Vincent, traffic lights, the Presence of God

John Freund, CM
August 31, 2014

Traffic_lightsMike Syslo of the SVDP USA  writes, “I have been reading “Little Steps to Great Holiness” by Charles Hugo Doyle. In the chapter on The Presence of God, the author refers to St. Vincent de Paul and how he focused on the presence of God throughout his life. I have included below that segment of Doyle’s book for your reflection.

(ED. When your read his excerpt it doesn’t take much imagination to translate this to today and sitting waiting for the light to change.)

…the exercise of the presence of God required two acts, one of understanding and the other of the will…St. Vincent de Paul was a wonderful proponent of this great means of practicing the presence of God. He tried never to let an instant pass without thinking of God’s holy and amiable presence. Alone or in public, at rest or in the midst of work, in joy or in affliction, in the silence of his cell or in the bustle of the busy street, at court or assemblies, he was always with God, always united to God by prayer and love. In moments of stress thrust upon him by others, there was evidence of St. Vincent’s retreat into the  presence of God. He always made a delay between the question asked him, and his answer—a delay that gave him time to say: “In the name of God,” and consult Him for the proper answer. St. Vincent made it a  rule formally to recall the presence of God four times an hour.

When the clock struck the quarter hour, he  made the sign of the cross and raised his eyes to heaven. When he rode in a carriage, as he frequently  did, he kept his eyes closed and opened them only to contemplate the cross on the rosary which hung  from his cincture. So as to see nothing that would distract him from the exercise of the presence of God, he would draw curtains on the carriage in which he traveled. Walking on the street he observed the same recollection. On passing a church, he would enter and prostrate himself on the floor. He saw no one, but  the onlookers were deeply impressed. Moses talked to God on Mount Sinai through a cloud, but his face  shone with a radiance that dazzled those who beheld the law giver long after his descent from that  mountain. St. Vincent kept himself always in the presence of God, and there was little wonder that the children followed him, crying out: “Behold! The saint is going by.”

To render practical the thought of the presence of God, St. Vincent had signs placed in different  corners and rooms of St. Lazare reading “Dieu me regarde” [God sees me]. The saint used to say, often,  that “the thought of the presence of God makes easier the fulfillment of the will of God: the  remembrance of the divine presence creeps little by little into the soul and by His grace it becomes a habit; and finally, one becomes animated by this divine presence.” …

…In resume, then, the exercise of the presence of God consists in an act of the understanding, and of  faith as well, in God’s adorable presence in, through, and around your body and soul, followed by the  employment of the will in making acts of love. These acts of love should take the form of short  ejaculatory prayers, such as: “Lord, it is for Your sake I do this”; “Thy will be done”; “My God, I love  Thee”; or “Praised be Jesus Christ!” May I repeat that time ought not be wasted in using the imagination  to conjure up a mental picture of God or His adorable Son, made man. After a fervent act of faith is made  in His presence within you, nothing more but the affectionate motions of the will are required.

Mike Syslo, National Associate Executive Director of the SVDP USA, shared this personal reflection in a recent edition of Frédéric’s E-Gazette .

Editors note: This reflection brought me back to my early days in formation in the novitiate. My novice master must have been reading Doyle since he used almost those exact words. So I asked one of our researchers for the references in Vincent and here is what he found….

References: Relationship between doing the willing of God and placing oneself in the presence of God (CCD:XI:287); how to place oneself in the presence of God (CCD:IX:26-27, 31)


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