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FIFTH MANSIONS
In which there are Four Chapters
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CHAPTER I. Begins to explain how in prayer the soul is united with God.
Describes how we may know that we are not mistaken about this.
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OH, sisters! How shall I ever be able to tell you of the riches
and the treasures and the delights which are to be found in the fifth
Mansions? I think it would be better if I were to say nothing of the
Mansions I have not yet treated, for no one can describe them, the
understanding is unable to comprehend them and no comparisons will avail
to explain them, for earthly things are quite insufficient for this
purpose. Send me light from Heaven, my Lord, that I may enlighten
these Thy servants, to some of whom Thou art often pleased to grant
fruition of these joys, lest, when the devil transfigures himself into
an angel of light, he should deceive them, for all their desires are
occupied in desiring to please Thee.
Although I said "to some", there are really very few who do not
enter these Mansions that I am about to describe. Some get farther
than others; but, as I say, the majority manage to get inside.
Some of the things which are in this room, and which I will mention
here, are, I am sure, attained by very few; but, if they
do no more than reach the door, God is showing them great mercy by
granting them this; for, though many are called, few are
chosen. So I must say here that, though all of us who wear
this sacred habit of Carmel are called to prayer and
contemplation -- because that was the first principle of our Order
and because we are descendent upon the line of those holy Fathers of
ours from Mount Carmel who sought this treasure, this precious pearl
of which we speak, in such great solitude and with such contempt for
the world -- few of us prepare ourselves for the Lord to
reveal it to us. As far as externals are concerned, we are on the
right road to attaining the essential virtues; but we shall need to do
a very great deal before we can attain to this higher state and we must
on no account be careless. So let us pause here, my sisters, and beg
the Lord that, since to some extent it is possible for us to enjoy
Heaven upon earth, He will grant us His help so that it will not be
our fault if we miss anything may He also show us the road and give
strength to our souls so that we may dig until we find this hidden
treasure, since it is quite true that we have it within ourselves.
This I should like to explain if the Lord is pleased to give me the
knowledge.
I said "strength to our souls", because you must understand that we
do not need bodily strength if God our Lord does not give it us;
there is no one for whom He makes it impossible to buy His riches;
provided each gives what he has, He is content. Blessed be so great
a God! But observe, daughters, that, if you are to gain this, He
would have you keep back nothing; whether it be little or much, He
will have it all for Himself, and according to what you know yourself
to have given, the favours He will grant you will be small or great.
There is no better test than this of whether or no our prayer attains
to union. Do not think it is a state, like the last, in which we
dream; I say "dream", because the soul seems to be, as it were,
drowsy, so that it neither seems asleep nor feels awake. Here we are
all asleep, and fast asleep, to the things of the world, and to
ourselves (in fact, for the short time that the condition lasts, the
soul is without consciousness and has no power to think, even though it
may desire to do so). There is no need now for it to devise any
method of suspending the thought. Even in loving, if it is able to
love, it cannot understand how or what it is that it loves, nor what
it would desire; in fact, it has completely died to the world so that
it may live more fully in God. This is a delectable death, a
snatching of the soul from all the activities which it can perform while
it is in the body; a death full of delight, for, in order to come
closer to God, the soul appears to have withdrawn so far from the body
that I do not know if it has still life enough to be able to
breathe. I have just been thinking about this and I believe
it has not; or at least, if it still breathes, it does so without
realizing it. The mind would like to occupy itself wholly in
understanding something of what it feels, and, as it has not the
strength to do this, it becomes so dumbfounded that, even if any
consciousness remains to it, neither hands nor feet can move; as we
commonly say of a person who has fallen into a swoon, it might be taken
for dead. Oh, the secrets of God! I should never weary of trying
to describe them to you, if I thought I could do so successfully. I
do not mind if I write any amount of nonsense, provided that just once
in a way I can write sense, so that we may give great praise to the
Lord.
I said that there was no question here of dreaming, whereas as in the
Mansion that I have just described the soul is doubtful as to what has
really happened until it has had a good deal of experience of it. It
wonders if the whole thing was imagination, if it has been asleep, if
the favour was a gift of God, or if the devil was transfigured into an
angel of light. It retains a thousand suspicions, and it is well that
it should, for, as I said, we can sometimes be deceived in this
respect, even by our own nature. For, although there is less
opportunity for the poisonous creatures to enter, a few little
lizards, being very agile, can hide themselves all over the place;
and, although they do no harm -- especially, as I said, if we take
no notice of them -- they correspond to the little thoughts which
proceed from the imagination and from what has been said it will be seen
that they are often very troublesome. Agile though they are,
however, the lizards cannot enter this Mansion, for neither
imagination nor memory nor understanding can be an obstacle to the
blessings that are bestowed in it. And I shall venture to affirm
that, if this is indeed union with God, the devil cannot
enter or do any harm; for His Majesty is in such close contact and
union with the essence of the soul that he will not dare to
approach, nor can he even understand this secret thing. That much is
evident: for it is said that he does not understand our
thoughts; still less, therefore, will he understand a thing
so secret that God will not even entrust our thoughts with
it. Oh, what a great blessing is this state in which that
accursed one can do us no harm! Great are the gains which come to the
soul with God working in it and neither we ourselves nor anyone else
hindering Him. What will He not give Who so much loves giving and
can give all that He will?
I fear I may be leaving you confused by saying "if this is indeed
union with God" and suggesting that there are other kinds of union.
But of course there are! If we are really very fond of vanities the
devil will send us into transports over them; but these are not like
the transports of God, nor is there the same delight and satisfaction
for the soul or the same peace and joy. That joy is greater than all
the joys of earth, and greater than all its delights, and all its
satisfactions, so that there is no evidence that these satisfactions
and those of the earth have a common origin; and they are apprehended,
too, very differently, as you will have learned by experience. I
said once that it is as if the one kind had to do with the
grosser part of the body, and the other kind penetrated to the very
marrow of the bones; that puts it well, and I know no better way of
expressing it.
But I fancy that even now you will not be satisfied, for you will
think that you may be mistaken, and that these interior matters are
difficult to investigate. In reality, what has been said will be
sufficient for anyone who has experienced this blessing, for there is a
great difference between the false and the true. But I will give you
a clear indication which will make it impossible for you to go wrong or
to doubt if some favour has come from God; His Majesty has put it
into my mind only to-day, and I think it is quite decisive. In
difficult matters, even if I believe I understand what I am saying
and am speaking the truth, I use this phrase "I think", because,
if I am mistaken, I am very ready to give credence to those who have
great learning. For even if they have not themselves experienced these
things, men of great learning have a certain instinct to
prompt them. As God uses them to give light to His Church, He
reveals to them anything which is true so that it shall be accepted;
and if they do not squander their talents, but are true servants of
God, they will never be surprised at His greatness, for they know
quite well that He is capable of working more and still more. In any
case, where matters are in question for which there is no explanation,
there must be others about which they can read, and they can deduce
from their reading that it is possible for these first-named to have
happened.
Of this I have the fullest experience; and I have also experience of
timid, half-learned men whose shortcomings have cost me very dear.
At any rate, my own opinion is that anyone who does not believe that
God can do much more than this, and that He has been pleased, and is
sometimes still pleased, to grant His creatures such favours, has
closed the door fast against receiving them. Therefore, sisters, let
this never be true of you, but trust God more and more, and do not
consider whether those to whom He communicates His favours are bad or
good. His Majesty knows all about this, as I have said;
intervention on our part is quite unnecessary; rather must we serve
His Majesty with humility and simplicity of heart, and praise Him
for His works and wonders.
Turning now to the indication which I have described as a
decisive one: here is this soul which God has made, as it were,
completely foolish in order the better to impress upon it true wisdom.
For as long as such a soul is in this state, it can neither see nor
hear nor understand: the period is always short and seems to the soul
even shorter than it really is. God implants Himself in the interior
of that soul in such a way that, when it returns to itself, it
cannot possibly doubt that God has been in it and it has been
in God; so firmly does this truth remain within it that, although for
years God may never grant it that favour again, it can neither forget
it nor doubt that it has received it (and this quite apart from the
effects which remain within it, and of which I will speak later).
This certainty of the soul is very material.
But now you will say to me: How did the soul see it and understand it
if it can neither see nor understand? I am not saying that it saw it
at the time, but that it sees it clearly afterwards, and not
because it is a vision, but because of a certainty which remains in the
soul, which can be put there only by God. I know of a person who had
not learned that God was in all things by presence and power and
essence; God granted her a favour of this kind, which convinced her
of this so firmly that, although one of those half-learned
men whom I have been talking about, and whom she asked in what way
God was in us (until God granted him an understanding of it he knew
as little of it as she), told her that He was in us only by grace,
she had the truth so firmly implanted within her that she did not
believe him, and asked others, who told her the truth, which was a
great consolation to her.
Do not make the mistake of thinking that this certainty has anything to
do with bodily form -- with the presence of Our Lord Jesus
Christ, for example, unseen by us, in the Most Holy Sacrament.
It has nothing to do with this -- only with His Divinity. How,
you will ask, can we become so convinced of what we have not seen?
That I do not know, it is the work of God. But I know I am
speaking the truth; and if anyone has not that certainty, I should
say that what he has experienced is not union of the whole soul with
God but only union of one of the faculties or some one of the many
other kinds of favour which God grants the soul. In all these matters
we must stop looking for reasons why they happened; if our
understanding cannot grasp them, why should we try to perplex it? It
suffices us to know that He Who brings this to pass is
all-powerful, and as it is God Who does it and we,
however hard we work, are quite incapable of achieving it, let us not
try to become capable of understanding it either.
With regard to what I have just said about our incapability, I
recall that, as you have heard, the Bride in the Songs says: "The
King brought me" (or "put me", I think the words are) "into the
cellar of wine." It does not say that she went. It also
says that she was wandering about in all directions seeking her
Beloved. This, as I understand it, is the cellar where
the Lord is pleased to put us, when He wills and as He wills. But
we cannot enter by any efforts of our own; His Majesty must put us
right into the centre of our soul, and must enter there
Himself; and, in order that He may the better show us His wonders,
it is His pleasure that our will, which has entirely surrendered
itself to Him, should have no part in this. Nor does He desire the
door of the faculties and senses, which are all asleep, to be opened
to Him; He will come into the centre of the soul without using a
door, as He did when He came in to His disciples, and said Pax
vobis,128 and when He left the sepulchre without removing the
stone. Later on you will see how it is His Majesty's will that the
soul should have fruition of Him in its very centre, but you will be
able to realize that in the last Mansion much better than here.
Oh, daughters, what a lot we shall see if we desire to see no more
than our own baseness and wretchedness and to understand that we are not
worthy to be the handmaidens of so great a Lord, since we cannot
comprehend His marvels. May He be for ever praised. Amen.
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