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Book III
OF THE PROGRESS AND PERFECTION OF LOVE.
CHAPTER XI. OF THE UNION OF THE BLESSED SPIRITS WITH GOD, IN THE VISION OF THE DIVINITY.
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When we look upon anything, though it is present to us, it is not itself
united to our eyes, but only sends out to them a certain representation or
picture of itself, which is called its sensible species, by means of which
we see. So also when we contemplate or understand anything, that which we
understand is not united to our understanding otherwise than by another
representation and most delicate and spiritual image, which is called
intelligible species. But further, these species, by how many windings and
changes do they get to the understanding! They arrive at the exterior
senses, thence pass to the interior, then to the imagination, then to the
active understanding, and come at last to the passive understanding, to the
end that passing through so many strainers and under so many files they may
be purified, subtilised and perfected, and of sensible become intelligible.
Thus, Theotimus, we see and understand all that we see and understand in
this mortal life, yea even things of faith; for, as the mirror contains not
the thing we see in it but only the representation and species of it (which
representation, stayed by the mirror, produces another in the beholding
eye), so the word of faith does not contain the things which it announces,
but only represents them, and this representation of divine things which is
in the word of faith produces another representation of them, which our
understanding, helped by God's grace, accepts and receives as a
representation of holy truth, and our will takes delight in it, and embraces
it, as an honourable, profitable, lovely and excellent truth. Thus the
truths signified in God's word are by it represented to the understanding as
things expressed in the mirror are by the mirror represented to the eye:
whence the great Apostle said that to believe is to see as in a glass. [170]
But in heaven, Theotimus,—Ah! my God, what a favour!—The Divinity will unite
itself to our understanding without the mediation of any species or
representation at all, but it will itself apply and join itself to our
understanding, making itself in such sort present unto it, that that inward
presence shall be instead of a representation or species. O God! what
sweetness shall it be for man's understanding to be united for ever to its
sovereign object, receiving not its representation but its presence, not the
picture or species, but the very essence of its divine truth and majesty. We
shall be there as most happy children of the divinity, and shall have the
honour to be fed with the divine substance itself, taken into our soul by
the mouth of our understanding, and what surpasses all sweetness is, that as
mothers are not contented with feeding their babes with their milk, which is
their own substance, if they do not also put the breast into their mouth,
that these may receive their substance, not in a spoon or other instrument,
but even in, and by this same substance (so that this maternal substance
serves as well for food, as for a conduit to convey it to the dear little
suckling);—so God our Father is not contented to make us receive his proper
substance in our understanding, that is, to make us see his divinity, but by
an abyss of his sweetness, wills himself to apply his substance to our soul,
to the end that we may no longer understand it by species or representation
but in itself and by itself; so that his fatherly and eternal substance is
both species and object to our understanding. Then these divine promises
shall be fulfilled in an excellent manner: I will lead her into the
wilderness, and I will speak to her heart, [171] and give her suck. Rejoice
with Jerusalem and be glad with her. That you may suck and be filled with
the breasts of her consolations, that you may milk out, and flow with
delights from the abundance of her glory: you shall be carried at the
breasts, and upon the knees they shall caress you. [172]
Infinite bliss, Theotimus, and one which has not been promised only, but of
which we have a pledge in the Blessed Sacrament, that perpetual feast of
Divine Grace. For in it we receive the blood of Our Saviour in his flesh,
and his flesh in his blood; his blood being applied unto us by means of his
flesh, his substance by his substance to our very corporal mouth; that we
may know that so he will apply unto us his divine essence in the eternal
feast of his glory. True it is, this favour is done unto us here really but
covertly, under Sacramental species and appearances, whereas in heaven, the
Divinity will give himself openly, and we shall see him face to face as he
is.
[170] I Cor. xiii. 12.
[171] Osee. ii. 14.
[172] Is. lxvi. 10, 11, 12.
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