Which treats of the purgation of the active night of the memory
and will. Gives instruction how the soul is to behave with respect
to the apprehensions of these two faculties, that it may come to
union with God, according to the two faculties aforementioned, in
perfect hope and charity.
CHAPTER I
THE first faculty of the soul, which is the understanding, has
now been instructed, through all its apprehensions, in the first
theological virtue, which is faith, to the end that, according to
this faculty, the soul may be united with God by means of the purity
of faith. It now remains to do likewise with respect to the other
two faculties of the soul, which are memory and will, and to purify
them likewise with respect to their apprehensions, to the end that,
according to these two faculties also, the soul may come to union
with God in perfect hope and charity. This will briefly be effected
in this third book. We have now concluded our treatment of the
understanding, which is the receptacle of all other objects
according to its mode of operation; and in treating of this we have
gone a great part of the whole way. It is therefore unnecessary for
us to write at equal length with respect to these faculties; for it
is not possible that, if the spiritual man instructs his
understanding in faith according to the doctrine which has been
given him, he should not, in so doing, instruct the other two
faculties in the other two virtues likewise; for the operations of
each faculty depend upon the others.
2. But since, in order to follow our manner of procedure, and in
order, too, that we may be the better understood, we must
necessarily speak of the proper and determinate matter, we shall
here be obliged to set down the apprehensions proper to each
faculty, and first, those of the memory, making here such
distinction between them as suffices for our purpose. This we shall
be able to deduce from the distinction between their objects, which
are three: natural, imaginary and spiritual; according to which
there are likewise three kinds of knowledge which come from the
memory, namely: natural and supernatural, imaginary and spiritual.
3. All these, by the Divine favour, we shall treat here in due
course, beginning with natural knowledge, which pertains to the most
exterior objects. And we shall then treat of the affections of the
will, wherewith we shall conclude this third book of the active
spiritual night.
CHAPTER II
Which treats of the natural apprehensions of the memory and
describes how the soul must be voided of them in order to be able to
attain to union with God according to this faculty.
IT is necessary that, in each of these books, the reader should
bear in mind the purpose of which we are speaking. For otherwise
there may arise within him many such questions with respect to what
he is reading as might by this time be occurring to him with respect
to what we have said of the understanding, and shall say now of the
memory, and afterwards shall say of the will. For, seeing how we
annihilate the faculties with respect to their operations, it may
perhaps seem to him that we are destroying the road of spiritual
practice rather than constructing it.
2. This would be true if we were seeking here only to instruct
beginners, who are best prepared through these apprehensible and
discursive apprehensions. But, since we are here giving instruction
to those who would progress farther in contemplation, even to union
with God, to which end all of these means and exercises of sense
concerning the faculties must recede into the background, and be put
to silence, to the end that God may of His own accord work Divine
union in the soul, it is necessary to proceed by this method of
disencumbering and emptying the soul, and causing it to reject the
natural jurisdiction and operations of the faculties, so that they
may become capable of infusion and illumination from supernatural
sources; for their capacity cannot attain to so lofty an experience,
but will rather hinder it, if it be not disregarded.
3. And thus, if it be true, as it is, that the soul must proceed
in its growing knowledge of God by learning that which He is not
rather than that which He is, in order to come to Him, it must
proceed by renouncing and rejecting, to the very uttermost,
everything in its apprehensions that it is possible to renounce,
whether this be natural or supernatural. We shall proceed with this
end in view with regard to the memory, drawing it out from its
natural state and limitations, and causing it to rise above itself
-- that is, above all distinct knowledge and apprehensible
possession -- to the supreme hope of God, Who is incomprehensible.
4. Beginning, then, with natural knowledge, I say that natural
knowledge in the memory consists of all the kinds of knowledge that
the memory can form concerning the objects of the five bodily senses
-- namely: hearing, sight, smell, taste and touch -- and all kinds
of knowledge of this type which it is possible to form and fashion.
Of all these forms and kinds of knowledge the soul must strip and
void itself, and it must strive to lose the imaginary apprehension
of them, so that there may be left in it no kind of impression of
knowledge, nor trace of aught soever, but rather the soul must
remain barren and bare, as if these forms had never passed through
it, and in total oblivion and suspension. And this cannot happen
unless the memory be annihilated as to all its forms, if it is to be
united with God. For it cannot happen save by total separation from
all forms which are not God; for God comes beneath no definite form
or kind of knowledge whatsoever, as we have said in treating of the
night of the understanding. And since, as Christ says, no man can
serve two masters, the memory cannot be united both with God and
with forms and distinct kinds of knowledge and, as God has no form
or image that can be comprehended by the memory, it follows that,
when the memory is united with God (as is seen, too, every day by
experience), it remains without form and without figure, its
imagination being lost and itself being absorbed in a supreme good,
and in a great oblivion, remembering nothing. For that Divine union
voids its fancy and sweeps it clean of all forms and kinds of
knowledge and raises it to the supernatural.
5. Now there sometimes comes to pass here a notable thing; for
occasionally, when God brings about these touches of union in the
memory, the brain (where memory has its seat) is so perceptibly
upset that it seems as if it becomes quite inert, and its judgment
and sense are lost. This is sometimes more perceptible and sometimes
less so, according to the strength of this touch, and then, by
reason of this union, the memory is voided and purged, as I say, of
all kinds of knowledge. It remains in oblivion -- at times in
complete oblivion -- so that it has to put forth a great effort and
to labour greatly in order to remember anything.
6. And sometimes this oblivion of the memory and suspension of
the imagination reach such a point, because of the union of the
memory with God, that a long time passes without the soul's
perceiving it, or knowing what has taken place during that period.
And, as the imaginative faculty is then in suspension, it feels
naught that is done to it, not even things that cause pain; for
without imagination there is no feeling, not even coming through
thought, since this exists not. And, to the end that God may bring
about these touches of union, the soul must needs withdraw its
memory from all apprehensible kinds of knowledge. And it is to be
noted that these suspensions come not to pass in those that are
already perfect, since they have attained to perfect union, and
these suspensions belong to the beginnings of union.
7. Someone will remark that all this seems very well, but that it
leads to the destruction of the natural use and course of the
faculties, and reduces man to the state of a beast -- a state of
oblivion and even worse -- since he becomes incapable of reasoning
or of remembering his natural functions and necessities. It will be
argued that God destroys not nature, but rather perfects it; and
that from this teaching there necessarily follows its destruction,
when that which pertains to morality and reason is not practised and
is forgotten, neither is that which is natural practised; for (it
will be said) none of these things can be remembered, as the soul is
deprived of forms and kinds of knowledge which are the means of
remembrance.
8. To this I reply that, the more nearly the memory attains to
union with God, the more do distinct kinds of knowledge become
perfected within it, until it loses them entirely -- namely, when it
attains to the state of union in perfection. And thus, at the
beginning, when this is first taking place, the soul cannot but fall
into great oblivion with respect to all things, since forms and
kinds of knowledge are being erased from it; and therefore it is
very negligent concerning its outward behaviour and usage --
forgetting to eat or drink, and being uncertain if it has done this
or no, if it has seen this or no, if it has said this or no --
because of the absorption of the memory in God. But when once it
attains to the habit of union, which is a supreme blessing, it no
longer has these periods of oblivion, after this manner, in that
which pertains to natural and moral reason; actions which are seemly
and necessary, indeed, it performs with a much greater degree of
pection, although it performs them no longer by means of forms and
manners of knowledge pertaining to the memory. For, when it has the
habit of union, which is a supernatural state, memory and the other
faculties fail it completely in their natural functions, and pass
beyond their natural limitations, even to God, Who is supernatural.
And thus, when the memory is transformed in God, it cannot receive
impressions of forms or kinds of knowledge. Wherefore the functions
of the memory and of the other faculties in this state are all
Divine; for, when at last God possesses the faculties and has become
the entire master of them, through their transformation into
Himself, it is He Himself Who moves and commands them divinely,
according to His Divine Spirit and will; and the result of this is
that the operations of the soul are not distinct, but all that it
does is of God, and its operations are Divine, so that, even as
Saint Paul says, he that is joined unto God becomes one spirit with
Him.
9. Hence it comes to pass that the operations of the soul in
union are of the Divine Spirit and are Divine. And hence it comes
that the actions of such souls are only those that are seemly and
reasonable, and not those that are ill-beseeming. For the Spirit of
God teaches them that which they ought to know, and causes them to
be ignorant of that which it behoves them not to know, and to
remember that which they have to remember, with or without forms,
and to forget that which they should forget; and it makes them love
that which they have to love, and not to love that which is not in
God. And thus, all the first motions of the faculties of such souls
are Divine and it is not to be wondered at that the motions and
operations of these faculties should be Divine, since they are
transformed in the Divine Being.
10. Of these operations I will give a few examples. Let this be
one. A person asks another who is in this state to commend him to
God. This person will not remember to do so by means of any form or
kind of knowledge that remains in his memory concerning that other
person; if it be right that he should recommend him to God (which
will be if God desires to receive a prayer for that person), He will
move his will and give him a desire to pray for him; and if God
desires not such prayer, that other person will not be able nor will
desire to pray,' though he make great efforts to do so; and at times
God will cause him to pray for others of whom he has no knowledge
nor has ever heard. And this is because, as I have said, God alone
moves the faculties of these souls to do those works which are meet,
according to the will and ordinance of God, and they cannot be moved
to do others; and thus the works and prayers of these souls are
always effectual. Such were those of the most glorious Virgin Our
Lady, who, being raised to this high estate from the beginning, had
never the form of any creature imprinted in her soul, neither was
moved by such, but was invariably guided by the Holy Spirit.
11. Another example. At a certain time a person in this state has
to attend to some necessary business. He will remember it by no kind
of form, but, without his knowing how, it will come to his soul, at
the time and in the manner that it ought to come, and that without
fail.
12. And not only in these things does the Holy Spirit give such
persons light, but also in many others, relating both to the present
and to the future, and even, in many cases, as regards those absent
from them; and although at times this comes to pass through
intellectual forms, it frequently happens without the intervention
of any forms that can be apprehended, so that these persons know not
how they know. But this comes to them from the Divine Wisdom; for,
since these souls exercise themselves in knowing and apprehending
nothing with the faculties, they come in general, as we have said in
the Mount, to know everything, according to that which the Wise Man
says: 'The worker of all things, who is Wisdom, taught me all
things.'
13. You will say, perhaps, that the soul will be unable to void
and deprive its memory of all forms and fancies to such an extent as
to be able to attain to so lofty a state; for there are two things
so difficult that their accomplishment surpasses human ability and
strength, namely, to throw off with one's natural powers that which
is natural, which is hard enough, and to attain and be united to the
supernatural, which is much more difficult -- indeed, to speak the
truth, is impossible with natural ability alone. The truth, I
repeat, is that God must place the soul in this supernatural state;
but the soul, as far as in it lies, must be continually preparing
itself; and this it can do by natural means, especially with the
help that God is continually giving it. And thus, as the soul, for
its own part, enters into this renunciation and self-emptying of
forms, so God begins to give it the possession of union; and this
God works passively in the soul, as we shall say, Deo dante,
when we treat of the passive night of the soul. And thus, when it
shall please God, and according to the manner of the soul's
preparation, He will grant it the habit of perfect and Divine union.
14. And the Divine effects which God produces in the soul when He
has granted it this habit, both as to the understanding and as to
the memory and will, we shall not describe in this account of the
soul's active purgation and night, for this alone will not bring the
soul to Divine union. We shall speak of these effects, however, in
treating of the passive night, by means of which is brought about
the union of the soul with God. And so I shall speak here only of
the necessary means whereby the memory may place itself actively in
this night and purgation, as far as lies in its power. And these
means are that the spiritual man must habitually exercise caution,
after this manner. All the things that he hears, sees, smells,
tastes, or touches, he must be careful not to store up or collect in
his memory, but he must allow himself to forget them immediately,
and this he must accomplish, if need be, with the same efficacy as
that with which others contrive to remember them, so that there
remains in his memory no knowledge or image of them whatsoever. It
must be with him as if they existed not in the world, and his memory
must be left free and disencumbered of them, and be tied to no
consideration, whether from above or from below; as if he had no
faculty of memory; he must freely allow everything to fall into
oblivion as though all things were a hindrance to him; and in fact
everything that is natural, if one attempt to make use of it in
supernatural matters, is a hindrance rather than a help.
15. And if those questions and objections which arose above with
respect to the understanding should also arise here (the objections,
that is to say, that the soul is doing nothing, is wasting its time
and is depriving itself of spiritual blessings which it might well
receive through the memory), the answer to this has already been
given, and will be given again farther on, in our treatment of the
passive night; wherefore there is no need for us to dwell upon it
here. It is needful only to observe that, although at certain times
the benefit of this suspension of forms and of all knowledge may not
be realized, the spiritual man must not for that reason grow weary,
for in His own time God will not fail to succour him. To attain so
great a blessing it behoves the soul to endure much and to suffer
with patience and hope.
16. And, although it is true that hardly any soul will be found
that is moved by God in all things and at all times, and has such
continual union with God that, without the mediation of any form,
its faculties are ever moved divinely, there are nevertheless souls
who in their operations are very habitually moved by God, and these
are not they that are moved of themselves, for, as Saint Paul says,
the sons of God who are transformed and united in God, are moved by
the Spirit of God, that is, are moved to perform Divine work in
their faculties. And it is no marvel that their operations should be
Divine, since the union of the soul is Divine.
CHAPTER III
Wherein are described three kinds of evil which come to the soul
when it enters not into darkness with respect to knowledge and
reflections in the memory. Herein is described the first.
TO three kinds of evil and inconvenience the spiritual man is
subject when he persists in desiring to make use of all natural
knowledge and reflections of the memory in order to journey toward
God, or for any other purpose: two of these are positive and one is
privative. The first comes from things of the world; the second,
from the devil; the third, which is privative, is the impediment and
hindrance to Divine union caused and effected in the soul.
2. The first evil, which comes from the world, consists in the
subjection of the soul, through knowledge and reflection, to many
kinds of harm, such as falsehoods, imperfections, desires, opinions,
loss of time, and many other things which breed many kinds of
impurity in the soul. And it is clear that the soul must of
necessity fall into many perils of falsehood, when it admits
knowledge and reasoning; for oftentimes that which is true must
appear false, and that which is certain, doubtful; and contrariwise;
for there is scarcely a single truth of which we can have complete
knowledge. From all these things the soul is free if the memory
enters into darkness with respect to every kind of reflection and
knowledge.
3. Imperfections meet the soul at every step if it sets its
memory upon that which it has heard, seen, touched, smelt and
tasted; for there must then perforce cling to it some affection,
whether this be of pain, of fear, of hatred, of vain hope, vain
enjoyment, vainglory, etc.; for all these are, at the least,
imperfections, and at times are downright venial sins; and they
leave much impurity most subtly in the soul, even though the
reflections and the knowledge have relation to God. And it is also
clear that they engender desires within the soul, for these arise
naturally from the knowledge and reflections aforementioned, and if
one wishes only to have this knowledge and these reflections, even
that is a desire. And it is clearly seen that many occasions of
judging others will come likewise; for, in using its memory, the
soul cannot fail to come upon that which is good and bad in others,
and, in such a case, that which is evil oftentimes seems good, and
that which is good, evil. I believe there is none who can completely
free himself from all these kinds of evil, save by blinding his
memory and leading it into darkness with regard to all these things.
4. And if you tell me that a man is well able to conquer all
these things when they come to him, I reply that, if he sets store
by knowledge, this is simply and utterly impossible; for countless
imperfections and follies insinuate themselves into such knowledge,
some of which are so subtle and minute that, without the soul's
realization thereof, they cling to it of their own accord, even as
pitch clings to the man that touches it; so that it is better to
conquer once for all by denying the memory completely. You will say
likewise that by so doing the soul deprives itself of many good
thoughts and meditations upon God, which are of great profit to it
and whereby God grants it favours. I reply that to this end purity
of soul is of the greatest profit, which means that there clings to
the soul no creature affection, or temporal affection, or effective
advertence; which I believe cannot but cling to the soul because of
the imperfection which the faculties have in their own operations.
Wherefore it is best to learn to silence the faculties and to cause
them to be still, so that God may speak. For, as we have said, in
order to attain to this state the natural operations must be
completely disregarded, and this happens, as the Prophet says, when
the soul comes into solitude, according to these its faculties, and
God speaks to its heart.
5. And if you again reply, saying that the soul will have no
blessing unless it meditates upon God and allows its memory to
reflect upon Him, and that many distractions and negligences will
continually enter it, I say that it is impossible, if the memory be
recollected with regard both to things of the next life and to
things here below, that evils or distractions should enter it, nor
any other follies or vices (the which things always enter when the
memory wanders), since there is no exit or entrance for them. This
would come to pass if, when we had shut the door upon considerations
and reflections concerning things above, we opened it to things
below; but in this state we shut the door to all things whence
distraction may come, causing the memory to be still and dumb, and
the ear of the spirit to be attentive, in silence, to God alone,
saying with the Prophet: 'Speak, Lord, for Thy servant heareth.' It
was thus that the Spouse in the Songs said that his Bride should be,
in these words: 'My sister is a garden enclosed and a fountain
sealed up' -- that is to say, enclosed and sealed up against all
things that may enter.
6. Let the soul, then, remain 'enclosed,' without anxieties and
troubles, and He that entered in bodily form to His disciples when
the doors were shut, and gave them peace, though they neither knew
nor thought that this was possible nor knew how it was possible,
will enter spiritually into the soul, without its knowing how He
does so, when the doors of its faculties -- memory, understanding
and will -- are enclosed against all apprehensions. And He will fill
them with peace, coming down upon the soul, as the prophet says,
like a river of peace, and taking it from all the misgivings and
suspicions, disturbances and darknesses which caused it to fear that
it was lost or was on the way to being so. Let it not grow careless
about prayer, and let it wait in detachment and emptiness, for its
blessings will not tarry.
CHAPTER IV
Which treats of the second kind of evil that may come to the soul
from the devil by way of the natural apprehensions of the memory.
THE second positive evil that may come to the soul by means of
the knowledge of the memory proceeds from the devil, who by this
means obtains great influence over it. For he can continually bring
it new forms, kinds of knowledge and reflections, by means whereof
he can taint the soul with pride, avarice, wrath, envy, etc., and
cause it unjust hatred, or vain love, and deceive it in many ways.
And besides this, he is wont to leave impressions, and to implant
them in the fancy, in such wise that those that are false appear
true, and those that are true, false, And finally all the worst
deceptions which are caused by the devil, and the evils that he
brings to the soul, enter by way of knowledge and reflections of the
memory, Thus if the memory enter into darkness with respect to them
all, and be annihilated in its oblivion to them, it shuts the door
altogether upon this evil which proceeds from the devil, and frees
itself from all these things, which is a great blessing. For the
devil has no power over the soul unless it be through the operations
of its faculties, principally by means of knowledge, whereupon
depend almost all the other operations of the other faculties.
Wherefore, if the memory be annihilated with respect to them, the
devil can do naught; for he finds no foothold, and without a
foothold he is powerless.
2. I would that spiritual persons might clearly see how many
kinds of harm are wrought by evil spirits in their souls by means of
the memory, when they devote themselves frequently to making use of
it, and how many kinds of sadness and affliction and vain and evil
joys they have, both with respect to their thoughts about God, and
also with respect to the things of the world; and how many
impurities are left rooted in their spirits; and likewise how
greatly they are distracted from the highest recollection, which
consists in the fixing of the whole soul, according to its
faculties, upon the one incomprehensible Good, and in withdrawing it
from all things that can be apprehended, since these are not
incomprehensible Good. This is a great good (although less good
results from this emptiness than from the soul's fixing itself upon
God), simply because it is the cause whereby the soul frees itself
from any griefs and afflictions and sorrows, over and above the
imperfections and sins from which it is freed.
CHAPTER V
Of the third evil which comes to the soul by way of the distinct
natural knowledge or the memory.
THE third evil which comes to the soul through the natural
apprehensions of the memory is privative; for these apprehensions
can hinder moral good and deprive us of spiritual good. And, in
order that we may first of all explain how these apprehensions
hinder moral good in the soul, it must be known that moral good
consists in the restraining of the passions and the curbing of
disorderly desires, from which restraint there come to the soul
tranquillity, peace and rest, and moral virtues, all of which things
are moral good. This restraining and curbing of the passions cannot
be truly accomplished by the soul that forgets not and withdraws not
itself from things pertaining to itself, whence arise the
affections; and no disturbances ever arise in the soul save through
the apprehensions of the memory. For, when all things are forgotten,
there is naught that can disturb peace or that moves the desires;
since, as they say, that which the eye sees not the heart desires
not.
2. This we are constantly learning by experience; for we observe
that, whenever the soul begins to think of any matter, it is moved
and disturbed, either much or little, with respect to that thing,
according to the nature of its apprehension. If it be a troublesome
and grievous matter, the soul finds sadness in it; if pleasant,
desire and joy, and so forth. Wherefore the result of the changing
of that apprehension is necessarily disturbance; and thus the soul
is now joyful, now sad; now it hates, now loves; and it cannot
continue in one and the same attitude (which is an effect of moral
tranquillity save when it strives to forget all things. It is clear,
then, that knowledge greatly hinders the good of the moral virtues
in the soul.
3. Again, what has been said clearly proves that an encumbered
memory also hinders spiritual good; for the soul that is disturbed,
and has no foundation of moral good, is to that extent incapable of
spiritual good, which impresses itself only upon souls that are
restrained and at peace. And besides this, if the soul pays
attention and heed to the apprehensions of the memory -- seeing that
it can attend to but one thing at a time -- and busies itself with
things that can be apprehended, such as the knowledge of the memory,
it is not possible for it to be free to attend to the
incomprehensible, which is God. For, in order to approach God, the
soul must proceed by not comprehending rather than by comprehending;
it must exchange the mutable and comprehensible for the immutable
and incomprehensible.
CHAPTER VI
Of the benefits which come to the soul from forgetfulness and
emptiness of all thoughts and knowledge which it may have in a
natural way with respect to the memory.
FROM the evils which, as we have said, come to the soul through
the apprehensions of the memory, we can likewise infer the benefits
which are contrary to them and come to the soul as a result of its
forgetting them and emptying itself of them. For, as natural
philosophy puts it, the same doctrine which serves for one thing
serves likewise for the contrary. In the first place, the soul
enjoys tranquillity and peace of mind, since it is freed from the
disturbance and the changeableness which arise from thoughts and
ideas of the memory, and consequently, which is more important, it
enjoys purity of conscience and soul. And herein the soul has ample
preparation for the acquiring of Divine and human wisdom, and of the
virtues.
2. In the second place, it is freed from many suggestions,
temptations and motions of the devil, which he infuses into the soul
by means of thoughts and ideas, causing it to fall into many
impurities and sins, as David says in these words: 'They have
thought and spoken wickedness.' And thus, when these thoughts have
been completely removed, the devil has naught wherewith to assault
the soul by natural means.
3. In the third place, the soul has within itself, through this
recollection of itself and this forgetfulness as to all things, a
preparedness to be moved by the Holy Spirit and taught by Him, for,
as the Wise Man says, He removes Himself from thoughts that are
without understanding. Even if a man received no other benefit from
this forgetfulness and emptiness of the memory than being freed
thereby from troubles and disturbances, it would be a great gain and
good for him. For the troubles and storms which adverse things and
happenings arouse in the soul are of no use or help for bringing
peace and calm; indeed, as a rule, they make things worse and also
harm the soul itself. Wherefore David said: 'Of a truth every man is
disquieted in vain.' For it is clear that to disquiet oneself is
always vain since it brings profit to none. And thus, even if
everything came to an end and were destroyed, and if all things went
wrong and turned to adversity, it would be vain to disturb oneself;
for such disturbance hurts a man rather than relieves him. Whereas
to bear everything with equable and peaceful tranquillity not only
brings the soul the profit of many blessings, but likewise causes
it, even in the midst of its adversities, to form a truer judgment
about them and to find a fitting remedy.
4. For this reason Solomon, being well acquainted both with the
evil and with the benefit of which we are speaking, said: 'I knew
that there was naught better for man than to rejoice and to do good
in his life.' By this he meant that, in everything that happens to
us, howsoever adverse it be, we should rejoice rather than be
disturbed, so that we may not lose a blessing which is greater than
any kind of prosperity -- namely, tranquillity and peace of mind in
all things, which, whether they bring adversity or prosperity, we
must bear in the same manner. This a man would never lose if he were
not only to forget all kinds of knowledge and put aside all
thoughts, but would even withdraw himself from hearing, sight and
commerce with others, in so far as was possible for him. Our nature
is so frail and unstable that, however well it be disciplined, it
will hardly fail to stumble upon the remembrance of things which
will disturb and change a mind that was in peace and tranquillity
when it remembered them not. For this cause said Jeremias: 'With
memory I will remember, and my soul will fail me for pain.'
CHAPTER VII
Which treats or the second kind or apprehension of the memory --
namely, imaginary apprehensions -- and of supernatural knowledge.
ALTHOUGH in writing of natural apprehensions of the first kind we
also gave instruction concerning the imaginary, which are likewise
natural, it was well to make this division because of the love which
the memory always has for other forms and kinds of knowledge, which
are of supernatural things, such as visions, revelations, locutions
and feelings which come in a supernatural way. When these things
have passed through the soul, there is wont to remain impressed upon
it some image, form, figure or idea, whether in the soul or in the
memory or fancy, at times very vividly and effectively. Concerning
these images it is also needful to give advice, lest the memory be
encumbered with them and they be a hindrance to its union with God
in perfect and pure hope.
2. I say that the soul, in order to attain that blessing, must
never reflect upon the clear and distinct objects which may have
passed through its mind by supernatural means, in such a way as to
preserve within itself the forms and figures and knowledge of those
things. For we must ever bear in mind this principle: the greater
heed the soul gives to any clear and distinct apprehensions, whether
natural or supernatural, the less capacity and preparation it has
for entering into the abyss of faith, wherein are absorbed all
things else. For, as has been said, no supernatural forms or kinds
of knowledge which can be apprehended by the memory are God, and, in
order to reach God, the soul must void itself of all that is not
God. The memory must also strip itself of all these forms and kinds
of knowledge, that it may unite itself with God in hope. For all
possession is contrary to hope, which, as Saint Paul says, belongs
to that which is not possessed. Wherefore, the more the memory
dispossesses itself, the greater is its hope; and the more it has of
hope, the more it has of union with God; for, with respect to God,
the more the soul hopes, the more it attains. And it hopes most when
it is most completely dispossessed; and, when it shall be perfectly
dispossessed, it will remain with the perfect possession of God, in
Divine union. But there are many who will not deprive themselves of
the sweetness and delight which memory finds in those forms and
notions, wherefore they attain not to supreme possession and perfect
sweetness. For he that renounces not all that he possesses cannot be
the disciple of Christ.
CHAPTER VIII
Of the evils which may be caused in the soul by the knowledge of
supernatural things, if it reflect upon them. Says how many these
evils are.
THE spiritual man incurs the risk of five kinds of evil if he
pays heed to, and reflects upon, these forms and ideas which are
impressed upon him by the things which pass through his mind in a
supernatural way.
2. The first is that he is frequently deceived, and mistakes one
thing for another. The second is that he is like to fall, and is
exposed to the danger of falling, into some form of presumption or
vanity. The third is that the devil has many occasions of deceiving
him by means of the apprehensions aforementioned. The fourth is that
he is hindered as to union in hope with God. The fifth is that, for
the most part, he has a low judgment of God.
3. As to the first evil, it is clear that, if the spiritual man
pays heed to these forms and notions, and reflects upon them, he
must frequently be deceived in his judgment of them; for, as no man
can have a complete understanding of the things that pass through
his imagination naturally, nor a perfect and certain judgment about
them, he will be much less able still to have this with respect to
supernatural things, which are above our capacity to understand, and
occur but rarely. Wherefore he will often think that what comes but
from his fancy pertains to God; and often, too, that what is of God
is of the devil, and what is of the devil is of God. And very often
there will remain with him deap-seated impressions of forms and
ideas concerning the good and evil of others, or of himself,
together with other figures which have been presented to him: these
he will consider to be most certain and true, when in fact they will
not be so, but very great falsehoods. And others will be true, and
he will judge them to be false, although this error I consider
safer, as it is apt to arise from humility.
4. And, even if he be not deceived as to their truth, he may well
be deceived as to their quantity or quality, thinking that little
things are great, and great things, little. And with respect to
their quality, he may consider what is in his imagination to be this
or that, when it is something quite different; he may put, as Isaias
says, darkness for light, and light for darkness, or bitter for
sweet, and sweet for bitter. And finally, even though he be correct
as to one thing, it will be a marvel if he goes not astray with
respect to the next; for, although he may not desire to apply his
judgment to the judging of them, yet, if he apply it in paying heed
to them, this will be sufficient to make some evil to cling to him
as a result of it, at least passively; if not evil of this kind,
then of one of the four other kinds of which we shall shortly speak.
5. It behoves the spiritual man, therefore, lest he fall into
this evil of being deceived in his judgment, not to desire to apply
his judgment in order to know the nature of his own condition or
feelings, or the nature of such and such a vision, idea or feeling;
neither should he desire to know it or to pay heed to it. This he
should only desire in order to speak of it to his spiritual father,
and to be taught by him how to void his memory of these
apprehensions. For, whatever may be their intrinsic nature, they
cannot help him to love God as much as the smallest act of living
faith and hope performed in the emptiness and renunciation of all
things.
CHAPTER IX
Of the second kind of evil, which is the peril of falling into
self-esteem and vain presumption.
THE supernatural apprehensions of the memory already described
are also a frequent occasion to spiritual persons of falling into
some kind of presumption or vanity, if they give heed to them and
set store by them. For, even as he who knows nothing of them is
quite free from falling into this vice, since he sees in himself no
occasion of presumption, even so, in contrary wise, he that has
experience of them has close at hand an occasion for thinking
himself to be something, since he possesses these supernatural
communications. For, although it is true that he may attribute them
to God, hold himself to be unworthy of them, and give God the
thanks, yet nevertheless there is wont to remain in his spirit a
certain secret satisfaction, and a self-esteem and a sense of their
value, from which, without his knowledge, there will come to him
great spiritual pride.
2. This may be observed very clearly by such as will consider the
dislike and aversion caused them by any who do not praise their
spirituality, or esteem the experiences which they enjoy, and the
mortification which they suffer when they think or are told that
others have just those same experiences, or even superior ones. All
this arises from secret self-esteem and pride, and they can never
quite realize that they are steeped in pride up to their very eyes.
For they think that a certain degree of recognition of their own
wretchedness suffices, and, although they have this, they are full
of secret self-esteem and self-satisfaction, taking more delight in
their own spirituality and spiritual gifts than in those of others.
They are like the Pharisee who gave thanks to God that he was not as
other men, and that he practised such and such virtues, whereat he
was satisfied with himself and presumed thereon. Such men, although
they may not use the Pharisee's actual words, habitually resemble
him in spirit. And some of them even become so proud that they are
worse than the devil. For, observing in themselves, as they imagine,
certain apprehensions and feelings concerning God which are devout
and sweet, they become self-satisfied to such an extent that they
believe themselves to be very near God; and those that are not like
themselves they consider very low and despise them after the manner
of the Pharisee.
3. In order to flee from this pestilent evil, abhorrent in the
eyes of God, they must consider two things. First, that virtue
consists not in apprehensions and feelings concerning God, howsoever
sublime they be, nor in anything of this kind that a man can feel
within himself; but, on the contrary, in that which has nothing to
do with feeling -- namely, a great humility and contempt of oneself
and of all that pertains to oneself, firmly rooted in the soul and
keenly felt by it; and likewise in being glad that others feel in
this very way concerning oneself and in not wishing to be of any
account in the esteem of others.
4. Secondly, it must be noted that all visions, revelations and
feelings coming from Heaven, and any thoughts that may proceed from
these, are of less worth than the least act of humility. And
humility is one of the effects of charity, which esteems not its own
things nor strives to attain them; nor thinks evil, save of itself;
nor thinks any good thing of itself, but only of others. It is well,
therefore, that these supernatural apprehensions should not attract
men's eyes, but that they should strive to forget them in order that
they may be free.
CHAPTER X
Of the third evil that may come to the soul from the devil,
through the imaginary apprehensions of the memory.
FROM all that has been said above it may be clearly understood
and inferred how great is the evil that may come to the soul from
the devil by way of these supernatural apprehensions. For not only
can he represent to the memory and the fancy many false forms and
ideas, which seem true and good, impressing them on spirit and sense
with great effectiveness and certifying them to be true by means of
suggestion (so that it appears to the soul that it cannot be
otherwise, but that everything is even as he represents it; for, as
he transfigures himself into an angel of light, he appears as light
to the soul); but he may also tempt the soul in many ways with
respect to true knowledge, which is of God, moving its desires and
affections, whether spiritual or sensual, in unruly fashion with
respect to these; for, if the soul takes pleasure in such
apprehensions, it is very easy for the devil to cause its desires
and affections to grow within it, and to make it fall into spiritual
gluttony and other evils.
2. And, in order the better to do this, he is wont to suggest and
give pleasure, sweetness and delight to the senses with respect to
these same things of God, so that the soul is corrupted and
bewildered by that sweetness, and is thus blinded with that pleasure
and sets its eyes on pleasure rather than on love (or, at least,
very much more than upon love), and gives more heed to the
apprehensions than to the detachment and emptiness which are found
in faith and hope and love of God. And from this he may go on
gradually to deceive the soul and cause it to believe his falsehoods
with great facility. For to the soul that is blind falsehood no
longer appears to be falsehood, nor does evil appear to be evil,
etc.; for darkness appears to be light, and light, darkness; and
hence that soul comes to commit a thousand foolish errors, whether
with respect to natural things, or to moral things, or to spiritual
things; so that that which was wine to it becomes vinegar. All this
happens to the soul because it began not, first of all, by denying
itself the pleasure of those supernatural things. At first this is a
small matter, and not very harmful, and the soul has therefore no
misgivings, and allows it to continue, and it grows, like the grain
of mustard seed, into a tall tree. For a small error at the
beginning, as they say, becomes a great error in the end.
3. Wherefore, in order to flee from this great evil, which comes
from the devil, the soul must not desire to have any pleasure in
such things, because such pleasure will most surely lead it to
become blind and to fall. For of their own nature, and without the
help of the devil, pleasure and delight and sweetness blinds the
soul. And this was the meaning of David when he said: 'Perhaps
darkness shall blind me in my delights and I shall have the night
for my light.'
CHAPTER XI
Of the fourth evil that comes to the soul from the distinct
supernatural apprehensions of the memory, which is the hindrance
that it interposes to union.
CONCERNING this fourth evil there is not much to be said, since
it has already been treated again and again in this third book,
wherein we have proved how, in order that the soul may come to union
with God in hope, it must renounce every possession of the memory;
for, in order that its hope in God may be perfect, it must have
naught in the memory that is not God. And, as we have likewise said,
no form or figure or image or other kind of knowledge that may come
to the memory can be God, neither can be like Him, whether it be of
heaven or of earth, natural or supernatural, even as David teaches,
when he says: 'Lord, among the gods there is none like unto Thee.'
2. Wherefore, if the memory desires to pay heed to any of these
things, it hinders the soul from reaching God; first, because it
encumbers it, and next because, the more the soul has of possession,
the less it has of hope. Wherefore it is needful for the soul to be
stripped of the distinct forms and the knowledge of supernatural
things, and to become oblivious to them, so that the memory may
cause no hindrance to its union with God in perfect hope.
CHAPTER XII
Of the fifth evil that may come to the soul in supernatural
imaginary forms and apprehensions, which is a low and unseemly
judgment or God.
NO less serious is the fifth evil that comes to the soul from its
desire to retain in the memory and imagination the said forms and
images of things that are supernaturally communicated to it, above
all if it desires to use them as a means to Divine union. For it is
a very easy thing to judge of the Being and greatness of God less
worthily and nobly than befits His incomprehensible nature; for,
although our reason and judgment may form no express conception that
God is like any one of these things, yet the very esteeming of these
apprehensions, if in fact the soul esteems them, makes and causes it
not to esteem God, or not to feel concerning Him, as highly as faith
teaches, since faith tells us that He is incomparable,
incomprehensible, and so forth. For, quite apart from the fact that
the soul takes from God all that it gives to the creature, it is
natural that its esteem of these apprehensible things should lead it
to make a certain inward comparison between such things and God,
which would prevent it from judging and esteeming God as highly as
it ought. For the creatures, whether terrestrial or celestial, and
all distinct images and kinds of knowledge, both natural and
supernatural, that can be encompassed by the faculties of the soul,
however lofty they be in this life, have no comparison or proportion
with the Being of God, since God falls within no genus and no
species, whereas the creatures do, or so the theologians tell us.
And the soul in this life is not capable of receiving in a clear and
distinct manner aught save that which falls within genus and
species. For this cause Saint John says that no man hath seen God at
any time. And Isaias says it has not entered into the heart of man
what God is like. And God said to Moses that he could not see Him
while he was in this mortal state. Wherefore he that encumbers his
memory and the other faculties of the soul with that which they can
comprehend cannot esteem God, neither feel concerning Him, as he
ought.
2. Let us make a comparison on a lower level. It is clear that
the more a man fixes his eyes upon the servants of a king, and the
more notice he takes of them, the less notice does he take of the
king himself, and the less does he esteem him; for, although this
comparison may not be formally and distinctly present in the
understanding, it is inherent in the act, since, the more attention
the man gives to the servants, the more he takes from their lord;
and he cannot have a very high opinion of the king if the servants
appear to him to be of any importance while they are in the presence
of the king, their lord. Even so does the soul treat its God when it
pays heed to the creatures aforementioned. This comparison, however,
is on a very low level, for, as we have said, God is of another
being than His creatures in that He is infinitely far from them all.
For this reason they must all be banished from sight, and the soul
must withdraw its gaze from them in all their forms, that it may yet
gaze on God through faith and hope.
3. Wherefore those who not only pay heed to the imaginary
apprehensions aforementioned, but suppose God to be like some of
them, and think that by means of them they will be able to attain to
union with God, have already gone far astray and will ever continue
to lose the light of faith in the understanding, through which this
faculty is united with God; neither will they grow in the loftiness
of hope, by means whereof the memory is united with God in hope,
which must be brought about through disunion from all that is of the
imagination.
CHAPTER XIII
Of the benefits which the soul receives through banishing from
itself the apprehensions of the imagination. This chapter answers a
certain objection and explains a difference which exists between
apprehensions that are imaginary, natural and supernatural.
THE benefits that come from voiding the imagination of imaginary
forms can be clearly observed in the five evils aforementioned which
they inflict upon the soul, if it desires to retain them, even as we
also said of the natural forms. But, apart from these, there are
other benefits for the spirit -- namely, those of great rest and
quiet. For, setting aside that natural rest which the soul obtains
when it is free from images and forms, it likewise becomes free from
anxiety as to whether they are good or evil, and as to how it must
behave with respect to the one and to the other. Nor has it to waste
the labour and time of its spiritual masters by requiring them to
decide if these things are good or evil, and if they are of this
kind or of another; for the soul has no need to desire to know all
this if it pays no heed to them. The time and energies which it
would have wasted in dealing with these images and forms can be
better employed in another and a more profitable exercise, which is
that of the will with respect to God, and in having a care to seek
detachment and poverty of spirit and sense, which consists in
desiring earnestly to be without any consoling support that can be
apprehended, whether interior or exterior. This we practise well
when we desire and strive to strip ourselves of these forms, since
from this there will proceed no less a benefit than that of approach
to God (Who has no image, neither form nor figure), and this will be
the greater according as the soul withdraws itself the more
completely from all forms, images and figures of the imagination.
2. But perchance you will say: 'Why do many spiritual persons
counsel the soul to strive to profit by the communications and
feelings which come from God, and to desire to receive them from
Him, that it may have something to give Him; since, if He gives us
nothing, we shall give Him nothing likewise? And wherefore does
Saint Paul say: 'Quench not the spirit?" And the Spouse to the
Bride: "Set Me as a seal upon thy heart and as a seal upon thine
arm?" This certainly denotes some kind of apprehension. And,
according to the instruction given above, not only must all this not
be striven after, but, even though God sends it, it must be rejected
and cast aside. But surely it is clear that, since God gives it, He
gives it to a good purpose, and it will have a good effect. We must
not throw away pearls. And it is even a kind of pride to be
unwilling to receive the things of God, as if we could do without
them and were self-sufficient.'
3. In order to meet this objection it is necessary to recall what
we said in the fifteenth and sixteenth chapters of the second book,
where to a great extent the difficulty is solved. For we said there
that the good that overflows in the soul from supernatural
apprehensions, when they come from a good source, is produced
passively in the soul at that very instant when they are represented
to the senses, without the working of any operation of the
faculties. Wherefore it is unnecessary for the will to perform the
act of receiving them; for, as we have also said, if at that time
the soul should try to labour with its faculties, the effect of its
own base and natural operation would be to hinder the supernatural
graces which God is even then working in it rather than that,
through these apprehensions, God should cause it to derive any
benefit from its active labour. Nay, rather, as the spirituality
coming from those imaginary apprehensions is given passively to the
soul, even so must the soul conduct itself passively with respect to
them, setting no store by its inward or outward actions. To do this
is to preserve the feelings that have their source in God, for in
this way they are not lost through the soul's base manner of
working. And this is not quenching the spirit; for the spirit would
be quenched by the soul if it desired to behave in any other manner
than that whereby God is leading it. And this it would be doing if,
when God had given it spiritual graces passively, as He does in
these apprehensions, it should then desire to exert itself actively
with respect to them, by labouring with its understanding or by
seeking to find something in them. And this is clear because, if the
soul desires to labour at that time with its own exertions, its work
cannot be more than natural, for of itself it is capable of no more;
for supernaturally it neither moves itself nor can move itself -- it
is God that moves it and brings it to this state. And thus, if the
soul at that time desires to labour with its own exertions (as far
as lies in its power), its active working will hinder the passive
work that God is communicating to it, which is spirit. It will be
setting itself to its own work, which is of another and an inferior
kind than that which God communicates to it; for the work of God is
passive and supernatural, and that of the soul is active and
natural; and in this way the soul would therefore be quenching the
spirit.
4. That this activity of the soul is an inferior one is also
clear from the fact that the faculties of the soul cannot, of their
own power, reflect and act, save upon some form, figure and image,
and this is the rind and accident of the substance and spirit which
lie beneath this rind and accident. This substance and spirit unite
not with the faculties of the soul in true understanding and love,
save when at last the operation of the faculties ceases. For the aim
and end of this operation is only that the substance which can be
understood and loved and which lies beneath these forms may come to
be received in the soul. The difference, therefore, between active
and passive operation, and the superiority of the latter,
corresponds to the difference between that which is being done and
that which is done already, or between that which a man tries to
attain and effect and that which is already effected. Hence it may
likewise be inferred that, if the soul should desire to employ its
faculties actively on these supernatural apprehensions, wherein God,
as we have said, bestows the spirit of them passively, it would be
doing nothing less than abandoning what it had already done, in
order to do it again, neither would it enjoy what it had done, nor
could it produce any other result by these actions of its own, save
that of impeding what had been done already. For, as we say, the
faculties cannot of their own power attain to the spirituality which
God bestows upon the soul without any operation of their own. And
thus the soul would be directly quenching the spirituality which God
infuses through these imaginary apprehensions aforementioned if it
were to set any store by them; wherefore it must set them aside, and
take up a passive and negative attitude with regard to them. For at
that time God is moving the soul to things which are above its own
power and knowledge. For this cause the Prophet said: 'I will stand
upon my watch and set my step upon my tower, and I will watch to see
that which will be said to me.' This is as though he were to say: I
will stand on guard over my faculties and I will take no step
forward as to my actions, and thus I shall be able to contemplate
that which will be said to me -- that is, I shall understand and
enjoy that which will be communicated to me supernaturally.
5. And the passage which has been quoted concerning the Spouse is
to be understood as referring to the love that He entreats of the
Bride, the office of which love between two lovers is to make one
like to the other in the most vital part of them. Wherefore He tells
her to set Him as a seal upon her heart, where all the arrows strike
that leave the quiver of love, which arrows are the actions and
motives of love. So they will all strike Him Who is there as a mark
for them; and thus all will be for Him, so that the soul will become
like Him through the actions and motions of love, until it be
transformed in Him. Likewise he bids her set Him as a seal upon her
arm, because the arm performs the exercise of love, for by the arm
the Beloved is sustained and comforted.
6. Therefore all that the soul has to endeavour to do with
respect to all the apprehensions which come to it from above,
whether imaginary or of any other kind -- it matters not if they be
visions, locutions, feelings or revelations -- is to make no account
of the letter or the rind (that is, of what is signified or
represented or given to be understood), but to pay heed only to the
possession of the love of God which they cause interiorly within the
soul. And in this case the soul will make account, not of feelings
of sweetness or delight, nor of figures, but of the feelings of love
which they cause it. And with this sole end in view it may at times
recall that image and apprehension caused it by love, in order to
set the spirit on its course of love. For, though the effect of that
apprehension be not so great afterwards, when it is recalled, as it
was on the first occasion when it was communicated, yet, when it is
recalled, love is renewed, and the mind is lifted up to God,
especially when the recollection is of certain figures, images or
feelings which are supernatural, and are wont to be sealed and
imprinted upon the soul in such a way that they continue for a long
time -- some of them, indeed, never leave the soul. And those that
are thus sealed upon the soul produce in it Divine effects of love,
sweetness, light and so forth, on almost every occasion when the
soul returns to them, sometimes more so and sometimes less; for it
was to this end that they were impressed upon it. And thus this is a
great favour for the soul on which God bestows it, for it is as
though it had within itself a mine of blessings.
7. The figures which produce effects such as these are deeply
implanted in the soul, and are not like other images and forms that
are retained in the fancy. And thus the soul has no need to have
recourse to this faculty when it desires to recall them, for it sees
that it has them within itself, and that they are as an image seen
in the mirror. When it comes to pass that any soul has such figures
formally within itself, it will then do well to recall them to the
effect of love to which I have referred, for they will be no
hindrance to the union of love in faith, since the soul will not
desire to be absorbed in the figure, but only to profit by the love;
it will immediately set aside the figure, which thus will rather be
a help to it.
8. Only with great difficulty can it be known when these images
are imprinted upon the soul, and when upon the fancy. For those
which touch the fancy are as apt to occur very frequently as are the
others; for certain persons are accustomed habitually to have
imaginary visions in their imagination and fancy, which are
presented to them in one form with great frequency; sometimes
because the apprehensive power of the organ concerned is very great,
and, however little they reflect upon it, that habitual figure is at
once presented to, and outlined upon, their fancy; sometimes because
it is the work of the devil; sometimes, again, because it is the
work of God; but the visions are not formally imprinted upon the
soul. They may be known, however, by their effects. For those that
are natural, or that come from the devil, produce no good effect
upon the soul, however frequently they be recalled, nor work its
spiritual renewal, but the contemplation of them simply produces
aridity. Those that are good, however, produce some good effect when
they are recalled, like that which was produced in the soul upon the
first occasion. But the formal images which are imprinted upon the
soul almost invariably produce some effect in it, whensoever they
are remembered.
9. He that has experienced these will readily distinguish the one
kind from the other, for the great difference between them is very
clear to anyone that has experience of them. I will merely say that
those which are formally and durably imprinted upon the soul are of
very rare occurrence. But, whether they be of this kind or of that,
it is good for the soul to desire to understand nothing, save God
alone, through faith, in hope. And if anyone makes the objection
that to reject these things, if they are good, appears to be pride,
I reply that it is not so, but that it is prudent humility to profit
by them in the best way, as has been said, and to be guided by that
which is safest.
CHAPTER XIV
Which treats of spiritual knowledge in so far as it may concern
the memory.
WE classed spiritual forms of knowledge as the third division of
the apprehensions of the memory, not because they belong to the
bodily sense of the fancy, as do the others, for they have no bodily
form and image, but because they are likewise apprehensible by
spiritual memory and reminiscence. Now, after the soul has had
experience of one of these apprehensions, it can recall it
whensoever it will; and this is not by the effigy and image that the
apprehension has left in the bodily sense, for, since this is of
bodily form, as we say, it has no capacity for spiritual forms; but
because it recalls it, intellectually and spiritually, by means of
that form which it has left impressed upon the soul, which is
likewise a formal or spiritual form or notion or image, whereby it
is recalled, or by means of the effect that it has wrought. It is
for this reason that I place these apprehensions among those of the
memory, although they belong not to the apprehensions of the fancy.
2. What these kinds of knowledge are, and how the soul is to
conduct itself with respect to them in order to attain to union with
God, are sufficiently described in the twenty-fourth chapter of the
second book, where we treated this knowledge as apprehensions of the
understanding. Let this be referred to, for we there described how
it was of two kinds: either uncreated or of the creatures. I speak
now only of things relating to my present purpose -- namely, how the
memory must behave with respect to them in order to attain to union.
And I say, as I have just said of formal knowledge in the preceding
chapter (for this, being of created things, is of the same kind),
that these apprehensions my be recalled when they produce good
effects, not that they may be dwelt upon, but that they may quicken
the soul's love and knowledge of God. But, unless the recollection
of them produces good effects, let the memory never give them even
passing attention. With regard to uncreated knowledge, I say that
the soul should try to recall it as often as possible, for it will
produce most beneficial effects. As we said above, it produces
touches and impressions of union with God, which is the aim towards
which we are directing the soul. And by no form, image or figure
which can be impressed upon the soul does the memory recall these
(for these touches and impressions of union with the Creator have no
form), but only by the effects which they have produced upon it of
light, love, joy and spiritual renewal, and so forth, some of which
are wrought anew in the soul whensoever they are remembered.
CHAPTER XV
Which sets down the general method whereby the spiritual person
must govern himself with respect to this sense.
IN order to conclude this discussion on the memory, it will be
well at this point to give the spiritual reader an account of the
method which he must observe, and which is of universal application,
in order that he may be united with God according to this sense.
For, although what has been said makes the subject quite clear, it
will nevertheless be more easily apprehended if we summarize it
here. To this end it must be remembered that, since our aim is the
union of the soul with God in hope, according to the memory, and
since that which is hoped for is that which is not possessed, and
since, the less we possess of other things, the greater scope and
the greater capacity have we for hoping, and consequently the
greater hope, therefore, the more things we possess, the less scope
and capacity is there for hoping, and consequently the less hope
have we. Hence, the more the soul dispossesses the memory of forms
and things which may be recalled by it, which are not God, the more
will it set its memory upon God, and the emptier will its memory
become, so that it may hope for Him Who shall fill it. What must be
done, then, that the soul may live in the perfect and pure hope of
God is that, whensoever these distinct images, forms and ideas come
to it, it must not rest in them, but must turn immediately to God,
voiding the memory of them entirely, with loving affection. It must
neither think of these things nor consider them beyond the degree
which is necessary for the understanding and performing of its
obligations, if they have any concern with these. And this it must
do without setting any affection or inclination upon them, so that
they may produce no effects in the soul. And thus a man must not
fail to think and recall that which he ought to know and do, for,
provided he preserves no affection or attachments, this will do him
no harm. For this matter the lines of the Mount, which are in the
thirteenth chapter of the first book, will be of profit.
2. But here it must be borne in mind that this doctrine ours does
not agree, nor do we desire that it should agree, with the doctrine
of those pestilent men, who, inspired by Satanic pride and envy,
have desired to remove from the eyes of the faithful the holy and
necessary use, and the worthy adoration, of images of God and of the
saints. This teaching of ours is very different from that; for we
say not here, as they do, that images should not exist, and should
not be adored; we simply explain the difference between images and
God. We exhort men to pass beyond that which is superficial that
they may not be hindered from attaining to the living truth beneath
it, and to make no more account of the former than suffices for
attainment to the spiritual. For means are good and necessary to an
end; and images are means which serve to remind us of God and of the
saints. But when we consider and attend to the means more than is
necessary for treating them as such, they disturb and hinder us as
much, in their own way, as any different thing; the more so, when we
treat of supernatural visions and images, to which I am specially
referring, and with respect to which arise many deceptions and
perils. For, with respect to the remembrance and adoration and
esteem of images, which the Catholic Church sets before us, there
can be no deception or peril, because naught is esteemed therein
other than that which is represented; nor does the remembrance of
them fail to profit the soul, since they are not preserved in the
memory save with love for that which they represent; and, provided
the soul pays no more heed to them than is necessary for this
purpose, they will ever assist it to union with God, allowing the
soul to soar upwards (when God grants it that favour) from the
superficial image to the living God, forgetting every creature and
everything that belongs to creatures.