Wherein is described how strait is the way that leads to
eternal life and how completely detached and disencumbered must be
those that will walk in it. We begin to speak of the detachment of
the understanding.
WE have now to describe the detachment and purity of the
three faculties of the soul and for this are necessary a far
greater knowledge and spirituality than mine, in order to make
clear to spiritual persons how strait is this road which, said Our
Saviour, leads to life; so that, persuaded of this, they may not
marvel at the emptiness and detachment to which, in this night, we
have to abandon the faculties of the soul.
2. To this end must be carefully noted the words which Our
Saviour used, in the seventh chapter of Saint Matthew, concerning
this road, as follows: Quam angusta porta, et arcta via est, quae
ducit ad vitam, et pauci sunt, qui inveniunt eam.[243] This
signifies: How strait is the gate and how narrow the way that
leadeth unto life, and few there are that find it! In this passage
we must carefully note the emphasis and insistence which are
contained in that word Quam. For it is as if He had said: In truth
the way is very strait, more so than you think. And likewise it is
to be noted that He says first that the gate is strait, to make it
clear that, in order for the soul to enter by this gate, which is
Christ, and which comes at the beginning of the road, the will
must first be straitened and detached in all things sensual and
temporal, and God must be loved above them all; which belongs to
the night of sense, as we have said.
3. He then says that the way is narrow -- that is to say, the
way of perfection -- in order to make it clear that, to travel
upon the way of perfection, the soul has not only to enter by the
strait gate, emptying itself of things of sense, but has also to
straiten[244] itself, freeing and disencumbering itself completely
in that which pertains to the spirit. And thus we can apply what
He says of the strait gate to the sensual part of man; and what He
says of the narrow road we can understand of the spiritual or the
rational part; and, when He says 'Few there are that find it,' the
reason of this must be noted, which is that there are few who can
enter, and desire to enter, into this complete detachment and
emptiness of spirit. For this path ascending the high mountain of
perfection leads upward, and is narrow, and therefore requires
travellers that have no burden weighing upon them with respect to
lower things, neither aught that embarrasses them with respect to
higher things: and, as this is a matter wherein we must seek after
and attain to God alone, God alone must be the object of our
search and attainment.
4. Hence it is clearly seen that the soul must not only be
disencumbered from that which belongs to the creatures, but
likewise, as it travels, must be annihilated and detached from all
that belongs to its spirit. Wherefore Our Lord, instructing us and
leading us into this road, gave, in the eighth chapter of St.
Mark, that wonderful teaching of which I think it may almost be
said that, the more necessary it is for spiritual persons, the
less it is practised by them. As this teaching is so important and
so much to our purpose, I shall reproduce it here in full, and
expound it according to its genuine, spiritual sense. He says,
then, thus: Si quis vult me sequi, deneget semetipsum: et tollat
crucem suam, et sequatur me. Qui enim voluerit animam suam salvam
facere, perdet eam: qui autem perdiderit animam suam propter me. .
. salvam lacier eam.[245] This signifies: If any man will follow My
road, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow Me.
For he that will save his soul shall lose it; but he that loses it
for My sake, shall gain it.
5. Oh, that one could show us how to understand, practise and
experience what this counsel is which our Saviour here gives us
concerning self-denial,[246] so that spiritual persons might see in
how different a way they should conduct themselves upon this road
from that which many of them think proper! For they believe that
any kind of retirement and reformation of life suffices; and
others are content with practising the virtues and continuing in
prayer and pursuing mortification; but they attain not to
detachment and poverty or selflessness[247] or spiritual purity
(which are all one), which the Lord here commends to us; for they
prefer feeding and clothing their natural selves with spiritual
feelings and consolations, to stripping themselves of all things,
and denying themselves all things, for God's sake. For they think
that it suffices to deny themselves worldly things without
annihilating and purifying themselves of spiritual attachment.
Wherefore it comes to pass that, when there presents itself to
them any of this solid and perfect spirituality, consisting in the
annihilation of all sweetness in God, in aridity, distaste and
trial, which is the true spiritual cross, and the detachment of
the spiritual poverty of Christ, they flee from it as from death,
and seek only sweetness and delectable communion with God. This is
not self-denial and detachment of spirit, but spiritual gluttony.
Herein, spiritually, they become enemies of the Cross of Christ;
for true spirituality seeks for God's sake that which is
distasteful rather than that which is delectable; and inclines
itself rather to suffering than to consolation; and desires to go
without all blessings for God's sake rather than to possess them;
and to endure aridities and afflictions rather than to enjoy sweet
communications, knowing that this is to follow Christ and to deny
oneself, and that the other is perchance to seek oneself in God,
which is clean contrary to love. For to seek oneself in God is to
seek the favours and refreshments of God; but to seek God in
oneself is not only to desire to be without both of these for
God's sake, but to be disposed to choose, for Christ's sake, all
that is most distasteful, whether in relation to God or to the
world; and this is love of God.
6. Oh, that one could tell us how far Our Lord desires this
self-denial to be carried! It must certainly be like to death and
annihilation, temporal, natural and spiritual, in all things that
the will esteems, wherein consists all self-denial. And it is this
that Our Lord meant when He said: 'He that will save his life, the
same shall lose it.' That is to say: He that will possess anything
or seek anything for himself, the same shall lose it; and he that
loses his soul for My sake, the same shall gain it. That is to
say: He who for Christ's sake renounces all that his will can
desire and enjoy, and chooses that which is most like to the Cross
(which the Lord Himself, through Saint John, describes as hating
his soul[248]), the same shall gain it. And this His Majesty taught
to those two disciples who went and begged Him for a place on His
right hand and on His left; when, giving no countenance to their
request for such glory, He offered them the chalice which He had
to drink, as a thing more precious and more secure upon this earth
than is fruition.[249]
7. This chalice is death to the natural self, a death
attained through the detachment and annihilation of that self, in
order that the soul may travel by this narrow path, with respect
to all its connections with sense, as we have said, and according
to the spirit, as we shall now say; that is, in its understanding
and in its enjoyment and in its feeling. And, as a result, not
only has the soul made its renunciation as regards both sense and
spirit, but it is not hindered, even by that which is spiritual,
in taking the narrow way, on which there is room only for self-
denial (as the Saviour explains), and the Cross, which is the
staff wherewith one may reach one+s goal, and whereby the road is
greatly lightened and made easy. Wherefore Our Lord said through
Saint Matthew: 'My yoke is easy and My burden is light'; which
burden is the cross. For if a man resolve to submit himself to
carrying this cross -- that is to say, if he resolve to desire in
truth to meet trials and to bear them in all things for God's
sake, he will find in them all great relief and sweetness
wherewith he may travel upon this road, detached from all things
and desiring nothing. Yet, if he desire to possess anything --
whether it come from God or from any other source -- with any
feeling of attachment, he has not stripped and denied himself in
all things; and thus he will be unable to walk along this narrow
path or to climb upward by it.
8. I would, then, that I could convince spiritual persons
that this road to God consists not in a multiplicity of
meditations nor in ways or methods of such, nor in consolations,
although these things may in their own way be necessary to
beginners; but that it consists only in the one thing that is
needful, which is the ability to deny oneself truly, according to
that which is without and to that which is within, giving oneself
up to suffering for Christ's sake, and to total annihilation. For
the soul that practises this suffering and annihilation will
achieve all that those other exercises can achieve, and that can
be found in them, and even more. And if a soul be found wanting in
this exercise, which is the sum and root of the virtues, all its
other methods are so much beating about the bush, and profiting
not at all, although its meditations and communications may be as
lofty as those of the angels. For progress comes not save through
the imitation of Christ, Who is the Way, the Truth and the Life,
and no man comes to the Father but by Him, even as He Himself says
through Saint John.[250] And elsewhere He says: 'I am the door; by
Me if any man enter he shall be saved.'[251] Wherefore, as it seems
to me, any spirituality that would fain walk in sweetness and with
ease, and flees from the imitation of Christ, is worthless.
9. And, as I have said that Christ is the Way, and that this
Way is death to our natural selves, in things both of sense and of
spirit, I will now explain how we are to die, following the
example of Christ, for He is our example and light.
10. In the first place, it is certain that He died as to
sense, spiritually, in His life, besides dying naturally, at His
death. For, as He said, He had not in His life where to lay His
head, and at His death this was even truer.
11. In the second place, it is certain that, at the moment of
His death, He was likewise annihilated in His soul, and was
deprived of any relief and consolation, since His Father left Him
in the most intense aridity, according to the lower part of His
nature. Wherefore He had perforce to cry out, saying: 'My God! My
God! 'Why hast Thou forsaken Me?'[252] This was the greatest
desolation, with respect to sense, that He had suffered in His
life. And thus He wrought herein the greatest work that He had
ever wrought, whether in miracles or in mighty works, during the
whole of His life, either upon earth or in Heaven, which was the
reconciliation and union of mankind, through grace, with God. And
this, as I say, was at the moment and the time when this Lord was
most completely annihilated in everything. Annihilated, that is to
say, with respect to human reputation; since, when men saw Him
die, they mocked Him rather than esteemed Him; and also with
respect to nature, since His nature was annihilated when He died;
and further with respect to the spiritual consolation and
protection of the Father, since at that time He forsook Him, that
He might pay the whole of man's debt and unite him with God, being
thus annihilated and reduced as it were to nothing. Wherefore
David says concerning Him: Ad nihilum redactus sum, et nescivi.[253]
This he said that the truly spiritual man may understand the
mystery of the gate and of the way of Christ, and so become united
with God, and may know that, the more completely he is annihilated
for God's sake, according to these two parts, the sensual and the
spiritual, the more completely is he united to God and the greater
is the work which he accomplishes. And when at last he is reduced
to nothing, which will be the greatest extreme of humility,
spiritual union will be wrought between the soul and God, which in
this life is the greatest and the highest state attainable. This
consists not, then, in refreshment and in consolations and
spiritual feelings, but in a living death of the Cross, both as to
sense and as to spirit -- that is, both inwardly and outwardly.
12. I will not pursue this subject farther, although I have
no desire to finish speaking of it, for I see that Christ is known
very little by those who consider themselves His friends: we see
them seeking in Him their own pleasures and consolations because
of their great love for themselves, but not loving His bitter
trials and His death because of their great love for Him. I am
speaking now of those who consider themselves His friends; for
such as live far away, withdrawn from Him, men of great learning
and influence, and all others who live yonder, with the world, and
are eager about their ambitions and their prelacies, may be said
not to know Christ; and their end, however good, will be very
bitter. Of such I make no mention in these lines; but mention will
be made of them on the Day of Judgment, for to them it was fitting
to speak first this word of God,[254] as to those whom God set up as
a target for it,[255] by reason of their learning and their high
position.
13. But let us now address the understanding of the spiritual
man, and particularly that of the man to whom God has granted the
favour of leading him into the state of contemplation (for, as I
have said, I am now speaking to these in particular), and let us
say how such a man must direct himself toward God in faith, and
purify himself from contrary things, constraining himself that he
may enter upon this narrow path of obscure contemplation.
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