Good Reading
Will you please read carefully this little article on "GOOD READING".
First of all it will show you how vitally important it is for
every Catholic without distinction to read a good book for at least ten or
fifteen minutes every day.
It is extraordinary how many Catholics are ignorant of this
grave obligation.
A person who reads a good book daily is a thousand times more
happy than those who do not.
Secondly, this article will show you what immense good every
Catholic, man or woman, young or old, can do by propagating these books. They
will save thousands of souls.
St. James the Apostle says that he who saves even one soul saves
his own and covers a multitude of sins. What a reward! To save one soul gives
God such pleasure that He will pardon all our sins and save our own soul.
The books we suggest are working wonders wherever they are
known. It is very easy to show them to friends or send them by mail to any
Catholic, asking them to read them and recommend them to others.
Communists and sectarians of all kinds are actively spreading
about perfidious doctrines and doing unspeakable evil whereas Catholics do
little, in fact some of them nothing at all.
We beg you in the Name of Jesus Christ to do your utmost to
propagate good books.
An easy and most effective way of becoming both holy and happy
is good Reading.
The reason for so little sanctity in many souls is not so much
weakness or malice but ignorance. Good Reading dispels this ignorance and helps
us to feel all the charm and consolation of God's blessed love.
Every Catholic should without fail make spiritual reading daily
for ten or fifteen minutes. The neglect of this duty is disastrous.
Thousands of souls are going to Hell every day simply because
they do not read good books.
To derive benefit from our reading we must observe the following
rules which will not only secure the best results but will make our reading
attractive and a real pleasure.
Read Books That Appeal to You
It is of elementary prudence to choose the proper books, for not
every good and excellent book suits all readers.
It must be our aim to find a book or books that make an appeal
to us personally, that will grip our attention and act as a driving force, a
stimulant to our energies.
Say A Little Prayer Before Reading
Next, it is well to say a short prayer, one Hail Mary, before
commencing our reading, asking Our Blessed Lady to help us to understand what
we are reading and put it into practice. St. Thomas of Aquin told his fellow
Dominican, Father Reginald, that he got his great treasures of knowledge more
by prayer than by study.
Read Your Book Not Once But Many Times
It is a fatal mistake to read a book quickly or to read it only
once. That produces very little good. We must not read a spiritual book as we
read a novel. However well-written the book may be the truths it presents are
so great that our poor weak minds only succeed in grasping them little by
little.
It may treat of, for example, the love of God. Nothing seems
easier to understand than that yet daily experience shows how very vaguely and
insufficiently this wonderful doctrine is grasped and as a consequence how very
little God is loved.
One book read slowly does us more good than a hundred books read
hurriedly.
In fact, one conversation, one little story has often changed
the whole tenor of a man's life. The following incidents, related by a dear old
priest, show that even what appears at first sight trivial may exercise a
lasting impression on one's whole life.
"When a student in college", he told me, "my Confessor kindly
gave me some advice one day in recreation. It seemed simplicity itself, yet
that advice has given me the most profound consolation all the long years of my
life and has moreover enabled me to give similar consolation to the souls of
many who have consulted me.
"A second incident", he said, "was my hearing a short story
about the Mass, after my ordination. This left a vivid and indelible impression
on my mind. I have never celebrated the Holy Sacrifice since without thinking
of it. As a result I enjoy deep devotion in saying every Mass."
A third fact, which this good priest mentioned, is no less
surprising.
A lady friend of mine once said to him: "'I confess that I feel
no special sympathy for your young Curate. One thing, however, that he does
impresses me very much. When he passes in front of the Altar of the Blessed
Sacrament he genuflects so reverently and looks with such devotion at the
Tabernacle that it would seem as if he saw God.' This remark was made to me
thirty years ago and never once since then have I passed in front of the
Blessed Sacrament without imitating the example of my Curate. This has given me
a very great increase of faith in the Real Presence."
If then a short conversation, a little story, a few words of
advice can make such a deep impression on one's mind, a book is likely to make
much more, for it may contain scores of such facts.
The Power of A Good Book
St. Augustine was one of the greatest geniuses that ever lived.
Unfortunately he was plunged for many years in error and vice. One of the chief
means which made him a great saint was the reading of a good book viz. The Life
of St. Antony of the Desert.
St. Ignatius was a rough soldier, trained in the camp and not
given much to piety, yet by reading one book he became the saint that he is. He
himself has written a book The Spiritual Exercises, which has converted and
sanctified thousands of its readers.
St. John Columbini was a very lax and indifferent Christian.
Dinner was delayed one day and he became very irritated. His wife offered him a
book to amuse him until such time as dinner was served. Glancing at the title
and seeing that it was a pious book he flung it on the floor in a fury.
Regretting this insult to his wife he picked it up, sat down and began to read
it.
So great was the impression it made on him that he changed his
whole life and became a Saint.
La Harpe taught the most impious doctrines which he published in
books very cleverly written, causing immense harm to his readers.
He was thrown into prison where the solitude proved almost
intolerable. He found a pious book, which though far from his liking, he read
for mere amusement.
Gradually he became engrossed in it and read chapter after
chapter. He was completely converted.
On leaving the prison he dedicated the rest of his life to
writing charming books, in a noble effort to undo all the terrible mischief he
had formerly done.
One of the gravest problems that defied the ablest American
statesmen for many years was the abolition of slavery. Government after
government fell in their efforts to help the unfortunate slaves.
Finally a lady writer published a book, the story of a poor
slave, which aroused the indignation of all who read it. This simple book
enabled the government to abolish slavery forever in the United States and to
set free the millions of slaves who were held in cruel bondage.
A good book that appeals to us is the best and most powerful of
teachers. It enlightens us, it stimulates us, it consoles us.
We ourselves see every day the wonderful results obtained by the
reading of even short, pithy pamphlets.
A celebrated London barrister, himself a convert, distributes
small pamphlets, leaving them in trams, trains, or on benches in the parks or
streets. By this means he has done considerable good.
We shall mention one case. Returning home after a busy day, he
put one of these leaflets on a railing in front of a house. A Protestant
policeman seeing it, took it, put it in his pocket and went home.
As a result of reading it, he and all his family became fervent
Catholics.
Frank Estis, a young American officer wounded in the war, had to
stay in hospital for many months. He found the long hours in bed so tiresome
that he asked his friends to bring him something to read. They brought Catholic
magazines which were eagerly read not only by Frank but by all the men in the
hospital ward, who asked him to pass them on when he was done with them. At the
end of eight months he was able to count many conversions of Protestants and
lapsed Catholics!
On leaving the hospital he and some others began to visit the
hospitals, prisons of the city and the houses of the poor, distributing
Catholic booklets, papers and magazines. These booklets and papers converted
more than 336 Protestants and 111 bad Catholics.
It is sheer madness for Catholics not to give ten or fifteen
minutes every day to reading some good book.
No one should dare to dispense himself from this imperative
duty. St. Dominic, great saint as he was, though constantly preaching, and
spending whole nights in prayer, yet read assiduously the lives of the Saints.
St. Thomas Aquinas, a prodigy of learning and sanctity, did
likewise and found his delight in such reading.
And so, too, did all the Saints.
Good reading is a pleasant and easy way of becoming holy.
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