Page:Sermons for all the Sundays in the year.djvu/258

 to have you accounts ready for that great day, on which your doom to eternal life or to eternal death must be decided, endeavour, during the remaining days of life, to live with death before your eyes. ” death, thy sentence is welcome." (Eccl. xli. 3.) Oh! how correct are the judgments, how well directed the actions, of those who form their judgments, and perform their actions, with death before their view! The remembrance of death destroys all attachment to the goods of this earth. ” Let the end of life be considered,  ”  says St. Lawrence Justinian,  ” and there will be nothing in this world to be loved." (de Ligno Vitæ, cap. v.) Yes; all the riches, honours, and pleasures of this world are easily despised by him who considers that he must soon leave them forever, and that he shall be thrown into the grave to be the food of worms. 7. Some banish the thought of death, as if, by avoiding to think of death, they could escape it. But death cannot be avoided; and they who banish the thought of it, expose themselves to great danger of an unhappy death. By keeping death before their eyes, the saints have despised all the goods of this earth. Hence St. Charles Borromeo kept on his table a death’s head, that he might have it continually in view. Cardinal Baronius had the words, “Memento mori ” Remember death" inscribed on his ring. The venerable P. Juvenal Anzia, Bishop of                                              Page 139 of 233 Saluzo, had before him a skull, on which was written, "As I am, so thou shalt be." In retiring to deserts and caves the holy solitaries brought with them the head of a dead man; and for what purpose? To prepare themselves for death. Thus a certain hermit being asked at death, why he was so cheerful, answered: I have kept death always before my eyes; and therefore, now that it has arrived, I feel no terror. But, oh! how full of terror is death, when it comes to those who have thought of it but seldom. Second Point. It is uncertain when we shall die. 8.  ” Nothing," says the Idiota,  ” is more certain than death, but nothing is more uncertain than the hour of death." It is certain that we shall die. God has already determined the year, the month, the day, the