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On Loving God St. Bernard of Clairvaux
Chapter IX. Of the second and third degrees of love
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So then in the beginning man loves God, not for God's sake, but for his
own. It is something for him to know how little he can do by himself
and how much by God's help, and in that knowledge to order himself
rightly towards God, his sure support. But when tribulations, recurring
again and again, constrain him to turn to God for unfailing help, would
not even a heart as hard as iron, as cold as marble, be softened by the
goodness of such a Savior, so that he would love God not altogether
selfishly, but because He is God? Let frequent troubles drive us to
frequent supplications; and surely, tasting, we must see how gracious
the Lord is (Ps. 34.8). Thereupon His goodness once realized draws us
to love Him unselfishly, yet more than our own needs impel us to love
Him selfishly: even as the Samaritans told the woman who announced that
it was Christ who was at the well: Now we believe, not because of thy
saying: for we have heard Him ourselves, and know that this is indeed
the Christ, the savior of the world' (John 4.42). We likewise bear the
same witness to our own fleshly nature, saying, No longer do we love
God because of our necessity, but because we have tasted and seen how
gracious the Lord is'. Our temporal wants have a speech of their own,
proclaiming the benefits they have received from God's favor. Once this
is recognized it will not be hard to fulfill the commandment touching
love to our neighbors; for whosoever loves God aright loves all God's
creatures. Such love is pure, and finds no burden in the precept
bidding us purify our souls, in obeying the truth through the Spirit
unto unfeigned love of the brethren (I Peter 1.22). Loving as he ought,
he counts that command only just. Such love is thankworthy, since it is
spontaneous; pure, since it is shown not in word nor tongue, but in
deed and truth (I John 3.18); just, since it repays what it has
received. Whoso loves in this fashion, loves even as he is loved, and
seeks no more his own but the things which are Christ's, even as Jesus
sought not His own welfare, but ours, or rather ourselves. Such was the
psalmist's love when he sang: O give thanks unto the Lord, for He is
gracious' (Ps. 118.1). Whosoever praises God for His essential
goodness, and not merely because of the benefits He has bestowed, does
really love God for God's sake, and not selfishly. The psalmist was not
speaking of such love when he said: So long as thou doest well unto
thyself, men will speak good of thee'(Ps. 49.18). The third degree of
love, we have now seen, is to love God on His own account, solely
because He is God.
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