Prière pour demander à Dieu le bon usage des maladies
Seigneur, dont l'esprit est si bon et si doux en toutes choses, et qui êtes si miséricordieux que non seulement les prospérités mais les disgrâces mêmes qui arrivent à vos élus sont des effets de votre miséricorde.
Our renderingLord, whose spirit is so good and gentle in all things, and who are so merciful that not only prosperity but even the misfortunes that befall your elect are effects of your mercy.
What it is
Pascal's only literary prayer composed as a formal text, written near the end of his life when he was gravely ill. Published in 1666 in the collection Divers traités de piété and later circulated in Port-Royal devotional circles, it asks God that suffering be received as a spiritual corrective rather than endured with impatience or sought to be escaped. The prayer reflects the Jansenist theology of suffering as a participation in Christ's Passion and of the body's destruction as a path toward divine union. It was used within the Port-Royal community as a model of interior surrender under affliction.
Why it still matters
This prayer speaks directly to anyone navigating serious illness or chronic pain; its petition that God use sickness for sanctification rather than healing alone is a rare and bracing template for Christian realism about suffering.
Kept alongside
Pensées de M. Pascal sur la religion et sur quelques autres sujets
Pascal's posthumously published fragmentary apology for the Christian faith, compiled and edited by the Solitaires of Port-Royal and personally sponsored by Artus Gouffier, Duc de Roannez, Pascal's closest aristocratic friend and Jansenist patron. The work grew directly out of Pascal's spiritual direction of the Roannez family: passages from his letters to Charlotte de Roannez (1656–1657) were woven into the 1670 Port-Royal edition. The Port-Royal editors transformed the unfinished apology into a book of moral and religious meditation, making it the central devotional-apologetic text of the Jansenist noble circle at Paris and Versailles. Pascal's vision of God as hidden (Deus absconditus) and of the human heart's radical incapacity without grace gave Jansenist aristocrats a vocabulary for rigorous interior examination.
Le Mémorial (Nuit de feu)
Mémorial
The most intimate of Pascal's surviving spiritual documents: a two-sided parchment recording his 'night of fire' mystical experience, which he kept sewn into the lining of his coat until death. Discovered only after his death in 1662, the Memorial is entirely private — never intended for publication — yet it became a touchstone text for the Port-Royal circle once it was described and circulated among the Solitaires. Pope Francis called it 'one of the most original texts in the history of spirituality.' Its stark address to the 'God of Abraham, God of Isaac, God of Jacob — not of the philosophers and scholars' defines the Jansenist insistence on a God of personal encounter over abstract deism.
Essais de morale
Pierre Nicole's multi-volume series of practical moral and devotional essays was the most widely read Jansenist spiritual reading material among the French aristocracy and haute bourgeoisie. The Marquise de Sévigné, one of the most prominent aristocratic readers of the Port-Royal milieu, turned to Nicole's Essais as her principal spiritual sustenance from 1671 onward, making the work the de facto devotional manual of the devout Parisian nobility. Nicole was Pascal's close collaborator at Port-Royal, and his essays reflect the same Augustinian anthropology — the total insufficiency of human nature without grace — in a format accessible for daily reading by noble laypeople.