
CHAPTER XVIII
OF THE REMEMBRANCE OF DEATH
If a man had ever before the eyes of his mind the remembrance of death and of the
final eternal judgment, and of the pains and torments of the lost souls, certain it is
that he would never have a will to sin or to offend God. And if it were possible for a man
to have lived from the beginning of the world until now, and in all that time to have
endured every kind of adversity, tribulation, grief, sorrow and affliction, and so to die,
and then his soul go to receive the eternal bliss of heaven, what harm would he have
received from all the evil which he had endured during all that time past?
Again, if for the same space of time a man had enjoyed every king of earthly
pleasure and consolation, and then, when he came to die, his soul were to fall into the
eternal torments of hell, what would all the good things profit him which he had enjoyed
in the time past?
A begger man said once to Brother Giles: "I tell thee, I would right gladly
live a long time in this world, and have great riches and abundance of all things, and be
held in great honour." To whom Brother Giles made answer: "My brother, wert thou
to be lord of the whole world, and wert thou to live therein a thousand years in every
kind of temporal enjoyment, pleasure, delight and consolation, tell me, what guerdon or
what reward couldst thou look for from this miserable flesh of thine, which thou wouldst
so diligently serve and cherish? But I say to thee, that he who lives according to the
will of God, and carefully keeps himself from offending God, shall receive from God, the
Supreme Good, and infinite eternal reward, great and abundant riches and great honour, and
long eternal life in that perpetual celestial glory; unto which may our good God, Lord,
and King, Jesus Christ, bring us all, to the honour of the same Lord Jesus Christ, and of
his poor little one Francis."
THE END OF THE LITTLE FLOWERS OF ST. FRANCIS
|