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Book II
THE HISTORY OF THE GENERATION AND HEAVENLY BIRTH OF DIVINE LOVE.
CHAPTER XII. THAT DIVINE INSPIRATIONS LEAVE US IN FULL LIBERTY TO FOLLOW OR REPULSE THEM.
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I will not here speak, my dear Theotimus, of those miraculous graces which
have almost in an instant transformed wolves into shepherds, rocks into
waters, persecutors into preachers. I leave on one side those all-powerful
vocations, and holily violent attractions by which God has brought some
elect souls from the extremity of vice to the extremity of grace, working as
it were in them a certain moral and spiritual transubstantiation: as it
happened to the great Apostle, who of Saul, vessel of persecution, became
suddenly Paul, vessel of election. [98] We must give a particular rank to
those privileged souls in regard of whom it pleased God to make not the mere
outflowing, but the inundation—to exercise, if one may so say, not the
simple liberality and effusion, but the prodigality and profusion of his
love. The divine justice chastises us in this world with punishments which,
as they are ordinary, so they remain almost always unknown and
imperceptible; sometimes, however, he sends out deluges and abysses of
punishments, to make known and dreaded the severity of his indignation. In
like manner his mercy ordinarily converts and graces souls so sweetly,
gently and delicately, that its movement is scarcely perceived; and yet it
happens sometimes that this sovereign goodness, overflowing its ordinary
banks (as a flood swollen and overcharged with the abundance of waters and
breaking out over the plain) makes an outpouring of his graces so impetuous,
though loving, that in a moment he steeps and covers the whole soul with
benedictions, in order that the riches of his love may appear, and that as
his justice proceeds commonly by the ordinary way and sometimes by the
extraordinary, so his mercy may exercise liberality upon the common sort of
men in the ordinary way, and on some also by extraordinary ways.
But what are then the ordinary cords whereby the divine providence is
accustomed to draw our hearts to his love? Such truly as he himself marks,
describing the means which he used to draw the people of Israel out of
Egypt, and out of the desert, unto the land of promise. I will draw them,
says he by Osee, with the cords of Adam, with the bands of love, [99] and of
friendship. Doubtless, Theotimus, we are not drawn to God by iron chains, as
bulls and wild oxen, but by enticements, sweet attractions, and holy
inspirations, which, in a word, are the cords of Adam, and of humanity, that
is, proportionate and adapted to the human heart, to which liberty is
natural. The band of the human will is delight and pleasure. We show nuts to
a child, says S. Augustine, and he is drawn by his love, he is drawn by the
cords, not of the body, but of the heart. Mark then how the Eternal Father
draws us: while teaching, he delights us, not imposing upon us any
necessity; he casts into our hearts delectations and spiritual pleasures as
sacred baits, by which he sweetly draws us to take and taste the sweetness
of his doctrine.
In this way then, dearest Theotimus, our free-will is in no way forced or
necessitated by grace, but notwithstanding the all-powerful force of God's
merciful hand, which touches, surrounds and ties the soul with such a number
of inspirations, invitations and attractions, this human will remains
perfectly free, enfranchised and exempt from every sort of constraint and
necessity. Grace is so gracious, and so graciously seizes our hearts to draw
them, that she noways offends the liberty of our will; she touches
powerfully but yet so delicately the springs of our spirit that our free
will suffers no violence from it. Grace has power, not to force but to
entice the heart; she has a holy violence not to violate our liberty but to
make it full of love; she acts strongly, yet so sweetly that our will is not
overwhelmed by so powerful an action; she presses us but does not oppress
our liberty; so that under the very action of her power, we can consent to
or resist her movements as we list. But what is as admirable as it is
veritable is, that when our will follows the attractions and consents to the
divine movement, she follows as freely as she resists freely when she does
resist, although the consent to grace depends much more on grace than on the
will, while the resistance to grace depends upon the will only. So sweet is
God's hand in the handling of our hearts! So dexterous is it in
communicating unto us its strength without depriving us of liberty, and in
imparting unto us the motion of its power without hindering that of our
will! He adjusts his power to his sweetness in such sort, that as in what
regards good his might sweetly gives us the power, so his sweetness mightily
maintains the freedom of the will. If thou didst know the gift of God, said
our Saviour to the Samaritan woman, and who he is that saith to thee, give
me to drink; thou perhaps wouldst have asked of him, and he would have given
thee living water. [100] Note, I pray you, Theotimus, Our Saviour's manner
of speaking of his attractions. If thou didst know, he means, the gift of
God, thou wouldst without doubt be moved and attracted to ask the water of
eternal life, and perhaps thou wouldst ask it. As though he said: Thou
wouldst have power and wouldst be provoked to ask, yet in no wise be forced
or constrained; but only perhaps thou wouldst have asked, for thy liberty
would remain to ask it or not to ask it. Such are our Saviour's words
according to the ordinary edition, and according to S. Augustine upon S.
John.
To conclude, if any one should say that our free-will does not co-operate in
consenting to the grace with which God prevents it, or that it could not
reject and deny consent thereto, he would contradict the whole Scripture,
all the ancient Fathers, and experience, and would be excommunicated by the
sacred Council of Trent. But when it is said that we have power to reject
the divine inspirations and motions, it is of course not meant that we can
hinder God from inspiring us or touching our hearts, for as I have already
said, that is done in us and yet without us. These are favours which God
bestows upon us before we have thought of them, he awakens us when we sleep,
and consequently we find ourselves awake before we have thought of it; but
it is in our power to rise, or not to rise, and though he has awakened us
without us, he will not raise us without us. Now not to rise, and to go to
sleep again, is to resist the call, seeing we are called only to the end we
should rise. We cannot hinder the inspiration from taking us, or
consequently from setting us in motion, but if as it drives us forwards we
repulse it by not yielding ourselves to its motion, we then make resistance.
So the wind, having seized upon and raised our apodes, will not bear them
very far unless they display their wings and co-operate, raising themselves
aloft and flying in the air, into which they have been lifted. If, on the
contrary, allured may be by some verdure they see upon the ground, or
benumbed by their stay there, in lieu of seconding the wind they keep their
wings folded and cast themselves again upon the earth, they have received
indeed the motion of the wind, but in vain, since they did not help
themselves thereby. Theotimus, inspirations prevent us, and even before they
are thought of make themselves felt, but after we have felt them it is ours
either to consent to them so as to second and follow their attractions, or
else to dissent and repulse them. They make themselves felt by us without
us, but they do not make us consent without us.
[98] Acts ix. 15.
[99] Osee xi. 4.
[100] John iv. 10.
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