Page:SermonOnTheMount1900.djvu/93

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their home: — ‘and the last state of that man becomes worse than the first.’ Now, if after each relapse our state becomes worse, if the devil’s yoke grows heavier, if we plunge deeper and deeper into evil, and our strength incessantly diminishes, where shall we be at last, and how come forth from the abyss? God can draw us out: — that we know; but if there is nothing to be despaired of, there is everything to be feared.

It is impossible to man, in the ordinary course of things, to save himself from such a state. God alone can do it by an effort — so to speak — of His omnipotence. ' It is impossible,’ St Paul says, ‘for those who were once illuminated, having tasted also the heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost.... and are fallen away, to be renewed again to penance.’ [1] If St Paul speaks thus of those who have profaned the sanctity of Baptism, what should not those fear who have added to this the profanation of the Sacrament of Penance, so often repeated and so often despised? ‘ The

earth that drinketh in the rain which cometh often upon it.... but which bringeth forth thorns and briars, is reprobate, and very near unto a curse, whose end is to be burnt.’ [2]

  1. Heb. vi. 4, seq.
  2. Ibid. vi. 7. 8.