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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 VIII. THAT THE CONTEMPT OF THE EVANGELICAL COUNSELS IS A GREAT SIN.
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The words in which our Saviour exhorts us to tend towards and aim at
perfection, are so forcible and so pressing, that we cannot dissemble the
obligation we have to undertake to carry out that design. Be holy, says he,
because I am holy. [380] He that is holy, let him be sanctified still; and
he that is just, let him be justified still. [381] Be perfect, as your
heavenly Father is perfect. [382] For this cause, the great S. Bernard
writing to the glorious S. Guerin, Abbot of Aulps, whose life and miracles
have left so sweet an odour in this diocese: "The just man," says he, "never
says it is enough; he still hungers and thirsts after justice."
Truly, Theotimus, in temporal matters nothing suffices him who is not
satisfied with what is enough; for what can suffice him to whom sufficiency
is not sufficient? But in spiritual goods he has not sufficient who is
satisfied with what is enough, and sufficiency is not sufficient, because
true sufficiency in divine things consists partly in the desire of
affluence. God in the beginning commanded the earth to bring forth the green
herb, and such as may seed, and the fruit-tree yielding fruit after its
kind, which has also seed in itself. [383]
And do we not see by experience, that plants and fruits are not come to
their full growth and maturity till they bring forth their seeds and pips,
whence other trees and plants of the same kind spring. Never do our virtues
come to their full stature and measure, till such time as they beget in us
desires of progress, which like spiritual seeds serve for the production of
new degrees of virtue. And, methinks, the earth of our heart is commanded to
bring forth the plants of virtue, which bear the fruits of good works, every
one in its kind, and having the seeds of desires and resolutions of ever
multiplying and advancing in perfection. And the virtue that bears not the
seed of these desires is not yet come to its growth and maturity. "So then,"
says S. Bernard to the tepid man, "you do not want to advance in perfection?
No. Nor yet grow worse? No, truly. What, then—you would neither grow better
nor worse?—poor man, you would be what cannot be. Nothing, indeed, in the
world is either stable or constant; but of man it is said even more
specially that he never remaineth in the same state. [384] It is necessary
then that he either go forward or backward."
Now I say not, any more than does S. Bernard, that it is a sin not to
practise the counsels. No, in truth, Theotimus: for it is the very
difference between commandments and counsels, that the commandment obliges
us under pain of sin, and the counsel only invites us without pain of sin.
Yet I distinctly say that to contemn the aiming after Christian perfection
is a great sin, and that it is a still greater to contemn the invitation by
which our Saviour calls us to it; but it is an insupportable impiety to
contemn the counsels and means which our Saviour points out for the
attainment of it. It were a heresy to say, that our Saviour had not given us
good counsel, and a blasphemy to say to God: Depart from us, we desire not
the knowledge of thy ways: [385] but it is a horrible irreverence towards
him who with so much love and sweetness invites us to perfection, to say: I
will not be holy or perfect, nor have any larger portion of thy benevolence,
nor follow the counsels which thou givest me to make progress in perfection.
We may indeed without sin not follow the counsels, on account of the
affection we may have to other things: as for example, it is lawful for a
man not to sell what he possesseth to give to the poor, because he has not
the courage to make so entire a renunciation. It is also lawful to marry,
because one loves, or because one has not strength of mind necessary to
undertake the war which must be waged against the flesh. But to profess not
to wish to follow the counsels, nor any one of them, cannot be done without
contempt of him who gives them. Not to follow the counsel of virginity, and
so to marry, is not wrong, but marrying as if putting marriage higher than
chastity, as heretics do, that is a great contempt either of the counsellor
or of his counsel. To drink wine against the doctor's advice when overcome
with thirst or with a desire to drink, is not precisely to contemn the
doctor nor his advice: but to say—I will not follow the doctor's advice—must
necessarily proceed from some bad opinion one harbours of him. Now as
regards men, one may often contemn their counsel, without contemning those
who give it, because to think that a man may have erred is not to contemn
him. But to reject and contemn God's counsel, can only spring from an idea
that he has not counselled us well; which cannot be thought but by a spirit
of blasphemy, as though God were not wise enough to be able, or good enough
to will, to give good advice. We may say the same of the counsels of the
Church, which by reason of the continued assistance of the Holy Ghost, who
instructs and conducts her in all truth, can never give evil advice.
[380] Levit. xi. 44.
[381] Apoc. xxii. 11
[382] Matt. v. 48.
[383] Gen. i. 11.
[384] Job xiv. 2.
[385] Job xxi. 14.
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