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Book III
OF THE PROGRESS AND PERFECTION OF LOVE.
CHAPTER XV. THAT THERE SHALL BE DIFFERENT DEGREES OF THE UNION OF THE BLESSED WITH GOD.
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Now this light of glory, Theotimus, shall be the measure of the sight and
centemplation of the Blessed; and according as we shall have less or more of
this holy splendour, we shall see more or less clearly, and consequently
with more or less happiness, the most holy Divinity, which as it is beholden
diversely so it will make us diversely glorious. All the spirits indeed in
this heavenly Paradise see all the divine essence, yet it is not seen and
cannot be seen entirely by any one of them or by all of them together. No,
Theotimus, for God being most singularly one, and most simply indivisible,
we cannot see Him without seeing Him all: but being infinite, without limit,
without bounds or measure at all in His perfection, there neither is, nor
can be, any capacity out of Himself which can ever totally comprehend or
penetrate the infinity of His goodness, infinitely essential and essentially
infinite.
This created light of the visible sun, which is limited and finite, is in
such sort all seen by those that behold it that it is never totally seen by
any one of them nor by all together. It is in a manner so with all our
senses. Amongst many that hear excellent music, though all of them hear it
all, yet some hear it not so well, nor with so much delight as others,
according as their ears are more or less delicate. The manna was all tasted
by each one that ate it, yet differently, according to the different
appetites of those who ate it, and was never wholly tasted, for it had more
tastes of different kinds than the Israelites had varieties of tasting
power. Theotimus, we shall see and taste in heaven all the Divinity, but no
one of the Blessed nor all together shall ever see or taste it totally. This
infinite Divinity shall still have infinitely more excellences than we
sufficiency and capacity; and we shall have an unspeakable content to know
that after we have satiated all the desires of our heart, and fully
replenished its capacity in the fruition of the infinite good which is God,
nevertheless there will remain in this infinity, infinite perfections to be
seen, enjoyed and possessed, which His divine Majesty knows and sees, it
alone comprehending itself.
So fishes enjoy the incredible vastness of the ocean; but not any fish, nor
yet all the multitude of fishes, ever saw all the shores of the sea or
wetted their fins in all its waters. Birds sport in the open air at their
pleasure, but not any bird, nor yet all the flocks of birds together, did
ever beat with their wings all the regions of the air, or arrive at the
supreme region of the same. Ah! Theotimus, our souls shall freely and
according to the full extent of their wishes swim in the ocean and soar in
the air of the Divinity, rejoicing eternally to see that this air is so
infinite, this ocean so vast, that it cannot be measured by their wings, and
that enjoying without reserve or exception all this infinite abyss of the
Divinity, yet shall they never be able to equalize their fruition to this
infinity, which remains still infinitely infinite beyond their capacity.
And at this the Blessed Spirits are ravished with two admirations, first for
the infinite beauty which they contemplate, secondly for the abyss of the
infinity which remains to be seen in this same beauty. O God! how admirable
is that which they see! But, O God! how much more admirable is that which
they see not! And yet, Theotimus, since the most sacred beauty which they
see is infinite, it entirely satisfies and satiates them, and being content
to enjoy it according to the rank which they hold in heaven, because God's
most amiable providence has so determined, they convert the knowledge they
have of not possessing and of not being able totally to possess their
object, into a simple complacency of admiration, in which they have a
sovereign joy to see that the beauty they love is so infinite that it cannot
be totally known but by itself. For in this consists the Divinity of this
infinite beauty or the beauty of this infinite Divinity.
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