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Time & Perspective Quote by Alphonsus Liguori

"What grieves me most in my past offenses, O my loving God, is not so much the punishment I have deserved, as the displeasure I have given You, Who are worthy of infinite love"

About this Quote

Guilt, here, isn’t a legal problem. It’s a love story gone wrong. Alphonsus Liguori frames sin less as rule-breaking than as relational damage: the wound that matters isn’t the “punishment I have deserved” but the “displeasure I have given You.” That pivot is the engine of the line. He demotes fear as a motive and promotes sorrow as intimacy - a grief calibrated not to self-preservation but to the harmed beloved.

The intent is devotional and tactical at once. Liguori was a moral theologian and founder of the Redemptorists, writing in a Catholic world shaped by post-Tridentine discipline and an often anxious penitential culture. By centering regret on God’s “infinite love,” he tries to rewire repentance away from scrupulous accounting. The speaker isn’t bargaining with a judge; he’s confessing to someone “loving,” and that adjective isn’t ornamental. It’s a spiritual cue: if God is loving, then repentance can be honest without becoming theatrical self-hatred.

The subtext is also a quiet argument about what “real” contrition looks like. Catholic tradition distinguishes fear-based repentance (imperfect contrition) from love-based repentance (perfect contrition). Liguori is clearly coaching the reader toward the latter: sorrow not because consequences are scary, but because love has been slighted.

It works because it’s psychologically astute. It refuses the ego’s favorite version of guilt - the kind that keeps the spotlight on me and my pain - and redirects attention to the one relationship that, in his theology, anchors every other. The line makes repentance feel less like a sentence and more like a return.

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APA Style (7th ed.)
Liguori, Alphonsus. (n.d.). What grieves me most in my past offenses, O my loving God, is not so much the punishment I have deserved, as the displeasure I have given You, Who are worthy of infinite love. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-grieves-me-most-in-my-past-offenses-o-my-42376/

Chicago Style
Liguori, Alphonsus. "What grieves me most in my past offenses, O my loving God, is not so much the punishment I have deserved, as the displeasure I have given You, Who are worthy of infinite love." FixQuotes. Accessed February 3, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-grieves-me-most-in-my-past-offenses-o-my-42376/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"What grieves me most in my past offenses, O my loving God, is not so much the punishment I have deserved, as the displeasure I have given You, Who are worthy of infinite love." FixQuotes, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-grieves-me-most-in-my-past-offenses-o-my-42376/. Accessed 3 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

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Alphonsus Liguori (September 27, 1696 - August 1, 1787) was a Clergyman from Italy.

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