For Saint Catherine of Siena’s feast day, I revisited her remarkable text, the Dialogue, a rich and inspiring collection of mystical and theological insights in the form of “conversations” between God the Father and the extraordinarily dynamic 14th century Dominican Tertiary saint and Doctor of the Church.
The powerful exhortation in Chapter 100 of the Dialogue is a radical reminder of the Gospel’s insistence that we must not judge, hate, or desire revenge against anyone, even in our thoughts. Rather, we must trust that God loves us and works His will for our good through our fellow human beings — our brothers and sisters whose actions he guides — or permits — as He leads us on the path to salvation. “Everything is grace,” even the injuries that God permits our neighbors to inflict upon us, which he allows so that we might grow in patience and endurance and conformity to His Son Jesus. Insofar as we do see our neighbor’s faults, we are called to offer “holy compassion” — to be merciful in union with the God who is Mercy.
Too often I forget this basic aspect of my own vocation to be merciful and compassionate to everyone; yet it is necessary for me because I myself am so much in need of mercy and forgiveness. And the love for war that breeds so many conflicts in our time stems from the war that begins in our hearts when we presume to “judge others,” when we forget “holy compassion.” Saint Catherine faced much conflict in her times, but trust in the goodness of God and the practice of compassion and mercy made her an exemplary peacemaker from whom we still have much to learn.
Text from Saint Catherine of Siena, Dialogue, chapter 100.
[God the Father speaks:]
“Unite yourself always to me by the affection of love, for I am the Supreme and Eternal Purity. I am the Fire that purifies the soul…
[God says that if you want to be united to His purity,] “you should never judge the human will in anything that you may see done or said by any creature whatsoever, either to yourself or to others. You should consider my will alone, both in them and in yourself.
“And if you should see evident sins or defects, draw the rose out of those thorns. That is to say, offer them to me with holy compassion. In the case of injuries done to yourself, judge that my will permits this in order to prove virtue in yourself and in my other servants, figuring that the one who acts thus does so as the instrument of my will. You should also realize that such apparent sinners may frequently have a good intention.
“No one can judge the secrets of a person's heart. What you do not see you should not judge in your mind, even though it may evidently be open mortal sin. See nothing in others but my will — not in order to judge but, as has been said, with holy compassion.
“In this way you will arrive at perfect purity because when you act this way, your mind will not be scandalized either in me or in your neighbors. Otherwise you fall into contempt of your neighbors if you judge their evil will toward you instead of my will acting in them. Such contempt and scandal separate the soul from me and prevent perfection and, in some cases, deprive her of grace, more or less according to the gravity of her contempt and the hatred her judgment has conceived against her neighbor.
“A different reward is received by the soul who perceives only my will. As has been said, [my will] wishes nothing else but your good so that everything I give or permit to happen to you, I give so that you may arrive at the end for which I created you. And because the soul remains always in the love of her neighbor, she remains always in my love and thus remains united to me.”














































