|
Book XI
OF THE SOVEREIGN AUTHORITY WHICH SACRED LOVE HOLDS OVER ALL THE VIRTUES, ACTIONS AND PERFECTIONS OF THE SOUL.
CHAPTER XV. HOW CHARITY CONTAINS IN IT THE GIFTS OF THE HOLY GHOST.
|
That man's heart may easily follow the motions and instincts of reason, in
order to attain the natural felicity which it can aim at, by living
according to the laws of rectitude, it requires to have: 1. Temperance, to
repress the rebellious movements of sensuality; 2. Justice, to render to
God, our neighbour and ourselves what is due; 3. Fortitude, to vanquish
the difficulties which occur in doing good and avoiding evil; 4. Counsel,
to discern what means are most proper to attain unto good and virtue; 5.
Knowledge, to know the true good, to which we are to aspire, and the true
evil which we are to fly; 6. Understanding, thoroughly to penetrate the
first and main grounds or principles of the beauty and excellence of
rectitude; 7. And finally, wisdom, to contemplate the divinity, the prime
source of all good. These are the qualities whereby the spirit is rendered
gentle, obedient, and pliable, with regard to the laws of the natural reason
which is in us.
In like manner, the Holy Ghost, who dwelleth in us, wishing to make our soul
supple, pliable, and obedient, with regard to his heavenly movements and
divine inspirations, which are the laws of his love, in the observance of
which consists the supernatural felicity of this present life, bestows upon
us seven properties and perfections, nearly corresponding to those seven
which we have just spoken of, and called, in the Holy Scripture and in the
books of theologians, gifts of the Holy Ghost.
Now they are not only inseparable from charity, but, all things well
considered, and speaking precisely, they are the principal virtues,
properties and qualities of charity. For 1. Wisdom is in fact no other
thing than the love which relishes, tastes and experiences, how sweet and
delicious God is; 2. Understanding is nothing else than love attentive to
consider and penetrate the beauty of the truths of faith, to know thereby
God in himself, and then descending from this to consider him in creatures;
3. Science, on the other hand, is but the same love, keeping us attentive
to the knowledge of ourselves and creatures, to make us reascend to a more
perfect knowledge of the service which we owe to God; 4. Counsel is also
love, insomuch as it makes us careful, attentive, and wise in choosing the
means proper to serve God holily; 5. Fortitude is love encouraging and
animating the heart, to put in execution that which counsel has determined
should be done; 6. Piety is the love which sweetens labour, and makes us,
with good heart, with pleasure, and with a filial affection, employ
ourselves in works which please God, our Father; and 7. to conclude, Fear
is nothing but love insomuch as it makes us fly and avoid what is
displeasing to the divine Majesty.
So, Theotimus, charity will be another Jacob's ladder to us, consisting of
the seven gifts of the Holy Ghost, as of so many sacred steps, by which
angelic men will ascend from earth to heaven, to be united to the heart of
God Almighty, and by which they will descend from heaven to earth, to take
their neighbour by the hand and lead him to heaven. For, as we mount the
first step, Fear makes us forsake evil; on the second, Piety excites us to
will to do good; upon the third, Knowledge makes us discern the good we are
to do, and the evil we are to fly; upon the fourth, by Fortitude we take
courage against all the difficulties which occur in our enterprise; upon the
fifth, by Counsel we make choice of suitable means; upon the sixth, we unite
our understanding to God to behold and penetrate the features of his
infinite beauty; and upon the seventh, we join our wills to God, to taste
and experience the sweetness of his incomprehensible goodness; for upon the
top of this ladder, God bending towards us, gives us the kiss of love, and
makes us taste the sacred breasts of his sweetness, better than wine.
But, if after we have deliciously enjoyed these favours of love, we desire
to return to the earth, to gain our neighbour to the same happiness from
the first and highest step, where we have filled our will with a most ardent
zeal, and have perfumed our souls with the perfumes of God's sovereign
charity, we must descend to the second step, where our understanding
receives an incomparable light, and makes provision of the most excellent
considerations and maxims, to glorify the divine beauty and goodness; thence
we pass to the third, where, by the gift of Counsel, we consider by what
means we may instil the relish and esteem of the divine sweetness into our
neighbour's heart; upon the fourth, we take heart, receiving a holy
Fortitude, to surmount the difficulties which might cross this design; upon
the fifth, by the gift of Knowledge, we begin to preach, exhorting souls to
follow virtue and fly vice; upon the sixth, we strive to emplant Piety in
them, that acknowledging God for their loving Father, they may obey him with
a filial fear; upon the last step, we urge them to fear the judgments of
God, so that mingling this fear of being damned with filial reverence, they
may more earnestly forsake the earth to ascend to heaven with us.
Charity, therefore, comprehends the seven Gifts, and is like to a fair lily,
which has six flowers whiter than snow, and in the midst the beautiful
little golden hammers of wisdom, which beat into our hearts the taste and
loving relish of the goodness of the Father our Creator, of the mercy of the
Son our Redeemer, and of the sweetness of the Holy Ghost our Sanctifier. And
I place thus this double fear upon the two lowest steps, to reconcile all
the translations with the holy and sacred Vulgate edition: for if in the
Hebrew, the word fear is twice said, this is not without mystery, but to
show that there is a gift of filial fear, which is nothing else but the gift
of piety, and a gift of servile fear, which is the beginning of all the
progress we make towards the sovereign wisdom.
|