Wherein is described the purpose and manner of God in His
communication of spiritual blessings to the soul by means of the
senses. Herein is answered the question which has been referred
to.
THERE is much to be said concerning the purpose of God, and
concerning the manner wherein He gives these visions in order to
raise up the soul from its lowly estate to His Divine union. All
spiritual books deal with this and in this treatise of ours the
method which we pursue is to explain it; therefore I shall only
say in this chapter as much as is necessary to answer our
question, which was as follows: Since in these supernatural
visions there is so much hindrance and peril to progress, as we
have said, why does God, Who is most wise and desires to remove
stumbling-blocks and snares from the soul, offer and communicate
them to it?
2. In order to answer this, it is well first of all to set
down three fundamental points. The first is from Saint Paul ad
Romanos, where he says: Quae autem sunt, a Deo ordinatoe sunt.[333]
Which signifies: The works that are done are ordained of God. The
second is from the Holy Spirit in the Book of Wisdom, where He
says: Disponit omnia suaviter.[334] And this is as though He had
said: The wisdom of God, although it extends from one end to
another -- that is to say, from one extreme to another -- orders
all things with sweetness. The third is from the theologians, who
say that Omnia movet secundum modum eorum. That is, God moves all
things according to their nature.
3. It is clear, then, from these fundamental points, that if
God is to move the soul and to raise it up from the extreme depth
of its lowliness to the extreme height of His loftiness, in Divine
union with Him, He must do it with order and sweetness and
according to the nature of the soul itself. Then, since the order
whereby the soul acquires knowledge is through forms and images of
created things, and the natural way wherein it acquires this
knowledge and wisdom is through the senses, it follows that, if
God is to raise up the soul to supreme knowledge, and to do so
with sweetness, He must begin to work from the lowest and extreme
end of the senses of the soul, in order that He may gradually lead
it, according to its own nature, to the other extreme of His
spiritual wisdom, which belongs not to sense. Wherefore He first
leads it onward by instructing it through forms, images and ways
of sense, according to its own method of understanding, now
naturally, now supernaturally, and by means of reasoning, to this
supreme Spirit of God.
4. It is for this reason that God gives the soul visions and
forms, images and other kinds of sensible and intelligible
knowledge of a spiritual nature; not that God would not give it
spiritual wisdom immediately, and all at once, if the two extremes
-- which are human and Divine, sense and spirit -- could in the
ordinary way concur and unite in one single act, without the
previous intervention of many other preparatory acts which concur
among themselves in order and sweetness, and are a basis and a
preparation one for another, like natural agents; so that the
first acts serve the second, the second the third, and so onward,
in exactly the same way. And thus God brings man to perfection
according to the way of man's own nature, working from what is
lowest and most exterior up to what is most interior and highest.
First, then, He perfects his bodily senses, impelling him to make
use of good things which are natural, perfect and exterior, such
as hearing sermons and masses, looking on holy things, mortifying
the palate at meals and chastening the sense of touch by penance
and holy rigour. And, when these senses are in some degree
prepared, He is wont to perfect them still further, by bestowing
on them certain supernatural favours and gifts, in order to
confirm them the more completely in that which is good, offering
them certain supernatural communications, such as visions of
saints or holy things, in corporeal shape, the sweetest perfumes,
locutions, and exceeding great delights of touch, wherewith sense
is greatly continued in virtue and is withdrawn from a desire for
evil things. And besides this He continues at the same time to
perfect the interior bodily senses, whereof we are here treating,
such as imagination and fancy, and to habituate them to that which
is good, by means of considerations, meditations, and reflections
of a sacred kind, in all of which He is instructing the spirit.
And, when these are prepared by this natural exercise, God is wont
to enlighten and spiritualize them still more by means of certain
supernatural visions, which are those that we are here calling
imaginary; wherein, as we have said, the spirit, at the same time,
profits greatly, for both kinds of vision help to take away its
grossness and gradually to reform it. And after this manner God
continues to lead the soul step by step till it reaches that which
is the most interior of all; not that it is always necessary for
Him to observe this order, and to cause the soul to advance
exactly in this way, from the first step to the last; sometimes He
allows the soul to attain one stage and not another, or leads it
from the more interior to the less, or effects two stages of
progress together. This happens when God sees it to be meet for
the soul, or when He desires to grant it His favours in this way;
nevertheless His ordinary method is as has been said.
5. It is in this way, then, that God instructs[335] the soul
and makes it more spiritual, communicating spirituality to it
first of all by means of outward and palpable things, adapted to
sense, on account of the soul's feebleness and incapacity, so
that, by means of the outer husk of those things which in
themselves are good, the spirit may make[336] particular acts and
receive so many spiritual communications[337] that it may form a
habit as to things spiritual, and may acquire actual and
substantial spirituality, which is completely removed from every
sense. To this, as we have said, the soul cannot attain except
very gradually, and in its own way -- that is, by means of sense
-- to which it has ever been attached. And thus, in proportion as
the spirit attains more nearly to converse with God, it becomes
ever more detached and emptied of the ways of sense, which are
those of imaginary meditation and reflection. Wherefore, when the
soul attains perfectly to spiritual converse with God, it must of
necessity have been voided of all that relates to God and yet
might come under the head of sense. Even so, the more closely a
thing grows attracted to one extreme, the farther removed and
withdrawn[338] it becomes from the other; and, when it comes to rest
perfectly in the one, it will also have withdrawn itself perfectly
from the other. Wherefore there is a commonly quoted spiritual
adage which says: Gustato spiritu, desipit omni caro. Which
signifies: After the taste and sweetness of the spirit have been
experienced, everything carnal is insipid. That is: No profit or
enjoyment is afforded by all the ways of the flesh, wherein is
included all communication of sense with the spiritual. And this
is clear: for, if it is spirit, it has no more to do with sense;
and, if sense can comprehend it, it is no longer pure spirit. For,
the more can be known of it by natural apprehension and sense, the
less it has of spirit and of the supernatural, as has been
explained above.
6. The spirit that has become perfect, therefore, pays no
heed to sense, nor does it receive anything through sense, nor
make any great use of it, neither does it need to do so, in its
relations with God, as it did aforetime when it had not grown
spiritually. It is this that is signified by that passage from
Saint Paul's Epistle to the Corinthians which says: Cum essem
parvulus, loquebar ut parvulus, sapiebam ut parvulus, cogitabam ut
parvulus. Quando autem factus sum vir, evacuavi quae erant
parvuli.[339] This signifies: When I was a child, I spake as a
child, I knew as a child, I thought as a child; but, when I became
a man, I put away[340] childish things. We have already explained
how the things of sense, and the knowledge that spirit can derive
from them, are the business of a child. Thus, if the soul should
desire to cling to them for ever, and not to throw them aside, it
would never be aught but a little child; it would speak ever of
God as a child, and would know of God as a child, and would think
of God as a child; for, clinging to the outer husk of sense, which
pertains to the child, it would never attain to the substance of
the spirit, which pertains to the perfect man. And thus the soul
must not desire to receive the said revelations in order to
continue in growth, even though God offer them to it, just as the
child must leave the breast in order to accustom its palate to
strong meat, which is more substantial.
7. You will ask, then, if, when the soul is immature, it must
take these things, and, when it is grown, must abandon them; even
as an infant must take the breast, in order to nourish itself,
until it be older and can leave it. I answer that, with respect to
meditation and natural reflection by means of which the soul
begins to seek God, it is true that it must not leave the breast
of sense in order to continue taking in nourishment until the time
and season to leave it have arrived, and this comes when God
brings the soul into a more spiritual communion, which is
contemplation, concerning which we gave instruction in the
eleventh chapter of this book.[341] But, when it is a question of
imaginary visions, or other supernatural apprehensions, which can
enter the senses without the co-operation of man's free will, I
say that at no time and season must it receive them, whether the
soul be in the state of perfection, or whether in a state less
perfect -- not even though they come from God. And this for two
reasons. The first is that, as we have said, He produces His
effect in the soul, without its being able to hinder it, although,
as often happens, it can and may hinder visions; and consequently
that effect which was to be produced in the soul is communicated
to it much more substantially, although not after that manner.
For, as we said likewise, the soul cannot hinder the blessings
that God desires to communicate to it, since it is not in the
soul's power to do so, save when it has some imperfection and
attachment; and there is neither imperfection nor attachment in
renouncing these things with humility and misgiving. The second
reason is that the soul may free itself from the peril and effort
inherent in discerning between evil visions and good, and in
deciding whether an angel be of light or of darkness. This effort
brings the soul no advantage; it merely wastes its time, and
hinders it, and becomes to it an occasion of many imperfections
and of failure to make progress. The soul concerns not itself, in
such a case, with what is important, nor frees itself of trifles
in the shape of apprehensions and perceptions of some particular
kind. This has already been said in the discussion of corporeal
visions; and more will be said on the subject hereafter.
8. Let it be believed, too, that, if Our Lord were not about
to lead the soul in a way befitting its own nature, as we say
here, He would never communicate to it the abundance of His Spirit
through these aqueducts, which are so narrow -- these forms and
figures and particular perceptions -- by means whereof He gives
the soul enlightenment by crumbs. For this cause David says:
Mittit crystallum suam sicut buccellas.[342] Which is as much as to
say: He sent His wisdom to the souls as in morsels. It is greatly
to be lamented that, though the soul has infinite capacity, it
should be given its food by morsels conveyed through the senses,
by reason of the small degree of its spirituality and its
incapacitation by sense. Saint Paul was also grieved by this lack
of preparation and this incapability of men for receiving the
Spirit, when he wrote to the Corinthians, saying: 'I, brethren,
when I came to you, could not speak to you as to spiritual
persons, but as to carnal; for ye could not receive it, neither
can ye now.' Tamquam parvulis in Christo lac potum vobis dedi, non
escam.[343] That is: I have given you milk to drink, as to infants
in Christ, and not solid food to eat.
9. It now remains, then, to be pointed out that the soul must
not allow its eyes to rest upon that outer husk -- namely, figures
and objects set before it supernaturally. These may be presented
to the exterior senses, as are locutions and words audible to the
ear; or, to the eyes, visions of saints, and of beauteous
radiance; or perfumes to the sense of smell; or tastes and
sweetnesses to the palate; or other delights to the touch, which
are wont to proceed from the spirit, a thing that very commonly
happens to spiritual persons. Or the soul may have to avert its
eyes from visions of interior sense, such as imaginary visions,
all of which it must renounce entirely. It must set its eyes only
upon the spiritual good which they produce, striving to preserve
it in its works and to practise that which is for the due service
of God, paying no heed to those representations nor desiring any
pleasure of sense. And in this way the soul takes from these
things only that which God intends and wills -- namely, the spirit
of devotion -- for there is no other important purpose for which
He gives them; and it casts aside that which He would not give if
these gifts could be received in the spirit without it, as we have
said -- namely, the exercise and apprehension of the senses.
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