DARK
NIGHT
OF THE SOUL
by
Saint
John of the Cross
DOCTOR OF THE CHURCH
THIRD REVISED EDITION
Translated and edited, with
an Introduction,
by E. ALLISON PEERS
from the critical edition of
P. SILVERIO DE SANTA TERESA,
C.D.
IMAGE BOOKS
A Division of Doubleday & Company, Inc.
Garden City, New York
IMAGE BOOKS EDITION 1959
by special arrangement with The Newman Press
Image Books edition published February 1959
1st printing January 1959
NIHIL OBSTAT: GEORGIVS
SMITH, S.T.D, PH.D.
CENSOR DEPVTATVS
IMPRIMATVR: E. MORROGH
BERNARD
VICARIVS GENERALIS
WESTMONASTERII: DIE XXIV
SEPTEMBRIS MCMLII
Printed in the United States of America
TO THE
DISCALCED CARMELITES OF CASTILE,
WITH ABIDING MEMORIES OF
THEIR HOSPITALITY AND KINDNESS
IN MADRID, çVILA AND BURGOS,
BUT ABOVE ALL OF THEIR
DEVOTION TO
SAINT JOHN OF THE CROSS,
I DEDICATE THIS TRANSLATION
CONTENTS
PREFACE TO THE ELECTRONIC EDITION
TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION
TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION
PRINCIPAL ABBREVIATIONS
INTRODUCTION
DARK NIGHT OF THE SOUL
PROLOGUE
BOOK I
CHAPTER I.—Sets down the first line and begins to
treat of the imperfections of beginners
CHAPTER II.—Of certain spiritual imperfections which
beginners have with respect to the habit of pride
CHAPTER III.—Of some imperfections which some of
these souls are apt to have, with respect to the second capital sin, which is
avarice, in the spiritual sense
CHAPTER IV.—Of other imperfections which these
beginners are apt to have with respect to the third sin, which is luxury
CHAPTER V.—Of the imperfections into which beginners
fall with respect to the sin of wrath
CHAPTER VI.—Of imperfections with respect to
spiritual gluttony
CHAPTER VII.—Of imperfections with respect to
spiritual envy and sloth
CHAPTER VIII.—Wherein is expounded the first line of
the first stanza, and a beginning is made of the explanation of this dark night
CHAPTER IX.—Of the signs by which it will be known
that the spiritual person is walking along the way of this night and purgation
of sense
CHAPTER X.—Of the way in which these souls are to
conduct themselves in this dark night
CHAPTER XI.—Wherein are expounded the three lines of
the stanza
CHAPTER XII.—Of the benefits which this night causes
in the soul
CHAPTER XIII.—Of other benefits which this night of
sense causes in the soul
CHAPTER XIV.—Expounds this last verse of the first
stanza
BOOK II
CHAPTER I.—Which begins to treat of the dark night
of the spirit and says at what time it begins
CHAPTER II.—Describes other imperfections which
belong to these proficients
CHAPTER III.—Annotation for that which follows
CHAPTER IV.—Sets down the first stanza and the
exposition thereof
CHAPTER V.—Sets down the first line and begins to
explain how this dark contemplation is not only night for the soul but is also
grief and purgation
CHAPTER VI.—Of other kinds of pain that the soul
suffers in this night
CHAPTER VII.—Continues the same matter and considers
other afflictions and constraints of the will
CHAPTER VIII.—Of other pains which afflict the soul
in this state
CHAPTER IX.—How, although this night brings darkness
to the spirit, it does so in order to illumine it and give it light
CHAPTER X.—Explains this purgation fully by a
comparison
CHAPTER XI.—Begins to explain the second line of the
first stanza. Describes how, as the fruit of these rigorous constraints, the
soul finds itself with the vehement passion of Divine love
CHAPTER XII.—Shows how this horrible night is
purgatory, and how in it the Divine wisdom illumines men on earth with the same
illumination that purges and illumines the angels in Heaven
CHAPTER XIII.—Of other delectable effects which are
wrought in the soul by this dark night of contemplation
CHAPTER XIV.—Wherein are set down and explained the
last three lines of the first stanza
CHAPTER XV.—Sets down the second stanza and its
exposition
CHAPTER XVI.—Explains how, though in darkness, the
soul walks securely
CHAPTER XVII.—Explains how this dark contemplation
is secret
CHAPTER XVIII.—Explains how this secret wisdom is
likewise a ladder
CHAPTER XIX.—Begins to explain the ten steps of the
mystic ladder of Divine love, according to Saint Bernard and Saint Thomas. The
first five are here treated
CHAPTER XX.—Wherein are treated the other five steps
of love
CHAPTER XXI.—Which explains this word 'disguised,'
and describes the colours of the disguise of the soul in this night
CHAPTER XXII.—Explains the third line of the second
stanza
CHAPTER XXIII.—Expounds the fourth line and
describes the wondrous hiding-place wherein the soul is set during this night.
Shows how, although the devil has an entrance into other places that are very
high, he has none into this
CHAPTER XXIV.—Completes the explanation of the
second stanza
CHAPTER XXV.—Wherein is expounded the third stanza
PREFACE TO THE
ELECTRONIC EDITION
This electronic edition (v 0.9) has been scanned
from an uncopyrighted 1959 Image Books third edition of the Dark Night
and is therefore in the public domain. The entire text except for the
translator's preface and some of the footnotes have been reproduced. Nearly 400 footnotes (and parts of
footnotes) describing variations among manuscripts have been omitted. Page number references in the footnotes have
been changed to chapter and section where possible. This edition has been
proofread once, but additional errors may remain. The translator's preface to the first and second editions may be
found with the electronic edition of Ascent of Mount Carmel.
Harry
Plantinga
University
of Pittsburgh
July
19, 1994.
PRINCIPAL ABBREVIATIONS
A.V.—Authorized Version of the Bible (1611).
D.V.—Douai Version of the Bible (1609).
C.W.S.T.J.—The Complete Works of Saint Teresa of
Jesus,
translated and edited by E. Allison Peers from the critical edition of P.
Silverio de Santa Teresa, C.D. London, Sheed and Ward, 1946. 3 vols.
H.—E. Allison Peers: Handbook to the Life and
Times of St. Teresa and St. John of the Cross. London, Burns Oates and
Washbourne, 1953.
LL.—The Letters of Saint Teresa of Jesus,
translated and edited by E. Allison Peers from the critical edition of P.
Silverio de Santa Teresa, C.D. London, Burns Oates and Washbourne, 1951. 2
vols.
N.L.M.—National Library of Spain (Biblioteca
Nacional), Madrid.
Obras (P. Silv.)—Obras de San Juan de la Cruz,
Doctor de la Iglesia, editadas y anotadas por el P. Silverio de Santa Teresa,
C.D. Burgos, 1929-31. 5 vols.
S.S.M.—E. Allison Peers: Studies of the Spanish
Mystics. Vol. I, London, Sheldon Press, 1927; 2nd ed., London, S.P.C.K.,
1951. Vol. II, London, Sheldon Press, 1930.
Sobrino.—Jose Antonio de Sobrino, S.J.: Estudios
sobre San Juan de la Cruz y nuevos textos de su obra. Madrid, 1950.
DARK NIGHT OF THE SOUL
INTRODUCTION
SOMEWHAT reluctantly, out of respect for a
venerable tradition, we publish the Dark Night as a separate treatise,
though in reality it is a continuation of the Ascent of Mount Carmel and
fulfils the undertakings given in it:
The first night or purgation is of the sensual part
of the soul, which is treated in the present stanza, and will be treated in the
first part of this book. And the second is of the spiritual part; of this
speaks the second stanza, which follows; and of this we shall treat likewise,
in the second and the third part, with respect to the activity of the soul; and
in the fourth part, with respect to its passivity.[1]
This 'fourth part' is the Dark Night.
Of it the Saint writes in a passage which follows that just quoted:
And the second night, or purification, pertains to
those who are already proficient, occurring at the time when God desires to
bring them to the state of union with God. And this latter night is a more
obscure and dark and terrible purgation, as we shall say afterwards.[2]
In his three earlier books he has written of the
Active Night, of Sense and of Spirit; he now proposes to deal with the Passive
Night, in the same order. He has already taught us how we are to deny and
purify ourselves with the ordinary help of grace, in order to prepare our
senses and faculties for union with God through love. He now proceeds to
explain, with an arresting freshness, how these same senses and faculties are
purged and purified by God with a view to the same end—that of union. The
combined description of the two nights completes the presentation of active and
passive purgation, to which the Saint limits himself in these treatises,
although the subject of the stanzas which he is glossing is a much wider one,
comprising the whole of the mystical life and ending only with the Divine
embraces of the soul transformed in God through love.
The stanzas expounded by the Saint are taken from
the same poem in the two treatises. The commentary upon the second, however, is
very different from that upon the first, for it assumes a much more advanced
state of development. The Active Night has left the senses and faculties well
prepared, though not completely prepared, for the reception of Divine
influences and illuminations in greater abundance than before. The Saint here
postulates a principle of dogmatic theology—that by himself, and with the
ordinary aid of grace, man cannot attain to that degree of purgation which is
essential to his transformation in God. He needs Divine aid more abundantly.
'However greatly the soul itself labours,' writes the Saint, 'it cannot
actively purify itself so as to be in the least degree prepared for the Divine
union of perfection of love, if God takes not its hand and purges it not in
that dark fire.'[3]
The Passive Nights, in which it is God Who
accomplishes the purgation, are based upon this incapacity. Souls 'begin to
enter' this dark night
when God draws them forth from the state of
beginners—which is the state of those that meditate on the spiritual road—and
begins to set them in the state of progressives—which is that of those who are
already contemplatives—to the end that, after passing through it, they may
arrive at the state of the perfect, which is that of the Divine union of the
soul with God.[4]
Before explaining the nature and effects of
this Passive Night, the Saint touches, in passing, upon certain imperfections
found in those who are about to enter it and which it removes by the process of
purgation. Such travellers are still untried proficients, who have not yet
acquired mature habits of spirituality and who therefore still conduct
themselves as children. The imperfections are examined one by one, following
the order of the seven deadly sins, in chapters (ii-viii) which once more
reveal the author's skill as a director of souls. They are easy chapters to
understand, and of great practical utility, comparable to those in the first
book of the Ascent which deal with the active purgation of the desires
of sense.
In Chapter viii, St. John of the Cross begins to
describe the Passive Night of the senses, the principal aim of which is the purgation
or stripping of the soul of its imperfections and the preparation of it for
fruitive union. The Passive Night of Sense, we are told, is 'common' and 'comes
to many,' whereas that of Spirit 'is the portion of very few.'[5] The one is 'bitter and
terrible' but 'the second bears no comparison with it,' for it is 'horrible and
awful to the spirit.'[6] A good deal of literature
on the former Night existed in the time of St. John of the Cross and he
therefore promises to be brief in his treatment of it. Of the latter, on the
other hand, he will 'treat more fully . . . since very little has been said of
this, either in speech or in writing, and very little is known of it, even by
experience.'[7]
Having described this Passive Night of Sense in
Chapter viii, he explains with great insight and discernment how it may be
recognized whether any given aridity is a result of this Night or whether it
comes from sins or imperfections, or from frailty or lukewarmness of spirit, or
even from indisposition or 'humours' of the body. The Saint is particularly
effective here, and we may once more compare this chapter with a similar one in
the Ascent (II, xiii)—that in which he fixes the point where the soul
may abandon discursive meditation and enter the contemplation which belongs to
loving and simple faith.
Both these chapters have contributed to the
reputation of St. John of the Cross as a consummate spiritual master. And this
not only for the objective value of his observations, but because, even in
spite of himself, he betrays the sublimity of his own mystical experiences.
Once more, too, we may admire the crystalline transparency of his teaching and
the precision of the phrases in which he clothes it. To judge by his language
alone, one might suppose at times that he is speaking of mathematical, rather
than of spiritual operations.
In Chapter x, the Saint describes the discipline
which the soul in this Dark Night must impose upon itself; this, as might be
logically deduced from the Ascent, consists in 'allowing the soul to
remain in peace and quietness,' content 'with a peaceful and loving
attentiveness toward God.'[8] Before long it will
experience enkindlings of love (Chapter xi), which will serve to purify its
sins and imperfections and draw it gradually nearer to God; we have here, as it
were, so many stages of the ascent of the Mount on whose summit the soul
attains to transforming union. Chapters xii and xiii detail with great
exactness the benefits that the soul receives from this aridity, while Chapter
xiv briefly expounds the last line of the first stanza and brings to an end
what the Saint desires to say with respect to the first Passive Night.
At only slightly greater length St. John of the
Cross describes the Passive Night of the Spirit, which is at once more
afflictive and more painful than those which have preceded it. This,
nevertheless, is the Dark Night par excellence, of which the Saint
speaks in these words: 'The night which we have called that of sense may and
should be called a kind of correction and restraint of the desire rather than
purgation. The reason is that all the imperfections and disorders of the
sensual part have their strength and root in the spirit, where all habits, both
good and bad, are brought into subjection, and thus, until these are purged,
the rebellions and depravities of sense cannot be purged thoroughly.'[9]
Spiritual persons, we are told, do not enter the
second night immediately after leaving the first; on the contrary, they
generally pass a long time, even years, before doing so,[10] for they still have many
imperfections, both habitual and actual (Chapter ii). After a brief
introduction (Chapter iii), the Saint describes with some fullness the nature
of this spiritual purgation or dark contemplation referred to in the first
stanza of his poem and the varieties of pain and affliction caused by it,
whether in the soul or in its faculties (Chapters iv-viii). These chapters are
brilliant beyond all description; in them we seem to reach the culminating
point of their author's mystical experience; any excerpt from them would do
them an injustice. It must suffice to say that St. John of the Cross seldom
again touches those same heights of sublimity.
Chapter ix describes how, although these purgations
seem to blind the spirit, they do so only to enlighten it again with a brighter
and intenser light, which it is preparing itself to receive with greater
abundance. The following chapter makes the comparison between spiritual
purgation and the log of wood which gradually becomes transformed through being
immersed in fire and at last takes on the fire's own properties. The force with
which the familiar similitude is driven home impresses indelibly upon the mind
the fundamental concept of this most sublime of all purgations. Marvellous,
indeed, are its effects, from the first enkindlings and burnings of Divine
love, which are greater beyond comparison than those produced by the Night of
Sense, the one being as different from the other as is the body from the soul.
'For this (latter) is an enkindling of spiritual love in the soul, which, in
the midst of these dark confines, feels itself to be keenly and sharply wounded
in strong Divine love, and to have a certain realization and foretaste of God.'[11] No less wonderful are the
effects of the powerful Divine illumination which from time to time enfolds the
soul in the splendours of glory. When the effects of the light that wounds and
yet illumines are combined with those of the enkindlement that melts the soul
with its heat, the delights experienced are so great as to be ineffable.
The second line of the first stanza of the poem is
expounded in three admirable chapters (xi-xiii), while one short chapter (xiv)
suffices for the three lines remaining. We then embark upon the second stanza,
which describes the soul's security in the Dark Night—due, among other
reasons, to its being freed 'not only from itself, but likewise from its other
enemies, which are the world and the devil.'[12]
This contemplation is not only dark, but also secret
(Chapter xvii), and in Chapter xviii is compared to the 'staircase' of the
poem. This comparison suggests to the Saint an exposition (Chapters xviii, xix)
of the ten steps or degrees of love which comprise St. Bernard's mystical
ladder. Chapter xxi describes the soul's 'disguise,' from which the book passes
on (Chapters xxii, xxiii) to extol the 'happy chance' which led it to journey
'in darkness and concealment' from its enemies, both without and within.
Chapter xxiv glosses the last line of the second
stanza—'my house being now at rest.' Both the higher and the lower 'portions of
the soul' are now tranquillized and prepared for the desired union with the
Spouse, a union which is the subject that the Saint proposed to treat in his
commentary on the five remaining stanzas. As far as we know, this commentary
was never written. We have only the briefest outline of what was to have been
covered in the third, in which, following the same effective metaphor of night,
the Saint describes the excellent properties of the spiritual night of infused
contemplation, through which the soul journeys with no other guide or support,
either outward or inward, than the Divine love 'which burned in my heart.'
It is difficult to express adequately the sense of
loss that one feels at the premature truncation of this eloquent treatise.[13] We have already given our
opinion[14] upon the commentaries
thought to have been written on the final stanzas of the 'Dark Night.' Did we
possess them, they would explain the birth of the light—'dawn's first
breathings in the heav'ns above'—which breaks through the black darkness of the
Active and the Passive Nights; they would tell us, too, of the soul's further
progress towards the Sun's full brightness. It is true, of course, that some
part of this great gap is filled by St. John of the Cross himself in his other
treatises, but it is small compensation for the incomplete state in which he
left this edifice of such gigantic proportions that he should have given us
other and smaller buildings of a somewhat similar kind. Admirable as are the Spiritual
Canticle and the Living Flame of Love, they are not so completely
knit into one whole as is this great double treatise. They lose both in
flexibility and in substance through the closeness with which they follow the
stanzas of which they are the exposition. In the Ascent and the Dark
Night, on the other hand, we catch only the echoes of the poem, which are
all but lost in the resonance of the philosopher's voice and the eloquent tones
of the preacher. Nor have the other treatises the learning and the authority of
these. Nowhere else does the genius of St. John of the Cross for infusing
philosophy into his mystical dissertations find such an outlet as here. Nowhere
else, again, is he quite so appealingly human; for, though he is human even in
his loftiest and sublimest passages, this intermingling of philosophy with
mystical theology makes him seem particularly so. These treatises are a
wonderful illustration of the theological truth that grace, far from destroying
nature, ennobles and dignifies it, and of the agreement always found between
the natural and the supernatural—between the principles of sound reason and the
sublimest manifestations of Divine grace.
Manuscripts of the DARK NIGHT
The autograph of the Dark Night, like that of
the Ascent of Mount Carmel, is unknown to us: the second seems to have
disappeared in the same period as the first. There are extant, however, as many
as twelve early copies of the Dark Night, some of which, though none of
them is as palaeographically accurate as the best copy of the Ascent,
are very reliable; there is no trace in them of conscious adulteration of the
original or of any kind of modification to fit the sense of any passage into a
preconceived theory. We definitely prefer one of these copies to the others but
we nowhere follow it so literally as to incorporate in our text its evident
discrepancies from its original.
MS. 3,446. An early MS. in the clear masculine hand of
an Andalusian: MS. 3,446 in the National Library, Madrid. Like many others,
this MS. was transferred to the library from the Convento de San Hermenegildo
at the time of the religious persecutions in the early nineteenth century; it
had been presented to the Archives of the Reform by the Fathers of Los
Remedios, Seville—a Carmelite house founded by P. Greci‡n in 1574. It has no
title and a fragment from the Living Flame of Love is bound up with it.
This MS. has only two omissions of any length; these
form part respectively of Book II, Chapters xix and xxiii, dealing with the
Passive Night of the Spirit. It has many copyist's errors. At the same time,
its antiquity and origin, and the good faith of which it shows continual signs,
give it, in our view, primacy over the other copies now to come under
consideration. It must be made clear, nevertheless, that there is no extant
copy of the Dark Night as trustworthy and as skilfully made as the
Alcaudete MS. of the Ascent.
MS. of the Carmelite Nuns of Toledo. Written in three hands,
all early. Save for a few slips of the copyist, it agrees with the foregoing; a
few of its errors have been corrected. It bears no title, but has a long
sub-title which is in effect a partial summary of the argument.
MS. of the Carmelite Nuns of Valladolid. This famous
convent, which was one of St. Teresa's foundations, is very rich in Teresan
autographs, and has also a number of important documents relating to St. John
of the Cross, together with some copies of his works. That here described is
written in a large, clear hand and probably dates from the end of the sixteenth
century. It has a title similar to that of the last-named copy. With few
exceptions it follows the other most important MSS.
MS. Alba de Tormes. What has been said of this
in the introduction to the Ascent (Image Books edition, pp. 6-7) applies
also to the Dark Night. It is complete, save for small omissions on the
part of the amanuensis, the 'Argument' at the beginning of the poem, the verses
themselves and a few lines from Book II, Chapter vii.
MS. 6,624. This copy is almost identical with the
foregoing. It omits the 'Argument' and the poem itself but not the lines from
Book II, Chapter vii.
MS. 8,795. This contains the Dark Night, Spiritual
Canticle, Living Flame of Love, a number of poems by St. John of the
Cross and the Spiritual Colloquies between Christ and the soul His Bride.
It is written in various hands, all very early and some feminine. A note by P.
Andrs de la Encarnaci—n, on the reverse of the first folio, records that
the copy was presented to the Archives of the Reform by the Discalced Carmelite
nuns of Baeza. This convent was founded in 1589, two years before the Saint's
death, and the copy may well date from about this period. On the second folio
comes the poem 'I entered in—I knew not where.' On the reverse of the third
folio begins a kind of preface to the Dark Night, opening with the
words: 'Begin the stanzas by means of which a soul may occupy itself and become
fervent in the love of God. It deals with the Dark Night and is divided into
two books. The first treats of the purgation of sense, and the second of the
spiritual purgation of man. It was written by P. Fr. Juan de la Cruz, Discalced
Carmelite.' On the next folio, a so-called 'Preface: To the Reader' begins: 'As
a beginning and an explanation of these two purgations of the Dark Night which
are to be expounded hereafter, this chapter will show how narrow is the path
that leads to eternal life and how completely detached and disencumbered must
be those that are to enter thereby.' This fundamental idea is developed for the
space of two folios. There follows a sonnet on the Dark Night,[15] and immediately afterwards
comes the text of the treatise.
The copy contains many errors, but its only omission
is that of the last chapter. There is no trace in it of any attempt to modify
its original; indeed, the very nature and number of the copyist's errors are a
testimony to his good faith.
MS. 12,658. A note by P. Andrs states that he
acquired it in Madrid but has no more detailed recollection of its provenance.
'The Dark Night,' it adds, 'begins on folio 43; our holy father is
described simply as ''the second friar of the new Reformation,"[16] which is clear evidence of
its antiquity.'
The Codex contains a number of opuscules,
transcribed no doubt with a devotional aim by the copyist. Its epoch is
probably the end of the sixteenth century; it is certainly earlier than the
editions. There is no serious omission except that of six lines of the
'Argument.' The authors of the other works copied include St. Augustine, B.
Juan de çvila, P. Baltasar çlvarez and P. Tom‡s de Jesśs.
The copies which remain to be described are all
mutilated or abbreviated and can be disposed of briefly:
MS. 13,498. This copy omits less of the Dark Night
than of the Ascent but few pages are without their omissions. In one
place a meticulous pair of scissors has removed the lower half of a folio on
which the Saint deals with spiritual luxury.
MS. of the Carmelite Friars of Toledo. Dates from early in the
seventeenth century and has numerous omissions, especially in the chapters on
the Passive Night of the Spirit. The date is given (in the same hand as that
which copies the title) as 1618. This MS. also contains an opuscule by Suso and
another entitled 'Brief compendium of the most eminent Christian perfection of
P. Fr. Juan de la Cruz.'
MS. 18,160. The copyist has treated the Dark Night
little better than the Ascent; except from the first ten and the last
three chapters, he omits freely.
MS. 12,411. Entitled by its copyist 'Spiritual
Compendium,' this MS. contains several short works of devotion, including one
by Ruysbroeck. Of St. John of the Cross's works it copies the Spiritual
Canticle as well as the Dark Night; the latter is headed: 'Song of
one soul alone.' It also contains a number of poems, some of them by the Saint,
and many passages from St. Teresa. It is in several hands, all of the
seventeenth century. The copy of the Dark Night is most unsatisfactory;
there are omissions and abbreviations everywhere.
M.S. of the Carmelite Nuns of Pamplona. This MS. also omits and
abbreviates continually, especially in the chapters on the Passive Night of
Sense, which are reduced to a mere skeleton.
Editio princeps. This is much more faithful
to its original in the Dark Night than in the Ascent. Both the
passages suppressed[17] and the interpolations[18] are relatively few and
unimportant. Modifications of phraseology are more frequent and alterations are
also made with the aim of correcting hyperbaton. In the first book about thirty
lines are suppressed; in the second, about ninety. All changes which are of any
importance have been shown in the notes.
The present edition. We have given preference,
as a general rule, to MS. 3,446, subjecting it, however, to a rigorous
comparison with the other copies. Mention has already been made in the
introduction to the Ascent (Image Books edition, pp. lxiii-lxvi) of
certain apparent anomalies and a certain lack of uniformity in the Saint's
method of dividing his commentaries. This is nowhere more noticeable than in
the Dark Night. Instead of dividing his treatise into books, each with
its proper title, the Saint abandons this method and uses titles only
occasionally. As this makes comprehension of his argument the more difficult,
we have adopted the divisions which were introduced by P. Salablanca and have
been copied by successive editors.
M. Baruzi (Bulletin Hispanique, 1922, Vol.
xxiv, pp. 18-40) complains that this division weighs down the spiritual rhythm
of the treatise and interrupts its movement. We do not agree. In any case, we
greatly prefer the gain of clarity, even if the rhythm occasionally halts, to
the other alternative—the constant halting of the understanding. We have, of
course, indicated every place where the title is taken from the editio
princeps and was not the work of the author.
The following abbreviations are adopted in the
footnotes:
A = MS. of the Discalced Carmelite Friars of Alba.
B = MS. 6,624 (National Library, Madrid).
Bz. = MS. 8,795 (N.L.M.).
C = MS. 13,498 (N.L.M.).
G = MS. 18,160 (N.L.M.).
H = MS. 3,446 (N.L.M.).
M = MS. of the Discalced Carmelite Nuns of Toledo.
Mtr. = MS. 12,658.
P = MS. of the Discalced Carmelite Friars of Toledo.
V = MS. of the Discalced Carmelite Nuns of
Valladolid.
E.p. = Editio princeps (1618).
MS. 12,411 and the MS. of the Discalced Carmelite
nuns of Pamplona are cited without abbreviations.
DARK
NIGHT
Exposition of the stanzas
describing the method followed by the soul in its journey upon the spiritual
road to the attainment of the perfect union of love with God, to the extent
that is possible in this life. Likewise are described the properties belonging
to the soul that has attained to the said perfection, according as they are
contained in the same stanzas.
PROLOGUE
IN this book are first set down all the
stanzas which are to be expounded; afterwards, each of the stanzas is expounded
separately, being set down before its exposition; and then each line is
expounded separately and in turn, the line itself also being set down before
the exposition. In the first two stanzas are expounded the effects of the two
spiritual purgations: of the sensual part of man and of the spiritual part. In
the other six are expounded various and wondrous effects of the spiritual
illumination and union of love with God.
STANZAS OF THE SOUL
1. On a dark night, Kindled in love with
yearnings—oh, happy chance!—
I went forth without being observed, My house being
now at rest.
2. In darkness and secure, By the secret ladder,
disguised—oh, happy chance!—
In darkness and in concealment, My house being now
at rest.
3. In the happy night, In secret, when none saw me,
Nor I beheld aught, Without light or guide, save
that which burned in my heart.
4. This light guided me More surely than the light
of noonday
To the place where he (well I knew who!) was
awaiting me—
A place where none appeared.
5. Oh, night that guided me, Oh, night more lovely
than the dawn,
Oh, night that joined Beloved with lover, Lover
transformed in the Beloved!
6. Upon my flowery breast, Kept wholly for himself
alone,
There he stayed sleeping, and I caressed him, And
the fanning of the cedars made a breeze.
7. The breeze blew from the turret As I parted his
locks;
With his gentle hand he wounded my neck And caused
all my senses to be suspended.
8. I remained, lost in oblivion; My face I reclined
on the Beloved.
All ceased and I abandoned myself, Leaving my cares
forgotten among the lilies.
Begins the exposition of the stanzas which treat of
the way and manner which the soul follows upon the road of the union of love
with God.
Before we enter upon the exposition of these
stanzas, it is well to understand here that the soul that utters them is now in
the state of perfection, which is the union of love with God, having already
passed through severe trials and straits, by means of spiritual exercise in the
narrow way of eternal life whereof Our Saviour speaks in the Gospel, along
which way the soul ordinarily passes in order to reach this high and happy
union with God. Since this road (as the Lord Himself says likewise) is so
strait, and since there are so few that enter by it,[19] the soul considers it a
great happiness and good chance to have passed along it to the said perfection
of love, as it sings in this first stanza, calling this strait road with full
propriety 'dark night,' as will be explained hereafter in the lines of the said
stanza. The soul, then, rejoicing at having passed along this narrow road
whence so many blessings have come to it, speaks after this manner.
BOOK THE FIRST
Which treats of the Night of
Sense.
STANZA THE FIRST
On a dark night, Kindled in love with yearnings—oh,
happy chance!—
I went forth without being observed, My house being
now at rest.
EXPOSITION
IN this first stanza the soul relates the way
and manner which it followed in going forth, as to its affection, from itself
and from all things, and in dying to them all and to itself, by means of true
mortification, in order to attain to living the sweet and delectable life of
love with God; and it says that this going forth from itself and from all
things was a 'dark night,' by which, as will be explained hereafter, is here
understood purgative contemplation, which causes passively in the soul the
negation of itself and of all things referred to above.
2. And this going forth it says here that it was
able to accomplish in the strength and ardour which love for its Spouse gave to
it for that purpose in the dark contemplation aforementioned. Herein it extols
the great happiness which it found in journeying to God through this night with
such signal success that none of the three enemies, which are world, devil and
flesh (who are they that ever impede this road), could hinder it; inasmuch as
the aforementioned night of purgative[20] contemplation lulled to
sleep and mortified, in the house of its sensuality, all the passions and
desires with respect to their mischievous desires and motions. The line, then,
says:
On a dark night
CHAPTER I
Sets down the first line and
begins to treat of the imperfections of beginners.
INTO this dark night souls begin to enter
when God draws them forth from the state of beginners—which is the state of
those that meditate on the spiritual road—and begins to set them in the state
of progressives—which is that of those who are already contemplatives—to the
end that, after passing through it, they may arrive at the state of the
perfect, which is that of the Divine union of the soul with God. Wherefore, to
the end that we may the better understand and explain what night is this
through which the soul passes, and for what cause God sets it therein, it will
be well here to touch first of all upon certain characteristics of beginners
(which, although we treat them with all possible brevity, will not fail to be
of service likewise to the beginners themselves), in order that, realizing the
weakness of the state wherein they are, they may take courage, and may desire
that God will bring them into this night, wherein the soul is strengthened and
confirmed in the virtues, and made ready for the inestimable delights of the
love of God. And, although we may tarry here for a time, it will not be for
longer than is necessary, so that we may go on to speak at once of this dark
night.
2. It must be known, then, that the soul, after it
has been definitely converted to the service of God, is, as a rule, spiritually
nurtured and caressed by God, even as is the tender child by its loving mother,
who warms it with the heat of her bosom and nurtures it with sweet milk and soft
and pleasant food, and carries it and caresses it in her arms; but, as the
child grows bigger, the mother gradually ceases caressing it, and, hiding her
tender love, puts bitter aloes upon her sweet breast, sets down the child from
her arms and makes it walk upon its feet, so that it may lose the habits of a
child and betake itself to more important and substantial occupations. The
loving mother is like the grace of God, for, as soon as the soul is regenerated
by its new warmth and fervour for the service of God, He treats it in the same
way; He makes it to find spiritual milk, sweet and delectable, in all the
things of God, without any labour of its own, and also great pleasure in
spiritual exercises, for here God is giving to it the breast of His tender
love, even as to a tender child.
3. Therefore, such a soul finds its delight in
spending long periods—perchance whole nights—in prayer; penances are its
pleasures; fasts its joys; and its consolations are to make use of the
sacraments and to occupy itself in Divine things. In the which things spiritual
persons (though taking part in them with great efficacy and persistence and
using and treating them with great care) often find themselves, spiritually
speaking, very weak and imperfect. For since they are moved to these things and
to these spiritual exercises by the consolation and pleasure that they find in
them, and since, too, they have not been prepared for them by the practice of
earnest striving in the virtues, they have many faults and imperfections with
respect to these spiritual actions of theirs; for, after all, any man's actions
correspond to the habit of perfection attained by him. And, as these persons
have not had the opportunity of acquiring the said habits of strength, they
have necessarily to work like feebler children, feebly. In order that this may
be seen more clearly, and likewise how much these beginners in the virtues
lacks with respect to the works in which they so readily engage with the
pleasure aforementioned, we shall describe it by reference to the seven capital
sins, each in its turn, indicating some of the many imperfections which they
have under each heading; wherein it will be clearly seen how like to children
are these persons in all they do. And it will also be seen how many blessings
the dark night of which we shall afterwards treat brings with it, since it
cleanses the soul and purifies it from all these imperfections.
CHAPTER II
Of certain spiritual
imperfections which beginners have with respect to the habit of pride.
AS these beginners feel themselves to be very
fervent and diligent in spiritual things and devout exercises, from this
prosperity (although it is true that holy things of their own nature cause
humility) there often comes to them, through their imperfections, a certain
kind of secret pride, whence they come to have some degree of satisfaction with
their works and with themselves. And hence there comes to them likewise a
certain desire, which is somewhat vain, and at times very vain, to speak of
spiritual things in the presence of others, and sometimes even to teach such
things rather than to learn them. They condemn others in their heart when they
see that they have not the kind of devotion which they themselves desire; and
sometimes they even say this in words, herein resembling the Pharisee, who
boasted of himself, praising God for his own good works and despising the
publican.[21]
2. In these persons the devil often increases the
fervour that they have and the desire to perform these and other works more
frequently, so that their pride and presumption may grow greater. For the devil
knows quite well that all these works and virtues which they perform are not
only valueless to them, but even become vices in them. And such a degree of evil
are some of these persons wont to reach that they would have none appear good
save themselves; and thus, in deed and word, whenever the opportunity occurs,
they condemn them and slander them, beholding the mote in their brother's eye
and not considering the beam which is in their own;[22] they strain at another's
gnat and themselves swallow a camel.[23]
3. Sometimes, too, when their spiritual masters,
such as confessors and superiors, do not approve of their spirit and behavior
(for they are anxious that all they do shall be esteemed and praised), they
consider that they do not understand them, or that, because they do not approve
of this and comply with that, their confessors are themselves not spiritual.
And so they immediately desire and contrive to find some one else who will fit
in with their tastes; for as a rule they desire to speak of spiritual matters
with those who they think will praise and esteem what they do, and they flee,
as they would from death, from those who disabuse them in order to lead them
into a safe road—sometimes they even harbour ill-will against them. Presuming
thus,[24] they are wont to resolve
much and accomplish very little. Sometimes they are anxious that others shall
realize how spiritual and devout they are, to which end they occasionally give
outward evidence thereof in movements, sighs and other ceremonies; and at times
they are apt to fall into certain ecstasies, in public rather than in secret,
wherein the devil aids them, and they are pleased that this should be noticed,
and are often eager that it should be noticed more.[25]
4. Many such persons desire to be the favourites of
their confessors and to become intimate with them, as a result of which there
beset them continual occasions of envy and disquiet.[26] They are too much embarrassed
to confess their sins nakedly, lest their confessors should think less of them,
so they palliate them and make them appear less evil, and thus it is to excuse
themselves rather than to accuse themselves that they go to confession. And
sometimes they seek another confessor to tell the wrongs that they have done,
so that their own confessor shall think they have done nothing wrong at all,
but only good; and thus they always take pleasure in telling him what is good,
and sometimes in such terms as make it appear to be greater than it is rather
than less, desiring that he may think them to be good, when it would be greater
humility in them, as we shall say, to depreciate it, and to desire that neither
he nor anyone else should consider them of account.
5. Some of these beginners, too, make little of
their faults, and at other times become over-sad when they see themselves fall
into them, thinking themselves to have been saints already; and thus they
become angry and impatient with themselves, which is another imperfection.
Often they beseech God, with great yearnings, that He will take from them their
imperfections and faults, but they do this that they may find themselves at
peace, and may not be troubled by them, rather than for God's sake; not
realizing that, if He should take their imperfections from them, they would
probably become prouder and more presumptuous still. They dislike praising
others and love to be praised themselves; sometimes they seek out such praise.
Herein they are like the foolish virgins, who, when their lamps could not be
lit, sought oil from others.[27]
6. From these imperfections some souls go on to
develop[28] many very grave ones, which
do them great harm. But some have fewer and some more, and some, only the first
motions thereof or little beyond these; and there are hardly any such beginners
who, at the time of these signs of fervour,[29] fall not into some of these
errors.[30] But those who at this time
are going on to perfection proceed very differently and with quite another
temper of spirit; for they progress by means of humility and are greatly
edified, not only thinking naught of their own affairs, but having very little
satisfaction with themselves; they consider all others as far better, and
usually have a holy envy of them, and an eagerness to serve God as they do. For
the greater is their fervour, and the more numerous are the works that they
perform, and the greater is the pleasure that they take in them, as they
progress in humility, the more do they realize how much God deserves of them,
and how little is all that they do for His sake; and thus, the more they do, the
less are they satisfied. So much would they gladly do from charity and love for
Him, that all they do seems to them naught; and so greatly are they importuned,
occupied and absorbed by this loving anxiety that they never notice what others
do or do not; or if they do notice it, they always believe, as I say, that all
others are far better than they themselves. Wherefore, holding themselves as of
little worth, they are anxious that others too should thus hold them, and
should despise and depreciate that which they do. And further, if men should
praise and esteem them, they can in no wise believe what they say; it seems to
them strange that anyone should say these good things of them.
7. Together with great tranquillity and humbleness,
these souls have a deep desire to be taught by anyone who can bring them
profit; they are the complete opposite of those of whom we have spoken above,
who would fain be always teaching, and who, when others seem to be teaching
them, take the words from their mouths as if they knew them already. These
souls, on the other hand, being far from desiring to be the masters of any, are
very ready to travel and set out on another road than that which they are
actually following, if they be so commanded, because they never think that they
are right in anything whatsoever. They rejoice when others are praised; they
grieve only because they serve not God like them. They have no desire to speak
of the things that they do, because they think so little of them that they are
ashamed to speak of them even to their spiritual masters, since they seem to
them to be things that merit not being spoken of. They are more anxious to
speak of their faults and sins, or that these should be recognized rather than
their virtues; and thus they incline to talk of their souls with those who
account their actions and their spirituality of little value. This is a
characteristic of the spirit which is simple, pure, genuine and very pleasing
to God. For as the wise Spirit of God dwells in these humble souls, He moves
them and inclines them to keep His treasures secretly within and likewise to
cast out from themselves all evil. God gives this grace to the humble, together
with the other virtues, even as He denies it to the proud.
8. These souls will give their heart's blood to
anyone that serves God, and will help others to serve Him as much as in them
lies. The imperfections into which they see themselves fall they bear with
humility, meekness of spirit and a loving fear of God, hoping in Him. But souls
who in the beginning journey with this kind of perfection are, as I understand,
and as has been said, a minority, and very few are those who we can be glad do
not fall into the opposite errors. For this reason, as we shall afterwards say,
God leads into the dark night those whom He desires to purify from all these
imperfections so that He may bring them farther onward.
CHAPTER III
Of some imperfections which
some of these souls are apt to have, with respect to the second capital sin,
which is avarice, in the spiritual sense.
MANY of these beginners have also at times
great spiritual avarice. They will be found to be discontented with the
spirituality which God gives them; and they are very disconsolate and querulous
because they find not in spiritual things the consolation that they would
desire. Many can never have enough of listening to counsels and learning
spiritual precepts, and of possessing and reading many books which treat of
this matter, and they spend their time on all these things rather than on works
of mortification and the perfecting of the inward poverty of spirit which
should be theirs. Furthermore, they burden themselves with images and rosaries
which are very curious; now they put down one, now take up another; now they
change about, now change back again; now they want this kind of thing, now
that, preferring one kind of cross to another, because it is more curious. And
others you will see adorned with agnusdeis[31] and relics and tokens,[32] like children with
trinkets. Here I condemn the attachment of the heart, and the affection which
they have for the nature, multitude and curiosity of these things, inasmuch as
it is quite contrary to poverty of spirit which considers only the substance of
devotion, makes use only of what suffices for that end and grows weary of this
other kind of multiplicity and curiosity. For true devotion must issue from the
heart, and consist in the truth and substances alone of what is represented by
spiritual things; all the rest is affection and attachment proceeding from
imperfection; and in order that one may pass to any kind of perfection it is necessary
for such desires to be killed.
2. I knew a person who for more than ten years made
use of a cross roughly formed from a branch[33] that had been blessed,
fastened with a pin twisted round it; he had never ceased using it, and he
always carried it about with him until I took it from him; and this was a
person of no small sense and understanding. And I saw another who said his
prayers using beads that were made of bones from the spine of a fish; his
devotion was certainly no less precious on that account in the sight of God,
for it is clear that these things carried no devotion in their workmanship or
value. Those, then, who start from these beginnings and make good progress
attach themselves to no visible instruments, nor do they burden themselves with
such, nor desire to know more than is necessary in order that they may act
well; for they set their eyes only on being right with God and on pleasing Him,
and therein consists their covetousness. And thus with great generosity they
give away all that they have, and delight to know that they have it not, for
God's sake and for charity to their neighbour, no matter whether these be
spiritual things or temporal. For, as I say, they set their eyes only upon the
reality of interior perfection, which is to give pleasure to God and in naught
to give pleasure to themselves.
3. But neither from these imperfections nor from
those others can the soul be perfectly purified until God brings it into the
passive purgation of that dark night whereof we shall speak presently. It
befits the soul, however, to contrive to labour, in so far as it can, on its
own account, to the end that it may purge and perfect itself, and thus may
merit being taken by God into that Divine care wherein it becomes healed of all
things that it was unable of itself to cure. Because, however greatly the soul
itself labours, it cannot actively purify itself so as to be in the least
degree prepared for the Divine union of perfection of love, if God takes not
its hand and purges it not in that dark fire, in the way and manner that we
have to describe.
CHAPTER IV
Of other imperfections which
these beginners are apt to have with respect to the third sin, which is luxury.
MANY of these beginners have many other
imperfections than those which I am describing with respect to each of the
deadly sins, but these I set aside, in order to avoid prolixity, touching upon
a few of the most important, which are, as it were, the origin and cause of the
rest. And thus, with respect to this sin of luxury (leaving apart the falling
of spiritual persons into this sin, since my intent is to treat of the
imperfections which have to be purged by the dark night), they have many
imperfections which might be described as spiritual luxury, not because they
are so, but because the imperfections proceed from spiritual things. For it
often comes to pass that, in their very spiritual exercises, when they are
powerless to prevent it, there arise and assert themselves in the sensual part
of the soul impure acts and motions, and sometimes this happens even when the
spirit is deep in prayer, or engaged in the Sacrament of Penance or in the
Eucharist. These things are not, as I say, in their power; they proceed from
one of three causes.
2. The first cause from which they often proceed is
the pleasure which human nature takes in spiritual things. For when the spirit
and the sense are pleased, every part of a man is moved by that pleasure[34] to delight according to its
proportion and nature. For then the spirit, which is the higher part, is moved
to pleasure[35] and delight in God; and the
sensual nature, which is the lower part, is moved to pleasure and delight of
the senses, because it cannot possess and lay hold upon aught else, and it
therefore lays hold upon that which comes nearest to itself, which is the
impure and sensual. Thus it comes to pass that the soul is in deep prayer with
God according to the spirit, and, on the other hand, according to sense it is
passively conscious, not without great displeasure, of rebellions and motions
and acts of the senses, which often happens in Communion, for when the soul
receives joy and comfort in this act of love, because this Lord bestows it
(since it is to that end that He gives Himself), the sensual nature takes that
which is its own likewise, as we have said, after its manner. Now as, after
all, these two parts are combined in one individual, they ordinarily both
participate in that which one of them receives, each after its manner; for, as
the philosopher says, everything that is received is in the recipient after the
manner of the same recipient. And thus, in these beginnings, and even when the
soul has made some progress, its sensual part, being imperfect, oftentimes
receives the Spirit of God with the same imperfection. Now when this sensual
part is renewed by the purgation of the dark night which we shall describe, it
no longer has these weaknesses; for it is no longer this part that receives
aught, but rather it is itself received into the Spirit. And thus it then has
everything after the manner of the Spirit.
3. The second cause whence these rebellions
sometimes proceed is the devil, who, in order to disquiet and disturb the soul,
at times when it is at prayer or is striving to pray, contrives to stir up
these motions of impurity in its nature; and if the soul gives heed to any of
these, they cause it great harm. For through fear of these not only do persons
become lax in prayer—which is the aim of the devil when he begins to strive
with them—but some give up prayer altogether, because they think that these
things attack them more during that exercise than apart from it, which is true,
since the devil attacks them then more than at other times, so that they may
give up spiritual exercises. And not only so, but he succeeds in portraying to
them very vividly things that are most foul and impure, and at times are very
closely related to certain spiritual things and persons that are of profit to
their souls, in order to terrify them and make them fearful; so that those who
are affected by this dare not even look at anything or meditate upon anything,
because they immediately encounter this temptation. And upon those who are inclined
to melancholy this acts with such effect that they become greatly to be pitied
since they are suffering so sadly; for this trial reaches such a point in
certain persons, when they have this evil humour, that they believe it to be
clear that the devil is ever present with them and that they have no power to
prevent this, although some of these persons can prevent his attack by dint of
great effort and labour. When these impurities attack such souls through the
medium of melancholy, they are not as a rule freed from them until they have
been cured of that kind of humour, unless the dark night has entered the soul,
and rids them of all impurities, one after another.[36]
4. The third source whence these impure motions are
apt to proceed in order to make war upon the soul is often the fear which such
persons have conceived for these impure representations and motions. Something
that they see or say or think brings them to their mind, and this makes them
afraid, so that they suffer from them through no fault of their own.
5. There are also certain souls of so tender and
frail a nature that, when there comes to them some spiritual consolation or
some grace in prayer, the spirit of luxury is with them immediately,
inebriating and delighting their sensual nature in such manner that it is as if
they were plunged into the enjoyment and pleasure of this sin; and the
enjoyment remains, together with the consolation, passively, and sometimes they
are able to see that certain impure and unruly acts have taken place. The
reason for this is that, since these natures are, as I say, frail and tender,
their humours are stirred up and their blood is excited at the least
disturbance. And hence come these motions; and the same thing happens to such
souls when they are enkindled with anger or suffer any disturbance or grief.[37]
6. Sometimes, again, there arises within these
spiritual persons, whether they be speaking or performing spiritual actions, a
certain vigour and bravado, through their having regard to persons who are
present, and before these persons they display a certain kind of vain
gratification. This also arises from luxury of spirit, after the manner wherein
we here understand it, which is accompanied as a rule by complacency in the
will.
7. Some of these persons make friendships of a
spiritual kind with others, which oftentimes arise from luxury and not from
spirituality; this may be known to be the case when the remembrance of that
friendship causes not the remembrance and love of God to grow, but occasions
remorse of conscience. For, when the friendship is purely spiritual, the love
of God grows with it; and the more the soul remembers it, the more it remembers
the love of God, and the greater the desire it has for God; so that, as the one
grows, the other grows also. For the spirit of God has this property, that it
increases good by adding to it more good, inasmuch as there is likeness and
conformity between them. But, when this love arises from the vice of sensuality
aforementioned, it produces the contrary effects; for the more the one grows,
the more the other decreases, and the remembrance of it likewise. If that
sensual love grows, it will at once be observed that the soul's love of God is
becoming colder, and that it is forgetting Him as it remembers that love; there
comes to it, too, a certain remorse of conscience. And, on the other hand, if
the love of God grows in the soul, that other love becomes cold and is
forgotten; for, as the two are contrary to one another, not only does the one
not aid the other, but the one which predominates quenches and confounds the
other, and becomes strengthened in itself, as the philosophers say. Wherefore
Our Saviour said in the Gospel: 'That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and
that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.'[38] That is to say, the love
which is born of sensuality ends in sensuality, and that which is of the spirit
ends in the spirit of God and causes it to grow. This is the difference that
exists between these two kinds of love, whereby we may know them.
8. When the soul enters the dark night, it brings
these kinds of love under control. It strengthens and purifies the one, namely
that which is according to God; and the other it removes and brings to an end;
and in the beginning it causes both to be lost sight of, as we shall say
hereafter.
CHAPTER V
Of the imperfections into
which beginners fall with respect to the sin of wrath.
BY reason of the concupiscence which many
beginners have for spiritual consolations, their experience of these
consolations is very commonly accompanied by many imperfections proceeding from
the sin of wrath; for, when their delight and pleasure in spiritual things come
to an end, they naturally become embittered, and bear that lack of sweetness
which they have to suffer with a bad grace, which affects all that they do; and
they very easily become irritated over the smallest matter—sometimes, indeed,
none can tolerate them. This frequently happens after they have been very
pleasantly recollected in prayer according to sense; when their pleasure and
delight therein come to an end, their nature is naturally vexed and
disappointed, just as is the child when they take it from the breast of which
it was enjoying the sweetness. There is no sin in this natural vexation, when
it is not permitted to indulge itself, but only imperfection, which must be purged
by the aridity and severity of the dark night.
2. There are other of these spiritual persons,
again, who fall into another kind of spiritual wrath: this happens when they
become irritated at the sins of others, and keep watch on those others with a
sort of uneasy zeal. At times the impulse comes to them to reprove them
angrily, and occasionally they go so far as to indulge it[39] and set themselves up as
masters of virtue. All this is contrary to spiritual meekness.
3. There are others who are vexed with themselves
when they observe their own imperfectness, and display an impatience that is
not humility; so impatient are they about this that they would fain be saints
in a day. Many of these persons purpose to accomplish a great deal and make
grand resolutions; yet, as they are not humble and have no misgivings about
themselves, the more resolutions they make, the greater is their fall and the
greater their annoyance, since they have not the patience to wait for that
which God will give them when it pleases Him; this likewise is contrary to the
spiritual meekness aforementioned, which cannot be wholly remedied save by the
purgation of the dark night. Some souls, on the other hand, are so patient as
regards the progress which they desire that God would gladly see them less so.
CHAPTER VI
Of imperfections with
respect to spiritual gluttony.
WITH respect to the fourth sin, which is
spiritual gluttony, there is much to be said, for there is scarce one of these
beginners who, however satisfactory his progress, falls not into some of the
many imperfections which come to these beginners with respect to this sin, on
account of the sweetness which they find at first in spiritual exercises. For
many of these, lured by the sweetness and pleasure which they find in such
exercises, strive more after spiritual sweetness than after spiritual purity
and discretion, which is that which God regards and accepts throughout the
spiritual journey.[40] Therefore, besides the
imperfections into which the seeking for sweetness of this kind makes them
fall, the gluttony which they now have makes them continually go to extremes,
so that they pass beyond the limits of moderation within which the virtues are
acquired and wherein they have their being. For some of these persons, attracted
by the pleasure which they find therein, kill themselves with penances, and
others weaken themselves with fasts, by performing more than their frailty can
bear, without the order or advice of any, but rather endeavouring to avoid
those whom they should obey in these matters; some, indeed, dare to do these
things even though the contrary has been commanded them.
2. These persons are most imperfect and
unreasonable; for they set bodily penance before subjection and obedience,
which is penance according to reason and discretion, and therefore a sacrifice
more acceptable and pleasing to God than any other. But such one-sided penance
is no more than the penance of beasts, to which they are attracted, exactly
like beasts, by the desire and pleasure which they find therein. Inasmuch as
all extremes are vicious, and as in behaving thus such persons[41] are working their own will,
they grow in vice rather than in virtue; for, to say the least, they are
acquiring spiritual gluttony and pride in this way, through not walking in
obedience. And many of these the devil assails, stirring up this gluttony in
them through the pleasures and desires which he increases within them, to such
an extent that, since they can no longer help themselves, they either change or
vary or add to that which is commanded them, as any obedience in this respect
is so bitter to them. To such an evil pass have some persons come that, simply
because it is through obedience that they engage in these exercises, they lose
the desire and devotion to perform them, their only desire and pleasure being
to do what they themselves are inclined to do, so that it would probably be
more profitable for them not to engage in these exercises at all.
3. You will find that many of these persons are very
insistent with their spiritual masters to be granted that which they desire,
extracting it from them almost by force; if they be refused it they become as
peevish as children and go about in great displeasure, thinking that they are
not serving God when they are not allowed to do that which they would. For they
go about clinging to their own will and pleasure, which they treat as though it
came from God;[42] and immediately their
directors[43] take it from them, and try
to subject them to the will of God, they become peevish, grow faint-hearted and
fall away. These persons think that their own satisfaction and pleasure are the
satisfaction and service of God.
4. There are others, again, who, because of this
gluttony, know so little of their own unworthiness and misery and have thrust
so far from them the loving fear and reverence which they owe to the greatness
of God, that they hesitate not to insist continually that their confessors
shall allow them to communicate often. And, what is worse, they frequently dare
to communicate without the leave and consent[44] of the minister and steward
of Christ, merely acting on their own opinion, and contriving to conceal the
truth from him. And for this reason, because they desire to communicate
continually, they make their confessions carelessly,[45] being more eager to eat
than to eat cleanly and perfectly, although it would be healthier and holier
for them had they the contrary inclination and begged their confessors not to
command them to approach the altar so frequently: between these two extremes,
however, the better way is that of humble resignation. But the boldness
referred to is[46] a thing that does great
harm, and men may fear to be punished for such temerity.
5. These persons, in communicating, strive with
every nerve to obtain some kind of sensible sweetness and pleasure, instead of
humbly doing reverence and giving praise within themselves to God. And in such
wise do they devote themselves to this that, when they have received no
pleasure or sweetness in the senses, they think that they have accomplished
nothing at all. This is to judge God very unworthily; they have not realized
that the least of the benefits which come from this Most Holy Sacrament is that
which concerns the senses; and that the invisible part of the grace that it
bestows is much greater; for, in order that they may look at it with the eyes
of faith, God oftentimes withholds from them these other consolations and
sweetnesses of sense. And thus they desire to feel and taste God as though He
were comprehensible by them and accessible to them, not only in this, but
likewise in other spiritual practices. All this is very great imperfection and
completely opposed to the nature of God, since it is Impurity in faith.
6. These persons have the same defect as regards the
practice of prayer, for they think that all the business of prayer consists in
experiencing sensible pleasure and devotion and they strive to obtain this by
great effort,[47] wearying and fatiguing
their faculties and their heads; and when they have not found this pleasure
they become greatly discouraged, thinking that they have accomplished nothing.
Through these efforts they lose true devotion and spirituality, which consist
in perseverance, together with patience and humility and mistrust of
themselves, that they may please God alone. For this reason, when they have
once failed to find pleasure in this or some other exercise, they have great
disinclination and repugnance to return to it, and at times they abandon it.
They are, in fact, as we have said, like children, who are not influenced by
reason, and who act, not from rational motives, but from inclination.[48] Such persons expend all
their effort in seeking spiritual pleasure and consolation; they never tire
therefore, of reading books; and they begin, now one meditation, now another,
in their pursuit of this pleasure which they desire to experience in the things
of God. But God, very justly, wisely and lovingly, denies it to them, for
otherwise this spiritual gluttony and inordinate appetite would breed in
numerable evils. It is, therefore, very fitting that they should enter into the
dark night, whereof we shall speak,[49] that they may be purged
from this childishness.
7. These persons who are thus inclined to such
pleasures have another very great imperfection, which is that they are very
weak and remiss in journeying upon the hard[50] road of the Cross; for the
soul that is given to sweetness naturally has its face set against all
self-denial, which is devoid of sweetness.[51]
8. These persons have many other imperfections which
arise hence, of which in time the Lord heals them by means of temptations,
aridities and other trials, all of which are part of the dark night. All these
I will not treat further here, lest I become too lengthy; I will only say that
spiritual temperance and sobriety lead to another and a very different temper,
which is that of mortification, fear and submission in all things. It thus
becomes clear that the perfection and worth of things consist not in the
multitude and the pleasantness of one's actions, but in being able to deny
oneself in them; this such persons must endeavour to compass, in so far as they
may, until God is pleased to purify them indeed, by bringing them[52] into the dark night, to
arrive at which I am hastening on with my account of these imperfections.
CHAPTER VII
Of imperfections with
respect to spiritual envy and sloth.
WITH respect likewise to the other two vices,
which are spiritual envy and sloth, these beginners fail not to have many
imperfections. For, with respect to envy, many of them are wont to experience
movements of displeasure at the spiritual good of others, which cause them a
certain sensible grief at being outstripped upon this road, so that they would
prefer not to hear others praised; for they become displeased at others'
virtues and sometimes they cannot refrain from contradicting what is said in
praise of them, depreciating it as far as they can; and their annoyance thereat
grows[53] because the same is not
said of them, for they would fain be preferred in everything. All this is clean
contrary to charity, which, as Saint Paul says, rejoices in goodness.[54] And, if charity has any
envy, it is a holy envy, comprising grief at not having the virtues of others,
yet also joy because others have them, and delight when others outstrip us in
the service of God, wherein we ourselves are so remiss.
2. With respect also to spiritual sloth, beginners
are apt to be irked by the things that are most spiritual, from which they flee
because these things are incompatible with sensible pleasure. For, as they are
so much accustomed to sweetness in spiritual things, they are wearied by things
in which they find no sweetness. If once they failed to find in prayer the
satisfaction which their taste required (and after all it is well that God
should take it from them to prove them), they would prefer not to return to it:
sometimes they leave it; at other times they continue it unwillingly. And thus
because of this sloth they abandon the way of perfection (which is the way of
the negation of their will and pleasure for God's sake) for the pleasure and
sweetness of their own will, which they aim at satisfying in this way rather
than the will of God.
3. And many of these would have God will that which
they themselves will, and are fretful at having to will that which He wills,
and find it repugnant to accommodate their will to that of God. Hence it
happens to them that oftentimes they think that that wherein they find not
their own will and pleasure is not the will of God; and that, on the other
hand, when they themselves find satisfaction, God is satisfied. Thus they
measure God by themselves and not themselves by God, acting quite contrarily to
that which He Himself taught in the Gospel, saying: That he who should lose his
will for His sake, the same should gain it; and he who should desire to gain
it, the same should lose it.[55]
4. These persons likewise find it irksome when they
are commanded to do that wherein they take no pleasure. Because they aim at
spiritual sweetness and consolation, they are too weak to have the fortitude
and bear the trials of perfection.[56] They resemble those who are
softly nurtured and who run fretfully away from everything that is hard, and
take offense at the Cross, wherein consist the delights of the spirit. The more
spiritual a thing is, the more irksome they find it, for, as they seek to go
about spiritual matters with complete freedom and according to the inclination
of their will, it causes them great sorrow and repugnance to enter upon the
narrow way, which, says Christ, is the way of life.[57]
5. Let it suffice here to have described these
imperfections, among the many to be found in the lives of those that are in
this first state of beginners, so that it may be seen how greatly they need God
to set them in the state of proficients. This He does by bringing them into the
dark night whereof we now speak; wherein He weans them from the breasts of
these sweetnesses and pleasures, gives them pure aridities and inward darkness,
takes from them all these irrelevances and puerilities, and by very different
means causes them to win the virtues. For, however assiduously the beginner
practises the mortification in himself of all these actions and passions of
his, he can never completely succeed—very far from it—until God shall work it
in him passively by means of the purgation of the said night. Of this I would
fain speak in some way that may be profitable; may God, then, be pleased to
give me His Divine light, because this is very needful in a night that is so
dark and a matter that is so difficult to describe and to expound.
The line, then, is:
In a dark night.
CHAPTER VIII
Wherein is expounded the
first line of the first stanza, and a beginning is made of the explanation of
this dark night.
THIS night, which, as we say, is
contemplation, produces in spiritual persons two kinds of darkness or
purgation, corresponding to the two parts of man's nature—namely, the sensual
and the spiritual. And thus the one night or purgation will be sensual, wherein
the soul is purged according to sense, which is subdued to the spirit; and the other
is a night or purgation which is spiritual, wherein the soul is purged and
stripped according to the spirit, and subdued and made ready for the union of
love with God. The night of sense is common and comes to many: these are the
beginners; and of this night we shall speak first. The night of the spirit is
the portion of very few, and these are they that are already practised and
proficient, of whom we shall treat hereafter.
2. The first purgation or night is bitter and
terrible to sense, as we shall now show.[58] The second bears no
comparison with it, for it is horrible and awful to the spirit, as we shall
show[59] presently. Since the night
of sense is first in order and comes first, we shall first of all say something
about it briefly, since more is written of it, as of a thing that is more
common; and we shall pass on to treat more fully of the spiritual night, since
very little has been said of this, either in speech[60] or in writing, and very
little is known of it, even by experience.
3. Since, then, the conduct of these beginners upon
the way of God is ignoble,[61] and has much to do with
their love of self and their own inclinations, as has been explained above, God
desires to lead them farther. He seeks to bring them out of that ignoble kind
of love to a higher degree of love for Him, to free them from the ignoble
exercises of sense and meditation (wherewith, as we have said, they go seeking
God so unworthily and in so many ways that are unbefitting), and to lead them
to a kind of spiritual exercise wherein they can commune with Him more
abundantly and are freed more completely from imperfections. For they have now
had practice for some time in the way of virtue and have persevered in
meditation and prayer, whereby, through the sweetness and pleasure that they
have found therein, they have lost their love of the things of the world and
have gained some degree of spiritual strength in God; this has enabled them to
some extent to refrain from creature desires, so that for God's sake they are
now able to suffer a light burden and a little aridity without turning back to
a time[62] which they found more
pleasant. When they are going about these spiritual exercises with the greatest
delight and pleasure, and when they believe that the sun of Divine favour is
shining most brightly upon them, God turns all this light of theirs into
darkness, and shuts against them the door and the source of the sweet spiritual
water which they were tasting in God whensoever and for as long as they
desired. (For, as they were weak and tender, there was no door closed to them,
as Saint John says in the Apocalypse, iii, 8). And thus He leaves them so
completely in the dark that they know not whither to go with their sensible
imagination and meditation; for they cannot advance a step in meditation, as
they were wont to do afore time, their inward senses being submerged in this
night, and left with such dryness that not only do they experience no pleasure
and consolation in the spiritual things and good exercises wherein they were
wont to find their delights and pleasures, but instead, on the contrary, they
find insipidity and bitterness in the said things. For, as I have said, God now
sees that they have grown a little, and are becoming strong enough to lay aside
their swaddling clothes and be taken from the gentle breast; so He sets them
down from His arms and teaches them to walk on their own feet; which they feel
to be very strange, for everything seems to be going wrong with them.
4. To recollected persons this commonly happens
sooner after their beginnings than to others, inasmuch as they are freer from
occasions of backsliding, and their desires turn more quickly from the things
of the world, which is necessary if they are to begin to enter this blessed
night of sense. Ordinarily no great time passes after their beginnings before
they begin to enter this night of sense; and the great majority of them do in
fact enter it, for they will generally be seen to fall into these aridities.
5. With regard to this way of purgation of the
senses, since it is so common, we might here adduce a great number of
quotations from Divine Scripture, where many passages relating to it are
continually found, particularly in the Psalms and the Prophets. However, I do
not wish to spend time upon these, for he who knows not how to look for them
there will find the common experience of this purgation to be sufficient.
CHAPTER IX
Of the signs by which it
will be known that the spiritual person is walking along the way of this night
and purgation of sense.
BUT since these aridities might frequently
proceed, not from the night and purgation of the sensual desires
aforementioned, but from sins and imperfections, or from weakness and
lukewarmness, or from some bad humour or indisposition of the body, I shall
here set down certain signs by which it may be known if such aridity proceeds
from the aforementioned purgation, or if it arises from any of the
aforementioned sins. For the making of this distinction I find that there are
three principal signs.
2. The first is whether, when a soul finds no pleasure
or consolation in the things of God, it also fails to find it in any thing
created; for, as God sets the soul in this dark night to the end that He may
quench and purge its sensual desire, He allows it not to find attraction or
sweetness in anything whatsoever. In such a case it may be considered very
probable[63] that this aridity and
insipidity proceed not from recently committed sins or imperfections. For, if
this were so, the soul would feel in its nature some inclination or desire to
taste other things than those of God; since, whenever the desire is allowed
indulgence in any imperfection, it immediately feels inclined thereto, whether
little or much, in proportion to the pleasure and the love that it has put into
it. Since, however, this lack of enjoyment in things above or below might
proceed from some indisposition or melancholy humour, which oftentimes makes it
impossible for the soul to take pleasure in anything, it becomes necessary to
apply the second sign and condition.
3. The second sign whereby a man may believe himself
to be experiencing the said purgation is that the memory is ordinarily centred
upon God, with painful care and solicitude, thinking that it is not serving
God, but is backsliding, because it finds itself without sweetness in the
things of God. And in such a case it is evident that this lack of sweetness and
this aridity come not from weakness and lukewarmness; for it is the nature of
lukewarmness not to care greatly or to have any inward solicitude for the
things of God. There is thus a great difference between aridity and
lukewarmness, for lukewarmness consists in great weakness and remissness in the
will and in the spirit, without solicitude as to serving God; whereas purgative
aridity is ordinarily accompanied by solicitude, with care and grief as I say,
because the soul is not serving God. And, although this may sometimes be
increased by melancholy or some other humour (as it frequently is), it fails
not for that reason to produce a purgative effect upon the desire, since the
desire is deprived of all pleasure and has its care centred upon God alone.
For, when mere humour is the cause, it spends itself in displeasure and ruin of
the physical nature, and there are none of those desires to sense God which
belong to purgative aridity. When the cause is aridity, it is true that the
sensual part of the soul has fallen low, and is weak and feeble in its actions,
by reason of the little pleasure which it finds in them; but the spirit, on the
other hand, is ready and strong.
4. For the cause of this aridity is that God
transfers to the spirit the good things and the strength of the senses, which,
since the soul's natural strength and senses are incapable of using them,
remain barren, dry and empty. For the sensual part of a man has no capacity for
that which is pure spirit, and thus, when it is the spirit that receives the
pleasure, the flesh is left without savour and is too weak to perform any
action. But the spirit, which all the time is being fed, goes forward in
strength, and with more alertness and solicitude than before, in its anxiety
not to fail God; and if it is not immediately conscious of spiritual sweetness
and delight, but only of aridity and lack of sweetness, the reason for this is
the strangeness of the exchange; for its palate has been accustomed to those
other sensual pleasures upon which its eyes are still fixed, and, since the
spiritual palate is not made ready or purged for such subtle pleasure, until it
finds itself becoming prepared for it by means of this arid and dark night, it
cannot experience spiritual pleasure and good, but only aridity and lack of
sweetness, since it misses the pleasure which aforetime it enjoyed so readily.
5. These souls whom God is beginning to lead through
these solitary places of the wilderness are like to the children of Israel, to
whom in the wilderness God began to give food from Heaven, containing within
itself all sweetness, and, as is there said, it turned to the savour which each
one of them desired. But withal the children of Israel felt the lack of the
pleasures and delights of the flesh and the onions which they had eaten
aforetime in Egypt, the more so because their palate was accustomed to these
and took delight in them, rather than in the delicate sweetness of the angelic
manna; and they wept and sighed for the fleshpots even in the midst of the food
of Heaven.[64] To such depths does the
vileness of our desires descend that it makes us to long for our own wretched
food[65] and to be nauseated by the
indescribable[66] blessings of Heaven.
6. But, as I say, when these aridities proceed from
the way of the purgation of sensual desire, although at first the spirit feels
no sweetness, for the reasons that we have just given, it feels that it is
deriving strength and energy to act from the substance which this inward food
gives it, the which food is the beginning of a contemplation that is dark and
arid to the senses; which contemplation is secret and hidden from the very
person that experiences it; and ordinarily, together with the aridity and
emptiness which it causes in the senses, it gives the soul an inclination and
desire to be alone and in quietness, without being able to think of any
particular thing or having the desire to do so. If those souls to whom this
comes to pass knew how to be quiet at this time, and troubled not about
performing any kind of action, whether inward or outward, neither had any
anxiety about doing anything, then they would delicately experience this inward
refreshment in that ease and freedom from care. So delicate is this refreshment
that ordinarily, if a man have desire or care to experience it, he experiences
it not; for, as I say, it does its work when the soul is most at ease and
freest from care; it is like the air which, if one would close one's hand upon
it, escapes.
7. In this sense we may understand that which the
Spouse said to the Bride in the Songs, namely: 'Withdraw thine eyes from me,
for they make me to soar aloft.'[67] For in such a way does God
bring the soul into this state, and by so different a path does He lead it
that, if it desires to work with its faculties, it hinders the work which God
is doing in it rather than aids it; whereas aforetime it was quite the
contrary. The reason is that, in this state of contemplation, which the soul
enters when it forsakes meditation for the state of the proficient, it is God
Who is now working in the soul; He binds its interior faculties, and allows it
not to cling to the understanding, nor to have delight in the will, nor to
reason with the memory. For anything that the soul can do of its own accord at
this time serves only, as we have said, to hinder inward peace and the work
which God is accomplishing in the spirit by means of that aridity of sense. And
this peace, being spiritual and delicate, performs a work which is quiet and
delicate, solitary, productive of peace and satisfaction[68] and far removed from all
those earlier pleasures, which were very palpable and sensual. This is the
peace which, says David, God speaks in the soul to the end that He may make it
spiritual.[69] And this leads us to the
third point.
8. The third sign whereby this purgation of sense
may be recognized is that the soul can no longer meditate or reflect in the imaginative
sphere of sense as it was wont, however much it may of itself endeavour to do
so. For God now begins to communicate Himself to it, no longer through sense,
as He did aforetime, by means of reflections which joined and sundered its
knowledge, but by pure spirit, into which consecutive reflections enter not;
but He communicates Himself to it by an act of simple contemplation, to which
neither the exterior nor the interior senses of the lower part of the soul can
attain. From this time forward, therefore, imagination and fancy can find no
support in any meditation, and can gain no foothold by means thereof.
9. With regard to this third sign, it is to be
understood that this embarrassment and dissatisfaction of the faculties proceed
not from indisposition, for, when this is the case, and the indisposition,
which never lasts for long,[70] comes to an end, the soul
is able once again, by taking some trouble about the matter, to do what it did
before, and the faculties find their wonted support. But in the purgation of
the desire this is not so: when once the soul begins to enter therein, its
inability to reflect with the faculties grows ever greater. For, although it is
true that at first, and with some persons, the process is not as continuous as
this, so that occasionally they fail to abandon their pleasures and reflections
of sense (for perchance by reason of their weakness it was not fitting to wean
them from these immediately), yet this inability grows within them more and
more and brings the workings of sense to an end, if indeed they are to make
progress, for those who walk not in the way of contemplation act very
differently. For this night of aridities is not usually continuous in their
senses. At times they have these aridities; at others they have them not. At
times they cannot meditate; at others they can. For God sets them in this night
only to prove them and to humble them, and to reform their desires, so that
they go not nurturing in themselves a sinful gluttony in spiritual things. He
sets them not there in order to lead them in the way of the spirit, which is
this contemplation; for not all those who walk of set purpose in the way of the
spirit are brought by God to contemplation, nor even the half of them—why, He
best knows. And this is why He never completely weans the senses of such
persons from the breasts of meditations and reflections, but only for short
periods and at certain seasons, as we have said.
CHAPTER X
Of the way in which these
souls are to conduct themselves in this dark night.
DURING the time, then, of the aridities of
this night of sense (wherein God effects the change of which we have spoken
above, drawing forth the soul from the life of sense into that of the
spirit—that is, from meditation to contemplation—wherein it no longer has any
power to work or to reason with its faculties concerning the things of God, as
has been said), spiritual persons suffer great trials, by reason not so much of
the aridities which they suffer, as of the fear which they have of being lost
on the road, thinking that all spiritual blessing is over for them and that God
has abandoned them since they find no help or pleasure in good things. Then
they grow weary, and endeavour (as they have been accustomed to do) to
concentrate their faculties with some degree of pleasure upon some object of
meditation, thinking that, when they are not doing this and yet are conscious
of making an effort, they are doing nothing. This effort they make not without
great inward repugnance and unwillingness on the part of their soul, which was
taking pleasure in being in that quietness and ease, instead of working with
its faculties. So they have abandoned the one pursuit,[71] yet draw no profit from the
other; for, by seeking what is prompted by their own spirit,[72] they lose the spirit of
tranquillity and peace which they had before. And thus they are like to one who
abandons what he has done in order to do it over again, or to one who leaves a
city only to re-enter it, or to one who is hunting and lets his prey go in
order to hunt it once more. This is useless here, for the soul will gain
nothing further by conducting itself in this way, as has been said.
2. These souls turn back at such a time if there is
none who understands them; they abandon the road or lose courage; or, at the
least, they are hindered from going farther by the great trouble which they
take in advancing along the road of meditation and reasoning. Thus they fatigue
and overwork their nature, imagining that they are failing through negligence
or sin. But this trouble that they are taking is quite useless, for God is now
leading them by another road, which is that of contemplation, and is very
different from the first; for the one is of meditation and reasoning, and the
other belongs neither to imagination nor yet to reasoning.
3. It is well for those who find themselves in this
condition to take comfort, to persevere in patience and to be in no wise
afflicted. Let them trust in God, Who abandons not those that seek Him with a
simple and right heart, and will not fail to give them what is needful for the
road, until He bring them into the clear and pure light of love. This last He
will give them by means of that other dark night, that of the spirit, if they
merit His bringing them thereto.
4. The way in which they are to conduct themselves
in this night of sense is to devote themselves not at all to reasoning and
meditation, since this is not the time for it, but to allow the soul to remain
in peace and quietness, although it may seem clear to them that they are doing nothing
and are wasting their time, and although it may appear to them that it is
because of their weakness that they have no desire in that state to think of
anything. The truth is that they will be doing quite sufficient if they have
patience and persevere in prayer without making any effort.[73] What they must do is merely
to leave the soul free and disencumbered and at rest from all knowledge and
thought, troubling not themselves, in that state, about what they shall think
or meditate upon, but contenting themselves with merely a peaceful and loving
attentiveness toward God, and in being without anxiety, without the ability and
without desired to have experience of Him or to perceive Him. For all these
yearnings disquiet and distract the soul from the peaceful quiet and sweet ease
of contemplation which is here granted to it.
5. And although further scruples may come to
them—that they are wasting their time, and that it would be well for them to do
something else, because they can neither do nor think anything in prayer—let
them suffer these scruples and remain in peace, as there is no question save of
their being at ease and having freedom of spirit. For if such a soul should
desire to make any effort of its own with its interior faculties, this means
that it will hinder and lose the blessings which, by means of that peace and
ease of the soul, God is instilling into it and impressing upon it. It is just
as if some painter were painting or dyeing a face; if the sitter were to move
because he desired to do something, he would prevent the painter from
accomplishing anything and would disturb him in what he was doing. And thus,
when the soul desires to remain in inward ease and peace, any operation and
affection or attentions wherein it may then seek to indulge[74] will distract it and
disquiet it and make it conscious of aridity and emptiness of sense. For the
more a soul endeavours to find support in affection and knowledge, the more
will it feel the lack of these, which cannot now be supplied to it upon that
road.
6. Wherefore it behoves such a soul to pay no heed
if the operations of its faculties become lost to it; it is rather to desire
that this should happen quickly. For, by not hindering the operation of infused
contemplation that God is bestowing upon it, it can receive this with more
peaceful abundance, and cause its spirit to be enkindled and to burn with the
love which this dark and secret contemplation brings with it and sets firmly in
the soul. For contemplation is naught else than a secret, peaceful and loving
infusion from God, which, if it be permitted, enkindles the soul with the
spirit of love, according as the soul declares in the next lines, namely:
Kindled in love with
yearnings.
CHAPTER XI
Wherein are expounded the
three lines of the stanza.
THIS enkindling of love is not as a rule felt
at the first, because it has not begun to take hold upon the soul, by reason of
the impurity of human nature, or because the soul has not understood its own
state, as we have said, and has therefore given it no peaceful abiding-place
within itself. Yet sometimes, nevertheless, there soon begins to make itself
felt a certain yearning toward God; and the more this increases, the more is
the soul affectioned and enkindled in love toward God, without knowing or
understanding how and whence this love and affection come to it, but from time
to time seeing this flame and this enkindling grow so greatly within it that it
desires God with yearning of love; even as David, when he was in this dark
night, said of himself in these words,[75] namely: 'Because my heart
was enkindled (that is to say, in love of contemplation), my reins also were
changed': that is, my desires for sensual affections were changed, namely from
the way of sense to the way of the spirit, which is the aridity and cessation
from all these things whereof we are speaking. And I, he says, was dissolved in
nothing and annihilated, and I knew not; for, as we have said, without knowing
the way whereby it goes, the soul finds itself annihilated with respect to all
things above and below which were accustomed to please it; and it finds itself
enamoured, without knowing how. And because at times the enkindling of love in
the spirit grows greater, the yearnings for God become so great in the soul
that the very bones seem to be dried up by this thirst, and the natural powers
to be fading away, and their warmth and strength to be perishing through the
intensity[76] of the thirst of love, for
the soul feels that this thirst of love is a living thirst. This thirst David
had and felt, when he said: 'My soul thirsted for the living God.'[77] Which is as much as to say:
A living thirst was that of my soul. Of this thirst, since it is living, we may
say that it kills. But it is to be noted that the vehemence of this thirst is
not continuous, but occasional although as a rule the soul is accustomed to
feel it to a certain degree.
2. But it must be noted that, as I began to say just
now, this love is not as a rule felt at first, but only the dryness and
emptiness are felt whereof we are speaking. Then in place of this love which
afterwards becomes gradually enkindled, what the soul experiences in the midst
of these aridities and emptinesses of the faculties is an habitual care and
solicitude with respect to God, together with grief and fear that it is not
serving Him. But it is a sacrifice which is not a little pleasing to God that
the soul should go about afflicted and solicitous for His love. This solicitude
and care leads the soul into that secret contemplation, until, the senses (that
is, the sensual part) having in course of time been in some degree purged of
the natural affections and powers by means of the aridities which it causes
within them, this Divine love begins to be enkindled in the spirit. Meanwhile,
however, like one who has begun a cure, the soul knows only suffering in this
dark and arid purgation of the desire; by this means it becomes healed of many
imperfections, and exercises itself in many virtues in order to make itself
meet for the said love, as we shall now say with respect to the line following:
Oh, happy chance!
3. When God leads the soul into this night of sense
in order to purge the sense of its lower part and to subdue it, unite it and
bring it into conformity with the spirit, by setting it in darkness and causing
it to cease from meditation (as He afterwards does in order to purify the
spirit to unite it with God, as we shall afterwards say), He brings it into the
night of the spirit, and (although it appears not so to it) the soul gains so
many benefits that it holds it to be a happy chance to have escaped from the bonds
and restrictions of the senses of or its lower self, by means of this night
aforesaid; and utters the present line, namely: Oh, happy chance! With respect
to this, it behoves us here to note the benefits which the soul finds in this
night, and because of which it considers it a happy chance to have passed
through it; all of which benefits the soul includes in the next line, namely:
I went forth without being
observed.
4. This going forth is understood of the subjection
to its sensual part which the soul suffered when it sought God through
operations so weak, so limited and so defective as are those of this lower
part; for at every step it stumbled into numerous imperfections and ignorances,
as we have noted above in writing of the seven capital sins. From all these it
is freed when this night quenches within it all pleasures, whether from above
or from below, and makes all meditation darkness to it, and grants it other
innumerable blessings in the acquirement of the virtues, as we shall now show.
For it will be a matter of great pleasure and great consolation, to one that
journeys on this road, to see how that which seems to the soul so severe and
adverse, and so contrary to spiritual pleasure, works in it so many blessings.
These, as we say, are gained when the soul goes forth, as regards its affection
and operation, by means of this night, from all created things, and when it
journeys to eternal things, which is great happiness and good fortune:[78] first, because of the great
blessing which is in the quenching of the desire and affection with respect to
all things; secondly, because they are very few that endure and persevere in
entering by this strait gate and by the narrow way which leads to life, as says
Our Saviour.[79] The strait gate is this
night of sense, and the soul detaches itself from sense and strips itself
thereof that it may enter by this gate, and establishes itself in faith, which
is a stranger to all sense, so that afterwards it may journey by the narrow
way, which is the other night—that of the spirit—and this the soul afterwards
enters in order in journey to God in pure faith, which is the means whereby the
soul is united to God. By this road, since it is so narrow, dark and terrible
(though there is no comparison between this night of sense and that other, in
its darkness and trials, as we shall say later), they are far fewer that
journey, but its benefits are far greater without comparison than those of this
present night. Of these benefits we shall now begin to say something, with such
brevity as is possible, in order that we may pass to the other night.
CHAPTER XII
Of the benefits which this
night causes in the soul.
THIS night and purgation of the desire, a
happy one for the soul, works in it so many blessings and benefits (although to
the soul, as we have said, it rather seems that blessings are being taken away
from it) that, even as Abraham made a great feast when he weaned his son Isaac,[80] even so is there joy in
Heaven because God is now taking this soul from its swaddling clothes, setting
it down from His arms, making it to walk upon its feet, and likewise taking
from it the milk of the breast and the soft and sweet food proper to children,
and making it to eat bread with crust, and to begin to enjoy the food of robust
persons. This food, in these aridities and this darkness of sense, is now given
to the spirit, which is dry and emptied of all the sweetness of sense. And this
food is the infused contemplation whereof we have spoken.
2. This is the first and principal benefit caused by
this arid and dark night of contemplation: the knowledge of oneself and of
one's misery. For, besides the fact that all the favours which God grants to
the soul are habitually granted to them enwrapped in this knowledge, these
aridities and this emptiness of the faculties, compared with the abundance
which the soul experienced aforetime and the difficulty which it finds in good
works, make it recognize its own lowliness and misery, which in the time of its
prosperity it was unable to see. Of this there is a good illustration in the
Book of Exodus, where God, wishing to humble the children of Israel and
desiring that they should know themselves, commanded them to take away and
strip off the festal garments and adornments wherewith they were accustomed to
adorn themselves in the Wilderness, saying: 'Now from henceforth strip
yourselves of festal ornaments and put on everyday working dress, that ye may know
what treatment ye deserve.'[81] This is as though He had
said: Inasmuch as the attire that ye wear, being proper to festival and
rejoicing, causes you to feel less humble concerning yourselves than ye should,
put off from you this attire, in order that henceforth, seeing yourselves
clothed with vileness, ye may know that ye merit no more, and may know who ye
are. Wherefore the soul knows the truth that it knew not at first, concerning
its own misery; for, at the time when it was clad as for a festival and found
in God much pleasure, consolation and support, it was somewhat more satisfied
and contented, since it thought itself to some extent to be serving God. It is
true that such souls may not have this idea explicitly in their minds; but some
suggestion of it at least is implanted in them by the satisfaction which they
find in their pleasant experiences. But, now that the soul has put on its other
and working attire—that of aridity and abandonment—and now that its first
lights have turned into darkness, it possesses these lights more truly in this
virtue of self-knowledge, which is so excellent and so necessary, considering
itself now as nothing and experiencing no satisfaction in itself; for it sees
that it does nothing of itself neither can do anything. And the smallness of
this self-satisfaction, together with the soul's affliction at not serving God,
is considered and esteemed by God as greater than all the consolations which
the soul formerly experienced and the works which it wrought, however great
they were, inasmuch as they were the occasion of many imperfections and
ignorances. And from this attire of aridity proceed, as from their fount and
source of self-knowledge, not only the things which we have described already,
but also the benefits which we shall now describe and many more which will have
to be omitted.
3. In the first place, the soul learns to commune
with God with more respect and more courtesy, such as a soul must ever observe
in converse with the Most High. These it knew not in its prosperous times of
comfort and consolation, for that comforting favour which it experienced made
its craving for God somewhat bolder than was fitting, and discourteous and
ill-considered. Even so did it happen to Moses, when he perceived that God was
speaking to him; blinded by that pleasure and desire, without further
consideration, he would have made bold to go to Him if God had not commanded
him to stay and put off his shoes. By this incident we are shown the respect
and discretion in detachment of desire wherewith a man is to commune with God.
When Moses had obeyed in this matter, he became so discreet and so attentive
that the Scripture says that not only did he not make bold to draw near to God,
but that he dared not even look at Him. For, having taken off the shoes of his
desires and pleasures, he became very conscious of his wretchedness in the
sight of God, as befitted one about to hear the word of God. Even so likewise
the preparation which God granted to Job in order that he might speak with Him
consisted not in those delights and glories which Job himself reports that he
was wont to have in his God, but in leaving him naked upon a dung-hill,[82] abandoned and even
persecuted by his friends, filled with anguish and bitterness, and the earth
covered with worms. And then the Most High God, He that lifts up the poor man
from the dunghill, was pleased to come down and speak with him there face to
face, revealing to him the depths and heights[83] of His wisdom, in a way
that He had never done in the time of his prosperity.
4. And here we must note another excellent benefit
which there is in this night and aridity of the desire of sense, since we have
had occasion to speak of it. It is that, in this dark night of the desire (to
the end that the words of the Prophet may be fulfilled, namely: 'Thy light
shall shine in the darkness'[84]), God will enlighten the
soul, giving it knowledge, not only of its lowliness and wretchedness, as we
have said, but likewise of the greatness and excellence of God. For, as well as
quenching the desires and pleasures and attachments of sense, He cleanses and
frees the understanding that it may understand the truth; for pleasure of sense
and desire, even though it be for spiritual things, darkens and obstructs the
spirit, and furthermore that straitness and aridity of sense enlightens and
quickens the understanding, as says Isaias.[85] Vexation makes us to
understand how the soul that is empty and disencumbered, as is necessary for
His Divine influence, is instructed supernaturally by God in His Divine wisdom,
through this dark and arid night of contemplation,[86] as we have said; and this
instruction God gave not in those first sweetnesses and joys.
5. This is very well explained by the same prophet
Isaias, where he says: 'Whom shall God teach His knowledge, and whom shall He
make to understand the hearing?' To those, He says, that are weaned from the
milk and drawn away from the breasts.[87] Here it is shown that the
first milk of spiritual sweetness is no preparation for this Divine influence,
neither is there preparation in attachment to the breast of delectable
meditations, belonging to the faculties of sense, which gave the soul pleasure;
such preparation consists rather in the lack of the one and withdrawal from the
other. Inasmuch as, in order to listen to God, the soul needs to stand upright
and to be detached, with regard to affection and sense, even as the Prophet
says concerning himself, in these words: I will stand upon my watch (this is
that detachment of desire) and I will make firm my step (that is, I will not
meditate with sense), in order to contemplate (that is, in order to understand
that which may come to me from God).[88] So we have now arrived at
this, that from this arid night there first of all comes self-knowledge,
whence, as from a foundation, rises this other knowledge of God. For which
cause Saint Augustine said to God: 'Let me know myself, Lord, and I shall know
Thee.'[89] For, as the philosophers
say, one extreme can be well known by another.
6. And in order to prove more completely how
efficacious is this night of sense, with its aridity and its desolation, in
bringing the soul that light which, as we say, it receives there from God, we
shall quote that passage of David, wherein he clearly describes the great power
which is in this night for bringing the soul this lofty knowledge of God. He
says, then, thus: 'In the desert land, waterless, dry and pathless, I appeared
before Thee, that I might see Thy virtue and Thy glory.'[90] It is a wondrous thing that
David should say here that the means and the preparation for his knowledge of
the glory of God were not the spiritual delights and the many pleasures which
he had experienced, but the aridities and detachments of his sensual nature,
which is here to be understood by the dry and desert land. No less wondrous is
it that he should describe as the road to his perception and vision of the
virtue of God, not the Divine meditations and conceptions of which he had often
made use, but his being unable to form any conception of God or to walk by
meditation produced by imaginary consideration, which is here to be understood
by the pathless land. So that the means to a knowledge of God and of oneself is
this dark night with its aridities and voids, although it leads not to a
knowledge of Him of the same plenitude and abundance that comes from the other
night of the spirit, since this is only, as it were, the beginning of that
other.
7. Likewise, from the aridities and voids of this
night of the desire, the soul draws spiritual humility, which is the contrary
virtue to the first capital sin, which, as we said, is spiritual pride. Through
this humility, which is acquired by the said knowledge of self, the soul is
purged from all those imperfections whereinto it fell with respect to that sin
of pride, in the time of its prosperity. For it sees itself so dry and
miserable that the idea never even occurs to it that it is making better
progress than others, or outstripping them, as it believed itself to be doing
before. On the contrary, it recognizes that others are making better progress
than itself.
8. And hence arises the love of its neighbours, for
it esteems them, and judges them not as it was wont to do aforetime, when it
saw that itself had great fervour and others not so. It is aware only of its
own wretchedness, which it keeps before its eyes to such an extent that it
never forgets it, nor takes occasion to set its eyes on anyone else. This was
described wonderfully by David, when he was in this night, in these words: 'I
was dumb and was humbled and kept silence from good things and my sorrow was
renewed.'[91] This he says because it
seemed to him that the good that was in his soul had so completely departed
that not only did he neither speak nor find any language concerning it, but
with respect to the good of others he was likewise dumb because of his grief at
the knowledge of his misery.
9. In this condition, again, souls become submissive
and obedient upon the spiritual road, for, when they see their own misery, not
only do they hear what is taught them, but they even desire that anyone soever
may set them on the way and tell them what they ought to do. The affective
presumption which they sometimes had in their prosperity is taken from them;
and finally, there are swept away from them on this road all the other
imperfections which we noted above with respect to this first sin, which is
spiritual pride.
CHAPTER XIII
Of other benefits which this
night of sense causes in the soul.
WITH respect to the soul's imperfections of
spiritual avarice, because of which it coveted this and that spiritual thing
and found no satisfaction in this and that exercise by reason of its
covetousness for the desire and pleasure which it found therein, this arid and
dark night has now greatly reformed it. For, as it finds not the pleasure and
sweetness which it was wont to find, but rather finds affliction and lack of
sweetness, it has such moderate recourse to them that it might possibly now
lose, through defective use, what aforetime it lost through excess; although as
a rule God gives to those whom He leads into this night humility and readiness,
albeit with lack of sweetness, so that what is commanded them they may do for
God's sake alone; and thus they no longer seek profit in many things because
they find no pleasure in them.
2. With respect to spiritual luxury, it is likewise
clearly seen that, through this aridity and lack of sensible sweetness which
the soul finds in spiritual things, it is freed from those impurities which we
there noted; for we said that, as a rule, they proceeded from the pleasure
which overflowed from spirit into sense.
3. But with regard to the imperfections from which
the soul frees itself in this dark night with respect to the fourth sin, which
is spiritual gluttony, they may be found above, though they have not all been
described there, because they are innumerable; and thus I will not detail them
here, for I would fain make an end of this night in order to pass to the next,
concerning which we shall have to pronounce grave words and instructions. Let
it suffice for the understanding of the innumerable benefits which, over and
above those mentioned, the soul gains in this night with respect to this sin of
spiritual gluttony, to say that it frees itself from all those imperfections
which have there been described, and from many other and greater evils, and
vile abominations which are not written above, into which fell many of whom we
have had experience, because they had not reformed their desire as concerning
this inordinate love of spiritual sweetness. For in this arid and dark night
wherein He sets the soul, God has restrained its concupiscence and curbed its
desire so that the soul cannot feed upon any pleasure or sweetness of sense,
whether from above or from below; and this He continues to do after such manner
that the soul is subjected, reformed and repressed with respect to
concupiscence and desire. It loses the strength of its passions and
concupiscence and it becomes sterile, because it no longer consults its
likings. Just as, when none is accustomed to take milk from the breast, the
courses of the milk are dried up, so the desires of the soul are dried up. And
besides these things there follow admirable benefits from this spiritual
sobriety, for, when desire and concupiscence are quenched, the soul lives in
spiritual tranquillity and peace; for, where desire and concupiscence reign
not, there is no disturbance, but peace and consolation of God.
4. From this there arises another and a second
benefit, which is that the soul habitually has remembrance of God, with fear
and dread of backsliding upon the spiritual road, as has been said. This is a
great benefit, and not one of the least that results from this aridity and
purgation of the desire, for the soul is purified and cleansed of the
imperfections that were clinging to it because of the desires and affections,
which of their own accord deaden and darken the soul.
5. There is another very great benefit for the soul
in this night, which is that it practices several virtues together, as, for
example, patience and longsuffering, which are often called upon in these times
of emptiness and aridity, when the soul endures and perseveres in its spiritual
exercises without consolation and without pleasure. It practises the charity of
God, since it is not now moved by the pleasure of attraction and sweetness
which it finds in its work, but only by God. It likewise practises here the
virtue of fortitude, because, in these difficulties and insipidities which it
finds in its work, it brings strength out of weakness and thus becomes strong.
All the virtues, in short—the theological and also the cardinal and moral—both
in body and in spirit, are practised by the soul in these times of aridity.
6. And that in this night the soul obtains these
four benefits which we have here described (namely, delight of peace, habitual
remembrance and thought of God, cleanness and purity of soul and the practice
of the virtues which we have just described), David tells us, having
experienced it himself when he was in this night, in these words: 'My soul
refused consolations, I had remembrance of God, I found consolation and was
exercised and my spirit failed.'[92] And he then says: 'And I
meditated by night with my heart and was exercised, and I swept and purified my
spirit'—that is to say, from all the affections.[93]
7. With respect to the imperfections of the other
three spiritual sins which we have described above, which are wrath, envy and
sloth, the soul is purged hereof likewise in this aridity of the desire and
acquires the virtues opposed to them; for, softened and humbled by these
aridities and hardships and other temptations and trials wherein God exercises
it during this night, it becomes meek with respect to God, and to itself, and
likewise with respect to its neighbour. So that it is no longer disturbed and
angry with itself because of its own faults, nor with its neighbour because of
his, neither is it displeased with God, nor does it utter unseemly complaints
because He does not quickly make it holy.
8. Then, as to envy, the soul has charity toward
others in this respect also; for, if it has any envy, this is no longer a vice
as it was before, when it was grieved because others were preferred to it and
given greater advantage. Its grief now comes from seeing how great is its own
misery, and its envy (if it has any) is a virtuous envy, since it desires to
imitate others, which is great virtue.
9. Neither are the sloth and the irksomeness which
it now experiences concerning spiritual things vicious as they were before. For
in the past these sins proceeded from the spiritual pleasures which the soul
sometimes experienced and sought after when it found them not. But this new
weariness proceeds not from this insuffficiency of pleasure, because God has
taken from the soul pleasure in all things in this purgation of the desire.
10. Besides these benefits which have been
mentioned, the soul attains innumerable others by means of this arid
contemplation. For often, in the midst of these times of aridity and hardship,
God communicates to the soul, when it is least expecting it, the purest
spiritual sweetness and love, together with a spiritual knowledge which is
sometimes very delicate, each manifestation of which is of greater benefit and
worth than those which the soul enjoyed aforetime; although in its beginnings
the soul thinks that this is not so, for the spiritual influence now granted to
it is very delicate and cannot be perceived by sense.
11. Finally, inasmuch as the soul is now purged from
the affections and desires of sense, it obtains liberty of spirit, whereby in
ever greater degree it gains the twelve fruits of the Holy Spirit. Here, too,
it is wondrously delivered from the hands of its three enemies—devil, world and
flesh; for, its pleasure and delight of sense being quenched with respect to
all things, neither the devil nor the world nor sensuality has any arms or any
strength wherewith to make war upon the spirit.
12. These times of aridity, then, cause the soul to
journey in all purity in the love of God, since it is no longer influenced in
its actions by the pleasure and sweetness of the actions themselves, as
perchance it was when it experienced sweetness, but only by a desire to please
God. It becomes neither presumptuous nor self-satisfied, as perchance it was
wont to become in the time of its prosperity, but fearful and timid with regard
to itself, finding in itself no satisfaction whatsoever; and herein consists
that holy fear which preserves and increases the virtues. This aridity, too,
quenches natural energy and concupiscence, as has also been said. Save for the
pleasure, indeed, which at certain times God Himself infuses into it, it is a
wonder if it finds pleasure and consolation of sense, through its own
diligence, in any spiritual exercise or action, as has already been said.
13. There grows within souls that experience this
arid night concern for God and yearnings to serve Him, for in proportion as the
breasts of sensuality, wherewith it sustained and nourished the desires that it
pursued, are drying up, there remains nothing in that aridity and detachment
save the yearning to serve God, which is a thing very pleasing to God. For, as
David says, an afflicted spirit is a sacrifice to God.[94]
14. When the soul, then, knows that, in this arid
purgation through which it has passed, it has derived and attained so many and
such precious benefits as those which have here been described, it tarries not
in crying, as in the stanza of which we are expounding the lines, 'Oh, happy
chance!—I went forth without being observed.' That is, 'I went forth' from the
bonds and subjection of the desires of sense and the affections, 'without being
observed'—that is to say, without the three enemies aforementioned being able
to keep me from it. These enemies, as we have said, bind the soul as with
bonds, in its desires and pleasures, and prevent it from going forth from
itself to the liberty of the love of God; and without these desires and
pleasures they cannot give battle to the soul, as has been said.
15. When, therefore, the four passions of the
soul—which are joy, grief, hope and fear—are calmed through continual
mortification; when the natural desires have been lulled to sleep, in the
sensual nature of the soul, by means of habitual times of aridity; and when the
harmony of the senses and the interior faculties causes a suspension of labour
and a cessation from the work of meditation, as we have said (which is the
dwelling and the household of the lower part of the soul), these enemies cannot
obstruct this spiritual liberty, and the house remains at rest and quiet, as
says the following line:
My house being now at rest.
CHAPTER XIV
Expounds this last line of
the first stanza.
WHEN this house of sensuality was now at
rest—that is, was mortified—its passions being quenched and its desires put to
rest and lulled to sleep by means of this blessed night of the purgation of
sense, the soul went forth, to set out upon the road and way of the spirit,
which is that of progressives and proficients, and which, by another name, is
called the way of illumination or of infused contemplation, wherein God Himself
feeds and refreshes the soul, without meditation, or the soul's active help.
Such, as we have said, is the night and purgation of sense in the soul. In
those who have afterwards to enter the other and more formidable night of the
spirit, in order to pass to the Divine union of love of God (for not all pass
habitually thereto, but only the smallest number), it is wont to be accompanied
by formidable trials and temptations of sense, which last for a long time,
albeit longer in some than in others. For to some the angel of Satan presents
himself—namely, the spirit of fornication—that he may buffet their senses with
abominable and violent temptations, and trouble their spirits with vile
considerations and representations which are most visible to the imagination,
which things at times are a greater affliction to them than death.
2. At other times in this night there is added to
these things the spirit of blasphemy, which roams abroad, setting in the path
of all the conceptions and thoughts of the soul intolerable blasphemies. These
it sometimes suggests to the imagination with such violence that the soul
almost utters them, which is a grave torment to it.
3. At other times another abominable spirit, which
Isaias calls Spiritus vertiginis,[95] is allowed to molest them,
not in order that they may fall, but that it may try them. This spirit darkens
their senses in such a way that it fills them with numerous scruples and
perplexities, so confusing that, as they judge, they can never, by any means,
be satisfied concerning them, neither can they find any help for their judgment
in counsel or thought. This is one of the severest goads and horrors of this
night, very closely akin to that which passes in the night of the spirit.
4. As a rule these storms and trials are sent by God
in this night and purgation of sense to those whom afterwards He purposes to
lead into the other night (though not all reach it), to the end that, when they
have been chastened and buffeted, they may in this way continually exercise and
prepare themselves, and continually accustom their senses and faculties to the
union of wisdom which is to be bestowed upon them in that other night. For, if
the soul be not tempted, exercised and proved with trials and temptations, it
cannot quicken its sense of Wisdom. For this reason it is said in
Ecclesiasticus: 'He that has not been tempted, what does he know? And he that
has not been proved, what are the things that he recognizes?'[96] To this truth Jeremias
bears good witness, saying: 'Thou didst chastise me, Lord, and I was
instructed.'[97] And the most proper form of
this chastisement, for one who will enter into Wisdom, is that of the interior
trials which we are here describing, inasmuch as it is these which most
effectively purge sense of all favours and consolations to which it was
affected, with natural weakness, and by which the soul is truly humiliated in
preparation for the exaltation which it is to experience.
5. For how long a time the soul will be held in this
fasting and penance of sense, cannot be said with any certainty; for all do not
experience it after one manner, neither do all encounter the same temptations.
For this is meted out by the will of God, in conformity with the greater or the
smaller degree of imperfection which each soul has to purge away. In conformity,
likewise, with the degree of love of union to which God is pleased to raise it,
He will humble it with greater or less intensity or in greater or less time.
Those who have the disposition and greater strength to suffer, He purges with
greater intensity and more quickly. But those who are very weak are kept for a
long time in this night, and these He purges very gently and with slight
temptations. Habitually, too, He gives them refreshments of sense so that they
may not fall away, and only after a long time do they attain to purity of
perfection in this life, some of them never attaining to it at all. Such are
neither properly in the night nor properly out of it; for, although they make
no progress, yet, in order that they may continue in humility and
self-knowledge, God exercises them for certain periods and at certain times[98] in those temptations and
aridities; and at other times and seasons He assists them with consolations,
lest they should grow faint and return to seek the consolations of the world.
Other souls, which are weaker, God Himself accompanies, now appearing to them,
now moving farther away, that He may exercise them in His love; for without
such turnings away they would not learn to reach God.
6. But the souls which are to pass on to that happy
and high estate, the union of love, are wont as a rule to remain for a long
time in these aridities and temptations, however quickly God may lead them, as
has been seen by experience. It is time, then, to begin to treat of the second
night.
BOOK THE SECOND
Of the Dark Night of the Spirit.
CHAPTER I
Which begins to treat of the
dark nights of the spirit and says at what time it begins.
THE soul which God is about to lead onward is
not led by His Majesty into this night of the spirit as soon as it goes forth
from the aridities and trials of the first purgation and night of sense; rather
it is wont to pass a long time, even years, after leaving the state of
beginners, in exercising itself in that of proficients. In this latter state it
is like to one that has come forth from a rigorous imprisonment;[99] it goes about the things of
God with much greater freedom and satisfaction of the soul, and with more
abundant and inward delight than it did at the beginning before it entered the
said night. For its imagination and faculties are no longer bound, as they were
before, by meditation and anxiety of spirit, since it now very readily finds in
its spirit the most serene and loving contemplation and spiritual sweetness
without the labour of meditation; although, as the purgation of the soul is not
complete (for the principal part thereof, which is that of the spirit, is
wanting, without which, owing to the communication that exists between the one
part and the other,[100] since the subject is one
only, the purgation of sense, however violent it may have been, is not yet
complete and perfect), it is never without certain occasional necessities,
aridities, darknesses and perils which are sometimes much more intense than
those of the past, for they are as tokens and heralds of the coming night of
the spirit, and are not of as long duration as will be the night which is to
come. For, having passed through a period, or periods, or days of this night
and tempest, the soul soon returns to its wonted serenity; and after this
manner God purges certain souls which are not to rise to so high a degree of
love as are others, bringing them at times, and for short periods, into this
night of contemplation and purgation of the spirit, causing night to come upon
them and then dawn, and this frequently, so that the words of David may be
fulfilled, that He sends His crystal—that is, His contemplation—like morsels,[101] although these morsels of
dark contemplation are never as intense as is that terrible night of
contemplation which we are to describe, into which, of set purpose, God brings
the soul that He may lead it to Divine union.
2. This sweetness, then, and this interior pleasure
which we are describing, and which these progressives find and experience in
their spirits so easily and so abundantly, is communicated to them in much
greater abundance than aforetime, overflowing into their senses more than was
usual previously to this purgation of sense; for, inasmuch as the sense is now
purer, it can more easily feel the pleasures of the spirit after its manner.
As, however, this sensual part of the soul is weak and incapable of
experiencing the strong things of the spirit, it follows that these
proficients, by reason of this spiritual communication which is made to their
sensual part endure therein many frailties and sufferings and weaknesses of the
stomach, and in consequence are fatigued in spirit. For, as the Wise Man says:
'The corruptible body presseth down the soul.'[102] Hence comes it that the
communications that are granted to these souls cannot be very strong or very
intense or very spiritual, as is required for Divine union with God, by reason
of the weakness and corruption of the sensual nature which has a part in them.
Hence arise the raptures and trances and dislocations of the bones which always
happen when the communications are not purely spiritual—that is, are not given
to the spirit alone, as are those of the perfect who are purified by the second
night of the spirit, and in whom these raptures and torments of the body no
longer exist, since they are enjoying liberty of spirit, and their senses are
now neither clouded nor transported.
3. And in order that the necessity for such souls to
enter this night of the spirit may be understood, we will here note certain
imperfections and perils which belong to these proficients.
CHAPTER II
Describes other
imperfections[103] which belong to these
proficients.
THESE proficients have two kinds of
imperfection: the one kind is habitual; the other actual. The habitual imperfections
are the imperfect habits and affections which have remained all the time in the
spirit, and are like roots, to which the purgation of sense has been unable to
penetrate. The difference between the purgation of these and that of this other
kind is the difference between the root and the branch, or between the removing
of a stain which is fresh and one which is old and of long standing. For, as we
said, the purgation of sense is only the entrance and beginning of
contemplation leading to the purgation of the spirit, which, as we have
likewise said, serves rather to accommodate sense to spirit than to unite
spirit with God. But there still remain in the spirit the stains of the old
man, although the spirit thinks not that this is so, neither can it perceive
them; if these stains be not removed with the soap and strong lye of the
purgation of this night, the spirit will be unable to come to the purity of
Divine union.
2. These souls have likewise the hebetudo mentis[104] and the natural roughness
which every man contracts through sin, and the distraction and outward clinging
of the spirit, which must be enlightened, refined and recollected by the
afflictions and perils of that night. These habitual imperfections belong to all
those who have not passed beyond this state of the proficient; they cannot
coexist, as we say, with the perfect state of union through love.
3. To actual imperfections all are not liable in the
same way. Some, whose spiritual good is so superficial and so readily affected
by sense, fall into greater difficulties and dangers, which we described at the
beginning of this treatise. For, as they find so many and such abundant
spiritual communications and apprehensions, both in sense and in spirit wherein
they oftentimes see imaginary and spiritual visions (for all these things,
together with other delectable feelings, come to many souls in this state,
wherein the devil and their own fancy very commonly practise deceptions on
them), and, as the devil is apt to take such pleasure in impressing upon the
soul and suggesting to it the said apprehensions and feelings, he fascinates
and deludes it with great ease unless it takes the precaution of resigning
itself to God, and of protecting itself strongly, by means of faith, from all
these visions and feelings. For in this state the devil causes many to believe
in vain visions and false prophecies; and strives to make them presume that God
and the saints are speaking with them; and they often trust their own fancy. And
the devil is also accustomed, in this state, to fill them with presumption and
pride, so that they become attracted by vanity and arrogance, and allow
themselves to be seen engaging in outward acts which appear holy, such as
raptures and other manifestations. Thus they become bold with God, and lose
holy fear, which is the key and the custodian of all the virtues; and in some
of these souls so many are the falsehoods and deceits which tend to multiply,
and so inveterate do they grow, that it is very doubtful if such souls will
return to the pure road of virtue and true spirituality. Into these miseries
they fall because they are beginning to give themselves over to spiritual
feelings and apprehensions with too great security, when they were beginning to
make some progress upon the way.
4. There is much more that I might say of these
imperfections and of how they are the more incurable because such souls
consider them to be more spiritual than the others, but I will leave this
subject. I shall only add, in order to prove how necessary, for him that would
go farther, is the night of the spirit, which is purgation, that none of these
proficients, however strenuously he may have laboured, is free, at best, from
many of those natural affections and imperfect habits, purification from which,
we said, is necessary if a soul is to pass to Divine union.
5. And over and above this (as we have said
already), inasmuch as the lower part of the soul still has a share in these
spiritual communications, they cannot be as intense, as pure and as strong as
is needful for the aforesaid union; wherefore, in order to come to this union,
the soul must needs enter into the second night of the spirit, wherein it must
strip sense and spirit perfectly from all these apprehensions and from all
sweetness, and be made to walk in dark and pure faith, which is the proper and
adequate means whereby the soul is united with God, according as Osee says, in
these words: 'I will betroth thee—that is, I will unite thee—with Me through
faith.'[105]
CHAPTER III
Annotation for that which
follows.
THESE souls, then, have now become
proficients, because of the time which they have spent in feeding the senses
with sweet communications, so that their sensual part, being thus attracted and
delighted by spiritual pleasure, which came to it from the spirit, may be
united with the spirit and made one with it; each part after its own manner
eating of one and the same spiritual food and from one and the same dish, as
one person and with one sole intent, so that thus they may in a certain way be
united and brought into agreement, and, thus united, may be prepared for the
endurance of the stern and severe purgation of the spirit which awaits them. In
this purgation these two parts of the soul, the spiritual and the sensual, must
be completely purged, since the one is never truly purged without the other,
the purgation of sense becoming effective when that of the spirit has fairly
begun. Wherefore the night which we have called that of sense may and should be
called a kind of correction and restraint of the desire rather than purgation.
The reason is that all the imperfections and disorders of the sensual part have
their strength and root in the spirit, where all habits, both good and bad, are
brought into subjection, and thus, until these are purged, the rebellions and
depravities of sense cannot be purged thoroughly.
2. Wherefore, in this night following, both parts of
the soul are purged together, and it is for this end that it is well to have
passed through the corrections of the first night, and the period of
tranquillity which proceeds from it, in order that, sense being united with
spirit, both may be purged after a certain manner and may then suffer with
greater fortitude. For very great fortitude is needful for so violent and
severe a purgation, since, if the weakness of the lower part has not first been
corrected and fortitude has not been gained from God through the sweet and
delectable communion which the soul has afterwards enjoyed with Him, its nature
will not have the strength or the disposition to bear it.
3. Therefore, since these proficients are still at a
very low stage of progress, and follow their own nature closely in the
intercourse and dealings which they have with God, because the gold of their
spirit is not yet purified and refined, they still think of God as little
children, and speak of God as little children, and feel and experience God as
little children, even as Saint Paul says,[106] because they have not reached
perfection, which is the union of the soul with God. In the state of union,
however, they will work great things in the spirit, even as grown men, and
their works and faculties will then be Divine rather than human, as will
afterwards be said. To this end God is pleased to strip them of this old man
and clothe them with the new man, who is created according to God, as the
Apostle says,[107] in the newness of sense. He
strips their faculties, affections and feelings, both spiritual and sensual,
both outward and inward, leaving the understanding dark, the will dry, the
memory empty and the affections in the deepest affliction, bitterness and
constraint, taking from the soul the pleasure and experience of spiritual
blessings which it had aforetime, in order to make of this privation one of the
principles which are requisite in the spirit so that there may be introduced
into it and united with it the spiritual form of the spirit, which is the union
of love. All this the Lord works in the soul by means of a pure and dark
contemplation, as the soul explains in the first stanza. This, although we
originally interpreted it with reference to the first night of sense, is
principally understood by the soul of this second night of the spirit, since this
is the principal part of the purification of the soul. And thus we shall set it
down and expound it here again in this sense.
CHAPTER IV
Sets down the first stanza
and the exposition thereof.
On a dark night, Kindled in love with yearnings—oh,
happy chance!—
I went forth without being observed, My house being
now at rest.
EXPOSITION
INTERPRETING this stanza now with reference
to purgation, contemplation or detachment or poverty of spirit, which here are
almost one and the same thing, we can expound it after this manner and make the
soul speak thus: In poverty, and without protection or support in all the
apprehensions of my soul—that is, in the darkness of my understanding and the
constraint of my will, in affliction and anguish with respect to memory,
remaining in the dark in pure faith, which is dark night for the said natural
faculties, the will alone being touched by grief and afflictions and yearnings
for the love of God—I went forth from myself—that is, from my low manner of
understanding, from my weak mode of loving and from my poor and limited manner
of experiencing God, without being hindered therein by sensuality or the devil.
2. This was a great happiness and a good chance for
me; for, when the faculties had been perfectly annihilated and calmed, together
with the passions, desires and affections of my soul, wherewith I had experienced
and tasted God after a lowly manner, I went forth from my own human dealings
and operations to the operations and dealings of God. That is to say, my
understanding went forth from itself, turning from the human and natural to the
Divine; for, when it is united with God by means of this purgation, its
understanding no longer comes through its natural light and vigour, but through
the Divine Wisdom wherewith it has become united. And my will went forth from
itself, becoming Divine; for, being united with Divine love, it no longer loves
with its natural strength after a lowly manner, but with strength and purity
from the Holy Spirit; and thus the will, which is now near to God, acts not
after a human manner, and similarly the memory has become transformed into
eternal apprehensions of glory. And finally, by means of this night and
purgation of the old man, all the energies and affections of the soul are
wholly renewed into a Divine temper and Divine delight.
There follows the line:
On a dark night.
CHAPTER V
Sets down the first line and
begins to explain how this dark contemplation is not only night for the soul
but is also grief and torment.
THIS dark night is an inflowing of God into
the soul, which purges it from its ignorances and imperfections, habitual
natural and spiritual, and which is called by contemplatives infused
contemplation, or mystical theology. Herein God secretly teaches the soul and
instructs it in perfection of love without its doing anything, or understanding
of what manner is this infused contemplation. Inasmuch as it is the loving
wisdom of God, God produces striking effects in the soul for, by purging and
illumining it, He prepares it for the union of love with God. Wherefore the
same loving wisdom that purges the blessed spirits and enlightens them is that
which here purges the soul and illumines it.
2. But the question arises: Why is the Divine light
(which as we say, illumines and purges the soul from its ignorances) here
called by the soul a dark night? To this the answer is that for two reasons
this Divine wisdom is not only night and darkness for the soul, but is likewise
affliction and torment. The first is because of the height of Divine Wisdom,
which transcends the talent of the soul, and in this way is darkness to it; the
second, because of its vileness and impurity, in which respect it is painful
and afflictive to it, and is also dark.
3. In order to prove the first point, we must here
assume a certain doctrine of the philosopher, which says that, the clearer and
more manifest are Divine things in themselves the darker and more hidden are
they to the soul naturally; just as, the clearer is the light, the more it
blinds and darkens the pupil of the owl, and, the more directly we look at the
sun, the greater is the darkness which it causes in our visual faculty,
overcoming and overwhelming it through its own weakness. In the same way, when
this Divine light of contemplation assails the soul which is not yet wholly
enlightened, it causes spiritual darkness in it; for not only does it overcome
it, but likewise it overwhelms it and darkens the act of its natural
intelligence. For this reason Saint Dionysius and other mystical theologians
call this infused contemplation a ray of darkness—that is to say, for the soul
that is not enlightened and purged—for the natural strength of the intellect is
transcended and overwhelmed by its great supernatural light. Wherefore David
likewise said: That near to God and round about Him are darkness and cloud;[108] not that this is so in
fact, but that it is so to our weak understanding, which is blinded and
darkened by so vast a light, to which it cannot attain.[109] For this cause the same
David then explained himself, saying: 'Through the great splendour of His
presence passed clouds'[110]—that is, between God and
our understanding. And it is for this cause that, when God sends it out from
Himself to the soul that is not yet transformed, this illumining ray of His
secret wisdom causes thick darkness in the understanding.
4. And it is clear that this dark contemplation is
in these its beginnings painful likewise to the soul; for, as this Divine
infused contemplation has many excellences that are extremely good, and the
soul that receives them, not being purged, has many miseries that are likewise
extremely bad, hence it follows that, as two contraries cannot coexist in one
subject—the soul—it must of necessity have pain and suffering, since it is the
subject wherein these two contraries war against each other, working the one
against the other, by reason of the purgation of the imperfections of the soul
which comes to pass through this contemplation. This we shall prove inductively
in the manner following.
5. In the first place, because the light and wisdom
of this contemplation is most bright and pure, and the soul which it assails is
dark and impure, it follows that the soul suffers great pain when it receives
it in itself, just as, when the eyes are dimmed by humours, and become impure
and weak, the assault made upon them by a bright light causes them pain. And
when the soul suffers the direct assault of this Divine light, its pain, which
results from its impurity, is immense; because, when this pure light assails the
soul, in order to expel its impurity, the soul feels itself to be so impure and
miserable that it believes God to be against it, and thinks that it has set
itself up against God. This causes it sore grief and pain, because it now
believes that God has cast it away: this was one of the greatest trials which
Job felt when God sent him this experience, and he said: 'Why hast Thou set me
contrary to Thee, so that I am grievous and burdensome to myself?'[111] For, by means of this pure
light, the soul now sees its impurity clearly (although darkly), and knows
clearly that it is unworthy of God or of any creature. And what gives it most
pain is that it thinks that it will never be worthy and that its good things
are all over for it. This is caused by the profound immersion of its spirit in
the knowledge and realization of its evils and miseries; for this Divine and
dark light now reveals them all to the eye, that it may see clearly how in its
own strength it can never have aught else. In this sense we may understand that
passage from David, which says: 'For iniquity Thou hast corrected man and hast
made his soul to be undone and consumed: he wastes away as the spider.'[112]
6. The second way in which the soul suffers pain is
by reason of its weakness, natural, moral and spiritual; for, when this Divine
contemplation assails the soul with a certain force, in order to strengthen it
and subdue it, it suffers such pain in its weakness that it nearly swoons away.
This is especially so at certain times when it is assailed with somewhat
greater force; for sense and spirit, as if beneath some immense and dark load,
are in such great pain and agony that the soul would find advantage and relief
in death. This had been experienced by the prophet Job, when he said: 'I desire
not that He should have intercourse with me in great strength, lest He oppress
me with the weight of His greatness.'[113]
7. Beneath the power of this oppression and weight
the soul feels itself so far from being favoured that it thinks, and correctly
so, that even that wherein it was wont to find some help has vanished with
everything else, and that there is none who has pity upon it. To this effect
Job says likewise: 'Have pity upon me, have pity upon me, at least ye my
friends, because the hand of the Lord has touched me.'[114] A thing of great wonder and
pity is it that the soul's weakness and impurity should now be so great that,
though the hand of God is of itself so light and gentle, the soul should now
feel it to be so heavy and so contrary,[115] though it neither weighs it
down nor rests upon it, but only touches it, and that mercifully, since He does
this in order to grant the soul favours and not to chastise it.
CHAPTER VI
Of other kinds of pain that
the soul suffers in this night.
THE third kind of suffering and pain that the
soul endures in this state results from the fact that two other extremes meet
here in one, namely, the Divine and the human. The Divine is this purgative
contemplation, and the human is the subject—that is, the soul. The Divine
assails the soul in order to renew it and thus to make it Divine; and,
stripping it of the habitual affections and attachments of the old man, to
which it is very closely united, knit together and conformed, destroys and
consumes its spiritual substance, and absorbs it in deep and profound darkness.
As a result of this, the soul feels itself to be perishing and melting away, in
the presence and sight of its miseries, in a cruel spiritual death, even as if
it had been swallowed by a beast and felt itself being devoured in the darkness
of its belly, suffering such anguish as was endured by Jonas in the belly of
that beast of the sea.[116] For in this sepulchre of
dark death it must needs abide until the spiritual resurrection which it hopes
for.
2. A description of this suffering and pain,
although in truth it transcends all description, is given by David, when he
says: 'The lamentations of death compassed me about; the pains of hell
surrounded me; I cried in my tribulation.'[117] But what the sorrowful soul
feels most in this condition is its clear perception, as it thinks, that God
has abandoned it, and, in His abhorrence of it, has flung it into darkness; it
is a grave and piteous grief for it to believe that God has forsaken it. It is
this that David also felt so much in a like case, saying: 'After the manner
wherein the wounded are dead in the sepulchres,' being now cast off by Thy
hand, so that Thou rememberest them no more, even so have they set me in the
deepest and lowest lake, in the dark places and in the shadow of death, and Thy
fury is confirmed upon me and all Thy waves Thou hast brought in upon me.'[118] For indeed, when this
purgative contemplation is most severe, the soul feels very keenly the shadow
of death and the lamentations of death and the pains of hell, which consist in
its feeling itself to be without God, and chastised and cast out, and unworthy
of Him; and it feels that He is wroth with it. All this is felt by the soul in
this condition—yea, and more, for it believes that it is so with it for ever.
3. It feels, too, that all creatures have forsaken
it, and that it is contemned by them, particularly by its friends. Wherefore
David presently continues, saying: 'Thou hast put far from me my friends and
acquaintances; they have counted me an abomination.'[119] To all this will Jonas
testify, as one who likewise experienced it in the belly of the beast, both
bodily and spiritually. 'Thou hast cast me forth (he says) into the deep, into
the heart of the sea, and the flood hath compassed me; all its billows and
waves have passed over me. And I said, "I am cast away out of the sight of
Thine eyes, but I shall once again see Thy holy temple" (which he says,
because God purifies the soul in this state that it may see His temple); the
waters compassed me, even to the soul, the deep hath closed me round about, the
ocean hath covered my head, I went down to the lowest parts of the mountains;
the bars of the earth have shut me up for ever.'[120] By these bars are here
understood, in this sense, imperfections of the soul, which have impeded it
from enjoying this delectable contemplation.
4. The fourth kind of pain is caused in the soul by
another excellence of this dark contemplation, which is its majesty and
greatness, from which arises in the soul a consciousness of the other extreme
which is in itself—namely, that of the deepest poverty and wretchedness: this
is one of the chiefest pains that it suffers in this purgation. For it feels
within itself a profound emptiness and impoverishment of three kinds of good,
which are ordained for the pleasure of the soul which are the temporal, the
natural and the spiritual; and finds itself set in the midst of the evils
contrary to these, namely, miseries of imperfection, aridity and emptiness of
the apprehensions of the faculties and abandonment of the spirit in darkness.
Inasmuch as God here purges the soul according to the substance of its sense
and spirit, and according to the interior and exterior faculties, the soul must
needs be in all its parts reduced to a state of emptiness, poverty and
abandonment and must be left dry and empty and in darkness. For the sensual
part is purified in aridity, the faculties are purified in the emptiness of
their perceptions and the spirit is purified in thick darkness.
5. All this God brings to pass by means of this dark
contemplation; wherein the soul not only suffers this emptiness and the
suspension of these natural supports and perceptions, which is a most
afflictive suffering (as if a man were suspended or held in the air so that he
could not breathe), but likewise He is purging the soul, annihilating it,
emptying it or consuming in it (even as fire consumes the mouldiness and the
rust of metal) all the affections and imperfect habits which it has contracted
in its whole life. Since these are deeply rooted in the substance of the soul,
it is wont to suffer great undoings and inward torment, besides the said
poverty and emptiness, natural and spiritual, so that there may here be
fulfilled that passage from Ezechiel which says: 'Heap together the bones and I
will burn them in the fire; the flesh shall be consumed and the whole composition
shall be burned and the bones shall be destroyed.'[121] Herein is understood the
pain which is suffered in the emptiness and poverty of the substance of the
soul both in sense and in spirit. And concerning this he then says: 'Set it
also empty upon the coals, that its metal may become hot and molten, and its
uncleanness may be destroyed within it, and its rust may be consumed.'[122] Herein is described the
grave suffering which the soul here endures in the purgation of the fire of
this contemplation, for the Prophet says here that, in order for the rust of
the affections which are within the soul to be purified and destroyed, it is
needful that, in a certain manner, the soul itself should be annihilated and
destroyed, since these passions and imperfections have become natural to it.
6. Wherefore, because the soul is purified in this
furnace like gold in a crucible, as says the Wise Man,[123] it is conscious of this
complete undoing of itself in its very substance, together with the direst
poverty, wherein it is, as it were, nearing its end, as may be seen by that
which David says of himself in this respect, in these words: 'Save me, Lord (he
cries to God), for the waters have come in even unto my soul; I am made fast in
the mire of the deep and there is no place where I can stand; I am come into
the depth of the sea and a tempest hath overwhelmed me; I have laboured crying,
my throat has become hoarse, mine eyes have failed whilst I hope in my God.'[124] Here God greatly humbles
the soul in order that He may afterwards greatly exalt it; and if He ordained
not that, when these feelings arise within the soul, they should speedily be
stilled, it would die in a very short space; but there are only occasional
periods when it is conscious of their greatest intensity. At times, however,
they are so keen that the soul seems to be seeing hell and perdition opened. Of
such are they that in truth go down alive into hell, being purged here on earth
in the same manner as there, since this purgation is that which would have to
be accomplished there. And thus the soul that passes through this either enters
not that place[125] at all, or tarries there
but for a very short time; for one hour of purgation here is more profitable
than are many there.
CHAPTER VII
Continues the same matter
and considers other afflictions end constraints of the will.
THE afflictions and constraints of the will
are now very great likewise, and of such a kind that they sometimes transpierce
the soul with a sudden remembrance of the evils in the midst of which it finds
itself, and with the uncertainty of finding a remedy for them. And to this is
added the remembrance of times of prosperity now past; for as a rule souls that
enter this night have had many consolations from God, and have rendered Him
many services, and it causes them the greater grief to see that they are far
removed from that happiness and unable to enter into it. This was also
described by Job, who had had experience of it, in these words: 'I, who was
wont to be wealthy and rich, am suddenly undone and broken to pieces; He hath
taken me by my neck; He hath broken me and set me up for His mark to wound me;
He hath compassed me round about with His lances; He hath wounded all my loins;
He hath not spared; He hath poured out my bowels on the earth; He hath broken
me with wound upon wound; He hath assailed me as a strong giant; I have sewed
sackcloth upon my skin and have covered my flesh with ashes; my face is become
swollen with weeping and mine eyes are blinded.'[126]
2. So many and so grievous are the afflictions of
this night, and so many passages of Scripture are there which could be cited to
this purpose, that time and strength would fail us to write of them, for all
that can be said thereof is certainly less than the truth. From the passages
already quoted some idea may be gained of them. And, that we may bring the
exposition of this line to a close and explain more fully what is worked in the
soul by this night, I shall tell what Jeremias felt about it, which, since
there is so much of it, he describes and bewails in many words after this
manner: 'I am the man that see my poverty in the rod of His indignation; He
hath threatened me and brought me into darkness and not into light. So far hath
He turned against me and hath converted His hand upon me all the day! My skin
and my flesh hath He made old; He hath broken my bones; He hath made a fence
around me and compassed me with gall and trial; He hath set me in dark places,
as those that are dead for ever. He hath made a fence around me and against me,
that I may not go out; He hath made my captivity heavy. Yea, and when I have
cried and have entreated, He hath shut out my prayer. He hath enclosed my paths
and ways out with square stones; He hath thwarted my steps. He hath set
ambushes for me; He hath become to me a lion in a secret place. He hath turned
aside my steps and broken me in pieces, He hath made me desolate; He hath bent
His bow and set me as a mark for His arrow. He hath shot into my reins the
daughters of His quiver. I have become a derision to all the people, and laughter
and scorn for them all the day. He hath filled me with bitterness and hath made
me drunken with wormwood. He hath broken my teeth by number; He hath fed me
with ashes. My soul is cast out from peace; I have forgotten good things. And I
said: "Mine end is frustrated and cut short, together with my desire and
my hope from the Lord. Remember my poverty and my excess, the wormwood and the
gall. I shall be mindful with remembrance and my soul shall be undone within me
in pains."'[127]
3. All these complaints Jeremias makes about these
pains and trials, and by means of them he most vividly depicts the sufferings
of the soul in this spiritual night and purgation. Wherefore the soul that God
sets in this tempestuous and horrible night is deserving of great compassion.
For, although it experiences much happiness by reason of the great blessings
that must arise on this account within it, when, as Job says, God raises up
profound blessings in the soul out of darkness, and brings up to light the
shadow of death,[128] so that, as David says, His
light comes to be as was His darkness;[129] yet notwithstanding, by
reason of the dreadful pain which the soul is suffering, and of the great
uncertainty which it has concerning the remedy for it, since it believes, as
this prophet says here, that its evil will never end, and it thinks, as David
says likewise, that God set it in dark places like those that are dead,[130] and for this reason brought
its spirit within it into anguish and troubled its heart,[131] it suffers great pain and
grief, since there is added to all this (because of the solitude and
abandonment caused in it by this dark night) the fact that it finds no
consolation or support in any instruction nor in a spiritual master. For,
although in many ways its director may show it good reason for being comforted
because of the blessings which are contained in these afflictions, it cannot
believe him. For it is so greatly absorbed and immersed in the realization of
those evils wherein it sees its own miseries so clearly, that it thinks that,
as its director observes not that which it sees and feels, he is speaking in this
manner because he understands it not; and so, instead of comfort, it rather
receives fresh affliction, since it believes that its director's advice
contains no remedy for its troubles. And, in truth, this is so; for, until the
Lord shall have completely purged it after the manner that He wills, no means
or remedy is of any service or profit for the relief of its affliction; the
more so because the soul is as powerless in this case as one who has been
imprisoned in a dark dungeon, and is bound hand and foot, and can neither move
nor see, nor feel any favour whether from above or from below, until the spirit
is humbled, softened and purified, and grows so keen and delicate and pure that
it can become one with the Spirit of God, according to the degree of union of
love which His mercy is pleased to grant it; in proportion to this the
purgation is of greater or less severity and of greater or less duration.
4. But, if it is to be really effectual, it will
last for some years, however severe it be; since the purgative process allows
intervals of relief wherein, by the dispensation of God, this dark
contemplation ceases to assail the soul in the form and manner of purgation,
and assails it after an illuminative and a loving manner, wherein the soul,
like one that has gone forth from this dungeon and imprisonment, and is brought
into the recreation of spaciousness and liberty, feels and experiences great
sweetness of peace and loving friendship with God, together with a ready
abundance of spiritual communication. This is to the soul a sign of the health
which is being wrought within it by the said purgation and a foretaste of the
abundance for which it hopes. Occasionally this is so great that the soul
believes its trials to be at last over. For spiritual things in the soul, when
they are most purely spiritual, have this characteristic that, if trials come
to it, the soul believes that it will never escape from them, and that all its
blessings are now over, as has been seen in the passages quoted; and, if
spiritual blessings come, the soul believes in the same way that its troubles
are now over, and that blessings will never fail it. This was so with David,
when he found himself in the midst of them, as he confesses in these words: 'I
said in my abundance: "I shall never be moved."'[132]
5. This happens because the actual possession by the
spirit of one of two contrary things itself makes impossible the actual
possession and realization of the other contrary thing; this is not so,
however, in the sensual part of the soul, because its apprehension is weak.
But, as the spirit is not yet completely purged and cleansed from the
affections that it has contracted from its lower part, while changing not in so
far as it is spirit, it can be moved to further afflictions in so far as these
affections sway it. In this way, as we see, David was afterwards moved, and
experienced many ills and afflictions, although in the time of his abundance he
had thought and said that he would never be moved. Just so is it with the soul
in this condition, when it sees itself moved by that abundance of spiritual
blessings, and, being unable to see the root of the imperfection and impurity
which still remain within it, thinks that its trials are over.
6. This thought, however, comes to the soul but
seldom, for, until spiritual purification is complete and perfected, the sweet
communication is very rarely so abundant as to conceal from the soul the root
which remains hidden, in such a way that the soul can cease to feel that there
is something that it lacks within itself or that it has still to do. Thus it
cannot completely enjoy that relief, but feels as if one of its enemies were
within it, and although this enemy is, as it were, hushed and asleep, it fears
that he will come to life again and attack it.[133] And this is what indeed
happens, for, when the soul is most secure and least alert, it is dragged down
and immersed again in another and a worse degree of affliction which is severer
and darker and more grievous than that which is past; and this new affliction
will continue for a further period of time, perhaps longer than the first. And
the soul once more comes to believe that all its blessings are over for ever.
Although it had thought during its first trial that there were no more
afflictions which it could suffer, and yet, after the trial was over, it
enjoyed great blessings, this experience is not sufficient to take away its
belief, during this second degree of trial, that all is now over for it and
that it will never again be happy as in the past. For, as I say, this belief,
of which the soul is so sure, is caused in it by the actual apprehension of the
spirit, which annihilates within it all that is contrary to it.
7. This is the reason why those who lie in purgatory
suffer great misgivings as to whether they will ever go forth from it and
whether their pains will ever be over. For, although they have the habit of the
three theological virtues—faith, hope and charity—the present realization which
they have of their afflictions and of their deprivation of God allows them not
to enjoy the present blessing and consolation of these virtues. For, although
they are able to realize that they have a great love for God, this is no
consolation to them, since they cannot think that God loves them or that they
are worthy that He should do so; rather, as they see that they are deprived of
Him, and left in their own miseries, they think that there is that in
themselves which provides a very good reason why they should with perfect
justice be abhorred and cast out by God for ever.[134] And thus although the soul
in this purgation is conscious that it has a great love for God and would give
a thousand lives for Him (which is the truth, for in these trials such souls
love their God very earnestly), yet this is no relief to it, but rather brings
it greater affliction. For it loves Him so much that it cares about naught
beside; when, therefore, it sees itself to be so wretched that it cannot
believe that God loves it, nor that there is or will ever be reason why He
should do so, but rather that there is reason why it should be abhorred, not
only by Him, but by all creatures for ever, it is grieved to see in itself
reasons for deserving to be cast out by Him for Whom it has such great love and
desire.
CHAPTER VIII
Of other pains which afflict
the soul in this state.
BUT there is another thing here that afflicts
and distresses the soul greatly, which is that, as this dark night has hindered
its faculties and affections in this way, it is unable to raise its affection
or its mind to God, neither can it pray to Him, thinking, as Jeremias thought
concerning himself, that God has set a cloud before it through which its prayer
cannot pass.[135] For it is this that is
meant by that which is said in the passage referred to, namely: 'He hath shut
and enclosed my paths with square stones.'[136] And if it sometimes prays
it does so with such lack of strength and of sweetness that it thinks that God
neither hears it nor pays heed to it, as this Prophet likewise declares in the
same passage, saying: 'When I cry and entreat, He hath shut out my prayer.'[137] In truth this is no time
for the soul to speak with God; it should rather put its mouth in the dust, as
Jeremias says, so that perchance there may come to it some present hope,[138] and it may endure its purgation
with patience. It is God Who is passively working here in the soul; wherefore
the soul can do nothing. Hence it can neither pray nor pay attention when it is
present at the Divine offices,[139] much less can it attend to
other things and affairs which are temporal. Not only so, but it has likewise
such distractions and times of such profound forgetfulness of the memory that
frequent periods pass by without its knowing what it has been doing or
thinking, or what it is that it is doing or is going to do, neither can it pay
attention, although it desire to do so, to anything that occupies it.
2. Inasmuch as not only is the understanding here
purged of its light, and the will of its affections, but the memory is also
purged of meditation and knowledge, it is well that it be likewise annihilated
with respect to all these things, so that that which David says of himself in
this purgation may by fulfilled, namely: 'I was annihilated and I knew not.'[140] This unknowing refers to
these follies and forgetfulnesses of the memory, which distractions and
forgetfulnesses are caused by the interior recollection wherein this
contemplation absorbs the soul. For, in order that the soul may be divinely
prepared and tempered with its faculties for the Divine union of love, it would
be well for it to be first of all absorbed, with all its faculties, in this
Divine and dark spiritual light of contemplation, and thus to be withdrawn from
all the affections and apprehensions of the creatures, which condition
ordinarily continues in proportion to its intensity. And thus, the simpler and
the purer is this Divine light in its assault upon the soul, the more does it
darken it, void it and annihilate it according to its particular apprehensions
and affections, with regard both to things above and to things below; and
similarly, the less simple and pure is it in this assault, the less deprivation
it causes it and the less dark is it. Now this is a thing that seems incredible,
to say that, the brighter and purer is supernatural and Divine light, the more
it darkens the soul, and that, the less bright and pure is it, the less dark it
is to the soul. Yet this may readily be understood if we consider what has been
proved above by the dictum of the philosopher—namely, that the brighter and the
more manifest in themselves are supernatural things the darker are they to our
understanding.
3. And, to the end that this may be understood the
more clearly, we shall here set down a similitude referring to common and
natural light. We observe that a ray of sunlight which enters through the
window is the less clearly visible according as it is the purer and freer from
specks, and the more of such specks and motes there are in the air, the brighter
is the light to the eye. The reason is that it is not the light itself that is
seen; the light is but the means whereby the other things that it strikes are
seen, and then it is also seen itself, through its reflection in them; were it
not for this, neither it nor they would have been seen. Thus if the ray of
sunlight entered through the window of one room and passed out through another
on the other side, traversing the room, and if it met nothing on the way, or if
there were no specks in the air for it to strike, the room would have no more
light than before, neither would the ray of light be visible. In fact, if we
consider it carefully, there is more darkness where the ray is, since it
absorbs and obscures any other light, and yet it is itself invisible, because,
as we have said, there are no visible objects which it can strike.
4. Now this is precisely what this Divine ray of
contemplation does in the soul. Assailing it with its Divine light, it
transcends the natural power of the soul, and herein it darkens it and deprives
it of all natural affections and apprehensions which it apprehended aforetime
by means of natural light; and thus it leaves it not only dark, but likewise
empty, according to its faculties and desires, both spiritual and natural. And,
by thus leaving it empty and in darkness, it purges and illumines it with
Divine spiritual light, although the soul thinks not that it has this light,
but believes itself to be in darkness, even as we have said of the ray of
light, which although it be in the midst of the room, yet, if it be pure and
meet nothing on its path, is not visible. With regard, however, to this
spiritual light by which the soul is assailed, when it has something to
strike—that is, when something spiritual presents itself to be understood,
however small a speck it be and whether of perfection or imperfection, or
whether it be a judgment of the falsehood or the truth of a thing—it then sees
and understands much more clearly than before it was in these dark places. And
exactly in the same way it discerns the spiritual light which it has in order
that it may readily discern the imperfection which is presented to it; even as,
when the ray of which we have spoken, within the room, is dark and not itself
visible, if one introduce a hand or any other thing into its path, the hand is
then seen and it is realized that that sunlight is present.
5. Wherefore, since this spiritual light is so
simple, pure and general, not appropriated or restricted to any particular
thing that can be understood, whether natural or Divine (since with respect to
all these apprehensions the faculties of the soul are empty and annihilated),
it follows that with great comprehensiveness and readiness the soul discerns
and penetrates whatsoever thing presents itself to it, whether it come from
above or from below; for which cause the Apostle said: That the spiritual man
searches all things, even the deep things of God.[141] For by this general and
simple wisdom is understood that which the Holy Spirit says through the Wise
Man, namely: That it reaches wheresoever it wills by reason of its purity;[142] that is to say, because it
is not restricted to any particular object of the intellect or affection. And this
is the characteristic of the spirit that is purged and annihilated with respect
to all particular affections and objects of the understanding, that in this
state wherein it has pleasure in nothing and understands nothing in particular,
but dwells in its emptiness, darkness and obscurity, it is fully prepared to
embrace everything to the end that those words of Saint Paul may be fulfilled
in it: Nihil habentes, et omnia possidentes.[143] For such poverty of spirit
as this would deserve such happiness.
CHAPTER IX
How, although this night
brings darkness to the spirit, it does so in order to illumine it and give it
light.
IT now remains to be said that, although this
happy night brings darkness to the spirit, it does so only to give it light in
everything; and that, although it humbles it and makes it miserable, it does so
only to exalt it and to raise it up; and, although it impoverishes it and
empties it of all natural affection and attachment, it does so only that it may
enable it to stretch forward, divinely, and thus to have fruition and
experience of all things, both above and below, yet to preserve its
unrestricted liberty of spirit in them all. For just as the elements, in order
that they may have a part in all natural entities and compounds, must have no
particular colour, odour or taste, so as to be able to combine with all tastes
odours and colours, just so must the spirit be simple, pure and detached from
all kinds of natural affection, whether actual or habitual, to the end that it
may be able freely to share in the breadth of spirit of the Divine Wisdom,
wherein, through its purity, it has experience of all the sweetness of all
things in a certain pre-eminently excellent way.[144] And without this purgation
it will be wholly unable to feel or experience the satisfaction of all this
abundance of spiritual sweetness. For one single affection remaining in the
spirit, or one particular thing to which, actually or habitually, it clings,
suffices to hinder it from feeling or experiencing or communicating the
delicacy and intimate sweetness of the spirit of love, which contains within
itself all sweetness to a most eminent degree.[145]
2. For, even as the children of Israel, solely
because they retained one single affection and remembrance—namely, with respect
to the fleshpots and the meals which they had tasted in Egypt[146]—could not relish the
delicate bread of angels, in the desert, which was the manna, which, as the
Divine Scripture says, held sweetness for every taste and turned to the taste
that each one desired;[147] even so the spirit cannot
succeed in enjoying the delights of the spirit of liberty, according to the
desire of the will, if it be still affectioned to any desire, whether actual or
habitual, or to particular objects of understanding, or to any other
apprehension. The reason for this is that the affections, feelings and
apprehensions of the perfect spirit, being Divine, are of another kind and of a
very different order from those that are natural. They are pre-eminent, so
that, in order both actually and habitually to possess the one, it is needful
to expel and annihilate the other, as with two contrary things, which cannot
exist together in one person. Therefore it is most fitting and necessary, if
the soul is to pass to these great things, that this dark night of
contemplation should first of all annihilate and undo it in its meannesses,
bringing it into darkness, aridity, affliction and emptiness; for the light
which is to be given to it is a Divine light of the highest kind, which
transcends all natural light, and which by nature can find no place in the
understanding.
3. And thus it is fitting that, if the understanding
is to be united with that light and become Divine in the state of perfection,
it should first of all be purged and annihilated as to its natural light, and,
by means of this dark contemplation, be brought actually into darkness. This darkness
should continue for as long as is needful in order to expel and annihilate the
habit which the soul has long since formed in its manner of understanding, and
the Divine light and illumination will then take its place. And thus, inasmuch
as that power of understanding which it had aforetime is natural, it follows
that the darkness which it here suffers is profound and horrible and most
painful, for this darkness, being felt in the deepest substance of the spirit,
seems to be substantial darkness. Similarly, since the affection of love which
is to be given to it in the Divine union of love is Divine, and therefore very
spiritual, subtle and delicate, and very intimate, transcending every affection
and feeling of the will, and every desire thereof, it is fitting that, in order
that the will may be able to attain to this Divine affection and most lofty
delight, and to feel it and experience it through the union of love, since it
is not, in the way of nature, perceptible to the will, it be first of all purged
and annihilated in all its affections and feelings, and left in a condition of
aridity and constraint, proportionate to the habit of natural affections which
it had before, with respect both to Divine things and to human. Thus, being
exhausted, withered and thoroughly tried in the fire of this dark
contemplation, and having driven away every kind[148] of evil spirit (as with the
heart of the fish which Tobias set on the coals[149]), it may have a simple and
pure disposition, and its palate may be purged and healthy, so that it may feel
the rare and sublime touches of Divine love, wherein it will see itself
divinely transformed, and all the contrarieties, whether actual or habitual,
which it had aforetime, will be expelled, as we are saying.
4. Moreover, in order to attain the said union to
which this dark night is disposing and leading it, the soul must be filled and
endowed with a certain glorious magnificence in its communion with God, which
includes within itself innumerable blessings springing from delights which
exceed all the abundance that the soul can naturally possess. For by nature the
soul is so weak and impure that it cannot receive all this. As Isaias says:
'Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath it entered into the heart of
man, that which God hath prepared, etc.'[150] It is meet, then, that the
soul be first of all brought into emptiness and poverty of spirit and purged
from all help, consolation and natural apprehension with respect to all things,
both above and below. In this way, being empty, it is able indeed to be poor in
spirit and freed from the old man, in order to live that new and blessed life
which is attained by means of this night, and which is the state of union with
God.
5. And because the soul is to attain to the
possession of a sense, and of a Divine knowledge, which is very generous and
full of sweetness, with respect to things Divine and human, which fall not
within the common experience and natural knowledge of the soul (because it
looks on them with eyes as different from those of the past as spirit is
different from sense and the Divine from the human), the spirit must be
straitened[151] and inured to hardships as
regards its common and natural experience, and be brought by means of this
purgative contemplation into great anguish and affliction, and the memory must
be borne far from all agreeable and peaceful knowledge, and have an intimated
sense and feeling that it is making a pilgrimage and being a stranger to all
things, so that it seems to it that all things are strange and of a different
kind from that which they were wont to be. For this night is gradually drawing
the spirit away from its ordinary and common experience of things and bringing
it nearer the Divine sense, which is a stranger and an alien to all human ways.
It seems now to the soul that it is going forth from its very self, with much
affliction. At other times it wonders if it is under a charm or a spell, and it
goes about marvelling at the things that it sees and hears, which seem to it
very strange and rare, though they are the same that it was accustomed to
experience aforetime. The reason of this is that the soul is now becoming alien
and remote from common sense and knowledge of things, in order that, being
annihilated in this respect, it may be informed with the Divine—which belongs
rather to the next life than to this.
6. The soul suffers all these afflictive purgations
of the spirit to the end that it may be begotten anew in spiritual life by
means of this Divine inflowing, and in these pangs may bring forth the spirit
of salvation, that the saying of Isaias may be fulfilled: 'In Thy sight, O
Lord, we have conceived, and we have been as in the pangs of labour, and we
have brought forth the spirit of salvation.'[152] Moreover, since by means of
this contemplative night the soul is prepared for the attainment of inward
peace and tranquillity, which is of such a kind and so delectable that, as the
Scripture says, it passes all understanding,[153] it behoves the soul to
abandon all its former peace. This was in reality no peace at all, since it was
involved in imperfections; but to the soul aforementioned it appeared to be so,
because it was following its own inclinations, which were for peace. It seemed,
indeed, to be a twofold peace—that is, the soul believed that it had already
acquired the peace of sense and that of spirit, for it found itself to be full
of the spiritual abundance of this peace of sense and of spirit—as I say, it is
still imperfect. First of all, then, it must be purged of that former peace and
disquieted concerning it and withdrawn from it.[154] Even so was Jeremias when,
in the passage which we quoted from him, he felt and lamented[155] thus, in order to express
the calamities of this night that is past, saying: 'My soul is withdrawn and
removed from peace.'[156]
7. This is a painful disturbance, involving many
misgivings, imaginings, and strivings which the soul has within itself,
wherein, with the apprehension and realization of the miseries it which it sees
itself, it fancies that it is lost and that its blessings have gone for ever.
Wherefore the spirit experiences pain and sighing so deep that they cause it
vehement spiritual groans and cries, to which at times it gives vocal
expression; when it has the necessary strength and power it dissolves into
tears, although this relief comes but seldom. David describes this very aptly,
in a Psalm, as one who has had experience of it, where he says: 'I was
exceedingly afflicted and humbled; I roared with the groaning of my heart.'[157] This roaring implies great
pain; for at times, with the sudden and acute remembrance of these miseries
wherein the soul sees itself, pain and affliction rise up and surround it, and
I know not how the affections of the soul could be described[158] save in the similitude of
holy Job, when he was in the same trials, and uttered these words: 'Even as the
overflowing of the waters, even so is my roaring.'[159] For just as at times the
waters make such inundations that they overwhelm and fill everything, so at
times this roaring and this affliction of the soul grow to such an extent that
they overwhelm it and penetrate it completely, filling it with spiritual pain
and anguish in all its deep affections and energies, to an extent surpassing
all possibility of exaggeration.
8. Such is the work wrought in the soul by this
night that hides the hopes of the light of day. With regard to this the prophet
Job says likewise: 'In the night my mouth is pierced with sorrows and they that
feed upon me sleep not.'[160] Now here by the mouth is
understood the will, which is transpierced with these pains that tear the soul
to pieces, neither ceasing nor sleeping, for the doubts and misgivings which
transpierce the soul in this way never cease.
9. Deep is this warfare and this striving, for the
peace which the soul hopes for will be very deep; and the spiritual pain is
intimate and delicate, for the love which it will possess will likewise be very
intimate and refined. The more intimate and the more perfect the finished work
is to be and to remain, the more intimate, perfect and pure must be the labour;
the firmer the edifice, the harder the labour. Wherefore, as Job says, the soul
is fading within itself, and its vitals are being consumed without any hope.[161] Similarly, because in the
state of perfection toward which it journeys by means of this purgative night
the soul will attain to the possession and fruition of innumerable blessings,
of gifts and virtues, both according to the substance of the soul and likewise
according to its faculties, it must needs see and feel itself withdrawn from
them all and deprived of them all and be empty and poor without them; and it
must needs believe itself to be so far from them that it cannot persuade itself
that it will ever reach them, but rather it must be convinced that all its good
things are over. The words of Jeremias have a similar meaning in that passage
already quoted, where he says: 'I have forgotten good things.'[162]
10. But let us now see the reason why this light of
contemplation, which is so sweet and blessed to the soul that there is naught
more desirable (for, as has been said above, it is the same wherewith the soul
must be united and wherein it must find all the good things in the state of
perfection that it desires), produces, when it assails the soul, these
beginnings which are so painful and these effects which are so disagreeable, as
we have here said.
1l. This question is easy for us to answer, by
explaining, as we have already done in part, that the cause of this is that, in
contemplation and the Divine inflowing, there is naught that of itself can
cause affliction, but that they rather cause great sweetness and delight, as we
shall say hereafter. The cause is rather the weakness and imperfection from
which the soul then suffers, and the dispositions which it has in itself and
which make it unfit for the reception of them. Wherefore, when the said Divine
light assails the soul, it must needs cause it to suffer after the manner
aforesaid.
CHAPTER X
Explains this purgation
fully by a comparison.
FOR the greater clearness of what has been
said, and of what has still to be said, it is well to observe at this point
that this purgative and loving knowledge or Divine light whereof we here speak
acts upon the soul which it is purging and preparing for perfect union with it
in the same way as fire acts upon a log of wood in order to transform it into
itself; for material fire, acting upon wood, first of all begins to dry it, by
driving out its moisture and causing it to shed the water which it contains
within itself. Then it begins to make it black, dark and unsightly, and even to
give forth a bad odour, and, as it dries it little by little, it brings out and
drives away all the dark and unsightly accidents which are contrary to the
nature of fire. And, finally, it begins to kindle it externally and give it
heat, and at last transforms it into itself and makes it as beautiful as fire.
In this respect, the wood has neither passivity nor activity of its own, save
for its weight, which is greater, and its substance, which is denser, than that
of fire, for it has in itself the properties and activities of fire. Thus it is
dry and it dries; it is hot and heats; it is bright and gives brightness; and
it is much less heavy than before. All these properties and effects are caused
in it by the fire.
2. In this same way we have to philosophize with
respect to this Divine fire of contemplative love, which, before it unites and
transforms the soul in itself, first purges it of all its contrary accidents.
It drives out its unsightliness, and makes it black and dark, so that it seems
worse than before and more unsightly and abominable than it was wont to be. For
this Divine purgation is removing all the evil and vicious humours which the
soul has never perceived because they have been so deeply rooted and grounded
in it; it has never realized, in fact, that it has had so much evil within
itself. But now that they are to be driven forth and annihilated, these humours
reveal themselves, and become visible to the soul because it is so brightly
illumined by this dark light of Divine contemplation (although it is no worse
than before, either in itself or in relation to God); and, as it sees in itself
that which it saw not before, it is clear to it that not only is it unfit to be
seen by God, but deserves His abhorrence, and that He does indeed abhor it. By
this comparison we can now understand many things concerning what we are saying
and purpose to say.
3. First, we can understand how the very light and
the loving wisdom which are to be united with the soul and to transform it are
the same that at the beginning purge and prepare it: even as the very fire
which transforms the log of wood into itself, and makes it part of itself, is
that which at the first was preparing it for that same purpose.
4. Secondly, we shall be able to see how these
afflictions are not felt by the soul as coming from the said Wisdom, since, as
the Wise Man says, all good things together come to the soul with her.[163] They are felt as coming
from the weakness and imperfection which belong to the soul; without such
purgation, the soul cannot receive its Divine light, sweetness and delight,
even as the log of wood, when the fire acts upon it, cannot immediately be
transformed until it be made ready; wherefore the soul is greatly afflicted.
This statement is fully supported by the Preacher, where he describes all that
he suffered in order that he might attain to union with wisdom and to the
fruition of it, saying thus: 'My soul hath wrestled with her and my bowels were
moved in acquiring her; therefore it shall possess a good possession.'[164]
5. Thirdly, we can learn here incidentally in what
manner souls are afflicted in purgatory. For the fire would have no power over
them, even though they came into contact with it, if they had no imperfections
for which to suffers. These are the material upon which the fire of purgatory
seizes; when that material is consumed there is naught else that can burn. So
here, when the imperfections are consumed, the affliction of the soul ceases
and its fruition remains.
6. The fourth thing that we shall learn here is the
manner wherein the soul, as it becomes purged and purified by means of this
fire of love, becomes ever more enkindled in love, just as the wood grows
hotter in proportion as it becomes the better prepared by the fire. This
enkindling of love, however, is not always felt by the soul, but only at times
when contemplation assails it less vehemently, for then it has occasion to see,
and even to enjoy, the work which is being wrought in it, and which is then
revealed to it. For it seems that the worker takes his hand from the work, and
draws the iron out of the furnace, in order that something of the work which is
being done may be seen; and then there is occasion for the soul to observe in
itself the good which it saw not while the work was going on. In the same way,
when the flame ceases to attack the wood, it is possible to see how much of it
has been enkindled.
7. Fifthly, we shall also learn from this comparison
what has been said above—namely, how true it is that after each of these
periods of relief the soul suffers once again, more intensely and keenly than
before. For, after that revelation just referred to has been made, and after
the more outward imperfections of the soul have been purified, the fire of love
once again attacks that which has yet to be consumed and purified more
inwardly. The suffering of the soul now becomes more intimate, subtle and
spiritual, in proportion as the fire refines away the finer,[165] more intimate and more
spiritual imperfections, and those which are most deeply rooted in its inmost
parts. And it is here just as with the wood, upon which the fire, when it
begins to penetrate it more deeply, acts with more force and vehemence[166] in preparing its most
inward part to possess it.
8. Sixthly, we shall likewise learn here the reason
why it seems to the soul that all its good is over, and that it is full of
evil, since naught comes to it at this time but bitterness; it is like the
burning wood, which is touched by no air nor by aught else than by consuming
fire. But, when there occur other periods of relief like the first, the
rejoicing of the soul will be more interior because the purification has been
more interior also.
9. Seventhly, we shall learn that, although the soul
has the most ample joy at these periods (so much so that, as we said, it
sometimes thinks that its trials can never return again, although it is certain
that they will return quickly), it cannot fail to realize, if it is aware (and
at times it is made aware) of a root of imperfection which remains, that its
joy is incomplete, because a new assault seems to be threatening it;[167] when this is so, the trial
returns quickly. Finally, that which still remains to be purged and enlightened
most inwardly cannot well be concealed from the soul in view of its experience
of its former purification;[168] even as also in the wood it
is the most inward part that remains longest unkindled,[169] and the difference between
it and that which has already been purged is clearly perceptible; and, when
this purification once more assails it most inwardly, it is no wonder if it
seems to the soul once more that all its good is gone, and that it never
expects to experience it again, for, now that it has been plunged into these
most inward sufferings, all good coming from without is over.[170]
10. Keeping this comparison, then, before our eyes,
together with what has already been said upon the first line of the first
stanza concerning this dark night and its terrible properties, it will be well
to leave these sad experiences of the soul and to begin to speak of the fruit
of its tears and their blessed properties, whereof the soul begins to sing from
this second line:
Kindled in love[171] with yearnings,
CHAPTER XI
Begins to explain the second
line of the first stanza. Describes how, as the fruit of these rigorous
constraints, the soul finds itself with the vehement passion of Divine love.
IN this line the soul describes the fire of
love which, as we have said, like the material fire acting upon the wood,
begins to take hold upon the soul in this night of painful contemplation. This
enkindling now described, although in a certain way it resembles that which we
described above as coming to pass in the sensual part of the soul, is in some
ways as different from that other as is the soul from the body, or the
spiritual part from the sensual. For this present kind is an enkindling of
spiritual love in the soul, which, in the midst of these dark confines, feels
itself to be keenly and sharply wounded in strong Divine love, and to have a
certain realization and foretaste of God, although it understands nothing
definitely, for, as we say, the understanding is in darkness.
2. The spirit feels itself here to be deeply and
passionately in love, for this spiritual enkindling produces the passion of
love. And, inasmuch as this love is infused, it is passive rather than active,
and thus it begets in the soul a strong passion of love. This love has in it
something of union with God, and thus to some degree partakes of its
properties, which are actions of God rather than of the soul, these being
subdued within it passively. What the soul does here is to give its consent;
the warmth and strength and temper and passion of love—or enkindling, as the
soul here calls it—belong[172] only to the love of God,
which enters increasingly into union with it. This love finds in the soul more
occasion and preparation to unite itself with it and to wound it, according as
all the soul's desires are the more recollected,[173] and are the more withdrawn
from and disabled for the enjoyment of aught either in Heaven or in earth.
3. This takes place to a great extent, as has
already been said, in this dark purgation, for God has so weaned all the
inclinations and caused them to be so recollected[174] that they cannot find
pleasure in anything they may wish. All this is done by God to the end that,
when He withdraws them and recollects them in Himself, the soul may have more
strength and fitness to receive this strong union of love of God, which He is
now beginning to give it through this purgative way, wherein the soul must love
with great strength and with all its desires and powers both of spirit and of
sense; which could not be if they were dispersed in the enjoyment of aught
else. For this reason David said to God, to the end that he might receive the
strength of the love of this union with God: 'I will keep my strength for
Thee;'[175] that is, I will keep the
entire capacity and all the desires and energies of my faculties, nor will I
employ their operation or pleasure in aught else than Thyself.
4. In this way it can be realized in some measure
how great and how strong may be this enkindling of love in the spirit, wherein
God keeps in recollection all the energies, faculties and desires of the soul,
both of spirit and of sense, so that all this harmony may employ its energies
and virtues in this love, and may thus attain to a true fulfilment of the first
commandment, which sets aside nothing pertaining to man nor excludes from this
love anything that is his, but says: 'Thou shalt love thy God with all thy
heart and with all thy mind, with all thy soul and with all thy strength.'[176]
5. When all the desires and energies of the soul,
then, have been recollected in this enkindling of love, and when the soul
itself has been touched and wounded in them all, and has been inspired with
passion, what shall we understand the movements and digressions of all these
energies and desires to be, if they find themselves enkindled and wounded with
strong love and without the possession and satisfaction thereof, in darkness
and doubt? They will doubtless be suffering hunger, like the dogs of which
David speaks as running about the city[177]; finding no satisfaction in
this love, they keep howling and groaning. For the touch of this love and
Divine fire dries up the spirit and enkindles its desires, in order to satisfy
its thirst for this Divine love, so much so that it turns upon itself a
thousand times and desires God in a thousand ways and manners, with the
eagerness and desire of the appetite. This is very well explained by David in a
psalm, where he says: 'My soul thirsted for Thee: in how many manners does my
soul long for Thee!'[178]—that is, in desires. And
another version reads: 'My soul thirsted for Thee, my soul is lost (or
perishes) for Thee.'
6. It is for this reason that the soul says in this
line that it was 'kindled in love with yearnings.'[179] For in all the things and
thoughts that it revolves within itself, and in all the affairs and matters
that present themselves to it, it loves in many ways, and also desires and
suffers in the desire in many ways, at all times and in all places, finding rest
in naught, and feeling this yearning in its enkindled wound, even as the
prophet Job declares, saying: 'As the hart[180] desireth the shadow, and as
the hireling desireth the end of his work, so I also had vain months and
numbered to myself wearisome and laborious nights. If I lie down to sleep, I
shall say: "When shall I arise?" And then I shall await the evening
and shall be full of sorrows even until the darkness of night.'[181] Everything becomes cramping
to this soul: it cannot live[182] within itself; it cannot
live either in Heaven or on earth; and it is filled with griefs until the
darkness comes to which Job here refers, speaking spiritually and in the sense
of our interpretation. What the soul here endures is afflictions and suffering
without the consolation of a certain hope of any light and spiritual good.
Wherefore the yearning and the grief of this soul in this enkindling of love
are greater because it is multiplied in two ways: first, by the spiritual
darkness wherein it finds itself, which afflicts it with its doubts and
misgivings; and then by the love of God, which enkindles and stimulates it,
and, with its loving wound, causes it a wondrous fear. These two kinds of
suffering at such a season are well described by Isaias, where he says: 'My
soul desired Thee in the night'[183]—that is, in misery.
7. This is one kind of suffering which proceeds from
this dark night; but, he goes on to say, with my spirit, in my bowels, until
the morning, I will watch for Thee. And this is the second way of grieving in
desire and yearning which comes from love in the bowels of the spirit, which
are the spiritual affections. But in the midst of these dark and loving afflictions
the soul feels within itself a certain companionship and strength, which bears
it company and so greatly strengthens it that, if this burden of grievous
darkness be taken away, it often feels itself to be alone, empty and weak. The
cause of this is that, as the strength and efficacy of the soul were derived
and communicated passively from the dark fire of love which assailed it, it
follows that, when that fire ceases to assail it, the darkness and power and
heat of love cease in the soul.
CHAPTER XII
Shows how this horrible
night is purgatory, and how in it the Divine wisdom illumines men on earth with
the same illumination that purges and illumines the angels in Heaven.
FROM what has been said we shall be able to
see how this dark night of loving fire, as it purges in the darkness, so also
in the darkness enkindles the soul. We shall likewise be able to see that, even
as spirits are purged in the next life with dark material fire, so in this life
they are purged and cleansed with the dark spiritual fire of love. The
difference is that in the next life they are cleansed with fire, while here
below they are cleansed and illumined with love only. It was this love that
David entreated, when he said: Cor mundum crea in me, Deus, etc.[184] For cleanness of heart is
nothing less than the love and grace of God. For the clean of heart are called
by our Saviour 'blessed'; which is as if He had called them 'enkindled with
love',[185] since blessedness is given
by nothing less than love.
2. And Jeremias well shows how the soul is purged
when it is illumined with this fire of loving wisdom (for God never grants
mystical wisdom without love, since love itself infuses it), where he says: 'He
hath sent fire into my bones, and hath taught me.'[186] And David says that the
wisdom of God is silver tried in fire[187]—that is, in purgative fire
of love. For this dark contemplation infuses into the soul love and wisdom
jointly, to each one according to his capacity and need, enlightening the soul
and purging it, in the words of the Wise Man, from its ignorances, as he said
was done to himself.
3. From this we shall also infer that the very
wisdom of God which purges these souls and illumines them purges the angels
from their ignorances, giving them knowledge, enlightening them as to that
which they knew not, and flowing down from God through the first hierarchies
even to the last, and thence to men.[188] All the works, therefore,
which are done by the angels, and all their inspirations, are said in the
Scriptures, with truth and propriety, to be the work of God and of themselves;
for ordinarily these inspirations come through the angels, and they receive
them likewise one from another without any delay—as quickly as a ray of
sunshine is communicated through many windows arranged in order. For although
it is true that the sun's ray itself passes through them all, still each one
passes it on and infuses it into the next, in a modified form, according to the
nature of the glass, and with rather more or rather less power and brightness,
according as it is nearer to the sun or farther from it.
4. Hence it follows that, the nearer to God are the
higher spirits and the lower, the more completely are they purged and
enlightened with more general purification; and that the lowest of them will
receive this illumination very much less powerfully and more remotely. Hence it
follows that man, who is the lowest of all those to whom this loving
contemplation flows down continually from God, will, when God desires to give
it him, receive it perforce after his own manner in a very limited way and with
great pain. For, when the light of God illumines an angel, it enlightens him
and enkindles[189] him in love, since, being
pure spirit, he is prepared for that infusion. But, when it illumines man, who
is impure and weak, it illumines him, as has been said above, according to his
nature. It plunges him into darkness and causes him affliction and distress, as
does the sun to the eye that is weak;[190] it enkindles him with
passionate yet afflictive love, until he be spiritualized and refined by this
same fire of love; and it purifies him until he can receive with sweetness the
union of this loving infusion after the manner of the angels, being now purged,
as by the help of the Lord we shall explain later. But meanwhile he receives
this contemplation and loving knowledge in the constraint and yearning of love
of which we are here speaking.
5. This enkindling and yearning of love are not
always perceived by the soul. For in the beginning, when this spiritual
purgation commences, all this Divine fire is used in drying up and making ready
the wood (which is the soul) rather than in giving it heat. But, as time goes
on, the fire begins to give heat to the soul, and the soul then very commonly
feels this enkindling and heat of love. Further, as the understanding is being
more and more purged by means of this darkness, it sometimes comes to pass that
this mystical and loving theology, as well as enkindling the will, strikes and
illumines the other faculty also—that of the understanding—with a certain
Divine light and knowledge, so delectably and delicately that it aids the will
to conceive a marvellous fervour, and, without any action of its own, there
burns in it this Divine fire of love, in living flames, so that it now appears
to the soul a living fire by reason of the living understanding which is given
to it. It is of this that David speaks in a Psalm, saying: 'My heart grew hot
within me, and, as I meditated, a certain fire was enkindled.'[191]
6. This enkindling of love, which accompanies the
union of these two faculties, the understanding and the will, which are here
united, is for the soul a thing of great richness and delight; for it is a
certain touch of the Divinity and is already the beginning[192] of the perfection of the
union of love for which it hopes. Now the soul attains not to this touch of so
sublime a sense and love of God, save when it has passed through many trials
and a great part of its purgation. But for other touches which are much lower
than these, and which are of ordinary occurrence, so much purgation is not
needful.
7. From what we have said it may here be inferred
how in these spiritual blessings, which are passively infused by God into the
soul, the will may very well love even though the understanding understand not;
and similarly the understanding may understand and the will love not. For,
since this dark night of contemplation consists of Divine light and love, just
as fire contains light and heat, it is not unbefitting that, when this loving
light is communicated, it should strike the will at times more effectively by
enkindling it with love and leaving the understanding in darkness instead of
striking it with light; and, at other times, by enlightening it with light, and
giving it understanding, but leaving the will in aridity (as it is also true
that the heat of the fire can be received without the light being seen, and
also the light of it can be seen without the reception of heat); and this is
wrought by the Lord, Who infuses as He wills.[193]
CHAPTER XIII
Of other delectable effects
which are wrought in the soul by this dark night of contemplation.
THIS type of enkindling will explain to us
certain of the delectable effects which this dark night of contemplation works
in the soul. For at certain times, as we have just said, the soul becomes
enlightened in the midst of all this darkness, and the light shines in the
darkness;[194] this mystical intelligence
flows down into the understanding and the will remains in dryness—I mean,
without actual union of love, with a serenity and simplicity which are so
delicate and delectable to the sense of the soul that no name can be given to
them. Thus the presence of God is felt, now after one manner, now after
another.
2. Sometimes, too, as has been said, it wounds the
will at the same time, and enkindles love sublimely, tenderly and strongly; for
we have already said that at certain times these two faculties, the
understanding and the will, are united, when, the more they see, the more
perfect and delicate is the purgation of the understanding. But, before this
state is reached, it is more usual for the touch of the enkindling of love to
be felt in the will than for the touch of intelligence to be felt in the
understanding.
3. But one question arises here, which is this: Why,
since these two faculties are being purged together, are the enkindling and the
love of purgative contemplation at first more commonly felt in the will than
the intelligence thereof is felt in the understanding? To this it may be
answered that this passive love does not now directly strike the will, for the
will is free, and this enkindling of love is a passion of love rather than the
free act of the will; for this heat of love strikes the substance of the soul
and thus moves the affections passively. And so this is called passion of love
rather than a free act of the will, an act of the will being so called only in
so far as it is free. But these passions and affections subdue the will, and
therefore it is said that, if the soul conceives passion with a certain
affection, the will conceives passion; and this is indeed so, for in this
manner the will is taken captive and loses its liberty, according as the
impetus and power of its passion carry it away. And therefore we can say that
this enkindling of love is in the will—that is, it enkindles the desire of the
will; and thus, as we say, this is called passion of love rather than the free
work of the will. And, because the receptive passion of the understanding can
receive intelligence only in a detached and passive way (and this is impossible
without its having been purged), therefore until this happens the soul feels
the touch of intelligence less frequently than that of the passion of love. For
it is not necessary to this end that the will should be so completely purged
with respect to the passions, since these very passions help it to feel
impassioned love.
4. This enkindling and thirst of love, which in this
case belongs to the spirit, is very different from that other which we
described in writing of the night of sense. For, though the sense has also its
part here, since it fails not to participate in the labour of the spirit, yet
the source and the keenness of the thirst of love is felt in the superior part
of the soul—that is, in the spirit. It feels, and understands what it feels and
its lack of what it desires, in such a way that all its affliction of sense,
although greater without comparison than in the first night of sense, is as
naught to it, because it recognizes within itself the lack of a great good
which can in no way be measured.
5. But here we must note that although, at the
beginning, when this spiritual night commences, this enkindling of love is not
felt, because this fire of love has not begun to take a hold, God gives the
soul, in place of it, an estimative love of Himself so great that, as we have
said, the greatest sufferings and trials of which it is conscious in this night
are the anguished thoughts that it[195] has lost God and the fears
that He has abandoned it. And thus we may always say that from the very
beginning of this night the soul is touched with yearnings of love, which is
now that of estimation,[196] and now again, that of
enkindling. And it is evident that the greatest suffering which it feels in
these trials is this misgiving; for, if it could be certified at that time that
all is not lost and over, but that what is happening to it is for the best—as
it is—and that God is not wroth, it would care naught for all these
afflictions, but would rejoice to know that God is making use of them for His
good pleasure. For the love of estimation which it has for God is so great,
even though it may not realize this and may be in darkness, that it would be
glad, not only to suffer in this way, but even to die many times over in order
to give Him satisfaction. But when once the flame has enkindled the soul, it is
wont to conceive, together with the estimation that it already has for God,
such power and energy, and such yearning for Him, when He communicates to it
the heat of love, that, with great boldness, it disregards everything and
ceases to pay respect to anything, such are the power and the inebriation of
love and desire. It regards not what it does, for it would do strange and
unusual things in whatever way and manner may present themselves, if thereby
its soul might find Him Whom it loves.
6. It was for this reason that Mary Magdalene,
though as greatly concerned for her own appearance as she was aforetime, took
no heed of the multitude of men who were at the feast, whether they were of
little or of great importance; neither did she consider that it was not seemly,
and that it looked ill, to go and weep and shed tears among the guests provided
that, without delaying an hour or waiting for another time and season, she
could reach Him for love of Whom her soul was already wounded and enkindled.
And such is the inebriating power and the boldness of love, that, though she
knew her Beloved to be enclosed in the sepulchre by the great sealed stone, and
surrounded by soldiers who were guarding Him lest His disciples should steal
Him away,[197] she allowed none of these
things to impede her, but went before daybreak with the ointments to anoint
Him.
7. And finally, this inebriating power and yearning
of love caused her to ask one whom she believed to be a gardener and to have
stolen Him away from the sepulchre, to tell her, if he had taken Him, where he
had laid Him, that she might take Him away;[198] considering not that such a
question, according to independent judgment and reason, was foolish; for it was
evident that, if the other had stolen Him, he would not say so, still less
would he allow Him to be taken away. It is a characteristic of the power and
vehemence of love that all things seem possible to it, and it believes all men
to be of the same mind as itself. For it thinks that there is naught wherein
one may be employed, or which one may seek, save that which it seeks itself and
that which it loves; and it believes that there is naught else to be desired,
and naught wherein it may be employed, save that one thing, which is pursued by
all. For this reason, when the Bride went out to seek her Beloved, through
streets and squares,[199] thinking that all others
were doing the same, she begged them that, if they found Him, they would speak
to Him and say that she was pining for love of Him.[200] Such was the power of the
love of this Mary that she thought that, if the gardener would tell her where
he had hidden Him, she would go and take Him away, however difficult it might
be made for her.
8. Of this manner, then, are the yearnings of love
whereof this soul becomes conscious when it has made some progress in this
spiritual purgation. For it rises up by night (that is, in this purgative
darkness) according to the affections of the will. And with the yearnings and
vehemence of the lioness or the she-bear going to seek her cubs when they have
been taken away from her and she finds them not, does this wounded soul go
forth to seek its God. For, being in darkness, it feels itself to be without Him
and to be dying of love for Him. And this is that impatient love wherein the
soul cannot long subsist without gaining its desire or dying. Such was Rachel's
desire for children when she said to Jacob: 'Give me children, else shall I
die.'[201]
9. But we have now to see how it is that the soul
which feels itself so miserable and so unworthy of God, here in this purgative
darkness, has nevertheless strength, and is sufficiently bold and daring, to
journey towards union with God. The reason is that, as love continually gives
it strength wherewith it may love indeed, and as the property of love is to
desire to be united, joined and made equal and like to the object of its love,
that it may perfect itself in love's good things, hence it comes to pass that,
when this soul is not perfected in love, through not having as yet attained to
union, the hunger and thirst that it has for that which it lacks (which is
union) and the strength set by love in the will which has caused it to become
impassioned, make it bold and daring by reason of the enkindling of its will,
although in its understanding, which is still dark and unenlightened, it feels
itself to be unworthy and knows itself to be miserable.
10. I will not here omit to mention the reason why
this Divine light, which is always light to the soul, illumines it not as soon
as it strikes it, as it does afterwards, but causes it the darkness and the
trials of which we have spoken. Something has already been said concerning
this, but the question must now be answered directly. The darkness and the
other evils of which the soul is conscious when this Divine light strikes it
are not darkness or evils caused by this light, but pertain to the soul itself,
and the light illumines it so that it may see them. Wherefore it does indeed
receive light from this Divine light; but the soul cannot see at first, by its
aid, anything beyond what is nearest to it, or rather, beyond what is within
it—namely, its darknesses or its miseries, which it now sees through the mercy of
God, and saw not aforetime, because this supernatural light illumined it not.
And this is the reason why at first it is conscious of nothing beyond darkness
and evil; after it has been purged, however, by means of the knowledge and
realization of these, it will have eyes to see, by the guidance of this light,
the blessings of the Divine light; and, once all these darknesses and
imperfections have been driven out from the soul, it seems that the benefits
and the great blessings which the soul is gaining in this blessed night of
contemplation become clearer.
11. From what has been said, it is clear that God
grants the soul in this state the favour of purging it and healing it with this
strong lye of bitter purgation, according to its spiritual and its sensual
part, of all the imperfect habits and affections which it had within itself
with respect to temporal things and to natural, sensual and spiritual things,
its inward faculties being darkened, and voided of all these, its spiritual and
sensual affections being constrained and dried up, and its natural energies
being attenuated and weakened with respect to all this (a condition which it
could never attain of itself, as we shall shortly say). In this way God makes
it to die to all that is not naturally God, so that, once it is stripped and
denuded of its former skin, He may begin to clothe it anew. And thus its youth
is renewed like the eagle's and it is clothed with the new man, which, as the
Apostle says, is created according to God.[202] This is naught else but His
illumination of the understanding with supernatural light, so that it is no
more a human understanding but becomes Divine through union with the Divine. In
the same way the will is informed with Divine love, so that it is a will that is
now no less than Divine, nor does it love otherwise than divinely, for it is
made and united in one with the Divine will and love. So, too, is it with the
memory; and likewise the affections and desires are all changed and converted
divinely, according to God. And thus this soul will now be a soul of heaven,
heavenly, and more Divine than human. All this, as we have been saying, and
because of what we have said, God continues to do and to work in the soul by
means of this night, illumining and enkindling it divinely with yearnings for
God alone and for naught else whatsoever. For which cause the soul then very
justly and reasonably adds the third line to the song, which says:
. . .
oh, happy chance!—
I went forth without being observed.
CHAPTER XIV
Wherein are set down and
explained the last three lines of the first stanza.
THIS happy chance was the reason for which
the soul speaks, in the next lines, as follows:
I went forth without being observed, My house being
now at rest.
It takes the metaphor from one who, in order
the better to accomplish something, leaves his house by night and in the dark,
when those that are in the house are now at rest, so that none may hinder him.
For this soul had to go forth to perform a deed so heroic and so rare—namely to
become united with its Divine Beloved—and it had to leave its house, because
the Beloved is not found save alone and without, in solitude. It was for this
reason that the Bride desired to find Him alone, saying: 'Who would give Thee
to me, my brother, that I might find Thee alone, without, and that my love
might be communicated to Thee.'[203] It is needful for the
enamoured soul, in order to attain to its desired end, to do likewise, going
forth at night, when all the domestics in its house are sleeping and at
rest—that is, when the low operations, passions and desires of the soul (who
are the people of the household) are, because it is night, sleeping and at
rest. When these are awake, they invariably hinder the soul from seeking its good,
since they are opposed to its going forth in freedom. These are they of whom
Our Saviour speaks in the Gospel, saying that they are the enemies of man.[204] And thus it would be meet
that their operations and motions should be put to sleep in this night, to the
end that they may not hinder the soul from attaining the supernatural blessings
of the union of love of God, for, while these are alive and active, this cannot
be. For all their work and their natural motions hinder, rather than aid, the
soul's reception of the spiritual blessings of the union of love, inasmuch as
all natural ability is impotent with respect to the supernatural blessings that
God, by means of His own infusion, bestows upon the soul passively, secretly
and in silence. And thus it is needful that all the faculties should receive
this infusion, and that, in order to receive it, they should remain passive,
and not interpose their own base acts and vile inclinations.
2. It was a happy chance for this soul that on this
night God should put to sleep all the domestics in its house—that is, all the
faculties, passions, affections and desires which live in the soul, both
sensually and spiritually. For thus it went forth 'without being observed'—that
is, without being hindered by these affections, etc., for they were put to
sleep and mortified in this night, in the darkness of which they were left,
that they might not notice or feel anything after their own low and natural manner,
and might thus be unable to hinder the soul from going forth from itself and
from the house of its sensuality. And thus only could the soul attain to the
spiritual union of perfect love of God.
3. Oh, how happy a chance is this for the soul which
can free itself from the house of its sensuality! None can understand it,
unless, as it seems to me, it be the soul that has experienced it. For such a
soul will see clearly how wretched was the servitude in which it lay and to how
many miseries it was subject when it was at the mercy of its faculties and
desires, and will know how the life of the spirit is true liberty and wealth,
bringing with it inestimable blessings. Some of these we shall point out, as we
proceed, in the following stanzas, wherein it will be seen more clearly what
good reason the soul has to sing of the happy chance of its passage from this
dreadful night which has been described above.
CHAPTER XV
Sets down the second stanza
and its exposition.
In darkness and secure, By the secret ladder,
disguised—oh, happy chance!
In darkness and concealment, My house being now at
rest.
IN this stanza the soul still continues to
sing of certain properties of the darkness of this night, reiterating how great
is the happiness which came to it through them. It speaks of them in replying
to a certain tacit objection, saying that it is not to be supposed that,
because in this night and darkness it has passed through so many tempests of
afflictions, doubts, fears and horrors, as has been said, it has for that
reason run any risk of being lost. On the contrary, it says, in the darkness of
this night it has gained itself. For in the night it has freed itself and
escaped subtly from its enemies, who were continually hindering its progress.
For in the darkness of the night it changed its garments and disguised itself
with three liveries and colours which we shall describe hereafter; and went
forth by a very secret ladder, which none in the house knew, the which ladder,
as we shall observe likewise in the proper place, is living faith. By this
ladder the soul went forth in such complete hiding and concealment, in order
the better to execute its purpose, that it could not fail to be in great
security; above all since in this purgative night the desires, affections and
passions of the soul are put to sleep, mortified and quenched, which are they
that, when they were awake and alive, consented not to this.
The first line, then, runs thus:[205]
In darkness and secure.
CHAPTER XVI
Explains how, though in
darkness, the soul walks securely.
THE darkness which the soul here describes
relates, as we have said, to the desires and faculties, sensual, interior and
spiritual, for all these are darkened in this night as to their natural light,
so that, being purged in this respect, they may be illumined with respect to
the supernatural. For the spiritual and the sensual desires are put to sleep
and mortified, so that they can experience[206] nothing, either Divine or
human; the affections of the soul are oppressed and constrained, so that they
can neither move nor find support in anything; the imagination is bound and can
make no useful reflection; the memory is gone; the understanding is in
darkness, unable to understand anything; and hence the will likewise is arid
and constrained and all the faculties are void and useless; and in addition to
all this a thick and heavy cloud is upon the soul, keeping it in affliction,
and, as it were, far away from God.[207] It is in this kind of
'darkness' that the soul says here it travelled 'securely.'
2. The reason for this has been clearly expounded;
for ordinarily the soul never strays save through its desires or its tastes or
its reflections or its understanding or its affections; for as a rule it has
too much or too little of these, or they vary or go astray, and hence the soul
becomes inclined to that which behoves it not. Wherefore, when all these
operations and motions are hindered, it is clear that the soul is secure
against being led astray by them; for it is free, not only from itself, but
likewise from its other enemies, which are the world and the devil. For when
the affections and operations of the soul are quenched, these enemies cannot
make war upon it by any other means or in any other manner.
3. It follows from this that, the greater is the
darkness wherein the soul journeys and the more completely is it voided of its
natural operations, the greater is its security. For, as the Prophet says,[208] perdition comes to the soul
from itself alone—that is, from its sensual and interior desires and
operations; and good, says God, comes from Me alone. Wherefore, when it is thus
hindered from following the things that lead it into evil, there will then come
to it forthwith the blessings of union with God in its desires and faculties,
which in that union He will make Divine and celestial. Hence, at the time of
this darkness, if the soul considers the matter, it will see very clearly how
little its desire and its faculties are being diverted to things that are
useless and harmful; and how secure it is from vainglory and pride and
presumption, vain and false rejoicing and many other things. It follows
clearly, then, that, by walking in darkness, not only is the soul not lost, but
it has even greatly gained, since it is here gaining the virtues.
4. But there is a question which at once arises
here—namely, since the things of God are of themselves profitable to the soul
and bring it gain and security, why does God, in this night, darken the desires
and faculties with respect to these good things likewise, in such a way that
the soul can no more taste of them or busy itself with them than with these
other things, and indeed in some ways can do so less? The answer is that it is
well for the soul to perform no operation touching spiritual things at that
time and to have no pleasure in such things, because its faculties and desires
are base, impure and wholly natural; and thus, although these faculties be
given the desire and interest in things supernatural and Divine, they could not
receive them save after a base and a natural manner, exactly in their own
fashion. For, as the philosopher says, whatsoever is received comes to him that
receives it after the manner of the recipient. Wherefore, since these natural
faculties have neither purity nor strength nor capacity to receive and taste
things that are supernatural after the manner of those things, which manner is
Divine, but can do so only after their own manner, which is human and base, as
we have said, it is meet that its faculties be in darkness concerning these
Divine things likewise. Thus, being weaned and purged and annihilated in this
respect first of all, they may lose that base and human way of receiving and
acting, and thus all these faculties and desires of the soul may come to be
prepared and tempered in such a way as to be able to receive, feel and taste
that which is Divine and supernatural after a sublime and lofty manner, which
is impossible if the old man die not first of all.
5. Hence it follows that all spiritual things, if
they come not from above and be not communicated by the Father of lights to
human desire and free will (howsoever much a man may exercise his taste and
faculties for God, and howsoever much it may seem to the faculties that they are
experiencing these things), will not be experienced after a Divine and
spiritual manner, but after a human and natural manner, just as other things
are experienced, for spiritual blessings go not from man to God, but come from
God to man. With respect to this (if this were the proper place for it) we
might here explain how there are many persons whose many tastes and affections
and the operations of whose faculties are fixed upon God or upon spiritual
things, and who may perhaps think that this is supernatural and spiritual, when
it is perhaps no more than the most human and natural desires and actions. They
regard these good things with the same disposition as they have for other
things, by means of a certain natural facility which they possess for directing
their desires and faculties to anything whatever.
6. If perchance we find occasion elsewhere in this
book, we shall treat of this, describing certain signs which indicate when the
interior actions and motions of the soul, with respect to communion with God,
are only natural, when they are spiritual, and when they are both natural and
spiritual. It suffices for us here to know that, in order that the interior
motions and acts of the soul may come to be moved by God divinely, they must
first be darkened and put to sleep and hushed to rest naturally as touching all
their capacity and operation, until they have no more strength.
7. Therefore, O spiritual soul, when thou seest thy
desire obscured, thy affections arid and constrained, and thy faculties bereft of
their capacity for any interior exercise, be not afflicted by this, but rather
consider it a great happiness, since God is freeing thee from thyself and
taking the matter from thy hands. For with those hands, howsoever well they may
serve thee, thou wouldst never labour so effectively, so perfectly and so
securely (because of their clumsiness and uncleanness) as now, when God takes
thy hand and guides thee in the darkness, as though thou wert blind, to an end
and by a way which thou knowest not. Nor couldst thou ever hope to travel with
the aid of thine own eyes and feet, howsoever good thou be as a walker.
8. The reason, again, why the soul not only travels
securely, when it travels thus in the darkness, but also achieves even greater
gain and progress, is that usually, when the soul is receiving fresh advantage
and profit, this comes by a way that it least understands—indeed, it quite
commonly believes that it is losing ground. For, as it has never experienced
that new feeling which drives it forth and dazzles it and makes it depart
recklessly from its former way of life, it thinks itself to be losing ground
rather than gaining and progressing, since it sees that it is losing with
respect to that which it knew and enjoyed, and is going by a way which it knows
not and wherein it finds no enjoyment. It is like the traveller, who, in order
to go to new and unknown lands, takes new roads, unknown and untried, and
journeys unguided by his past experience, but doubtingly and according to what
others say. It is clear that such a man could not reach new countries, or add
to his past experience, if he went not along new and unknown roads and
abandoned those which were known to him. Exactly so, one who is learning fresh
details concerning any office or art always proceeds in darkness, and receives
no guidance from his original knowledge, for if he left not that behind he
would get no farther nor make any progress; and in the same way, when the soul
is making most progress, it is travelling in darkness, knowing naught.
Wherefore, since God, as we have said, is the Master and Guide of this blind
soul, it may well and truly rejoice, once it has learned to understand this,
and say: 'In darkness and secure.'
9. There is another reason why the soul has walked
securely in this darkness, and this is because it has been suffering; for the
road of suffering is more secure and even more profitable than that of fruition
and action: first, because in suffering the strength of God is added to that of
man, while in action and fruition the soul is practising its own weaknesses and
imperfections; and second, because in suffering the soul continues to practise
and acquire the virtues and become purer, wiser and more cautious.
10. But there is another and a more important reason
why the soul now walks in darkness and securely; this emanates from the dark
light or wisdom aforementioned. For in such a way does this dark night of
contemplation absorb and immerse the soul in itself, and so near does it bring
the soul to God, that it protects and delivers it from all that is not God. For
this soul is now, as it were, undergoing a cure, in order that it may regain
its health—its health being God Himself. His Majesty restricts it to a diet and
abstinence from all things, and takes away its appetite for them all. It is
like a sick man, who, if he is respected by those in his house, is carefully
tended so that he may be cured; the air is not allowed to touch him, nor may he
even enjoy the light, nor must he hear footsteps, nor yet the noise of those in
the house; and he is given food that is very delicate, and even that only in
great moderation—food that is nourishing rather than delectable.
11. All these particularities (which are for the
security and safekeeping of the soul) are caused by this dark contemplation,
because it brings the soul nearer to God. For the nearer the soul approaches
Him, the blacker is the darkness which it feels and the deeper is the obscurity
which comes through its weakness; just as, the nearer a man approaches the sun,
the greater are the darkness and the affliction caused him through the great
splendour of the sun and through the weakness and impurity of his eyes. In the
same way, so immense is the spiritual light of God, and so greatly does it
transcend our natural understanding, that the nearer we approach it, the more
it blinds and darkens us. And this is the reason why, in Psalm xvii, David says
that God made darkness His hiding-place and covering, and His tabernacle around
Him dark water in the clouds of the air.[209] This dark water in the
clouds of the air is dark contemplation and Divine wisdom in souls, as we are
saying. They continue to feel it is a thing which is near Him, as the
tabernacle wherein He dwells, when God brings them ever nearer to Himself. And
thus, that which in God is supreme light and refulgence is to man blackest
darkness, as Saint Paul says, according as David explains in the same Psalm,
saying: 'Because of the brightness which is in His presence, passed clouds and cataracts'[210]—that is to say, over the
natural understanding, the light whereof, as Isaias says in Chapter V: Obtenebrata
est in caligine ejus.[211]
12. Oh, miserable is the fortune of our life, which
is lived in such great peril and wherein it is so difficult to find the truth.
For that which is most clear and true is to us most dark and doubtful;
wherefore, though it is the thing that is most needful for us, we flee from it.
And that which gives the greatest light and satisfaction to our eyes we embrace
and pursue, though it be the worst thing for us, and make us fall at every
step. In what peril and fear does man live, since the very natural light of his
eyes by which he has to guide himself is the first light that dazzles him and
leads him astray on his road to God! And if he is to know with certainty by
what road he travels, he must perforce keep his eyes closed and walk in
darkness, that he may be secure from the enemies who inhabit his own house—that
is, his senses and faculties.
13. Well hidden, then, and well protected is the
soul in these dark waters, when it is close to God. For, as these waters serve
as a tabernacle and dwelling-place for God Himself, they will serve the soul in
the same way and for a perfect protection and security, though it remain in
darkness, wherein, as we have said, it is hidden and protected from itself, and
from all evils that come from creatures; for to such the words of David refer
in another Psalm, where he says: 'Thou shalt hide them in the hiding-place of
Thy face from the disturbance of men; Thou shalt protect them in Thy tabernacle
from the contradiction of tongues.'[212] Herein we understand all
kinds of protection; for to be hidden in the face of God from the disturbance
of men is to be fortified with this dark contemplation against all the chances
which may come upon the soul from men. And to be protected in His tabernacle
from the contradiction of tongues is for the soul to be engulfed in these dark
waters, which are the tabernacle of David whereof we have spoken. Wherefore,
since the soul has all its desires and affections weaned and its faculties set
in darkness, it is free from all imperfections which contradict the spirit,
whether they come from its own flesh or from other creatures. Wherefore this
soul may well say that it journeys 'in darkness and secure.'
14. There is likewise another reason, which is no
less effectual than the last, by which we may understand how the soul journeys
securely in darkness; it is derived from the fortitude by which the soul is at
once inspired in these obscure and afflictive dark waters of God. For after
all, though the waters be dark, they are none the less waters, and therefore
they cannot but refresh and fortify the soul in that which is most needful for
it, although in darkness and with affliction. For the soul immediately
perceives in itself a genuine determination and an effectual desire to do
naught which it understands to be an offence to God, and to omit to do naught
that seems to be for His service. For that dark love cleaves to the soul,
causing it a most watchful care and an inward solicitude concerning that which
it must do, or must not do, for His sake, in order to please Him. It will
consider and ask itself a thousand times if it has given Him cause to be
offended; and all this it will do with much greater care and solicitude than
before, as has already been said with respect to the yearnings of love. For
here all the desires and energies and faculties of the soul are recollected
from all things else, and its effort and strength are employed in pleasing its
God alone. After this manner the soul goes forth from itself and from all
created things to the sweet and delectable union of love of God, 'In darkness
and secure.'
By the secret ladder, disguised.
CHAPTER XVII
Explains how this dark
contemplation is secret.
THREE things have to be expounded with
reference to three words contained in this present line. Two (namely, 'secret'
and 'ladder') belong to the dark night of contemplation of which we are
treating; the third (namely, 'disguised') belongs to the soul by reason of the
manner wherein it conducts itself in this night. As to the first, it must be
known that in this line the soul describes this dark contemplation, by which it
goes forth to the union of love, as a secret ladder, because of the two
properties which belong to it—namely, its being secret and its being a ladder.
We shall treat of each separately.
2. First, it describes this dark contemplation as
'secret,' since, as we have indicated above, it is mystical theology, which
theologians call secret wisdom, and which, as Saint Thomas says is communicated
and infused into the soul through love.[213] This happens secretly and
in darkness, so as to be hidden from the work of the understanding and of other
faculties. Wherefore, inasmuch as the faculties aforementioned attain not to
it, but the Holy Spirit infuses and orders it in the soul, as says the Bride in
the Songs, without either its knowledge or its understanding, it is called
secret. And, in truth, not only does the soul not understand it, but there is
none that does so, not even the devil; inasmuch as the Master Who teaches the
soul is within it in its substance, to which the devil may not attain, neither
may natural sense nor understanding.
3. And it is not for this reason alone that it may
be called secret, but likewise because of the effects which it produces in the
soul. For it is secret not only in the darknesses and afflictions of purgation,
when this wisdom of love purges the soul, and the soul is unable to speak of
it, but equally so afterwards in illumination, when this wisdom is communicated
to it most clearly. Even then it is still so secret that the soul cannot speak
of it and give it a name whereby it may be called; for, apart from the fact
that the soul has no desire to speak of it, it can find no suitable way or
manner or similitude by which it may be able to describe such lofty
understanding and such delicate spiritual feeling. And thus, even though the
soul might have a great desire to express it and might find many ways in which
to describe it, it would still be secret and remain undescribed. For, as that
inward wisdom is so simple, so general and so spiritual that it has not entered
into the understanding enwrapped or cloaked in any form or image subject to
sense, it follows that sense and imagination (as it has not entered through
them nor has taken their form and colour) cannot account for it or imagine it,
so as to say anything concerning it, although the soul be clearly aware that it
is experiencing and partaking of that rare and delectable wisdom. It is like
one who sees something never seen before, whereof he has not even seen the
like; although he might understand its nature and have experience of it, he
would be unable to give it a name, or say what it is, however much he tried to
do so, and this in spite of its being a thing which he had perceived with the
senses. How much less, then, could he describe a thing that has not entered
through the senses! For the language of God has this characteristic that, since
it is very intimate and spiritual in its relations with the soul, it transcends
every sense and at once makes all harmony and capacity of the outward and
inward senses to cease and be dumb.
4. For this we have both authorities and examples in
the Divine Scripture. For the incapacity of man to speak of it and describe it
in words was shown by Jeremias,[214] when, after God had spoken
with him, he knew not what to say, save 'Ah, ah, ah!' This interior incapacity—that
is, of the interior sense of the imagination—and also that of the exterior
sense corresponding to it was also demonstrated in the case of Moses, when he
stood before God in the bush;[215] not only did he say to God
that after speaking with Him he knew not neither was able to speak, but also
that not even (as is said in the Acts of the Apostles)[216] with the interior
imagination did he dare to meditate, for it seemed to him that his imagination
was very far away and was too dumb, not only to express any part of that which
he understood concerning God, but even to have the capacity to receive aught
therefrom. Wherefore, inasmuch as the wisdom of this contemplation is the
language of God to the soul, addressed by pure spirit to pure spirit, naught
that is less than spirit, such as the senses, can perceive it, and thus to them
it is secret, and they know it not, neither can they say it,[217] nor do they desire to do
so, because they see it not.
5. We may deduce from this the reason why certain
persons—good and fearful souls—who walk along this road and would like to give
an account of their spiritual state to their director,[218] are neither able to do so
nor know how. For the reason we have described, they have a great repugnance in
speaking of it, especially when their contemplation is of the purer sort, so
that the soul itself is hardly conscious of it. Such a person is only able to
say that he is satisfied, tranquil and contented and that he is conscious of
the presence of God, and that, as it seems to him, all is going well with him;
but he cannot describe the state of his soul, nor can he say anything about it
save in general terms like these. It is a different matter when the experiences
of the soul are of a particular kind, such as visions, feelings, etc., which,
being ordinarily received under some species wherein sense participates, can be
described under that species, or by some other similitude. But this capacity
for being described is not in the nature of pure contemplation, which is
indescribable, as we have said, for the which reason it is called secret.
6. And not only for that reason is it called secret,
and is so, but likewise because this mystical knowledge has the property of
hiding the soul within itself. For, besides performing its ordinary function,
it sometimes absorbs the soul and engulfs it in its secret abyss, in such a way
that the soul clearly sees that it has been carried far away from every
creature and; has become most remote therefrom;[219] so that it considers itself
as having been placed in a most profound and vast retreat, to which no human
creature can attain, such as an immense desert, which nowhere has any boundary,
a desert the more delectable, pleasant and lovely for its secrecy, vastness and
solitude, wherein, the more the soul is raised up above all temporal creatures,
the more deeply does it find itself hidden. And so greatly does this abyss of
wisdom raise up and exalt the soul at this time, making it to penetrate the
veins of the science of love, that it not only shows it how base are all
properties of the creatures by comparison with this supreme knowledge and
Divine feeling, but likewise it learns how base and defective, and, in some
measure, how inapt, are all the terms and words which are used in this life to
treat of Divine things, and how impossible it is, in any natural way or manner,
however learnedly and sublimely they may be spoken of, to be able to know and
perceive them as they are, save by the illumination of this mystical theology.
And thus, when by means of this illumination the soul discerns this truth, namely,
that it cannot reach it, still less explain it, by common or human language, it
rightly calls it secret.
7. This property of secrecy and superiority over
natural capacity, which belongs to this Divine contemplation, belongs to it,
not only because it is supernatural, but also inasmuch as it is a road that
guides and leads the soul to the perfections of union with God; which, as they
are things unknown after a human manner, must be approached, after a human
manner, by unknowing and by Divine ignorance. For, speaking mystically, as we
are speaking here, Divine things and perfections are known and understood as
they are, not when they are being sought after and practised, but when they
have been found and practised. To this purpose speaks the prophet Baruch concerning
this Divine wisdom: 'There is none that can know her ways nor that can imagine
her paths.'[220] Likewise the royal Prophet
speaks in this manner concerning this road of the soul, when he says to God:
'Thy lightnings lighted and illumined the round earth; the earth was moved and
trembled. Thy way is in the sea and Thy paths are in many waters; and Thy
footsteps shall not be known.'[221]
8. All this, speaking spiritually, is to be
understood in the sense wherein we are speaking. For the illumination of the
round earth[222] by the lightnings of God is
the enlightenment which is produced by this Divine contemplation in the
faculties of the soul; the moving and trembling of the earth is the painful
purgation which is caused therein; and to say that the way and the road of God
whereby the soul journeys to Him is in the sea, and His footprints are in many
waters and for this reason shall not be known, is as much as to say that this
road whereby the soul journeys to God is as secret and as hidden from the sense
of the soul as the way of one that walks on the sea, whose paths and footprints
are not known, is hidden from the sense of the body. The steps and footprints which
God is imprinting upon the souls that He desires to bring near to Himself, and
to make great in union with His Wisdom, have also this property, that they are
not known. Wherefore in the Book of Job mention is made of this matter, in
these words: 'Hast thou perchance known the paths of the great clouds or the
perfect knowledges?'[223] By this are understood the
ways and roads whereby God continually exalts souls and perfects them in His
Wisdom, which souls are here understood by the clouds. It follows, then, that
this contemplation which is guiding the soul to God is secret wisdom.
CHAPTER XVIII
Explains how this secret
wisdom is likewise a ladder.
IT now remains to consider the second
point—namely, how this secret wisdom is likewise a ladder. With respect to this
it must be known that we can call this secret contemplation a ladder for many
reasons. In the first place, because, just as men mount by means of ladders and
climb up to possessions and treasures and things that are in strong places,
even so also, by means of this secret contemplation, without knowing how, the
soul ascends and climbs up to a knowledge and possession of[224] the good things and
treasures of Heaven. This is well expressed by the royal prophet David, when he
says: 'Blessed is he that hath Thy favour and help, for such a man hath placed
in his heart ascensions into the vale of tears in the place which he hath
appointed; for after this manner the Lord of the law shall give blessing, and
they shall go from virtue to virtue as from step to step, and the God of gods
shall be seen in Sion.'[225] This God is the treasure of
the strong place of Sion, which is happiness.
2. We may also call it a ladder because, even as the
ladder has those same steps in order that men may mount, it has them also that
they may descend; even so is it likewise with this secret contemplation, for
those same communications which it causes in the soul raise it up to God, yet humble
it with respect to itself. For communications which are indeed of God have this
property, that they humble the soul and at the same time exalt it. For, upon
this road, to go down is to go up, and to go up, to go down, for he that
humbles himself is exalted and he that exalts himself is humbled.[226] And besides the fact that
the virtue of humility is greatness, for the exercise of the soul therein, God
is wont to make it mount by this ladder so that it may descend, and to make it
descend so that it may mount, that the words of the Wise Man may thus be
fulfilled, namely: 'Before the soul is exalted, it is humbled; and before it is
humbled, it is exalted.'[227]
3. Speaking now in a natural way, the soul that
desires to consider it will be able to see how on this road (we leave apart the
spiritual aspect, of which the soul is not conscious) it has to suffer many ups
and downs, and how the prosperity which
it enjoys is followed immediately by certain storms and trials; so much so,
that it appears to have been given that period of calm in order that it might
be forewarned and strengthened against the poverty which has followed; just as
after misery and torment there come abundance and calm. It seems to the soul as
if, before celebrating that festival, it has first been made to keep that
vigil. This is the ordinary course and proceeding of the state of contemplation
until the soul arrives at the state of quietness; it never remains in the same
state for long together, but is ascending and descending continually.
4. The reason for this is that, as the state of
perfection, which consists in the perfect love of God and contempt for self,
cannot exist unless it have these two parts, which are the knowledge of God and
of oneself, the soul has of necessity to be practised first in the one and then
in the other, now being given to taste of the one—that is, exaltation—and now
being made to experience the other—that is, humiliation—until it has acquired
perfect habits; and then this ascending and descending will cease, since the
soul will have attained to God and become united with Him, which comes to pass
at the summit of this ladder, for the ladder rests and leans upon Him. For this
ladder of contemplation, which, as we have said, comes down from God, is
prefigured by that ladder which Jacob saw as he slept, whereon angels were
ascending and descending, from God to man, and from man to God, Who Himself was
leaning upon the end of the ladder.[228] All this, says Divine
Scripture, took place by night, when Jacob slept, in order to express how
secret is this road and ascent to God, and how different from that of man's
knowledge. This is very evident, since ordinarily that which is of the greatest
profit in it—namely, to be ever losing oneself and becoming as nothing[229]—is considered the worst
thing possible; and that which is of least worth, which is for a soul to find
consolation and sweetness (wherein it ordinarily loses rather than gains), is
considered best.
5. But, speaking now somewhat more substantially and
properly of this ladder of secret contemplation, we shall observe that the
principal characteristic of contemplation, on account of which it is here
called a ladder, is that it is the science of love. This, as we have said, is
an infused and loving knowledge of God, which enlightens the soul and at the
same time enkindles it with love, until it is raised up step by step, even unto
God its Creator. For it is love alone that unites and joins the soul with God.
To the end that this may be seen more clearly, we shall here indicate the steps
of this Divine ladder one by one, pointing out briefly the marks and effects of
each, so that the soul may conjecture hereby on which of them it is standing.
We shall therefore distinguish them by their effects, as do Saint Bernard and
Saint Thomas,[230] for to know them in
themselves is not possible after a natural manner, inasmuch as this ladder of
love is, as we have said, so secret that God alone is He that measures and
weighs it.
CHAPTER XIX
Begins to explain the ten
steps[231] of the mystic ladder of
Divine love, according to Saint Bernard and Saint Thomas. The first five are
here treated.
WE observe, then, that the steps of this
ladder of love by which the soul mounts, one by one, to God, are ten. The first
step of love causes the soul to languish, and this to its advantage. The Bride
is speaking from this step of love when she says: 'I adjure you, daughters of
Jerusalem, that, if ye find my Beloved, ye tell Him that I am sick with love.'[232] This sickness, however, is
not unto death, but for the glory of God, for in this sickness the soul swoons
as to sin and as to all things that are not God, for the sake of God Himself,
even as David testifies, saying: 'My soul hath swooned away'[233]—that is, with respect to
all things, for Thy salvation. For just as a sick man first of all loses his
appetite and taste for all food, and his colour changes, so likewise in this
degree of love the soul loses its taste and desire for all things and changes
its colour and the other accidentals of its past life, like one in love. The
soul falls not into this sickness if excess of heat be not communicated to it
from above, even as is expressed in that verse of David which says: Pluviam
voluntariam segregabis, Deus, haereditati tuae, et infirmata est,[234] etc. This sickness and
swooning to all things, which is the beginning and the first step on the road
to God, we clearly described above, when we were speaking of the annihilation
wherein the soul finds itself when it begins to climb[235] this ladder of
contemplative purgation, when it can find no pleasure, support, consolation or
abiding-place in anything soever. Wherefore from this step it begins at once to
climb to the second.
2. The second step causes the soul to seek God
without ceasing. Wherefore, when the Bride says that she sought Him by night
upon her bed (when she had swooned away according to the first step of love)
and found Him not, she said: 'I will arise and will seek Him Whom my soul
loveth.'[236] This, as we say, the soul
does without ceasing as David counsels it, saying: 'Seek ye ever the face of
God, and seek ye Him in all things, tarrying not until ye find Him;'[237] like the Bride, who, having
enquired for Him of the watchmen, passed on at once and left them. Mary
Magdalene did not even notice the angels at the sepulchre.[238] On this step the soul now
walks so anxiously that it seeks the Beloved in all things. In whatsoever it
thinks, it thinks at once of the Beloved. Of whatsoever it speaks, in
whatsoever matters present themselves, it is speaking and communing at once
with the Beloved. When it eats, when it sleeps, when it watches, when it does
aught soever, all its care is about the Beloved, as is said above with respect
to the yearnings of love. And now, as love begins to recover its health and
find new strength in the love of this second step, it begins at once to mount
to the third, by means of a certain degree[239] of new purgation in the
night, as we shall afterwards describe, which produces in the soul the
following effects.
3. The third step of the ladder of love is that
which causes the soul to work and gives it fervour so that it fails not.
Concerning this the royal Prophet says: 'Blessed is the man that feareth the
Lord, for in His commandments he is eager to labour greatly.'[240] Wherefore if fear, being
the son of love, causes within him this eagerness to labour,[241] what will be done by love
itself? On this step the soul considers great works undertaken for the Beloved
as small; many things as few; and the long time for which it serves Him as
short, by reason of the fire of love wherein it is now burning. Even so to
Jacob, though after seven years he had been made to serve seven more, they
seemed few because of the greatness of his love.[242] Now if the love of a mere
creature could accomplish so much in Jacob, what will love of the Creator be
able to do when on this third step it takes possession of the soul? Here, for
the great love which the soul bears to God, it suffers great pains and
afflictions because of the little that it does for God; and if it were lawful
for it to be destroyed a thousand times for Him it would be comforted.
Wherefore it considers itself useless in all that it does and thinks itself to
be living in vain. Another wondrous effect produced here in the soul is that it
considers itself as being, most certainly, worse than all other souls: first,
because love is continually teaching it how much is due to God;[243] and second, because, as the
works which it here does for God are many and it knows them all to be faulty
and imperfect, they all bring it confusion and affliction, for it realizes in
how lowly a manner it is working for God, Who is so high. On this third step,
the soul is very far from vainglory or presumption, and from condemning others.
These anxious effects, with many others like them, are produced in the soul by
this third step; wherefore it gains courage and strength from them in order to
mount to the fourth step, which is that that follows.
4. The fourth step of this ladder of love is that
whereby there is caused in the soul an habitual suffering because of the
Beloved, yet without weariness. For, as Saint Augustine says, love makes all
things that are great, grievous and burdensome to be almost naught. From this
step the Bride was speaking when, desiring to attain to the last step, she said
to the Spouse: 'Set me as a seal upon thy heart, as a seal upon thine arm; for
love—that is, the act and work of love—is strong as death, and emulation and
importunity last as long as hell.'[244] The spirit here has so much
strength that it has subjected the flesh and takes as little account of it as
does the tree of one of its leaves. In no way does the soul here seek its own
consolation or pleasure, either in God, or in aught else, nor does it desire or
seek to pray to God for favours, for it sees clearly that it has already
received enough of these, and all its anxiety is set upon the manner wherein it
will be able to do something that is pleasing to God and to render Him some
service such as He merits and in return for what it has received from Him,
although it be greatly to its cost. The soul says in its heart and spirit: Ah,
my God and Lord! How many are there that go to seek in Thee their own
consolation and pleasure, and desire Thee to grant them favours and gifts; but
those who long to do Thee pleasure and to give Thee something at their cost,
setting their own interests last, are very few. The failure, my God, is not in
Thy unwillingness to grant us new favours, but in our neglect to use those that
we have received in Thy service alone, in order to constrain Thee to grant them
to us continually. Exceeding lofty is this step of love; for, as the soul goes
ever after God with love so true, imbued with the spirit of suffering for His
sake, His Majesty oftentimes and quite habitually grants it joy, and visits it
sweetly and delectably in the spirit; for the boundless love of Christ, the
Word, cannot suffer the afflictions of His lover without succouring him. This
He affirmed through Jeremias, saying: 'I have remembered thee, pitying thy
youth and tenderness, when thou wentest after Me in the wilderness.'[245] Speaking spiritually, this
denotes the detachment which the soul now has interiorly from every creature,
so that it rests not and nowhere finds quietness. This fourth step enkindles
the soul and makes it to burn in such desire for God that it causes it to mount
to the fifth, which is that which follows.
5. The fifth step of this ladder of love makes the
soul to desire and long for God impatiently. On this step the vehemence of the
lover to comprehend the Beloved and be united with Him is such that every
delay, however brief, becomes very long, wearisome and oppressive to it, and it
continually believes itself to be finding the Beloved. And when it sees its
desire frustrated (which is at almost every moment), it swoons away with its
yearning, as says the Psalmist, speaking from this step, in these words: 'My
soul longs and faints for the dwellings of the Lord.'[246] On this step the lover must
needs see that which he loves, or die; at this step was Rachel, when, for the
great longing that she had for children, she said to Jacob, her spouse: 'Give
me children, else shall I die.'[247] Here men suffer hunger like
dogs and go about and surround the city of God. On this step, which is one of
hunger,[248] the soul is nourished upon
love; for, even as is its hunger, so is its abundance; so that it rises hence
to the sixth step, producing the effects which follow.
CHAPTER XX
Wherein are treated the
other five steps of love.
ON the sixth step the soul runs swiftly to God
and touches Him again and again; and it runs without fainting by reason of its
hope. For here the love that has made it strong makes it to fly swiftly. Of
this step the prophet Isaias speaks thus: 'The saints that hope in God shall
renew their strength; they shall take wings as the eagle; they shall fly and
shall not faint,'[249] as they did at the fifth
step. To this step likewise alludes that verse of the Psalm: 'As the hart
desires the waters, my soul desires Thee, O God.'[250] For the hart, in its
thirst, runs to the waters with great swiftness. The cause of this swiftness in
love which the soul has on this step is that its charity is greatly enlarged
within it, since the soul is here almost wholly purified, as is said likewise
in the Psalm, namely: Sine iniquitate cucurri.[251] And in another Psalm: 'I
ran the way of Thy commandments when Thou didst enlarge my heart';[252] and thus from this sixth
step the soul at once mounts to the seventh, which is that which follows.
2. The seventh step of this ladder makes the soul to
become vehement in its boldness. Here love employs not its judgment in order to
hope, nor does it take counsel so that it may draw back, neither can any shame
restrain it; for the favour which God here grants to the soul causes it to
become vehement in its boldness. Hence follows that which the Apostle says,
namely: That charity believeth all things, hopeth all things and is capable of all
things.[253] Of this step spake Moses,
when he entreated God to pardon the people, and if not, to blot out his name
from the book of life wherein He had written it.[254] Men like these obtain from
God that which they beg of Him with desire. Wherefore David says: 'Delight thou
in God and He will give thee the petitions of thy heart.'[255] On this step the Bride grew
bold, and said: Osculetur me osculo oris sui.[256] To this step it is not
lawful for the soul to aspire boldly, unless it feel the interior favour of the
King's sceptre extended to it, lest perchance it fall from the other steps
which it has mounted up to this point, and wherein it must ever possess itself
in humility. From this daring and power which God grants to the soul on this
seventh step, so that it may be bold with God in the vehemence of love, follows
the eighth, which is that wherein it takes the Beloved captive and is united
with Him, as follows.
3. The eighth step of love causes the soul to seize
Him and hold Him fast without letting Him go, even as the Bride says, after
this manner: 'I found Him Whom my heart and soul love; I held Him and I will
not let Him go.'[257] On this step of union the
soul satisfies her desire, but not continuously. Certain souls climb some way,[258] and then lose their hold;
for, if this state were to continue, it would be glory itself in this life; and
thus the soul remains therein for very short periods of time. To the prophet
Daniel, because he was a man of desires, was sent a command from God to remain
on this step, when it was said to him: 'Daniel, stay upon thy step, because
thou art a man of desires.'[259] After this step follows the
ninth, which is that of souls now perfect, as we shall afterwards say, which is
that that follows.
4. The ninth step of love makes the soul to burn
with sweetness. This step is that of the perfect, who now burn sweetly in God. For
this sweet and delectable ardour is caused in them by the Holy Spirit by reason
of the union which they have with God. For this cause Saint Gregory says,
concerning the Apostles, that when the Holy Spirit came upon them visibly they
burned inwardly and sweetly through love.[260] Of the good things and
riches of God which the soul enjoys on this step, we cannot speak; for if many
books were to be written concerning it the greater part would still remain
untold. For this cause, and because we shall say something of it hereafter, I
say no more here than that after this follows the tenth and last step of this
ladder of love, which belongs not to this life.
5. The tenth and last step of this secret ladder of
love causes the soul to become wholly assimilated to God, by reason of the
clear and immediate[261] vision of God which it then
possesses; when, having ascended in this life to the ninth step, it goes forth
from the flesh. These souls, who are few, enter not into purgatory, since they
have already been wholly purged by love. Of these Saint Matthew says: Beati
mundo corde: quoniam ipsi Deum videbunt.[262] And, as we say, this vision
is the cause of the perfect likeness of the soul to God, for, as Saint John
says, we know that we shall be like Him.[263] Not because the soul will
come to have the capacity of God, for that is impossible; but because all that
it is will become like to God, for which cause it will be called, and will be,
God by participation.
6. This is the secret ladder whereof the soul here
speaks, although upon these higher steps it is no longer very secret to the
soul, since much is revealed to it by love, through the great effects which
love produces in it. But, on this last step of clear vision, which is the last
step of the ladder whereon God leans, as we have said already, there is naught
that is hidden from the soul, by reason of its complete assimilation. Wherefore
Our Saviour says: 'In that day ye shall ask Me nothing,' etc.[264] But, until that day,
however high a point the soul may reach, there remains something hidden from
it—namely, all that it lacks for total assimilation in the Divine Essence.
After this manner, by this mystical theology and secret love, the soul
continues to rise above all things and above itself, and to mount upward to
God. For love is like fire, which ever rises upward with the desire to be
absorbed in the centre of its sphere.
CHAPTER XXI
Which explains the word
'disguised,' and describes the colours of the disguise of the soul in this
night.
Now that we have explained the reasons why
the soul called this contemplation a 'secret ladder,' it remains for us to
explain likewise the word 'disguised,' and the reason why the soul says also
that it went forth by this 'secret ladder' in 'disguise.'
2. For the understanding of this it must be known
that to disguise oneself is naught else but to hide and cover oneself beneath
another garb and figure than one's own—sometimes in order to show forth, under
that garb or figure, the will and purpose which is in the heart to gain the
grace and will of one who is greatly loved; sometimes, again, to hide oneself
from one's rivals and thus to accomplish one's object better. At such times a
man assumes the garments and livery which best represent and indicate the
affection of his heart and which best conceal him from his rivals.
3. The soul, then, touched with the love of Christ
the Spouse, and longing to attain to His grace and gain His goodwill, goes
forth here disguised with that disguise which most vividly represents the
affections of its spirit and which will protect it most securely on its journey
from its adversaries and enemies, which are the devil, the world and the flesh.
Thus the livery which it wears is of three chief colours—white, green and
purple—denoting the three theological virtues, faith, hope and charity. By
these the soul will not only gain the grace and goodwill of its Beloved, but it
will travel in security and complete protection from its three enemies: for
faith is an inward tunic of a whiteness so pure that it completely dazzles the
eyes of the understanding.[265] And thus, when the soul
journeys in its vestment of faith, the devil can neither see it nor succeed in
harming it, since it is well protected by faith—more so than by all the other
virtues—against the devil, who is at once the strongest and the most cunning of
enemies.
4. It is clear that Saint Peter could find no better
protection than faith to save him from the devil, when he said: Cui
resistite fortes in fide.[266] And in order to gain the
grace of the Beloved, and union with Him, the soul cannot put on a better vest
and tunic,[267] to serve as a foundation
and beginning of the other vestments of the virtues, than this white garment[268] of faith, for without it,
as the Apostle says, it is impossible to please God, and with it, it is
impossible to fail to please Him. For He Himself says through a prophet: Sponsabo
te mihi in fide.[269] Which is as much as to say:
If thou desirest, O soul, to be united and betrothed to Me, thou must come
inwardly clad in faith.
5. This white garment of faith was worn by the soul
on its going forth from this dark night, when, walking in interior constraint
and darkness, as we have said before, it received no aid, in the form of light,
from its understanding, neither from above, since Heaven seemed to be closed to
it and God hidden from it, nor from below, since those that taught it satisfied
it not. It suffered with constancy and persevered, passing through those trials
without fainting or failing the Beloved, Who in trials and tribulations proves
the faith of His Bride, so that afterwards she may truly repeat this saying of
David, namely: 'By the words of Thy lips I kept hard ways.'[270]
6. Next, over this white tunic of faith the soul now
puts on the second colour, which is a green vestment. By this, as we said, is
signified the virtue of hope, wherewith, as in the first case, the soul is delivered
and protected from the second enemy, which is the world. For this green colour
of living hope in God gives the soul such ardour and courage and aspiration to
the things of eternal life that, by comparison with what it hopes for therein,
all things of the world seem to it to be, as in truth they are, dry and faded
and dead and nothing worth. The soul now divests and strips itself of all these
worldly vestments and garments, setting its heart upon naught that is in the
world and hoping for naught, whether of that which is or of that which is to
be, but living clad only in the hope of eternal life. Wherefore, when the heart
is thus lifted up above the world, not only can the world neither touch the
heart nor lay hold on it, but it cannot even come within sight of it.
7. And thus, in this green livery and disguise, the
soul journeys in complete security from this second enemy, which is the world.
For Saint Paul speaks of hope as the helmet of salvation[271]—that is, a piece of armour
that protects the whole head, and covers it so that there remains uncovered
only a visor through which it may look. And hope has this property, that it
covers all the senses of the head of the soul, so that there is naught soever
pertaining to the world in which they can be immersed, nor is there an opening
through which any arrow of the world can wound them. It has a visor, however,
which the soul is permitted to use so that its eyes may look upward, but
nowhere else; for this is the function which hope habitually performs in the
soul, namely, the directing of its eyes upwards to look at God alone, even as
David declared that his eyes were directed, when he said: Oculi mei semper
ad Dominum.[272] He hoped for no good thing
elsewhere, save as he himself says in another Psalm: 'Even as the eyes of the
handmaid are set upon the hands of her mistress, even so are our eyes set upon
our Lord God, until He have mercy upon us as we hope in Him.'[273]
8. For this reason, because of this green livery
(since the soul is ever looking to God and sets its eyes on naught else,
neither is pleased with aught save with Him alone), the Beloved has such great
pleasure with the soul that it is true to say that the soul obtains from Him as
much as it hopes for from Him. Wherefore the Spouse in the Songs tells the
Bride that, by looking upon Him with one eye alone, she has wounded His heart.[274] Without this green livery
of hope in God alone it would be impossible for the soul to go forth to
encompass this loving achievement, for it would have no success, since that
which moves and conquers is the importunity of hope.
9. With this livery of hope the soul journeys in
disguise through this secret and dark night whereof we have spoken; for it is
so completely voided of every possession and support that it fixes its eyes and
its care upon naught but God, putting its mouth in the dust,[275] if so be there may be
hope—to repeat the quotation made above from Jeremias.[276]
10. Over the white and the green vestments, as the
crown and perfection of this disguise and livery, the soul now puts on the
third colour, which is a splendid garment of purple. By this is denoted the
third virtue, which is charity. This not only adds grace to the other two
colours, but causes the soul to rise to so lofty a point that it is brought
near to God, and becomes very beautiful and pleasing to Him, so that it makes
bold to say: 'Albeit I am black, O daughters of Jerusalem, I am comely;
wherefore the King hath loved me and hath brought me into His chambers.'[277] This livery of charity,
which is that of love, and causes greater love in the Beloved, not only
protects the soul and hides it from the third enemy, which is the flesh (for
where there is true love of God there enters neither love of self nor that of
the things of self), but even gives worth to the other virtues, bestowing on
them vigour and strength to protect the soul, and grace and beauty to please
the Beloved with them, for without charity no virtue has grace before God. This
is the purple which is spoken of in the Songs,[278] upon which God reclines.
Clad in this purple livery the soul journeys when (as has been explained above
in the first stanza) it goes forth from itself in the dark night, and from all
things created, 'kindled in love with yearnings,' by this secret ladder of
contemplation, to the perfect union of love of God, its beloved salvation.[279]
11. This, then, is the disguise which the soul says
that it wears in the night of faith, upon this secret ladder, and these are its
three colours. They constitute a most fit preparation for the union of the soul
with God, according to its three faculties, which are understanding, memory and
will. For faith voids and darkens the understanding as to all its natural
intelligence, and herein prepares it for union with Divine Wisdom. Hope voids
and withdraws the memory from all creature possessions; for, as Saint Paul
says, hope is for that which is not possessed;[280] and thus it withdraws the
memory from that which it is capable of possessing, and sets it on that for
which it hopes. And for this cause hope in God alone prepares the memory purely
for union with God. Charity, in the same way, voids and annihilates the
affections and desires of the will for whatever is not God, and sets them upon
Him alone; and thus this virtue prepares this faculty and unites it with God
through love. And thus, since the function of these virtues is the withdrawal
of the soul from all that is less than God, their function is consequently that
of joining it with God.
12. And thus, unless it journeys earnestly, clad in
the garments of these three virtues, it is impossible for the soul to attain to
the perfection of union with God through love. Wherefore, in order that the
soul might attain that which it desired, which was this loving and delectable
union with its Beloved, this disguise and clothing which it assumed was most
necessary and convenient. And likewise to have succeeded in thus clothing
itself and persevering until it should obtain the end and aspiration which it
had so much desired, which was the union of love, was a great and happy chance,
wherefore in this line the soul also says:
Oh, happy chance!
CHAPTER XXII
Explains the third[281] line of the second stanza.
IT is very clear that it was a happy chance
for this soul to go forth with such an enterprise as this, for it was its going
forth that delivered it from the devil and from the world and from its own
sensuality, as we have said. Having attained liberty of spirit, so precious and
so greatly desired by all, it went forth from low things to high; from
terrestrial, it became celestial; from human, Divine. Thus it came to have its
conversation in the heavens, as has the soul in this state of perfection, even
as we shall go on to say in what follows, although with rather more brevity.
2. For the most important part of my task, and the
part which chiefly led me to undertake it, was the explanation of this night to
many souls who pass through it and yet know nothing about it, as was said in
the prologue. Now this explanation and exposition has already been half
completed. Although much less has been said of it than might be said, we have
shown how many are the blessings which the soul bears with it through the night
and how happy is the chance whereby it passes through it, so that, when a soul
is terrified by the horror of so many trials, it is also encouraged by the
certain hope of so many and such precious blessings of God as it gains therein.
And furthermore, for yet another reason, this was a happy chance for the soul;
and this reason is given in the following line:
In darkness and in concealment.
CHAPTER XXIII
Expounds the fourth line[282] and describes the wondrous
hiding place wherein the soul is set during this night. Shows how, although the
devil has an entrance into other places that are very high, he has none into
this.
'IN concealment' is as much as to say 'in a
hiding-place,' or 'in hiding'; and thus, what the soul here says (namely, that
it went forth 'in darkness and in concealment') is a more complete explanation
of the great security which it describes itself in the first line of the stanza
as possessing, by means of this dark contemplation upon the road of the union
of the love of God.
2. When the soul, then, says 'in darkness and in
concealment,' it means that, inasmuch as it journeyed in darkness after the
manner aforementioned, it went in hiding and in concealment from the devil and
from his wiles and stratagems. The reason why, as it journeys in the darkness
of this contemplation, the soul is free, and is hidden from the stratagems of
the devil, is that the infused contemplation which it here possesses is infused
into it passively and secretly, without the knowledge of the senses and
faculties, whether interior or exterior, of the sensual part. And hence it
follows that, not only does it journey in hiding, and is free from the
impediment which these faculties can set in its way because of its natural
weakness, but likewise from the devil; who, except through these faculties of
the sensual part, cannot reach or know that which is in the soul, nor that which
is taking place within it. Wherefore, the more spiritual, the more interior and
the more remote from the senses is the communication, the farther does the
devil fall short of understanding it.
3. And thus it is of great importance for the
security of the soul that its inward communication with God should be of such a
kind that its very senses of the lower part will remain in darkness[283] and be without knowledge of
it, and attain not to it: first, so that it may be possible for the spiritual
communication to be more abundant, and that the weakness of its sensual part
may not hinder the liberty of its spirit; secondly because, as we say, the soul
journeys more securely since the devil cannot penetrate so far. In this way we
may understand that passage where Our Saviour, speaking in a spiritual sense,
says: 'Let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doeth.'[284] Which is as though He had
said: Let not thy left hand know that which takes place upon thy right hand,
which is the higher and spiritual part of the soul; that is, let it be of such
a kind that the lower portion of thy soul, which is the sensual part, may not
attain to it; let it be a secret between the spirit and God alone.
4. It is quite true that oftentimes, when these very
intimate and secret spiritual communications are present and take place in the
soul, although the devil cannot get to know of what kind and manner they are,
yet the great repose and silence which some of them cause in the senses and the
faculties of the sensual part make it clear to him that they are taking place
and that the soul is receiving a certain blessing from them. And then, as he
sees that he cannot succeed in thwarting them in the depth of the soul, he does
what he can to disturb and disquiet the sensual part—that part to which he is
able to attain—now by means of afflictions, now by terrors and fears, with
intent to disquiet and disturb the higher and spiritual part of the soul by
this means, with respect to that blessing which it then receives and enjoys.
But often, when the communication of such contemplation makes its naked assault
upon the soul and exerts its strength upon it, the devil, with all his
diligence, is unable to disturb it; rather the soul receives a new and a
greater advantage and a securer peace. For, when it feels the disturbing
presence of the enemy, then—wondrous thing!—without knowing how it comes to
pass, and without any efforts of its own, it enters farther into its own
interior depths, feeling that it is indeed being set in a sure refuge, where it
perceives itself to be most completely withdrawn and hidden from the enemy. And
thus its peace and joy, which the devil is attempting to take from it, are increased;
and all the fear that assails it remains without; and it becomes clearly and
exultingly conscious of its secure enjoyment of that quiet peace and sweetness
of the hidden Spouse, which neither the world nor the devil can give it or take
from it. In that state, therefore, it realizes the truth of the words of the
Bride about this, in the Songs, namely: 'See how threescore strong men surround
the bed of Solomon, etc., because of the fears of the night.'[285] It is conscious of this
strength and peace, although it is often equally conscious that its flesh and
bones are being tormented from without.
5. At other times, when the spiritual communication
is not made in any great measure to the spirit, but the senses have a part
therein, the devil more easily succeeds in disturbing the spirit and raising a
tumult within it, by means of the senses, with these terrors. Great are the
torment and the affliction which are then caused in the spirit; at times they
exceed all that can be expressed. For, when there is a naked contact of spirit
with spirit, the horror is intolerable which the evil spirit causes in the good
spirit (I mean, in the soul), when its tumult reaches it. This is expressed
likewise by the Bride in the Songs, when she says that it has happened thus to
her at a time when she wished to descend to interior recollection in order to
have fruition of these blessings. She says: 'I went down into the garden of
nuts to see the apples of the valleys, and if the vine had flourished. I knew
not; my soul troubled me because of the chariots'—that is, because of the
chariots and the noise of Aminadab, which is the devil.[286]
6. At other times it comes to pass that the devil is
occasionally able to see certain favours which God is pleased to grant the soul
when they are bestowed upon it by the mediation of a good angel; for of those
favours which come through a good angel God habitually allows the enemy to have
knowledge: partly so that he may do that which he can against them according to
the measure of justice, and that thus he may not be able to allege with truth
that no opportunity is given him for conquering the soul, as he said concerning
Job.[287] This would be the case if
God allowed not a certain equality between the two warriors—namely, the good
angel and the bad—when they strive for the soul, so that the victory of either
may be of the greater worth, and the soul that is victorious and faithful in
temptation may be the more abundantly rewarded.
7. We must observe, therefore, that it is for this
reason that, in proportion as God is guiding the soul and communing with it, He
gives the devil leave to act with it after this manner. When the soul has
genuine visions by the instrumentality of the good angel (for it is by this
instrumentality that they habitually come, even though Christ reveal Himself,
for He scarcely ever appears[288] in His actual person), God
also gives the wicked angel leave to present to the soul false visions of this
very type in such a way that the soul which is not cautious may easily be
deceived by their outward appearance, as many souls have been. Of this there is
a figure in Exodus,[289] where it is said that all
the genuine signs that Moses wrought were wrought likewise in appearance by the
magicians of Pharao. If he brought forth frogs, they brought them forth
likewise; if he turned water into blood, they did the same.
8. And not only does the evil one imitate God in
this type of bodily vision, but he also imitates and interferes in spiritual
communications which come through the instrumentality of an angel, when he
succeeds in seeing them, as we say (for, as Job said[290]: Omne sublime videt).
These, however, as they are without form and figure (for it is the nature of
spirit to have no such thing), he cannot imitate and counterfeit like those
others which are presented under some species or figure. And thus, in order to
attack the soul, in the same way as that wherein it is being visited, his
fearful spirit presents a similar vision in order to attack and destroy
spiritual things by spiritual. When this comes to pass just as the good angel
is about to communicate spiritual contemplation to the soul, it is impossible
for the soul to shelter itself in the secrecy and hiding-place of contemplation
with sufficient rapidity not to be observed by the devil; and thus he appears
to it and produces a certain horror and perturbation of spirit which at times
is most distressing to the soul. Sometimes the soul can speedily free itself
from him, so that there is no opportunity for the aforementioned horror of the
evil spirit to make an impression on it; and it becomes recollected within
itself, being favoured, to this end, by the effectual spiritual grace that the
good angel then communicates to it.
9. At other times the devil prevails and encompasses
the soul with a perturbation and horror which is a greater affliction to it
than any torment in this life could be. For, as this horrible communication
passes direct from spirit to spirit, in something like nakedness and clearly
distinguished from all that is corporeal, it is grievous beyond what every
sense can feel; and this lasts in the spirit for some time, yet not for long,
for otherwise the spirit would be driven forth from the flesh by the vehement
communication of the other spirit. Afterwards there remains to it the memory
thereof, which is sufficient to cause it great affliction.
10. All that we have here described comes to pass in
the soul passively, without its doing or undoing anything of itself with
respect to it. But in this connection it must be known that, when the good
angel permits the devil to gain this advantage of assailing the soul with this
spiritual horror, he does it to purify the soul and to prepare it by means of
this spiritual vigil for some great spiritual favour and festival which he
desires to grant it, for he never mortifies save to give life, nor humbles save
to exalt, which comes to pass shortly afterwards. Then, according as was the
dark and horrible purgation which the soul suffered, so is the fruition now
granted it of a wondrous and delectable spiritual contemplation, sometimes so
lofty that there is no language to describe it. But the spirit has been greatly
refined by the preceding horror of the evil spirit, in order that it may be able
to receive this blessing; for these spiritual visions belong to the next life
rather than to this, and when one of them is seen this is a preparation for the
next.
11. This is to be understood with respect to
occasions when God visits the soul by the instrumentality of a good angel,
wherein, as has been said, the soul is not so totally in darkness and in
concealment that the enemy cannot come within reach of it. But, when God
Himself visits it, then the words of this line are indeed fulfilled, and it is
in total darkness and in concealment from the enemy that the soul receives
these spiritual favours of God. The reason for this is that, as His Majesty
dwells substantially in the soul, where neither angel nor devil can attain to
an understanding of that which comes to pass, they cannot know the intimate and
secret communications which take place there between the soul and God. These
communications, since the Lord Himself works them, are wholly Divine and
sovereign, for they are all substantial touches of Divine union between the
soul and God; in one of which the soul receives a greater blessing than in all
the rest, since this is the loftiest degree[291] of prayer in existence.
12. For these are the touches that the Bride
entreated of Him in the Songs, saying: Osculetur me osculo oris sui.[292] Since this is a thing which
takes place in such close intimacy with God, whereto the soul desires with such
yearnings to attain, it esteems and longs for a touch of this Divinity more
than all the other favours that God grants it. Wherefore, after many such
favours have been granted to the Bride in the said Songs, of which she has sung
therein, she is not satisfied, but entreats Him for these Divine touches,
saying: 'Who shall give Thee to me, my brother, that I might find Thee alone
without, sucking the breasts of my mother, so that I might kiss Thee with the
mouth of my soul, and that thus no man should despise me or make bold to attack
me.'[293] By this she denotes the
communication which God Himself alone makes to her, as we are saying, far from
all the creatures and without their knowledge, for this is meant by 'alone and
without, sucking, etc.'—that is, drying up and draining the breasts of the
desires and affections of the sensual part of the soul. This takes place when
the soul, in intimate peace and delight, has fruition of these blessings, with
liberty of spirit, and without the sensual part being able to hinder it, or the
devil to thwart it by means thereof. And then the devil would not make bold to
attack it, for he would not reach it, neither could he attain to an
understanding of these Divine touches in the substance of the soul in the
loving substance of God.
13. To this blessing none attains save through
intimate purgation and detachment and spiritual concealment from all that is
creature; it comes to pass in the darkness, as we have already explained at
length and as we say with respect to this line. The soul is in concealment and
in hiding, in the which hiding-place, as we have now said, it continues to be
strengthened in union with God through love, wherefore it sings this in the
same phrase, saying: 'In darkness and in concealment.'
14. When it comes to pass that those favours are
granted to the soul in concealment (that is, as we have said, in spirit only),
the soul is wont, during some of them, and without knowing how this comes to
pass, to see itself so far with drawn and separated according to the higher and
spiritual part, from the sensual and lower portion, that it recognizes in
itself two parts so distinct from each other that it believes that the one has
naught to do with the other, but that the one is very remote and far withdrawn
from the other. And in reality, in a certain way, this is so; for the operation
is now wholly spiritual, and the soul receives no communication in its sensual
part. In this way the soul gradually becomes wholly spiritual; and in this
hiding-place of unitive contemplation its spiritual desires and passions are to
a great degree removed and purged away. And thus, speaking of its higher part,
the soul then says in this last line:
My house being now at rest.[294]
CHAPTER XXIV
Completes the explanation of
the second stanza.
THIS is as much as to say: The higher portion
of my soul being like the lower part also, at rest with respect to its desires
and faculties, I went forth to the Divine union of the love of God.
2. Inasmuch as, by means of that war of the dark
night, as has been said, the soul is combated and purged after two
manners—namely, according to its sensual and its spiritual part—with its
senses, faculties and passions, so likewise after two manners—namely, according
to these two parts, the sensual and the spiritual—with all its faculties and
desires, the soul attains to an enjoyment of peace and rest. For this reason,
as has likewise been said, the soul twice pronounces this line—namely,[295] in this stanza and in the
last—because of these two portions of the soul, the spiritual and the sensual,
which, in order that they may go forth to the Divine union of love, must needs
first be reformed, ordered and tranquillized with respect to the sensual and to
the spiritual, according to the nature of the state of innocence which was
Adam's.[296] And thus this line which,
in the first stanza, was understood of the repose of the lower and sensual
portion, is, in this second stanza, understood more particularly of the higher
and spiritual part; for which reason it is repeated.[297]
3. This repose and quiet of this spiritual house the
soul comes to attain, habitually and perfectly (in so far as the condition of
this life allows), by means of the acts of the substantial touches of Divine
union whereof we have just spoken; which, in concealment, and hidden from the
perturbation of the devil, and of its own senses and passions, the soul has
been receiving from the Divinity, wherein it has been purifying itself, as I
say, resting, strengthening and confirming itself in order to be able to
receive the said union once and for all, which is the Divine betrothal between
the soul and the Son of God. As soon as these two houses of the soul have
together become tranquillized and strengthened, with all their
domestics—namely, the faculties and desires—and have put these domestics to
sleep and made them to be silent with respect to all things, both above and
below, this Divine Wisdom immediately unites itself with the soul by making a
new bond of loving possession, and there is fulfilled that which is written in
the Book of Wisdom, in these words: Dum quietum silentium contineret omnia,
et nox in suo cursu medium iter haberet, omnipotens sermo tuus Domine a
regalibus sedibus.[298] The same thing is described
by the Bride in the Songs,[299] where she says that, after
she had passed by those who stripped her of her mantle by night and wounded
her, she found Him Whom her soul loved.
4. The soul cannot come to this union without great
purity, and this purity is not gained without great detachment from every
created thing and sharp mortification. This is signified by the stripping of
the Bride of her mantle and by her being wounded by night as she sought and
went after the Spouse; for the new mantle which belonged to the betrothal could
not be put on until the old mantle was stripped off. Wherefore, he that refuses
to go forth in the night aforementioned to seek the Beloved, and to be stripped
of his own will and to be mortified, but seeks Him upon his bed and at his own
convenience, as did the Bride,[300] will not succeed in finding
Him. For this soul says of itself that it found Him by going forth in the dark
and with yearnings of love.
CHAPTER XXV
Wherein is expounded the
third stanza.
In the happy night, In secret, when none saw me,
Nor I beheld aught, Without light or guide, save
that which burned in my heart.
EXPOSITION
THE soul still continues the metaphor and
similitude of temporal night in describing this its spiritual night, and
continues to sing and extol the good properties which belong to it, and which
in passing through this night it found and used, to the end that it might
attain its desired goal with speed and security. Of these properties it here
sets down three.
2. The first, it says, is that in this happy night
of contemplation God leads the soul by a manner of contemplation so solitary
and secret, so remote and far distant from sense, that naught pertaining to it,
nor any touch of created things, succeeds in approaching the soul in such a way
as to disturb it and detain it on the road of the union of love.
3. The second property whereof it speaks pertains to
the spiritual darkness of this night, wherein all the faculties of the higher
part of the soul are in darkness. The soul sees naught, neither looks at aught
neither stays in aught that is not God, to the end that it may reach Him,
inasmuch as it journeys unimpeded by obstacles of forms and figures, and of
natural apprehensions, which are those that are wont to hinder the soul from
uniting with the eternal Being of God.
4. The third is that, although as it journeys it is
supported by no particular interior light of understanding, nor by any exterior
guide, that it may receive satisfaction therefrom on this lofty road—it is
completely deprived of all this by this thick darkness—yet its love alone,
which burns at this time, and makes its heart to long for the Beloved, is that
which now moves and guides it, and makes it to soar upward to its God along the
road of solitude, without its knowing how or in what manner.
There follows the line:
In the happy night.[301]
"He
soars on the wings of Divine love
"It is perhaps not an exaggeration to say that
the verse and prose works combined of St. John of the Cross form at once the
most grandiose and the most melodious spiritual canticle to which any one man
has ever given utterance.
The most sublime of all the Spanish mystics, he
soars aloft on the wings of Divine love to heights known to hardly any of them.
. . . True to the character of his thought, his style is always forceful and
energetic, even to a fault.
When we study his treatises—principally that great
composite work known as the Ascent of Mount Carmel and the Dark Night—we
have the impression of a mastermind that has scaled the heights of mystical
science;and from their summit looks down upon and dominates the plain below and
the paths leading upward. . . . Nowhere else, again, is he quite so appealingly
human; for, though he is human even in his loftiest and sublimest passages, his
intermingling of philosophy with mystical theology; makes him seem particularly
so. These treatises are a wonderful illustration of the theological truth that
graced far from destroying nature, ennobles and dignifies it, and of the
agreement always found between the natural and the supernatural—between the
principles of sound reason and the sublimest manifestations of Divine
grace."
E.
ALLISON PEERS
[1]Ascent, Bk. I, chap. i, ¤ 2.
[2]Op, cit., ¤ 3.
[3]Dark Night, Bk. 1, chap. iii, ¤ 3.
[4]Op. cit., Bk. I, chap. i, ¤ 1.
[5]Dark Night, Bk. 1, chap. viii, ¤ 1.
[6]Op. cit., Bk. I, chap. viii, ¤ 2.
[7]Ibid.
[8]Dark Night, Bk. I, chap. x, ¤ 4.
[9]Op. cit., Bk. II, chap. iii, ¤ 1.
[10]Op. cit., Bk. II, chap. i, ¤ 1.
[11]Dark Night, Bk. II, chap. xi, ¤ 1.
[12]Dark Night, Bk. II, chap. xvi, ¤ 2.
[13][On this, see Sobrino, pp. 159‑66.]
[14]Cf. pp. lviii‑lxiii, Ascent of Mount Carmel (Image Books edition).
[15][It contains a series of paradoxical statements, after the style of those in Ascent, Bk. I, chap. xiii, and is of no great literary merit. P. Silverio reproduces it in Spanish on p. 302 (note) of his first volume.]
[16]The 'first friar' would be P. Antonio de Jesśs, who was senior to St. John of the Cross in the Carmelite Order, though not in the Reform.
[17]The longest of these are one of ten lines in Bk. I, chap. iv, [in the original] and those of Bk. II, chaps. vii, viii, xii, xiii, which vary from eleven to twenty‑three lines. Bk. II, chap. xxiii, has also considerable modifications.
[18]The chief interpolation is in Bk. I, chap. x.
[19]St. Matthew vii, 14.
[20][More exactly: 'purificative.']
[21]St. Luke xviii, 11-12.
[22]St. Matthew vii, 3.
[23]St. Matthew xxiii, 24.
[24][Lit., 'Presuming.']
[25][The original merely has: 'and are often eager.']
[26][Lit., 'a thousand envies and disquietudes.']
[27]St. Matthew xxv, 8. [Lit., 'who, having their lamps dead, sought oil from without.']
[28][Lit., 'to have.']
[29][Lit., 'these fervours.']
[30][Lit., 'into something of this.']
[31]The agnusdei was a wax medal with a representation of the lamb stamped upon it, often blessed by the Pope; at the time of the Saint such medals were greatly sought after, as we know from various references in St. Teresa's letters.
[32][The word n—mina, translated 'token,' and normally meaning list, or 'roll,' refers to a relic on which were written the names of saints. In modern Spanish it can denote a medal or amulet used superstitiously.]
[33][No doubt a branch of palm, olive or rosemary, blessed in church on Palm Sunday, like the English palm crosses of to‑day. 'Palm Sunday' is in Spanish Domingo de ramos: 'Branch Sunday.']
[34][Lit., 'recreation.']
[35][Lit., 'recreation.']
[36][Lit., 'of everything.']
[37]All writers who comment upon this delicate matter go into lengthy and learned explanations of it, though in reality there is little that needs to be added to the Saint's clear and apt exposition. It will be remembered that St. Teresa once wrote to her brother Lorenzo, who suffered in this way: 'As to those stirrings of sense. . . . I am quite clear they are of no account, so the best thing is to make no account of them' (LL. 168). The most effective means of calming souls tormented by these favours is to commend them to a discreet and wise director whose counsel they may safely follow. The Illuminists committed the grossest errors in dealing with this matter.
[38]St. John iii, 6.
[39][Lit. 'they even do it.']
[40][Lit., 'spiritual road.']
[41][Lit., 'these persons.']
[42][Lit., 'and treat this as their God.']
[43][The Spanish is impersonal: 'immediately this is taken from them,' etc.]
[44][Lit., 'and opinion.']
[45][Lit., 'anyhow.']
[46][Lit, 'the other boldnesses are.']
[47][Lit., 'they strive to obtain this, as they say, by the strength of their arms.' The phrase is, of course, understood in the Spanish to be metaphorical, as the words 'as they say' clearly indicate.]
[48][Lit., 'who are not influenced, neither act by reason, but from pleasure.']
[49][Lit., 'which we shall give.']
[50][‡spero: harsh, rough, rugged.]
[51][Lit., 'against all the sweetlessness of self‑denial.']
[52][Lit., 'causing them to enter.']
[53][Lit., 'and, as they say, their eye (el ojo) grows'—a colloquial phrase expressing annoyance.]
[54]1 Corinthians xiii, 6. The Saint here cites the sense, not the
letter, of the epistle.
[55]St. Matthew xvi, 25.
[56][Lit., 'they are very weak for the fortitude and trial of perfection.']
[57]St. Matthew vii, 14.
[58][Lit., 'say.']
[59][Lit., 'say.']
[60][pl‡tica: the word is frequently used in Spanish to denote an informal sermon or address.]
[61][Lit., 'low'; the same word recurs below and is similarly translated .]
[62][Lit., 'to the better time.']
[63][Lit., 'And in this it is known very probably.']
[64]Numbers xi, 5-6.
[65][Lit., 'makes us to desire our miseries.']
[66][Lit., 'incommunicable.']
[67]Canticles vi, 4 [A.V., vi, 5].
[68][Lit., 'satisfactory and pacific.']
[69]Psalm lxxxiv, 9 [A.V., lxxxv, 8].
[70][The stress here is evidently on the transience of the distempers whether they be moral or physical.]
[71][Lit., 'spoiling themselves in the one.']
[72][Lit., 'because they seek their spirit.']
[73][Lit., 'without doing anything themselves.']
[74][Lit., 'which it may then wish to have.']
[75]Psalm lxxii, 21 [A.V., lxxiii, 21‑2].
[76][Lit., 'livingness': cf. the quotation below.]
[77]Psalm xli, 3 [A.V., xlii, 2].
[78][Lit., 'and chance': the same word as in the verse‑line above.]
[79]St. Matthew vii, 14.
[80]Genesis xxi, 8.
[81]Exodus xxxiii, 5.
[82][Job ii, 7-8].
[83][Lit., 'the deep heights.']
[84]Isaias lviii, 10.
[85]Isaias xxviii, 19. [The author omits the actual text.]
[86]To translate this passage at all, we must read the Dios c—mo of P. Silverio (p. 403, 1. 20), which is also found in P. Gerardo and elsewhere, as c—mo Dios.
[87]Isaias xxviii, 9.
[88]Habacuc ii, 1.
[89]St. Augustine: Soliloq., Cap. ii.
[90]Psalm lxii, 3 [A.V., lxiii, 1‑2].
[91]Psalm xxxviii, 3 [A.V., xxxix, 2].
[92]Psalm lxxvi, 4 [A.V., lxxvii, 3‑4].
[93]Psalm lxxvi, 7 [A.V., lxxvii, 6].
[94]Psalm l, 19 [A.V., li, 17]
[95][The 'spirit of giddiness' of D.V., and 'perverse spirit' of A.V., Isaias xix, 14.]
[96]Ecclesiasticus xxxiv, 9-10.
[97]Jeremias xxxi, 18.
[98][Lit., 'for certain days.']
[99][Lit., 'from a narrow prison.']
[100][i.e., between sense and spirit.]
[101]Psalm cxlvii, 17 [D.V. and A.V.].
[102]Wisdom ix, 15.
[103][Lit., 'Continues with other imperfections.']
[104][i.e., 'deadening of the mind.']
[105]Osee ii, 20.
[106]1 Corinthians xiii, 11.
[107][Ephesians iv, 24.]
[108]Psalm xcvi, 2 [A.V., xcvii, 2].
[109][Lit., 'not attaining.']
[110]Psalm xvii, 13 [A.V., xviii, 12].
[111]Job vii, 20.
[112]Psalm xxxviii, 12 [A.V., xxxix, 11].
[113]Job xxiii, 6.
[114]Job xix, 21.
[115][There is a reference here to Job vii, 20: cf. ¤ 5, above.]
[116]Jonas ii, 1.
[117]Psalm xvii, 5‑7 [A.V., xviii, 4‑5].
[118]Psalm lxxxvii, 6‑8 [A.V., lxxxviii, 5‑7].
[119]Psalm lxxxvii, 9 [A.V., lxxxviii, 8].
[120]Jonas ii, 4‑7 [A.V., ii, 3‑6].
[121]Ezechiel xxiv, 10.
[122]Ezechiel xxiv, 11.
[123]Wisdom iii, 6.
[124]Psalm lxviii, 2‑4 [A.V., lxix, 1‑3].
[125][i.e., purgatory.]
[126]Job xvi, 13‑17 [A.V., xvi, 12‑16].
[127]Lamentations iii, 1-20.
[128]Job xii, 22.
[129]Psalm cxxxviii, 12 [A.V., cxxxix, 12].
[130][Lit., 'like to the dead of the world (or of the age).']
[131]Psalm cxlii, 3 [A.V., cxliii, 3‑4].
[132]Psalm xxix, 7 [A.V., xxx, 6].
[133][Lit., 'and play his tricks upon it.']
[134]B. Bz., C, H. Mtr. all have this long passage on the suffering of the soul in Purgatory. It would be rash, therefore, to deny that St. John of the Cross is its author, [or to suppose, as P. Gerardo did, that he deleted it during a revision of his works]. An admirably constructed synthesis of these questions will be found in B. Belarmino, De Purgatorio, Bk. II, chaps. iv, v. He asks if souls in Purgatory are sure of their salvation. This was denied by Luther, and by a number of Catholic writers, who held that, among the afflictions of these souls, the greatest is this very uncertainty, some maintain that, though they have in fact such certainty, they are unaware of it. Belarmino quotes among other authorities Denis the Carthusian De quattuor novissimis, Gerson (Lect. I De Vita Spirituali) and John of Rochester (against Luther's 32nd article); these writers claim that, as sin which is venial is only so through the Divine mercy, it may with perfect justice be rewarded by eternal punishment, and thus souls that have committed venial sin cannot be confident of their salvation. He also shows, however, that the common opinion of theologians is that the souls in Purgatory are sure of their salvation, and considers various degrees of certainty, adding very truly that, while these souls experience no fear, they experience hope, since they have not yet the Beatific vision.
Uncertainty as to their salvation, it is said, might arise from ignorance of the sentence passed upon them by the Judge or from the deadening of their faculties by the torments which they are suffering. Belarmino refutes these and other suppositions with great force and effect. St. John of the Cross seems to be referring to the last named when he writes of the realization of their afflictions and their deprivation of God not allowing them to enjoy the blessings of the theological virtues. It is not surprising if the Saint, not having examined very closely this question, of which he would have read treatments in various authors, thought of it principally as an apt illustration of the purifying and refining effects of passive purgation; and an apt illustration it certainly is.
[135]Lamentations iii, 44.
[136][Lamentations iii, 9.]
[137]Lamentations iii, 9.
[138]Lamentations iii, 28.
[139][Lit., 'at the Divine things.']
[140]Psalm lxxii, 22 [A.V., lxxiii, 22].
[141]1 Corinthians ii, 10. [Lit., 'penetrates all things.']
[142]Wisdom vii, 24.
[143]2 Corinthians vi, 10.
[144][Lit., 'with a certain eminence of excellence.']
[145][Lit., '. . . sweetness, with great eminence.']
[146]Exodus xvi, 3.
[147]Wisdom xvi, 21.
[148][Lit., 'from every kind.' But see Tobias viii, 2. The 'deprived' of e.p. gives the best reading of this phrase, but the general sense is clear from the Scriptural reference.]
[149]Tobias viii, 2.
[150]Isaias lxiv, 4 [1 Corinthians ii, 9].
[151][Lit., 'be made thin.']
[152]Isaias xxvi, 17-18.
[153][Philippians iv, 7.]
[154][We have here split up a parenthesis of about seventy words.]
[155][Lit., 'and wept.']
[156]Lamentations iii, 17.
[157]Psalm xxxvii, 9 [A.V., xxxviii, 8].
[158][Lit., '. . . sees itself, it arises and is surrounded with pain and affliction the affections of the soul, that I know not how it could be described.' A confused, ungrammatical sentence, of which, however, the general meaning is not doubtful.]
[159]Job iii, 24.
[160]Job xxx, 17.
[161]Job xxx, 16.
[162]Lamentations iii, 17.
[163]Wisdom vii, 11.
[164]Ecclesiasticus li, 28‑9 [A.V., li, 19‑21].
[165][Lit., 'more delicate.']
[166][Lit., 'fury.']
[167][The sudden change of metaphor is the author's. The 'assault' is, of course, the renewed growth of the 'root.']
[168][Lit., '. . . from the soul, with regard to that which has already been purified.']
[169][Lit., 'not enlightened': the word is the same as that used just above.]
[170][The word translated 'over' is rendered 'gone' just above.]
[171][Lit., 'in loves'; and so throughout the exposition of this line.]
[172][Lit., 'cling,' 'adhere.']
[173][Lit., 'shut up.']
[174][Here, and below, the original has recogidos, the word normally translated 'recollected']
[175]Psalm lviii, 10 [A V., lix, 9].
[176]Deuteronomy vi, 5.
[177]Psalm lviii, 15-16 [A.V., lix, 14-15].
[178]Psalm lxii, 2 [A.V., lxiii, 1].
[179][Lit., as in the verses, 'in loves.']
[180][For cievro, hart, read siervo, servant, and we have the correct quotation from Scripture. The change, however, was evidently made by the Saint knowingly. In P. Gerardo's edition, the Latin text, with cervus, precedes the Spanish translation, with ciervo.]
[181]Job vii, 2-4.
[182][No cabe: Lit., 'it cannot be contained,' 'there is no room for it.']
[183]Isaias xxvi, 9.
[184]Psalm l, 12 [A.V., li, 10].
[185][Lit., 'enamoured.']
[186]Lamentations i, 13.
[187]Psalm xi, 7 [A.V., xii, 6].
[188]The Schoolmen frequently assert that the lower angels are purged and illumined by the higher. Cf. St. Thomas, Summa, I, q. 106, a. 1, ad. 1.
[189][Lit., 'and softens.']
[190][More literally, 'is sick.']
[191]Psalm xxxviii, 4 [A.V., xxxix, 3].
[192][Lit., 'the beginnings.']
[193]The Saint here treats a question often debated by philosophers and mystics—that of love and knowledge. Cf. also Spiritual Canticle, Stanza XVII, and Living Flame, Stanza III. Philosophers generally maintain that it is impossible to love without knowledge, and equally so to love more of an object than what is known of it. Mystics have, however, their own solutions of the philosophers' difficulty and the speculative Spanish mystics have much to say on the matter. (Cf., for example, the Mdula Mistica, Trat. V, Chap. iv, and the Escuela de Oraci—n, Trat. XII, Duda v.)
[194]St. John i, 5.
[195][Lit., 'the yearning to think of it.']
[196][The word translated 'estimation' might also be rendered 'reverent love.' The 'love of estimation,' which has its seat in the understanding, is contrasted with the 'enkindling' or the 'love of desire,' which has its seat in the will. So elsewhere in this paragraph.]
[197]St. John xx, 1 [St. Matthew xxvii, 62‑6].
[198]St. John xx, 15.
[199][Lit., 'outskirts,' 'suburbs.']
[200]Canticles v, 8.
[201]Genesis xxx, 1.
[202]Ephesians iv, 4.
[203]Canticles viii, 1.
[204]St. Matthew x, 36.
[205][Lit., 'The line, then, continues, and says thus.' In fact, however, the author is returning to the first line of the stanza.]
[206][Lit., 'taste.']
[207]Some have considered this description exaggerated, but it must be borne in mind that all souls are not tested alike and the Saint is writing of those whom God has willed to raise to such sanctity that they drain the cup of bitterness to the dregs. We have already seen (Bk. I, chap. xiv, ¤ 5) that 'all do not experience (this) after one manner . . . for (it) is meted out by the will of God, in conformity with the greater or the smaller degree of imperfection which each soul has to purge away, (and) in conformity, likewise, with the degree of love of union to which God is pleased to raise it' (Bk. I, chap xiv, above).
[208]Osee xiii, 9.
[209]Psalm xvii, 12 [A.V., xviii, 11].
[210]Psalm xvii, 13 [A.V., xviii, 12].
[211]Isaias v, 30.
[212]Psalm xxx, 21 [A.V., xxxi, 20].
[213]'Propter hoc Gregorius (Hom. 14 in Ezech.) constituit vitam contemplativam in charitate Dei.' Cf. Summa Theologica, 2a, 2ae, q. 45, a. 2.
[214]Jeremias i, 6.
[215]Exodus iv, 10 [cf. iii, 2].
[216]Acts vii, 32.
[217][Or: 'and they know not how to say it nor are able to do so.']
[218][Lit., 'to him that rules them.']
[219][Lit., 'that is set most far away and most remote from every creatures.']
[220]Baruch iii, 31.
[221]Psalm lxxvi, 19‑20 [A.V., lxxvii, 18‑19].
[222][Lit., 'of the roundness of the earth.']
[223]Job xxxvii, 16.
[224][Lit., 'rises to scale, know and possess.']
[225]Psalm lxxxiii, 6 [A.V., lxxxiv, 7].
[226]St. Luke xiv, 11.
[227]Proverbs xviii, 12.
[228]Genesis xxviii, 12.
[229][Lit., 'and annihilating oneself.']
[230]'Ut dicit Bernardus, Magna res est amor, sed sunt in eo gradus. Loquendo ergo aliquantulum magis moraliter quam realiter, decem amoris gradus distinguere possumus' (D. Thom., De dilectione Dei et proximi, cap. xxvii. Cf. Opusc. LXI of the edition of Venice, 1595).
[231][The word translated 'step' may also (and often more elegantly) be rendered 'degree.' The same word is kept, however, throughout the translation of this chapter except where noted below.]
[232]Canticles v, 8.
[233]Psalm cxlii, 7 [A.V., cxliii, 7].
[234]Psalm lxvii, 10 [A.V., lxviii, 9].
[235][Lit., 'to enter (upon).']
[236]Canticles iii, 2.
[237]Psalm civ, 4 [A.V., cv, 4].
[238]St. John xx.
[239][The word in the Spanish is that elsewhere translated 'step.']
[240]Psalm cxi, 1 [A.V., cxii, 1].
[241][Lit., 'makes in him this labour of eagerness.']
[242]Genesis xxix, 20.
[243][Lit., 'how much God merits.']
[244]Canticles viii, 5.
[245]Jeremias ii, 2.
[246]Psalm lxxxiii, 2 [A.V., lxxxiv, 2].
[247]Genesis xxx, 1.
[248][Lit., 'On this hungering step.']
[249]Isaias xl, 31.
[250]Psalm xli, 2 [A.V., xlii, 1].
[251]Psalm lviii, 5 [A.V., lix, 4].
[252]Psalm cxviii, 32 [A.V., cxix, 32].
[253]1 Corinthians xiii, 7.
[254]Exodus xxxii, 31‑2.
[255]Psalm xxxvi, 4 [A.V., xxxvii, 4].
[256]Canticles i, 1.
[257]Canticles iii, 4.
[258][Lit., 'attain to setting their foot.']
[259]Daniel x, 11.
[260]'Dum Deum in ignis visione suscipiunt, per amorem suaviter arserunt' (Hom. XXX in Evang.).
[261][i.e., direct, not mediate.]
[262]St. Matthew v, 8.
[263]St. John iii, 2.
[264]St. John xvi, 23.
[265][Lit., 'that it dislocates the sight of all understanding.']
[266]1 St. Peter v, 9.
[267][Lit., 'a better undershirt and tunic.']
[268][Lit., 'this whiteness.']
[269]Osee, ii, 20.
[270]Psalm xvi, 4 [A.V., xvii, 4].
[271]1 Thessalonians v, 8.
[272]Psalm xxiv, 15 [A.V., xxv, 15].
[273]Psalm cxxii, 2 [A.V., cxxiii, 2].
[274]Canticles iv, 9.
[275]Lamentations iii, 29.
[276]Ibid. [For the quotation, see Bk. II, chap. viii, ¤ 1, above.]
[277]Canticles i, 3. [A.V., i, 4.] [For 'chambers' the Spanish has 'bed.']
[278]Canticles iii, 10.
[279][Or 'health.']
[280]Romans viii, 24.
[281]i.e., in the original Spanish and in our verse rendering of the poem in The Complete Works of St. John of the Cross, Ed. by E. Allison Peers, Vol. II (The Newman Press, Westminster, Md.).
[282]i.e., in the original Spanish and in our verse rendering of the poem in The Complete Works of St. John of the Cross, Ed. by E. Allison Peers, Vol. II (The Newman Press, Westminster, Md.).
[283][The Spanish also admits of the rendering: 'remain shut off from it by darkness.']
[284]Matthew vi, 3.
[285]Canticles iii, 7-8.
[286]Canticles vi, 10 [A.V., vi, 11‑12].
[287]Job i, 1-11.
[288]Such is the unanimous opinion of theologians. Some, with St. Thomas (Pt. III, q. 57, a. 6), suppose that the appearance which converted St. Paul near Damascus was that of Our Lord Jesus Christ in person.
[289]Exodus vii, 11‑22; viii, 7.
[290]Job xli, 25.
[291][Lit., 'step.' Cf. Bk. II, chap. xix, first note, above.]
[292]Canticles i, 1.
[293]Canticles viii, 1.
[294]The word translated 'at rest' is a past participle: more literally, 'stilled.'
[295][Lit., 'twice repeats'—a loosely used phrase.]
[296]H omits this last phrase, which is found in all the other Codices, and in e.p. The latter adds: 'notwithstanding that the soul is not wholly free from the temptations of the lower part.' The addition is made so that the teaching of the Saint may not be confused with that of the Illuminists, who supposed the contemplative in union to be impeccable, do what he might. The Saint's meaning is that for the mystical union of the soul with God such purity and tranquillity of senses and faculties are needful that his condition resembles that state of innocence in which Adam was created, but without the attribute of impeccability, which does not necessarily accompany union, nor can be attained by any, save by a most special privilege of God. Cf. St. Teresa's Interior Castle, VII, ii. St. Teresa will be found occasionally to explain points of mystical doctrine which St. John of the Cross takes as being understood.
[297][Lit., 'twice repeated.']
[298]Wisdom xviii, 14.
[299]Canticles v, 7.
[300]Canticles iii, 1.
[301]Thus end the majority of the MSS. Cf. pp. lxviii‑lxiii, Ascent of Mount Carmel (Image Books edition), 26-27, on the incomplete state of this treatise. The MSS. say nothing of this, except that in the Alba de Tormes MS. we read: 'Thus far wrote the holy Fray John of the Cross concerning the purgative way, wherein he treats of the active and the passive [aspect] of it as is seen in the treatise of the Ascent of the Mount and in this of the Dark Night, and, as he died, he wrote no more. And hereafter follows the illuminative way, and then the unitive.' Elsewhere we have said that the lack of any commentary on the last five stanzas is not due to the Saint's death, since he lived for many years after writing the commentary on the earlier stanzas.