Saint Alphonsus, a Doctor of the Church, often writes very long and scholarly works, and so it is a great joy and pleasure to find such a small pamphlet packed with his wisdom, in this particular case, directing us to better seek out conformity with the will of God, rather than the pursuit of our own.
(quoting St. Denis the Areopagite) "The principal effect of love is so to unite the wills of those who love each other as to make them will the same things." (p. 4)
(quoting Bl Henry Suso) "I would rather be the vilest worm on earth by God's will, then be a seraph by my own." (p. 6)
"Conformity signifies that we join our wills to the will of God. Uniformity means more - it means that we make one will of God's will and ours, so that we will only what God wills; that God's will alone, is our will." (p. 7)
(quoting St. John of Avila) "One 'Blessed be God' in times of adversity, is worth more than a thousand acts of gratitude in times of prosperity." (p. 8)
(speaking of Job) "He did not say: 'The Lord hath given me my children and possessions, and the Sabeans have taken them away'...We must not therefore consider the afflictions that come upon us as happening by chance or solely from the malice of men: we should be convinced that what happens, happens by the will of God." (p. 9)
"I want it to be warm, to be cold, windy, to rain, because God wills it." (p. 11)
"I practice silence towards men, while I cultivate the habit of speaking with God. Conversing with God is the way I found and maintain my peace of soul." (p. 14)
"[S]courges of the Lord have happened for our amendment and not for our destruction." (p. 15)
"God's holy will should be fulfilled in us and by us." (p. 16)
"Lord, I wish neither to be well nor to remain sick; I want only what thou wilt." (p. 19)
(quoting St. Teresa of Avila) "In this life our lot is not to enjoy God, but to do his holy will. Love of God does not consist in experiencing his tendernesses, but in serving him with resolution and humility." (p. 24)
"St. Teresa too feared to lose God and when she would hear the striking of the clock, she would find consolation in the thought that the passing of the hour was an hour less of the danger of losing God." (p. 28)
(quoting St. Bernard) "Why are we so tenacious of life when the longer we live, the more we sin?" (p. 29)