Of the Imitation of Christ/Book III/Chapter LI
CHAPTER LI.
THAT A MAN OUGHT TO EMPLOY HIMSELF IN WORKS OF HUMILITY, WHEN STRENGTH IS WANTING FOR HIGHER EMPLOYMENT.
Y son, thou art not able always to continue in the more fervent desire of virtue, nor to persist in the higher pitch of contemplation; but thou must needs sometimes, by reason of original corruption, descend to inferior things, and bear the burden of this corruptible life, though against thy will, and with wearisomeness.
As long as thou carriest a mortal body, thou shalt feel weariness and heaviness of heart.
Thou oughtest therefore in the flesh oftentimes to bewail the burden of the flesh; for that thou canst not employ thyself unceasingly in spiritual studies and divine contemplation.
2. Then it is expedient for thee to flee to humble and outward works, and to refresh thyself with good actions, to await with a firm confidence My coming and heavenly visitation, to bear patiently thy banishment and the dryness of thy mind, till I shall again visit thee, and set thee free from all anxieties.
For I wilt cause thee to forget thy painful toils, and to enjoy thorough inward quietness.
I will spread open before thee the pleasant fields of holy scripture, that with an enlarged heart thou mayest begin to run the way of My commandments.
And thou shalt say, "The sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us."