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Book XI
OF THE SOVEREIGN AUTHORITY WHICH SACRED LOVE HOLDS OVER ALL THE VIRTUES, ACTIONS AND PERFECTIONS OF THE SOUL.
CHAPTER II. THAT DIVINE LOVE MAKES THE VIRTUES IMMEASURABLY MORE AGREEABLE TO GOD THAN THEY ARE OF THEIR OWN NATURE.
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The masters of husbandry admire the gracious innocence and purity of little
strawberries, because, though they lie upon the ground and are continually
crept over by serpents, lizards, and other venomous beasts, they yet receive
no impression of poison, nor are infected with any malign quality; a sign
that they have no affinity with poison. Such then are human virtues,
Theotimus; which, though they may be in a heart that is low, earthly, and
largely occupied by sin, yet are not infected with its malice, being of a
nature so noble and innocent that it cannot be corrupted by the society of
iniquity, according to what even Aristotle has said: that virtue is a habit
which no one can make ill use of. And though the virtues which are so good
in themselves are not rewarded with an eternal recompense when they are
practised by infidels or by such as are not in the state of grace, this is
not surprising, because the sinful heart from whence they proceed is not
capable of an eternal good (being, as it is, turned away from God), and
because no one can receive the celestial inheritance belonging to the Son of
God, but such as are in him, and are adoptive brothers of his; to say
nothing of this reason, that the covenant by which God promises heaven
refers to such only as are in his grace, while the virtues of sinners have
no worth nor value save that of their nature, which, consequently, cannot
raise them to the merit of supernatural rewards. Indeed these are for this
very cause called supernatural, that nature and all that belongs thereto can
neither give nor merit them.
But the virtues which are found in the friends of God, though they be only
moral and natural in themselves, are yet ennobled, and raised to the dignity
of being holy works, by reason of the excellence of the heart which produces
them. It is one of the properties of friendship to make the friend and all
that is good and honest in him dear to us: friendship pours out its grace
upon all the actions of him who is loved, however little ground of favour
there may be; the bitternesses of friends are sweets, and the sweets of
enemies are bitter. All the virtuous actions of a heart at friends with God
are dedicated to God, for the heart that has given itself, how has it not
given all that depends on itself? He that gives the tree without reserve,
gives he not also the leaves, flowers and fruit? The just shall flourish
like the palm-tree: he shall grow up like the cedar of Libanus. They that
are planted in the house of the Lord shall flourish in the courts of the
house of our God. [497] Since the just man is planted in the house of God,
his leaves, his flowers and his fruit grow therein, and are dedicated to the
service of His Majesty. He shall be like a tree which is planted near the
running waters, which shall bring forth its fruit in due season. And his
leaf shall not fall of: and all whatsoever he shall do shall prosper. [498]
Not only the fruits of charity, and the flowers of the works which it
ordains, but even its very leaves, that is, the moral and natural virtues,
draw a special power and efficacy from the love of the heart which produces
them. If you are grafting a rose tree, and put a grain of musk in the cleft
of the stock, all the roses that spring from it will smell of musk: cleave
then your heart by holy penitence, and put the love of God in the cleft;
then engraft on it what virtue you please, and the works which spring from
it will be all perfumed with sanctity, without need of any further
attention.
When the Spartans had heard an excellent sentence from the mouth of some
wicked man, they never thought it right to receive it till it was first
pronounced by the mouth of some good man: so that to make it worthy of
acceptance they did no more than get it uttered again by a virtuous man. If
you desire to make the human and moral virtue of Epictetus, Socrates or
Demades become holy, cause them to be practised by a truly Christian soul,
that is, by one which has the love of God. So God first had respect to the
good Abel, and then to his offerings, these taking their favour and worth in
the sight of God from the goodness and piety of him who offered them. Oh the
sovereign goodness of this great God, which so favours its lovers that it
cherishes their least little actions, so long as they have the slightest
degree of goodness, and excellently ennobles them, giving them the title and
quality of holy! Ah! this is in consideration of his beloved Son, whose
adopted children he would honour, sanctifying all there is of good in them,
their bones, the hairs of their head, their garments, their graves, yea,
down to the very shadow [499] of their bodies; their faith, hope, love,
religion, yea even their social life, their courtesy, the affability of
their hearts.
Therefore my beloved brethren, saith the Apostle, be ye steadfast and
immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, knowing that your
labour is not in vain in the Lord. [500] And mark, Theotimus, that every
virtuous work is to be esteemed the "work of the Lord," yea though it were
even practised by an infidel; for his divine Majesty said unto Ezechiel that
Nabuchodonosor and his army had laboured for him, [501] because he had waged
a lawful and just war against the Tyrians: sufficiently showing thereby that
the justice of the unjust is God's, and tends and belongs to him, though the
unjust who work that justice are neither his, nor tend nor belong to him:
for as the great prince and prophet Job, though of pagan extraction and an
inhabitant of the land of Hus, did for all that belong to God, so moral
virtues, though they proceed from a sinful heart, do none the less belong to
God. But when these same virtues are found in a truly Christian heart, that
is in a heart endowed with holy love, then they not only belong to God, but
they are not "in vain in the Lord," being rendered fruitful and precious in
the eyes of his goodness. "Add charity to a man," says S. Augustine, "and
everything profits; take charity from him, and what remains profits him no
longer." And: To them that love God all things work together unto good,
[502] says the Apostle.
[497] Ps. xci. 13, 14.
[498] Ps. i. 3.
[499] Acts v. 15.
[500] 1 Cor. iv. 58.
[501] Ezech. xxix. 20.
[502] Rom. viii. 28.
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