How faith is the proximate and proportionate means to the
understanding whereby the soul may attain to the Divine union of
love. This is proved by passages and figures from Divine
Scripture.
FROM what has been said it is to be inferred that, in order
for the understanding to be prepared for this Divine union, it
must be pure and void of all that pertains to sense, and detached
and freed from all that can clearly be apprehended by the
understanding, profoundly hushed and put to silence, and leaning
upon faith, which alone is the proximate and proportionate means
whereby the soul is united with God; for such is the likeness
between itself and God that there is no other difference, save
that which exists between seeing God and believing in Him. For,
even as God is infinite, so faith sets Him before us as infinite;
and, as He is Three and One, it sets Him before us as Three and
One; and, as God is darkness to our understanding, even so does
faith likewise blind and dazzle our understanding. And thus, by
this means alone, God manifests Himself to the soul in Divine
light, which passes all understanding. And therefore, the greater
is the faith of the soul, the more closely is it united with God.
It is this that Saint Paul meant in the passage which we quoted
above, where he says: 'He that will be united with God must
believe.'[271] That is, he must walk by faith as he journeys to Him,
the understanding being blind and in darkness, walking in faith
alone; for beneath this darkness the understanding is united with
God, and beneath it God is hidden, even as David said in these
words: 'He set darkness under His feet. And He rose upon the
cherubim, and flew upon the wings of the wind. And He made
darkness, and the dark water, His hiding-place.'[272]
2. By his saying that He set darkness beneath His feet, and
that He took the darkness for a hiding-place, and that His
tabernacle round about Him was in the dark water, is denoted the
obscurity of the faith wherein He is concealed. And by his saying
that He rose upon the cherubim and flew upon the wings of the
winds, is understood His soaring above all understanding. For the
cherubim denote those who understand or contemplate. And the wings
of the winds signify the subtle and lofty ideas and conceptions of
spirits, above all of which is His Being, and to which none, by
his own power, can attain.
3. This we learn from an illustration in the Scriptures. When
Solomon had completed the building of the Temple, God came down in
darkness and filled the Temple so that the children of Israel
could not see; whereupon Solomon spake and said: 'The Lord hath
promised that He will dwell in darkness'.[273] Likewise He appeared
in darkness to Moses on the Mount, where God was concealed. And
whensoever God communicated Himself intimately, He appeared in
darkness, as may be seen in Job, where the Scripture says that God
spoke with him from the darkness of the air.[274] All these mentions
of darkness signify the obscurity of the faith wherein the
Divinity is concealed, when It communicates Itself to the soul;
which will be ended when, as Saint Paul says, that which is in
part shall be ended,[275] which is this darkness of faith, and that
which is perfect shall come, which is the Divine light. Of this we
have a good illustration in the army of Gedeon, whereof it is said
all the soldiers had lamps in their hands, which they saw not,
because they had them concealed in the darkness of the pitchers;
but, when these pitchers were broken, the light was seen.[276] Just
so does faith, which is foreshadowed by those pitchers, contain
within itself Divine light; which, when it is ended and broken, at
the ending and breaking of this mortal life, will allow the glory
and light of the Divinity, which was contained in it, to appear.
4. It is clear, then, that, if the soul in this life is to
attain to union with God, and commune directly with Him, it must
unite itself with the darkness whereof Solomon spake, wherein God
had promised to dwell, and must draw near to the darkness of the
air wherein God was pleased to reveal His secrets to Job, and must
take in its hands, in darkness, the jars of Gedeon, that it may
have in its hands (that is, in the works of its will) the light,
which is the union of love, though it be in the darkness of faith,
so that, when the pitchers of this life are broken, which alone
have kept from it the light of faith, it may see God face to face
in glory.
5. It now remains to describe in detail all the types of
knowledge and the apprehensions which the understanding can
receive; the hindrance and the harm which it can receive upon this
road of faith; and the way wherein the soul must conduct itself so
that, whether they proceed from the senses or from the spirit,
they may cause it, not harm, but profit.
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