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CHAPTER 2 : THE SECOND CONVERSION: ENTRANCE INTO THE ILLUMINATIVE
WAY
WE have seen that, comparable with the two crises which mark the
transition from childhood to youth and from youth to manhood,
there are also in the spiritual life two crises, one by which
proficients pass into the illuminative way, and another by which
the perfect reach the state of union.
The first of these crises has been called a second conversion, and
it is of this that we have now to speak.
The liturgy, especially at periods such as Advent and Lent, speaks
often of the need of conversion, even for those who are leading a
Christian life. Spiritual writers also refer often to this second
conversion, necessary for the Christian who, though he has thought
seriously of his salvation and made an effort to walk in the way
of God, has nevertheless begun once more to follow the bent of his
nature and to fall into a state of tepidity -- like an engrafted
plant reverting to its wild state. Some of these writers, such as
the Blessed Henry Suso or Tauler, have insisted especially upon
the necessity of this second conversion, a necessity which they
have learned from their own experience. St. John of the Cross has
profoundly pointed out that the entrance into the illuminative way
is marked by a passive purgation of the senses, which is a second
conversion, and that the entrance into the unitive way is preceded
by a passive purgation of the spirit, a further and a deeper
conversion affecting the soul in its most intimate depths. Among
the writers of the Society of Jesus we may quote Pere Lallemant,
who writes: 'Saints and religious who reach perfection pass
ordinarily through two conversions: one by which they devote
themselves to the service of God, and another by which they
surrender themselves entirely to perfection. We find this in the
case of the Apostles, first when our Lord called them, and then
when He sent the Holy Ghost upon them; we find it in the case of
St. Teresa, of her confessor, P. Alvarez, and of many others.
This
second conversion is not granted to all religious, and it is due
to their negligence.' [57]
This question is of the greatest interest for every spiritual
soul. Among those who dealt with it before St. John of the Cross
we must count St. Catherine of Siena, who touches upon the subject
repeatedly in her Dialogue and in her Letters. Her treatment,
which is very realistic and practical, throws a great light upon
the teaching which is commonly received in the Church. [58]
Following St. Catherine, we shall speak first of this second
conversion as it took place in the Apostles, and then as it should
take place in us; we shall say what defects render this conversion
necessary, what great motives ought to inspire it, and finally
what fruits it should produce in us.
The second conversion of the Apostles.
St. Catherine of Siena speaks explicitly of the second conversion
of the Apostles in the 63rd chapter of her Dialogue.
Their first conversion had taken place when Jesus called them,
with the words: 'I will make you fishers of men.' They followed
our Lord, listened with admiration to His teaching, saw His
miracles and took part in His ministry. Three of them saw Him
transfigured on Thabor. All were present at the institution of the
Eucharist, were ordained priests and received Holy Communion. But
when the hour of the Passion arrived, an hour which Jesus had so
often foretold, the Apostles abandoned their Master Even Peter,
though he loved his Master devotedly; went so far as to deny Him
thrice. Our Lord had told Peter after the Supper, in words that
recall the prologue of the Book of Job. 'Simon, Simon, behold
Satan hath desired to have you, that he may sift you as wheat. But
I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not; and thou being
once converted confirm thy brethren.' To which Peter replied:
'Lord, I am ready to go with thee both into prison and to death.'
But Jesus warned him: 'I say to thee, Peter, the cock shall not
crow this day till thou thrice deniest that thou knowest me.' [59]
And, in fact, Peter fell; he denied his Master, swearing that he
did not know Him.
When did his second conversion begin? Immediately after his triple
denial, as we are told in the Gospel of St. Luke [60]
'Immediately, as he was yet speaking, the cock crew. And the Lord
turning, looked on Peter. And Peter remembered the word of the
Lord, as he had said: Before the cock crow, thou shalt deny me
thrice. And Peter going out, wept bitterly.' Under the glance of
Jesus and the grace which accompanied it, Peter's repentance must
have been deep indeed and must have been the beginning of a new
life for him
In connection with this second conversion of St. Peter it is well
to recall the words of St. Thomas; [61] 'Even after a grave sin,
if the soul has a sorrow which is truly fervent and proportionate
to the degree of grace which it has lost, it will recover this
same degree of grace; grace may even revive in the soul in a
higher degree, if the contrition is still more fervent. Thus the
soul has not to begin again completely from the beginning, but it
continues from the point which it had reached at the moment of the
fall.' In the same way, the climber who falls when he has reached
half-way up the mountain-side, rises immediately and continues his
ascent from the point at which he has fallen. [62]
Everything leads us to suppose that Peter's repentance was so
fervent that he not only recovered the degree of grace which he
possessed before, but was raised to a higher degree of
supernatural life. Our Lord had allowed him to fall in this way in
order to cure him of his presumption, so that he might be more
humble and place his confidence in God and not in himself.
St. Catherine writes in her Dialogue :[63] 'Peter... after the sin
of denying My Son, began to weep. Yet his lamentations were
imperfect, and remained so until after the forty days, that is
until after the Ascension. (They remained imperfect in spite of
the appearances of our Lord.) But when my Truth returned to me, in
His humanity, Peter and the others concealed themselves in the
house, awaiting the coming of the Holy Spirit which my Truth had
promised them. They remained barred in through fear, because the
soul always fears until it arrives at true love. 'It was only at
Pentecost that they were truly transformed.
Yet even before the end of the Passion of Christ there was clearly
a second conversion in Peter and the other Apostles, a conversion
which was consolidated during the days that followed. After His
resurrection our Lord appeared to them several times, enlightening
them, as He did when He taught the disciples of Emmaus the
understanding of the Scriptures; and in particular, after the
miraculous draught of fishes, He made Peter compensate for his
threefold denial by a threefold act of love. 'Simon, son of John,'
He says to him, 'lovest thou me more than these? He saith to him:
Yea, Lord, thou knowest that I love thee. He saith to him: Feed my
lambs. He saith to him again: Simon, son of John, lovest thou me.
He saith to him: Yea, Lord, thou knowest that I love thee. He
saith to him: Feed my lambs. He said to him the third time: Simon,
son of John, lovest thou me? Peter was grieved because he said to
him the third time: Lovest thou me? And he said to him: Lord, thou
knowest all things, thou knowest that I love thee. He said to him:
Feed my sheep.' And then He foretold in veiled terms the martyrdom
that Peter would undergo: 'When thou wast younger thou didst gird
thyself and didst walk where thou wouldst. But when thou shalt be
old, thou shalt stretch forth thy hands and another shall gird
thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not.' [64]
The threefold act of love made reparation for the threefold
denial. It was a consolidation of the second conversion, a measure
of confirmation in grace before the transformation of Pentecost.
For St. John, too, there had been something special just before
the death of Christ. John, like the other Apostles, had abandoned
his Master when Judas arrived with his band of armed men; but by
an invisible and powerful grace Jesus drew the beloved disciple to
the foot of the cross, and the second conversion of St. John took
place when he heard the seven last words of the dying Saviour.
What our second conversion ought to be. The defects which render
it necessary.
In the 60th and 63rd chapters of her Dialogue, St. Catherine shows
that what happened in the case of the Apostles, our models formed
immediately by the Saviour Himself, must happen, after a certain
manner, in the case of each one of us. Indeed we may say that if
even the Apostles stood in need of a second conversion, then still
more do we. The Saint emphasizes especially the faults which make
this second conversion necessary, in particular self-love. In
varying degrees this egoism survives in all imperfect souls in
spite of the state of grace, and it is the source of a multitude
of venial sins, of habitual faults which become characteristic
features of the soul, rendering necessary a veritable purging even
in those who have, as it were, been present on Mount Thabor, or
who have often partaken of the Eucharistic banquet, as the
Apostles did at the Last Supper.
In her Dialogue [65] St. Catherine of Siena speaks of this self-
love, describing it as 'the mercenary love of the imperfect,' of
those who, without being conscious of it, serve God from self-
interest, because they are attached to temporal or spiritual
consolations, and who shed tears of self-pity when they are
deprived of them.
It is a strange but not uncommon mixture of sincere love of God
with an inordinate love of self. [66] The soul loves God more than
itself, otherwise it would not be in the state of grace, it would
not possess charity; but it still loves itself with an inordinate
love. It has not yet reached the stage of loving itself in God and
for His sake. Such a state of soul is neither white nor black; it
is a light grey, in which there is more white than black. The soul
is on the upward path, but it still has a tendency to slip
downwards.
We read in this 60th chapter of the Dialogue (it is God who
speaks). 'Among those who have become My trusted servants there
are some who serve Me with faith, without servile fear, it is not
the mere fear of punishment, but love which attaches them to My
service (thus Peter before the Passion). But this love is still
imperfect, because what they seek in My service (at any rate to a
great extent) is their own profit, their own satisfaction, or the
pleasure that they find in Me. The same imperfection is found in
the love which they bear towards their neighbour. And do you know
what shows the imperfection of their love? It is that, as soon as
they are deprived of the consolations which they find in Me, their
love fails and can no longer survive. It becomes weak and
gradually cools towards Me when, in order to exercise them in
virtue and to detach them from their imperfection, I withdraw
spiritual consolations from them and send them difficulties and
afflictions. I act in this way in order to bring them to
perfection, to teach them to know themselves, to realize that they
are nothing and that of themselves they have no grace. [67]
Adversity should have the effect of making them seek refuge in Me,
recognize Me as their benefactor, and become attached to Me by a
true humility....
' If they do not recognize their imperfection and desire to become
perfect, it is impossible that they should not turn back.' This is
what the Fathers have so often asserted: 'In the way of God he who
makes no progress loses ground.' Just as the child who does not
grow does not merely remain a child but becomes an idiot, so the
beginner who does not enter upon the way of proficients when he
ought to, does not merely remain a beginner, but becomes a stunted
soul. It would seem, unhappily, that the great majority of souls
do not belong to any of these three categories, of beginners,
proficients or perfect, but rather to that of stunted souls! At
what stage are we ourselves? This is often a very difficult
question to answer, and it would perhaps be vain curiosity to
inquire at what point we have arrived in our upward path; but at
least we must take care not to mistake the road, not to take a
path that leads downwards.
It is important, therefore, to reach beyond the merely mercenary
love, which often we unconsciously retain. We read in this same
60th chapter: 'It was with this imperfect love that Peter loved
the good and gentle Jesus, my only-begotten Son, when he
experienced the delights of sweet intimacy with Him (on Mount
Thabor). But as soon as the time of tribulation came all his
courage forsook him. Not only did he not have the strength to
suffer for Him, but at the first threat of danger his loyalty was
overcome by the most servile fear, and he denied Him three times,
swearing that he did not know Him.'
St. Catherine of Siena, in the 63rd chapter of the same Dialogue,
shows that the imperfect soul, which loves God with a love which
is still mercenary, must do what Peter did after his denial. Not
infrequently Providence allows us, too, at this stage to commit
some very palpable fault, in order to humiliate us and cause us to
take true measure of ourselves.
' Then,' says the Lord, [68] 'having recognized the grievousness
of its sin and repented of it, the soul begins to weep, for fear
of punishment; then it rises to the consideration of my mercy, in
which it finds satisfaction and comfort. But it is, I say, still
imperfect, and in order to draw it on to perfection... I withdraw
from it, not in grace but in feeling. [69]... This I do in order
to humiliate that soul, and cause it to seek Me in truth...
without thought of self and with lively faith and with hatred of
its own sensuality.' And just as Peter compensated for his
threefold denial by three acts of pure and devoted love, so the
enlightened soul must do in like manner.
St. John of the Cross, following Tauler, gives us three signs
which mark this second conversion: 'The soul finds no pleasure or
consolation in the things of God, but it also fails to find it in
any thing created.... The second sign... is that ordinarily the
memory is centred upon God, with painful care and solicitude,
thinking that it is not serving God, but backsliding, because it
finds itself without sweetness in the things of God.... The third
sign... is that the soul can no longer meditate or reflect in its
sense of the imagination.... For God now begins to communicate
Himself to it, no longer through sense, as He did aforetime, by
means of reflections which joined and sundered its knowledge, but
by an act of simple contemplation, to which neither the exterior
nor the interior senses of the lower part of the soul can attain.'
[70]
Progressives or proficients thus enter, according to St. John of
the Cross, 'upon the road and way of the spirit, which... is
called the way of illumination or of infused contemplation,
wherewith God Himself feeds and refreshes the soul.' [71]
While St. Catherine of Siena does not give so exact an analysis,
she insists particularly upon one of the signs of this state: an
experimental knowledge of our poverty and profound imperfection; a
knowledge which is not precisely acquired, but granted by God, as
it was granted to Peter when Jesus looked upon him immediately
after his denial. At that moment Peter received a grace of
enlightenment; he remembered, and going out he wept bitterly. [72]
At the end of this same 63rd chapter of her Dialogue we find a
passage of which St. John of the Cross later gives a full
development- 'I withdraw from the soul,' says the Lord, 'so that
it may see and know its defects, so that, feeling itself deprived
of consolation and afflicted by pain, it may recognize its own
weakness, and learn how incapable it is of stability or
perseverance, thus cutting down to the very root of spiritual
self-love; for this should be the end and purpose of all its self-
knowledge, to rise above itself, mounting the throne of
conscience, and not permitting the sentiment of imperfect love to
turn again in its death-struggle, but, with correction and
reproof, digging up the root of self-love, with the knife of self-
hatred and the love of virtue.' [73]
In this same connection the Saint speaks of the many dangers that
lie in wait for a soul that is moved only by a mercenary love,
saying that souls which are imperfect desire to follow the Father
alone, without passing by the way of Christ crucified, because
they have no desire to suffer. [74]
The motives which must inspire the second conversion, and the
fruits that derive therefrom.
The first motive is expressed in the greatest commandment, which
knows no limits: 'Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with thy whole
heart and with thy whole soul and with all thy strength and with
all thy mind.' [75] This commandment requires the love of God for
His own sake, and not from self-interest or attachment to our own
personal satisfaction; it demands, moreover, that we love God with
all our strength in the hour of trial, so that we may finally
arrive at the stage of loving Him with our whole mind, when our
love will be unaffected by the ebb and flow of sensibility and we
shall be of those who 'adore in spirit and in truth.' Furthermore,
this commandment is absolute and without limits: the end for which
all Christians are required to strive is the perfection of
charity, each in his own condition and state of life, whether it
be in the state of marriage or in the priestly or the religious
life.
St. Catherine of Siena emphasizes this in the 11th and 47th
chapters of her Dialogue, reminding us that we can only perfectly
fulfil the commandment of love towards God and our neighbour if we
have the spirit of the counsels, that is to say, the spirit of
detachment from earthly goods, which, in the words of St. Paul, we
must use as though we used them not.
The great motive of the second conversion is thus described in the
60th chapter: 'Such souls should leave their mercenary love and
become sons, and serve Me irrespective of their own personal
advantage. I am the rewarder of every labour, and I render to
every man according to his condition and according to his works.
Wherefore, if these souls do not abandon the exercise of holy
prayer and their other good works, but continue with perseverance
to increase their virtues, they will arrive at the state of filial
love, because I respond to them with the same love with which they
love Me; so that if they love Me as a servant loves his master, I
pay them their wages according to their deserts, but I do not
reveal myself to them, because secrets are revealed to a friend
who has become one thing with his friend, and not to a servant....
' But if My servants, through displeasure at their imperfection
and through love of virtue, dig up with hatred the root of
spiritual self-love, and mount to the throne of conscience,
reasoning with themselves so as to quell the motions of servile
fear in their heart, and to correct mercenary love by the light of
holy faith, they will be so pleasing to Me that they will attain
to the love of the friend. And I will manifest Myself to them, as
My Truth said in these words- "He who loves me shall be one thing
with me and I with him, and I will manifest myself to him and we
will dwell together." [76]These last words refer to the knowledge
of Himself which God grants by a special inspiration. This is
contemplation, which proceeds from faith enlightened by the gifts,
from faith united with love; it is a knowledge which savours
mysteries and penetrates into their depths.
A second motive which should inspire the second conversion is the
price of the blood of the Saviour, which St. Peter failed to
realize before the Passion, in spite of the words: 'This is my
blood which is shed for you,' which Christ pronounced at the Last
Supper. It was only after the Resurrection that he began to
comprehend this. We read in the Dialogue 1 on this subject. 'My
creatures should see and know that I wish nothing but their good,
through the Blood of My only-begotten Son, in which they are
washed from their iniquities. By this Blood they are enabled to
know My truth, how in order to give them life I created them in My
image and likeness and re-created them to grace with the Blood of
My. Son, making them sons of adoption.' This is what St. Peter
understood after his sin and after the Passion of Christ; it was
only then that he appreciated the value of the Precious Blood
which had been shed for our salvation, the Blood of Redemption.
Here we have a glimpse of the greatness of Peter in his
humiliation; he is much greater here than he was on Thabor, for
here he has some understanding of his own poverty and of the
infinite goodness of the most High. When Jesus for the first time
foretold that he must go to Jerusalem to be crucified, Peter took
his Master aside and said to Him: 'Lord, be it far from thee, this
shall not be unto thee!' In speaking thus he had, all
unconsciously, spoken against the whole economy of Redemption,
against the whole plan of Providence, against the very motive of
the Incarnation. And that is why Jesus answered him. 'Get behind
me, Satan; thou savourest not the things that are of God but the
things that are of men.' But now, after his sin and after his
conversion, Peter in his humiliation has an understanding of the
Cross, and he sees something of the price of the Precious Blood.
And so we can understand why St. Catherine constantly speaks in
her Dialogue and in her Letters of the Blood which gives efficacy
to Baptism and to the other sacraments. At every Mass, when the
priest raises the Precious Blood high above the altar, our faith
in its redemptive power and virtue ought to become greater and
more intense.
A third motive which ought to inspire the second conversion is the
love of souls which need to be saved, a love which is inseparable
from the love of God, because it is at once the sign and the
effect of that love. This love of souls ought in every Christian
worthy of the name to become a zeal that inspires all the virtues.
In St. Catherine it led her to offer herself as a victim for the
salvation of sinners. In the last chapter but one of the Dialogue
we read' Thou didst ask Me to do mercy to the world... Thou didst
pray for the mystical body of Holy Church, that I would remove
darkness and persecution from it, at thine own desire punishing in
thy person the iniquities of certain of its ministers.... I have
also told thee that I wish to do mercy to the world, proving to
thee that mercy is My special attribute, for through the mercy and
the inestimable love which I had for man I sent into the world the
Word, My only-begotten Son....
' I also promised thee, and now again I promise thee, that through
the long endurance of My servants I will reform My Spouse.
Wherefore I invite thee to endure, Myself lamenting with thee over
the iniquities of some of My ministers.... And I have spoken to
thee also of the virtue of them that live like angels.... And now
I urge thee and My other servants to grief, for by your grief and
humble and continual prayer I will do mercy to the world.'
The fruit of this second conversion, as in the case of Peter, is a
beginning of contemplation by a progressive understanding of the
great mystery of the Cross and the Redemption, a living
appreciation of the infinite value of the Blood which Christ shed
for us. This incipient contemplation is accompanied by a union
with God less dependent upon the fluctuations of sensibility, a
purer, a stronger, a more continuous union. Subsequently, if not
joy, at all events peace, takes up its dwelling in the soul even
in the midst of adversity. The soul becomes filled, no longer with
a merely abstract, theoretical and vague persuasion, but with a
concrete and living conviction, that in God's government all
things are ordained towards the manifestation of His goodness.
[77] At the end of the Dialogue God Himself declares this truth
:[78] 'Nothing has ever happened and nothing happens save by the
plan of My divine Providence. In all things that I permit, in all
things that I give you, in tribulations and in consolations,
temporal or spiritual, I do nothing save for your good, so that
you may be sanctified in Me and that My Truth be fulfilled in
you.' It is the same truth which St. Paul expresses in his epistle
to the Romans: 'To them that love God all things work together
unto good.'
This is the conviction that was born in the soul of Peter and the
Apostles after their second conversion, and also in the souls of
the disciples of Emmaus when the risen Christ gave them a fuller
understanding of the mystery of the Cross: 'O foolish,' He said to
them, 'and slow of heart to believe in all things which the
prophets have spoken. Ought not Christ to have suffered these
things and so to enter into his glory? And beginning at Moses and
all the prophets he expounded to them in all the Scriptures the
things that were concerning him.' [79]
They knew Him in the breaking of bread.
What happened to these disciples on the way to Emmaus should
happen to us too, if we are faithful, on the way to eternity. If
for them and for the Apostles there had to be a second conversion,
still more is such a conversion necessary for us. And under the
influence of this new grace of God we too shall say: 'Was not our
heart burning within us whilst he spoke in the way and opened to
us the Scriptures?' Theology, too, helps us to discover the
profound meaning of the Gospel. But the more theology progresses,
the more, in a sense, it has to conceal itself; it has to
disappear very much as St. John the Baptist disappears after
announcing the coming of our Lord. It helps us to discover the
deep significance of divine revelation contained in Scripture and
Tradition, and when it has rendered this service it should stand
aside. In order to restore our cathedrals, to set well-hewn stones
into their proper place it is necessary to erect a scaffolding;
but when once the stones have been replaced the scaffolding is
removed and the cathedral once more appears in all its beauty. In
a similar way theology helps us to demonstrate the solidity of the
foundations of the doctrinal edifice, the firmness of its
construction, the proportion of its parts; but when it has shown
us this, it effaces itself to make place for that supernatural
contemplation which proceeds from a faith enlightened by the gifts
of the Holy Spirit, from a faith that penetrates and savours the
truths of God, a faith that is united with love. [80]
And so it is with the question with which we are dealing, the
truly vital question of our interior life in God.
CHAPTER 3 : THE THIRD CONVERSION OR TRANSFORMATION OF THE SOUL:
ENTRANCE INTO THE UNITIVE WAY
WE have spoken of the second conversion, which is necessary for
the soul if it is to leave the way of beginners and enter upon the
way of proficients, or the illuminative way. As we have seen, many
authors hold that this second conversion took place for the
Apostles at the end of the Passion of Christ, and for Peter in
particular after his triple denial.
St. Thomas remarks in his commentary on St. Matthew [81] that this
repentance of St. Peter came about immediately, as soon as his
Master had looked upon him, and that it was efficacious and
definitive.
Nevertheless, Peter and the Apostles were slow to believe in the
resurrection of Christ, in spite of the account which the holy
women gave them of this miracle so often foretold by Jesus
Himself. The story they told seemed to them to be madness. [82]
Moreover, slow to believe the resurrection of the Saviour, they
were correspondingly anxious, says St. Augustine, [83] to see the
complete restoration of the kingdom of Israel such as they
imagined would come to pass. This may be seen from the question
which they put to our Lord on the very day of the Ascension: 'Lord
wilt thou at this time again restore the kingdom of Israel?' But
there was still much suffering to be undergone before the
restoration of the kingdom; and that restoration would be far
superior to anything that they suspected.
And so spiritual writers have often spoken of a third conversion
or transformation of the Apostles, which took place on the day of
Pentecost. Let us see first what this transformation was in them,
and then what it ought to be, proportionately, in us.
The Apostles were prepared for their third transformation by the
fact that from the time of the Ascension they were deprived of the
perceptible presence of Jesus Himself. When our Lord deprived His
Apostles forever of the sight of His sacred Humanity, they must
have suffered a distress to which we do not perhaps sufficiently
advert. When we consider that our Lord had become their very life
-- as St. Paul says: 'Mihi vivere Christus est' -and that they had
become daily more and more intimate with Him, they must have had a
feeling of the greatest loneliness, like a feeling of desolation,
even of death. And their desolation must have been the more
intense since our Lord Himself had foretold all the sufferings
that were in store. We experience something of the same dismay
when, after having lived on a higher plane during the time of
retreat, under the guidance of a priestly soul full of the spirit
of God, we are plunged once again into our everyday life which
seems to deprive us suddenly of this fulness. The Apostles stood
there with their eyes raised up to heaven. This was no longer
merely the crushing of their sensibility, as it was during the
time of the Passion; it was a complete blank, which must have
seemed to take from them all power of thinking. During the Passion
our Lord was still there; now He had been taken away from them,
and they seemed to be completely deprived of Him.
It was in the night of the spirit that they were prepared for the
outpouring of the graces of Pentecost.
The Descent of the Holy Ghost upon the Apostles.
"All These Were Persevering In One Mind In Prayer, With The Women
And Mary The Mother Of Jesus.
The Acts of the Apostles give us an account of the event.' When
the days of Pentecost were accomplished they were all together in
one place. And suddenly there came a sound from heaven, as of a
mighty wind coming; and it filled the whole house where they were
sitting. And there appeared to them parted tongues, as it were of
fire, and it sat upon every one of them. And they were all filled
with the Holy Ghost; and they began to speak with divers tongues
according as the Holy Ghost gave them to speak.' [84]
The sound from heaven, like that of a mighty wind, was an external
sign of the mysterious and powerful action of the Holy Spirit; and
at the same time the tongues of fire which rested upon each of the
Apostles symbolized what was to be accomplished in their souls.
It happens not infrequently that a great grace is preceded by some
striking perceptible sign which arouses us from our inertia; it is
like a divine awakening. Here the symbolism is as clear as it can
be. As fire purifies, enlightens and gives warmth, so the Holy
Ghost in this moment most deeply purified, enlightened and
inflamed the souls of the Apostles. This was truly the profound
purging of the spirit. [85] And St. Peter explained that this was
the fulfilment of what the prophet Joel had foretold: 'It shall
come to pass in the last days (saith the Lord) I will pour out my
Spirit on all flesh; and your sons and your daughters shall
prophesy.... And it shall come to pass that whosoever shall call
upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.' [86]
the Holy Ghost already dwell in the souls of the Apostles, but by
this visible mission [87] He came into them to increase the
treasures of His grace, of the virtues and the gifts, giving them
light and strength in order that they might be capable of
witnessing to Christ even to the ends of the earth, and at the
peril of their lives. The tongues of fire are a sign that the Holy
Spirit enkindled in their souls that living flame of Love of which
St. John of the Cross speaks.
Then were the words of Christ fulfilled: 'The Holy Ghost whom the
Father will send in my name, he will teach you all things, and
will bring to your mind whatsoever I shall have said to you.' [88]
Then the Apostles began to speak 'in divers tongues the wonderful
works of God,' so that the foreigners who were witnesses of this
marvel, 'Parthians and Medes, Elamites and inhabitants of
Mesopotamia, Judaea and Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia... Jews,
Cretes and Arabians... were all amazed and wondered, saying... We
have heard them speak in our own tongues.' [89] It was a sign that
they were now to begin to preach the Gospel to the different
nations, as our Lord had commanded them-' Go ye, and teach all
nations.'[90]
The effects of the descent of the Holy Ghost.
The Acts show us what were these effects: the Apostles were
enlightened and fortified, and their sanctifying influence
transformed the first Christians; there was a transport of intense
fervour in the infant Church.
First of all, the Apostles received a much greater enlightenment
from the Holy Spirit regarding the price of the Blood of the
Saviour, regarding the mystery of Redemption, foretold in the Old
Testament and fulfilled in the New. They received the fulness of
the contemplation of this mystery which they were now to preach to
humanity for the salvation of men. St. Thomas says that 'the
preaching of the word of God must proceed from the fulness of
contemplation.' [91] This was most fully verified at that time, as
we may see from the first sermons of St. Peter related in the Acts
and from that of St. Stephen before his martyrdom. These words of
St. Peter and St. Stephen recall the saying of the Psalmist: 'Thy
word is exceedingly refined and thy servant hath loved it.' [92]
The Apostles and the disciples, men without education, were still
asking on the day of the Ascension: 'Lord, wilt thou at this time
restore the kingdom of Israel?' Jesus had answered: 'It is not for
you to know the times or moments which the Father hath put in his
own power. But you shall receive the power of the Holy Ghost
coming upon you, and you shall be witnesses unto me in Jerusalem
and in all Judaea and Samaria, and even to the uttermost parts of
the earth.' [93]
And now behold Peter. He who before the Passion had trembled at
the word of a woman, who had been so slow to believe the
resurrection of the Master, now stands before the Jews, saying to
them with an authority that can come only from God: 'Jesus of
Nazareth, a man approved of God by miracles and wonders and signs
which God did by him in the midst of you... this same being
delivered up by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge [94] of
God, you by the hands of wicked men have crucified and slain. Him
God hath raised up [as David foretold].... This Jesus God hath
raised again, whereof all we are witnesses... he hath poured forth
this which you see and hear.... Therefore let all the house of
Israel know most certainly that God hath made both Lord and Christ
this same Jesus whom you have crucified.' [95] Herein lies the
whole mystery of the Redemption. Peter now sees that Jesus was a
willing victim, and he contemplates the infinite value of His
merits and of the Blood which He shed.
The Acts add that those who heard this discourse 'had compunction
in their heart and said to Peter: What shall we do? Peter
answered. Do penance and be baptized every one of you in the name
of Jesus Christ, for the remission of sins. And you shall receive
the gift of the Holy Ghost. 'And so it came to pass, and on that
day about three thousand persons were converted and received the
sacrament of baptism. [96]
Some days later, Peter said to the Jews in the temple, after the
cure of a man who had been lame from birth: 'The author of life
you killed, whom God hath raised from the dead; of which we are
witnesses.... Our Lord Jesus Christ of Nazareth, whom you
crucified... this is the stone which was rejected by you the
builders, which is become the head of the corner. Neither is there
salvation in any other. For there is no other name under heaven
given to men, whereby we must be saved.' [97] In this enumeration
of the graces of Pentecost we must notice chiefly, not the gift of
tongues or other powers of this kind, but rather that special
illumination which enabled the Apostles to enter into the depths
of the mystery of the Incarnation, and more particularly of the
Passion of Christ. This is the mystery of which Peter could not
bear the prediction, when Jesus said that He was to be crucified:
'Lord, be it far from thee; this shall not be unto thee.' And
Jesus answered: 'Thou savourest not the things that are of God,
but the things that are of men.' [98] Now Peter has an
understanding of the things of God, and he contemplates the whole
economy of the mystery of the redemptive Incarnation. And it is
not only he who is thus enlightened. All the Apostles bear witness
in like manner, and the disciples also, and the deacon, St.
Stephen, who, before being stoned to death, reminded the Jews of
all that God had done for the chosen people in the time of the
Patriarchs, in the time of Moses and, since then, until the coming
of the Saviour. [99]
But the Apostles were not only enlightened on the day of
Pentecost, they were also strengthened and confirmed. Jesus had
promised them: 'You shall receive the power of the Holy Ghost
coming upon you.' [100]
Fearful before Pentecost, they are now
full of courage, even to the point of martyrdom. Peter and John,
arrested and haled before the Sanhedrin, declare that 'there is no
salvation in any other' than in Jesus Christ. Arrested again, and
beaten with rods,' they went forth from the presence of the
council rejoicing that they were accounted worthy to suffer
reproach for the name of Jesus. And every day they ceased not, in
the temple and from house to house, to teach and preach Christ
Jesus.' [101] They all bore testimony to Christ in their blood.
Who had given them the strength to do this? The Holy Spirit, by
enkindling the living fire of charity in their hearts.
Such was their third conversion; it was a complete transformation
of their souls. Their first conversion had made them disciples of
the Master, attracted by the sublime beauty of His teaching; the
second, at the end of the Passion, had enabled them to divine the
fecundity of the mystery of the Cross, enlightened as it was by
the Resurrection which followed it; the third conversion fills
them with the profound conviction of this mystery, a mystery which
they will constantly live until their martyrdom.
The transformation which the Apostles had undergone is shown also
in their sanctifying influence, in the transport of intense
fervour which they communicated to the first Christians. As the
Acts show, [102] the life of the infant Church was a life of
marvellous sanctity; 'the multitude of the believers had but one
heart and one soul'; they had all things in common, they sold
their goods and brought the price of them to the Apostles that
they might distribute to each according to his needs. They met
together every day to pray, to hear the preaching of the Apostles,
and to celebrate the Eucharist. They were often seen assembled
together in prayer, and men wondered to see the charity that
reigned among them.' By this,' our Lord had said, 'shall all men
know that you are my disciples.'
Bossuet has given an admirable description of the fervour of the
first Christians, in his third sermon for the feast of Pentecost.'
They are strong in the face of peril, but they are tender in the
love of their brethren; the almighty Spirit who guides them well
knows the secret of reconciling the most opposite tensions.... He
gives them a heart of flesh... made tender by charity... and He
makes them hard as iron or steel in the face of peril.... He
strengthens and He softens, but in a manner all His own. For these
are the same hearts of the disciples, which seem as diamonds in
their invincible firmness, and which yet become human hearts and
hearts of flesh by brotherly love. This is the effect of the
heavenly fire that rests upon them this day. It has softened the
hearts of the faithful, it has, so to speak, melted them into
one....
' The Apostles of the Son of God had once disputed concerning the
primacy; but now that the Holy Spirit has made them of one heart
and one soul they are no longer jealous or quarrelsome. It seems
to them that through Peter they all speak, that with him they all
preside, and if his shadow heals the sick the whole Church has its
part in this gift and praises our Lord for it.' In the same way we
ought to regard one another as members of the same mystical body,
of which Christ is the head, and, far from allowing ourselves to
give way to jealousy or envy, we ought to rejoice with a holy joy
in the good qualities of our neighbour; for we profit by them as
the hand derives advantage from what the eye sees, or the ear
hears.
Such were the fruits of the transformation of the Apostles and the
disciples by the Holy Spirit.
But was the Holy Spirit sent to produce these marvellous fruits
only in the infant Church? Evidently not. He continues the same
work throughout the course of ages. His action in the Church is
apparent in the invincible strength that He gives her; a strength
which may be seen in the three centuries of persecution which she
underwent, and in the victory that she won over so many heresies.
Every Christian community, then, must conform to the example of
the infant Church. What must we learn from her?
To be of but one heart and one soul, and to banish all divisions
amongst us. To work for the extension of the kingdom of God in the
world, despite the difficulties with which we are confronted. To
believe firmly and practically in the indefectibility of the
Church, which is always holy, and never ceases to give birth to
saints. Like the early Christians we must bear with patience and
love the sufferings which God sends us. Let us with all our hearts
believe in the Holy Spirit who never ceases to give life to the
Church, and in the Communion of Saints.
If we saw the Church as she is in the most generous souls who live
most truly the life of the Church, she would appear most beautiful
in our sight, despite the human imperfections which are mingled
with the activity of her children. We rightly lament certain
blots, but let us not forget that if there is sometimes mud in the
valley at the foot of the mountains, on the summits there is
always snow of dazzling whiteness, air of great purity, and a
wonderful view that ever leads the eye to God.
The purification of the spirit necessary for Christian perfection.
Create A Clean Heart In Me, O Lord. [103]
We have seen that the transformation of the Apostles on the day of
Pentecost was like a third conversion for them. There must be
something similar in the life of every Christian, if he is to pass
from the way of proficients to that of the perfect. Here, says St.
John of the Cross, there must be a radical purgation of the
spirit, just as there had to be a purgation of the senses in order
to pass from the way of beginners to that of proficients, commonly
called the illuminative way. And just as the first conversion, by
which we turn away from the world to begin to walk in the way of
God, presupposes acts of faith, hope, charity and contrition, so
it is also with the other two conversions. But here the acts of
the theological virtues are much more profound: God, who makes us
perform these acts, drives the furrow in our souls in the same
direction, but much more deeply.
Let us see now (I) why this conversion is necessary for
proficients, (2) how God purifies the soul at this stage and (3)
what are the fruits of this third conversion.
The necessity of the purification of the spirit.
Many imperfections remain even in those who have advanced in the
way of God. If their sensibility has been to a great extent purged
of the faults of spiritual sensuality, inertia, jealousy,
impatience, yet there still remain in the spirit certain 'stains
of the old man' which are like rust on the soul, a rust which will
only disappear under the action of an intense fire, similar to
that which came down upon the Apostles on the day of Pentecost.
This comparison is made by St. John of the Cross. [104]
This rust remains deep down in the spiritual faculties of the
soul, in the intelligence and the will; and it consists in an
attachment to self which prevents the soul from being completely
united to God. Hence it is that we are often distracted in prayer,
that we are subject to sluggishness, to a failure to understand
the things of God, to the dissipation of the spirit, and to
natural affections which are hardly, if at all, inspired by the
motive of charity. Movements of roughness and impatience are not
rare at this stage. Moreover, many souls, even among those that
are advanced in the way of God, remain too much attached to their
own point of view in the spiritual life; they imagine that they
have received special inspirations from God, whereas they are in
reality the victims of their own imagination or of the enemy of
all good. They thus become puffed up with presumption, spiritual
pride and vanity; they depart from the true path and lead other
souls astray.
As St. John of the Cross says, this catalogue of faults is
inexhaustible; and he confines his attention almost exclusively to
those defects which relate to the purely interior life. How much
longer would the catalogue be if we considered also the faults
which offend against fraternal charity, against justice in our
relations with our superiors, our equals or our inferiors, and
those which relate to the duties of our state and to the influence
which we may exert upon others.
Together with spiritual pride there remains often in the soul
intellectual pride, jealousy, or some hidden ambition. The seven
capital sins are thus transposed into the life of the spirit, to
its great detriment.
All this, says St. John of the Cross, shows the need of the
'strong lye,' that passive purgation of the spirit, that further
conversion which marks the entrance into the perfect way. Even
after passing through the night of the senses, St. John says,
'these proficients are still at a very low stage of progress, and
follow their own nature closely in the intercourse and dealings
which they have with God; because the gold of their spirit is not
yet purified and refined; they still think of God as little
children, and feel and experience God as little children, even as
St. Paul says, because they have not reached perfection, which is
the union of the soul with God. In the state of union, however,
they will work great things in the spirit, even as grown men, and
their works and faculties will then be divine rather than human.'
[105] Before this third conversion has taken place we may still
say of these souls, in the words of Isaias, that their justices
are as a soiled rag; a further, and final, purification is
necessary.
How does God purify the soul in this third conversion?
It seems that at first He strips the soul instead of enriching it.
In order to cure the soul of all spiritual and intellectual pride,
and to show it what dregs of poverty it still has within, He
leaves the understanding in darkness, the will in aridity,
sometimes even in bitterness and anguish. The soul then, says St.
John of the Cross, after Tauler, must 'remain in the dark, in pure
faith, which is dark night for the natural faculties.' [106] St.
Thomas often points out that the object of faith is that which is
not seen (fides est de non visis); it is dark. And the Angelic
Doctor adds that it is impossible for anyone to believe and to see
the same thing under the same aspect; because what is believed, as
such, is not seen. [107] The soul has now to enter into the depths
of faith and to rise to its heights, like the Apostles when they
were deprived of the sensible presence of Christ after His
ascension. As He Himself had told them: 'It is expedient to you
that I go. For if I go not the Paraclete will not come to you; but
if I go I will send him to you.' [108] St. Thomas gives an
admirable explanation of these words in his commentary on St.
John; he says that the Apostles, attached as they were to the
humanity of Christ by a natural love, were not yet sufficiently
filled with a spiritual love of His divinity, and therefore were
not yet capable of receiving the Holy Ghost spiritually, as they
must if they were to withstand the tribulations which they would
meet when Jesus had deprived them of His perceptible presence.
At first, then, God seems to strip the soul in this purification,
as in the preceding; He seems to leave it in darkness and aridity.
The motto of the soul must now be: 'Fidelity and abandonment.' It
is now that the words of Christ will be fulfilled.' He that
followeth me walketh not in darkness, but shall have the light of
life.' [109] Especially illuminated now by the purging light of
the gift of understanding, the soul begins, as St. Paul says, 'to
search the deep things of God.' [110]
Now humility and the theological virtues are purged of all human
alloy. The soul experiences more and more, without seeing it, the
infinite purity and greatness of God, who transcends all the ideas
that we can form of Him; it experiences likewise all the
supernatural riches of the holy soul of Christ, which here on
earth contained the fulness of grace, 'all the treasures of wisdom
and knowledge.' [111] Like the Apostles on the day of Pentecost it
has a glimpse of the depths of the mystery of the Incarnation and
the Redemption; it perceives something of the infinite value of
the merits of Christ who died for us on the Cross. The soul now
has a sort of living knowledge, an experimental perception, of the
supernatural world, a new outlook upon it. And by contrast the
soul becomes more conscious of its own poverty. The chief
suffering of a St. Paul of the Cross, of a Cure d'Ars, at this
stage, was to feel themselves so distant from the ideal of the
priesthood, which loomed now so great before them in the dark
night of faith; while at the same time they understood better the
great needs of those many souls that had recourse to them,
imploring their prayers and their help.
This third conversion or purification is, evidently, the work of
the Holy Spirit, who illuminates the soul by the gift of
understanding. As with a lightning-flash during the night He
illumines the soul that He wishes to purify. The soul had said to
Him so often.' Enlighten my eyes that I may never sleep in
death';[112] 'O my God, enlighten my darkness' ;[113]
'Create a
clean heart in me, O God, and renew a right spirit within my
bowels. Cast me not away from thy face, and take not thy holy
spirit from me. Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation and
strengthen me with a perfect spirit. I will teach the unjust thy
ways... and my tongue shall extol thy justice.' [114]
The purified soul addresses to Christ those words which He Himself
once uttered, and begs that they may be fulfilled in itself. 'I am
come to cast fire on the earth; and what will I, but that it be
kindled?'[115] This third purification comes about, as St. John of
the Cross says, by 'an inflowing of God into the soul, which
purges it from its ignorances and imperfections, habitual, natural
and spiritual, and which is called by contemplatives infused
contemplation or mystical theology. Herein God secretly teaches
the soul and instructs it in perfection of love, without its doing
anything or understanding of what manner is this infused
contemplation.'[116]
This great purification or transformation appears under different
forms, according as it is in pure contemplatives like a St. Bruno,
or in souls dedicated to the apostolate or to works of mercy, like
a St. Vincent de Paul; but in substance it is the same. In every
case there is the purification of humility and the three
theological virtues from every human alloy, so that the formal
motive of these virtues takes increasing ascendancy over all
secondary motives. Humility grows according to the process
described by St. Anselm, and repeated by St. Thomas: '(I) To know
that one is contemptible; (2) to feel affliction at this
knowledge; (3) to confess that one is despicable; (4) to wish
one's neighbours to know this; (5) patiently to endure their
saying so; (6) to submit to being treated as worthy of contempt;
(7) to like being so treated.' So we have the example of St.
Dominic, who by preference went to those parts of Languedoc where
he was ill-treated and ridiculed, experiencing a holy joy at
feeling himself made like our Lord, who was humbled for our sake.
Then the formal motives of the three theological virtues appear in
all their sublime grandeur- the supreme Truth that reveals, Mercy
ever ready to help, sovereign Goodness, ever lovable for its own
sake. These three motives shine forth like three stars of the
first magnitude in the night of the spirit, to guide us surely to
the end of our journey.
The fruits of this third conversion are the same as those of
Pentecost, when the Apostles were enlightened and fortified, and
being themselves transformed, transformed the first Christians by
their preaching-as we learn from the Acts of the Apostles, where
we are told of the first sermons of St. Peter and of St. Stephen's
discourse before his martyrdom.
The fruits of this third conversion are a true and deep humility,
and a living faith that begins to relish and savour the mysteries
of the supernatural order-as it were, a foretaste of eternal life.
Moreover, it produces a firm and confident hope in the divine
mercy, which is ever at hand to help us. To attain to this
perfection of hope, one must, as St. Paul says, have hoped against
hope.
But the most perfect fruit of this third conversion is a very
great love of God, a very pure and very strong love, a love that
hesitates before no contradiction or persecution, like the love of
the Apostles who rejoiced to suffer for the sake of our Lord. This
love is born of an ardent desire for perfection, it is 'hunger and
thirst after the justice of God,' accompanied by the gift of
fortitude, which enables it to triumph over every obstacle. It is
the perfect fulfilment of the commandment- 'Thou shalt love the
Lord thy God with thy whole heart, with thy whole soul and with
all thy strength and with all thy mind.'
Henceforth the depth of the soul belongs completely to God. The
soul has now reached the stage of living almost continually the
life of the spirit in its higher part; it is now an adorer in
spirit and in truth. The darkness of the night of faith is thus a
prelude to the life of eternity: quaedam inchoatio vitae aeternae
It is the fulfilment of the words of Christ: 'If any man thirst
let him come to me and drink.... Out of his belly shall flow
rivers of living water.' [117] This is the living water that
springs up into eternal life, the water which Jesus promised to
the Samaritan woman: 'If thou didst know the gift of God... thou
perhaps wouldst have asked of him and he would have given thee
living water.... The water that I will give him shall become in
him a fountain of water, springing up into life everlasting.'
[118]
PRAYER TO THE HOLY GHOST
Holy Spirit, come into my heart; draw it to Thee by Thy power, O
my God, and grant me charity with filial fear. Preserve me, O
ineffable Love, from every evil thought; warm me, inflame me with
Thy dear love, and every pain will seem light to me. My Father, my
sweet Lord, help me in all my actions. Jesus, love, Jesus, love
(St. Catherine of Siena).
(Anyone who has consecrated himself to Mary according to the
formula of the Blessed Grignion de Montfort, and then also to the
Sacred Heart, will find great treasures in a repeated consecration
to the Holy Spirit. The whole influence of Mary leads us to
intimacy with Christ, and the humanity of Jesus leads us to the
Holy Spirit, who introduces us into the mystery of the adorable
Trinity. )
PRAYER OF CONSECRATION TO THE HOLY GHOST
O Holy Ghost, divine Spirit of light and love, I consecrate to
Thee my intellect, my heart, my will and my whole being for time
and for eternity.
May my intellect be ever docile to Thy heavenly inspirations and
to the teaching of the Holy Catholic Church of which Thou art the
infallible Guide. May my heart be ever inflamed with the love of
God and my neighbour; may my will be ever in conformity with the
divine will, and may my whole life be a faithful imitation of the
life and virtues of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, to whom,
with the Father and thee, Holy Spirit, be honour and glory for
ever. Amen.
(Indulgence of 300 days once a day, applicable to the souls in
Purgatory -- Pius X. This consecration may be renewed by repeating
only the first paragraph of the form. )
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