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Material Foresight & Wastefulness

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2024

Extract

“How can prudent foresight be wastefulness? It doesn’t do to talk absurdities!”

It all becomes clear and easy if we once understand that God knows what he is saying ! With what simplification should we not be enriched if we would be persuaded that not one of his words is useless, not one of his commandments thrown at hazard and without a profound reason, that their end, since he loves us, is none other than our greatest good, our surest happiness. And then, that he is always right.

It is not sufficient, in order to put h'm in the wrong, that we should understand the necessity of what he ordains. It may be we lack some of the elements that would enable us to judge. God sees continually, and in the light of eternity, the totality of creation. As for ourselves, have we taken into consideration that our hand held before our eyes suffices to hide from them the narrow section that they embrace of our limited, terrestrial and changing horizon? How then should it not be that the greater part of God’s motives escape us? . . . Before judging God, let us first follow his teaching a little while to discover where it leads.

Let us see what trouble God takes to prove to us, by daily, unfailing experience, that foresight such as we understand it, is a bad speculation, whatever we may think of it.

The Hebrews would not listen to him, and believed themselves well advised to make a provision of manna for the following day, but it began to be full of worms, and it putrified.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1946 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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Footnotes

1

Translated from the French of Madame Isabelle Riviére. Extract from the 3rd chapter of the 1st part of Sur le Devoir d'ImprSvoyance. With the kind permission of the Author and Publisher (Editions du Cerf, 29, Boulevard de la Tour—Manbourg, Paris)