Which treats of the first kind of words that the recollected
spirit sometimes forms within itself. Describes the cause of these
and the profit and the harm which there may be in them.
These successive words always come when the spirit is
recollected and absorbed very attentively in some meditation; and,
in its reflections upon that same matter whereon it is thinking,
it proceeds from one stage to another, forming words and arguments
which are very much to the point, with great facility and
distinctiveness, and by means of its reasoning discovers things
which it knew not with respect to the subject of its reflections,
so that it seems not to be doing this itself, but rather it seems
that another person is supplying the reasoning within its mind or
answering its questions or teaching it. And in truth it has good
cause for thinking this, for the soul itself is reasoning with
itself and answering itself as though it were two persons
convening together; and in some ways this is really so; for,
although it is the spirit itself that works as an instrument, the
Holy Spirit oftentimes aids it to produce and form those true
reasonings, words and conceptions. And thus it utters them to
itself as though to a third person. For, as at that time the
understanding is recollected and united with the truth of that
whereon it is thinking, and the Divine Spirit is likewise united
with it in that truth, as it is always united in all truth, it
follows that, when the understanding communicates in this way with
the Divine Spirit by means of this truth, it begins to form within
itself, successively, those other truths which are connected with
that whereon it is thinking, the door being opened to it and
illumination being given to it continually by the Holy Spirit Who
teaches it. For this is one of the ways wherein the Holy Spirit
teaches.
2. And when the understanding is illumined and taught in this
way by this master, and comprehends these truths, it begins of its
own accord to form the words which relate to the truths that are
communicated to it from elsewhere. So that we may say that the
voice is the voice of Jacob and the hands are the hand of Esau.[457]
And one that is in this condition will be unable to believe that
this is so, but will think that the sayings and the words come
from a third person. For such a one knows not the facility with
which the understanding can form words inwardly, as though they
came from a third person, and having reference to conceptions and
truths which have in fact been communicated to it by a third
person.
3. And although it is true that, in this communication and
enlightenment of the understanding, no deception is produced in
the soul itself, nevertheless, deception may, and does, frequently
occur in the formal words and reasonings which the understanding
bases upon it. For, inasmuch as this illumination which it
receives is at times very subtle and spiritual, so that the
understanding cannot attain to a clear apprehension of it, and it
is the understanding that, as we say, forms the reasonings of its
own accord, it follows that those which it forms are frequently
false, and on other occasions are only apparently true, or are
imperfect. For since at the outset the soul began to seize the
truth, and then brought into play the skilfulness or the
clumsiness of its own weak understanding, its perception of the
truth may easily be modified by the instability of its own
faculties of comprehension, and act all the time exactly as though
a third person were speaking.
4. I knew a person who had these successive locutions: among
them were some very true and substantial ones concerning the most
holy Sacrament of the Eucharist, but others were sheer heresy. And
I am appalled at what happens in these days -- namely, when some
soul with the very smallest experience[458] of meditation, if it be
conscious of certain locutions of this kind in some state of
recollection, at once christens them all as coming from God, and
assumes that this is the case, saying: 'God said to me . . .';
'God answered me . . .'; whereas it is not so at all, but, as we
have said, it is for the most part they who are saying these
things to themselves.
5. And, over and above this, the desire which people have for
locutions, and the pleasure which comes to their spirits from
them, lead them to make answer to themselves and then to think
that it is God Who is answering them and speaking to them. They
therefore commit great blunders unless they impose a strict
restraint upon themselves, and unless their director obliges them
to abstain from these kinds of reflection. For they are apt to
gain from them mere nonsensical talk and impurity of soul rather
than humility and mortification of spirit, if they think, 'This
was indeed a great thing' and 'God was speaking'; whereas it will
have been little more than nothing, or nothing at all, or less
than nothing. For, if humility and charity be not engendered by
such experiences, and mortification and holy simplicity and
silence, etc., what can be the value of them? I say, then, that
these things may hinder the soul greatly in its progress to Divine
union because, if it pay heed to them, it is led far astray from
the abyss of faith, where the understanding must remain in
darkness, and must journey in darkness, by love and in faith, and
not by much reasoning.
6. And if you ask me why the understanding must be deprived
of these truths, since through them it is illumined by the Spirit
of God, and thus they[459] cannot be evil, I reply that the Holy
Spirit illumines the understanding which is recollected, and
illumines it according to the manner of its recollection,[460] and
that the understanding cannot find any other and greater
recollection than in faith; and thus the Holy Spirit will illumine
it in naught more than in faith. For the purer and the more
refined in faith is the soul, the more it has of the infused
charity of God; and the more charity it has, the more is it
illumined and the more gifts of the Holy Spirit are communicated
to it, for charity is the cause and the means whereby they are
communicated to it. And although it is true that, in this
illumination of truths, the Holy Spirit communicates a certain
light to the soul, this is nevertheless as different in quality
from that which is in faith, wherein is no clear understanding, as
is the most precious gold from the basest metal; and, with regard
to its quantity, the one is as much greater than the other as the
sea is greater than a drop of water. For in the one manner there
is communicated to the soul wisdom concerning one or two or three
truths, etc., but in the other there is communicated to it all the
wisdom of God in general, which is the Son of God, Who
communicates Himself to the soul in faith.
7. And if you tell me that this is all good, and that the one
impedes not the other, I reply that it impedes it greatly if the
soul sets store by it; for to do this is to occupy itself with
things which are clear and of little importance, yet which are
sufficient to hinder the communication of the abyss of faith,
wherein God supernaturally and secretly instructs the soul, and
exalts it in virtues and gifts in a way that it knows not. And the
profit which these successive communications will bring us cannot
come by our deliberately applying the understanding to them, for
if we do this they will rather lead us astray, even as Wisdom says
to the soul in the Songs: 'Turn away thine eyes from me, for they
make me to fly away.'[461] That is so say: They make me to fly far
away from thee and to set myself higher. We must therefore not
apply the understanding to that which is being supernaturally
communicated to it, but simply and sincerely apply the will to God
with love, for it is through love that these good things are
communicated and through love they will be communicated in greater
abundance than before. For if the ability of the natural
understanding or of other faculties be brought actively to bear
upon these things which are communicated supernaturally and
passively, its imperfect nature will not reach them, and thus they
will perforce be modified according to the capacity of the
understanding, and consequently will perforce be changed; and thus
the understanding will necessarily go astray and begin to form
reasonings within itself, and there will no longer be anything
supernatural or any semblance thereof, but all will be merely
natural and most erroneous and unworthy.
8. But there are certain types of understanding so quick and
subtle that, when they become recollected during some meditation,
they invent conceptions, and begin naturally, and with great
facility, to form these conceptions into the most lifelike words
and arguments, which they think, without any doubt, come from God.
Yet all the time they come only from the understanding, which,
with its natural illumination, being to some extent freed from the
operation of the senses, is able to effect all this, and more,
without any supernatural aid. This happens very commonly, and many
persons are greatly deceived by it, thinking that they have
attained to a high degree of prayer and are receiving
communications from God, wherefore they either write this down or
cause it to be written. And it turns out to be nothing, and to
have the substance of no virtue, and it serves only to encourage
them in vanity.
9. Let these persons learn to be intent upon naught, save
only upon grounding the will in humble love, working diligently,
suffering and thus imitating the Son of God in His life and
mortifications, for it is by this road that a man will come to all
spiritual good, rather than by much inward reasoning.
10. In this type of locution -- namely, in successive
interior words -- the devil frequently intervenes, especially in
the case of such as have some inclination or affection for them.
At times when such persons begin to be recollected, the devil is
accustomed to offer them ample material for distractions, forming
conceptions or words by suggestion in their understanding, and
then corrupting[462] and deceiving it most subtly with things that
have every appearance of being true. And this is one of the
manners wherein he communicates with those who have made some
implicit or expressed compact with him; as with certain heretics,
especially with certain heresiarchs, whose understanding he fills
with most subtle, false and erroneous conceptions and arguments.
11. From what has been said, it is evident that these
successive locutions may proceed in the understanding from three
causes, namely: from the Divine Spirit, Who moves and illumines
the understanding; from the natural illumination of the same
understanding; and from the devil, who may speak to the soul by
suggestion. To describe now the signs and indications by which a
man may know when they proceed from one cause and when from
another would be somewhat difficult, as also to give examples and
indications. It is quite possible, however, to give some general
signs, which are these. When in its words and conceptions the soul
finds itself loving God, and at the same time is conscious not
only of love but also of humility and reverence, it is a sign that
the Holy Spirit is working within it, for, whensoever He grants
favours, He grants them with this accompaniment.[463] When the
locutions proceed solely from the vivacity and brilliance of the
understanding, it is the understanding that accomplishes
everything, without the operation of the virtues (although the
will, in the knowledge and illumination of those truths, may love
naturally); and, when the meditation is over, the will remains
dry, albeit inclined neither to vanity nor to evil, unless the
devil should tempt it afresh about this matter. This, however, is
not the case when the locutions have been prompted by a good
spirit; for then, as a rule, the will is afterwards affectioned to
God and inclined to well-doing. At certain times, nevertheless, it
will happen that, although the communication has been the work of
a good spirit, the will remains in aridity, since God ordains it
so for certain causes which are of assistance to the soul. At
other times the soul will not be very conscious of the operations
or motions of those virtues, yet that which it has experienced
will be good. Wherefore I say that the difference between these
locutions is sometimes difficult to recognize, by reason of the
varied effects which they produce; but these which have now been
described are the most common, although sometimes they occur in
greater abundance and sometimes in less. But those that come from
the devil are sometimes difficult to understand and recognize,
for, although it is true that as a rule they leave the will in
aridity with respect to love of God, and the mind inclined to
vanity, self-esteem or complacency, nevertheless they sometimes
inspire the soul with a false humility and a fervent affection of
the will rooted in self-love, so that at times a person must be
extremely spiritually-minded to recognize it. And this the devil
does in order the better to protect himself; for he knows very
well how sometimes to produce tears by the feelings which he
inspires in a soul, in order that he may continue to implant in it
the affections that he desires. But he always strives to move its
will so that it may esteem those interior communications, attach
great importance to them, and, as a result, give itself up to them
and be occupied in that which is not virtue, but is rather the
occasion of losing virtue as the soul may have.
12. Let us remember, then, this necessary caution, both as to
the one type of locution and as to the other, so that we may not
be deceived or hindered by them. Let us treasure none of them, but
think only of learning to direct our will determinedly to God,
fulfilling His law and His holy counsels perfectly, which is the
wisdom of the Saints, and contenting ourselves with knowing the
mysteries and truths with the simplicity and truth wherewith the Church sets them
before us. For this is sufficient to enkindle the will greatly, so
that we need not pry into other deep and curious things wherein it
is a wonder if there is no peril. For with respect to this Saint
Paul says: It is not fitting to know more than it behoves us[464] to
know.[465] And let this suffice with respect to this matter of
successive words.
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