Many years ago, before any of these districts even existed, I used to go to the King's Hospital, many, many years ago, over forty, where were you all then...?
When it is received in a Christian way, a person who is suffering physically or mentally can be very happy.
And I remember that by the bedside of a woman with tuberculosis, - because tuberculosis was a terminal sickness then, like cancer now, there was no cure, - a wretched women who had had a high position in society, because of some difficult circumstances her family had thrown her out, there she lay on a pallet in that hospital - and she was happy, and she made the effort to smile, and she smiled, because smiling was a mortification, but from another point of view it wasn't a mortification, she was smiling at God, thanking him for her suffering, and there I taught her to say this prayer:
"Blessed be suffering, loved be suffering, sanctified be suffering, glorified be suffering." You know it as well as I do. So suffering, my daughter, is not evil, it is bad when it is received with bad will. But when it is received in a Christian way, a person who is suffering physically or mentally can be very happy, and doesn't go telling everyone how much she's suffering, she keeps it quiet, like a caress from God.