|
Book XI
OF THE SOVEREIGN AUTHORITY WHICH SACRED LOVE HOLDS OVER ALL THE VIRTUES, ACTIONS AND PERFECTIONS OF THE SOUL.
CHAPTER XIV. THE PRACTICE OF WHAT HAS BEEN SAID IN THE PRECEDING CHAPTER.
|
Let us purify, then, Theotimus, as far as we can, all our intentions, and
since we are able to spread over all the acts of the virtues the sacred
motive of divine love, why shall we not do it, rejecting, as occasion
requires, all kinds of vicious motives, such as vain-glory, and
self-interest, and considering all the good motives which we may have for
undertaking the action which presents itself, in order to choose that of
holy love, which is the most excellent of all, to pour it over all the rest,
or steep them in it. For example, if I desire valorously to expose myself to
the hazards of war, I can do it, considering various motives: For the
natural motive of this action is that of strength and valour, which moves us
reasonably to undertake perilous exploits: yet besides this I may have
divers other motives; as that of obeying the prince whom I serve, that of
love for the common weal, that of magnanimity, which makes me rejoice in the
greatness of this action. Now, coming to the action, I enter on the foreseen
peril for all these motives together. But to raise them all to the rank of
divine love, and perfectly to purify them, I will say in my soul with all my
heart: O eternal God, who art the most dear love of my affections, if
valour, obedience to my prince, love of my country, and magnanimity, were
not agreeable unto thee, I would never follow the movements I now feel, but
because these virtues please thee, I embrace this occasion of putting them
in practice, and I will only follow their instinct and leading, because thou
lovest and willest them.
You see plainly, Theotimus, that by this reflection of the spirit, we
perfume all those other motives with the holy sweetness of love, since we do
not follow them as motives simply virtuous, but as motives, willed,
accepted, loved and cherished by God. He who steals in order to get drunk,
is more a drunkard than a thief, according to Aristotle; and he who
practises valour, obedience, love of country, and magnanimity to please God,
is rather a divine lover, than valiant, obedient, patriotic, and
magnanimous, because his whole will in this action comes to terminate and be
absorbed in the love of God, only using all the other motives to arrive at
this end. We are not wont to say we are going to Lyons but to Paris, when we
only go to Lyons in order to get to Paris: nor that we are going to sing but
that we are going to serve God, when we only go to sing in order to serve
God.
And if it chance that sometimes we are touched by some particular motive,
as, for example, if we should love chastity on account of its lovely and
delightful purity, at once we must pour out, over this motive, that of holy
love in this manner: O most honourable and most pleasing spotlessness of
chastity, how worthy of love art thou, since thou art so beloved of the
divine goodness! Then, turning towards the Creator: Ah! Lord, I demand only
one thing of thee, this is what I aim at in chastity, to see and effect in
it thy good pleasure, and to take the delight thou takest therein. And when
we begin the practice of any virtue, we should often say with all our heart:
Yes, eternal Father, I will do it, for so hath it seemed good in thy sight.
[547] Thus are we to animate all our actions with this heavenly
good-pleasure, loving the honourableness and beauty of virtue principally
because they are agreeable to God: for, my dear Theotimus, there are some
men who excessively love the beauty of certain virtues, not only without
loving charity, but even with contempt of charity. Origen and Tertullian so
loved the purity of chastity, that for it they violated the great laws of
charity; the one choosing to commit idolatry to preserve it, [548] the other
separating himself from the most chaste Catholic Church, his mother, to
establish the chastity of his wife more according to his own fancy. Who
knows not that there were certain "Poor men of Lyons," who from praising
mendicity excessively, became heretics, and of beggars became lying
vagabonds? Who is ignorant of the folly of the Enthusiasts, Messalians,
Euchites, who forsook charity, to exalt prayer? And were there not heretics,
who to exalt charity towards the poor, put down charity towards God,
ascribing man's whole salvation to alms-deeds, as S. Augustine witnesses;
although the holy Apostle cries out, if I should distribute all my goods to
feed the poor, and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing? [549]
God has set over me the standard of love, [550] says the sacred Sulamitess.
Love, Theotimus, is the standard in the army of virtues: they ought all to
range themselves by it; it is the only flag under which our Saviour, who is
the true General of the army, makes them fight. Let us therefore reduce all
the virtues to the obedience of charity: let us love particular virtues, but
principally because they are agreeable to God; let us excellently love the
more excellent virtues, not because they are excellent, but because God
loves them more excellently. Thus will holy love give life to all the
virtues, making all of them full of love, lovable, and lovable above all
things.
[547] Matt. xi. 26.
[548] The only authority for this accusation against Origen is a statement
of S. Epiphanius (de Hr. lxiv. c. 2), which Baronius (ann. 253) rejects as
an interpolation, and Tillemont (III. note xxii. on Origen) proves to be
erroneous Tr.).
[549] 1 Cor. xiii. 3.
[550] Cant. ii. 4. From the Septuagint (Tr.).
|