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Lukewarmness: The Devil in Disguise

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Here is a practical and complete remedy for a spiritual malady that afflicts many Christians, often without their even being aware of lukewarmness. Francis Carvajal explains how lukewarmness can creep into your soul through small infidelities, and can result in spiritual death. In this book, he offers a radical cure to this little-known spiritual sickness. He gives you realistic steps you can take now (including frequent Confession and renewed devotion to Mary) to root lukewarmness out of your soul.

142 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1992

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Steven R. McEvoy.
3,783 reviews172 followers
October 7, 2018
I owned the first edition of this book called, ‘Lukewarmness: The Devil in Disguise’ but lent it out and never got around to replacing it. The revised edition is called ‘Overcoming Lukewarmness: Healing Your Soul's Sadness’ and is an incredible read. Occasionally when I read a book, especially one I have had a while, or known about for a while, I really regret not having read it earlier. This is one of those times. Even while I was reading it, I could not but wish I had read it sooner. The forward of the revised edition of this book states:

“Every book has a small history. This one was born of a meditation during a few days of spiritual retreat. It appeared later, enlarged, with the title Lukewarmness. That was in 1978. Since then, the original Spanish edition has reached its twelfth printing.

Now, having wholly updated it with the experience of more than a few years, it appears with a new title: Overcoming Lukewarmness: Healing Your Soul’s Sadness. Lukewarmness is a pathology of love that puts the ideals of the Christian to sleep. It can be found, hidden, close to and constantly stalking the life of our first surrender, the joyful following of Jesus, that it tries to destroy or at least hinder.

Lukewarmness is, precisely, the great hidden enemy of that love, aging and destroying it, though that may be difficult to notice, particularly at the beginning. It is like those silent diseases that little by little extend into the whole organism, while the infected man barely notices his condition until it is pervasive. To lukewarmness we can apply words of an Italian poet describing a mortally wounded soldier: andava camminando ed era morto—he was walking and was dead.”

There are so many great reads, and so many books I want to read. And yet my first thought upon finishing this book, was that I will need to read it again. The chapters in this book are:

1. Created for Happiness
2. To Follow Jesus
3. Shortsighted and “Tired”: Lukewarmness
4. When Everything Is Hard
5. I Seek Your Face
6. Love and Little Things
7. The Wide Road
8. With the Light of Faith
9. Venial Sins and Lukewarmness
10. The Daughters of Lukewarmness
11. The Love of God and of Others
12. Who Fixes Us?
13. Embers

This book is not the work of one man. Francis Fernandez-Carvajal draws extensively from the Catechism, the writings of the popes and the saints both ancient and modern. A few of the paragraphs that really stuck with me are

“The real cause of sadness isn’t so much external problems as interior ones—sin of any kind and that special crisis of the theological virtues called indifference, suffered by the lukewarm soul. A Christian with this sickness loses joy little by little, his happiness of heart slips away almost without his realizing it, and his soul ages.”

“Lukewarmness always supposes a crisis of hope, losing heart, along with a crisis of faith and love. For the lukewarm person, Christ is a vague figure, insubstantial, with features poorly defined. The soul does not dare to make the generous affirmations of former days. Less is enough.”

“Lukewarmness arises from prolonged neglect in the interior life. It is always preceded by numerous small unfaithful acts. Unless these are repented of, the guilt weighs heavily on the relationship of such a soul with God.”

“The lukewarm man little by little forces God from his heart and grows solitary. Then he must flee from himself, do things so as to feel useful. Often he plunges into activities with all his strength, as if his very life depended on it.”

This book was recommended to me again recently while on retreat. I already had the book but not got around to reading it. There have been times my spiritual life has become arid, and spiritually lethargic. This book gives us tools to counter that. In the book of Revelation, Jesus speaks very strongly about lukewarness. And this book helps us understand why.

The author of this book wrote the incredible In Conversation with God series, a seven-volume set that I have been read for almost 30 years now. His books are available in English published under the names, Francis Fernandez-Carvajal, Francis Carvajal, Francis Fernandez, and Francis Fernandez Carvajal but no matter what name they are published under these books are invaluable for spiritual growth. And this one deals with a topic that all Christians should be concerned about in today’s culture, both within and outside the church.

This is one of the best Catholic books I have read in the last few years, and I give it my highest recommendation.

Read the review on my blog Book Reviews and More and reviews of other books by Francis Fernandez.

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2018 Catholic Reading Plan!
Profile Image for Wangũi.
82 reviews30 followers
August 27, 2009
A wonderful book that you can often go back to; and really it just helps you live your Christian life better and more fully! With diverse topics it covers step by step those things that probably would lead us to fall and stay in lukewarmness and provides practical solutions on how to deal with each of these things- for example: it contains a chapter on frequent confession and another on spiritual direction...and so on; and each of them contains the standard to aim for(you could say) in your life.

An every day book to carry around and often go back to.

Profile Image for David.
16 reviews2 followers
March 10, 2017
A reliably orthodox guide to seeking conversion of heart and avoiding lukewarmness - or overcoming it. It's a bit repetitive, I think, but the wonderful quotes from St. Josemaria Escriva (and others) make the relatively short read worth the effort.
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