[182]"La gloria di colui che tutto move
per l'universo penetra, e resplende
in una parte più e meno altrove" (Par. i. 1-3).
The theological ground-plan of the Cantica is epitomized in this introductory verse.
[183]"Summa Contra Gentiles," 1. iv. cap. 1. (Rickaby's translation).
[184]Leben, cap. lvi.
[185]Aug. Conf., bk. xiii. cap. xi.
[186]Avisos y Sentencias Espirituales, N. 51.
[187]"Varieties of Religious Experience," Lecture vi.
[188]Quoted by W. L. Lilly, "Many Mansions," p. 140.
[189]Ennead vi. 9.
[190]Thus Aquinas says, "Since God is the universal cause of all Being, in whatever region Being can be found, there must be the Divine Presence" ("Summa Contra Gentiles," 1. iii. cap. lxviii.). And we have seen that the whole claim of the mystics ultimately depends on man's possession of pure being in "the spark of the soul."
[191]"De Ornatu Spiritualium Nuptiarum," I. ii. cap. lxvii.
[192]Op. cit., I. iii. cap. i.
[193]Relaccion ix. 10. But this image of a sponge, which also suggested itelf to St. Augustine, proved an occasion of stumbling to his more metaphysical mind: tending to confuse his idea of the nature of God with the category of space. Vide Aug. Conf., bk. vii. cap. v.
[194]"The Threefold Life of Man," cap. vi. SS 71.
[195]Eckhart, Pred, lxix. So too we read in the Oxyrhyncus Papyri, "Raise the stone and there thou shalt find Me. Cleave the wood and there am I."
[196]Compare above, cap. ii.
[197]"Revelations of Divine Love," cap. xl.
[198]Boyce Gibson, "God with Us," p. 24.
[199]See A. E. Waite, "The Doctrine and Literature of the Kabalah," pp. 36-53.
[200]Par. xxxiii. 137.
[201]"Vala," viii. 237.
[202]"Jerusalem," lxi. 44 and xcv. 23.
[203]A. E. Waite, "The Doctrine and Literature of the Kabalah," p. 35.
204Palmer. "Oriental Mysticism," pt. i. cap. i
[205]Delacroix, "Études sur le Mysticisme," p. 75. The reference in the last sentence is to St. Teresa's "Castillo Interior."
[206]See Tauler, Sermon on St. John Baptist, and Third Instruction (" The Inner Way," pp. 97 and 321); Suso, "Buchlein von der Warheit," cap. v.; Ruysbroeck, "De Ornatu Spiritalium Nuptiarum," 1. iii. caps, ii. and vi.
[207]St. Teresa, "El Castillo Interior," Moradas; Sétimas, cap. i.
[208]Julian of Norwich, "Revelations of Divine Love." cap. lv. Julian here repeats a familiar Patristic doctrine. So St. Thomas says ("Summa Contra Gentiles," 1. iv. cap. xxvi), "A likeness of the Divine Trinity is observable in the human mind."
[209]"The three Persons of the Trinity," said John Scotus Erigena, "are less modes of the Divine Substance than modes under which our mind conceives the Divine Substance"--a stimulating statement of dubious orthodoxy.
[210]Aug. Conf., bk. xiii. cap. xi.
[211]Op. cit., cap. v.
[212]Substance is here, of course, to be understood in the scholastic sense, as the reality which underlies merely phenomenal existence.
[213]I.e., the Second Person of the Christian Trinity is the redemptive, "fount of mercy," the medium by which Grace, the free gift of transcendental life, reaches and vivifies human nature: "permeates it," in Eucken's words, "with the Infinite and Eternal" ("Der Sinn und Wert des Lebens," p. 181).
[214]"Revelations of Divine Love," cap. lviii.
215Op. cit., cap. lix.
[216]"The School of the Heart," Epigram x. This book, which is a free translation of the "Scola Cordis" of Benedict Haeften (1635), is often, but wrongly attributed to Francis Quarles.
[217]"De Consideratione," bk. v. cap. viii.
[218]Ephesians iv. 6.
[219]"De Visione Dei," cap. xvii.
[220]Eucken, "Der Sinn und Wert des Lebens," p. 131.
[221]"An Appeal to All who Doubt" ("Liberal and Mystical Writings of William Law" p. 54). Law's symbols are here borrowed from the system of his master, Jacob Boehme. (See the "De Signatura Rerum" of Boehme, cap. xiv.)
[222]Aug. Conf., bk. vii. cap. x.
[223]Tauler, 3rd Instruction ("The Inner Way," p. 324).
[224]Par. xxxiii 67, 85.
[225]"De Ornatu Spiritalium Nuptiarum," I. iii. cap. iii.
[226]Von Hügel, "The Mystical Element of Religion," vol. i. p. 357.
[227]Ruysbroeck, op. cit.., loc. cit.
[228]Supra, Cap. II.
[229]Tauler, op. cit., loc. cit.
[230]"Summa Contra Gentiles," I. iv. cap. xxvi.
[231]"De Ornatu Spiritalium Nuptiarum," I. ii. cap. iv.
[232]Op. cit., I. ii. cap. xxxvii.
[233]Aug. Conf., bk. xiii. cap. ix.
[234]Introduction to "Three Dialogues of the Supersensual Life," p. xxx.
[235]The doctrine is found in St. Augustine, and is frequently reproduced by the mediaeval mystics. Eckhart is perhaps here quoting St. Thomas Aquinas, a usual source of his more orthodox utterances. Compare "Summa Contra Gentiles," I. iv. cap. xxiii: "Since the Holy Ghost proceeds as the love wherewith God loves Himself, and since God loves with the same love Himself and other beings for the sake of His own goodness, it is clear that the love wherewith God loves us belongs to the Holy Ghost. In like manner also the love wherewith we love God."
[236]Pred. xii.
[237]"De Ornatu Spiritalium Nuptiarum " I. iii. cap. iii.
[238]Suso, Leben, cap. lvi.
[239]"The Rod, the Root, and the Flower," "Homo," xix.
[240]"De Visione Dei," cap. xxiii.
[241]"Because by the mystery of the Incarnate Word the new light of Thy brightness hath shone upon the eyes of our mind: that we, knowing God seen of the eyes, by Him may be snatched up into the love of that which eye hath not seen" (Missale Romanum. Praefatio Solemnis de Nativitate).
[242]"The Threefold Life of Man, cap. iii. SS 31.
[243]Ruysbroeck, op. cit., 1. iii. cap. i.
[244]Dialogo, cap. xxii.
[245]"Revelations of Divine Love," cap. lix.
[246]Par. xxiii. 37. "Here is the Wisdom and the Power which opened the ways betwixt heaven and earth, for which there erst had been so long a yearning."
[247]"Theologia Germanica," cap. xviii.
[248]"De Ornatu Spiritalium Nuptiarum," 1. iii. cap. v. The extreme antiquity of this idea is illustrated by the Catholic practice, dating from Patristic times, of celebrating three Masses on Christmas Day. Of these the first, at midnight, commemorates the Eternal Generation of the Son; the second, at dawn, His incarnation upon earth; the third His birth in the heart of man. Compare the Roman Missal: also Kellner, "Heortology" (English translation, London, 1908), p. 156.
[249]Eckhart, Pred. i., "Mystische Schriften," p. 13. Compare Tauler, Sermon on the Nativity of Our Lady ("The Inner Way," p. 167).
[250]This idea of re-birth is probably of Oriental origin. It can be traced back to Egypt, being found in the Hermetic writings of the third century, B.C. See Petrie, "Personal Religion in Egypt before Christianity," p. 167.
[251]F. von Hügel, "The Life of Prayer," p. 24.
[252]Supra, p. 53.
[253]"The Cloud upon the Sanctuary," p. 77.
[254]The Enochian Walks with God," p. 3.
[255]Op. cit., p. 81.
[256]"De Signatura Rerum," viii. 47.
[257]"De Itinerado Mentis in Deo," cap. vii.