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Rev. Fr. J. Boudreau - The Happiness of Heaven: The Joys and Rewards of Eternal Glory

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Rev. Fr. J. Boudreau The Happiness of Heaven: The Joys and Rewards of Eternal Glory
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The Happiness of Heaven

The Joys and Rewards of Eternal Glory

J. BOUDREAU, S.J.

Approbation for "The Happiness of Heaven by a Father of the Society of Jesus" given by Ferdinand Coosemans, S.J., Provincial of the Society of Jesus in Missouri, St. Louis, Missouri, Nov. 1, 1870.

Liber supradictus, cum a Censoribus Nostris fuerit jam probatus ,

Imprimatur: Martinus Joannes,
Archiep. Baltimor.

Originally published in 1872 by John Murphy & Co., Baltimore, Md., in cooperation with the Catholic Publication Society, New York, N.Y. Reset and published in 1984 by TAN Books and Publishers, Inc. Typography is the property of TAN Books, and may not be reproduced without permission from the publisher.

Library of Congress Catalog Card No.: 83-51548

TAN Books
Charlotte, North Carolina
www.TANBooks.com

1984

CONTENTS

PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION

Many books, owing to their special character, are designed for only a small circle of readers. But topics involving general and vital interests deservedly claim the attention of all persons. Such is the subject of the present work, The Happiness of Heaven . For who is he that, believing in the existence of that blessed abode, does not hope eventually to arrive there?

What sublime descriptions the Holy Scriptures give us of the blessed City of God! Her walls are built of jasper-stone, but the city itself is of pure and shining gold, like unto clear crystal. And the foundations of the city are adorned with all manner of precious stones. Her gates are pearls. The very streets are transparent as glass. This glorious city has no need of the sun or of the moon to shine in her, for the glory of God is her light.

In the midst of her sits the Ancient of Days: His garments are white as snow, His throne is like flames of fire. Thousands and thousands minister unto Him, and ten thousand times a hundred thousand stand before Him. A river of life-giving water as clear as crystal, whose banks are adorned with the tree of life, issues from the throne of God. The blessed drink of the torrent of pleasure, and are inebriated with the plenty of the house of God. All tears are wiped away from their eyes and death shall be no more, nor mourning, nor crying, nor sorrow shall be any more, for the former things are passed away.

And when we are assured that no mortal eye hath seen, nor ear heard, nor heart of man conceived the happiness prepared for God's children, we must conclude that the magnificent language describing the heavenly Jerusalem is only symbolical; that the Holy Ghost speaks of the most precious and beautiful things we know in order to raise our minds to the reality which they faintly represent.

It has been the aim of the author of the following pages to discover the meaning concealed under those attractive figures. In his exposition of The Happiness of Heaven he has endeavored to follow the teachings of the most approved theologians of the Church. Moreover, mindful that our Divine Model spoke of the Kingdom of Heaven in parables, he has laid aside, as far as possible, the technical language of the schools and has replaced it by illustrations, which are better adapted to the capacity of all.

Should the worshiper of mammon, on perusing these pages, pause in his headlong course to think of "treasures which neither moth nor rust consumes"; should the votary of pleasure be induced to sigh after the joys that pass not away; should the poor and the afflicted of every description cast a lingering, longing glance toward that blessed region where sorrow is unknown; should those who have consecrated themselves to God be incited to a greater perfection and to a desire of a higher degree of glory in Heaven, the writer will deem himself amply rewarded for his labor.

St. Louis University
St. Louis, Missouri
Easter Sunday, 1870

PUBLISHER'S PREFACE

To The Second Revised Edition

It seldom falls to the lot of a Catholic publisher to issue from his press a book which, while it possesses the true, substantial merit of genuine Catholic literature, is at the same time graced with the novelty and the absorbing interest which at once command the attention of the public, and place the book in a high and permanent position before the world. Such has been our good fortune in the publication of The Happiness of Heaven and of this no better proof can be required than the unprecedented sale of 3,000 copies, constituting the first edition, in less than sixty days, and the constantly increasing demand which already calls forth this second edition. Few books have been more warmly welcomed by the press, both Catholic and non-Catholic, than The Happiness of Heaven; fewer still have proved, in the perusal, more worthy of the praises bestowed by reviewers, or have borne out the character which favorable critics had assigned. Of this work it may be said with truth that the highest praise falls short of its merit; the most favorable critic has not said too much in its commendation. And this promises to be more than an ephemeral popularity; the book will liveit will be read with pleasure and profit as long as genuine Catholic literature finds readers. It is a book which was long wanted: a thorough, systematic treatise on a subject of the most vital importance: a book which gives us all that Catholic theology teaches about Heaven, and gives it in an authentic shape, with text, references and citations in all scholastic completeness, and yet in a form adapted to the humblest capacity. It is indeed, as one of its reviewers so happily calls it, "The spiritual geography of Heaven, giving us such a knowledge of that blessed country as we can acquire at this distance," and showing forth its beauties, its loveliness, its thousandfold bliss in a manner so clear, so winning, so unconquerably attractive, that earth pales into insignificance before those dazzling splendors and our hearts long to be where our real treasure is. When we have read this book and studied it (for a single perusal of it will not satisfy us), we know something of that heavenly Paradise which is to be the eternal abode of the elect, and knowing it, we must love and desire itwe must submit with patience, if not with joy, to the trials of this life, which are to be there so gloriously rewardedwe must sigh for the moment which is to admit us into that Paradise of endless delights and of imperishable beauty.

Let then this book go forth on its mission of consolation and encouragement to the sorrowing and suffering poor: it will teach them to prize their sorrows and their afflictions as the virgin gold of which their crown is to be formed, and the brilliant gems which are to adorn it forever. Let it go to the counting-house of the merchant, to the desk of the bankerand they will know that there is another and a truer wealth, more worthy of their ambition. Let the great ones of the earth learn from it that their honors are a deceit and a snare; that one sigh for Eternity, one moment spent in the service of God, will purchase greater glory than all the crowns and scepters of earth can bestow. Let those whose lives are consecrated to the task of teaching young hearts to love God, of recalling the wanderer to the paths of his duty, of battling with the errors of worldly wisdom and the passions of the depraved human heartlet them gather from this book not only the motives which will be powerful over the souls of men, but also the strength and courage which they themselves need in their toils for the good of their neighbor. In a word, let all study this precious volumeCatholics and Protestants, the learned and ignorant, the old and the young, the innocent youth still arrayed in the spotless garment of his baptismal purity and the unhappy sinner who has grown old in wickedness and whose soul has lost almost all hope of peacethere is instruction for all, comfort and joy, encouragement and hope for all, if they will but make a proper use of such means as God has given to them, and live here without forgetting that they are all destined for a most glorious life hereafter.

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