Tuesday, August 28, 2012

PODCAST: My August 15 talk on My Peace now available for download

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Speaking to the St. Thomas More Society of Orange County, August 15, 2012. Photo by James Doan (see more photos from the event on Flickr).

Yesterday I wrote in this space that, thanks to the good folks at St. Joseph Radio, I was able to offer a free download of the talk I gave to the St. Thomas More Society of Orange County on August 15 about my book My Peace I Give You: Healing Sexual Wounds with the Help of the Saints. Today I am delighted to report that, through the generous help of reader Dan, the recording has been edited so that it now qualifies as a podcast. That is to say, most of the introduction has been trimmed, along with the Q&A, plus it's now in MP3 format. So it's easy to download the recording and enjoy it during your commute, at home, or anywhere. Click here to download the podcast.

Next month I will be speaking about My Peace I Give You in New York City (at the First Things offices) and in South Carolina—click here for details and my full tour itinerary. If you would like to bring me to your parish or college, anywhere in the world, to give a talk like the one I gave August 15, drop me a line (click here to send an e-mail).

Please join me in contining prayer that the Jesus, the Divine Physician, may bring healing to all the readers of My Peace I Give You, to everyone who has heard my talks, and to all victims of trauma and abuse.

Monday, August 27, 2012

The cardinal and the Cosmo girl

The National Catholic Register website today features an op-ed in which I reflect on the life and legacy of longtime Cosmopolitan editor Helen Gurley Brown.

Don't be put off by the essay's polemic headline, which was added by the editors. Although I do talk about Brown's promotion of the "culture of use," I'm more interested in how she came to dance with Dolan.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Theology of the (funny) face

At the M Street Bridge in Georgetown, August 18, 2012

Last Saturday afternoon at a New York television studio, watching the playback of the interview I had just taped for Colleen Carroll Campbell's "Faith and Culture," I decided to stop fighting and admit to myself that I am funny-looking.

By "funny-looking," I don't mean ugly, just ... funny. The laziness of my left eye is increasingly pronounced, and my efforts to see with my good eye make me cock my head in a way that makes me look, well, cockeyed. Add to that the fact that my smile is stronger on my left side than my right, and my expression becomes occasionally Picasso-esque.

Admitting this brought a strange sense of relief. Back when I was promoting The Thrill of the Chaste, I tried to look fetching in a modest sort of way. (Around that time, a friend asked me for a title for a Christian-themed beauty blog she wanted to start. I suggested "Glam of God.")

But one can't stay winsome in aeternum. So, watching myself on the playback, I was thankful that promoting My Peace I Give You requires of me no special glamour—just a wounded witness. It was Archbishop Sheen whose writings taught me, as a new convert struggling with memories of childhood pain, that there is nothing wrong with being wounded, for it is through our wounds that we draw closer to the wounded and resurrected Christ.

There is also the comforting thought that being funny-looking in itself puts me in the company of saints. One of the holy people featured in My Peace I Give YouBlessed Margaret of Castello, was physically awkward in the extreme—born blind, dwarfish, and extremely hunchbacked. Her head was large in proportion to her body, and one of her legs was much shorter than the other, which would come to cause her great difficulty in walking.

Margaret's wealthy parents, who had hoped for a "perfect" child, were ashamed of her. Throughout her childhood, they did their utmost to hide her existence, locking her away in various places so that she would be out of sight of their friends. When she was nineteen, they decided to stop caring for her altogether—dumping her to fend for herself in a strange city.

After begging for a time, Margaret was admitted into a convent. She was prayerful, and was under the impression that the nuns, whose Rule entailed silence and personal sacrifice, would enable her to reach the holiness she sought. Appearances, however, were deceiving; the sisters were in fact worldly. Before long, however, they too dumped her—annoyed that she refused to follow them in ignoring the Rule.

Yet, this disabled and deformed young woman, cruelly rejected by both her birth family and her religious family, became so loved by the local townspeople—who saw her prayer life (she became a Third Order Dominican) and knew how she spent herself helping the sick and imprisoned—that when she died in 1320 at the age of thirty-three, they insisted she be buried in a place of honor at the town church.

Margaret's reputation grew after her death, as miracles of healing were reported at her burial site. When her body was exhumed in 1558 as part of the process of investigating her cause for sainthood, she was found to be incorrupt. Her kind, homely face; her hunched back; her unevenly matched legs and misshapen feet—all remained as they were on the day of her death. Although her body has since suffered sun damage (the locals were a bit too eager to display their very own beata), she remains as intact as she was in life. To the world, she was funny-looking. To God, who refuses to let her turn to dust, she is beautiful—a sign pointing to the day when each of the faithful shall receive a new, glorified body.






Another holy woman whose humble appearance let the light of Christ shine through was Mother Teresa. I remember once speaking to Sister Gerry (Geraldine Calabrese M.P.F.), a blind nun who was very dear to me, about beauty, and she related a story she had heard about a blind elevator operator who encountered the blessed woman of Calcutta. After the operator let her off at her desired floor, he asked one of the remaining riders, "Who was that?" Told that it was Mother Teresa, he said he knew it must have been someone famous, because she was so beautiful.


Sister Gerry (above) was herself outstandingly beautiful; too much so to pass for anyone's idea of "funny-looking," though she would have gladly accepted the title if only to be in greater solidarity with the suffering. Even as she was dying from cancer, her sightless eyes seemed to dance with joy.

My favorite funny-looking holy person is not a canonized saint, though he is an unofficial patron to people in recovery the world over. He is Father Ed Dowling S.J., the spiritual adviser to Bill W. who showed the Alcoholics Anonymous co-founder the connections between the Twelve Steps and St. Ignatius Loyola's rules for discernment of spirits.

Father Ed was, in the words of one of his Jesuit superiors, "humble and modest," which perhaps explains why he looks profoundly uncomfortable in his publicity photographs. Although I find his appearance endearing, he appeared awkward to those around him. In The Soul of Sponsorship Robert Fitzgerald S.J.'s account of Dowling and Wilson's friendship, a contemporary of Father Ed says "His manners and ways of expressing himself went against him. He seemed disorganized, a bit slap-happy, a roughneck."

It probably didn't help that he was overweight for much of his adult life and walked stiffly due to painful arthritis. Bill W. used to recount of the night Father Ed first visited him that, upon hearing the Jesuit's limping gait coming down the hall—thud, stomp, thud, stomp—he muttered to himself, "Not another drunk."

So I am not surprised to read in Fitzgerald that once when Father Ed paid a visit to St. Ignatius High School in Chicago, the young Jesuit brother who answered the door left him in the front parlor and said to a companion, "Who is this funny-looking guy?

My favorite image of Father Ed is this one, from February 1957, three years before his death.


It was taken at Calvary Cemetery in St. Louis. With Father Ed are descendants of Dred Scott. Dowling is revealing to them the location of their famous ancestor's unmarked grave—which he took pains to discover, just in time for the hundred-year anniversary of Scott's death.

Look at Father Ed's back in the photo and you can tell he is in pain. He used to joke about it: "I yield in my stiffness to no one."

Today, Father Ed's body lies in that same cemetery. But while Dred Scott's grave, thanks to the holy Jesuit, now has its own marker, Dowling's is unmarked, save for the monument listing the hundreds of Jesuits whose bodies were moved to the site when the order's Florissant, Missouri, novitiate was sold. Father Dowling's old grave at Florissant had its own marker. I have no doubt he would have been pleased at the reversal of fortune between himself and the hero whose legacy he helped preserve.

April 3, 1960, was the date Father Ed passed away at age 61. Appropriately, it was Passion Sunday (not Palm Sunday, but the one before it, marking the beginning of Passiontide). The first reading for that day, Hebrews 9:11-15, says, "For if the blood of goats and bulls, with the sprinkling of the ashes of a heifer, sanctifies those who have been defiled so that their flesh is purified, how much more will the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without blemish to God, purify our conscience from dead works to worship the living God!"

As I write in My Peace I Give You, we think of the saints as being pure, which they also are, but it would be truer to say they have been purified. Father Ed accepted his purification with joy. I want to be like him, my funny-looking face alongside his in heaven, both looking at the face of God.

At Calvary Cemetery's monument to the Jesuits buried there, St. Louis, Missouri, January 5, 2011 (click on photo to enlarge). I am pointing to Father Daniel A. Lord's name. Father Dowling's name is third from bottom. Photo by Mark S. Abeln.

Saturday, August 18, 2012

My "Tin Cup" runneth over!
A note of thanks

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Signing books after addressing the St. Thomas More Society of Orange County, Tustin, California, August 15, 2012 (see more photos courtesy of the STMOC on Flickr).

My California speaking tour having ended, I arrived home tonight after a lo-o-ong journey!

First, my friend Bill dropped me off at LAX last night to catch the red-eye to LaGuardia. Seven hours later, my friend Lyle (whom you can see standing directly in front of his mother in this classic 1970 Richard Avedon photo) picked me up from the airport, taking me for a diner breakfast with copious amounts of coffee, and then to St. Joseph's Seminary in Yonkers, where I taped an interview about My Peace I Give You for Colleen Carroll Campbell's EWTN show "Faith and Culture." (Colleen tapes well in advance, so I'm told the episode may not air until as late as next May.) From there, Lyle dropped me off at Penn Station, where I took the 3:04 p.m. train to D.C.'s Union Station, and, two Metro rides later, landed at Chez Eden. Whew!

Upon arriving home, I was overwhelmed with delight and gratitude upon discovering that the generosity of Dawn Patrol readers had provided all the books and supplies I needed for the new school semester. Thanks so much to D.L., C.C., J.D., P.C., and M.T., as well as the donor or donors who chose to remain anonymous. Together you provided me with everything I will need for the five classes I am taking this semester at the Pontifical Faculty of the Immaculate Conception at Dominican House of Studies. What a wonderful encouragement as I work to complete the pontifically licensed degrees I need (S.T.B. and S.T.L.) in order to attain my hoped-for sacred-theology doctorate. You are a part of any and all good work I do in school and in my writing/speaking apostolate, and you are in my prayers.

Friday, August 17, 2012

Last night in L.A.

Last night, after the final event of my California tour speaking about My Peace I Give You, I enjoyed dessert with friends at Jerry's Deli. From left: Ben Eshbach, Bill Inglot, Father Jim Melley, Rob and Nikki Shallenberger, and a very happy yours truly.

My Peace readers will recognize Ben Eshbach as is the Sugarplastic musician and songwriter whose reading recommendation of G.K. Chesterton's The Man Who Was Thursday back in 1995 set the wheels turning that began my journey into the Church. Here is a sample of his band's gorgeous music—"Autumn All the Time."


Thanks so much to all the Dawn Patrol readers who prayed for me this summer as I toured the country speaking about healing sexual wounds with the help of the saints. Although I will be doing some more dates in the fall (click here for my itinerary), it was a special joy getting to dedicate three months to touring—reaching hundreds of people at more than two dozen talks in eight states and the District of Columbia. I made some wonderful new friends and got to reconnect with treasured old ones. Truly I feel I have received the hundredfold promised by Jesus in Mark's gospel.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

SLIDESHOW: My talk this afternoon for the St. Thomas More Society of Orange County





Well, this is a lovely surprise! Only four hours after I finished addressing the St. Thomas More Society of Orange County about my book My Peace I Give You: Healing Sexual Wounds with the Help of the Saints, the Catholic lawyers' group has already posted a beautiful slideshow video of the event.

I'm especially touched by the use of the sweet Randy Newman tune. Back when I met Randy in October 1988 (right), I never would have imagined that, nearly a quarter-century later, I would be having such a blessed day speaking near his beloved L.A..

If you missed today's talk and are in the Los Angeles area, you can still catch me tomorrow night in Encino. Click here for my tour itinerary.

"The most helpful and prophetic piece of writing, to date, on this agonizing topic"

Excerpt from Father McCafferty's Letter to the Editor

Father Paddy McCafferty, the Irish priest and abuse-victims' advocate I wrote about yesterday, has a letter today in the Irish News in which he urges an individual who expressed skepticism about the emotional effects of childhood sexual abuse to read My Peace I Give You. I am deeply honored and grateful for this endorsement from the priest who wrote the landmark "Liturgy of Lament and Repentance" that was led by Cardinal Sean O'Malley at Dublin's pro-cathedral last year.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

California beaming

Irish eyes were smiling—and mine too as I had the great pleasure of meeting Father Paddy McCafferty tonight. The Irish priest, whose courageous public witness as a victim of clergy sex abuse has helped bring purification and healing to the Church, is currently the substitute pastor at St. Therese of Carmel in San Diego, where I began my West Coast tour speaking about My Peace I Give You: Healing Sexual Wounds with the Help of the Saints. Click here to see my tour itinerary, which includes three more SoCal talks over the next three days.

Monday, August 13, 2012

Extra Peace

Click the video to see me answer questions for the Patheos Book Club.

While I'm in sunny San Diego to begin my California tour speaking about My Peace I Give You: Healing Sexual Wounds with the Help of the Saints (click here to see my itinerary), it's a lovely surprise to see that, back in Washington, National Review Online editor-at-large Kathryn Jean Lopez posting additional material from her interview with me. You can find all the "extras" in the "Dawn Eden" section of Kathryn's blog, K-Lo at Large.

Friday, August 10, 2012

Speaking My Peace—on Cajun TV

Trista (left) and Karol (right) of the Diocese of Lafayette interview me for their cable-TV show "Catholics Today."


Here's a treat from my recent trip to Cajun country: staff members of the Diocese of Lafayette, Louisiana's Office of Pro-Life Apostolate interview me about My Peace I Give You: Healing Sexual Wounds with the Help of the Saints on their cable talk show "Catholics Today." It was a beautiful experience for me to talk with fellow Catholic women about the effects of childhood sexual abuse and the great resources our faith offers for healing—particularly through the lives and examples of the saints.
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Seeking your help—please click here or scroll down.

UPDATED—"Tin Cup Rattle": Please help me get schoolbooks for the new semester

UPDATE, 8/18/12: My "Tin Cup" runneth over!

Original post follows:

I am about to begin the fall semester at the Pontifical Faculty of the Immaculate Conception at Dominican House of Studies, where I am studying towards an S.T.L. (which I need before I can earn an S.T.D.—that's a sacred-theology doctorate) and would like to ask your help.

Would you please look at my Amazon wish list containing the books I will need for my classes, and consider supporting my studies by purchasing one or more of them for me?

I am requesting donations because I need them. Being a late vocation to theology, and having survived thyroid cancer, I am eager to earn my doctorate so I may spend the remainder of my working life teaching theology at a Catholic college. That means studying full-time, as I turn 44 on September 3 and would like to earn my S.T.D. before I'm in AARP! I live on student loans, (very) occasional income from freelance writing, and donations from people who wish to support me in my studies and my speaking apostolate.

If you would like to support me with a cash donation, click here to donate cash via PayPal. I just drew into my savings to pay for my annual student medical and dental insurance, which cost $1,876 (Dominican House uses the CUA health plan), so any cash donations will help compensate for that expenditure.

If you can't donate anything material, prayers are free, and they sustain me more than anything. Thanks so much, and God bless you.

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

A saint who lived the "spirituality of wounds"

August 9 is the day the Church honors the Jewish convert St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross, neé Edith Stein, a Carmelite nun who was martyred at Auschwitz.

When I was newly baptized and proudly Protestant, many Catholics I met prayed for Teresa Benedicta's intercession so that I might know the fullness of the faith in the heart of the Catholic Church. I am grateful to them and to Teresa Benedicta, as their prayers together helped bring me home.

On Good Friday, 1938, while on retreat preparing for her final vows, Sister Teresa Benedicta wrote a poem that she called "JUXTA CRUCEM TECUM STARE." Its title was drawn from a line in the hymn Stabat Mater, "To stand by the Cross with you." In it she beautifully articulates the "spirituality of wounds" in light of Mary's experience of co-suffering with Jesus. It is this spirituality, also known as "co-redemption," that underlies my book My Peace I Give You: Healing Sexual Wounds with the Help of the Saints.

The action of redemption, of course, belongs to Christ; the "co-" refers to the cooperation of the faithful in Our Lord's suffering. That cooperation is expressed most eminently in Our Lady's prayerful presence at Calvary. As her Son permitted His heart to be wounded by a sword, so too Mary willingly received a spiritual sword that pierced her own heart—continuing the "Yes" to God that she gave at the Annunciation. Teresa Benedicta's poem shows how deeply this spirituality of wounds is tied in with the mystery of spiritual motherhood.

This translation of the saint's reflection is from a book I found at the Lafayette Carmelites' bookstore, Edith Stein: A Victim of the Shoah, by Waltraud Herbstrith:

JUXTA CRUCEM TECUM STARE

Mary,
Today I stood with you beneath the cross,
And understood more clearly than before.
How it was here
That you became our mother.
Even an earthly mother tries, as best she can,
To carry out her own son's final wishes.
How much more you,
The handmaid of the Lord,
You in whose life and being were inscribed
The life and being of God's incarnate Son.
You took to heart all those who were your own,
You purchased with heart's blood and bitter pains
New life for every soul.
Knowing us through and through the wounds, the shame,
The light of glory too, the radiance
In which your Son would bathe us,
You keep us in your care,
And think no price too high
If only it will bring us to our goal.
As for the ones who form your escort,
Chosen to one day gather at your throne:
They too must stand with you beneath the cross,
Purchasing with their heart's blood and their pains
Heavenly glory for the precious souls
Which God has given them as their inheritance.

Illustration of Saint Teresa Benedicta by Sister Marie-Celeste Fadden, O.C.D. Photograph of window from Georgetown University's Dahlgren Chapel of the Sacred Heart by Frank Miller.

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Seeking your help—please click here.

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Talking about My Peace with NRO's K-Lo

Two new articles came out yesterday about My Peace I Give You: Healing Sexual Wounds with the Help of the Saints: a feature in The Tidings of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, which is the largest diocesan newspaper in the country, and Kathryn Jean Lopez's Q&A with me in National Review Online.

I'm thrilled to get the Tidings press in advance of my upcoming speaking tour of Los Angeles and San Diego (see my tour itinerary). And of course, for an author, there's nothing like the K-Lo treatment in NRO. Lopez played devil's advocate, resulting in some questions I hadn't been asked before—and so causing me to give some answers I hadn't given before. Here is an excerpt from the NRO piece, "Peace the World Cannot Give":

KATHRYN JEAN LOPEZ: How can saints help with much of anything, particularly anything having to do with sex?

DAWN EDEN: The saints don’t just give us help here and there; as one of the Eucharistic Prayers puts it, we rely upon their constant intercession for “unfailing help.” I write in My Peace I Give You that, in manifesting God’s design for humanity’s total vocation, the saints show us what it means to be fully human. To be fully human means first and foremost to love — to love God, and to love my neighbor as myself for the love of God. That is the highest virtue — the theological virtue of charity — and virtue by its nature is a power given to the entire person, which for human persons means body and soul. Therefore, if I am to have true virtue, I cannot just love in a disembodied way. I love as I love because I have a female body, and that body is part of how I love—whether I am engaged in a physical act of love or just thinking about a loved one.

Now, for the Church to recognize a saint, it is not enough that the candidate for sainthood have ordinary virtue. A saint has to possess heroic virtue. So we know that every female saint not only possessed charity, but possessed heroic charity, loving fully, as a woman, in every relationship, according to the type of relationship. If she was a daughter, she loved fully in the manner proper to being a daughter; if she was a wife, she loved fully in the manner proper to being a wife. And likewise with friendships — hers was not a disembodied friendship, but a fully present friendship, loving her friends as their sister in Christ. And likewise for every male saint—he loved others fully as a man, according to the type of relationship.

Why is all this important for victims of childhood sexual abuse? Because the problems faced by victims are not primarily problems having to do with the action of “sex.” They know how the marital act works: Everyone does, in my experience. Speaking for myself and for fellow victims I have met, what they need is help with the noun “sex”: learning how to be fully integrated as a man or woman. That’s where the saints can help.

LOPEZ: Isn’t the Catholic obsession with dead people, their bodies, and their things a bit odd?

EDEN: First of all, the saints, although dead in this world, are alive in the next. What’s more, they’re united to God, who cares about each of us individually. So, to call them “dead people” is misleading. It’s people on this earth who lack faith, hope, and charity—including myself at times when I fail to live up to the graces and calling of my baptism—who are the real “dead people.” Jesus told the Sadducees that, when we speak of God as being God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, we affirm that he is not God of the dead but God of the living. So if anything, the saints are more alive than we are!

Second, we respect the body, whether living or dead, because the body is properly united to the soul. It’s the body and soul together that make the person. The saints in heaven await reunion with their bodies, which will be restored by God in a new way on the last day. So, the relics of a saint are very important in that they share in the holiness of the saint’s soul, and they point to the reunion of body and soul that will come with Christ’s return.
Read the full interview at National Review Online.

LISTEN NOW: Talking about My Peace on Catholic Broadcasting Northwest

Had a beautiful time yesterday morning speaking with Catholic Radio Northwest's Dina Marie Hale about My Peace I Give You: Healing Sexual Wounds with the Help of the Saints. The interview is one-hour long and is now available for download (click here).

Friday, August 3, 2012

Stars over St. Peter's
Amazing footage of the Vatican Observatory from 1929


Click the image to watch the video in a new window.

Here's another gem from the British Pathé archives: a silent 1929 newsreel with amazing footage of the Vatican Observatory.

How beautifully symbolic to see the telescope pointing above the dome of St. Peter's. It reminds me of what I write in My Peace I Give You: Healing Sexual Wounds with the Help of the Saints about "holy people who, having experienced some of the greatest sorrows that the world could offer, were yet able to turn their eyes toward heaven and be saved." Among them was St. Josephine Bakhita, who, after being baptized, looked back and realized that her first encounter with her heavenly Father was when, as a child, she gazed in awe at the sky: "Seeing the sun, the moon and the stars, I said to myself: Who could be the Master of these beautiful things? And I felt a great desire to see him, to know Him and to pay Him homage ..."

Read more about the Vatican Observatory on its official website.

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

The "revert" saint who struggled against scrupulosity

Today is the feast of St. Alphonsus Liguori, Doctor of the Church, patron of confessors and moral theologians, founder of the Redemptorists, and wounded healer. His life and example inspire me as I spread the message of healing sexual wounds with the help of the saints.

The Catholic Encyclopedia's biography of this Doctor of the Church, who is the patron of confessors and moral theologians, gives remarkable detail about the depth of his inner life. Today we might call him a "revert":
Psychologically, Alphonsus may be classed among twice-born souls; that is to say, there was a definitely marked break or conversion, in his life, in which he turned, not from serious sin, for that he never committed, but from comparative worldliness, to thorough self-sacrifice for God.
Most moving is the encyclopedia author's account of Alphonsus's final years, which saw him battle against depression and scrupulosity:
About three years before his death he went through a veritable "Night of the Soul". Fearful temptations against every virtue crowded upon him, together with diabolical apparitions and illusions, and terrible scruples and impulses to despair which made life a hell. at last came peace, and on 1 August, 1787, as the midday Angelus was ringing, the Saint passed peacefully to his reward. He had nearly completed his ninety-first year.
Later in the same entry, the author gives additional detail about Alphonsus's dark night:
... God kept him humble by interior trials. From his earliest years he had an anxious fear about committing sin which passed at times into scruple.

He who ruled and directed others so wisely, had, where his own soul was concerned, to depend on obedience like a little child. To supplement this, God allowed him in the last years of his life to fall into disgrace with the pope, and to find himself deprived of all external authority, trembling at times even for his eternal salvation.
When I was in Detroit in June to speak about My Peace I Give You, I found at the John K. King used-book warehouse a privately published copy of some of St. Alphonsus's letters to nuns. They are very beautiful for what they reveal about how, even as the saint battled his own scruples, he was able to reach out with great fatherly gentleness to souls too timid to approach Our Lord. Here is one of my favorites, written to Sister Brianna Carafa on December 18, 1767; it is also in a book available online:
O my God! I no longer wish to hear the words "very bad state." But for pity s sake do not omit holy Communion; go to Communion in whatever condition you find yourself whether cold, very cold, or distracted. Do not say anything to me about abandonment by God.

No, I do not permit you even once to sleep on the floor. Do you perhaps wish to lose your mind? As you are still weak, you will not do wrong to take a little more rest, and to allow yourself some indulgence in your diet in order to repair the loss of strength caused by your illness.

As for the Communions prescribed by Father N., I do not wish you to omit them no, never, never; for you know how strict I am on this point ; and it does not matter that you have not gone to confession. ... By virtue of obedience, speak no more to me of Father N., nor of your bad state, nor of your abandonment by God; I do not wish to hear another word about these things. Continue what you are doing as well as you can, and God will aid you.

Do not listen to your relatives, nor to those that bring you messages. Do not give up your ordinary exercises, even when you perform them without devotion; God will supply what is wanting.

You will already have received my book The Way of Salvation; I beg you to read from time to time the short
considerations that are found at the end, entitled Darts of Fire. I read them myself nearly every day, and they seem to me to be suitable to you.

Pray to Jesus Christ for me; I am colder than you, but I trust in the blood of Jesus Christ and in our Mother Mary, and this is what we should all do. It belongs to God to sanctify us, and not to us, nor to our spiritual Fathers.

I wish you to preserve my letters, because I cannot be so diffuse in my other answers, nor repeat the same things. Be careful to read them over from time to time, especially when you are losing confidence. ...

May Jesus Christ fill you with his holy love!

            Alfonso Maria
            Bishop of Sant' Agata

A bit of tough love from a great saint!

Here are more of St. Alphonsus's insights on combating scrupulosity, via the informative website A Short History of OCD:

The suffering that affects scrupulous souls comes, not from the fact that they have a scruple about what they are doing, but from the fear that what they are doing might be sinful and that they are, in fact, committing sin. But they should realize that whoever obeys a competent and holy director does not, in fact, act in doubt but acts with the greatest certainty that one can have here on earth, namely, the certainty which comes from the divine word of Jesus Christ who declares that whoever listens to the instructions of his ministers listens to himself.... In a word, to quote St. Bernard, "The great remedy for scruples is blind obedience to one's confessor."... "Scruples are to be completely disregarded, and one is to do the very opposite to what they suggest, provided one is following the advice of a prudent, competent and devout spiritual director" [apparently quoting Father Wigandt]....

Gerson [John Gerson (1363-1429)] puts the whole matter succinctly. He says that one must take a very determined stand against scruples. Philip Neri [(1515-1595)] suggested that the best remedy for scruples is to treat them with contempt. In his life it is recorded that as well as advising the accepted remedy of total submission in everything to the judgment of one's confessor, he also advised his penitents to treat scruples with disdain and contempt. His practice with scrupulous persons was to forbid them to confess frequently. And when they did confess to him and mentioned their scruples he ordered them to go to Holy Communion without listening further to their scruples.

So to conclude. Scrupulous souls should follow the way of obedience.... Moreover, any fear that scrupulous souls may have should be treated with contempt since such fears are not authentic norms of conscience.
[SourceAlphonsus de Liguori: selected writings, edited by Frederick M. Jones (New York: Paulist Press, 1999), pp. 209-14, 322-3]
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