belong to the little number of those who are saved. You say: If Christ wanted
to damn me, then why did He create me? Silence, rash tongue! God did not create
anyone to damn him; but whoever is damned, is damned because he wants to be.
Therefore, I will now strive to defend the goodness of my God and acquit it of
all blame: that will be the subject of the second point.
Before going on, let us gather
on one side all the books and all the
heresies of Luther and Calvin, and on the other side the books and heresies
of the Pelagians and Semi-Pelagians,
and let us burn them. Some destroy grace, others freedom,
and all are filled with errors; so let us cast them into the fire. All the damned
bear upon their brow the oracle of the Prophet Osee,
"Thy damnation comes from thee,"
so that they may understand that whoever is damned, is damned by his own malice
and because he wants to be damned.
First let us take these two
undeniable truths as a basis: "God wants all men to be saved," "All are in need of the grace of God." Now, if I show you that
God wants to save all men, and that for this purpose He gives all of them His
grace and all the other necessary means of obtaining that sublime end, you will
be obliged to agree that whoever is damned must impute it to his own malice,
and that if the greater number of Christians are damned, it is because they
want to be. "Thy damnation comes
from thee; thy help is only in Me."
God Desires All Men to be
Saved
In a hundred places in Holy
Scripture, God tells us that it is truly His desire to save all men. "Is it My will that a sinner should die, and
not that he should be converted from his ways and live?...
I live, saith the Lord God. I desire not the death of
the sinner. Be converted and live." When someone wants something
very much, it is said that he is dying with desire; it is a hyperbole. But God
has wanted and still wants our salvation so much that He died of desire, and He
suffered death to give us life. This will to save all men is therefore not an
affected, superficial and apparent will in God; it is a real, effective, and
beneficial will; for He provides us with all the means most proper for us to be
saved. He does not give them to us so they will not obtain it; He gives them to
us with a sincere will, with the intention that they may obtain their effect.
And if they do not obtain it, He shows Himself afflicted and offended over it.
He commands even the damned to use them in order to be saved; He exhorts them
to it; He obliges them to it; and if they do not do it, they sin. Therefore,
they may do it and thus be saved.
Far more, because God sees that
we could not even make use of His grace without His help, He gives us other
aids; and if they sometimes remain ineffective, it is our fault; for with these
same aids, one may abuse them and be damned with them, and another may do right
and be saved; he might even be saved with less powerful aids. Yes, it can happen that we abuse a greater
grace and are damned, whereas another cooperates with a lesser grace and is
saved.
But if the sinner still wants to
cast himself into hell in spite of all that, what does God do? Does He abandon
him? No. He takes him by the hand; and while he has one foot in hell and the
other outside, He still preaches to him, He implored him not to abuse His
graces. Now I ask you, if that man is damned, is it not true that he is damned
against the Will of God and because he wants to be damned? Come and ask me now:
If God wanted to damn me, then why did He create me?
Ungrateful sinner, learn today
that if you are damned, it is not God who is to blame, but you and your
self-will. To persuade yourself of this, go down even to the depths of the
abyss, and there I will bring you one of those wretched damned souls burning in
hell, so that he may explain this truth to you. Here is one now: "Tell me, who are you?" "I am a poor idolater, born in an unknown
land; I never heard of heaven or hell, nor of what I
am suffering now." "Poor wretch! Go away, you are not the one I am looking for." Another one is coming; there he is.
"Who are you?" "I am a schismatic from the ends of Tartary; I always lived in an uncivilized state, barely
knowing that there is a God." "You are not the one I want; return to hell." Here is another. "And who are you?" "I am a poor heretic from the North. I was
born under the Pole and never saw either the light of the sun or the light of
faith." "It is not
you that I am looking for either, return to Hell." Brothers, my
heart is broken upon seeing these wretches who never even knew the True Faith
among the damned. Even so, know that the sentence of condemnation was
pronounced against them and they were told, "Thy damnation comes from thee." They were damned because
they wanted to be. They received so many aids from God to be saved! We do not
know what they were, but they know them well, and now they cry out, "O Lord, Thou art just... and Thy judgments
are equitable."
Brothers, you must know that the
most ancient belief is the Law of God,
and that we all bear it written in our
hearts; that it can be learned
without any teacher, and that it
suffices to have the light of reason in order to know all the precepts of that
Law. That is why even the barbarians hid when they committed sin,
because they knew they were doing wrong; and they are damned for not having
observed the natural law written in their heart: for had they observed it, God
would have made a miracle rather than let them be damned; He would have sent
them someone to teach them and would have given them other aids, of which they
made themselves unworthy by not living in conformity with the inspirations of
their own conscience, which never failed to warn them of the good they should
do and the evil they should avoid. So it is their conscience that accused them
at the Tribunal of God, and it tells them constantly in hell, "Thy damnation comes from thee."
They do not know what to answer and are obliged to confess that they are
deserving of their fate. Now if these infidels have no excuse, will there be
any for a Catholic who had so many sacraments, so many sermons, so many aids at his disposal? How will he dare to say,
"If God was going to damn me,
then why did He create me?" How will he dare to speak in this
manner, when God gives him so many aids to be saved? So let us finish
confounding him.
You who are suffering in the abyss, answer me! Are
there any Catholics among you? "There
certainly are!" How many? Let one of them come
here! "That is impossible, they
are too far down, and to have them come up would turn all of hell upside down;
it would be easier to stop one of them as he is falling in." So
then, I am speaking to you who live in the habit of mortal sin, in hatred, in
the mire of the vice of impurity, and who are getting closer to hell each day.
Stop, and turn around; it is Jesus who calls you and who, with His wounds, as
with so many eloquent voices, cries to you, "My son, if you are damned,
you have only yourself to blame: 'Thy
damnation comes from thee.' Lift up your eyes and see all the graces with which I have
enriched you to insure your eternal salvation. I could have had you born in a
forest in
"I could have cast you into
hell after the first mortal sin you committed, without waiting for the second:
I did it to so many others, but I was patient with you, I waited for you for
many long years. I am still waiting for you today in penance. If you are damned
in spite of all that, whose fault is it? Your own, My
son, your own: "Thy damnation
comes from thee." You know how many have died before your very eyes
and were damned: that was a warning for you. You know how many others I set
back on the right path to give you the good example. Do you remember what that
excellent confessor told you? I am the one who had him say it. Did he not
enjoin you to change your life, to make a good confession? I am the One who
inspired him. Remember that sermon that touched your heart? I am the One who
led you there. And what has happened between you and Me in the secret of your heart, ...that you can never forget.
"Those interior
inspirations, that clear knowledge, that constant remorse of conscience, would
you dare to deny them? All of these were so many aids of My
grace, because I wanted to save you. I refused to give them to
many others, and I gave them to you because I loved you tenderly. My son, My son, if I spoke to them as tenderly as I am speaking to
you today, how many others souls return to the right path! And you... you turn
your back on Me. Listen to what I am going to tell you, for these are My last
words: You have cost Me My blood; if you want to be damned in spite of the
blood I shed for you, do not blame Me, you have only yourself to accuse; and
throughout all eternity, do not forget that if you are damned in spite of Me,
you are damned because you want to be damned: 'Thy damnation comes from thee.' "
O my good Jesus, the very stones
would split on hearing such sweet words, such tender expressions. Is there
anyone here who wants to be damned, with so many graces and aids? If there is
one, let him listen to me, and then let him resist if he can.
Baronius relates that after Julian the Apostate's infamous apostasy, he conceived such great hatred against Holy
Baptism that day and night, he sought a way in which he might erase his own. To
that purpose he had a bath of goat's blood prepared and placed himself in it, wanting this impure blood of a victim
consecrated to Venus to erase the sacred character of Baptism from his soul.
Such behavior seems abominable to you, but if Julian's plan had been able to
succeed, it is certain that he would be suffering much less in hell.
Sinners, the advice I want to
give you will no doubt seem strange to you; but if you understand it well, it
is, on the contrary, inspired by tender compassion toward you. I implore you on
my knees, by the blood of Christ and by the Heart of Mary, change your life,
come back to the road that leads to heaven, and do all you can to belong to the
little number of those who are saved. If, instead of this, you want to continue
walking on the road that leads to hell, at least find a way to erase your
baptism. Woe to you if you take the Holy
Name of Jesus Christ and the sacred character of the Christian engraved upon
your soul into hell! Your chastisement will be all the greater. So do what
I advise you to do: if you do not want to convert, go this very day and ask
your pastor to erase your name from the baptismal register, so that there may
not remain any remembrance of your ever having been a Christian; implore your
Guardian Angel to erase from his book of graces the inspirations and aids he
has given you on orders from God, for woe to you if he recalls them! Tell Our
Lord to take back His faith, His baptism, His
sacraments.
You are horror-struck at such a
thought? Well then, cast yourself at the feet of Jesus Christ and say to Him,
with tearful eyes and contrite heart: "Lord,
I confess that up till now I have not lived as a Christian. I am not worthy to
be numbered among Your elect. I recognize that I
deserve to be damned; but Your mercy is great and, full of confidence in Your
grace, I say to You that I want to save my soul, even if I have to sacrifice my
fortune, my honor, my very life, as long as I am saved. If I have been
unfaithful up to now, I repent, I deplore, I detest my infidelity, I ask You humbly to forgive me for it. Forgive me, good Jesus, and
strengthen me also, that I may be saved. I ask You not
for wealth, honor or prosperity; I ask you for one thing only, to save my
soul."
And You, O Jesus! What do You say? O Good Shepherd, see the stray sheep who returns to
You; embrace this repentant sinner, bless his sighs and tears, or rather bless
these people who are so well disposed and who want nothing but their salvation.
Brothers, at the feet of Our Lord, let us protest that we want to save our
soul, cost what it may. Let us all say to Him with tearful eyes, "Good
Jesus, I want to save my soul," O blessed tears, O blessed sighs!
Conclusion
Brothers, I want to send all of
you away comforted today. So if you ask me my sentiment on the number of those
who are saved, here it is: Whether there are many or few that are saved, I say that whoever wants to be saved, will
be saved; and that no one can be damned if he does not want to be. And if
it is true that few are saved, it is because there are few who live well. As
for the rest, compare these two opinions: the first one states that the greater
number of Catholics are condemned; the second one, on
the contrary, pretends that the greater number of Catholics are saved. Imagine
an Angel sent by God to confirm the first opinion, coming to tell you that not
only are most Catholics damned, but that of all this assembly present here, one
alone will be saved. If you obey the
Commandments of God, if you detest the corruption of this world, if you embrace
the Cross of Jesus Christ in a spirit of penance, you will be that one alone
who is saved.
Now imagine the same Angel
returning to you and confirming the second opinion. He tells you that not only
are the greater portion of Catholics saved, but that out of all this gathering,
one alone will be damned and all the others saved. If after that, you continue
your usuries, your vengeances, your criminal deeds, your impurities, then you will be that one alone who is damned.
What is the use of knowing
whether few or many are saved? Saint Peter says to us, "Strive
by good works to make your election sure." When Saint Thomas
Aquinas's sister asked him what she must do to go to heaven, he said, "You will be saved if you want to be."
I say the same thing to you, and here is proof of my declaration. No one is
damned unless he commits mortal sin: that is of faith. And no one commits
mortal sin unless he wants to: that is an undeniable theological proposition.
Therefore, no one goes to hell unless he wants to; the consequence is obvious.
Does that not suffice to comfort you? Weep over past sins, make a good
confession, sin no more in the future, and you will all be saved. Why torment
yourself so? For it is certain that you have to commit mortal sin to go to
hell, and that to commit mortal sin you must want to, and that consequently no
one goes to hell unless he wants to. That is not just an opinion, it is an
undeniable and very comforting truth; may God give you to understand it, and
may He bless you. Amen.
In the first Rules on the
discernment of spirits, Saint Ignatius shows that it is typical of the evil
spirit to tranquilize sinners. Therefore, we must constantly preach and give
rise to confidence and the duty of hope in the Lord's infinite pardon and
mercy, for conversion is easy and His grace is all-powerful. But we must also
recall that "God is not mocked," and that someone who is living
habitually in the state of mortal sin is on the road to eternal damnation.
There are last-minute miracles, but unless we contend that
miracles are the general run of things, we are obliged to agree that for the
majority of people living in the state of mortal sin, final impenitence is the
most probable eventuality.
Saint Leonard of Port Maurice's
reasons have persuaded us. They are worth listening to. With eloquence and
clarity, they develop a consideration of Father Lombardi in his public debate
with Italian Communist leader Velio Spano in Cagliara on December 4,
1948. "I am horror-struck at the thought that if you continue in this
manner, you will be condemned to hell," said Father Lombardi to the
Marxist Spano. Spano
replied, "I do not believe in hell." And Father Lombardi retorted,
"Precisely, and if you continue, you will be condemned; for to avoid being
condemned, one must believe in hell."
We could generalize Father
Lombardi's answer. Perhaps it is precisely such a lack of supernatural faith
that is preventing people from arriving at a deep appreciation of the pastoral
transcendence of preaching in the manner of Saint Leonard of Port Maurice in
its application to our contemporary life. At any rate, it is not because morals
are any better now than in the famous missionary's day. No occasion could be
finer for us to apply this reproach of Cardinal Pie: "I see prudence
everywhere; soon we will not see courage anywhere; rest assured, if we continue in this manner, we will die from an attack
of wisdom." Not divine wisdom, surely; for only carnal and worldly
prudence give rise to vain knowledge, which mocks at the sermon of
The doctrine of Saint Leonard of
Port Maurice has saved and will save countless souls till the end of time. Here
is what the Church says in the prayer of the Divine Office, Sixth Lesson,
speaking of
This sermon by Saint Leonard of
Port Maurice was preached during the reign of Pope Benedict XIV, who so loved
the great missionary.