|
Book V
OF THE TWO PRINCIPAL EXERCISES OF HOLY LOVE WHICH CONSIST IN COMPLACENCY AND BENEVOLENCE.
CHAPTER XII. OF THE SOVEREIGN PRAISE WHICH GOD GIVES UNTO HIMSELF, AND HOW WE EXERCISE BENEVOLENCE IN IT.
|
All our Saviour's human actions are of an infinite merit and value, by
reason of the person who produces them, who is the same God with the Father
and the Holy Ghost, yet they are not infinite by nature and essence. For as,
being in a chamber, we receive not light according to the greatness of the
brightness of the sun which sends it out, but according to the greatness of
the window, by which it is communicated,—so our Saviour's human actions are
not infinite, though indeed they are of infinite value; for although they
are the actions of a divine person, yet they are not done according to the
extent of his infinity, but according to the finite greatness of his
humanity by which he does them. So that, as the human actions of our sweet
Saviour are infinite compared to ours, so are they only finite in comparison
with the essential infinity of the divinity. They are infinite in value,
estimation and dignity, as proceeding from a person who is God; yet are they
finite by nature and essence, as being done by God according to his human
nature and substance, which is finite; and therefore the praises which are
given by our Saviour, as he is man, not being in all respects infinite,
cannot fully correspond to the infinite greatness of the divinity, to which
they are directed.
Wherefore after the first ravishment of admiration which seizes us, when we
meet with a praise so glorious as is that which our Saviour renders to his
Father, we fail not to recognise that the divinity is yet infinitely more
deserving of praise than it can be praised, either by all creatures, or by
the very humanity of the eternal Son.
If a man were praising the sun for its light, the more he lifted himself
towards it in praising it, the more praiseworthy he would find it, because
he would still discover more and more brightness in it. And if, as is very
probable, it be the beauty of this light which provokes larks to sing, it is
no marvel that, as they fly more loftily, they sing more clearly, equally
raising their voice and their flight, till such time as hardly being able to
sing any more, they begin to fall in voice and body, bringing down by little
and little their flight and their voice. So, Theotimus, while by benevolence
we are rising towards the divinity to intone and hear his praises, we see
ever that he is above all praise. And finally, we learn that he cannot be
praised according to his worth save only by himself, who alone can worthily
match his sovereign goodness with sovereign praise. Hereupon we cry out:
"Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost:" and that
every one may know that it is not the glory of created praises which we wish
God by this ejaculation, but the essential and eternal glory that is in
himself, by himself, of himself, and which is himself, we add: "As it was in
the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen." As
though we expressed a wish that God should be glorified for ever with the
glory which he had before all creatures, in his infinite eternity and
eternal infinity. For this we add the verse Gloria to every psalm and
canticle, according to the ancient custom of the Eastern Church, which the
great S. Jerome begged Pope S. Damasus to institute here in the Western; to
protest, that all the praises of men and angels are too low to praise
worthily the divine goodness, and that, to be worthily praised, itself must
be its own glory, praise and benediction.
O God! what complacency, what a joy to the soul who loves, when she has her
desire satisfied, in seeing her beloved infinitely praise, bless and magnify
himself! But from this complacency there springs a new desire of praise: for
the soul would gladly praise this so worthy a praise given to God by
himself, thanking him profoundly for it, and calling again all things to her
assistance, to come and glorify the glory of God with her, to bless his
infinite benedictions, and praise his eternal praises; so that by this
return and repetition of praises upon praises, she engages herself, between
complacency and benevolence, in a most happy labyrinth of love, being wholly
lost in this immense sweetness, sovereignly praising the divinity in that it
cannot be sufficiently praised but by itself. And though in the beginning,
the amorous soul had conceived a certain desire of being able to praise God
sufficiently; yet reflecting upon herself again, she protests that she would
not wish to have power to praise him sufficiently, but remains in a most
humble complacency, to perceive that the divine goodness is so infinitely
praiseworthy, that it cannot be sufficiently praised save by its own
infinity alone.
And here the soul, ravished with admiration, sings the song of sacred
silence: A hymn becometh thee, O Lord, in Sion, and a vow shall be paid to
thee in Jerusalem. [256]
For so the seraphim of Isaias, adoring and praising God, veiled their faces
and feet, confessing therein their want of ability to contemplate or serve
him properly; for our feet, by which we go, signify service: but still they
fly with two wings in the sweet unrest of complacency and benevolence, their
love reposing in that delightful unrest.
Man's heart is never so much disquieted as when the motion by which it
continually opens and shuts itself is hindered, never so quiet as when its
motions are free; so that the heart's quiet consists in its motion. Now it
is the same with the love of the Seraphim and seraphical men; for this has
its repose in its continual movement of complacency, by which it draws God
into itself, as if shutting itself, and of benevolence, by which it opens
itself and throws itself entirely into God. This love then desires to behold
the infinite wonders of God's goodness, yet it spreads its wings over its
face, confessing that it cannot succeed in this: it would also present some
worthy service, but it folds this desire over its feet, confessing that it
has not power to perform it, nor does anything remain save the two wings of
complacency and benevolence, by which it flies and darts towards God.
[256] Ps. lxiv. 1.
|