Wherein is explained how at times, although God answers the
prayers that are addressed to Him, He is not pleased that we
should use such methods. It is also shown how, although He
condescend to us and answer us, He is oftentimes wroth.
CERTAIN spiritual men, as we have said, assure themselves
that it is a good thing to display curiosity, as they sometimes
do, in striving to know certain things by supernatural methods,
thinking that, because God occasionally answers their importunity,
this is a good method and pleasing to Him. Yet the truth is that,
although He may answer them, the method is not good, neither is it
pleasing to God, but rather it is displeasing to Him; and not only
so, but oftentimes He is greatly offended and wroth. The reason
for this is that it is lawful for no creature to pass beyond the
limits that God has ordained for its governance after the order of
nature. He has laid down rational and natural limits for man's
governance; wherefore to desire to pass beyond them is not lawful,
and to desire to seek out and attain to anything by supernatural
means is to go beyond these natural limits. It is therefore an
unlawful thing, and it is therefore not pleasing to God, for He is
offended by all that is unlawful. King Achaz was well aware of
this, since, although Isaias told him from God to ask for a sign,
he would not do so, saying: Non petam, et non tentabo Dominum.[382]
That is: I will not ask such a thing, neither will I tempt God.
For it is tempting God to seek to commune with Him by
extraordinary ways, such as those that are supernatural.
2. But why, you will say, if it be a fact that God is
displeased, does He sometimes answer? I reply that it is sometimes
the devil who answers. And, if it is God Who answers, I reply that
He does so because of the weakness of the soul that desires to
travel along that road, lest it should be disconsolate and go
backward, or lest it should think that God is wroth with it and
should be overmuch afflicted; or for other reasons known to God,
founded upon the weakness of that soul, whereby God sees that it
is well that He should answer it and deigns to do so in that way.
In a like manner, too, does He treat many weak and tender souls,
granting them favours and sweetness in sensible converse with
Himself, as has been said above; this is not because He desires or
is pleased that they should commune with Him after that manner or
by these methods; it is that He gives to each one, as we have
said, after the manner best suited to him. For God is like a
spring, whence everyone draws water according to the vessel which
he carries. Sometimes a soul is allowed to draw it by these
extraordinary channels; but it follows not from this that it is
lawful to draw water by them, but only that God Himself can permit
this, when, how and to whom He wills, and for what reason He
wills, without the party concerned having any right in the matter.
And thus, as we say, He sometimes deigns to satisfy the desire and
the prayer of certain souls, whom, since they are good and
sincere, He wills not to fail to succour, lest He should make them
sad, but it is not because He is pleased with their methods that
He wills it. This will be the better understood by the following
comparison.
3. The father of a family has on his table many and different
kinds of food, some of which are better than others. A child is
asking him for a certain dish, not the best, but the first that
meets its eye, and it asks for this dish because it would rather
eat of it than any other; and as the father sees that, even if he
gives it the better kind of food, it will not take it, but will
have that which it asks for, since that alone pleases it, he gives
it that, regretfully, lest it should take no food at all and be
miserable. In just this way, we observe, did God treat the
children of Israel when they asked Him for a king: He gave them
one, but unwillingly, because it was not good for them. And thus
He said to Samuel: Audi vocem populi in omnibus quae loquuntur
tibi: non enim te objecerunt, sed me.[383] Which signifies: Hearken
unto the voice of this people and grant them the king whom they
ask of thee, for they have not rejected thee but Me, that I should
not reign over them. In this same way God condescends to certain
souls, and grants them that which is not best for them, because
they will not or cannot walk by any other road. And thus certain
souls attain to tenderness and sweetness of spirit or sense; and
God grants them this because they are unable to partake of the
stronger and more solid food of the trials of the Cross of His
Son, which He would prefer them to take, rather than aught else.
4. I consider, however, that the desire to know things by
supernatural means is much worse than the desire for other
spiritual favours pertaining to the senses; for I cannot see how
the soul that desires them can fail to commit, at the least,
venial sin, however good may be its aims, and however far advanced
it may be on the road to perfection; and if anyone should bid the
soul desire them, and consent to it, he sins likewise. For there
is no necessity for any of these things, since the soul has its
natural reason and the doctrine and law of the Gospel, which are
quite sufficient for its guidance, and there is no difficulty or
necessity that cannot be solved and remedied by these means, which
are very pleasing to God and of great profit to souls; and such
great use must we make of our reason and of Gospel doctrine that,
if certain things be told us supernaturally, whether at our desire
or no, we must receive only that which is in clear conformity with
reason and Gospel law. And then we must receive it, not because it
is revelation, but because it is reason, and not allow ourselves
to be influenced by the fact that it has been revealed. Indeed, it
is well in such a case to look at that reason and examine it very
much more closely than if there had been no revelation concerning
it; inasmuch as the devil utters many things that are true, and
that will come to pass, and that are in conformity with reason, in
order that he may deceive.
5. Wherefore, in all our needs, trials and difficulties,
there remains to us no better and surer means than prayer and hope
that God will provide for us, by such means as He wills. This is
the advice given to us in the Scriptures, where we read that, when
King Josaphat was greatly afflicted and surrounded by enemies, the
saintly King gave himself to prayer, saying to God: Cum ignoremus
quid facere debeamus, hoc solum habemus residue, ut oculos nostros
dirigamus ad re.[384] Which is as though he had said: When means
fail and reason is unable to succour us in our necessities, it
remains for us only to lift up our eyes to Thee, that Thou mayest
succour us as is most pleasing to Thee.
6. And further, although this has also been made clear, it
will be well to prove, from certain passages of Scripture, that,
though God may answer such requests, He is none the less sometimes
wroth. In the First Book of the Kings it is said that, when King
Saul begged that the prophet Samuel, who was now dead, might speak
to him, the said prophet appeared to him, and that God was wroth
with all this, since Samuel at once reproved Saul for having done
such a thing, saying: Quare inquietasti me, ut suscitarer?[385] That
is: Why hast thou disquieted me, in causing me to arise? We also
know that, in spite of having answered the children of Israel and
given them the meat that they besought of Him, God was
nevertheless greatly incensed against them; for He sent fire from
Heaven upon them as a punishment, as we read in the Pentateuch,
and as David relates in these words: Adhuc escape eorum erant in
ore ipsorum, et ira Dei descendit super cos.[386] Which signifies:
Even as they had the morsels in their months, the wrath of God
came down upon them. And likewise we read in Numbers that God was
greatly wroth with Balaam the prophet, because he went to the
Madianites when Balac their king sent for him, although God had
bidden him go, because he desired to go and had begged it of God;
and while he was yet in the way there appeared to him an angel
with a sword, who desired to slay him, and said to him: Perversa
est via tua, mihique contraria.[387] 'Thy way is perverse and
contrary to Me.' For which cause he desired to slay him.
7. After this manner and many others God deigns to satisfy
the desires of souls though He be wroth with them. Concerning this
we have many testimonies in Scripture, and, in addition, many
illustrations, though in a matter that is so clear these are
unnecessary. I will merely say that to desire to commune with God
by such means is a most perilous thing, more so than I can
express, and that one who is affectioned to such methods will not
fail to err greatly and will often find himself in confusion.
Anyone who in the past has prized them will understand me from his
own experience. For over and above the difficulty that there is in
being sure that one is not going astray in respect of locutions
and visions which are of God, there are ordinarily many of these
locutions and visions which are of the devil; for in his converse
with the soul the devil habitually wears the same guise as God
assumes in His dealings with it, setting before it things that are
very like to those which God communicates to it, insinuating
himself, like the wolf in sheep's clothing, among the flock, with
a success so nearly complete that he can hardly be recognized.
For, since he says many things that are true, and in conformity
with reason, and things that come to pass as he describes them,[388]
it is very easy for the soul to be deceived, and to think that,
since these things come to pass as he says, and the future is
correctly foretold, this can be the work of none save God; for
such souls know not that it is a very easy thing for one that has
clear natural light to be acquainted, as to their causes, with
things, or with many of them, which have been or shall be. And
since the devil has a very clear light of this kind, he can very
easily deduce effect from cause, although it may not always turn
out as he says, because all causes depend upon the will of God.
Let us take an example.
8. The devil knows that the constitution of the earth and the
atmosphere, and the laws ruling the sun, are disposed in such
manner and in such degree that, when a certain moment has arrived,
it will necessarily follow, according to the laws of nature laid
down for these elements, that they will infect people with
pestilence, and he knows in what places this will be more severe
and in what places less so. Here you have a knowledge of
pestilence in respect of its causes. What a wonderful thing it
seems when the devil reveals this to a soul, saying: 'In a year or
in six months from now there will be pestilence,' and it happens
as he says! And yet this is a prophecy of the devil. In the same
way he may have a knowledge of earthquakes, and, seeing that the
bowels of the earth are filling with air, will say: 'At such a
time there will be an earthquake.' Yet this is only natural
knowledge, for the possession of which it suffices for the spirit
to be free from the passions of the soul, even as Boetius says in
these words: Si vis claro lumine cernere verum, gaudia pelle,
timorem, spemque fugato, nec dolor adsit.[389] That is: If thou
desire to know truths with the clearness of nature, cast from thee
rejoicing and fear and hope and sorrow.
9. And likewise supernatural events and happenings may be
known, in their causes, in matters concerning Divine Providence,
which deals most justly and surely as is required by their good or
evil causes as regards the sons of men. For one may know by
natural means that such or such a person, or such or such a city,
or some other place, is in such or such necessity, or has reached
such or such a point, so that God, according to His providence and
justice, must deal with such a person or thing in the way required
by its cause, and in the way that is fitting for it, whether by
means of punishment or of reward, as the cause merits. And then
one can say: 'At such a time God will give you this, or will do
this, or that will come to pass, of a surety.' It was this that
holy Judith said to Holofernes,[390] when, in order to persuade him
that the children of Israel would without fail be destroyed, she
first related to him many of their sins and the evil deeds that
they did. And then she said: Et, quoniam haec faciunt, certum est
quod in perditionem dabuntur. Which signifies: Since they do these
things, it is certain that they will be destroyed. This is to know
the punishment in the cause, and it is as though she had said: It
is certain that such sins must be the cause of such punishments,
at the hand of God Who is most just. And as the Divine Wisdom
says: Per quae quis peccat, per haec et torquetur.[391] With respect
to that and for that wherein a man sins, therein is he punished.
10. The devil may have knowledge of this, not only naturally,
but also by the experience which he has of having seen God do
similar things, and he can foretell it and do so correctly. Again,
holy Tobias was aware of the punishment of the city of Ninive
because of its cause, and he thus admonished his son, saying:
'Behold, son, in the hour when I and thy mother die, go thou forth
from this land, for it will not remain.' Video enim quia iniquitas
ejus finem dabit ei.[392] I see clearly that its own iniquity will
be the cause of its punishment, which will be that it shall be
ended and destroyed altogether. This might have been known by the
devil as well as by Tobias, not only because of the iniquity of
the city, but by experience, since they had seen that for the sins
of the world God destroyed it in the Flood, and that the
Sodomites, too, perished for their sins by fire; but Tobias knew
it also through the Divine Spirit.
11. And the devil may know that one Peter[393] cannot, in the
course of nature, live more than so many years, and he may
foretell this; and so with regard to many other things and in many
ways that it is impossible to recount fully -- nor can one even
begin to recount many of them, since they are most intricate and
subtle -- he insinuates falsehoods; from which a soul cannot free
itself save by fleeing from all revelations and visions and
locutions that are supernatural. Wherefore God is justly angered
with those that receive them, for He sees that it is temerity on
their part to expose themselves to such great peril and
presumption and curiosity, and things that spring from pride, and
are the root and foundation of vainglory, and of disdain for the
things of God, and the beginning of many evils to which many have
come. Such persons have succeeded in angering God so greatly that
He has of set purpose allowed them to go astray and be deceived
and to blind their own spirits and to leave the ordered paths of
life and give rein to their vanities and fancies, according to the
word of Isaias, where he says: Dominus miscuit in medio ejus
spiritum vertiginis.[394] Which is as much to say: The Lord hath
mingled in the midst thereof the spirit of dissension and
confusion. Which in our ordinary vernacular signifies the spirit
of misunderstanding. What Isaias is here very plainly saying is to
our purpose, for he is speaking of those who were endeavouring by
supernatural means to know things that were to come to pass. And
therefore he says that God mingled in their midst the spirit of
misunderstanding; not that God willed them, in fact, to have the
spirit of error, or gave it to them, but that they desired to
meddle with that to which by nature they could not attain. Angered
by this, God allowed them to act foolishly, giving them no light
as to that wherewith He desired not that they should concern
themselves. And thus the Prophet says that God mingled that spirit
in them, privatively. And in this sense God is the cause of such
an evil -- that is to say, He is the privative cause, which
consists in His withdrawal of His light and favour, to such a
point that they must needs fall into error.
12. And in this way God gives leave to the devil to blind and
deceive many, when their sins and audacities merit it; and this
the devil can do and does successfully, and they give him credence
and believe him to be a good spirit; to such a point that,
although they may be quite persuaded that he is not so, they
cannot undeceive themselves, since, by the permission of God,
there has already been insinuated into them the spirit of
misunderstanding, even as we read was the case with the prophets
of King Achab, whom God permitted to be deceived by a lying
spirit, giving the devil leave to deceive them, and saying:
Decipies, et praevalebis; egredere, et fac ita.[395] Which
signifies: Thou shalt prevail with thy falsehood, and shalt
deceive them; go forth and do so. And so well was he able to work
upon the prophets and the King, in order to deceive them, that
they would not believe the prophet Micheas, who prophesied the
truth to them, saying the exact contrary of that which the others
had prophesied, and this came to pass because God permitted them
to be blinded, since their affections were attached to that which
they desired to happen to them, and God answered them according to
their desires and wishes; and this was a most certain preparation
and means for their being blinded and deceived, which God allowed
of set purpose.
13. Thus, too, did Ezechiel prophesy in the name of God.
Speaking against those who began to desire to have knowledge
direct from God, from motives of curiosity, according to the
vanity of their spirit, he says: When such a man comes to the
prophet to enquire of Me through him, I, the Lord, will answer him
by Myself, and I will set my face in anger against that man; and,
as to the prophet, when he has gone astray in that which was asked
of him, Ego Dominus decepi prophetam illum.[396] That is: I, the
Lord, have deceived that prophet. This is to be taken to mean, by
not succouring him with His favour so that he might not be
deceived; and this is His meaning when He says: I the Lord will
answer him by Myself in anger[397] -- that is, God will withdraw His
grace and favour from that man. Hence necessarily follows
deception by reason of his abandonment by God. And then comes the
devil and makes answer according to the pleasure and desire of
that man, who, being pleased thereat, since the answers and
communications are according to his will, allows himself to be
deceived greatly.
14. It may appear that we have to some extent strayed from
the purpose that we set down in the title of this chapter, which
was to prove that, although God answers, He sometimes complains.
But, if it be carefully considered, all that has been said goes to
prove or intention; for it all shows that God desires not that we
should wish for such visions, since He makes it possible for us to
be deceived by them in so many ways.
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