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Book VII
OF THE UNION OF THE SOUL WITH HER GOD, WHICH IS PERFECTED IN PRAYER.
CHAPTER VII. HOW LOVE IS THE LIFE OF THE SOUL, AND CONTINUATION OF THE DISCOURSE ON THE ECSTATIC LIFE.
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The soul is the first act and principle of all the vital movements of man,
and, as Aristotle expresses it, the principle whereby we live, feel and
understand: whence it follows, that we know the different kinds of life from
the difference of movements; so much so, indeed, that animals when entirely
without movement are entirely without life. Even so, Theotimus, love is the
first act or principle of our devout or spiritual life, by which we live,
feel and move: and our spiritual life is such as the movements of our love
are, and a heart that has no movement nor affection, has no love; as on the
contrary a heart possessed of love is not without affective movement. As
soon therefore as we have set our affection upon Jesus Christ, we have
consequently placed in him our spiritual life. But he is now hidden in God
in heaven, as God was hidden in him while he was here below. Our life
therefore is hidden in him, and when he shall appear in glory, our life and
our love shall likewise appear with him in God. Hence S. Ignatius (Martyr)
as S. Denis relates, said that his love was crucified, as though he would
say: my natural and human love, with all the passions that depend on it, is
nailed to the cross; I have put it to death as a mortal love, which made my
heart live a mortal life; and as my Saviour was crucified and died according
to his mortal life, so did I die with him upon the cross according to my
natural love, which was the mortal life of my soul, to the end that I might
rise again to the supernatural life of a love which, because it can be
exercised in heaven, is consequently also immortal.
When therefore we see a soul that has raptures in prayer, by which she goes
out from and mounts above herself in God, and yet has no ecstasy in her
life, that is, leads not a life elevated and united to God, by abnegation of
worldly concupiscences, by mortification of natural wills and inclinations,
by an interior sweetness, simplicity, humility, and above all by a continual
charity;—believe, Theotimus, that all these raptures are exceedingly
doubtful and dangerous; these are raptures fit to stir up men to admiration,
but not to sanctify them. For what can it profit the soul to be ravished
unto God by prayer, while in her life and conversation she is ravished by
earthly, base and natural affections; to be above herself in prayer and
below herself in life and operation, to be angelic in meditation and brutish
in conversation? It is to halt on two sides, [341] to swear by the Lord and
swear by Melchom. [342] In a word it is a true mark that such raptures and
ecstasies are but operations and deceits of the evil spirit. Blessed are
they who live a superhuman and ecstatic life, raised above themselves,
though they may not be ravished above themselves in prayer. There are many
saints in heaven who were never in ecstasy or rapture of contemplation. For
how many martyrs and great saints do we see in history never to have had
other privilege in prayer than that of devotion and fervour. But there was
never saint who had not the ecstasy and rapture of life and operation,
overcoming himself and his natural inclinations.
And who sees not, I pray you, Theotimus, that it is the ecstasy of life and
operation that the great Apostle principally speaks of when he says: I live
now, not I, but Christ liveth in me; [343] for he himself explains it in
other terms to the Romans, saying that: Our old man is crucified with him,
[344] that we are dead to sin with him, and that we are also risen with him
to walk in newness of life, that we may serve sin no longer. Behold,
Theotimus, how two men are represented in each of us, and consequently two
lives; the one of the old man, which is an old life; like, they say, the
eagle's, which having grown into old age can but drag its wings along, and
is unable to take flight: the other is the life of the new man, which also
is a new life, like that of the eagle, which, being disburdened of its old
feathers, now shaken off into the sea, takes new ones, and having grown
young again, flies in the newness of its strength.
In the first life we live according to the old man, that is, according to
the failings, weaknesses and infirmities contracted by the sin of our first
father, Adam; and therefore we live to Adam's sin, and our life is a mortal
life, yea death itself. In the second life we live according to the new man,
that is, according to the graces, favours, ordinances and wills of our
Saviour, and consequently, we live to salvation and redemption, and this new
life is a lively, living and life-giving life. But whosoever would attain
the new life, must make his way by the death of the old, crucifying his
flesh with the vices and concupiscences [345] thereof, burying it under the
waters of holy baptism or penance: as Naaman drowned and buried in the
waters of Jordan his leprous and infected old life, to live a new, sound,
and spotless life; for one might well have said of him, that he was not now
the old, leprous, corrupt, infected Naaman, but a new, clean, sound, and
honourable Naaman, because he was dead to leprosy and was living to health
and cleanness.
Now whosoever is raised up again to this new life of our Saviour, neither
lives to himself, nor for himself, but to his Saviour, in his Saviour, and
for his Saviour. So you also reckon, says S. Paul, that you are dead to sin
but alive unto God, in Christ Jesus our Lord. [346]
[341] 3 Kings xviii. 21.
[342] Soph. i. 5.
[343] Gal. ii. 20.
[344] Rom. vi. 6.
[345] Gal. v. 24.
[346] Rom. vi. 11.
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