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Book VII
OF THE UNION OF THE SOUL WITH HER GOD, WHICH IS PERFECTED IN PRAYER.
CHAPTER II. OF THE VARIOUS DEGREES OF THE HOLY UNION WHICH IS MADE IN PRAYER.
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Sometimes the union is made without our co-operation, save only by a simple
following (suite), permitting ourselves to be united to the divine goodness
without resistance, as a little child, in love with its mother's breasts,
and yet so feeble that it cannot move itself towards them, nor cleave to
them when there; only it is—Ah! so happy, to be taken and drawn within its
mother's arms, and to be pressed by her to her bosom.
Sometimes we co-operate, when, being drawn, we willingly run, [319] to
second the force of God's goodness which draws us and clasps us to him by
love.
Sometimes we seem to begin to join and fasten ourselves to God before he
joins himself to us, because we feel the action of the union on our part,
without perceiving what God is doing on his side, who, however, there is no
doubt, always acts first on us, though we do not always perceive his action:
for unless he united himself to us we should never unite ourselves to him;
he always chooses and lays hold of us, before we choose or lay hold of him.
But when, following his imperceptible attractions, we begin to unite
ourselves to him, he sometimes makes the continuation of our union,
assisting our weakness, and joining himself perceptibly to us, insomuch that
we feel him enter and penetrate our hearts with an incomparable sweetness.
And sometimes also, as he drew us insensibly to the union, he continues
insensibly to aid and assist us. And we know not indeed how so great a union
is made, yet know we well that our forces are not able to make it, wherefore
we justly argue that some secret power is working insensibly in us: as
skippers with a cargo of iron perceiving their ships move apace with a very
light breeze, know that they are near mountains of loadstone, which draw
them imperceptibly, and thus they perceive a sensible and perceptible
advancement caused by an insensible and imperceptible means. For so when we
see our spirit unite itself ever closer and closer to God, during the little
efforts which our will makes, we rightly judge that we have too little wind
to sail so fast, and that it must needs be that the loadstone of our souls
draws us by the secret influence of his grace: which he would leave
imperceptible, that it may be more admirable, and that undistracted by the
sense of his drawings, we may with more purity and simplicity be occupied in
uniting ourselves to his goodness.
Sometimes this union is made so insensibly that our heart neither perceives
the divine operation in her, nor yet her own co-operation, but finds simply
the union itself insensibly effected, like Jacob, who found himself married
to Lia without thinking of it: or rather, like another Samson, but more
happy, the heart finds itself netted and tied in the bands of holy union,
without having ever perceived it.
At other times we feel the embraces, the union being made by sensible
actions as well on God's side, as on ours.
Sometimes the union is made by the will only, and in the will only; and
sometimes the understanding has its part therein, because the will draws it
after it and applies it to its object, making it take a special pleasure in
being fastened down to the consideration thereof; as we see that love causes
in our corporal eyes a profound and special attention, to rivet them on the
sight of what we love.
Sometimes this union is made by all the faculties of the soul, which gather
about the will, not to be united to God themselves, not being all capable of
it, but to give more convenience to the will to make its union; for if the
other faculties were applied each to its proper object, the soul working in
them, could not so perfectly give herself to the action by which the union
with God is made. Such is the variety of unions.
Look at S. Martial (for he was, they say, the blessed child mentioned in S.
Mark): Our Saviour took him, lifted him up, and held him for a good while in
his arms. O lovely little Martial, how happy thou art to be laid hold of,
taken up and carried, to be united, joined and clasped to the heavenly bosom
of our Saviour, and kissed with his sacred mouth, without any co-operation
of thine, save that thou didst not resist the receiving of those divine
caresses! On the contrary, S. Simeon embraces our Saviour, and clasps him to
his bosom, our Saviour giving no sign of co-operating in this union, though,
as the holy Church sings: "The old man carried the child, but the child was
governing the old man." S. Bonaventure, touched with a holy humility, did
not only not unite himself to our Saviour, but withdrew himself from his
real presence, that is, from the holy sacrament of the altar, when, hearing
Mass one day, our Saviour came to unite himself with him, bringing him his
holy sacrament. But this union being made,—Ah! Theotimus, think with what
fervour this holy soul locked his Saviour in his heart! On the contrary S.
Catharine of Siena ardently desiring our Saviour in the holy communion,
pressing and advancing her soul and affection towards him—he came and joined
himself unto her, entering into her mouth with a thousand benedictions. So
that our Saviour began the union with S. Bonaventure, and S. Catharine
seemed to begin that which she had with her Saviour. The sacred spouse in
the Canticles speaks as having practised both sorts of unions. I to my
beloved, and his turning is towards me: [320] which is as much as if she had
said: I am united to my dear love, and he likewise turns towards me, to the
end that uniting himself more and more unto me he may become wholly mine. A
bundle of myrrh is my beloved to me, he shall abide between my breasts.
[321] My soul, says David, hath stuck close to thee: thy right hand hath
received me. [322] But in another place she confesses that she is first
taken, saying: My beloved to me and I to him. [323] We make a holy union, by
which he joins himself to me and I join myself to him. And yet to show that
the whole union is ever made by God's grace, which draws us unto it, and by
its attractions moves our soul and animates the movement of our union
towards him, she cries out, as being wholly powerless: Draw me: yet to
testify that she will not let herself be drawn as a stone or a galley-slave,
but that on her side she will concur and will mingle her feeble movements
with the mighty drawings of her lover: We will run after thee, she says, to
the odour of thy ointments. [324] And to make it known that if she is
strongly drawn by the will, all the powers of the soul will make towards the
union: Draw me, says she, and we will run; the spouse draws but one, and
many run to the union. It is the will only that God desires, but all the
other powers run after it to be united to God with it.
To this union the divine Shepherd of souls provoked his dear Sulamitess. Put
me, says he, as a seal upon thy heart, as a seal upon thy arm. [325] To
impress properly a signet upon wax, one not only applies it, but presses it
hard down: so he desires that we should be united unto him by a union so
strict and close, that we should remain marked with his seal.
The charity of Christ presses us. [326] O God! what an example of excellent
union! He was united to our human nature by grace, as a vine to its elm, to
make it in some sort participate in his fruit; but seeing this union undone
by Adam's sin, he made another more close and pressing union in the
Incarnation, whereby human nature remains for ever joined in personal unity
to the Divinity; and to the end that not human nature only, but that every
man might be intimately united with his goodness, he instituted the
Sacrament of the most holy Eucharist, in which every one may participate, to
unite his Saviour to himself really and by way of food. Theotimus, this
sacramental union urges and aids us towards the spiritual, of which we
speak.
[319] Cant. i. 3.
[320] Cant. vii. 10.
[321] Cant. i. 12.
[322] Ps. lxii. 9.
[323] Cant. ii. 16.
[324] Cant. i. 3.
[325] Cant. viii. 6.
[326] 2 Cor. v. 14.
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