Which treats of natural imaginary apprehensions. Describes
their nature and proves that they cannot be a proportionate means
of attainment to union with God. Shows the harm which results from
inability to detach oneself from them.
BEFORE we treat of the imaginary visions which are wont to
occur supernaturally to the interior sense, which is the
imagination and the fancy, it is fitting here, so that we may
proceed in order, to treat of the natural apprehensions of this
same interior bodily sense, in order that we may proceed from the
lesser to the greater, and from the more exterior to the more
interior, until we reach the most interior[292] recollection wherein
the soul is united with God; this same order we have followed up
to this point. For we treated first of all the detachment of the
exterior senses from the natural apprehensions of objects, and, in
consequence, from the natural power of the desires -- this was
contained in the first book, wherein we spoke of the night of
sense. We then began to detach these same senses from supernatural
exterior apprehensions (which, as we have just shown in the last
chapter, affect the exterior senses), in order to lead the soul
into the night of the spirit.
2. In this second book, the first thing that has now to be
treated is the interior bodily sense -- namely, the imagination
and the fancy; this we must likewise void of all the imaginary
apprehensions and forms that may belong to it by nature, and we
must prove how impossible it is that the soul should attain to
union with God until its operation cease in them, since they
cannot be the proper and proximate means of this union.
3. It is to be known, then, that the senses whereof we are
here particularly speaking are two interior bodily senses which
are called imagination and fancy, which subserve each other in due
order. For the one sense reasons, as it were, by imagining, and
the other forms the imagination, or that which is imagined, by
making use of the fancy.[293] For our purpose the discussion of the
one is equivalent to that of the other, and, for this reason, when
we name them not both, it must be understood that we are speaking
of either, as we have here explained. All the things, then, that
these senses can receive and fashion are known as imaginations and
fancies, which are forms that are represented to these senses by
bodily figures and images. This can happen in two ways. The one
way is supernatural, wherein representation can be made, and is
made, to these senses passively, without any effort of their own;
these we call imaginary visions, produced after a supernatural
manner, and of these we shall speak hereafter. The other way is
natural, wherein, through the ability of the soul, these things
can be actively fashioned in it through its operation, beneath
forms, figures and images. And thus to these two faculties belongs
meditation, which is a discursive action wrought by means of
images, forms and figures that are fashioned and imagined by the
said senses, as when we imagine Christ crucified, or bound to the
column, or at another of the stations; or when we imagine God
seated upon a throne with great majesty; or when we consider and
imagine glory to be like a most beauteous light, etc.; or when we
imagine all kinds of other things, whether Divine or human, that
can belong to the imagination. All these imaginings must be cast
out from the Soul, which will remain in darkness as far as this
sense is concerned, that it may attain to Divine union; for they
can bear no proportion to proximate means of union with God, any
more than can the bodily imaginings, which serve as objects to the
five exterior senses.
4. The reason of this is that the imagination cannot fashion
or imagine anything whatsoever beyond that which it has
experienced through its exterior senses -- namely, that which it
has seen with the eyes, or heard with the ears, etc. At most it
can only compose likenesses of those things that it has seen or
heard or felt, which are of no more consequence than those which
have been received by the senses aforementioned, nor are they even
of as much consequence. For, although a man imagines palaces of
pearls and mountains of gold, because he has seen gold and pearls,
all this is in truth less than the essence of a little gold or of
a single pearl, although in the imagination it be greater in
quantity and in beauty. And since, as has already been said, no
created things can bear any proportion to the Being of God, it
follows that nothing that is imagined in their likeness can serve
as proximate means to union with Him, but, as we say, quite the
contrary.
5. Wherefore those that imagine God beneath any of these
figures, or as a great fire or brightness, or in any other such
form, and think that anything like this will be like to Him, are
very far from approaching Him. For, although these considerations
and forms and manners of meditation are necessary to beginners, in
order that they may gradually feed and enkindle their souls with
love by means of sense, as we shall say hereafter, and although
they thus serve them as remote means to union with God, through
which a soul has commonly to pass in order to reach the goal and
abode of spiritual repose, yet they must merely pass through them,
and not remain ever in them, for in such a manner they would never
reach their goal, which does not resemble these remote means,
neither has aught to do with them. The stairs of a staircase have
naught to do with the top of it and the abode to which it leads,
yet are means to the reaching of both; and if the climber left not
behind the stairs below him until there were no more to climb, but
desired to remain upon any one of them, he would never reach the
top of them nor would he mount to the pleasant[294] and peaceful
room which is the goal. And just so the soul that is to attain in
this life to the union of that supreme repose and blessing, by
means of all these stairs of meditations, forms and ideas, must
pass though them and have done with them, since they have no
resemblance and bear no proportion to the goal to which they lead,
which is God. Wherefore Saint Paul says in the Acts of the
Apostles: Non debemus aestimare, auro, vel argento, aut lapidi
sculpturae artis, et cogitationis hominis, Divinum esse
similem.[295] Which signifies: We ought not to think of the Godhead
by likening Him to gold or to silver, neither to stone that is
formed by art, nor to aught that a man can fashion with his
imagination.
6. Great, therefore, is the error of many spiritual persons
who have practised approaching God by means of images and forms
and meditations, as befits beginners. God would now lead them on
to[296] further spiritual blessings, which are interior and
invisible, by taking from them the pleasure and sweetness of
discursive meditation; but they cannot, or dare not, or know not
how to detach themselves from those palpable methods to which they
have grown accustomed. They continually labour to retain them,
desiring to proceed, as before, by the way of consideration and
meditation upon forms, for they think that it must be so with them
always. They labour greatly to this end and find little sweetness
or none; rather the aridity and weariness and disquiet of their
souls are increased and grow, in proportion as they labour for
that earlier sweetness. They cannot find this in that earlier
manner, for the soul no longer enjoys that food of sense, as we
have said; it needs not this but another food, which is more
delicate, more interior and partaking less of the nature of sense;
it consists not in labouring with the imagination, but in setting
the soul at rest, and allowing it to remain in its quiet and
repose, which is more spiritual. For, the farther the soul
progresses in spirituality, the more it ceases from the operation
of the faculties in particular acts, since it becomes more and
more occupied in one act that is general and pure; and thus the
faculties that were journeying to a place whither the soul has
arrived cease to work, even as the feet stop and cease to move
when their journey is over. For if all were motion, one would
never arrive, and if all were means, where or when would come the
fruition of the end and goal?
7. It is piteous, then, to see many a one who[297] though his
soul would fain tarry in this peace and rest of interior quiet,
where it is filled with the peace and refreshment of God, takes
from it its tranquillity, and leads it away to the most exterior
things, and would make it return and retrace the ground it has
already traversed, to no purpose, and abandon the end and goal
wherein it is already reposing for the means which led it to that
repose, which are meditations. This comes not to pass without
great reluctance and repugnance of the soul, which would fain be
in that peace that it understands not, as in its proper place;
even as one who has arrived, with great labour, and is now
resting, suffers pain if he is made to return to his labour. And,
as such souls know not the mystery of this new experience, the
idea comes to them that they are being idle and doing nothing; and
thus they allow not themselves to be quiet, but endeavor to
meditate and reason. Hence they are filled with aridity and
affliction, because they seek to find sweetness where it is no
longer to be found; we may even say of them that the more they
strive the less they profit, for, the more they persist after this
manner, the worse is the state wherein they find themselves,
because their soul is drawn farther away from spiritual peace; and
this is to leave the greater for the less, and to retrace the
ground already traversed, and to seek to do that which has been
done.
8. To such as these the advice must be given to learn to
abide attentively and wait lovingly upon God in that state of
quiet, and to pay no heed either to imagination or to its working;
for here, as we say, the faculties are at rest, and are working,
not actively, but passively, by receiving that which God works in
them; and, if they work at times, it is not with violence or with
carefully elaborated meditation, but with sweetness of love, moved
less by the ability of the soul itself than by God, as will be
explained hereafter. But let this now suffice to show how fitting
and necessary it is for those who aim at making further progress
to be able to detach themselves from all these methods and manners
and works of the imagination at the time and season when the
profit of the state which they have reached demands and requires
it.
9. And, that it may be understood how this is to be, and at
what season, we shall give in the chapter following certain signs
which the spiritual person will see in himself and whereby he may
know at what time and season he may freely avail himself of the
goal mentioned above, and may cease from journeying by means of
meditation and the work of the imagination.
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