Random Excerpts from Newman's PPS and Catholic Sermons

At the end of my post on the Indwelling of the Spirit, Part II on Friday, September 27 for my Son Rise Morning Show spot this morning, I commented:
What Newman learned from the Fathers of the Church about the Indwelling of the Spirit and deification he poured into his sermons and his pastoral care as both an Anglican minister and a Catholic priest, urging his congregations to be aware of this indwelling and be willing to cooperate with its Grace and inspiration for the faith, hope, and charity it imparted.
After doing so, I thought of examples I could post to demonstrate that assertion and went to four sermons from the first four volumes of eight published Parochial and Plain Sermons, finding these statements:
Example One: PPSVolume 1, Sermon 16. The Christian Mysteries
Therefore, if we feel the necessity of coming to Christ, yetthe difficulty, let us recollect that the gift of coming is in God's hands, andthat we must pray Him to give it to us. Christ does not merely tell us, that wecannot come of ourselves (though this He does tell us), but He tells us alsowith whom the power of coming is lodged, with His Father,—that we may seek itof Him. It is true, religion has an austere appearance to those who never havetried it; its doctrines full of mystery, its precepts of harshness; so that itis uninviting, offending different men in different ways, but in some wayoffending all. When then we feel within us the risings of this opposition toChrist, proud aversion to His Gospel, or {214} a low-minded longing after thisworld, let us pray God to draw us; and though we cannot move a step withoutHim, at least let us try to move. He looks into our hearts and sees ourstrivings even before we strive, and He blesses and strengthens even ourfeebleness. Let us get rid of curious and presumptuous thoughts by going aboutour business, whatever it is; and let us mock and baffle the doubts which Satanwhispers to us by acting against them. No matter whether webelieve doubtingly or not, or know clearly or not, so that we act uponour belief. The rest will follow in time; part in this world, part in the next.Doubts may pain, but they cannot harm, unless we give way to them; and thatwe ought not to give way, our conscience tells us, so that ourcourse is plain. And the more we are in earnest to "work out oursalvation," the less shall we care to know how those things really are,which perplex us. At length, when our hearts are in our work, we shall beindisposed to take the trouble of listening to curious truths (if they are butcurious), though we might have them explained to us. For what says the HolyScripture? that of speculations "there is no end," and they are"a weariness to the flesh;" but that we must "fear God and keepHis commandments; for this is the whole duty of man." [Eccles. xii. 12,13.]
Example Two: PPSVolume 2, Sermon 14. Saving Knowledge
To know God is life eternal, and to believe in the Gospelmanifestation of Him is to know Him; but how are we to "know that we knowHim?" How are we to be sure that we are not mistaking some dream of ourown for the true and clear Vision? How can we tell we are not like gazers upona distant prospect through a misty atmosphere, who mistake one object foranother? The text answers us clearly and intelligibly; though some Christianshave recourse to other proofs of it, or will not have patience to askthemselves the question. They say they are quite certain that they have truefaith; for faith carries with it its own evidence, and admits of no mistaking,the true spiritual conviction being unlike all others. On the other hand, St.John says, "Hereby do we know that we know Him, if we keep Hiscommandments." Obedience is the test of Faith.
Thus the whole duty and work of a Christian is made up ofthese two parts, Faith and Obedience; "looking unto Jesus," theDivine Object as well as Author of our faith, and acting according to His will.Not as if a certain frame of mind, certain notions, affections, feelings, andtempers, were not a necessary condition of a saving state; but, so it is, theApostle does not insist upon it, as if it were sure to follow, if our hearts dobut grow into these two chief objects, the view of God in Christ and the diligentaim to obey Him in our conduct. {154}
Example Three: PPSVolume 3, Sermon 9. A Particular Providence as Revealed in the Gospel
These are the meditations which come upon the Christian toconsole him, while he is with Christ upon the holy mount. And, when he descendsto his daily duties, they are still his inward strength, though he is notallowed to tell the vision to those around him. They make his countenance toshine, make him cheerful, collected, serene, and firm in the midst of alltemptation, persecution, or bereavement. And with such thoughts before us, howbase and miserable does the world appear in all its pursuits and doctrines! Howtruly miserable does it seem to seek good from the creature; to covet station,wealth, or credit; to choose for ourselves, in fancy, this or that mode oflife; to affect the manners and fashions of the great; to spend our time infollies; to be discontented, quarrelsome, jealous or envious, censorious orresentful; fond of unprofitable talk, and eager for the news of the day; busyabout public matters which concern us not; hot in the cause of this or thatinterest or party; or set upon gain; or devoted to the {127} increase of barrenknowledge! And at the end of our days, when flesh and heart fail, what will beour consolation, though we have made ourselves rich, or have served an office,or been the first man among our equals, or have depressed a rival, or managedthings our own way, or have settled splendidly, or have been intimate with thegreat, or have fared sumptuously, or have gained a name! Say, even if we obtainthat which lasts longest, a place in history, yet, after all, what ashes shallwe have eaten for bread! And, in that awful hour, when death is in sight, willHe, whose eye is now so loving towards us, and whose hand falls on us sogently, will He acknowledge us any more? or, if He still speaks, will His voicehave any power to stir us? rather will it not repel us, as it did Judas, by thevery tenderness with which it would invite us to Him?
Example Four: PPS Volume4, Sermon 12. The Church a Home for the Lonely
May thoughts like these, my brethren, sink deep into yourhearts, and bring forth good fruit in holiness and {199} constancy ofobedience. Whatever has been your past life, whether (blessed be God) you havenever trusted aught but God's sacred light within you, or whether you havetrusted the world and it has failed you, God's mercies in Christ are hereoffered to you in full abundance. Come to Him for them; approach him in the wayHe has appointed, and you shall find Him, as He has said, upon His Holy Hill ofZion. Let not your past sins keep you from Him. Whatever they be, they cannotinterfere with His grace stored up for all who come to Him for it. If you havein past years neglected Him, perchance you will have to suffer for it; but fearnot; He will give you grace and strength to bear such punishment as He may bepleased to inflict. Let not the thought of His just severity keep you at adistance. He can make even pain pleasant to you. Keeping from Him is not toescape from His power, only from His love. Surrender yourselves tohim in faith and holy fear. He is All-merciful, though All-righteous; andthough He is awful in His judgments, He is nevertheless more wonderfullypitiful, and of tender compassion above our largest expectations; and in thecase of all who humbly seek him, He will in "wrath remember mercy."

Example One: Faith and Prejudice, The Calls of Grace:
And if you are conscious that your hearts are hard, and are desirous that they should be softened, do not despair. All things are possible to you, through God's grace. Come to Him for the will and the power to do that to which He calls you. He never forsakes anyone who calls upon him. He never puts any trial on a man but He gives Him grace to overcome it. Do not despair then; nay do not despond, even though you do come to Him, yet are not at once exalted to overcome yourselves. He gives grace by little and little. It is by coming daily into His presence, that by degrees we find ourselves awed by that presence and able to believe and obey Him. Therefore if any one desires illumination to know God's will as well as strength to do it, let him come to Mass daily, if he possibly can. At least let him present himself daily before the Blessed Sacrament, and, as it were, offer his heart to His Incarnate Saviour, presenting it as a reasonable offering to be influenced, changed and sanctified under the eye and by the grace of the Eternal Son. And let him every now and then through the day make some {51} short prayer or ejaculation, to the Lord and Saviour, and again to His Blessed Mother, the immaculate most Blessed Virgin Mary, or again to his guardian Angel, or to his Patron Saint. Let him now and then collect his mind and place himself, as if in heaven, in the presence of God; as if before God's throne; let him fancy he sees the All-Holy Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world. These are the means by which, with God's grace, he will be able in course of time to soften his heart—not all at once, but by degrees; not by his own power or wisdom, but by the grace of God blessing his endeavour. Thus it is that Saints have begun. They have begun by these little things, and so become at length Saints. They were not saints all at once, but by little and little. And so we, who are not saints, must still proceed by the same road; by lowliness, patience, trust in God, recollection that we are in His presence, and thankfulness for His mercies.
Example Two: Discourses to Mixed Congregations, God's Will the End of Life:
In each excerpt there is a common call to acknowledge the objective truth of "God's mercies in Christ . . . here offered to you in full abundance" and our need to respond to those mercies with belief and obedience by "lowliness, patience, trust in God, recollection that we are in His presence, and thankfulness for His mercies." Newman warns his readers about the choices they face and the consequences of their choices, but emphasizes the mercy and forgiveness God has for the repentant sinner who believes and tries again.
The end of a thing is the test. It was our Lord's rejoicing in His last solemn hour, that He had done the work for which He was sent. "I have glorified Thee on earth," He says in His prayer, "I have finished the work which Thou gavest Me to do; I have manifested Thy name to the men whom Thou hast given Me out of the world." It was St. Paul's consolation also; "I have fought the good fight, I have finished the course, I have kept the faith; henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of justice, which the Lord shall render to me in that day, the just Judge". Alas! alas! how different will be our view of things when we come to die, or when we have passed into eternity, from the dreams and pretences with which we beguile ourselves now! What will Babel do for us then? Will it rescue our souls from the purgatory or the hell to which it sends them? If we were created, it was that we might serve God; if we have His gifts, it is that we may glorify Him; if we have a conscience, it is that we may obey it; if we have the prospect of heaven, it is that we may keep it before {122} us; if we have light, that we may follow it; if we have grace, that we may save ourselves by means of it. Alas! alas! for those who die without fulfilling their mission! who were called to be holy, and lived in sin; who were called to worship Christ, and who plunged into this giddy and unbelieving world; who were called to fight, and who remained idle; who were called to be Catholics, and who did but remain in the religion of their birth! Alas for those who have had gifts and talent, and have not used, or have misused, or abused them; who have had wealth, and have spent it on themselves; who have had abilities, and have advocated what was sinful, or ridiculed what was true, or scattered doubts against what was sacred; who have had leisure, and have wasted it on wicked companions, or evil books, or foolish amusements! Alas! for those, of whom the best that can be said is, that they are harmless and naturally blameless, while they never have attempted to cleanse their hearts or to live in God's sight!
Saint John Henry Newman, pray for us!