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Book I
CONTAINING A PREPARATION FOR THE WHOLE TREATISE.
CHAPTER VI. HOW THE LOVE OF GOD HAS DOMINION OVER OTHER LOVES.
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The will governs all the other faculties of man's soul, yet it is governed
by its love which makes it such as its love is. Now of all loves that of God
holds the sceptre, and has the authority of commanding so inseparably united
to it and proper to its nature, that if it be not master it ceases to be and
perishes.
Ismael was not co-heir with Isaac his younger brother, Esau was appointed to
be his younger brother's servant, Joseph was adored, not only by his
brothers, but also by his father, yea, and by his mother also, in the person
of Benjamin, as he had foreseen in the dreams of his youth. Truly it is not
without mystery that the younger of these brethren thus bear away the
advantage from the elder. Divine love is indeed the last begotten of all the
affections of man's heart, for as the Apostle says: That which is animal is
first; afterwards that which is spiritual: [29] —but this last born inherits
all the authority, and self-love, as another Esau is deputed to his service;
and not only all the other motions of the soul as his brethren adore him and
are subject to him, but also the understanding and will which are to him as
father and mother. All is subject to this heavenly love, who will either be
king or nothing, who cannot live unless he reign, nor reign if not
sovereignly.
Isaac, Jacob and Joseph were supernatural children; for their mothers,
Sarah, Rebecca and Rachel, being sterile by nature, conceived them by the
grace of the divine goodness, and for this cause they were established
masters of their brethren. Similarly, divine love is a child of miracle,
since man's will cannot conceive it if it be not poured into our hearts by
the Holy Ghost. And as supernatural it must rule and reign over all the
affections, yea, even over the understanding and will.
And although there are other supernatural movements in the soul,—fear,
piety, force, hope,—as Esau and Benjamin were supernatural children of
Rachel and Rebecca, yet is divine love still master, heir and superior, as
being the son of promise, since in virtue of it heaven is promised to man.
Salvation is shown to faith, it is prepared for hope, but it is given only
to charity. Faith points out the way to the land of promise as a pillar of
cloud and of fire, that is, light and dark; hope feeds us with its manna of
sweetness, but charity actually introduces us into it, as the Ark of
alliance, which makes for us the passage of the Jordan, that is, of the
judgment, and which shall remain amidst the people in the heavenly land
promised to the true Israelites, where neither the pillar of faith serves as
guide nor the manna of hope is used as food.
Divine love makes its abode in the most high and sublime region of the soul,
where it offers sacrifice and holocausts to the divinity as Abraham did, and
as our Saviour sacrificed himself upon the top of Calvary, to the end that
from so exalted a place it may be heard and obeyed by its people, that is,
by all the faculties and affections of the soul. These he governs with an
incomparable sweetness, for love has no convicts nor slaves, but brings all
things under its obedience with a force so delightful, that as nothing is so
strong as love nothing also is so sweet as its strength.
The virtues are in the soul to moderate its movements, and charity, as first
of all the virtues, governs and tempers them all, not only because the first
in every species of things serves as a rule and measure to the rest, but
also because God, having created man to his image and likeness, wills that
as in himself so in man all things should be ordered by love and for love.
[29] 1 Cor. xv. 46.
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