|
Book IV
OF THE DECAY AND RUIN OF CHARITY.
CHAPTER VII. THAT WE MUST AVOID ALL CURIOSITY, AND HUMBLY ACQUIESCE IN GOD'S MOST WISE PROVIDENCE.
|
The human spirit is so weak that when it would look too curiously into the
causes and reasons of God's will it embarrasses and entangles itself in the
meshes of a thousand difficulties, out of which it has much to do to deliver
itself; it resembles smoke, for as smoke ascends it gets more subtle, and as
it grows more subtle it vanishes. In striving to raise our reasonings too
high in divine things by curiosity we grow vain or empty in our thoughts,
and instead of arriving at the knowledge of truth, we fall into the folly of
our vanity.
But above all we are unreasonable towards Divine providence in regard to the
diversity of the means which he bestows upon us to draw us to his holy love,
and by his holy love to glory. For our temerity urges us ever to inquire why
God gives more means to one than to another; why he did not amongst the
Tyrians and Sidonians the miracles which he did in Corozain and Bethsaida,
seeing they would have made as good use of them; and, in fine, why he draws
one rather than another to his love.
O Theotimus! my friend, never, no never, must we permit our minds to be
carried away by this mad whirlwind, nor expect to find a better reason of
God's will than his will itself, which is sovereignly reasonable, yea, the
reason of all reasons, the rule of all goodness, the law of all equity. And
although the Holy Ghost, speaking in the Holy Scripture, gives reason in
divers places of almost all we can wish to know of what this divine
providence does in conducting men to holy love and eternal salvation, yet on
various occasions he shows that we must in no wise depart from the respect
which is due to his will, whose purpose, decree, good-pleasure, and sentence
we are to adore; and he being sovereign judge and sovereignly equitable, it
is not reasonable that at the end he manifest his motives, but it is
sufficient that he say simply—for reasons. And if charity obliges us to bear
so much respect to the decrees of sovereign courts, composed of corruptible
judges, of the earth and earthly, as to believe that they were not made
without motives, though we know these not—ah! Lord God, with what a loving
reverence ought we to adore the equity of thy supreme providence which is
infinite in justice and goodness!
So in a thousand places of the holy Word we find the reason why God has
reprobated the Jews. Because, say S. Paul and S. Barnabas, you reject the
word of God, and judge yourselves unworthy of eternal life, behold we turn
to the Gentiles. [207] And he that shall consider in tranquillity of heart
Chapters IX. X. and XI. of the Epistle to the Romans, shall clearly see that
God's will did not without reason reject the Jews; nevertheless, this reason
must not be sought out by man's spirit, which, on the contrary, is obliged
to be satisfied with purely and simply reverencing the divine decree,
admiring it with love as infinitely just and upright, and loving it with
admiration as impenetrable and incomprehensible. So that the divine Apostle
thus concludes the long discourse which he had made concerning it: O the
depth of the riches of the wisdom and of the knowledge of God! How
incomprehensible are his judgments, and how unsearchable his ways! For who
hath known the mind of the Lord? Or who hath been his counsellor? [208] By
which exclamation he testifies that God does all things with great wisdom,
knowledge and reason; yet so, that, as man has not entered into the divine
counsels, whose judgments and designs are placed infinitely above our reach,
we ought devoutly to adore his decrees as most just, without searching out
their motives. These he keeps in secret to himself, in order to keep our
understanding in respect and humility to ourself.
S. Augustine in a hundred places teaches us this practice. "No one cometh to
Our Saviour," says he, "if not drawn;—whom he draws, and whom he draws not,
why he draws this one and not that,—do not wish to judge if you do not wish
to err. Listen once for all and understand. Art thou not drawn, pray that
thou mayst be drawn." "Verily it is sufficient for a Christian living as yet
by faith, and not seeing that which is perfect, but only knowing in part, to
know and believe that God delivers none from damnation, but by his free
mercy, through our Lord Jesus Christ; and that he condemns none but by his
most just truth, through the same Lord Jesus Christ. But to know why he
delivers this one rather than the other—let that man sound so great a depth
of God's judgments who is able, but let him beware of the precipice." "These
judgments are not therefore unjust because they are hidden." "But why then
does he deliver this man rather than that? We say again, O man, who art thou
that repliest against God? [209] His judgments are incomprehensible, and his
ways unknown, and let us add this: Seek not the things that are too high for
thee, and search not into things above thy ability:" [210] "Now he granteth
not them mercy, to whom, by a truth most secret and furthest removed from
men's thoughts, he judges it not fit to communicate his favours and mercy."
We see sometimes twins, of whom one is born alive and receives Baptism, the
other in his birth loses his temporal life, before being regenerated to the
eternal, and consequently the one is heir of heaven, the other is deprived
of the inheritance. Now why does divine providence give such different fates
to one equal birth? Truly it might be answered that ordinarily God's
providence does not violate the laws of nature, so that one of these twins
being strong, and the other too feeble to support the labour of his
delivery, the latter died before he could be baptized, the other lived;
divine providence not willing to stop the course of natural causes, which on
this occasion were the reason why the one was deprived of Baptism. And truly
this is a perfectly solid answer. But, following the advice of the divine S.
Paul, and of S. Augustine, we ought not to busy our thoughts in this
consideration, which, though it be good, yet in no respect enters into
comparison with many others which God has reserved to himself, and will show
us in heaven. "Then," says S. Augustine, "the secret shall end why rather
the one than the other was received, the causes being equal as to both, and
why miracles were not done amongst those who in case they had been done
would have been brought to repentance, and were done amongst such as would
will not to believe them." And in another place the same saint, speaking of
sinners, some of whom God leaves in their iniquity while others he raises,
says: "Now why he retains the one and not the other, it is not possible to
comprehend, nor lawful to inquire, since it is enough to know that it is by
him we stand and that it is not by him we fall." And again: "This is hidden
and far removed from man's understanding, at least from mine."
Behold, Theotimus, the most holy way of philosophising on this subject.
Wherefore I have always considered that the learned modesty and most wise
humility of the seraphic Doctor S. Bonaventure were greatly to be admired
and loved, in the discourse which he makes of the reason why divine
providence ordains the elect to eternal life. "Perhaps," says he, "it is by
a foresight of the good works which will be done by him that is drawn,
insomuch as they proceed in some sort from the will: but distinctly to
declare which good works being foreseen move God's will, I am not able, nor
will I make inquiry thereupon: and there is no other reason than some sort
of congruity, so that we might assign one while it might be another.
Wherefore we cannot with assurance point out the true reason nor the true
motive of God's will in this: for as S. Augustine says: 'Although the truth
of it is most certain, yet is it far removed from our thoughts.' So that we
can say nothing assuredly of it unless by the revelation of him who knows
all things. And whereas it was not expedient for our salvation that we
should have knowledge of these secrets, but on the contrary, it was more
profitable that we should be ignorant of them, to keep us in humility, God
would not reveal them, yea the holy Apostle did not dare to inquire about
them, but testified the insufficiency of our understanding in this matter
when he cried out: O the depth of the riches of the wisdom and of the
knowledge of God!" Could one speak more holily Theotimus of so holy a
mystery? Indeed these are the words of a most saintly and prudent Doctor of
the Church.
[207] Acts xiii. 46.
[208] Rom. xi. 33, 34.
[209] Rom. ix. 20.
[210] Eccli. iii. 22.
|