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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 XXI. THAT SADNESS IS ALMOST ALWAYS USELESS, YEA CONTRARY TO THE SERVICE OF HOLY LOVE.
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One cannot graft an oak upon a pear tree, of so contrary a humour are those
two trees: nor can anger or despair be grafted on charity, at least it would
be very difficult. As for anger, we have seen this in the discourse upon
zeal; as for despair, unless it be reduced to the legitimate distrust of
ourselves, or to a sense of the vanity, weakness and inconstancy of worldly
favours, helps and promises, I see not what service Divine love can draw
from it.
And as for sadness, how can it be profitable to holy charity, seeing that
joy is ranked amongst the fruits of the Holy Ghost, coming next to charity?
Still, the great apostle says: The sorrow that is according to God worketh
penance unto salvation which is lasting: but the sorrow of the world worketh
death. [578] There is then a sorrow or sadness according to God, which is
employed either by sinners in penance, or by the good in compassion for the
temporal miseries of their neighbours, or by the perfect in deploring,
bemoaning and condoling the spiritual calamities of souls. For David, S.
Peter, Magdalen, wept for their sins; Agar wept when she saw her son almost
dead of thirst; Jeremias over the ruin of Jerusalem; Our Saviour over the
Jews; and his great Apostle sighing says these words: Many walk of whom I
have told you often (and now tell you weeping) that they are enemies of the
cross of Christ. [579]
There is then also a sadness of this world, which likewise proceeds from
three causes. For 1. It comes sometimes from the infernal enemy, who by a
thousand sad, melancholy and disturbing suggestions obscures the
understanding, weakens the will, and troubles the whole soul: and as a thick
mist fills the head and breast with rheum, and by this means makes
respiration difficult, and greatly incommodes the traveller; so the evil
spirit, filling man's mind with sad thoughts, deprives it of facility in
aspiring to God, and possesses it with an extreme tedium and discouragement,
in order to bring it to despair and perdition. They say there is a fish
called the sea-toad, surnamed the sea-devil, which stirring and spreading
the mud troubles the water round about it so as to hide itself therein as in
an ambush, from whence, as soon as it perceives poor little fishes, it darts
upon them, kills and devours them: whence perhaps has come the common
expression fishing in troubled waters. Now it is the same with the devil of
hell as with the devil of the sea; for he makes his ambush in sadness, and
then, having troubled the soul with a multitude of sad thoughts cast hither
and thither in the understanding, he makes a charge upon the affections,
bearing them down with distrust, jealousies, aversions, envies, superfluous
apprehensions of past sins, adding withal a number of vain, sour and
melancholy subtleties of the imagination, that all reasons and consolations
may be rejected.
2. Sadness sometimes also proceeds from one's natural disposition, when the
melancholy humour predominates in us: and this is not vicious in itself, yet
our enemy makes great use of it to weave and prepare a thousand temptations
in our souls. For as spiders scarcely ever spin their webs save when the
weather is dull and the sky cloudy; so this malign spirit never finds as
much facility in spreading the nets of his suggestions in sweet, kindly and
bright souls, as he has with the gloomy, sad and melancholy; for these he
easily disturbs with vexations, suspicions, hatreds, murmurings, censures,
envies, sloth and spiritual numbness.
3. Lastly, there is a sadness which the various accidents of life bring
upon us. What manner of joy shall be to me, said Tobias, who sit in
darkness, and see not the light of heaven [580] Thus was Jacob sad on the
news of the death of his Joseph, and David for that of his Absalom. Now this
sadness is common to the good and the bad; but to the good it is moderated
by acquiescence in and resignation to the will of God: as we see in Tobias,
who gave thanks to the Divine Majesty for all the adversities which came
upon him, and in Job, who blessed the name of the Lord for them, and in
Daniel, who turned his griefs into songs of joy. As to worldlings, on the
contrary, this sadness is an ordinary thing with them, and spreads out into
regrets, despair, and deadness of soul: for they are like apes and monkeys,
which are always sullen, sad and peevish at the waning of the moon, as, on
the contrary, at the new moon, they leap, dance and play their apish tricks.
The worldling is out of temper, uncivil, bitter and gloomy when temporal
prosperity fails him; and in abundance he is almost always boastful,
foolishly elated and insolent.
Indeed the sadness of true penitence is not so much to be named sadness as
displeasure, or the sense and detestation of evil; a sadness which is never
troubled nor vexed; a sadness which does not dull the spirit, but makes it
active, ready and diligent; a sadness which does not weigh the heart down,
but raises it by prayer and hope, and causes in it the movements of the
fervour of devotion; a sadness which in the heaviest of its bitternesses
ever produces the sweetness of an incomparable consolation, according to the
precept of the great S. Augustine: "Let the penitent sorrow always, yet
always rejoice for his sorrow." "The sadness," says Cassian, "which works
solid penitence, and that desirable repentance of which one never repents,
is obedient, affable, humble, mild, sweet, patient, as being a child and
scion of charity: so that spreading over every pain of body and contrition
of spirit, and being in a certain way joyous, courageous, and strengthened
by the hope of doing better, it retains all the sweetness of gentleness and
longanimity, having in itself the Fruits of the Holy Spirit, which the holy
Apostle recounts: Now the Fruits of the Spirit are charity, joy, peace,
longanimity, goodness, benignity, faith, mildness, continency." Such is true
penitence, and such is right sadness, which in good sooth is not really sad
or melancholy, but only attentive and earnest to detest, reject and hinder
the evil of sin for past and for future. And indeed we often see repentances
which are very eager, troubled, impatient, wet-eyed, bitter, given to
groans, very crabbed and melancholy, which at last turn out fruitless and
lack all true amendment, because they do not proceed from the true motives
of the virtue of penitence, but from selfish and natural love.
The sorrow of the world worketh death, [581] says the Apostle; we must,
therefore, Theotimus, carefully avoid and banish it as much as we can. If it
be from nature, we must repulse it by contradicting its movements, turning
it aside by the practices suitable to that purpose, and using the remedies
and way of life which physicians themselves may judge best. If it come from
temptation, we must clearly open our mind to our spiritual father, who, will
prescribe for us the method of overcoming it, according as we have said in
Part IV. of the Introduction to the Devout Life. If it arise from
circumstances, we will have recourse to the teaching of Book VIII., in order
to see how grateful tribulations are to the children of God, and how the
greatness of our hopes for eternal life ought to make all the passing events
of the temporal almost unworthy of thinking about.
At last, in all the sadness which may come upon us, we must employ the
authority of the superior will to do all that should be done in favour of
divine love. There are indeed actions which so depend upon the corporal
disposition and constitution that we have not the power to do them just as
we please: for the melancholy-disposed cannot keep their eyes, or their
words, or their faces, in the same good grace and sweetness as they would do
if they were relieved from this bad humour; but they are quite able, though
without this good grace, to say gracious, kind, and civil words, and, in
spite of inclination, to do what reason requires as to words and works of
charity, gentleness and condescension. We may be excused for not being
always bright, for one is not master of cheerfulness to have it when one
will; but we are not excusable for not being always gracious, yielding and
considerate; for this is always in the power of our will, and we have only
to determine to keep down the contrary humour and inclination.
[578] 2 Cor. vii. 10.
[579] Phil. iii. 18.
[580] Tob. v. 12.
[581] 2 Cor. vii. 10.
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