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BOOK CALLED WAY
OF PERFECTION.
Composed by
TERESA OF JESUS, Nun of the Order of Our Lady of Carmel, addressed to the
Discalced Nuns of Or Lady of Carmel of the First Rule.
General Argument
of this Book
J. H. S.
This book treats of maxims and counsels which Teresa of
Jesus gives to her daughters and sisters in religion, belonging to the Convents
which, with the favour of Our Lord and of the glorious Virgin, Mother of God,
Our Lady, she has founded according to the First Rule of Our Lady of Carmel. In
particular she addresses it to the sisters of the Convent of Saint Joseph of
Ávila, which was the first Convent, and of which she was Prioress when she wrote
it.
PROTESTATIONS
In all that I shall say in this Book, I submit to what is
taught by Our Mother, the Holy Roman Church; if there is anything in it contrary
to this, it will be without my knowledge. Therefore, for the love of Our Lord, I
beg the learned men who are to revise it to look at it very carefully and to
amend any faults of this nature which there may be in it and the many others
which it will have of other kinds. If there is anything good in it, let this be
to the glory and honour of God and in the service of His most sacred Mother, our
Patroness and Lady, whose habit, though all unworthily, I wear.
PROLOGUE
J. H. S.
The sisters of this Convent of Saint Joseph, knowing that I
had had leave from Father Presentado Fray Domingo Bañes,
of the Order of the glorious Saint Dominic, who at present is my confessor, to
write certain things about prayer, which it seems I may be able to succeed in
doing since I have had to do with many holy and spiritual persons, have, out of
their great love for me, so earnestly begged me to say something to them about
this that I have resolved to obey them. I realize that the great love which they
have for me may render the imperfection and the poverty of my style in what I
shall say to them more acceptable than other books which are very ably written
by those who
have known what they are writing about. I rely upon their prayers, by means of
which the Lord may be pleased to enable me to say something concerning the way
and method of life which it is fitting should be practised in this house. If I
do not succeed in doing this, Father Presentado, who will first read what I have
written, will either put it right or burn it, so that I shall have lost nothing
by obeying these servants of God, and they will see how useless I am when His
Majesty does not help me.
My intent is to suggest a few remedies for a number of
small temptations which come from the devil, and which, because they are so
slight, are apt to pass unnoticed. I shall also write of other things, according
as the Lord reveals them to me and as they come to my mind; since I do not know
what I am going to say I cannot set it down in suitable order; and I think it is
better for me not to do so, for it is quite unsuitable that I should be writing
in this way at all. May the Lord lay His hand on all that I do so that it may be
in accordance with His holy will; this is always my desire, although my actions
may be as imperfect as I myself am.
I know that I am lacking neither in love nor in desire to
do all I can to help the souls of my sisters to make great progress in the
service of the Lord. It may be that this love, together with my years and the
experience which I have of a number of convents, will make me more successful in
writing about small matters than learned men can be. For these, being themselves
strong and handing other and more important occupations, do not always pay such
heed to things which in themselves seem of no importance but which may do great
harm to persons as weak as we women are. For the snares laid by the devil for
strictly cloistered nuns are numerous and he finds that he needs new weapons if
he is to do them harm. I, being a wicked woman, have defended myself but ill,
and so I should like my sisters to take warning by me. I shall speak of nothing
of which I have no experience, either in my own life or in the observation of
others, or which the Lord has not taught me in prayer.
A few days ago I was commanded to write an account of my
life in which I also dealt with certain matters concerning prayer. It may be
that my confessor will not wish you to see this, for which reason I shall set
down here some of the things which I said in that book and others which may also
seem to me necessary. May the Lord direct this, as I have begged Him to do, and
order it for His greater glory. Amen.
CHAPTER 1
Of the reason which moved me to found this convent in such
strict observance.
When this convent was originally founded, for the reasons
set down in the book which, as I say, I have already written, and also because
of certain wonderful revelations by which the Lord showed me how well He would
be served in this house, it was not my intention that there should be so much
austerity in external matters, nor that it should have no regular income: on the
contrary, I should have liked there to be no possibility of want. I acted, in
short, like the weak and wretched woman that I am, although I did so with good
intentions and not out of consideration for my own comfort.
At about this time there came to my notice the harm and
havoc that were being wrought in France by these Lutherans and the way in which
their unhappy sect was increasing.
This troubled me very much, and, as though I could do anything, or be of any
help in the matter, I wept before the Lord and entreated Him to remedy this
great evil. I felt that I would have laid down a thousand lives to save a single
one of all the souls that were being lost there. And, seeing that I was a woman,
and a sinner,
and incapable of doing all I should like in the Lord's service, and as my whole
yearning was, and still is, that, as He has so many enemies and so few friends,
these last should be trusty ones, I determined to do the little that was in me
-- namely, to follow the evangelical counsels as perfectly as I could, and to
see that these few nuns who are here should do the same, confiding in the great
goodness of God, Who never fails to help those who resolve to forsake everything
for His sake. As they are all that I have ever painted them as being in my
desires, I hoped that their virtues would more than counteract my defects, and I
should thus be able to give the Lord some pleasure, and all of us, by busying
ourselves in prayer for those who are defenders of the Church, and for the
preachers and learned men who defend her, should do everything we could to aid
this Lord of mine Who is so much oppressed by those to whom He has shown so much
good that it seems as though these traitors would send Him to the Cross again
and that He would have nowhere to lay His head.
Oh, my Redeemer, my heart cannot conceive this without
being sorely distressed! What has become of Christians now? Must those who owe
Thee most always be those who distress Thee? Those to whom Thou doest the
greatest kindnesses, whom Thou dost choose for Thy friends, among whom Thou dost
move, communicating Thyself to them through the Sacraments? Do they not think,
Lord of my soul, that they have made Thee endure more than sufficient
torments?
It is certain, my Lord, that in these days withdrawal from
the world means no sacrifice at all. Since worldly people have so little respect
for Thee, what can we expect them to have for us? Can it be that we deserve that
they should treat us any better than they have treated Thee? Have we done more
for them than Thou hast done that they should be friendly to us? What then? What
can we expect -- we who, through the goodness of the Lord, are free from that
pestilential infection, and do not, like those others, belong to the devil? They
have won severe punishment at his hands and their pleasures have richly earned
them eternal fire. So to eternal fire they will have to go,
though none the less it breaks my heart to see so many souls travelling to
perdition. I would the evil were not so great and I did not see more being lost
every day.
Oh, my sisters in Christ! Help me to entreat this of the
Lord, Who has brought you together here for that very purpose. This is your
vocation; this must be your business; these must be your desires; these your
tears; these your petitions. Let us not pray for worldly things, my sisters. It
makes me laugh, and yet it makes me sad, when I hear of the things which people
come here to beg us to pray to God for; we are to ask His Majesty to give them
money and to provide them with incomes -- I wish that some of these people would
entreat God to enable them to trample all such things beneath their feet. Their
intentions are quite good, and I do as they ask because I see that they are
really devout people, though I do not myself believe that God ever hears me when
I pray for such things. The world is on fire. Men try to condemn Christ once
again, as it were, for they bring a thousand false witnesses against Him. They
would raze His Church to the ground -- and are we to waste our time upon things
which, if God were to grant them, would perhaps bring one soul less to Heaven?
No, my sisters, this is no time to treat with God for things of little
importance.
Were it not necessary to consider human frailty, which
finds satisfaction in every kind of help -- and it is always a good thing if we
can be of any help to people -- I should like it to be understood that it is not
for things like these that God should be importuned with such anxiety.
CHAPTER 2
Treats of how the necessities of the body should be
disregarded and of the good that comes from poverty.
Do not think, my sisters, that because you do not go about
trying to please people in the world you will lack food. You will not, I assure
you: never try to sustain yourselves by human artifices, or you will die of
hunger, and rightly so. Keep your eyes fixed upon your Spouse: it is for Him to
sustain you; and, if He is pleased with you, even those who like you least will
give you food, if unwillingly, as you have found by experience. If you should do
as I say and yet die of hunger, then happy are the nuns of Saint Joseph's! For
the love of the Lord, let us not forget this: you have forgone a regular income;
forgo worry about food as well, or thou will lose everything. Let those whom the
Lord wishes to live on an income do so: if that is their vocation, they are
perfectly justified; but for us to do so, sisters, would be inconsistent.
Worrying about getting money from other people seems to me
like thinking about what other people enjoy. However much you worry, you will
not make them change their minds nor will they become desirous of giving you
alms. Leave these anxieties to Him Who can move everyone, Who is the Lord of all
money and of all who possess money. It is by His command that we have come here
and His words are true -- they cannot fail: Heaven and earth will fail first.
Let us not fail Him, and let us have no fear that He will fail us; if He should
ever do so it will be for our greater good, just as the saints failed to keep
their lives when they were slain for the Lord's sake, and their bliss was
increased through their martyrdom. We should be making a good exchange if we
could have done with this life quickly and enjoy everlasting satiety.
Remember, sisters, that this will be important when I am
dead; and that is why I am leaving it to you in writing. For, with God's help,
as long as I live, I will remind you of it myself, as I know by experience what
a great help it will be to you. It is when I possess least that I have the
fewest worries and the Lord knows that, as far as I can tell, I am more
afflicted when there is excess of anything than when there is lack of it; I am
not sure if that is the Lord's doing, but I have noticed that He provides for us
immediately. To act otherwise would be to deceive the world by pretending to be
poor when we are not poor in spirit but only outwardly. My conscience would give
me a bad time. It seems to me it would be like stealing what was being given us,
as one might say; for I should feel as if we were rich people asking alms:
please God this may never be so. Those who worry too much about the alms that
they are likely to be given will find that sooner or later this bad habit will
lead them to go and ask for something which they do not need, and perhaps from
someone who needs it more than they do. Such a person would gain rather than
lose by giving it us but we should certainly be the worse off for having it. God
forbid this should ever happen, my daughters; if it were likely to do so, I
should prefer you to have a regular income.
I beg you, for the love of God, just as if I were begging
alms for you, never to allow this to occupy your thoughts. If the very least of
you ever hears of such a thing happening in this house, cry out about it to His
Majesty and speak to your Superior. Tell her humbly that she is doing wrong;
this is so serious a matter that it may cause true poverty gradually to
disappear. I hope in the Lord that this will not be so and that He will not
forsake His servants; and for that reason, if for no other, what you have told
me to write may be useful to you as a reminder.
My daughters must believe that it is for their own good
that the Lord has enabled me to realize in some small degree what blessings are
to be found in holy poverty. Those of them who practise it will also realize
this, though perhaps not as clearly as I do; for, although I had professed
poverty, I was not only without poverty of spirit, but my spirit was devoid of
all restraint. Poverty is good and contains within itself all the good things in
the world. It is a great domain -- I mean that he who cares nothing for the good
things of the world has dominion over them all. What do kings and lords matter
to me if I have no desire to possess their money, or to please them, if by so
doing I should cause the least displeasure to God? And what do their honours
mean to me if I have realized that the chief honour of a poor man consists in
his being truly poor?
For my own part, I believe that honour and money nearly
always go together, and that he who desires honour never hates money, while he
who hates money cares little for honour. Understand this clearly, for I think
this concern about honour always implies some slight regard for
endowments or money: seldom or never is a poor man honoured by the world;
however worthy of honour he may be, he is apt rather to be despised by it. With
true poverty there goes a different kind of honour to which nobody can take
objection. I mean that, if poverty is embraced for God's sake alone, no one has
to be pleased save God. It is certain that a man who has no need of anyone has
many friends: in my own experience I have found this to be very true.
A great deal has been written about this virtue which I
cannot understand, still less express, and I should only be making things worse
if I were to eulogize it, so I will say no more about it now. I have only spoken
of what I have myself experienced and I confess that I have been so much
absorbed that until now I have hardly realized what I have been writing.
However, it has been said now. Our arms are holy poverty, which was so greatly
esteemed and so strictly observed by our holy Fathers at the beginning of the
foundation of our Order. (Someone who knows about this tells me that they never
kept anything from one day to the next.) For the love of the Lord, then, [I beg
you] now that the rule of poverty is less perfectly observed as regards outward
things, let us strive to observe it inwardly. Our life lasts only for a couple
of hours; our reward is boundless; and, if there were no reward but to follow
the counsels given us by the Lord, to imitate His Majesty in any degree would
bring us a great recompense.
These arms must appear on our banners and at all costs we
must keep this rule -- as regards our house, our clothes, our speech, and (which
is much more important) our thoughts. So long as this is done, there need be no
fear, with the help of God, that religious observances in this house will
decline, for, as Saint Clare said, the walls of poverty are very strong. It was
with these walls, she said, and with those of humility, that she wished to
surround her convents; and assuredly, if the rule of poverty is truly kept, both
chastity and all the other virtues are fortified much better than by the most
sumptuous edifices. Have a care to this, for the love of God; and this I beg of
you by His blood. If I may say what my conscience bids me, I should wish that,
on the day when you build such edifices, they
may fall down and kill you all.
It seems very wrong, my daughters, that great houses should
be built with the money of the poor; may God forbid that this should be done;
let our houses be small and poor in every way. Let us to some extent resemble
our King, Who had no house save the porch in Bethlehem where He was born and the
Cross on which He died. These were houses where little comfort could be found.
Those who erect large houses will no doubt have good reasons for doing so. I
do not utterly condemn them: they are moved by various holy intentions. But
any corner is sufficient for thirteen poor women. If grounds should be thought
necessary on account of the strictness of the enclosure, and also as an aid to
prayer and devotion, and because our miserable nature needs such things,
well and good; and let there be a few hermitages
in them in which the sisters may go to pray. But as for a large ornate convent,
with a lot of buildings -- God preserve us from that! Always remember that these
things will all fall down on the Day of Judgment, and who knows how soon that
will be?
It would hardly look well if the house of thirteen poor
women made a great noise when it fell, for those who are really poor must make
no noise: unless they live a noiseless life people will never take pity on them.
And how happy my sisters will be if they see someone freed from hell by means of
the alms which he has given them; and this is quite possible, since they are
strictly bound to offer continual prayer for persons who give them food. It is
also God's will that, although the food comes from Him, we should thank the
persons by whose means He gives it to us: let there be no neglect of this.
I do not remember what I had begun to say, for I have
strayed from my subject. But I think this must have been the Lord's will, for I
never intended to write what I have said here. May His Majesty always keep us in
His hand so that we may never fall. Amen.
CHAPTER 3
Continues the subject begun in the first chapter and
persuades the sisters to busy themselves constantly in beseeching God to help
those who work for the Church. Ends with an exclamatory prayer.
Let us now return to the principal reason for which the
Lord has brought us together in this house, for which reason I am most desirous
that we may be able to please His Majesty. Seeing how great are the evils of the
present day and how no human strength will suffice to quench the fire kindled by
these heretics (though attempts have been made to organize opposition to them,
as though such a great and rapidly spreading evil could be remedied by force of
arms), it seems to me that it is like a war in which the enemy has overrun the
whole country, and the Lord of the country, hard pressed, retires into a city,
which he causes to be well fortified, and whence from time to time he is able to
attack. Those who are in the city are picked men who can do more by themselves
than they could do with the aid of many soldiers if they were cowards. Often
this method gains the victory; or, if the garrison does not conquer, it is at
least not conquered; for, as it contains no traitors, but picked men, it
can be reduced only by hunger. In our own conflict, however, we cannot be forced
to surrender by hunger; we can die but we cannot be conquered.
Now why have I said this? So that you may understand, my
sisters, that what we have to ask of God is that, in this little castle of ours,
inhabited as it is by good Christians, none of us may go over to the enemy. We
must ask God, too, to make the captains in this castle or city -- that is, the
preachers and theologians -- highly proficient in the way of the Lord. And as
most of these are religious, we must pray that they may advance in perfection,
and in the fulfilment of their vocation, for this is very needful. For, as I
have already said, it is the ecclesiastical and not the secular arm which must
defend us. And as we can do nothing by either of these means to help our King,
let us strive to live in such a way that our prayers may be of avail to help
these servants of God, who, at the cost of so much toil, have fortified
themselves with learning and virtuous living and have laboured to help the Lord.
You may ask why I emphasize this so much and why I say we
must help people who are better than ourselves. I will tell you, for I am not
sure if you properly understand as yet how much we owe to the Lord for bringing
us to a place where we are so free from business matters, occasions of sin and
the society of worldly people. This is a very great favour and one which is not
granted to the persons of whom I have been speaking, nor is it fitting that it
should be granted to them; it would be less so now, indeed, than at any other
time, for it is they who must strengthen the weak and give courage to God's
little ones. A fine thing it would be for soldiers if they lost their captains!
These preachers and theologians have to live among men and associate with men
and stay in palaces and sometimes even behave as people in palaces do in outward
matters. Do you think, my daughters, that it is an easy matter to have to do
business with the world, to live in the world, to engage in the affairs of the
world, and, as I have said, to live as worldly men do, and yet inwardly to be
strangers to the world, and enemies of the world, like persons who are in exile
-- to be, in short, not men but angels? Yet unless these persons act thus, they
neither deserve to bear the title of captain nor to be allowed by the Lord to
leave their cells, for they would do more harm than good. This is no time for
imperfections in those whose duty it is to teach.
And if these teachers are not inwardly fortified by
realizing the great importance of spurning everything beneath their feet and by
being detached from things which come to an end on earth, and attached to things
eternal, they will betray this defect in themselves, however much they may try
to hide it. For with whom are they dealing but with the world? They need not
fear: the world will not pardon them or fail to observe their imperfections. Of
the good things they do many will pass unnoticed, or will even not be considered
good at all; but they need not fear that any evil or imperfect thing they do
will be overlooked. I am amazed when I wonder from whom they learned about
perfection, when, instead of practising it themselves (for they think they have
no obligation to do that and have done quite enough by a reasonable observance
of the Commandments), they condemn others, and at times mistake virtue for
indulgence. Do not think, then, that they need but little Divine favour in this
great battle upon which they have entered; on the contrary, they need a great
deal.
I beg you to try to live in such a way as to be worthy to
obtain two things from God. First, that there may be many of these very learned
and religious men who have the qualifications for their task which I have
described, and that the Lord may prepare those who are not completely prepared
already and who lack anything, for a single one who is perfect will do
more than many who are not. Secondly, that after they have entered upon this
struggle, which, as I say, is not light, but a very heavy one, the Lord
may have them in His hand so that they may be delivered from all the dangers
that are in the world, and, while sailing on this perilous sea, may shut their
ears to the song of the sirens. If we can prevail with God in the smallest
degree about this, we shall be fighting His battle even while living a
cloistered life and I shall consider as well spent all the trouble to which I
have gone in founding this retreat,
where I have also tried to ensure that this Rule of Our Lady and Empress shall
be kept in its original perfection.
Do not think that offering this petition continually is
useless. Some people think it a hardship not to be praying all the time for
their own souls. Yet what better prayer could there be than this? You may be
worried because you think it will do nothing to lessen your pains in Purgatory,
but actually praying in this way will relieve you of some of them and anything
else that is left -- well, let it remain. After all, what does it matter if I am
in Purgatory until the Day of Judgment provided a single soul should be saved
through my prayer? And how much less does it matter if many souls profit by it
and the Lord is honoured! Make no account of any pain which has an end if by
means of it any greater service can be rendered to Him Who bore such pains for
us. Always try to find out wherein lies the greatest perfection. And for the
love of the Lord I beg you to beseech His Majesty to hear us in this; I,
miserable creature though I am, beseech this of His Majesty, since it is for His
glory and the good of His Church, which are my only wishes.
It seems over-bold of me to think that I can do anything
towards obtaining this. But I have confidence, my Lord, in these servants of
Thine who are here, knowing that they neither desire nor strive after anything
but to please Thee. For Thy sake they have left the little they possessed,
wishing they had more so that they might serve Thee with it. Since Thou, my
Creator, art not ungrateful, I do not think Thou wilt fail to do what they
beseech of Thee, for when Thou wert in the world, Lord, Thou didst not despise
women, but didst always help them and show them great compassion.
Thou didst find more faith and no less love in them than in men, and one of
them was Thy most sacred Mother, from whose merits we derive merit, and whose
habit we wear, though our sins make us unworthy to do so.
We can do nothing in public that is of any use to Thee, nor dare we speak of
some of the truths over which we weep in secret lest Thou shouldst not hear this
our just petition. Yet, Lord I cannot believe this of Thy goodness and
righteousness, for Thou art a righteous Judge, not like judges in the world,
who, being, after all, men and sons of Adam, refuse to consider any woman's
virtue as above suspicion. Yes, my King, but the day will come when all will be
known. I am not speaking on my own account, for the whole world is already aware
of my wickedness, and I am glad that it should become known; but, when I see
what the times are like, I feel it is not right to repel spirits which
are virtuous and brave, even though they be the spirits of women.
Hear us not when we ask Thee for honours, endowments,
money, or anything that has to do with the world; but why shouldst Thou not hear
us, Eternal Father, when we ask only for the honour of Thy Son, when we would
forfeit a thousand honours and a thousand lives for Thy sake? Not for ourselves,
Lord, for we do not deserve to be heard, but for the blood of Thy Son and for
His merits.
Oh, Eternal Father! Surely all these scourgings and insults
and grievous tortures will not be forgotten. How, then, my Creator, can a heart
so [merciful and] loving as Thine endure that an act which was performed by Thy
Son in order to please Thee the more (for He loved Thee most deeply and Thou
didst command Him to love us) should be treated as lightly as those heretics
treat the Most Holy Sacrament today, in taking it from its resting-place when
they destroy the churches? Could it be that [Thy Son and our Redeemer] had
failed to do something to please Thee? No: He fulfilled everything. Was it not
enough, Eternal Father, that while He lived He had no place to lay His head and
had always to endure so many trials? Must they now deprive Him of the places
to which He can invite His friends, seeing how weak we are and knowing that
those who have to labour need such food to sustain them? Had He not already more
than sufficiently paid for the sin of Adam? Has this most loving Lamb to pay
once more whenever we relapse into sin? Permit it not, my Emperor; let Thy
Majesty be appeased; look not upon our sins but upon our redemption by Thy Most
Sacred Son, upon His merits and upon those of His glorious Mother and of all the
saints and martyrs who have died for Thee.
Alas, Lord, who is it that has dared to make this petition
in the name of all? What a poor mediator am I, my daughters, to gain a hearing
for you and to present your petition! When this Sovereign Judge sees how bold I
am it may well move Him to anger, as would be both right and just. But behold,
Lord, Thou art a God of mercy; have mercy upon this poor sinner, this miserable
worm who is so bold with Thee. Behold my desires, my God, and the tears with
which I beg this of Thee; forget my deeds, for Thy name's sake, and have pity
upon all these souls who are being lost, and help Thy Church. Do not permit more
harm to be wrought to Christendom, Lord; give light to this darkness.
For the love of the Lord, my sisters, I beg you to commend
this poor sinner
to His Majesty and to beseech Him to give her humility, as you are bound to do.
I do not charge you to pray particularly for kings and prelates of the Church,
especially for our Bishop, for I know that those of you now here are very
careful about this and so I think it is needless for me to say more. Let those
who are to come remember that, if they have a prelate who is holy, those under
him will be holy too, and let them realize how important it is to bring him
continually before the Lord. If your prayers and desires and disciplines and
fasts are not performed for the intentions of which I have spoken, reflect [and
believe] that you are not carrying out the work or fulfilling the object for
which the Lord has brought you here.
CHAPTER 4
Exhorts the nuns to keep their Rule and names three things
which are important for the spiritual life. Describes the first of these three
things, which is love of one's neighbour, and speaks of the harm which can be
done by individual friendships.
Now, daughters, you have looked at the great enterprise
which we are trying to carry out. What kind of persons shall we have to be if we
are not to be considered over-bold in the eyes of God and of the world? It is
clear that we need to labour hard and it will be a great help to us if we have
sublime thoughts so that we may strive to make our actions sublime also. If we
endeavour to observe our Rule and Constitutions in the fullest sense, and with
great care, I hope in the Lord that He will grant our requests. I am not asking
anything new of you, my daughters -- only that we should hold to our profession,
which, as it is our vocation, we are bound to do, although there are many ways
of holding to it.
Our Primitive Rules tells us to pray without ceasing.
Provided we do this with all possible care (and it is the most important thing
of all) we shall not fail to observe the fasts, disciplines and periods of
silence which the Order commands; for, as you know, if prayer is to be genuine
it must be reinforced with these things -- prayer cannot be accompanied by
self-indulgence.
It is about prayer that you have asked me to say something
to you. As an acknowledgment of what I shall say, I beg you to read frequently
and with a good will what I have said about it thus far, and to put this into
practice. Before speaking of the interior life -- that is, of prayer -- I shall
speak of certain things which those who attempt to walk along the way of prayer
must of necessity practise. So necessary are these that, even though not greatly
given to contemplation, people who have them can advance a long way in the
Lord's service, while, unless they have them, they cannot possibly be great
contemplatives, and, if they think they are, they are much mistaken. May the
Lord help me in this task and teach me what I must say, so that it may be to His
glory. Amen.
Do not suppose, my friends and sisters, that I am going to
charge you to do a great many things; may it please the Lord that we do the
things which our holy Fathers ordained and practised and by doing which they
merited that name. It would be wrong of us to look for any other way or to learn
from anyone else. There are only three things which I will explain at some
length and which are taken from our Constitution itself. It is essential that we
should understand how very important they are to us in helping us to preserve
that peace, both inward and outward, which the Lord so earnestly recommended to
us. One of these is love for each other; the second, detachment from all created
things; the third, true humility, which, although I put it last, is the most
important of the three and embraces all the rest.
With regard to the first -- namely, love for each other --
this is of very great importance; for there is nothing, however annoying, that
cannot easily be borne by those who love each other, and anything which causes
annoyance must be quite exceptional. If this commandment were kept in the world,
as it should be, I believe it would take us a long way towards the keeping of
the rest; but, what with having too much love for each other or too little, we
never manage to keep it perfectly. It may seem that for us to have too much love
for each other cannot be wrong, but I do not think anyone who had not been an
eye-witness of it would believe how much evil and how many imperfections can
result from this. The devil sets many snares here which the consciences of those
who aim only in a rough-and-ready way at pleasing God seldom observe -- indeed,
they think they are acting virtuously -- but those who are aiming at perfection
understand what they are very well: little by little they deprive the will of
the strength which it needs if it is to employ itself wholly in the love of God.
This is even more applicable to women than to men and the
harm which it does to community life is very serious. One result of it is that
all the nuns do not love each other equally: some injury done to a friend is
resented; a nun desires to have something to give to her friend or tries to make
time for talking to her, and often her object in doing this is to tell her how
fond she is of her, and other irrelevant things, rather than how much she loves
God. These intimate friendships are seldom calculated
to make for the love of God; I am more inclined to believe that the devil
initiates them so as to create factions within religious Orders. When a
friendship has for its object the service of His Majesty, it at once becomes
clear that the will is devoid of passion and indeed is helping to conquer other
passions.
Where a convent is large I should like to see many
friendships of that type; but in this house, where there are not, and can never
be, more than thirteen nuns, all must be friends with each other, love each
other, be fond of each other and help each other. For the love of the Lord,
refrain from making individual friendships, however holy, for even among
brothers and sisters such things are apt to be poisonous and I can see no
advantage in them; when they are between other relatives,
they are much more dangerous and become a pest. Believe me, sisters, though I
may seem to you extreme in this, great perfection and great peace come of doing
what I say and many occasions of sin may be avoided by those who are not very
strong. If our will becomes inclined more to one person than to another (this
cannot be helped, because it is natural -- it often leads us to love the person
who has the most faults if she is the most richly endowed by nature), we must
exercise a firm restraint on ourselves and not allow ourselves to be conquered
by our affection. Let us love the virtues and inward goodness, and let us always
apply ourselves and take care to avoid attaching importance to externals.
Let us not allow our will to be the slave of any, sisters,
save of Him Who bought it with His blood. Otherwise, before we know where we
are, we shall find ourselves trapped, and unable to move. God help me! The
puerilities which result from this are innumerable. And, because they are so
trivial that only those who see how bad they are will realize and believe it,
there is no point in speaking of them here except to say that they are wrong in
anyone, and, in a prioress, pestilential.
In checking these preferences we must be strictly on the
alert from the moment that such a friendship begins and we must proceed
diligently and lovingly rather than severely. One effective precaution against
this is that the sisters should not be together except at the prescribed hours,
and that they should follow our present custom in not talking with one another,
or being alone together, as is laid down in the Rule: each one should be alone
in her cell. There must be no workroom at Saint Joseph's; for, although it is a
praiseworthy custom to have one, it is easier to keep silence if one is alone,
and getting used to solitude is a great help to prayer. Since prayer must be the
foundation on which this house is built, it is necessary for us to learn to like
whatever gives us the greatest help in it.
Returning to the question of our love for one another, it
seems quite unnecessary to commend this to you, for where are there people so
brutish as not to love one another when they live together, are continually in
one another's company, indulge in no conversation, association or recreation
with any outside their house and believe that God loves us and that they
themselves love God since they are leaving everything for His Majesty? More
especially is this so as virtue always attracts love, and I hope in God that,
with the help of His Majesty, there will always be love in the sisters of this
house. It seems to me, therefore, that there is no reason for me to commend this
to you any further.
With regard to the nature of this mutual love and what is
meant by the virtuous love which I wish you to have here, and how we shall know
when we have this virtue, which is a very great one, since Our Lord has so
strongly commended it to us and so straitly enjoined it upon His Apostles --
about all this I should like to say a little now as well as my lack of skill
will allow me; if you find this explained in great detail in other books, take
no notice of what I am saying here, for it may be that I do not understand what
I am talking about.
There are two kinds of love which I am describing. The one
is purely spiritual, and apparently has nothing to do with sensuality or
the tenderness of our nature, either of which might stain its purity. The other
is also spiritual, but mingled with it are our sensuality and weakness;
yet it is a worthy love, which, as between relatives and friends, seems lawful.
Of this I have already said sufficient.
It is of the first kind of spiritual love that I would now
speak. It is untainted by any sort of passion, for such a thing would completely
spoil its harmony. If it leads us to treat virtuous people, especially
confessors, with moderation and discretion, it is profitable; but, if the
confessor is seen to be tending in any way towards vanity, he should be regarded
with grave suspicion, and, in such a case, conversation with him, however
edifying, should be avoided, and the sister should make her confession briefly
and say nothing more. It would be best for her, indeed, to tell the superior
that she does not get on with him and go elsewhere; this is the safest way,
providing it can be done without injuring his reputation.
In such cases, and in other difficulties with which the
devil might ensnare us, so that we have no idea where to turn, the safest thing
will be for the sister to try to speak with some learned person; if necessary,
permission to do this can be given her, and she can make her confession to him
and act in the matter as he directs her. For he cannot fail to give her some
good advice about it, without which she might go very far astray. How often
people stray through not taking advice, especially when there is a risk of doing
someone harm! The course that must on no account be followed is to do nothing at
all; for, when the devil begins to make trouble in this way, he will do a great
deal of harm if he is not stopped quickly; the plan I have suggested, then, of
trying to consult another confessor is the safest one if it is practicable, and
I hope in the Lord that it will be so.
Reflect upon the great importance of this, for it is a
dangerous matter, and can be a veritable hell, and a source of harm to everyone.
I advise you not to wait until a great deal of harm has been done but to take
every possible step that you can think of and stop the trouble at the outset;
this you may do with a good conscience. But I hope in the Lord that He will not
allow persons who are to spend their lives in prayer to have any attachment save
to one who is a great servant of God; and I am quite certain He will not, unless
they have no love for prayer and for striving after perfection in the way we try
to do here. For, unless they see that he understands their language and likes to
speak to them of God, they cannot possibly love him, as he is not like them. If
he is such a person, he will have very few opportunities of doing any harm, and,
unless he is very simple, he will not seek to disturb his own peace of mind and
that of the servants of God.
As I have begun to speak about this, I will repeat that the
devil can do a great deal of harm here, which will long remain undiscovered, and
thus the soul that is striving after perfection can be gradually ruined without
knowing how. For, if a confessor gives occasion for vanity through being vain
himself, he will be very tolerant with it in [the consciences of] others. May
God, for His Majesty's own sake, deliver us from things of this kind. It would
be enough to unsettle all the nuns if their consciences and their confessor
should give them exactly opposite advice, and, if it is insisted that they must
have one confessor only, they will not know what to do, nor how to pacify their
minds, since the very person who should be calming them and helping them is the
source of the harm. In some places there must be a great deal of trouble of this
kind: I always feel very sorry about it and so you must not be surprised if I
attach great importance to your understanding this danger.
Appendix To Chapter 4
The following variant reading of the Escorial Manuscript
seems too important to be relegated to a footnote. It occurs the twelfth
paragraph of ch. 4 (cf. n. 24) , and deals, as will be seen, with the
qualifications and character of the confessor. Many editors substitute it in
their text for the corresponding passage in V. As will be seen, however, it is
not a pure addition; we therefore reproduce it separately.
The important thing is that these two kinds of mutual love
should be untainted by any sort of passion, for such a thing would completely
spoil this harmony. If we exercise this love, of which I have spoken, with
moderation and discretion, it is wholly meritorious, because what seems to us
sensuality is turned into virtue. But the two may be so closely intertwined with
one another that it is sometimes impossible to distinguish them, especially
where a confessor is concerned. For if persons who are practising prayer find
that their confessor is a holy man and understands the way they behave, they
become greatly attached to him. And then forthwith the devil lets loose upon
them a whole battery of scruples which produce a terrible disturbance within the
soul, this being what he is aiming at. In particular, if the confessor is
guiding such persons to greater perfection, they become so depressed that they
will go so far as to leave him for another and yet another, only to be tormented
by the same temptation every time.
What you can do here is not to let your minds dwell upon
whether you like your confessor or not, but just to like him if you feel so
inclined. For, if we grow fond of people who are kind to our bodies, why should
we not love those who are always striving and toiling to help our souls?
Actually, if my confessor is a holy and spiritual man and I see that he is
taking great pains for the benefit of my soul, I think it will be a real help to
my progress for me to like him. For so weak are we that such affection sometimes
helps us a great deal to undertake very great things in God's service.
But, if your confessor is not such a person as I have
described, there is a possibility of danger, and for him to know that you like
him may do the greatest harm, most of all in houses where the nuns are very
strictly enclosed. And as it is a difficult thing to get to know which
confessors are good, great care and caution are necessary. The best advice to
give would be that you should see he has no idea of your affection for him and
is not told about it. But the devil is so active that this is not practicable:
you feel as if this is the only thing you have to confess and imagine you are
obliged to confess it. For this reason I should like you to think that your
affection for him is of no importance and to take no more notice of it.
Follow this advice if you find that everything your
confessor says to you profits your soul; if you neither see nor hear him indulge
in any vanity (and such things are always noticed except by one who is wilfully
dull) and if you know him to be a God-fearing man, do not be distressed over any
temptation about being too fond of him, and the devil will then grow tired and
stop tempting you. But if you notice that the confessor is tending in any way
towards vanity in what he says to you, you should regard him with grave
suspicion; in such a case conversation with him, even about prayer and about
God, should be avoided -- the sister should make her confession briefly and say
nothing more. It would be best for her to tell the Mother (Superior) that she
does not get on with him and go elsewhere. This is the safest way if it is
practicable, and I hope in God that it will be, and that you will do all you
possibly can to have no relations with him, though this may be very painful for
you.
Reflect upon the great importance of this, etc. (pp. 58-9).
CHAPTER 5
Continues speaking of confessors. Explains why it is
important that they should be learned men.
May the Lord grant, for His Majesty's own sake, that no one
in this house shall experience the trials that have been described, or find
herself oppressed in this way in soul and body. I hope the superior will never
be so intimate with the confessor that no one will dare to say anything about
him to her or about her to him. For this will tempt unfortunate penitents
to leave very grave sins unconfessed because they will feel uncomfortable about
confessing them. God help me! What trouble the devil can make here and how
dearly people have to pay for their miserable worries and concern about
honour! If they consult only one confessor, they think they are acting in the
interests of their Order and for the greater honour of their convent: and
that is the way the devil lays his snares for souls when he can find no other.
If the poor sisters ask for another confessor, they are told that this
would mean the complete end of all discipline in the convent; and, if he
is not a priest of their Order, even though he be a saint, they are led to
believe that they would be disgracing their entire Order by consulting him.
Give great praise to God, Daughters, for this liberty
that you have, for, though there are not a great many priests whom you can
consult, there are a few, other than your ordinary confessors, who can give you
light upon everything. I beg every superior,
for the love of the Lord, to allow a holy liberty here: let the Bishop or
Provincial be approached for leave for the sisters to go from time to time
beyond their ordinary confessors and talk about their souls with persons of
learning, especially if the confessors, though good men, have no learning; for
learning is a great help in giving light upon everything. It should be possible
to find a number of people who combine both learning and spirituality, and the
more favours the Lord grants you in prayer, the more needful is it that your
good works and your prayers should have a sure foundation.
You already know that the
first stone of this foundation must be a good conscience and that you must make
every effort to free yourselves from even venial sins and follow the greatest
possible perfection. You might suppose that any confessor would know this, but
you would be wrong: it happened that I had to go about matters of consciences to
a man who had taken a complete course in theology; and he did me a great deal of
mischief by telling me that certain things were of no importance. I know that he
had no intention of deceiving me, or any reason for doing so: it was simply
that he knew no better. And in addition to this instance I have met with two or
three similar ones.
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