.Whether
it be due to our own over-indulgences in abusing the varied and sundry goods of
this earth, our own seemingly countless transgressions against God’s
commandments, or the providentially paternal designs of our Creator and first
Benefactor, we will have our lot of suffering in this life. There is no escaping
that. The question is how to benefit from it individually unto our everlasting
glory and happiness in heaven. Suffering and death are part of our debt due to
original sin. Therefore, they are necessary for our good. We must suffer and, in
the end, die. But, why such a debt as this? How can its acceptance be for our
good? Father Remler provides fifteen reasons why we ought to embrace our trials
and tribulations, be they physical or spiritual, for the priceless opportunity
that every pain provides us in our vocation to be made conformable to our Savior
and King, Jesus Christ. It would be hard to find a book like Father Remler’s
that so wonderfully explains the value of penance in the light of the patient
and enduring acceptance of the cross. Outside of grace, the author writes, our
sins cast no shadow. They are committed in the darkness in which we chose to
wallow, a darkness that will drag us into the pit of hell. Stepping out of that
darkness, into the light of grace, we can come back to God Who is drawing us to
Him through a sincere confession. Once the guilt of our sins has been remitted,
however, their effects remain.
This is the shadow that follows us through life, because only if we are in the
light of faith, living in hope and charity, can we see truly the sad effects of
our sins, our shadow. The higher the light of Christ is in our lives, the more
directly we let it shine upon us by our embrace of suffering, the more the
shadow of past transgressions is reduced. Our goal, the will of God, is that
this shadow disappear altogether. In some sense this is a very practical book,
for it has a foolproof game plan that, if followed well, will cut short
dramatically our time of purgation in the next life. But, it is much more than
that. This magnificent analysis of suffering, as to its cause, its value, and
its ultimate effect (i.e., conformity to Christ, the Man of Sorrows) will give
us more strength to bear not only our own cross, but to willingly share in the
suffering Jesus endured for all men by accepting, as joyful victims, crosses
vicariously borne for sinners within our own family, for our wayward friends,
for the crimes of our nation, and for those dear to us who are languishing in
Purgatory.