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On Loving God St. Bernard of Clairvaux
Chapter XI. Of the attainment of this perfection of love only at the resurrection
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What of the souls already released from their bodies? We believe that
they are overwhelmed in that vast sea of eternal light and of luminous
eternity. But no one denies that they still hope and desire to receive
their bodies again: whence it is plain that they are not yet wholly
transformed, and that something of self remains yet unsurrendered. Not
until death is swallowed up in victory, and perennial light overflows
the uttermost bounds of darkness, not until celestial glory clothes our
bodies, can our souls be freed entirely from self and give themselves
up to God. For until then souls are bound to bodies, if not by a vital
connection of sense, still by natural affection; so that without their
bodies they cannot attain to their perfect consummation, nor would they
if they could. And although there is no defect in the soul itself
before the restoration of its body, since it has already attained to
the highest state of which it is by itself capable, yet the spirit
would not yearn for reunion with the flesh if without the flesh it
could be consummated.
And finally, Right dear in the sight of the Lord is the death of His
saints' (Ps. 116.15). But if their death is precious, what must such a
life as theirs be! No wonder that the body shall seem to add fresh
glory to the spirit; for though it is weak and mortal, it has availed
not a little for mutual help. How truly he spake who said, All things
work together for good to them that love God' (Rom. 8.28). The body is
a help to the soul that loves God, even when it is ill, even when it is
dead, and all the more when it is raised again from the dead: for
illness is an aid to penitence; death is the gate of rest; and the
resurrection will bring consummation. So, rightly, the soul would not
be perfected without the body, since she recognizes that in every
condition it has been needful to her good.
The flesh then is a good and faithful comrade for a good soul: since
even when it is a burden it assists; when the help ceases, the burden
ceases too; and when once more the assistance begins, there is no
longer a burden. The first state is toilsome, but fruitful; the second
is idle, but not monotonous: the third is glorious. Hear how the
Bridegroom in Canticles bids us to this threefold progress: Eat, O
friends; drink, yea, drink abundantly, O beloved' (Cant. 5.1). He
offers food to those who are laboring with bodily toil; then He calls
the resting souls whose bodies are laid aside, to drink; and finally He
urges those who have resumed their bodies to drink abundantly. Surely
those He styles beloved' must overflow with charity; and that is the
difference between them and the others, whom He calls not beloved' but
friends'. Those who yet groan in the body are dear to Him, according to
the love that they have; those released from the bonds of flesh are
dearer because they have become readier and abler to love than
hitherto. But beyond either of these classes are those whom He calls
beloved': for they have received the second garment, that is, their
glorified bodies, so that now nothing of self remains to hinder or
disturb them, and they yield themselves eagerly and entirely to loving
God. This cannot be so with the others; for the first have the weight
of the body to bear, and the second desires the body again with
something of selfish expectation.
At first then the faithful soul eats her bread, but alas! in the sweat
of her face. Dwelling in the flesh, she walks as yet by faith, which
must work through love. As faith without works is dead, so work itself
is food for her; even as our Lord saith, My meat is to do the will of
Him that sent Me' (John 4.34). When the flesh is laid aside, she eats
no more the bread of carefulness, but is allowed to drink deeply of the
wine of love, as if after a repast. But the wine is not yet unmingled;
even as the Bridegroom saith in another place, I have drunk My wine
with My milk' (Cant. 5.1). For the soul mixes with the wine of God's
love the milk of natural affection, that is, the desire for her body
and its glorification. She glows with the wine of holy love which she
has drunk; but she is not yet all on fire, for she has tempered the
potency of that wine with milk. The unmingled wine would enrapture the
soul and make her wholly unconscious of self; but here is no such
transport for she is still desirous of her body. When that desire is
appeased, when the one lack is supplied, what should hinder her then
from yielding herself utterly to God, losing her own likeness and being
made like unto Him? At last she attains to that chalice of the heavenly
wisdom, of which it is written, My cup shall be full.' Now indeed she
is refreshed with the abundance of the house of God, where all selfish,
carking care is done away, and where, for ever safe, she drinks the
fruit of the vine, new and pure, with Christ in the Kingdom of His
Father (Matt. 26.29).
It is Wisdom who spreads this threefold supper where all the repast is
love; Wisdom who feeds the toilers, who gives drink to those who rest,
who floods with rapture those that reign with Christ. Even as at an
earthly banquet custom and nature serve meat first and then wine, so
here. Before death, while we are still in mortal flesh, we eat the
labors of our hands, we swallow with an effort the food so gained; but
after death, we shall begin eagerly to drink in the spiritual life and
finally, reunited to our bodies, and rejoicing in fullness of delight,
we shall be refreshed with immortality. This is what the Bridegroom
means when He saith: Eat, O friends; drink, yea, drink abundantly, O
beloved.' Eat before death; begin to drink after death; drink
abundantly after the resurrection. Rightly are they called beloved who
have drunk abundantly of love; rightly do they drink abundantly who are
worthy to be brought to the marriage supper of the Lamb, eating and
drinking at His table in His Kingdom (Rev. 19.9; Luke 22.30). At that
supper, He shall present to Himself a glorious Church, not having spot,
or wrinkle, or any such thing (Eph. 5.27). Then truly shall He refresh
His beloved; then He shall give them drink of His pleasures, as out of
the river (Ps. 36.8). While the Bridegroom clasps the Bride in tender,
pure embrace, then the rivers of the flood thereof shall make glad the
city of God (Ps. 46.4). And this refers to the Son of God Himself, who
will come forth and serve them, even as He hath promised; so that in
that day the righteous shall be glad and rejoice before God: they shall
also be merry and joyful (Ps. 68.3). Here indeed is appeasement without
weariness: here never-quenched thirst for knowledge, without distress;
here eternal and infinite desire which knows no want; here, finally, is
that sober inebriation which comes not from drinking new wine but from
enjoying God (Acts 2.13). The fourth degree of love is attained for
ever when we love God only and supremely, when we do not even love
ourselves except for God's sake; so that He Himself is the reward of
them that love Him, the everlasting reward of an everlasting love.
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