Which treats of two kinds of spiritual vision that come
supernaturally.
SPEAKING now strictly of those visions which are spiritual,
and are received without the intervention of any bodily sense, I
say that there are two kinds of vision than can be received by the
understanding: the one kind is of corporeal substances; the other,
of incorporeal or separated substances. The corporeal visions have
respect to all material things that are in Heaven and on earth,
which the soul is able to see, even while it is still in the body,
by the aid of a certain supernatural illumination, derived from
God, wherein it is able to see all things that are not present,
both in Heaven and on earth, even as Saint John saw, as we read in
the twenty-first chapter of the Apocalypse, where he describes and
relates the excellence of the celestial Jerusalem, which he saw in
Heaven. Even so, again, we read of Saint Benedict that in a
spiritual vision he saw the whole world.[425] This vision, says
Saint Thomas in the first of his Quodlibets, was in the light that
is derived from above, as we have said.
2. The other visions, which are of incorporeal substances,
cannot be seen by the aid of this derived illumination, whereof we
are here speaking, but only by another and a higher illumination
which is called the illumination of glory. And thus these visions
of incorporeal substances, such as angels and soul, are not of
this life, neither can they be seen in the mortal body; for, if
God were pleased to communicate them to the soul, in essence as
they are, the soul would at once go forth from the flesh and would
be loosed from this mortal life. For this reason God said to
Moses, when he entreated Him to show him His Essence: Non videbit
me homo, et vivet.[426] That is: Man shall not see Me and be able to
remain alive. Wherefore, when the children of Israel thought that
they were to see God, or had seen Him, or some angel, they feared
death, as we read in the Book of Exodus, where, fearing these
things, they said: Non loquatur nobis Dominus, ne forte
moriamur.[427] As if they had said: Let not God communicate Himself
to us openly, lest we die. And likewise in the Book of Judges,
Manue, father of Samson, thought that he and his wife had seen in
essence the angel who spake with them (and who had appeared to
them in the form of a most beautiful man) and he said to his wife:
Morte moriemur, quida vidimus Dominum.[428] Which signifies: We
shall die, because we have seen the Lord.[429]
3. And thus these visions occur not in this life, save
occasionally and fleetingly, when, making an exception to the
conditions which govern our natural life, God so allows it. At
such times He totally withdraws the spirit from this life, and the
natural functions of the body are supplied by His favour. This is
why, at the time when it is thought that Saint Paul saw these
(namely, the incorporeal substances in the third heaven), that
Saint says: Sive in corpore, nescio, sive extra corpus, nescio,
Deus scit.[430] That is, he was raptured, and of that which he saw
he says that he knows not if it was in the body or out of the
body, but that God knows. Herein it is clearly seen that the
limits of natural means of communication were passed, and that
this was the work of God. Likewise, it is believed that God showed
His Essence to Moses, for we read that God said to him that He
would set him in the cleft of the rock, and would protect him, by
covering him with His right hand, and protecting him so that he
should not die when His glory passed; the which glory passed
indeed, and was shown to him fleetingly, and the natural life of
Moses was protected by the right hand of God.[431] But these visions
that were so substantial -- like that of Saint Paul and Moses, and
that of our father Elias, when he covered his face at the gentle
whisper of God -- although they are fleeting, occur only very
rarely -- indeed, hardly ever and to very few; for God performs
such a thing in those that are very strong in the spirit of the
Church and the law of God, as were the three men named above.
4. But, although these visions of spiritual substances cannot
be unveiled and be clearly seen in this life by the understanding,
they can nevertheless be felt in the substance of the soul, with
the sweetest touches and unions, all of which belongs to spiritual
feelings, whereof, with the Divine favour, we shall treat
presently; for our pen is being directed and guided to these --
that is to say, to the Divine bond and union of the soul with
Divine Substance. We shall speak of this when we treat of the dark
and confused mystical understanding which remains to be described,
wherein we shall show how, by means of this dark and loving
knowledge, God is united with the soul in a lofty and Divine
degree;[432] for, after some manner, this dark and loving knowledge,
which is faith, serves as a means to Divine union in this life,
even as, in the next life, the light of glory serves as an
intermediary to the clear vision of God.
5. Let us, then, now treat of the visions of corporeal
substances, received spiritually in the soul, which come after the
manner of bodily visions. For, just as the eyes see bodily visions
by means of natural light, even so does the soul, through the
understanding, by means of supernaturally derived light, as we
have said, see those same natural things inwardly, together with
others, as God wills; the difference between the two kinds of
vision is only in the mode and manner of them. For spiritual and
intellectual visions are much clearer and subtler than those which
pertain to the body. For, when God is pleased to grant this favour
to the soul, He communicates to it that supernatural light whereof
we speak, wherein the soul sees the things that God wills it to
see, easily and most clearly, whether they be of Heaven or of
earth, and the absence or presence of them is no hindrance to the
vision. And it is at times as though a door were opened before it
into a great brightness, through which the soul sees a light,
after the manner of a lightning flash, which, on a dark night,
reveals things suddenly, and causes them to be clearly and
distinctly seen, and then leaves them in darkness, although the
forms and figures of them remain in the fancy. This comes to pass
much more perfectly in the soul, because those things that the
spirit has seen in that light remain impressed upon it in such a
way that whensoever it observes them it sees them in itself as it
saw them before; even as in a mirror the forms that are in it are
seen whensoever a man looks in it, and in such a way that those
forms of the things that he has seen are never wholly removed from
his soul, although in course of time they become somewhat remote.
6. The effect which these visions produce in the soul is that
of quiet, illumination, joy like that of glory, sweetness, purity
and love, humility and inclination or elevation of the spirit in
God; sometimes more so, at other times less; with sometimes more
of one thing, at other times more of another, according to the
spirit wherein they are received and according as God wills.
7. The devil likewise can produce these visions, by means of
a certain natural light, whereby he brings things clearly before
the mind, through spiritual suggestion, whether they be present or
absent. There is that passage in Saint Matthew, which says of the
devil and Christ: Ostendit omnia regna mundi, et gloriam eorum.[433]
That is so say: He showed Him all the kingdoms of the world and
the glory of them. Concerning this certain doctors say that he did
it by spiritual suggestion,[434] for it was not possible to make Him
see so much with the bodily eyes as all the kingdoms of the world
and the glory of them. But there is much difference between these
visions that are caused by the devil and those that are of God.
For the effects produced in the soul by the devil's visions are
not like those produced by good visions; the former produce
aridity of spirit as to communion with God and an inclination to
esteem oneself highly, and to receive and set store by the visions
aforesaid, and in no wise do they produce the gentleness of
humility and love of God. Neither do the forms of such visions
remain impressed upon the soul with the sweetness and brightness
of the others; nor do they last, but are quickly effaced from the
soul, save when the soul greatly esteems them, in which case this
high esteem itself causes it to recall them naturally, but with
great aridity of spirit, and without producing that effect of love
and humility which is produced by good visions when the soul
recalls them.
8. These visions, inasmuch as they are of creatures,
wherewith God has no essential conformity or proportion, cannot
serve the understanding as a proximate means to union with God.
And thus the soul must conduct itself in a purely negative way
concerning them, as in the other things that we have described, in
order that it may progress by the proximate means -- namely, by
faith. Wherefore the soul must make no store of treasure of the
forms of such visions as remain impressed upon it, neither must it
lean upon them; for to do this would be to be encumbered with
those forms, images and persons which remain inwardly within it,
and thus the soul would not progress toward God by denying itself
all things. For, even if these forms should be permanently set
before the soul, they will not greatly hinder this progress, if
the soul has no desire to set store by them. For, although it is
true that the remembrance of them impels the soul to a certain
love of God and contemplation, yet it is impelled and exalted much
more by pure faith and detachment in darkness from them all,
without its knowing how or whence it comes to it. And thus it will
come to pass that the soul will go forward, enkindled with
yearnings of purest love for God, without knowing whence they come
to it, or on what they are founded. The fact is that, while faith
has become ever more deeply rooted and infused in the soul by
means of that emptiness and darkness and detachment from all
things, or spiritual poverty, all of which may be spoken of as one
and the same thing, at the same time the charity of God has become
rooted and infused in the soul ever more deeply also. Wherefore,
the more the soul desires obscurity and annihilation with respect
to all the outward or inward things that it is capable of
receiving, the more is it infused by faith, and, consequently, by
love and hope, since all these three theological virtues go
together.
9. But at certain times the soul neither understands this
love nor feels it; for this love resides, not in sense, with its
tender feelings, but in the soul, with fortitude and with a
courage and daring that are greater than they were before, though
sometimes it overflows into sense and produces gentle and tender
feelings. Wherefore, in order to attain to that love, joy and
delight which such visions produce and cause in the soul, it is
well that soul should have fortitude and mortification and love,
so that it may desire to remain in emptiness and darkness as to
all things, and to build its love and joy upon that which it
neither sees nor feels, neither can see nor feel in this life,
which is God, Who is incomprehensible and transcends all things.
It is well, then, for us to journey to Him by denying ourselves
everything. For otherwise, even if the soul be so wise, humble and
strong that the devil cannot deceive it by visions or cause it to
fall into some sin of presumption, as he is wont to do, he will
not allow it to make progress; for he set obstacles in the way of
spiritual detachment and poverty of spirit and emptiness in faith,
which is the essential condition for union of the soul with God.
10. And, as the same teaching that we gave in the nineteenth
and twentieth chapters, concerning supernatural apprehensions and
visions of sense, holds good for these visions, we shall not spend
more time here in describing them.
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