“The world is like a field, and to bear fruit there
is as difficult as it is praiseworthy. The hermits bloom in solitary places and
shun the company of men. The monks blossom in a garden enclosed and hide
themselves from the eyes of men. How much more glorious is it if a Christian
brings forth fruit in an open field, the world, for all too easily the twin
sprouts of grace, the spirit of a life of virtue and the fragrance of a good
name, wither there and die. Therefore did Christ glory in being a flower of the
field, since he said of himself: ‘I am the flower of the field.’” —Saint
Anthony of Padua (1195-1231), quoted in Fr. Ambrose Ryan, The Life of Saint Anthony
(The image accompanying this past is Gerard David’s Saint Anthony of Padua (detail of the
Saint Michael Altarpiece), c. 1510, oil on panel Kunsthistorisches Museum,
Vienna, Austria.)
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