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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 IV. THAT DIVINE LOVE MORE EXCELLENTLY SANCTIFIES THE VIRTUES WHEN THEY ARE PRACTISED BY ITS ORDER AND COMMANDMENT.
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The fair Rachel had children by Jacob in two ways. She counted as hers the
children of her handmaid Bala, and afterwards she had children of her
own—namely, Joseph and the beloved Benjamin.
Now I say to you, my dear Theotimus, that charity and sacred love, a hundred
times more fair than Rachel, ceaselessly desires to produce holy operations.
She calls the operations of the other virtues her offspring because they are
produced by her order, love being the master of the heart, and consequently
of all the works of the other virtues done by its consent. But, further,
this divine love has two acts which are her own proper issue and of her
extraction. Of these the one is effective love, which, as another Joseph,
using the plenitude of royal authority, subjects and reduces all the
people—her faculties, powers, passions and affections—to God's will, that it
may be loved, obeyed and served above all things, by this means putting the
great celestial commandment in execution: Thou shalt love the Lord thy God
with all thy heart, with all thy soul, with all thy mind, and with all thy
strength. The other is affective or affectionate love, which, as a little
Benjamin, is exceedingly delicate, tender, pleasing and amiable, but in this
more happy than Benjamin, that charity its mother dies not in its bringing
forth, but, so to say, gains a new life, by the sweetness she feels in it.
Thus then, Theotimus, the virtuous actions of the children of God all belong
to charity; some of them because she produces them of her own nature; others
because she sanctifies them by her quickening presence; and finally others,
by the authority and command which she exercises over the other virtues,
whence she makes them spring. And these last, as indeed they are not so
eminent in dignity as the actions which properly and immediately issue from
charity, yet incomparably surpass those which take their whole sanctity from
the mere presence and society of charity.
A great general of an army having won some important battle, will without
doubt have all the honour of the victory, and not unreasonably; for he
himself will have fought in the very front of the army, doing many great
feats of arms, and for the rest he will have arrayed his troops, and
ordained and commanded all that was done: so that he is considered to have
done all, either by himself, fighting with his own hand, or by his
direction, commanding others. And even if some friendly troops come
unexpectedly and fall in with the army, yet the general is not deprived of
the honour of their work, for though they have not received his commands,
yet they have served him and followed his intentions. Nevertheless, although
we attribute the glory as a whole to him, we do not fail to give each part
of his army due credit for its own share; we say that the vanguard did this,
the main body that, the rearguard the other; the French behaved thus, the
Italians thus, the Germans and the Spaniards thus: yea we praise the private
individuals who have distinguished themselves in the battle. So, my dear
Theotimus, amongst all the virtues, the glory of our salvation and victory
over hell is ascribed to divine love, which, as prince and general of the
whole army of virtues, does all the exploits by which we gain the triumph.
For sacred love has his proper actions which issue and proceed from himself,
by which he does wonders of arms against our enemy, and withal he ranges,
commands and orders the actions of other virtues, which are therefore,
termed acts commanded or ordained by love. And if, at last, some virtues
perform their operations without his order, yet if they assist his
intention, which is God's honour, he will still acknowledge them to be his
own. Nevertheless, though we say in general, after the divine Apostle, that
Charity beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things,
endureth all things, [504] in a word, that it does all, yet we distribute in
particular the praise of the salvation of the Blessed to other virtues,
according as they excelled in each one; for we say some were saved by faith,
others by alms-deeds, others by temperance, prayer, humility, hope,
chastity, because the acts of these virtues have appeared with lustre in
these saints. Yet again after we have extolled these particular virtues we
must reciprocally refer all their honour to divine love, which to every one
gives all the sanctity which they have. For what else does the glorious
Apostle mean when he teaches that charity is kind, is patient, that it
believes all, hopes all, bears all, save that charity ordains and commands
patience to be patient, hope to hope, faith to believe. And truly,
Theotimus, at the same time the Apostle intimates that love is the soul and
life of all the virtues, as though he would say: patience is not patient
enough, nor faith faithful enough, nor hope confident enough, nor mildness
sweet enough, unless love animate and quicken them. The same thing this same
vessel of election gives us to understand when he says, that nothing profits
him and he is nothing without charity; for it is as though he had said, that
without love a man is not patient, nor mild, nor constant, nor faithful, nor
hopeful, in the way a servant of God should be, which is the true and
desirable being of man.
[504] 1 Cor. xiii. 7.
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