Category: SUFFERING & TRIBULATION

  • “If there had been a door within reach that led straight to death, he wouldn’t have hesitated to push it open, without a second thought.”

    —Haruki Murakami, Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage

  • Both spiritual knowledge and health are good by nature, yet their contraries have been of more benefit to many people.

    —St. Maximos the Confessor, Four-Hundred Texts on Love

  • Sometimes men are tested by pleasure, sometimes by distress or by physical suffering. By means of His prescriptions the Physician of souls administers the remedy according to the cause of the passions lying hidden in the soul.

    —St. Maximos the Confessor, Four-Hundred Texts on Love

  • To those who suppose that they can only progress in the spiritual life when all else is “well,” St. John Cassian replies, “You should not think that you can find virtue when you are not irritated — for it is not in your power to prevent troubles from happening. Rather, you should look for patience as the result of your own humility and longsuffering, for patience does depend upon your own will” (Institutes). Towards the end of his life, St. Seraphim of Sarov suffered from open ulcers on his legs. “Yet,” as his Life tells us, “in appearance he was always bright and cheerful, for in spirit he felt that heavenly peace and joy which are the riches of the glorious inheritance of the saints.”

    —Bishop Ignatius Brianchaninov, ILLNESS AND THE WORK OF PERFECTION

  • Remembered suffering never feels as bad as present suffering.

    —Sally Rooney

  • St. Paul did not find his joy in ideal circumstances, but he found his joy in winning others to Christ.

    Fr. Paul Girguis


  • “How close God is to us when we come to recognize and to accept our abjection and to cast our care entirely upon HIm! Against all human expectation He sustains us when we need to be sustained, helping us to do what seemed impossible. We learn to know Him, now, not in the ‘presence’ that is found in abstract consideration – a presence in which we dress Him in our own finery – but in the emptiness of a hope that may come close to despair. For perfect hope is achieved on the brink of despair when, instead of falling over the edge, we find ourselves walking on the air. Hope is always just about to turn into despair, but never does so, for at the moment of supreme crisis God’s power is suddenly made perfect in our infirmity. So we learn to expect His mercy almost calmly when all is most dangerous, to seek Him quietly in the face of peril, certain that He cannot fail us though we may be upbraided by the just and rejected by those who claim to hold the evidence of His love.”

    —Thomas Merton

  • It is a great mistake to suppose that those who have inherited the material for their life from suffering generations, and who have poor health and a timid approach or some vice or weakness, have not been designed and planned by God as much as others who seem luckier in the world’s eyes.

    Christ has said: “I am the Way,” and He has been there in every generation, blowing with the Divine Breath of the Spirit on that little flame of life. He is the Way, but He is not limited as we are: He can manifest Himself in countless ways we do not dream of. He can will to live in lives of suffering and darkness we cannot conceive of; He can choose what seems to us the most unlikely material in the world to use for a positive miracle of His love.”

    —Caryll Houselander, The Reed of God

  • Only when a person suffers and wills to learn from what he suffers does he come to know something about himself and about his relationship to God. This is the sign that he is being educated for eternity. Through suffering a person can come to know a great deal about the world – how deceitful and treacherous it is – but all this knowledge is not the schooling of suffering. 

    This is the key to finding rest in your suffering. There is only one way in which rest is to be found: to let God rule in everything. Whatever else you might come to learn only pertains to how God has willed to rule. But as soon as unrest begins, the cause for it is due to your unwillingness to obey, your unwillingness to surrender yourself to God.

    When there is suffering, but also obedience in suffering, then you are being educated for eternity. Then there will be no impatient hankering in your soul, no restlessness, neither of sin nor of sorrow. If you will but let it, suffering is the guardian angel who keeps you from slipping out into the fragmentariness of the world; the fragmentariness that seeks to rip apart the soul. And for this reason, suffering keeps you in school – – this dangerous schooling – – so that you may be properly educated for eternity.

    —Søren Kierkegaard

  • “Only the man who has had to face despair is really convinced that he needs mercy. Those who do not want mercy never seek it. It is better to find God on the threshold of despair than to risk our lives in a complacency that has never felt the need of forgiveness. A life that is without problems may literally be more hopeless than one that always verges on despair.”

    —Thomas Merton