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Book VIII
OF THE LOVE OF CONFORMITY, BY WHICH WE UNITE OUR WILL TO THE WILL OF GOD, SIGNIFIED UNTO US BY HIS COMMANDMENTS, COUNSELS AND INSPIRATIONS.
CHAPTER VI. OF THE CONFORMITY OF OUR WILL TO THAT WILL OF GOD WHICH IS SIGNIFIED UNTO US BY HIS COUNSELS.
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A Commandment testifies a most entire and absolute will in him who gives it,
but counsel only represents a will of desire: a commandment obliges us,
counsel only invites us; a commandment makes the transgressors thereof
culpable; counsel only makes such as do not follow it less worthy of praise;
those who violate commandments deserve damnation, those who neglect counsels
deserve only to be less glorified. There is a difference between commanding
and recommending: in commanding we use authority to oblige, but in
recommending we use friendliness to induce and incite: a commandment imposes
necessity, counsel and recommendation induce to what is of greater utility:
commandments correspond to obedience, counsels to credence: we follow
counsel with intention to please, and commandments lest we should displease.
And thence it is that the love of complacency which obliges us to please the
beloved, consequently urges us to follow his counsels, and the love of
benevolence, which desires that all wills and affections should be subjected
unto him, causes that we not only will what he ordains, but also what he
counsels and exhorts to: as the love and respect which a good child bears to
his father make him resolve to live not only according to the commandments
which his father imposes, but also according to the desires and inclinations
which he manifests.
A counsel is indeed given for the benefit of him who receives it, to the end
that he may become perfect: If thou wilt be perfect, said our Saviour, go
sell all that thou hast, give it to the poor, and come, follow me. [363] But
the loving heart does not receive a counsel for its utility, but to conform
itself to the desire of him who gives the counsel, and to render him the
homage due to his will. And therefore it receives not counsels but in such
sort as God desires, nor does God desire that every one should observe all
counsels, but such only as are suitable, according to the diversity of
persons, times, occasions, strengths, as charity requires: for she it is
who, as queen of all the virtues, of all the commandments, of all the
counsels, and, in short, of all Christian laws and works, gives to all of
them their rank, order, season and worth.
If your assistance be truly necessary to your father or mother to enable
them to live, it is no time then to practise the counsel of retiring into a
monastery, for charity ordains that you presently put into execution its
command of honouring, serving, aiding and succouring your father or your
mother. You are perhaps a prince, by whose posterity the subjects of your
crown are to be preserved in peace, and assured against tyranny, sedition,
civil wars: the effecting, therefore, of so great a good, obliges you to
beget lawful successors in a holy marriage. It is either not to lose
chastity, or at least to lose it chastely, when for love of charity it is
sacrificed to the public good. Are you weak and uncertain in your health,
and does it require great support? Do not then voluntarily undertake actual
poverty, for this is forbidden you by charity. Charity not only forbids
fathers of families to sell all and give it to the poor, but also commands
them honestly to gather together what is requisite for the support and
education of wife, children and servants: as also it commands kings and
princes to lay up treasures, which, being acquired by a laudible frugality,
and not by tyrannical measures, serve as wholesome defences against visible
enemies. Does not S. Paul counsel such as are married, that, the time of
prayer being ended, they should return to the well-ordered course of their
married life? [364]
The counsels are all given for the perfection of the Christian people, but
not for that of each Christian in particular. There are circumstances which
make them sometimes impossible, sometimes unprofitable, sometimes perilous,
sometimes hurtful to some men, which is one of the reasons why Our Saviour
said of one of the counsels, what he would have to be understood of them
all: He that can receive it, let him receive it: [365] as though he had
said, according to S. Jerome's exposition: he that can win and bear away the
honour of chastity as a prize of renown, let him take it, for it is proposed
to such as shall run valiantly. Not every one then is able, that is, it is
not expedient for every one, to observe always all the counsels, for as they
are granted in favour of charity, so is this the rule and measure by which
they are put in practice.
When, therefore, charity so orders, monks and religious are drawn out of
their cloisters to be made cardinals, prelates, parish-priests, yea
sometimes they are even joined in matrimony for a kingdom's repose, as I
have already said. And if charity make those leave their cloister that bad
bound themselves thereto by solemn vow,—for better reason, and upon less
occasion, one may by the authority of the same charity, counsel many to live
at home, to keep their means, to marry, yea to turn soldiers and go to war,
which is so perilous a profession.
Now when charity draws some to poverty and withdraws others from it, when
she directs some to marriage and others to continence, when she shuts one up
in a cloister and makes another quit it, she is not bound to give account
thereof to any one: for she has the plenitude of power in Christian laws, as
it is written: charity can do all things; she has the perfection of
prudence, according to that: charity does nothing wrongly. [366] And if any
would contest, and demand why she so does, she will boldly make answer: The
Lord hath need of it. [367] All is made for charity, and charity for God.
All must serve her and she none: no, she serves not her well-beloved, whose
servant she is not, but his spouse, whom she does not serve, but love: for
which cause we are to take our orders from her how to exercise counsels. To
some she will appoint chastity without poverty, to others obedience and not
chastity, to others fasting but not alms-deeds, to others alms-deeds and
fasting, to others solitude and not the pastoral charge, to others
intercourse with men and not solitude. In fine she is a sacred water, by
which the garden of the church is fertilized, and though she herself have no
colour that can be called colour, yet the flowers which she makes spring
have each one its particular colour. She makes Martyrs redder than the rose,
Virgins whiter than the lily; some she dyes with the fine violet of
mortification, others with the yellow of marriage-cares, variously employing
the counsels, for the perfection of the souls who are so happy as to live
under her conduct.
[363] Matt. xix. 21.
[364] 1 Cor. vii. 5.
[365] Matt. xix. 11.
[366] 1 Cor. xiii.
[367] Matt. xxi. 3.
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