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Book VI
OF THE EXERCISES OF HOLY LOVE IN PRAYER.
CHAPTER I. A DESCRIPTION OF MYSTICAL THEOLOGY, WHICH IS NO OTHER THING THAN PRAYER.
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We have two principal exercises of our love towards God, the one affective,
the other effective, or, as S. Bernard calls it, active; by that we affect
or love God and what he loves, by this we serve God and do what he ordains;
that joins us to God's goodness, this makes us execute his will: the one
fills us with complacency, benevolence, yearnings, desires, aspirations and
spiritual ardours, causing us to practise the sacred infusions and minglings
of our spirit with God's; the other establishes in us the solid resolution,
the constancy of heart, and the inviolable obedience requisite to effect the
ordinances of the divine will, and to suffer, accept, approve and embrace,
all that comes from his good-pleasure; the one makes us pleased in God, the
other makes us please God: by the one we conceive, by the other we bring
forth: by the one we place God upon our heart, as a standard of love, around
which all our affections are ranged, by the other we place him upon our arm,
as a sword of love whereby we effect all the exploits of virtue.
Now the first exercise consists principally in prayer; in which so many
different interior movements take place that to express them all is
impossible, not only by reason of their number, but also for their nature
and quality, which being spiritual, they cannot but be very rarefied, and
almost imperceptible to our understanding. The cleverest and best trained
hounds are often at fault; they lose the strain and scent by the variety of
sleights which the stag uses, who makes doubles, puts them on a wrong scent,
and practises a thousand arts to escape the cry; and we oftentimes lose the
scent and knowledge of our own heart in the infinite diversity of motions by
which it turns itself, in so many ways and with such promptitude, that one
cannot discern its track.
God alone is he, who, by his infinite wisdom, sees, knows and penetrates all
the turnings and windings of our hearts: he understands our thoughts from
afar, he finds out our traces, doubles and turnings; his knowledge therein
is admirable, surpassing our capacity and reach. Certainly if our spirits
would turn back upon themselves by reflections, and by reconsiderations of
their acts, we should enter into labyrinths from which we should find no
outgate; and it would require an attention quite beyond our power, to think
what our thoughts are, to consider our considerations, to observe all our
spiritual observations, to discern that we discern, to remember that we
remember,—these acts would be mazes from which we could not deliver
ourselves. This treatise, then, is difficult, especially to one who is not a
man of great prayer.
We take not here the word prayer (oraison) only for the petition (priere) or
demand for some good, poured out by the faithful before God, as S. Basil
calls it, but as S. Bonaventure does, when he says that prayer, generally
speaking; comprehends all the acts of contemplation; or as S. Gregory
Nazianzen, who teaches that prayer is a conference or conversation of the
soul with God; or again as S. Chrysostom, when he says that prayer is a
discoursing with the divine Majesty; or finally as S. Augustine and S.
Damascene, who term prayer an ascent or raising of the soul to God. And if
prayer be a colloquy, a discourse or a conversation of the soul with God, by
it then we speak to God, and he again speaks to us; we aspire to him and
breathe in him, and he reciprocally inspires us and breathes upon us.
But of what do we discourse in prayer? What is the subject of our
conference? Theotimus, in it we speak of God only: for of what can love
discourse and talk but of the well-beloved? And therefore prayer, and
mystical theology, are one same thing. It is called theology, because, as
speculative theology has God for its object, so this also treats only of
God, yet with three differences: for, 1. The former treats of God as God,
but the latter treats of him as sovereignly amiable; that is, the former
regards the Divinity of the supreme goodness, and the latter the supreme
goodness of the Divinity. 2. The speculative treats of God with men and
amongst men, the mystical speaks of God with God, and in God himself. 3.
The speculative tends to the knowledge of God, and the mystical to the love
of God; that, therefore, makes its scholars wise, and learned, and
theologians, but this makes its scholars fervent, and affectionate, lovers
of God, a Philotheus or a Theophilus.
Now it is called mystical, because its conversation is altogether secret,
and there is nothing said in it between God and the soul save only from
heart to heart, by a communication incommunicable to all but those who make
it. Lovers' language is so peculiar to themselves that none but themselves
understand it. I sleep, said the holy spouse, and my heart watcheth. Ah!
hark! The voice of my beloved knocking. [257] Who would have guessed that
this spouse being asleep could yet talk with her beloved? But where love
reigns, the sound of exterior words is not necessary, nor the help of sense
to entertain and to hear one another. In fine, prayer and mystical theology
is nothing else but a conversation in which the soul amorously entertains
herself with God concerning his most amiable goodness, to unite and join
herself thereto.
Prayer is a manna, for the infinity of delicious tastes and precious
sweetnesses which it gives to such as use it, but it is hidden, [258]
because it falls before the light of any science, in the mental solitude
where the soul alone treats with her God alone. Who is she, might one say of
her, that goeth up by the desert, as a pillar of smoke of aromatical spices,
of myrrh, and frankincense, and of all the powders of the perfumer? [259]
And it was the desire of secrecy that moved her to make this petition to her
love: Come, my beloved, let us go forth into the field, let us abide in the
villages. [260] For this reason the heavenly spouse is styled a turtle, a
bird which is delighted in shady and solitary places, where she makes no
other use of her song but for her only mate, either in life wooing him or
after his death plaining him. For this reason, in the Canticles, the divine
lover and the heavenly spouse describe their loves by a continual conversing
together; and if their friends sometimes speak during their conference, it
is but casually, and without interrupting their colloquy. Hence the Blessed
Mother (S.) Teresa of Jesus found at first more profit in the mysteries
where our Saviour was most alone; as in the Garden of Olives, and where he
was awaiting the Samaritan woman, for she fancied that he being alone would
more readily admit her into his company.
Love desires secrecy; yea, though lovers may have nothing secret to say, yet
they love to say it secretly: and this is partly, if I am not mistaken,
because they would speak only for themselves, whereas when they speak out
loud it seems no longer to be for themselves alone; partly because they do
not say common things in a common manner, but with touches which are
particular, and which manifest the special affection with which they speak.
The language of love is common, as to the words, but in manner and
pronunciation it is so special that none but lovers understand it. The name
of a friend uttered in public is no great thing, but spoken apart, secretly
in the ear, it imports wonders, and the more secretly it is spoken the more
delightful is its signification. O God! what a difference there is between
the language of the ancient lovers of the Divinity,—Ignatius, Cyprian,
Chrysostom, Augustine, Hilary, Ephrem, Gregory, Bernard,—and that of less
affectionate theologians! We use their very words, but with them the words
were full of fire and of sweets of amorous perfumes; with us they are cold
and have no scent at all.
Love speaks not only by the tongue, but by the eyes, by sighs, and play of
features; yea, silence and dumbness are words for it. My heart hath said to
thee, my face hath sought thee: thy face, O Lord, will I still seek. [261]
My eyes have failed for thy word, saying: When wilt thou comfort me? [262]
Hear my prayer, O Lord, and my supplication: give ear to my tears. [263] Let
not the apple of thy eye cease, [264] said the desolate heart of the
inhabitants of Jerusalem to their own city. Do you mark, Theotimus, how the
silence of afflicted lovers speaks by the apple of their eye, and by tears?
Truly the chief exercise in mystical theology is to speak to God and to hear
God speak in the bottom of the heart; and because this discourse passes in
most secret aspirations and inspirations, we term it a silent conversing.
Eyes speak to eyes, and heart to heart, and none understand what passes save
the sacred lovers who speak.
[257] Cant. v. 2.
[258] Apoc. ii. 17.
[259] Cant. iii. 6.
[260] Cant. vii. 11.
[261] Ps. xxvi. 8.
[262] Ps. cxviii. 82.
[263] Ps. xxxviii. 13.
[264] Jer. Lam. ii. 18.
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