Treats in general of how the soul likewise must be in
darkness, in so far as this rests with itself, to the end that it
may be effectively guided by faith to the highest contemplation.
IT is now, I think, becoming clear how faith is dark night to
the soul, and how the soul likewise must be dark, or in darkness
as to its own light so that it may allow itself to be guided by
faith to this high goal of union. But, in order that the soul may
be able to do this, it will now be well to continue describing, in
somewhat greater detail, this darkness which it must have, in
order that it may enter into this abyss of faith. And thus in this
chapter I shall speak of it in a general way; and hereafter, with
the Divine favour, I shall continue to describe more minutely the
way in which the soul is to conduct itself that it may neither
stray therein nor impede this guide.
2. I say, then, that the soul, in order to be effectively
guided to this state by faith, must not only be in darkness with
respect to that part that concerns the creatures and temporal
things, which is the sensual and the lower part (whereof we have
already treated), but that likewise it must be blinded and
darkened according to the part which has respect to God and to
spiritual things, which is the rational and higher part, whereof
we are now treating. For, in order that one may attain
supernatural transformation, it is clear that he must be plunged
into darkness and carried far away from all contained in his
nature that is sensual and rational. For the word supernatural
means that which soars above the natural self; the natural self,
therefore, remains beneath it. For, although this transformation
and union is something that cannot be comprehended by human
ability and sense, the soul must completely and voluntarily void
itself of all that can enter into it, whether from above or from
below -- I mean according to the affection and will -- so far as
this rests with itself. For who shall prevent God from doing that
which He will in the soul that is resigned, annihilated and
detached? But the soul must be voided of all such things as can
enter its capacity, so that, however many supernatural experiences
it may have, it will ever remain as it were detached from them and
in darkness. It must be like to a blind man, leaning upon dark
faith, taking it for guide and light, and leaning upon none of the
things that he understands, experiences, feels and imagines. For
all these are darkness, which will cause him to stray; and faith
is above all that he understands and experiences and feels and
imagines. And, if he be not blinded as to this, and remain not in
total darkness, he attains not to that which is greater -- namely,
that which is taught by faith.
3. A blind man, if he be not quite blind, refuses to be led
by a guide; and, since he sees a little, he thinks it better to go
in whatever happens to be the direction which he can distinguish,
because he sees none better; and thus he can lead astray a guide
who sees more than he, for after all it is for him to say where he
shall go rather than for the guide. In the same way a soul may
lean upon any knowledge of its own, or any feeling or experience
of God, yet, however great this may be, it is very little and far
different from what God is; and, in going along this road, a soul
is easily led astray, or brought to a standstill, because it will
not remain in faith like one that is blind, and faith is its true
guide.
4. It is this that was meant by Saint Paul when he said:
Accedentem ad Deum oportet credere quod est.[225] Which signifies:
He that would journey towards union with God must needs believe in
His Being. As though he had said: He that would attain to being
joined in a union with God must not walk by understanding, neither
lean upon experience or feeling or imagination, but he must
believe in His being, which is not perceptible to the
understanding, neither to the desire nor to the imagination nor to
any other sense, neither can it be known in this life at all. Yea,
in this life, the highest thing that can be felt and experienced
concerning God is infinitely remote from God and from the pure
possession of Him. Isaias and Saint Paul say: Nec oculus vidit,
nec auris audivit, nec in cor hominis ascendit, qua praeparavit
Deus iis, qui diligunt illum.[226] Which signifies: That which God
hath prepared for them that love Him neither eye hath seen, nor
ear heard, neither hath it entered into the heart or thought of
man. So, however much the soul aspires to be perfectly united
through grace in this life with that to which it will be united
through glory in the next (which, as Saint Paul here says, eye
hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath it entered into the
heart of man in the flesh), it is clear that, in order perfectly
to attain to union in this life through grace and through love, a
soul must be in darkness with respect to all that can enter
through the eye, and to all that can be received through the ear,
and can be imagined with the fancy, and understood with the heart,
which here signifies the soul. And thus a soul is greatly impeded
from reaching this high estate of union with God when it clings to
any understanding or feeling or imagination or appearance or will
or manner of its own, or to any other act or to anything of its
own, and cannot detach and strip itself of all these. For, as we
say, the goal which it seeks lies beyond all this, yea, beyond
even the highest thing that can be known or experienced; and thus
a soul must pass beyond everything to unknowing.
5. Wherefore, upon this road, to enter upon the road is to
leave the road; or, to express it better, it is to pass on to the
goal and to leave one's own way,[227] and to enter upon that which
has no way, which is God. For the soul that attains to this state
has no longer any ways or methods, still less is it attached to
ways and methods, or is capable of being attached to them. I mean
ways of understanding, or of perception, or of feeling.
Nevertheless it has within itself all ways, after the way of one
that possesses nothing, yet possesses all things.[228] For, if it
have courage to pass beyond its natural limitations, both
interiorly and exteriorly, it enters within the limits of the
supernatural, which has no way, yet in substance has all ways.
Hence for the soul to arrive at these limits is for it to leave
these limits, in each case going forth out of itself a great way,
from this lowly state to that which is high above all others.
6. Wherefore, passing beyond all that can be known and
understood, both spiritually and naturally, the soul will desire
with all desire to come to that which in this life cannot be
known, neither can enter into its heart. And, leaving behind all
that it experiences and feels, both temporally and spiritually,
and all that it is able to experience and feel in this life, it
will desire with all desire to come to that which surpasses all
feeling and experience. And, in order to be free and void to that
end, it must in no wise lay hold upon that which it receives,
either spiritually or sensually, within itself[229] (as we shall
explain presently, when we treat this in detail), considering it
all to be of much less account. For the more emphasis the soul
lays upon what it understands, experiences and imagines, and the
more it esteems this, whether it be spiritual or no, the more it
loses of the supreme good, and the more it is hindered from
attaining thereto. And the less it thinks of what it may have,
however much this be, in comparison with the highest good, the
more it dwells upon that good and esteems it, and, consequently,
the more nearly it approaches it. And in this wise the soul
approaches a great way towards union, in darkness, by means of
faith, which is likewise dark, and in this wise faith wondrously
illumines it. It is certain that, if the soul should desire to
see, it would be in darkness much more quickly, with respect to
God, than would one who opens his eyes to look upon the great
brightness of the sun.
7. Wherefore, by blinding itself in its faculties upon this
road, the soul will see the light, even as the Saviour says in the
Gospel, in this wise: In judicium veni in hunc mundum: ut qui non
vident, videant, et qui vident, caeci fiant.[230] That is: I am come
into this world for judgment; that they which see not may see, and
that they which see may become blind. This, as it will be
supposed, is to be understood of this spiritual road, where the
soul that is in darkness, and is blinded as regards all its
natural and proper lights, will see supernaturally; and the soul
that would depend upon any light of its own will become the
blinder and will halt upon the road to union.
8. And, that we may proceed with less confusion, I think it
will be necessary to describe, in the following chapter, the
nature of this that we call union of the soul with God; for, when
this is understood, that which we shall say hereafter will become
much clearer. And so I think the treatment of this union comes
well at this point, as in its proper place. For, although the
thread of that which we are expounding is interrupted thereby,
this is not done without a reason, since it serves to illustrate
in this place the very thing that is being described. The chapter
which follows, then, will be a parenthetical one, placed, as it
were, between the two terms of an enthymeme, since we shall
afterwards have to treat in detail of the three faculties of the
soul, with respect to the three logical virtues, in relation to
this second night.
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