It is a certain truth that if God in his providence
exterminated every evil deed at once, killed every evil-doer, the final sum of
goodness would be less. We have our
Lord’s own words for it; there would be diminution. Goodness itself, sanctity itself, is fostered
by the proximity of evil. As Saint Augustine puts it so
well: it pleased God to make good come
out of evil rather than to abolish all evil.
God could have abolished all evil in his omnipotence; he did not;
he did the better thing; he made
good come out of evil, he makes sanctity come out of it; makes martyrs through the cruelty of man, and
give his Church the most glorious traditions of fortitude and courage through
the very presence of enemies in her midst and around her walls. When the great day of harvest comes, sanctity
will be found to be so great and so high by very reason of the wickedness that
encompassed it.
Our lives are constantly bound up with those of other people
in some way or another. Perhaps those people
fail in many things, but they are in some way a portion of our own lives; they partake of the graces we possess. “The faithless husband,” says St. Paul , “will be
sanctified through the believing wife.”
The children of believers are sanctified through the very fact of their
paternity. One person in a family may be
the salvation of the whole family, though it may not be given to him to see the
final issues and the ultimate results.
But there is the fact – an absolute certainty, goodness inevitably produces
goodness; it is unconquerable, it cannot be stifled, it has greater
ramifications than evil can ever have….One saint outweighs a hundred, a
thousand, perhaps a million sinners.
The sanctity of one saint prevails over the sinfulness of a thousand
sinners. Sin is negative; sanctity,
positive. Sanctity is more powerful than
sin; sanctity is, in fact, the only real power.
1875 - 1938
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