The
Book of Supreme Truth
The prophet
Samuel mourned for King Saul, though he knew well that God had rejected him and
his issue from being kings in Israel: this was because of his pride, and
because he did not obey God and the prophet who spoke in His name. We may also
read in the Gospel, that the disciples of our Lord pleaded with Him for the
Gentile woman of Canaan, to send her away, that is, to do unto her that which
she desired; for she cried after Him. So likewise I might say that we must
mourn for all such deceived men as think themselves to be kings in Israel; for
they believe themselves to be lifted up above other good men, into a lofty and
God-seeing life. And yet they are proud and wittingly and willingly disobedient
to God and the law and the Holy Church and every virtue. And like as Saul rent
the mantle of the prophet Samuel, they endeavour to rend asunder the unity of
the Christian faith, and all true doctrine and virtuous life. Whosoever persist
herein, they are separated and shut out from the kingdom of eternal contemplation,
even as Saul was shut out from the kingdom of Israel. But that humble little
woman of Canaan, though she was Gentile and a stranger, had faith and hope in
God, and acknowledged and confessed her littleness before Christ and His
apostles: and so she received grace and health and all that she desired. For
God exalts the humble, and fills them with grace and all virtues; and He
resists the proud, and these remain empty of all good.
CHAPTER I – WHEREFORE THIS BOOK WAS WRITTEN
CHAPTER I – WHEREFORE THIS BOOK WAS WRITTEN
Certain of my friends have desired and besought
me, that I should show and make plain in a few words and according to my best
cunning, shortly and clearly, how I understand and feel the truth of all the
highest teachings that I have written before; so that none should take offense
at my words, but everyone should profit by them. And this I willingly consent
to do. I will, with God’s help, teach the humble who love virtue and truth;
and, with the same words, I shall inwardly vex and darken the false and the
proud: for to these my words will be displeasing and contrary, and this the
proud cannot endure, but it provokes them to anger.
CHAPTER II – A SHORT REPETITION OF ALL THE HIGHEST TEACHINGS WRITTEN BY THE AUTHOR
CHAPTER II – A SHORT REPETITION OF ALL THE HIGHEST TEACHINGS WRITTEN BY THE AUTHOR
Behold, I have said this: that the contemplative
lover of God is united with God through means, and also without means, and
thirdly, without difference or distinction; and this I find in nature, and in
grace, and also in glory. Further I have said that never creature may be or
become so holy that it loses its created being and becomes God; even the soul
of our Lord Jesus Christ shall ever remain creature, and other than God. Yet,
none the less, we must all be lifted up above ourselves into God, and become
one spirit with God in love; and then we shall be blessed. And therefore mark my
words and my meaning, and understand me aright as to what is the condition and
the way to our eternal blessedness.
CHAPTER III – OF THE UNION THROUGH MEANS
CHAPTER III – OF THE UNION THROUGH MEANS
And next, I will say that all good men are
united with God through means. These means are the grace of God, and the
sacraments of Holy Church, and the Divine virtues, faith, hope and charity, and
a virtuous life according to the commandments of God; and to these there
belongs a death to sin and to the world and to every inordinate lust of nature.
And through these, we remain united with Holy Church, that is, with all good
men; and with these, we obey God, and are one will with Him, even as an orderly
convent is united with its Superior: and without this union none can please God
nor be saved. Whosoever keeps this union through these means unto the end of
his life, he shall be one of those of whom Christ says unto His Father in
heaven in the Gospel of Saint John: Father, I will that they also whom Thou
hast given Me be with Me where I am: that they may behold My glory which Thou
hast given Me. And in another place He says that His servants shall sit down to
meat—that is, in the richness and the fulness of those virtues which they have
exercised—and He will go one to another and will minister unto them of His
glory which He has achieved. And He will generously impart and reveal to His
beloved, to each one specially and separately—more or less according as he is
worthy of it and can lay hold of it—the loftiness of His glory and honour which
He alone has earned by the merits of His life and His death. Thus all saints
shall be forever with Christ, each in his own order and in the degree of glory
which he has earned through God’s help by his works. And Christ, according to
His manhood shall be set above all saints, and above all angels, as a prince of
all glory and all honour; the which pertain to His manhood alone above all
creatures.
Behold,
thus you may understand how we are united with God through means, both here in
grace and hereafter in glory. But there is a great distinction and a great
difference in these means, and this is true both as regards life and reward, as
I have told you. And this was well understood by Saint Paul, when he said that
he had A desire to depart and to be with Christ. But he did not say that he had
a desire to be Christ Himself or God; as is done by some unbelieving and
perverse men, who say that they have no God, but that they are so wholly dead
to themselves, and united with God, that they have themselves become God.
CHAPTER IV – OF THE MEN WHO PRACTISE A FALSE VACANCY
CHAPTER IV – OF THE MEN WHO PRACTISE A FALSE VACANCY
Behold,
such folk, by means of a onefold simplification and a natural tendency, are
turned in upon the bareness of their own being; and therefore they think
eternal life is and shall be nought else but an enduring state of beatitude,
without distinction in order in holiness or in reward. Yea, all such are so
deep in error that they say that the Persons shall pass away into the Godhead,
and that nought else shall remain in eternity than the essential substance of the
Godhead; and that all blessed spirits shall be so simply absorbed with God in
the Essential Blessedness that nothing shall remain beside it, neither willing
nor working, nor the discerning knowledge of any creature whatsoever. Behold,
these men have gone astray into the vacant and blind simplicity of their own
being, and they seek for blessedness in bare nature; for they are so simply and
so idly united with the bare essence of their souls, and with that wherein God
always is, that they have neither zeal, nor cleaving to God, neither from
without, nor from within. For in the highest part into which they have entered,
they feel nothing but the simplicity of their own proper being, depending upon
the Being of God. And the onefold simplicity which they there possess, they
take to be God, because they find a natural rest therein. And so they think
themselves to be God in their simple ground; for they lack true faith, hope and
charity.
And, because of the naked emptiness which they feel and possess, they
say that they are without knowledge and without love, and are exempt from the
virtues. And so they endeavour to live without heeding their conscience, what
wickedness soever they commit. And they are careless of the sacraments, and of
all virtues, and of all the practices of Holy Church, and believe that they
have no need of them: for they fancy in their folly that they have passed
beyond all these things, but imperfect men, they say, have need of them. And
some men have become so accustomed to and deep-rooted in this simplification
that they would know and heed as little of all the works which God has wrought,
and all that Scripture teaches, as though not one line had ever been written;
for they believe themselves to have found and to possess that for the sake of
which all Scriptures have been made, namely, the blind essential rest which
they feel.
But in fact they have lost God and all the ways which may lead to
Him; for they have no more inwardness, nor more devotion, nor holy practices,
than a dead beast has. Yet they sometimes approach the sacraments, and at times
they quote the Scriptures, that thus they may the better dissimulate and cover
themselves; and they like to take some dark saying of Scripture, which they can
falsely turn to their own sense, so that they may please other simple men, and
may draw them into the false vacancy which they themselves feel. Behold, these
folk think themselves wise and subtle beyond any one else, and yet they are the
most coarse and crude of all men living; for that which even Pagans and Jews
and bad Christians, learned and unlearned, find and understand through their
natural reason, these wretched men neither can nor will attain. You may cross
yourselves against the devil, but beware earnestly of these perverted men, and
take care lest you should not recognise them in their words and works. For they
would teach, and be taught of none; they would reprove, and be reproved of
none; they would command, and obey none. They would oppress others, but no one
may oppress them; they wish to say whatever they like, but will endure no
contradiction; they recognise only their own self-will and are subject to no
one; and this they take to be ghostly freedom. They practise the liberty of the
flesh, for they give to the body whatsoever it lusts after; and this they take
to be natural freedom. They have unified themselves in a blind and dark vacancy
of their own being; and there, they think, they are one with God, and they take
this for the Eternal Blessedness. And they have entered into this, and have
taken possession of it, through self-will and their natural tendency; and
therefore they imagine themselves to be set above the law and above the
commandments of God and Holy Church. For, above that essential rest which they
possess, they feel neither God nor any otherness; for the Divine light has not
shone into their dimness.
And this is because they have neither sought after it
through active love nor through supernatural freedom. And thus they have lost
truth and every virtue, and have fallen into a perverted unlikeness; for they
make it a part of the highest holiness that a man should yield to all that
concerns his nature, and be without restraint, so that he may abide, with an
inclined spirit, in vacancy; and that as regards the lusts of the flesh
whenever they move him, he should turn outwards, that the flesh being
satisfied, he may quickly escape from the image and may return once more
unencumbered into the bare vacancy of his spirit. Lo! this is a fruit of hell,
which grows from their unbelief; and therewith shall unbelief be nourished even
in death. For, when the time has come and their nature is weighed down with
bitter woe and the sorrow of death, then they are filled with images and unrest
and inward fear; and they lose their vacant introversion in quietude, and fall
into such despair that none can console them, and they die like mad dogs. And
their vacancy shall bring them no reward, and those who worked wicked works,
and died in them shall go to the eternal flames, as our faith teaches.
I have
shown to you the evil and the good side by side, so that you may so much the
better understand the good and be able to guard against the evil. You shall
abhor and fly from such folk, for, how holy soever they seem in their conduct,
in works, in dress and demeanour, they are the mortal enemies of your soul. For
they are the devil’s ministers, and the most noxious of all who now live to
simple and unlearned men of good-will. But I will leave this subject, and go
back again to the matter with which I first began.
CHAPTER V – OF THE UNION WITHOUT MEANS
CHAPTER V – OF THE UNION WITHOUT MEANS
You may
remember that I showed heretofore how all saints and all good men are united
with God through means. Now I will further show to you how they are all united
with God without means. But in this life there are but few who are meet for
this, and sufficiently enlightened to feel and understand it. And therefore,
whosoever wishes to find and to feel within himself those three unions of which
I am going to speak, he must live entirely and wholly in God, so that he may
satisfy and be amenable to the grace and the stirring of God, in all virtues
and inward exercises. And he must be lifted up through love, and die in God to
himself and all his works; so that he yields himself up with all his powers,
and submits to the transformation through the incomprehensible Truth which is
God Himself.
And to
that end it is needful that living he should go forth in the virtues, and dying
should enter into God. And in these two things his perfect life consists; and
these two are joined together within him like matter and form, like body and
soul. And as he exercises himself in them so he becomes clear in understanding,
and rich and overflowing in feeling; for he has joined himself to God with
uplifted powers, with true intention, with his heart’s desire, with ceaseless
craving, with the living ardour of his spirit and of his nature. And since he
thus exercises himself and keeps himself in the Presence of God, love
overpowers him: in whatsoever manner he moves, he is ever growing in love and
in all virtues. But love always moves each man according to the profit and the
ability of each.
CHAPTER VI – OF HEAVENLY WEAL AND HELLISH WOE
CHAPTER VI – OF HEAVENLY WEAL AND HELLISH WOE
The most
profitable stirrings which such a man can feel, and for which he is best
fitted, are heavenly weal and hellish woe, and the ability to respond to these
two with fit and proper works. For heavenly weal lifts a man up above all
things into an untrammelled power of praising and loving God in every way that
his heart and his soul desire. After this comes hellish woe, and casts him down
into a misery, and into a lack of all the comfort and consolation that he
experienced before. In this woe, weal sometimes shows itself, and brings with
it a hope which none can gainsay. And then the man falls back again into a
despair in which he can find no consolation. When a man feels God within
himself with rich and full grace, this I call heavenly health; for then he is
wise and clear of understanding, rich and outflowing with heavenly teachings,
ardent and generous in charity, drunken and overflowing with joy, strong in
feeling, bold and ever ready in all the things which he knows to be well
pleasing to God; and such-like things without number, which may only be known
by those who feel them. But when the scale of love goes down, and God hides
Himself with all His graces, then the man falls back into dereliction and
torment and dark misery, as though he should never more recover: and then he
feels himself to be nought else but a poor sinner, who knows little or nothing
of God. He scorns every consolation that creatures may give him; and the taste
and consolation of God he does not receive. And then his reason says within
him: Where is now thy God? What hath become of all that thou didst receive from
God? Then his Tears are his meat day and night, as the Prophet says. Now if
that man is to recover from this misery, he must observe and feel that he does
not belong to himself, but to God; and therefore he must freely abandon his own
will to the will of God, and must leave God to work in him in time and in
eternity. So soon as he can do this, with untroubled heart, and with a free
spirit, at that very moment he recovers his health, and brings heaven into
hell, and hell into heaven. For howsoever the scales of love go up and down,
all things to him are even or alike. For whatsoever love gives or takes away,
he who abandons himself and loves God finds peace in all. For his spirit
remains free and unmoved, who lives in all pains without rebellion; and he is
able to feel the unmediated union with God. For he has achieved the union
through means by the richness of his virtues. And after this, because he is one
aim and one will with God, he feels God within himself together with the
fulness of His grace, as the quickening health of his being and all his works.
CHAPTER VII – SHOWING WHEREFORE ALL GOOD MEN DO NOT ATTAIN TO THE UNMEDIATED UNION WITH GOD
CHAPTER VII – SHOWING WHEREFORE ALL GOOD MEN DO NOT ATTAIN TO THE UNMEDIATED UNION WITH GOD
But now
you may ask me why all good men do not attain to feel this. Now listen and I
will tell you the why and the wherefore. They do not respond to the stirring of
God with a forsaking of themselves, and so they do not abide with quickening
fervour before the Presence of God; and also they are not careful of heart in
their inward self-examination. And therefore they always remain more outward
and manifold than inward and simple, and they work their works more from good
custom than from inward feeling. And they care more for particular methods and
the greatness and multiplicity of good works than for the intention and love
towards God. And so they remain outward and manifold of heart, and are not
aware of how God lives in them with the fulness of grace.
CHAPTER VIII – SHOWING HOW THE INWARD MAN SHOULD EXERCISE HIMSELF, THAT HE MAY BE UNITED WITH GOD WITHOUT MEANS
CHAPTER VIII – SHOWING HOW THE INWARD MAN SHOULD EXERCISE HIMSELF, THAT HE MAY BE UNITED WITH GOD WITHOUT MEANS
But now
I will tell you how the inward man, who has health amidst all miseries, should
feel himself to be one with God without means. When such a quickened man rises
up, with his whole being and all his powers, and joins himself to God with
life-giving and active love, then he feels that his love is, in its ground,
where it begins and ends, fruitive and without ground. If he then wishes to
penetrate further, with his active love into that fruitive love: then, all the
powers of his soul must give way, and they must suffer and patiently endure
that piercing Truth and Goodness which is God’s self. For, as the air is
penetrated by the brightness and heat of the sun, and iron is penetrated by
fire; so that it works through fire the works of fire, since it burns and
shines like the fire, and so likewise it can be said of the air—for, if the air
had understanding, it could say: “I enlighten and brighten the whole world”—yet
each of these keeps its own nature. For the fire does not become iron and the
iron does not become fire, though their union is without means; for the iron is
within the fire and the fire within the iron; and so also the air is in the
sunshine and the sunshine in the air. So likewise is God in the being of the
soul; and whenever the soul’s highest powers are turned inward with active
love, they are united with God without means, in a simple knowledge of all
truth, and in an essential feeling and tasting of all good. This simple knowing
and feeling of God is possessed in essential love, and is practised and
preserved through active love. And therefore it is accidental to our powers
through the dying introversion in love; but it is essential to our being, and
always abides within it. And therefore we must perpetually turn inwards and be
renewed in love, if we would seek out love through love. And this is taught us
by Saint John, where he says: He that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God and God
in him. And though this union of the loving spirit with God is without means,
yet there is here a great distinction, for the creature never becomes God, nor
does God ever become the creature; as I explained to you heretofore in the
example of the iron wnd the fire. And if material things, which have been made
by God, may thus be united without means; so much the more may He, whenever
such is His pleasure, unite himself with his beloved, if they, through His
grace, submit to it and make themselves ready for it. And so in such an inward man,
whom God has adorned with virtues, and, above that, has lifted up into a
contemplative life, there is no intermediary between himself and God in his
highest introversion but his enlightened reason and his active love. And
through these two things, he has an adherence to God; and this is “becoming one
with God,” says Saint Bernard. But above reason, and above active love, he is
lifted up into a naked contemplation, and dwells without activity in essential
love. And there he is one love and one spirit with God, as I said heretofore.
In this essential love through the unity which he has essentially with God, he
infinitely transcends his understanding; and this is a life common to all
God-seeing men. For in this transcendence such a man is able to see in one sight—if
it be God’s pleasure to show it to him—all the creatures in heaven and on
earth, with the distinction of their lives and their rewards. But before the
Infinity of God, he must yield, and must follow after It essentially and
without end; for This no creature, not even the soul of our Lord Jesus Christ,
which yet received the highest union above all other creatures, can either
comprehend or overtake.
CHAPTER IX – OF THE INWARD WORKING OF GOD’S GRACE
CHAPTER IX – OF THE INWARD WORKING OF GOD’S GRACE
Behold,
this Eternal Love, which lives within the spirit, and with which it is united
without means, gives its light and its grace to all the powers of the soul; and
becomes thereby the cause of all the virtues. For the grace of God touches the
highest powers of the soul, and from this touch there spring charity and the
knowledge of truth, the love of all righteousness, the practice of the counsels
of God according to discretion, freedom from images, the overcoming of all
things without effort, and the death into the Unity through love. As long as a
man can maintain himself in this exercise, he is able to contemplate, and to
feel the union without means; and he feels the touch of God within himself,
which is a renewal of grace and all virtues. You must further know that the
grace of God also pours forth even through the lowest powers, and touches a
man’s heart; and from this there comes forth a heart-felt love towards God and
a sensible joy in Him; and the love and delight pierce through heart and
senses, through flesh and blood, and the whole bodily nature, and cause a
pressure and restlessness in all his members, so that he is often at his wit’s
end. For he feels like a man full of wine, who is no longer master of
himself.
And from
this there come many a strange state, wherein men of tender heart cannot well
govern themselves. Sometimes through impatient longing, they lift up their
heads and gaze with wide-opened eyes towards heaven; now joying, now weeping;
now singing, now crying; now in weal, now in woe, and often both together;
running and jumping, laughing, clapping their hands, kneeling, bowing down: and
many other like gestures are seen in them. So long as a man remains thus, and
lifts himself up with an open heart towards those riches of God which live in
his spirit, he feels ever anew the stirring of God, and the impatience of love;
and then all these things are renewed in him. And so this man through this
bodily feeling may sometimes pass into a ghostly feeling which is according to
reason; and through this ghostly feeling, he may pass into a godly feeling,
which is above reason; and, through this godly feeling, he may drown himself in
an unchangeable and beatific feeling. This feeling is our superessential
blessedness, which is a fruition of God and all His beloved: and this
blessedness is that Dark Quiet which ever abides in idleness. To God it is
essential, and to all creatures superessential. And there we may behold how the
Persons give place and abide in the Essential Love, that is, in the Fruitive
Unity and yet they dwell for ever, according to Their personal nature, in the
working of the Trinity.
CHAPTER X – OF THE MUTUAL CONTENTMENT OF THE DIVINE PERSONS, AND THE MUTUAL CONTENTMENT BETWEEN GOD AND GOOD MEN
CHAPTER X – OF THE MUTUAL CONTENTMENT OF THE DIVINE PERSONS, AND THE MUTUAL CONTENTMENT BETWEEN GOD AND GOOD MEN
And so
you may perceive that the Divine Nature eternally works according to the Persons,
and is eternally idle and wayless according to the simplicity of Its Essence.
All therefore that God has chosen and laid hold of with eternal personal love,
has already been essentially and fruitively possessed of Him in unity with
essential love. For the Divine Persons are enfolded within the Unity in a
mutual embrace in an eternal contentment, in abysmal active love. And this is
perpetually renewed in the lifegiving life of the Trinity; for here there takes
place a perpetual new birth in new knowledge new contentment and new
outbreathing; in a new embrace with new torrents of Eternal Love. In this
contentment all the chosen are enfolded: angels and men, from the first even to
the last. Upon this contentment depend heaven and earth, and life and being and
the activity and preservation of all creatures, save only the tendency to turn
from God in sin: this comes from the wilful and blind wickedness of the
creatures. From the Divine contentment grace and glory and all gifts pour forth
in heaven and on earth, and into each creature separately, according to its
needs and its receptivity. For God’s grace is made ready for all men, and
awaits the conversion of every sinner, and whenever a sinner, urged by grace,
renounces himself and will call upon God with faith, he finds pardon. And
likewise, whosoever through grace with loving contentment turns towards the
Eternal Contentment of God, he is enwrapped and embraced in the abysmal love
which is God Himself. And thereby he is perpetually renewed in love and in the
virtues; for, between our contentment in God and God’s contentment in us there
abides an activity of love and of eternal life. But God has eternally loved us
and established us within His contentment, and if we rightly observe this, our
love and our contentment shall be wakened anew. For, in the mutual relations of
the Persons in the Godhead, this contentment perpetually renews itself, in a
new gushing forth of love, in an ever new embrace within the Unity. And this
takes place beyond Time; that is, without before and after, in an eternal NOW.
For, in this embrace in the Unity, all things are consummated; and in the
gushing forth of love, all things are wrought; and in the life-giving and
fruitful Nature lie the power and possibilities of all things. For in the
life-giving and fruitful Nature, the Son is in the Father, and the Father in
the Son, and the Holy Ghost in Both. For It is a life-giving and fruitful
Unity, which is the home and the beginning of all life and of all becoming. And
so all creatures are therein, beyond themselves, one Being and one Life with
God, as in their Eternal Origin. But in the precession of the different
Persons, the Son proceeds from the Father, and the Holy Ghost from Both: and it
is there that God has made and ordained all creatures according to their proper
being, and has re-made man, through His grace and His death, inasmuch as he
cleaves to Him. And He has adorned His own with love and with the virtues; and
has turned back with them, towards His Origin.
There
the Father and the Son and all the beloved are enfolded and embraced in the
bonds of love; that is, in the unity of the Holy Ghost. And this is that same
unity which is fruitful in the outgoing activity of the Persons, and forms in
Their return an eternal bond of love which shall never be untied: and all who
know themselves to be bound up in it shall be blessed throughout eternity, and
they are rich in virtue, and clear in contemplation, and simple in fruitive
rest. For in their introversion, the Love of God is revealed to them, pouring
forth with all good, and drawing back again into the Unity, and above all being
and beyond all conditions abiding in eternal rest. And so they are all united
with God, through means, and without means, and also without distinction.
CHAPTER XI – HOW GOOD MEN IN THEIR CONTEMPLATION HAVE THE LOVE OF GOD BEFORE THEM, AND HOW THEY ARE LIFTED UP INTO GOD
CHAPTER XI – HOW GOOD MEN IN THEIR CONTEMPLATION HAVE THE LOVE OF GOD BEFORE THEM, AND HOW THEY ARE LIFTED UP INTO GOD
They
have the Love of God before them in their inward seeing, as a common good
pouring forth through heaven and earth; and they feel the Holy Trinity inclined
towards them, and within them, with fulness of grace. And therefore they are
adorned without and within with all the virtues, with holy practices and with
good works. And thus they are united with God through Divine grace and their own
holy lives. And because they have abandoned themselves to God in doing, in
leaving undone, and in suffering, they have steadfast peace and inward joy,
consolation and savour, of which the world cannot partake; neither any
dissembler, nor the man who seeks and means himself more than the glory of God.
Moreover, those same inward and enlightened men have before them in their
inward seeing whenever they will, the Love of God as something drawing or
urging them into the Unity; for they see and feel that the Father with the Son
through the Holy Ghost, embrace Each Other and all the chosen, and draw
themselves back with eternal love into the unity of Their Nature. Thus the
Unity is ever drawing to itself and inviting to itself everything that has been
born of It, either by nature or by grace. And therefore, too, such enlightened
men are, with a free spirit, lifted up above reason into a bare and imageless
vision, wherein lives the eternal indrawing summons of the Divine Unity; and,
with an imageless and bare understanding, they pass through all works, and all
exercises, and all things, until they reach the summit of their spirits. There,
their bare understanding is drenched through by the Eternal Brightness, even as
the air is drenched through by the sunshine. And the bare, uplifted will is
transformed and drenched through by abysmal love, even as iron is by fire. And
the bare, uplifted memory feels itself enwrapped and established in an abysmal
Absence of Image. And thereby the created image is united above reason in a
threefold way with its Eternal Image, which is the origin of its being and its
life; and this origin is preserved and possessed, essentially and eternally,
through a simple seeing in an imageless void: and so a man is lifted up above
reason in a threefold manner into the Unity, and in a onefold manner into the
Trinity. Yet the creature does not become God, for the union takes place in God
through grace and our homeward-turning love: and therefore the creature in its
inward contemplation feels a distinction and an otherness between itself and
God. And though the union is without means, yet the manifold works which God
works in heaven and on earth are nevertheless hidden from the spirit. For
though God gives Himself as He is, with clear discernment, He gives Himself in
the essence of the soul, where the powers of the soul are simplified above
reason, and where, in simplicity, they suffer the transformation of God. There
all is full and overflowing, for the spirit feels itself to be one truth and
one richness and one unity with God. Yet even here there is an essential
tending forward, and therein is an essential distinction between the being of
the soul and the Being of God; and this is the highest and finest distinction
which we are able to feel.
CHAPTER XII – OF THE HIGHEST UNION, WITHOUT DIFFERENCE OR DISTINCTION
CHAPTER XII – OF THE HIGHEST UNION, WITHOUT DIFFERENCE OR DISTINCTION
And
after this there follows the union without distinction. For you must apprehend
the Love of God not only as an outpouring with all good, and as drawing back
again into the Unity; but it is also, above all distinction, an essential
fruition in the bare Essence of the Godhead. And in consequence of this
enlightened men have found within themselves an essential contemplation which
is above reason and without reason, and a fruitive tendency which pierces
through every condition and all being, and through which they immerse
themselves in a wayless abyss of fathomless beatitude, where the Trinity of the
Divine Persons possess Their Nature in the essential Unity. Behold, this
beatitude is so onefold and so wayless that in it every essential gazing,
tendency, and creaturely distinction cease and pass away. For by this fruition,
all uplifted spirits are melted and noughted in the Essence of God, Which is
the superessence of all essence. There they fall from themselves into a
solitude and an ignorance which are fathomless; there all light is turned to
darkness; there the three Persons give place to the Essential Unity, and abide
without distinction in fruition of essential blessedness. This blessedness is
essential to God, and superessential to all creatures; for no created essence
can become one with God’s Essence and pass away from its own substance. For so
the creature would become God, which is impossible; for the Divine Essence can
neither wax nor wane, nor can anything be added to It or taken from It. Yet all
loving spirits are one fruition and one blessedness with God without
distinction; for that beatific state, which is the fruition of God and of all
His beloved, is so simple and onefold that therein neither Father, nor Son, nor
Holy Ghost, is distinct according to the Persons, neither is any creature. But
all enlightened spirits are here lifted up above themselves into a wayless
fruition, which is an abundance beyond all the fulness that any creature has
ever received or shall ever receive. For there all uplifted spirits are, in
their superessence, one fruition and one beatitude with God without
distinction; and there this beatitude is so onefold that no distinction can
enter into it. And this was prayed for by Christ when He besought His Father in
heaven that all His beloved might be made perfect in one, even as He is one
with the Father through the Holy Ghost: even so He prayed and besought that He
in us and we in Him and His heavenly Father might be one in fruition through
the Holy Ghost. And this I think the most loving prayer which Christ ever made
for our blessedness.
CHAPTER XIII – OF THE THREEFOLD PRAYER OF CHRIST, THAT WE MIGHT BE ONE WITH GOD
CHAPTER XIII – OF THE THREEFOLD PRAYER OF CHRIST, THAT WE MIGHT BE ONE WITH GOD
But you
should also observe that His prayer, as it has been written by Saint John in
this same Gospel, was threefold. For He prayed that we might be with Him, that
we might behold the glory which His Father had given Him. And therefore I said
at the beginning that all good men are united with God by means of Divine grace
and their own virtuous life; for the love of God is always pouring into us with
new gifts, and whosoever is aware of this is fulfilled with new virtues and
holy exercises and with all good, in the way that I told you heretofore: and
this union through the fulness of grace and glory, in body and soul, begins
here below and shall endure throughout eternity.
Further,
Christ prayed thus, that He might be in us and we in Him. This we find in the
Gospel, in many places. And this is the union without means; for the Love of
God is not only outpouring, but it also draws us inwards, into the Unity. And
those who feel and are aware of this, become inward and enlightened men, and
their highest powers are uplifted, above all exercises, into their naked being:
and there, above reason, the powers become simplified in their essence, and so
they are full and overflowing. For in that simplicity, the spirit finds itself
united with God without means; and this union, with the exercise which belongs
to it, shall endure eternally, as I have told you heretofore.
Further,
Christ uttered His most sublime prayer, namely, that His beloved might be made
perfect in one, as He is one with the Father: not one as He is with the Father
one single Divine Substance, for this is impossible to us; but so one, and in
such a unity, as He is one fruition and one beatitude with the Father without
distinction in Essential Love. Those who are thus united with God in this
threefold way, in them the prayer of Christ has been fulfilled.
These
with God shall ebb and flow,
Having and joying, they shall empty go;
They shall both work and passively endure,
And in their superessence rest secure.
They shall go out and in, and find their food,
They shall go out and in, and find their food,
And, drunk with love, in radiant darkness sleep in God.
Many more words I should like to say here, but those who possess this have no need of them: and he to whom it has been shown, and who cleaves with love to Love, he shall be taught the whole truth by Love itself. But those who turn outwards, and would find consolation in outward things, do not feel this; and, even though I should say much more of it, yet they would not understand. For those who give themselves wholly to outward works, or those who are idle in inward passivity, shall never be able to understand it. Now although reason and all bodily feelings must here give place and yield to the faith and contemplation of the spirit, and to those things which are above reason; yet reason and also the life of the senses continue to abide in their place, and cannot pass away, any more than the nature of man can pass away. And further, though the gazing and tendency of the spirit towards God must give place to fruition in simplicity; yet this gazing and this tendency continue to exist in their place. For this is the inmost life of the spirit; and, in the enlightened and uplifted man, the life of the senses adheres to the spirit. And so his sensual powers are joined to God by heart-felt love, and his nature is fulfilled with all good; and he feels that his ghostly life adheres to God without means. And thereby his highest powers are uplifted to God in eternal love, and drenched through by Divine truth, and established in imageless freedom. And so he is filled with God, and overflowing without measure. In this inundation there comes to pass the essential outpouring or immersion in the superessential Unity; and this is the union without distinction, of which I have often told you. For in the superessence all our ways end. If we will go with God upon the highway of love, we shall rest with Him eternally and without end: and thus we shall eternally go forth towards God and enter into Him and rest in Him.
CHAPTER XIV – HERE THE AUTHOR DECLARES THAT HE SUBMITS ALL THAT HE HAS WRITTEN TO THE JUDGMENT OF HOLY CHURCH
Many more words I should like to say here, but those who possess this have no need of them: and he to whom it has been shown, and who cleaves with love to Love, he shall be taught the whole truth by Love itself. But those who turn outwards, and would find consolation in outward things, do not feel this; and, even though I should say much more of it, yet they would not understand. For those who give themselves wholly to outward works, or those who are idle in inward passivity, shall never be able to understand it. Now although reason and all bodily feelings must here give place and yield to the faith and contemplation of the spirit, and to those things which are above reason; yet reason and also the life of the senses continue to abide in their place, and cannot pass away, any more than the nature of man can pass away. And further, though the gazing and tendency of the spirit towards God must give place to fruition in simplicity; yet this gazing and this tendency continue to exist in their place. For this is the inmost life of the spirit; and, in the enlightened and uplifted man, the life of the senses adheres to the spirit. And so his sensual powers are joined to God by heart-felt love, and his nature is fulfilled with all good; and he feels that his ghostly life adheres to God without means. And thereby his highest powers are uplifted to God in eternal love, and drenched through by Divine truth, and established in imageless freedom. And so he is filled with God, and overflowing without measure. In this inundation there comes to pass the essential outpouring or immersion in the superessential Unity; and this is the union without distinction, of which I have often told you. For in the superessence all our ways end. If we will go with God upon the highway of love, we shall rest with Him eternally and without end: and thus we shall eternally go forth towards God and enter into Him and rest in Him.
CHAPTER XIV – HERE THE AUTHOR DECLARES THAT HE SUBMITS ALL THAT HE HAS WRITTEN TO THE JUDGMENT OF HOLY CHURCH
Now at
this time I cannot set forth my meaning more clearly. In all that I understand,
or feel, or have written, I submit myself to the judgment of the saints and of
Holy Church; for I wish to live and to die as a servant of Christ, in the
Christian faith; and I desire to be, by the grace of God, a life-giving member
of Holy Church. And therefore, as I told you heretofore, you should beware of
those self-deceived men who, by means of their idle vacancy, and with their
bare and simple gaze have found the Divine Essence within themselves in a
merely natural way; and who pretend to be one with God without the grace of
God, and without exercise of virtue, and without obedience to God and to Holy
Church. And for all their perversity of life, which I have described, they
would be one with God’s Son by nature. But if the Prince of all the angels was
cast out of heaven, because he set himself up against God and would be like
unto the most High; and if the first man was driven from Paradise because he
would be as God: how then shall this wretched sinner – that is, the faithless
Christian who would be as God without likeness to God in grace and virtue –
ever rise from earth into heaven? For through his own power no man has ascended
into heaven, save the Son of Man, Jesus Christ. And therefore we must unite
ourselves with Him, through grace and virtue and Christian faith: so we shall
ascend with Him whither He has gone before us. For in the Last Day we shall all
rise, each with his own body; and then those who have worked good works shall
go into life everlasting, and those who have worked evil works shall go into
everlasting fire. These are two unlike ends, which shall never come together
for each flies from the other perpetually.
Pray for him who has composed and written this, that God may
have mercy upon him. That his poor beginning, and his and our wretched middle
course may be brought to a blessed end, this may Jesus Christ, the Son of the
living God, bestow upon us all. Amen.
by Blessed John Ruysbroeck
Photo taken from MorgueFile Photos
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