Which treats of the substantial words that come interiorly to
the spirit. Describes the difference between them and formal
words, and the profit which they bring and the resignation and
respect which the soul must observe with regard to them.[469]
THE third kind of interior words, we said, is called
substantial. These substantial words, although they are likewise
formal, since they are impressed upon the soul in a definitely
formal way, differ, nevertheless, in that substantial words
produce vivid and substantial effects upon the soul, whereas words
which are merely formal do not. So that, although it is true that
every substantial word is formal, every formal word is not
therefore substantial, but only, as we said above, such a word as
impresses substantially on the soul that which it signifies. It is
as if Our Lord were to say formally to the soul: 'Be thou good';
it would then be substantially good. Or as if He were to say to
it: 'Love thou Me'; it would then have and feel within itself the
substance of love for God. Or as if it feared greatly and He said
to it: 'Fear thou not'; it would at once feel within itself great
fortitude and tranquility. For the saying of God, and His word, as
the Wise Man says, is full of power;[470] and thus that which He
says to the soul He produces substantially within it. For it is
this that David meant when he said: 'See, He will give to His
voice a voice of virtue.'[471] And even so with Abraham, when He
said to him: 'Walk in My presence and be perfect':[472] he was then
perfect and walked ever in the fear of God. And this is the power
of His word in the Gospel, wherewith He healed the sick, raised
the dead, etc., by no more than a word. And after this manner He
gives certain souls locutions which are substantial; and they are
of such moment and price that they are life and virtue and
incomparable good to the soul; for one of these words works
greater good within the soul than all that the soul itself has
done throughout its life.
2. With respect to these words, the soul should do nothing.
It should neither desire them nor refrain from desiring them; it
should neither reject them nor fear them. It should do nothing in
the way of executing what these words express, for these
substantial words are never pronounced by God in order that the
soul may translate them into action, but that He may so translate
them within the soul; herein they differ from formal and
successive words. And I say that the soul must neither desire nor
refrain from desiring, since its desire is not necessary for God
to translate these words into effect, nor is it sufficient for the
soul to refrain from desiring in order for the said effect not to
be produced. Let the soul rather be resigned and humble with
respect to them. It must not reject them, since the effect of
these words remains substantially within it and is full of the
good which comes from God. As the soul receives this good
passively, its action is at no time of any importance. Nor should
it fear any deception; for neither the understanding nor the devil
can intervene herein, nor can they succeed in passively producing
this substantial effect in the soul, in such a way that the effect
and habit of the locution may be impressed upon it, unless the
soul should have given itself to the devil by a voluntary compact,
and he should have dwelt in it as its master, and impressed upon
it these effects, not of good, but of evil. Inasmuch as that soul
would be already voluntarily united to him in perversity, the
devil might easily impress upon it the effects of his sayings and
words with evil intent. For we see by experience that in many
things and even upon good souls he works great violence, by means
of suggestion, making his suggestions very efficacious; and if
they were evil he might work in them the consummation of these
suggestions. But he cannot leave upon a soul effects similar to
those of locutions which are good; for there is no comparison
between the locutions of the devil and those of God. The former
are all as though they were not, in comparison with the latter,
neither do they produce any effect at all compared with the effect
of these. For this cause God says through Jeremias: 'What has the
chaff to do with the wheat? Are not My words perchance as fire,
and as a hammer that breaketh the rock in pieces?'[473] And thus
these substantial words are greatly conducive to the union of the
soul with God; and the more interior they are, the more
substantial are they, and the greater is the profit that they
bring. Happy is the soul to whom God addresses these words. Speak,
Lord, for Thy servant heareth.[474]
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