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Book X
OF THE COMMANDMENT OF LOVING GOD ABOVE ALL THINGS.
CHAPTER X. THAT WE ARE TO LOVE THE DIVINE GOODNESS SOVEREIGNLY ABOVE OURSELVES.
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Aristotle was consistent in saying that good is indeed amiable, but to each
one his own good principally, so that the love which we have for others
proceeds from the love of ourselves:—for how could a philosopher say
otherwise who not only did not love God, but hardly ever even spoke of the
love of God? As a fact, however, this love of God precedes all love of
ourselves, even according to the natural inclination of our will, as I have
made clear in the first book.
In truth, the will is so dedicated, and, if we may say it, consecrated to
goodness, that if an infinite goodness be clearly proposed unto it, it must,
unless by miracle, sovereignly love this goodness: yea, the Blessed are
carried away and necessitated, though not forced, to love God whose
sovereign beauty they clearly see; as the Scripture sufficiently shows in
comparing the contentment which fills the hearts of the glorious inhabitants
of the heavenly Jerusalem to a torrent and impetuous flood, whose waters
cannot be kept from spreading over the plains it meets with.
But in this mortal life, Theotimus, we are not necessitated to love him so
sovereignly, because we see him not so clearly. In heaven, where we shall
see him face to face, we shall love him heart to heart; that is, as we shall
all see the infinity of his beauty, each in our measure, with a sovereignly
clear sight, so shall we be ravished, with the love of his infinite goodness
in a sovereignly strong rapture, to which we shall neither desire, nor be
able to desire, to make any resistance. But here below on earth, where we do
not see this sovereign goodness in its beauty, but only have a half-sight of
it amid our obscurities, we are indeed inclined and allured to love him more
than ourselves;—yet we are not necessitated: on the contrary, though we have
this holy natural inclination to love the divinity above all things, yet we
have not the strength to put it in execution, unless the same divinity
infuse its most holy charity supernaturally into our hearts.
Yet true it is that as the clear view of the divinity infallibly produces
the necessity of loving it more than ourselves, so the half-view, that is,
the natural knowledge, of the divinity, infallibly produces the inclination
and tendency to love it more than ourselves; for, I pray you, Theotimus,
since the will is wholly ordained unto the love of good, how can it know,
ever so little, a sovereign good without being so far inclined to love it
sovereignly? Of all goods which are not infinite, our will always prefers in
its love that which is nearest to it, and chiefly its own; but there is so
little proportion between the infinite and the finite, that our will having
knowledge of an infinite good is without doubt moved, inclined and excited
to prefer the friendship of this abyss of infinite goodness before every
other sort of love, yea even the love of ourselves.
This inclination is strong principally because we are more in God than in
ourselves, we live more in him than in ourselves, and are in such sort from
him, by him, for him and belonging to him, that we cannot undistractedly
consider what we are to him and he is to us, without being forced to
exclaim: I am thine, Lord, and must belong to none but thee; my soul is
thine, and ought not to live but by thee, my will is thine, and is only to
tend to thee, I must love thee as my first principle since I have my being
from thee, I must love thee as my end and centre since I am for thee, I must
love thee more than my own being, since my being subsists by thee, I must
love thee more than myself, since I am wholly thine and in thee.
And in case there were or could be some sovereign good whereof we were
independent, we should also, supposing that we could unite ourselves unto it
by love, be excited to love this more than ourselves, seeing that the
infinity of its sweetness would be still sovereignly more powerful to draw
our will to its love than all other goods, yea, even than our own good.
But if, by imagination of a thing impossible, there were an infinite
goodness on which we had no dependence whatever, and with which we could
have no kind of union or communication, we should indeed esteem it more than
ourselves, for we should know that being infinite it would be more estimable
and lovable than we; and consequently we should be able to make simple
desires of being able to love it; yet, properly speaking, we should not love
it, since love aims at union; and much less could we have charity towards
it, since charity is a friendship, and friendship cannot be unless it be
reciprocal, having for its groundwork communication, and for its end union:
I speak thus for the benefit of certain fantastic and empty spirits, who
very often on baseless imaginations revolve morbid thoughts to their own
great affliction. But as for us, Theotimus, my dear friend, we see plainly
that we cannot be true men without putting this inclination into effect. Let
us love him more than ourselves who is to us more than all and more than
ourselves. Amen, so it is.
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