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CONTAINING A PREPARATION FOR THE WHOLE TREATISE.
Origin says somewhere [43] that in his opinion the Divine Scripture wishing
to hinder the word love from giving occasion of evil thoughts to the weak,
as being more proper to signify a carnal passion than a spiritual affection,
instead of this name of love has used the words charity and dilection, which
are more honest. But S. Augustine having deeply weighed the use of God's
word clearly shows that the name love is no less sacred than the word
dilection, and that the one and the other signify sometimes a holy affection
and sometimes also a depraved passion, alleging to this purpose different
passages of Holy Scripture. But the great S. Denis, as excelling doctor of
the proper use of the divine names, goes much further in favour of the word
love, teaching that theologians, that is, the Apostles and their first
disciples (for this saint knew no other theologians) to disabuse the common
people, and break down their error in taking the word love in a profane and
carnal sense, more willingly employed it in divine things than that of
dilection; and, though they considered that both might be used for the same
thing, yet some of them were of opinion that the word love was more proper
and suitable to God than the word dilection. Hence the divine Ignatius wrote
these words: "My love is crucified." And as these ancient theologians made
use of the word love in divine things to free it from the taint of impurity
of which it was suspected according to the imagination of the world, so to
express human affections they liked to use the word dilection as exempt from
all suspicion of impropriety. Wherefore one of them, as S. Denis reports,
said: "Thy dilection has entered into my soul like the dilection of women."
[44] In fine the word love signifies more fervour, efficacy, and activity
than that of dilection, so that amongst the Latins dilection is much less
significative than love: "Clodius," says their great orator, "bears me
dilection, and to say it more excellently, he loves me." Therefore the word
love, as the most excellent, has justly been given to charity, as to the
chief and most eminent of all loves; so that for all these reasons, and
because I intend to speak of the acts of charity rather than of its habit, I
have entitled this little work, A Treatise of the Love of God.
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