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On Loving God St. Bernard of Clairvaux
Chapter VIII. Of the first degree of love: wherein man loves God for self's sake
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Love is one of the four natural affections, which it is needless to
name since everyone knows them. And because love is natural, it is only
right to love the Author of nature first of all. Hence comes the first
and great commandment, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God.' But nature is
so frail and weak that necessity compels her to love herself first; and
this is carnal love, wherewith man loves himself first and selfishly,
as it is written, That was not first which is spiritual but that which
is natural; and afterward that which is spiritual' (I Cor. 15.46). This
is not as the precept ordains but as nature directs: No man ever yet
hated his own flesh' (Eph. 5.29). But if, as is likely, this same love
should grow excessive and, refusing to be contained within the
restraining banks of necessity, should overflow into the fields of
voluptuousness, then a command checks the flood, as if by a dike: Thou
shalt love thy neighbor as thyself'. And this is right: for he who
shares our nature should share our love, itself the fruit of nature.
Wherefore if a man find it a burden, I will not say only to relieve his
brother's needs, but to minister to his brother's pleasures, let him
mortify those same affections in himself, lest he become a
transgressor. He may cherish himself as tenderly as he chooses, if only
he remembers to show the same indulgence to his neighbor. This is the
curb of temperance imposed on thee, O man, by the law of life and
conscience, lest thou shouldest follow thine own lusts to destruction,
or become enslaved by those passions which are the enemies of thy true
welfare. Far better divide thine enjoyments with thy neighbor than with
these enemies. And if, after the counsel of the son of Sirach, thou
goest not after thy desires but refrainest thyself from thine appetites
(Ecclus. 18.30); if according to the apostolic precept having food and
raiment thou art therewith content (I Tim. 6.8), then thou wilt find it
easy to abstain from fleshly lusts which war against the soul, and to
divide with thy neighbors what thou hast refused to thine own desires.
That is a temperate and righteous love which practices self-denial in
order to minister to a brother's necessity. So our selfish love grows
truly social, when it includes our neighbors in its circle.
But if thou art reduced to want by such benevolence, what then? What
indeed, except to pray with all confidence unto Him who giveth to all
men liberally and upbraideth not (James 1.5), who openeth His hand and
filleth all things living with plenteousness (Ps. 145.16). For
doubtless He that giveth to most men more than they need will not fail
thee as to the necessaries of life, even as He hath promised: Seek ye
the Kingdom of God, and all those things shall be added unto you' (Luke
12.31). God freely promises all things needful to those who deny
themselves for love of their neighbors; and to bear the yoke of modesty
and sobriety, rather than to let sin reign in our mortal body (Rom.
6.12), that is indeed to seek the Kingdom of God and to implore His aid
against the tyranny of sin. It is surely justice to share our natural
gifts with those who share our nature.
But if we are to love our neighbors as we ought, we must have regard to
God also: for it is only in God that we can pay that debt of love
aright. Now a man cannot love his neighbor in God, except he love God
Himself; wherefore we must love God first, in order to love our
neighbors in Him. This too, like all good things, is the Lord's doing,
that we should love Him, for He hath endowed us with the possibility of
love. He who created nature sustains it; nature is so constituted that
its Maker is its protector for ever. Without Him nature could not have
begun to be; without Him it could not subsist at all. That we might not
be ignorant of this, or vainly attribute to ourselves the beneficence
of our Creator, God has determined in the depths of His wise counsel
that we should be subject to tribulations. So when man's strength fails
and God comes to his aid, it is meet and right that man, rescued by
God's hand, should glorify Him, as it is written, Call upon Me in the
time of trouble; so will I hear thee, and thou shalt praise Me' (Ps.
50.15). In such wise man, animal and carnal by nature, and loving only
himself, begins to love God by reason of that very self-love; since he
learns that in God he can accomplish all things that are good, and that
without God he can do nothing.
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