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Book I
CONTAINING A PREPARATION FOR THE WHOLE TREATISE.
CHAPTER XII. THAT IN THESE TWO PORTIONS OF THE SOUL THERE ARE FOUR DIFFERENT DEGREES OF REASON.
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There were three courts in Solomon's temple. One was for the Gentiles and
strangers who, wishing to have recourse to God, went to adore in Jerusalem;
the second for the Israelites, men and women (the separation of men from
women not being made by Solomon); the third for the priests and Levites; and
in fine, besides all this, there was the sanctuary or sacred house, which
was open to the high priest only, and that but once a year. Our reason, or,
to speak better, our soul in so far as it is reasonable, is the true temple
of the great God, who there takes up his chief residence. "I sought thee,"
says S. Augustine, "outside myself, but I found thee not, because thou art
within me." In this mystical temple there are also three courts, which are
three different degrees of reason; in the first we reason according to the
experience of sense, in the second according to human sciences, in the third
according to faith: and in fine, beyond this, there is a certain eminence or
supreme point of the reason and spiritual faculty, which is not guided by
the light of argument or reasoning, but by a simple view of the
understanding and a simple movement of the will, by which the spirit bends
and submits to the truth and the will of God.
Now this extremity and summit of our soul, this highest point of our spirit,
is very naturally represented by the sanctuary or holy place. For, first, in
the sanctuary there were no windows to give light: in this degree of the
soul there is no reasoning which illuminates. Secondly, all the light
entered by the door; in this degree of the soul nothing enters but by faith,
which produces, like rays, the sight and the sentiment of the beauty and
goodness of the good pleasure of God. Thirdly, none entered the sanctuary
save the high priest; in this apex of the soul reasoning enters not, but
only the high, universal and sovereign feeling that the divine will ought
sovereignly to be loved, approved and embraced, not only in some particular
things but in general for all things, nor generally in all things only, but
also particularly in each thing. Fourthly, the high priest entering into the
sanctuary obscured even that light which came by the door, putting many
perfumes into his thurible, the smoke whereof drove back the rays of light
to which the open door gave entrance: and all the light which is in the
supreme part of the soul is in some sort obscured and veiled by the
renunciations and resignations which the soul makes, not desiring so much to
behold and see the goodness of the truth and the truth of the goodness
presented to her, as to embrace and adore the same, so that the soul would
almost wish to shut her eyes as soon as she begins to see the dignity of
God's will, to the end that not occupying herself further in considering it,
she may more powerfully and perfectly accept it, and by an absolute
complacency perfectly unite and submit herself thereto. Fifthly, to
conclude, in the sanctuary was kept the ark of alliance, and in that, or at
least adjoining to it, the tables of the law, manna in a golden vessel, and
Aaron's rod which in one night bore flowers and fruit: and in this highest
point of the soul are found: 1. The light of faith, figured by the manna
hidden in its vessel, by which we acquiesce in the truths of the mysteries
which we do not understand. 2. The utility of hope, represented by Aaron's
flowering and fruitful rod, by which we acquiesce in the promises of the
goods which we see not. 3. The sweetness of holy charity, represented by
God's commandments which charity contains, by which we acquiesce in the
union of our spirit with God's, which we scarcely perceive.
For although faith, hope and charity spread out their divine movements into
almost all the faculties of the soul, as well reasonable as sensitive,
reducing and holily subjecting them to their just authority, yet their
special residence, their true and natural dwelling, is in this supreme
region of the soul, from whence as from a happy source of living water, they
run out by divers conduits and brooks upon the inferior parts and faculties.
So that, Theotimus, in the superior part of reason there are two degrees of
reason. In the one those discourses are made which depend on faith and
supernatural light, in the other the simple acquiescings of faith, hope and
charity. Saint Paul's soul found itself pressed by two different desires,
the one to be delivered from his body, so as to go to heaven with Jesus
Christ, the other to remain in this world to labour in the conversion of
souls; both these desires were without doubt in the superior part, for they
both proceeded from charity, but his resolution to follow the latter
proceeded not from reasoning but from a simple sight, seeing and loving his
master's will, in which the superior point alone of the spirit acquiesced,
putting on one side all that reasoning might conclude.
But if faith, hope and charity be formed by this holy acquiescence in the
point of the spirit, how can reasonings which depend on the light of faith
be made in the inferior part of the soul? As, Theotimus, we see that
barristers dispute with many arguments on the acts and rights of parties to
a suit, and that the high parliament or senate settles all the strife by a
positive sentence, though even after this is pronounced the advocates and
auditors do not give up discoursing among themselves the motives parliament
may have had:—even so, after reasoning, and above all the grace of God have
persuaded the point and highest part of the spirit to acquiesce, and make
the act of faith after the manner of a sentence or judgment, the
understanding does not at once cease discoursing upon that same act of faith
already conceived, to consider the motives and reasons thereof. But always
the arguments of theology are stated at the pleading place and bar of the
superior portion of the soul, but the acquiescence is given above, on the
bench and tribunal of the point of the spirit. Now, because the knowledge of
these four degrees of the reason is much required for understanding all
treatises on spiritual things, I have thought well to explain it rather
fully.
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