How to make a Good Intention
Instruction from “Grace and the Sacraments”
by Michael Mueller, C.SS.R., 1890
Imprimatur + Thomas Foley
by Michael Mueller, C.SS.R., 1890
Imprimatur + Thomas Foley
When should we make a good intention?
We should make it especially in the morning; and it is advisable to make it before and after each action.- Morning Offering
O my Jesus, through the Immaculate Heart of Mary, I offer Thee all my prayers, works, joys, and sufferings of this day for Thy greater honor and glory, the salvation of my soul, for the intentions of our Holy Father, and for the poor souls in Purgatory.
Offer All Our Actions to God
As we belong entirely to God, we should consecrate to Him all the actions of the day by making a good intention in the morning: “Whether you eat or drink,” says St. Paul, “or whatsoever else you do, do all to the glory of God.” (1 Cor. x, 31.) As the effect of our good intention is destroyed by vainglory or self-love, it is advisable often to repeat good intention, especially before and after each action. Our good intention gives our actions their value and excellence before God. If our intention is terrestrial, or celestial, or divine, our action becomes, like our intention, terrestrial, or celestial, or divine. If our intention is low and bad, our action is so also, no matter how brilliant it may appear in the eyes of men. A glass of water is but a very little thing; and yet, whoever gives it with a good intention to a poor man, shall not lose his reward, says Jesus Christ. On the other hand, a man who fasts, gives alms, converts sinners, without a good, or with a bad, intention, loses the merit of his actions. In the estimation of men, the value of an act increases in proportion to the time spent in its performance; but, before God, the value of an act increases in proportion to the purity of intention with which it is performed. For, as the Scripture says, men look only to the external acts, but God regards the heart; that is, the will with which they are performed: “For man seeth those things that appear, but the Lord beholdeth the heart.” (1 Kings xvi, 7.) Can there be any action more excellent than to suffer martyrdom for the faith? But St. Paul says: “If I should deliver my body to be burned, and have not charity” (that is, do not die out of love for God), “it profiteth me nothing.” (1 Cor. xiii, 3.) It is neither torments nor death, says the fathers of the Church, but the cause and intention, that makes a martyr.Our intention is bad, if we seek only ourselves in our actions - if we perform them to be praised, or to please ourselves: “Take heed,” says our Lord, “that you do not your justice before men to be seen by them.” (Matt. vi.) If you do, I will answer you when asking a reward of me: “You have received your reward; you have obtained the praise which you sought : what can you now expect from me?” We read in the life of St. Pachomius that a certain monk make two mats whilst his companions made but one. He showed the two mats to the saint, in order to be praised; but the saint said to the other monks : “This monk has worked till night, and has offered his work to the devil.”
How To Assess Our Own Intentions
There are marks by which we may easily know whether our works have truly been done for God: 1. Remain Tranquil When UnsuccessfulThe first mark is, if we remain tranquil when our undertaking has not been successful. When we see that God has not been pleased to crown our efforts with success, we have no reason, on that account, to be disturbed; for we know that God does not demand an account of the success or failure of our undertaking, but of the purity of our intention.
2. Rejoice at the Good Done by Others
The second mark is, to rejoice at the good done by others, as if it had been done by ourselves. If we seek nothing but the divine glory, we shall not care whether it is promoted by another or by ourselves. To rejoice in the good deeds done by others, is to enrich ourselves with their good deeds; for, were we to rejoice in the sins of our neighbors, we would thereby share in their sins, and become punishable in the sight of God. But God is more inclined to reward than to punish us. Now, if His justice obliges Him to punish us for rejoicing in the sins of our neighbors, must not His goodness oblige Him to reward us for rejoicing in the good deeds of our fellow-men?
3. Not To Seek Praise from Others
The third mark is, not to desire approbation of our good works, nor gratitude from them, but to remain, even when censured and maltreated, in our usual tranquillity of mind, satisfied at having succeeded in pleasing God.