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Book I
CONTAINING A PREPARATION FOR THE WHOLE TREATISE.
CHAPTER IX. THAT LOVE TENDS TO UNION.
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The great Solomon describes, in an admirably delicious manner, the loves of
the Saviour and the devout soul, in that divine work which for its excellent
sweetness is named the Canticle of Canticles. And to raise ourselves by a
more easy flight to the consideration of this spiritual love which is
exercised between God and us by the correspondence of the movements of our
hearts with the inspirations of his divine majesty, he makes use of a
perpetual representation of the loves of a chaste shepherd and a modest
shepherdess. Now making the spouse or bride begin first by manner of a
certain surprise of love, he first puts into her mouth this ejaculation: Let
him kiss me with the kiss of his mouth. [30] Notice, Theotimus, how the
soul, in the person of this shepherdess, has but the one aim, in the first
expression of her desire, of a chaste union with her spouse, protesting that
it is the only end of her ambition and the only thing she aspires after;
for, I pray you, what other thing would this first sigh intimate? Let him
kiss me with the kiss of his mouth.
A kiss from all ages as by natural instinct has been employed to represent
perfect love, that is, the union of hearts, and not without cause: we
express and make known our passions and the movements which our souls have
in common with the animals, by our eyes, eyebrows, forehead and the rest of
our countenance. Man is known by his look, [31] says the Scripture, and
Aristotle giving a reason why ordinarily it is only the faces of great men
that are portrayed,—it is, says he, because the face shows what we are.
Yet we do not utter our discourse nor the thoughts which proceed from the
spiritual portion of our soul, which we call reason, and by which we are
distinguished from beasts, except by words, and consequently by help of the
mouth; insomuch that to pour out our soul and open out our heart is nothing
else but to speak. Pour out your hearts before God, [32] says the Psalmist,
that is, express and turn the affections of your hearts into words. And
Samuel's pious mother pronouncing her prayers so softly that one could
hardly discern the motion of her lips: I have poured out my soul before the
Lord, [33] said she. And thus one mouth is applied to another in kissing to
testify that we would desire to pour out one soul into the other, to unite
them reciprocally in a perfect union. For this reason, at all times and
amongst the most saintly men the world has had, the kiss has been a sign of
love and affection, and such use was universally made of it amongst the
ancient Christians as the great S. Paul testifies, when, writing to the
Romans and Corinthians, he says, Salute one another in a holy kiss. [34] And
as many declare, Judas in betraying Our Saviour made use of a kiss to
manifest him, because this divine Saviour was accustomed to kiss his
disciples when he met them; and not only his disciples but even little
children, whom he took lovingly in his arms; as he did him by whose example
he so solemnly invited his disciples to the love of their neighbour, whom
many think to have been S. Martial, as the Bishop Jansenius [35] says.
Thus then the kiss being a lively mark of the union of hearts, the spouse
who has no other aim in all her endeavours than to be united to her beloved,
Let him kiss me, says she, with the kiss of his mouth; as if she cried
out:—so many sighs and inflamed darts which my love throws out will they
never impetrate that which my soul desires? I run—Ah! shall I never gain the
prize towards which I urge myself, which is to be united heart to heart,
spirit to spirit, to my God, my spouse my life? When will the hour come in
which I shall pour my soul into his heart, and he will pour his heart into
my soul, and thus happily united we shall live inseparable.
When the Holy Ghost would express a perfect love, he almost always employs
words expressing union or conjunction. And the multitude of believers, says
S. Luke, had but one heart and one soul. [36] Our Saviour prayed for all the
faithful that they all may be one. [37] S. Paul warns us to be careful to
preserve the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace." [38] These unities
of heart, of soul, and of spirit signify the perfection of love which joins
many souls in one. So it is said that Jonathan's soul was knit to David's,
that is to say, as the Scripture adds, He loved him as his own soul.1 [39]
The great Apostle of France (S. Denis) as well according to his own
sentiment as when giving that of his Hierotheus, writes a hundred times, I
think, in a single chapter of the De Nominibus Divinis, that love is
unifying, uniting, drawing together, embracing, collecting and bringing all
things to unity! S. Gregory Nazianzen and S. Augustine say that their
friends and they had but one soul, and Aristotle approving already in his
time this manner of speech: "When," says he, "we would express how much we
love our friends, we say his and my soul is but one." Hatred separates us,
and love brings us into one. The end then of love is no other thing than the
union of the lover and the thing loved.
[30] Cant. i. 1.
[31] Eccli. xix. 26.
[32] lxi. 9.
[33] 1 Kings i. 15.
[34] Rom. xvi. 16; 1 Cor. xvi. 20.
[35] Of Ghent, uncle of the heretic, but himself an orthodox and esteemed
writer. (Tr.)
[36] Acts iv. 32.
[37] John xvii. 21.
[38] Eph. iv. 3.
[39] Kings xviii. 1.
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