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SECOND MANSIONS
In which there is
one Chapter Only
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CHAPTER I. Treats of the great importance of perseverance if we are to reach the
final Mansions and of the fierce war which the devil wages against us.
Tells how essential it is, if we are to attain our goal, not to miss
our way at the beginning. Gives a method which has proved very
efficacious.
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LET us now come to consider who the souls are that enter the second
Mansions and what they do there. I want to say very little to you
about this, because elsewhere I have written of it at length,
and it will be impossible for me to avoid repeating a great deal of
this, because I cannot remember anything of what I said. If it
could be arranged in a different form, I am quite sure you
would not mind, as we are never tired of books that treat of this,
numerous though they are.
This chapter has to do with those who have already begun to practise
prayer and who realize the importance of not remaining in the first
Mansions, but who often are not yet resolute enough to leave those
Mansions, and will not avoid occasions of sin, which is a very
perilous condition. But it is a very great mercy that they should
contrive to escape from the snakes and other poisonous creatures, if
only for short periods and should realize that it is good to flee from
them. In some ways, these souls have a much harder time than those in
the first Mansions; but they are in less peril, for they seem now to
understand their position and there is great hope that they will get
farther into the castle still. I say they have a harder time because
the souls in the first Mansions are, as it were, not only dumb, but
can hear nothing, and so it is not such a trial to them to be unable to
speak; the others, who can hear and not speak, would find the trial
much harder to bear. But that is no reason for envying those who do
not hear, for after all it is a great thing to be able to understand
what is said to one.
These souls, then, can understand the Lord when He calls them;
for, as they gradually get nearer to the place where His Majesty
dwells, He becomes a very good Neighbour to them. And such are His
mercy and goodness that, even when we are engaged in our worldly
pastimes and businesses and pleasures and hagglings, when we are
falling into sins and rising from them again (because these creatures
are at once so venomous and so active and it is so dangerous for us to
be among them that it will be a miracle if we escape stumbling over them
and falling) -- in spite of all that, this Lord of ours is so
anxious that we should desire Him and strive after His companionship
that He calls us ceaselessly, time after time, to approach Him; and
this voice of His is so sweet that the poor soul is consumed with grief
at being unable to do His bidding immediately, and thus, as I say,
it suffers more than if it could not hear Him.
I do not mean by this that He speaks to us and calls us in the precise
way which I shall describe later; His appeals come through the
conversations of good people, or from sermons, or through the reading
of good books; and there are many other ways, of which you have
heard, in which God calls us. Or they come through sicknesses and
trials, or by means of truths which God teaches us at times when we
are engaged in prayer; however feeble such prayers may be God values
them highly. You must not despise this first favour, sisters, nor be
disconsolate, even though you have not responded immediately to the
Lord's call; for His Majesty is quite prepared to wait for many
days, and even years, especially when He sees we are persevering and
have good desires. This is the most necessary thing here; if we have
this we cannot fail to gain greatly. Nevertheless, the assault which
the devils now make upon the soul, in all kinds of ways, is terrible;
and the soul suffers more than in the preceding Mansions; for there it
was deaf and dumb, or at least it could hear very little, and so it
offered less resistance, like one who to a great extent has lost hope
of gaining the victory. Here the understanding is keener and the
faculties are more alert, while the clash of arms and the noise of
cannon are so loud that the soul cannot help hearing them. For here
the devils once more show the soul these vipers -- that is, the
things of the world -- and they pretend that earthly pleasures are
almost eternal: they remind the soul of the esteem in which it is held
in the world, of its friends and relatives, of the way in which its
health will be endangered by penances (which the soul always wants to
do when it first enters this Mansion) and of impediments of a thousand
other kinds.
Oh, Jesus! What confusion the devils bring about in the poor soul,
and how distressed it is, not knowing if it ought to proceed farther or
return to the room where it was before! On the other hand, reason
tells the soul how mistaken it is in thinking that all these earthly
things are of the slightest value by comparison with what it is
seeking, faith instructs it in what it must do to find satisfaction;
memory shows it how all these things come to an end, and reminds it
that those who have derived so much enjoyment from the things which it
has seen have died. Sometimes they have died suddenly and been quickly
forgotten by all: people whom we once knew to be very prosperous are
now beneath the ground, and we trample upon their graves, and often,
as we pass them, we reflect that their bodies are seething with worms
-- of these and many other things the soul is reminded by memory.
The will inclines to love One in Whom it has seen so many acts and
signs of love, some of which it would like to return. In particular,
the will shows the soul how this true Lover never leaves it, but goes
with it everywhere and gives it life and being. Then the understanding
comes forward and makes the soul realize that, for however many years
it may live, it can never hope to have a better friend, for the world
is full of falsehood and these pleasures which the devil pictures to it
are accompanied by trials and cares and annoyances; and tells it to be
certain that outside this castle it will find neither security nor
peace: let it refrain from visiting one house after another when its
own house is full of good things, if it will only enjoy them. How
fortunate it is to be able to find all that it needs, as it were, at
home, especially when it has a Host Who will put all good things into
its possession, unless, like the Prodigal Son, it desires to go
astray and eat the food of the swine!
It is reflections of this kind which vanquish devils. But, oh, my
God and Lord, how everything is ruined by the vain habits we fall
into and the way everyone else follows them! So dead is our faith that
we desire what we see more than what faith tells us about -- though
what we actually see is that people who pursue these visible things meet
with nothing but ill fortune. All this is the work of these poisonous
creatures which we have been describing. For, if a man is bitten by a
viper, his whole body is poisoned and swells up; and so it is in this
case, and yet we take no care of ourselves. Obviously a great deal of
attention will be necessary if we are to be cured and only the great
mercy of God will preserve us from death. The soul will certainly
suffer great trials at this time, especially if the devil sees that its
character and habits are such that it is ready to make further
progress: all the powers of hell will combine to drive it back again.
Ah, my Lord! It is here that we have need of Thine aid, without
which we can do nothing. Of Thy mercy, allow not this soul to be
deluded and led astray when its journey is but begun. Give it light so
that it may see how all its welfare consists in this and may flee from
evil companionship. It is a very great thing for a person to associate
with others who are walking in the right way: to mix, not only with
those whom he sees in the rooms where he himself is, but with those
whom he knows to have entered the rooms nearer the centre, for they
will be of great help to him and he can get into such close touch with
them that they will take him with them. Let him have a fixed
determination not to allow himself to be beaten, for, if the devil
sees that he has firmly resolved to lose his life and his peace and
everything that he can offer him rather than to return to the first
room, he will very soon cease troubling him. Let him play the man and
not be like those who went down on their knees in order to drink when
they went to battle -- I forget with whom -- but let him be
resolute, for he is going forth to fight with all the devils and there
are no better weapons than the Cross.
There is one thing so important that, although I have said it on
other occasions, I will repeat it once more here: it is that
at the beginning one must not think of such things as spiritual
favours, for that is a very poor way of starting to build such a large
and beautiful edifice. If it is begun upon sand, it will all
collapse: souls which build like that will never be free from
annoyances and temptations. For it is not in these Mansions, but in
those which are farther on, that it rains manna; once there, the soul
has all that it desires, because it desires only what is the will of
God. It is a curious thing: here we are, meeting with hindrances
and suffering from imperfections by the thousand, with our virtues so
young that they have not yet learned how to walk -- in fact, they
have only just been born: God grant that they have even been born at
all! -- and yet we are not ashamed to be wanting consolations in
prayer and to be complaining about periods of aridity. This must not
be true of you, sisters: embrace the Cross which your Spouse bore
upon His shoulders and realize that this Cross is yours to carry too:
let her who is capable of the greatest suffering suffer most for Him
and she will have the most perfect freedom. All other things are of
quite secondary importance: if the Lord should grant them to you,
give Him heartfelt thanks.
You may think that you will be full of determination to resist outward
trials if God will only grant you inward favours. His Majesty knows
best what is suitable for us; it is not for us to advise Him what to
give us, for He can rightly reply that we know not what we
ask. All that the beginner in prayer has to do -- and you
must not forget this, for it is very important -- is to labour and be
resolute and prepare himself with all possible diligence to bring his
will into conformity with the will of God. As I shall say later,
you may be quite sure that this comprises the very greatest perfection
which can be attained on the spiritual road. The more perfectly a
person practises it, the more he will receive of the Lord and the
greater the progress he will make on this road; do not think we have to
use strange jargon or dabble in things of which we have no knowledge or
understanding, our entire welfare is to be found in what I have
described. If we go astray at the very beginning and want the Lord to
do our will and to lead us just as our fancy dictates, how can this
building possibly have a firm foundation? Let us see that we do as
much as in us lies and avoid these venomous reptiles, for often it is
the Lord's will that we should be persecuted and afflicted by evil
thoughts, which we cannot cast out, and also by aridities; and
sometimes He even allows these reptiles to bite us, so that we may
learn better how to be on our guard in the future and see if we are
really grieved at having offended Him.
If, then, you sometimes fail, do not lose heart, or cease striving
to make progress, for even out of your fall God will bring good, just
as a man selling an antidote will drink poison before he takes it in
order to prove its power. If nothing else could show us what wretched
creatures we are and what harm we do to ourselves by dissipating our
desires, this war which goes on within us would be sufficient to do so
and to lead us back to recollection. Can any evil be greater than the
evil which we find in our own house? What hope can we have of being
able to rest in other people's homes if we cannot rest in our
own? For none of our friends and relatives are as near to us as our
faculties, with which we have always to live, whether we like it or
not, and yet our faculties seem to be making war upon us, as if they
were resentful of the war made upon them by our vices. "Peace,
peace," said the Lord, my sisters, and many a time He spoke words
of peace to His Apostles. Believe me, unless we have
peace, and strive for peace in our own home, we shall not find it in
the homes of others. Let this war now cease. By the blood which
Christ shed for us, I beg this of those who have not begun to enter
within themselves; and those who have begun to do so must not allow
such warfare to turn them back. They must realize that to fall a
second time is worse than to fall once. They can see that it will lead
them to ruin: let them place their trust, not in themselves, but in
the mercy of God, and they will see how His Majesty can lead them on
from one group of Mansions to another and set them on safe ground where
these beasts cannot harass or hurt them, for He will place the beasts
in their power and laugh them to scorn; and then they themselves --
even in this life, I mean -- will enjoy many more good things than
they could ever desire.
As I said first of all, I have already written to you about how you
ought to behave when you have to suffer these disturbances with which
the devil torments you; and about how recollection cannot be
begun by making strenuous efforts, but must come gently, after which
you will be able to practise it for longer periods at a time. So I
will say no more about this now, except that it is very important for
you to consult people of experience; for otherwise you will imagine
that you are doing yourselves great harm by pursuing your necessary
occupations. But, provided we do not abandon our prayer, the Lord
will turn everything we do to our profit, even though we may find no
one to teach us. There is no remedy for this evil of which we have
been speaking except to start again at the beginning; otherwise the
soul will keep on losing a little more every day -- please God that
it may come to realize this.
Some of you might suppose that, if it is such a bad thing to turn
back, it would have been better never to have begun, but to have
remained outside the castle. I told you, however, at the outset,
and the Lord Himself says this, that he who goes into danger shall
perish in it, and that the door by which we can enter this
castle is prayer. It is absurd to think that we can enter Heaven
without first entering our own souls -- without getting to know
ourselves, and reflecting upon the wretchedness of our nature and what
we owe to God, and continually imploring His mercy. The Lord
Himself says: "No one will ascend to My Father, but by
Me" (I am not sure if those are the exact words, but I
think they are) and "He that sees Me sees My
Father." Well, if we never look at Him or think of what we
owe Him, and of the death which He suffered for our sakes, I do not
see how we can get to know Him or do good works in His service. For
what can be the value of faith without works, or of works which are not
united with the merits of our Lord Jesus Christ? And what but such
thoughts can arouse us to love this Lord? May it please His Majesty
to grant us to understand how much we cost Him, that the servant is
not greater than his Lord, that we must needs work if we would
enjoy His glory, and that for that reason we must perforce pray, lest
we enter continually into temptation.
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