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Book V
OF THE TWO PRINCIPAL EXERCISES OF HOLY LOVE WHICH CONSIST IN COMPLACENCY AND BENEVOLENCE.
CHAPTER X. HOW THE DESIRE TO PRAISE GOD MAKES US ASPIRE TO HEAVEN.
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The amorous soul, perceiving that she cannot satiate the desire she has to
praise her well-beloved while she lives in this world, and knowing that the
praises which are given in heaven to the divine goodness are sung to an
incomparably more delightful air,—O God! says she, how much to be praised
are the praises which are poured forth by those blessed spirits before the
throne of my heavenly king; how blessed are their blessings! O what a
happiness is it to hear this melody of the most holy eternity, in which by
the sweetest concurrence of dissimilar and varied tones, are made those
admirable accords—all the parts mingling together with a continued sequence
and marvellous linking of progressive movements—by which perpetual Alleluias
do resound on every side.
Voices which for their loudness are compared to thunders, to trumpets, to
the noise of the waves of a troubled sea; yet voices which, for their
incomparable softness and sweetness, are compared to the melody of harps,
delicately and delightfully touched by hands of the most skilful players;
and voices all of which unite to sing the joyous Paschal canticle: Alleluia,
praise God, Amen, praise God. For know, Theotimus, that a voice goes out
from the divine throne which ceases not to cry to the happy inhabitants of
the glorious heavenly Jerusalem: Praise God, O you that are his servants,
and you that fear him great and little: [251] at which all the innumerable
multitude of saints,—the choirs of angels and the choirs of assembled
men,—answer, singing with all their force: Alleluia, praise God. But what is
this admirable voice, which issuing out from the divine throne entones the
Alleluias of the elect, except most holy complacency, which being received
into the heart, makes them feel the sweetness of the divine perfections,
whereupon a loving benevolence, the source of heavenly praises, is bred in
them? So that complacency coming from the throne, declares to the blessed
the grandeurs of God, and benevolence excites them to pour out in their turn
the perfumes of praise before the throne. Wherefore by way of answer they
eternally sing: Alleluia, that is, praise God. The complacency comes from
the throne into the heart, and benevolence goes from the heart to the
throne.
O how worthy of love is this temple, wholly resounding with praise! O what
content have such as live in this sacred dwelling, where so many heavenly
philomels and nightingales sing with this holy strife of love, the canticles
of eternal delight!
The heart, then, that in this world can neither sing nor hear the divine
praises to its liking, enters into unutterable desires of being delivered
from the bonds of this life to pass to the other, where the heavenly
well-beloved is so perfectly praised: and these desires having taken
possession of the heart, often become so strong and urgent in the breast of
sacred lovers, that banishing all other desires they cause disgust of all
earthly things, and render the soul languishing and lovesick: yea, sometimes
the holy passion goes so far, that, God permitting, one dies of it.
So that glorious and seraphical lover S. Francis, having been long torn with
this strong affection for praising God, in the end, in his last years, after
he had had assurance, by a special revelation, of his eternal salvation,
could not contain his joy, but wasted daily, as if his life and soul had
burnt away like incense, upon the fire of the ardent desires which he had to
see his Master, incessantly to praise him: so that these ardours taking
every day a fresh increase, his soul left his body by a passionate movement
which he made towards heaven; for the divine Providence thought good that he
should die pronouncing these sacred words: Bring my soul out of prison, that
I may praise thy name: the just wait for me, until thou reward me. [252]
Behold, Theotimus, I beseech you, this soul, who, as a heavenly nightingale
shut up in the cage of his body, in which he cannot at will sing the
benedictions of his eternal love, knows that he could better trill and
practise his delicious song if he could gain the air, to enjoy his liberty
and the society of other philomels, amongst the gay and flowery hills of the
land of the blessed; wherefore he cries: Alas! O Lord of my life, ah! by thy
sweet goodness, deliver poor me from the cage of my body, free me from this
little prison, to the end that released from this bondage I may fly to my
dear companions, who expect me there above in heaven, to make me one of
their choirs, and environ me with their joy. There, Lord, according my voice
to theirs, I with them will make up a sweet harmony of delicious airs and
words, singing, praising, and blessing thy mercy. This admirable Saint, as
an orator who would end and conclude all he had said in some short sentence,
put this happy ending to all his wishes and desires, whereof these last
words were an abridgment; words to which he so firmly attached his soul,
that in breathing them he breathed his last. My God, Theotimus, what a sweet
and dear death was this! a happily loving death, a holily mortal love.
[251] Apoc. xix.
[252] Ps. cxli. 8.
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