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SECTION VII: MORALITY AND DOCTRINE
425. Second part.--That man without faith cannot know the true good, nor
justice.
All men seek happiness. This is without exception. Whatever different means
they employ, they all tend to this end. The cause of some going to war, and of
others avoiding it, is the same desire in both, attended with different views.
The will never takes the least step but to this object. This is the motive of
every action of every man, even of those who hang themselves.
And yet, after such a great number of years, no one without faith has reached
the point to which all continually look. All complain, princes and subjects,
noblemen and commoners, old and young, strong and weak, learned and ignorant,
healthy and sick, of all countries, all times, all ages, and all conditions.
A trial so long, so continuous, and so uniform, should certainly convince us of
our inability to reach the good by our own efforts. But example teaches us
little. No resemblance is ever so perfect that there is not some slight
difference; and hence we expect that our hope will not be deceived on this
occasion as before. And thus, while the present never satisfies us, experience
dupes us and, from misfortune to misfortune, leads us to death, their eternal
crown.
What is it, then, that this desire and this inability proclaim to us, but that
there was once in man a true happiness of which there now remain to him only
the mark and empty trace, which he in vain tries to fill from all his
surroundings, seeking from things absent the help he does not obtain in things
present? But these are all inadequate, because the infinite abyss can only be
filled by an infinite and immutable object, that is to say, only by God
Himself. He only is our true good, and since we have forsaken him, it is a
strange thing that there is nothing in nature which has not been serviceable in
taking His place; the stars, the heavens, earth, the elements, plants,
cabbages, leeks, animals, insects, calves, serpents, fever, pestilence, war,
famine, vices, adultery, incest. And since man has lost the true good,
everything can appear equally good to him, even his own destruction, though so
opposed to God, to reason, and to the whole course of nature.
Some seek good in authority, others in scientific research, others in pleasure.
Others, who are in fact nearer the truth, have considered it necessary that the
universal good, which all men desire, should not consist in any of the
particular things which can only be possessed by one man, and which, when
shared, afflict their possessors more by the want of the part he has not than
they please him by the possession of what he has. They have learned that the
true good should be such as all can possess at once, without diminution and
without envy, and which no one can lose against his will. And their reason is
that this desire, being natural to man, since it is necessarily in all, and
that it is impossible not to have it, they infer from it...
426. True nature being lost, everything becomes its own nature; as the true
good being lost, everything becomes its own true good.
427. Man does not know in what rank to place himself. He has plainly gone
astray and fallen from his true place without being able to find it again. He
seeks it anxiously and unsuccessfully everywhere in impenetrable darkness.
428. If it is a sign of weakness to prove God by nature, do not despise
Scripture; if it is a sign of strength to have known these contradictions,
esteem Scripture.
429. The vileness of man in submitting himself to the brutes and in even
worshipping them. e
430. For Port-Royal. The beginning, after having explained the
incomprehensibility.--The greatness and the wretchedness of man are so evident
that the true religion must necessarily teach us both that there is in man some
great source of greatness and a great source of wretchedness. It must then give
us a reason for these astonishing contradictions.
In order to make man happy, it must prove to him that there is a God; that we
ought to love Him; that our true happiness is to be in Him, and our sole evil
to be separated from Him; it must recognise that we are full of darkness which
hinders us from knowing and loving Him; and that thus, as our duties compel us
to love God, and our lusts turn us away from Him, we are full of
unrighteousness. It must give us an explanation of our opposition to God and to
our own good. It must teach us the remedies for these infirmities and the means
of obtaining these remedies. Let us, therefore, examine all the religions of
the world and see if there be any other than the Christian which is sufficient
for this purpose.
Shall it be that of the philosophers, who put forward, as the chief good, the
good which is in ourselves? Is this the true good? Have they found the remedy
for our ills? Is man's pride cured by placing him on an equality with God? Have
those who have made us equal to the brutes, or the Mohammedans who have offered
us earthly pleasures as the chief good even in eternity, produced the remedy
for our lusts? What religion, then, will teach us to cure pride and lust? What
religion will, in fact, teach us our good, our duties, the weakness which turns
us from them, the cause of this weakness, the remedies which can cure it, and
the means of obtaining these remedies?
All other religions have not been able to do so. Let us see what the wisdom of
God will do.
"Expect neither truth," she says, "nor consolation from men. I am she who
formed you, and who alone can teach you what you are. But you are now no longer
in the state in which I formed you. I created man holy, innocent, perfect. I
filled him with light and intelligence. I communicated to him my glory and my
wonders. The eye of man saw then the majesty of God. He was not then in the
darkness which blinds him, nor subject to mortality and the woes which afflict
him. But he has not been able to sustain so great glory without falling into
pride. He wanted to make himself his own centre and independent of my help. He
withdrew himself from my rule; and, on his making himself equal to me by the
desire of finding his happiness in himself, I abandoned him to himself. And
setting in revolt the creatures that were subject to him, I made them his
enemies; so that man is now become like the brutes and so estranged from me
that there scarce remains to him a dim vision of his Author. So far has all his
knowledge been extinguished or disturbed! The senses, independent of reason,
and often the masters of reason, have led him into pursuit of pleasure. All
creatures either torment or tempt him, and domineer over him, either subduing
him by their strength, or fascinating him by their charms, a tyranny more awful
and more imperious.
"Such is the state in which men now are. There remains to them some feeble
instinct of the happiness of their former state; and they are plunged in the
evils of their blindness and their lust, which have become their second nature.
"From this principle which I disclose to you, you can recognize the cause of
those contradictions which have astonished all men and have divided them into
parties holding so different views. Observe, now, all the feelings of greatness
and glory which the experience of so many woes cannot stifle, and see if the
cause of them must not be in another nature.
For Port-Royal to-morrow (Prosopopaea).--"It is in vain, O men, that you seek
within yourselves the remedy for your ills. All your light can only reach the
knowledge that not in yourselves will you find truth or good. The philosophers
have promised you that, and you have been unable to do it. They neither know
what is your true good, nor what is your true state. How could they have given
remedies for your ills, when they did not even know them? Your chief maladies
are pride, which takes you away from God, and lust, which binds you to earth;
and they have done nothing else but cherish one or other of these diseases. If
they gave you God as an end, it was only to administer to your pride; they made
you think that you are by nature like Him and conformed to Him. And those who
saw the absurdity of this claim put you on another precipice, by making you
understand that your nature was like that of the brutes, and led you to seek
your good in the lusts which are shared by the animals. This is not the way to
cure you of your unrighteousness, which these wise men never knew. I alone can
make you understand who you are...."
Adam, Jesus Christ.
If you are united to God, it is by grace, not by nature. If you are humbled, it
is by penitence, not by nature.
Thus this double capacity...
You are not in the state of your creation.
As these two states are open, it is impossible for you not to recognise them.
Follow your own feelings, observe yourselves, and see if you do not find the
lively characteristics of these two natures. Could so many contradictions be
found in a simple subject?
Incomprehensible. Not all that is incomprehensible ceases to exist. Infinite
number. An infinite space equal to a finite.
Incredible that God should unite Himself to us. This consideration is drawn
only from the sight of our vileness. But if you are quite sincere over it,
follow it as far as I have done and recognise that we are indeed so vile that
we are incapable in ourselves of knowing if His mercy cannot make us capable of
Him. For I would know how this animal, who knows himself to be so weak, has the
right to measure the mercy of God and set limits to it, suggested by his own
fancy. He has so little knowledge of what God is that he does not know what he
himself is, and, completely disturbed at the sight of his own state, dares to
say that God cannot make him capable of communion with Him.
But I would ask him if God demands anything else from him than the knowledge
and love of Him, and why, since his nature is capable of love and knowledge, he
believes that God cannot make Himself known and loved by him. Doubtless he
knows at least that he exists, and that he loves something. Therefore, if he
sees anything in the darkness wherein he is, and if he finds some object of his
love among the things on earth, why, if God impart to him some ray of His
essence, will he not be capable of knowing and of loving Him in the manner in
which it shall please Him to communicate Himself to us? There must, then, be
certainly an intolerable presumption in arguments of this sort, although they
seem founded on an apparent humility, which is neither sincere nor reasonable,
if it does not make us admit that, not knowing of ourselves what we are, we can
only learn it from God.
"I do not mean that you should submit your belief to me without reason, and I
do not aspire to overcome you by tyranny. In fact, I do not claim to give you a
reason for everything. And to reconcile these contradictions, I intend to make
you see clearly, by convincing proofs, those divine signs in me, which may
convince you of what I am, and may gain authority for me by wonders and proofs
which you cannot reject; so that you may then believe without... the things
which I teach you, since you will find no other ground for rejecting them,
except that you cannot know of yourselves if they are true or not.
"God has willed to redeem men and to open salvation to those who seek it. But
men render themselves so unworthy of it that it is right that God should refuse
to some, because of their obduracy, what He grants others from a compassion
which is not due to them. If He had willed to overcome the obstinacy of the
most hardened, He could have done so by revealing Himself so manifestly to them
that they could not have doubted of the truth of His essence; as it will appear
at the last day, with such thunders and such a convulsion of nature that the
dead will rise again, and the blindest will see Him.
"It is not in this manner that He has willed to appear in His advent of mercy,
because, as so many make themselves unworthy of His mercy, He has willed to
leave them in the loss of the good which they do not want. It was not, then,
right that He should appear in a manner manifestly divine, and completely
capable of convincing all men; but it was also not right that He should come in
so hidden a manner that He could not be known by those who should sincerely
seek Him. He has willed to make himself quite recognisable by those; and thus,
willing to appear openly to those who seek Him with all their heart, and to be
hidden from those who flee from Him with all their heart, He so regulates the
knowledge of Himself that He has given signs of Himself, visible to those who
seek Him, and not to those who seek Him not. There is enough light for those
who only desire to see, and enough obscurity for those who have a contrary
disposition."
431. No other religion has recognised that man is the most excellent creature.
Some, which have quite recognised the reality of his excellence, have
considered as mean and ungrateful the low opinions which men naturally have of
themselves; and others, which have thoroughly recognised how real is this
vileness, have treated with proud ridicule those feelings of greatness, which
are equally natural to man.
"Lift your eyes to God," say the first; "see Him whom you resemble and who has
created you to worship Him. You can make yourselves like unto Him; wisdom will
make you equal to Him, if you will follow it." "Raise your heads, free men,"
says Epictetus. And others say, "Bend your eyes to the earth, wretched worm
that you are, and consider the brutes whose companion you are."
What, then, will man become? Will he be equal to God or the brutes? What a
frightful difference! What, then, shall we be? Who does not see from all this
that man has gone astray, that he has fallen from his place, that he anxiously
seeks it, that he cannot find it again? And who shall then direct him to it?
The greatest men have failed.
432. Scepticism is true; for, after all, men before Jesus Christ did not know
where they were, nor whether they were great or small. And those who have said
the one or the other knew nothing about it and guessed without reason and by
chance. They also erred always in excluding the one or the other.
Quod ergo ignorantes, quaeritis, religio annuntiat vobis.64
433. After having understood the whole nature of man.--That a religion may be
true, it must have knowledge of our nature. It ought to know its greatness and
littleness, and the reason of both. What religion but the Christian has known
this?
434. The chief arguments of the sceptics--I pass over the lesser ones--are that
we have no certainty of the truth of these principles apart from faith and
revelation, except in so far as we naturally perceive them in ourselves. Now
this natural intuition is not a convincing proof of their truth; since, having
no certainty, apart from faith, whether man was created by a good God, or by a
wicked demon, or by chance, it is doubtful whether these principles given to us
are true, or false, or uncertain, according to our origin. Again, no person is
certain, apart from faith, whether he is awake or sleeps, seeing that during
sleep we believe that we are awake as firmly as we do when we are awake; we
believe that we see space, figure, and motion; we are aware of the passage of
time, we measure it; and in fact we act as if we were awake. So that half of
our life being passed in sleep, we have on our own admission no idea of truth,
whatever we may imagine. As all our intuitions are, then, illusions, who knows
whether the other half of our life, in which we think we are awake, is not
another sleep a little different from the former, from which we awake when we
suppose ourselves asleep?
And who doubts that, if we dreamt in company, and the dreams chanced to agree,
which is common enough, and if we were always alone when awake, we should
believe that matters were reversed? In short, as we often dream that we dream,
heaping dream upon dream, may it not be that this half of our life, wherein we
think ourselves awake, is itself only a dream on which the others are grafted,
from which we wake at death, during which we have as few principles of truth
and good as during natural sleep, these different thoughts which disturb us
being perhaps only illusions like the flight of time and the vain fancies of
our dreams?
These are the chief arguments on one side and the other.
I omit minor ones, such as the sceptical talk against the impressions of
custom, education, manners, country and the like. Though these influence the
majority of common folk, who dogmatise only on shallow foundations, they are
upset by the least breath of the sceptics. We have only to see their books if
we are not sufficiently convinced of this, and we shall very quickly become so,
perhaps too much.
I notice the only strong point of the dogmatists, namely, that, speaking in
good faith and sincerely, we cannot doubt natural principles. Against this the
sceptics set up in one word the uncertainty of our origin, which includes that
of our nature. The dogmatists have been trying to answer this objection ever
since the world began.
So there is open war among men, in which each must take a part and side either
with dogmatism or scepticism. For he who thinks to remain neutral is above all
a sceptic. This neutrality is the essence of the sect; he who is not against
them is essentially for them. In this appears their advantage. They are not for
themselves; they are neutral, indifferent, in suspense as to all things, even
themselves being no exception.
What, then, shall man do in this state? Shall he doubt everything? Shall he
doubt whether he is awake, whether he is being pinched, or whether he is being
burned? Shall he doubt whether he doubts? Shall he doubt whether he exists? We
cannot go so far as that; and I lay it down as a fact that there never has been
a real complete sceptic. Nature sustains our feeble reason and prevents it
raving to this extent.
Shall he, then, say, on the contrary, that he certainly possesses truth--he
who, when pressed ever so little, can show no title to it and is forced to let
go his hold?
What a chimera, then, is man! What a novelty! What a monster, what a chaos,
what a contradiction, what a prodigy! Judge of all things, imbecile worm of the
earth; depositary of truth, a sink of uncertainty and error; the pride and
refuse of the universe!
Who will unravel this tangle? Nature confutes the sceptics, and reason confutes
the dogmatists. What, then, will you become, O men! who try to find out by your
natural reason what is your true condition? You cannot avoid one of these
sects, nor adhere to one of them.
Know then, proud man, what a paradox you are to yourself. Humble yourself, weak
reason; be silent, foolish nature; learn that man infinitely transcends man,
and learn from your Master your true condition, of which you are ignorant. Hear
God.
For in fact, if man had never been corrupt, he would enjoy in his innocence
both truth and happiness with assurance; and if man had always been corrupt, he
would have no idea of truth or bliss. But, wretched as we are, and more so than
if there were no greatness in our condition, we have an idea of happiness and
can not reach it. We perceive an image of truth and possess only a lie.
Incapable of absolute ignorance and of certain knowledge, we have thus been
manifestly in a degree of perfection from which we have unhappily fallen.
It is, however, an astonishing thing that the mystery furthest removed from our
knowledge, namely, that of the transmission of sin, should be a fact without
which we can have no knowledge of ourselves. For it is beyond doubt that there
is nothing which more shocks our reason than to say that the sin of the first
man has rendered guilty those who, being so removed from this source, seem
incapable of participation in it. This transmission does not only seem to us
impossible, it seems also very unjust. For what is more contrary to the rules
of our miserable justice than to damn eternally an infant incapable of will,
for a sin wherein he seems to have so little a share that it was committed six
thousand years before he was in existence? Certainly nothing offends us more
rudely than this doctrine; and yet without this mystery, the most
incomprehensible of all, we are incomprehensible to ourselves. The knot of our
condition takes its twists and turns in this abyss, so that man is more
inconceivable without this mystery than this mystery is inconceivable to man.
Whence it seems that God, willing to render the difficulty of our existence
unintelligible to ourselves, has concealed the knot so high, or, better
speaking, so low, that we are quite incapable of reaching it; so that it is not
by the proud exertions of our reason, but by the simple submissions of reason,
that we can truly know ourselves.
These foundations, solidly established on the inviolable authority of religion,
make us know that there are two truths of faith equally certain: the one, that
man, in the state of creation, or in that of grace, is raised above all nature,
made like unto God and sharing in His divinity; the other, that in the state of
corruption and sin, he is fallen from this state and made like unto the
beasts.
These two propositions are equally sound and certain. Scripture manifestly
declares this to us, when it says in some places: Deliciae meae esse cum
filiis hominum.65 Effundam spiritum meum super omnem
carnem.66 Dii estis,67 etc.; and in other
places, Omnis caro faenum.68 Homo assimilatus est jumentis
insipientibus, et similis factus est illis.69 Dixi in corde
meo de filiis hominum.70
Whence it clearly seems that man by grace is made like unto God, and a partaker
in His divinity, and that without grace he is like unto the brute beasts.
435. Without this divine knowledge what could men do but either become elated
by the inner feeling of their past greatness which still remains to them, or
become despondent at the sight of their present weakness? For, not seeing the
whole truth, they could not attain to perfect virtue. Some considering nature
as incorrupt, others as incurable, they could not escape either pride or sloth,
the two sources of all vice; since they cannot but either abandon themselves to
it through cowardice, or escape it by pride. For if they knew the excellence of
man, they were ignorant of his corruption; so that they easily avoided sloth,
but fell into pride. And if they recognized the infirmity of nature, they were
ignorant of its dignity; so that they could easily avoid vanity, but it was to
fall into despair. Thence arise the different schools of the Stoics and
Epicureans, the Dogmatists, Academicians, etc.
The Christian religion alone has been able to cure these two vices, not by
expelling the one through means of the other according to the wisdom of the
world, but by expelling both according to the simplicity of the Gospel. For it
teaches the righteous that it raises them even to a participation in divinity
itself; that in this lofty state they still carry the source of all corruption,
which renders them during all their life subject to error, misery, death, and
sin; and it proclaims to the most ungodly that they are capable of the grace of
their Redeemer. So making those tremble whom it justifies, and consoling those
whom it condemns, religion so justly tempers fear with hope through that double
capacity of grace and of sin, common to all, that it humbles infinitely more
than reason alone can do, but without despair; and it exalts infinitely more
than natural pride, but without inflating; thus making it evident that alone
being exempt from error and vice, it alone fulfils the duty of instructing and
correcting men.
Who, then, can refuse to believe and adore this heavenly light? For is it not
clearer than day that we perceive within ourselves ineffaceable marks of
excellence? And is it not equally true that we experience every hour the
results of our deplorable condition? What does this chaos and monstrous
confusion proclaim to us but the truth of these two states, with a voice so
powerful that it is impossible to resist it?
436. Weakness.--Every pursuit of men is to get wealth; and they cannot have a
title to show that they possess it justly, for they have only that of human
caprice; nor have they strength to hold it securely. It is the same with
knowledge, for disease takes it away. We are incapable both of truth and
goodness.
437. We desire truth, and find within ourselves only uncertainty.
We seek happiness, and find only misery and death.
We cannot but desire truth and happiness, and are incapable of certainty or
happiness. This desire is left to us, partly to punish us, partly to make us
perceive wherefrom we are fallen.
438. If man is not made for God, why is he only happy in God? If man is made
for God, why is he so opposed to God?
439. Nature corrupted.--Man does not act by reason, which constitutes his
being.
440. The corruption of reason is shown by the existence of so many different
and extravagant customs. It was necessary that truth should come, in order that
man should no longer dwell within himself.
441. For myself, I confess that, so soon as the Christian religion reveals the
principle that human nature is corrupt and fallen from God, that opens my eyes
to see everywhere the mark of this truth: for nature is such that she testifies
everywhere, both within man and without him, to a lost God and a corrupt
nature.
442. Man's true nature, his true good, true virtue, and true religion, are
things of which the knowledge is inseparable.
443. Greatness, wretchedness.--The more light we have, the more greatness and
the more baseness we discover in man. Ordinary men--those who are more
educated: philosophers, they astonish ordinary men--Christians, they astonish
philosophers.
Who will then be surprised to see that religion only makes us know profoundly
what we already know in proportion to our light?
444. This religion taught to her children what men have only been able to
discover by their greatest knowledge.
445. Original sin is foolishness to men, but it is admitted to be such. You
must not, then, reproach me for the want of reason in this doctrine, since I
admit it to be without reason. But this foolishness is wiser than all the
wisdom of men, sapientius est hominibus.[71]
For without this, what can we say that man is? His whole state depends on this
imperceptible point. And how should it be perceived by his reason, since it is
a thing against reason, and since reason, far from finding it out by her own
ways, is averse to it when it is presented to her?
446. Of original sin. Ample tradition of original sin according to the Jews.
On the saying in Genesis 8:21: "The imagination of man's heart is evil from his
youth."
R. Moses Haddarschan: This evil leaven is placed in man from the time that he
is formed.
Massechet Succa: This evil leaven has seven names in Scripture. It is called
evil, the foreskin, uncleanness, an enemy, a scandal, a heart of stone, the
north wind; all this signifies the malignity which is concealed and impressed
in the heart of man.
Midrasch Tillim says the same thing and that God will deliver the good nature
of man from the evil.
This malignity is renewed every day against man, as it is written, Psalm 37:32:
"The wicked watcheth the righteous, and seeketh to slay him"; but God will not
abandon him. This malignity tries the heart of man in this life and will accuse
him in the other. All this is found in the Talmud.
Midrasch Tillim on Psalm 4:4: "Stand in awe and sin not." Stand in awe and be
afraid of your lust, and it will not lead you into sin. And on Psalm 36:1: "The
wicked has said within his own heart: Let not the fear of God be before me."
That is to say that the malignity natural to man has said that to the wicked.
Midrasch el Kohelet: "Better is a poor and wise child than an old and foolish
king who cannot foresee the future." The child is virtue, and the king is the
malignity of man. It is called king because all the members obey it, and old
because it is in the human heart from infancy to old age, and foolish because
it leads man in the way of perdition, which he does not foresee. The same thing
is in Midrasch Tillim.
Bereschist Rabba on Psalm 35:10: "Lord, all my bones shall bless Thee, which
deliverest the poor from the tyrant." And is there a greater tyrant than the
evil leaven? And on Proverbs 25:21: "If thine enemy be hungry, give him bread
to eat." That is to say, if the evil leaven hunger, give him the bread of
wisdom of which it is spoken in Proverbs 9, and if he be thirsty, give him the
water of which it is spoken in Isaiah 55.
Midrasch Tillim says the same thing, and that Scripture in that passage,
speaking of the enemy, means the evil leaven; and that, in giving him that
bread and that water, we heap coals of fire on his head.
Midrasch el Kohelet on Ecclesiastes 9:14: "A great king besieged a little
city." This great king is the evil leaven; the great bulwarks built against it
are temptations; and there has been found a poor wise man who has delivered
it--that is to say, virtue.
And on Psalm 41:1: "Blessed is he that considereth the poor."
And on Psalm 78:39: "The spirit passeth away, and cometh not again"; whence
some have erroneously argued against the immortality of the soul. But the sense
is that this spirit is the evil leaven, which accompanies man till death and
will not return at the resurrection.
And on Psalm 103 the same thing.
And on Psalm 16.
Principles of Rabbinism: two Messiahs.
447. Will it be said that, as men have declared that righteousness has departed
the earth, they therefore knew of original sin?--Nemo ante obitum beatus
est[72]--that is to say, they knew death
to be the beginning of eternal and essential happiness?
448. Milton sees well that nature is corrupt and that men are averse to virtue;
he does not know why they cannot fly higher.
449. Order.--After Corruption to say: "It is right that all those who are in
that state should know it, both those who are content with it, and those who
are not content with it; but it is not right that all should see Redemption."
450. If we do not know ourselves to be full of pride, ambition, lust, weakness,
misery, and injustice, we are indeed blind. And if, knowing this, we do not
desire deliverance, what can we say of a man...?
What then, can we have but esteem for a religion which knows so well the
defects of man, and desire for the truth of a religion which promises remedies
so desirable?
451. All men naturally hate one another. They employ lust as far as possible in
the service of the public weal. But this is only a pretnece and a false image
of love; for at bottom it is only hate.
452. To pity the unfortunate is not contrary to lust. On the contrary, we can
quite well give such evidence of friendship, and acquire the reputation of
kindly feeling, without giving anything.
453. From lust men have found and extracted excellent rules of policy,
morality, and justice; but in reality this vile root of man, this figmentum
malum, is only covered, it is not taken away.
454. Injustice.--They have not found any other means of satisfying lust without
doing injury to others.
455. Self is hateful. You, Milton, conceal it; you do not for that reason
destroy it; you are, then, always hateful.
No; for in acting as we do to oblige everybody, we give no more occasion for
hatred of us. That is true, if we only hated in Self the vexation which comes
to us from it. But if I hate it because it is unjust and because it makes
itself the centre of everything, I shall always hate it.
In a word, the Self has two qualities: it is unjust in itself since it makes
itself the centre of everything; it is inconvenient to others since it would
enslave them; for each Self is the enemy, and would like to be the tyrant of
all others. You take away its inconvenience, but not its injustice, and so you
do not render it lovable to those who hate injustice; you render it lovable
only to the unjust, who do not any longer find in it an enemy. And thus you
remain unjust and can please only the unjust.
456. It is a perverted judgement that makes every one place himself above the
rest of the world, and prefer his own good, and the continuance of his own good
fortune and life, to that of the rest of the world!
457. Each one is all in all to himself; for he being dead, all is dead to him.
Hence it comes that each believes himself to be all in all to everybody. We
must not judge of nature by ourselves, but by it.
458. "All that is in the world is the lust of the flesh, or the lust of the
eyes, or the pride of life; libido sentiendi, libido sciendi, libido
dominandi."[73] Wretched is the cursed land
which these three rivers of fire enflame rather than water! Happy they who, on
these rivers, are not overwhelmed nor carried away, but are immovably fixed,
not standing but seated on a low and secure base, whence they do not rise
before the light, but, having rested in peace, stretch out their hands to Him,
who must lift them up, and make them stand upright and firm in the porches of
the holy Jerusalem! There pride can no longer assail them nor cast them down;
and yet they weep, not to see all those perishable things swept away by the
torrents, but at the remembrance of their loved country, the heavenly
Jerusalem, which they remember without ceasing during their prolonged exile.
459. The rivers of Babylon rush and fall and sweep away.
O holy Zion, where all is firm and nothing falls!
We must sit upon the waters, not under them or in them, but on them; and not
standing but seated; being seated to be humble, and being above them to be
secure. But we shall stand in the porches of Jerusalem.
Let us see if this pleasure is stable or transitory; if it pass away, it is a
river of Babylon.
460. The lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, pride, etc.--There are three
orders of things: the flesh, the spirit, and the will. The carnal are the rich
and kings; they have the body as their object. Inquirers and scientists; they
have the mind as their object. The wise; they have righteousness as their
object.
God must reign over all, and all men must be brought back to Him. In things of
the flesh lust reigns specially; in intellectual matters, inquiry specially; in
wisdom, pride specially. Not that a man cannot boast of wealth or knowledge,
but it is not the place for pride; for in granting to a man that he is learned,
it is easy to convince him that he is wrong to be proud. The proper place for
pride is in wisdom, for it cannot be granted to a man that he has made himself
wise, and that he is wrong to be proud; for that is right. Now God alone gives
wisdom, and that is why Qui gloriatur, in Domino
glorietur.74
461. The three lusts have made three sects; and the philosophers have done no
other thing than follow one of the three lusts.
462. Search for the true good.--Ordinary men place the good in fortune and
external goods, or at least in amusement. Philosophers have shown the vanity of
all this and have placed it where they could.
463. Philosophers.--They believe that God alone is worthy to be loved and
admired; and they have desired to be loved and admired of men and do not know
their own corruption. If they feel full of feelings of love and admiration and
find therein their chief delight, very well, let them think themselves good.
But if they find themselves averse to Him, if they have no inclination but the
desire to establish themselves in the esteem of men, and if their whole
perfection consists only in making men--but without constraint--find their
happiness in loving them, I declare that this perfection is horrible. What!
they have known God and have not desired solely that men should love Him, but
that men should stop short at them! They have wanted to be the object of the
voluntary delight of men.
464. Philosophers.--We are full of things which take us out of ourselves.
Our instinct makes us feel that we must seek our happiness outside ourselves.
Our passions impel us outside, even when no objects present themselves to
excite them. External objects tempt us of themselves, and call to us, even when
we are not thinking of them. And thus philosophers have said in vain: "Retire
within yourselves, you will find your good there." We do not believe them, and
those who believe them are the most empty and the most foolish.
465. The Stoics say, "Retire within yourselves; it is there you will find your
rest."
And that is not true.
Others say, "Go out of yourselves; seek happiness in amusement." And this is
not true. Illness comes.
Happiness is neither without us nor within us. It is in God, both without us
and within us.
466. Had Epictetus seen the way perfectly, he would have said to men, "You
follow a wrong road"; he shows that there is another, but he does not lead to
it. It is the way of willing what God wills. Jesus Christ alone leads to it:
Via, veritas.75 The vices of Zeno himself.
467. The reason of effects.--Epictetus. Those who say, "You have a headache";
this is not the same thing. We are assured of health, and not of justice; and
in fact his own was nonsense.
And yet he believed it demonstrable, when he said, "It is either in our power
or it is not." But he did not perceive that it is not in our power to regulate
the heart, and he was wrong to infer from this the fact that there were some
Christians.
468. No other religion has proposed to men to hate themselves. No other
religion, then, can please those who hate themselves, and who seek a Being
truly lovable. And these, if they had never heard of the religion of a God
humiliated, would embrace it at once.
469. I feel that I might not have been; for the Ego consists in my thoughts.
Therefore I, who think, would not have been, if my mother had been killed
before I had life. I am not, then, a necessary being. In the same way I am not
eternal or infinite; but I see plainly that there exists in nature a necessary
Being, eternal and infinite.
470. "Had I seen a miracle," say men, "I should become converted." How can they
be sure they would do a thing of the nature of which they are ignorant? They
imagine that this conversion consists in a worship of God which is like
commerce, and in a communion such as they picture to themselves. True religion
consists in annihilating self before that Universal Being, whom we have so
often provoked, and who can justly destroy us at any time; in recognising that
we can do nothing without Him, and have deserved nothing from Him but His
displeasure. It consists in knowing that there is an unconquerable opposition
between us and God, and that without a mediator there can be no communion with
Him.
471. It is unjust that men should attach themselves to me, even though they do
it with pleasure and voluntarily. I should deceive those in whom I had created
this desire; for I am not the end of any, and I have not the wherewithal to
satisfy them. Am I not about to die? And thus the object of their attachment
will die. Therefore, as I would be blamable in causing a falsehood to be
believed, though I should employ gentle persuasion, though it should be
believed with pleasure, and though it should give me pleasure; even so I am
blamable in making myself loved and if I attract persons to attach themselves
to me. I ought to warn those who are ready to consent to a lie that they ought
not to believe it, whatever advantage comes to me from it; and likewise that
they ought not to attach themselves to me; for they ought to spend their life
and their care in pleasing God, or in seeking Him.
472. Self-will will never be satisfied, though it should have command of all it
would; but we are satisfied from the moment we renounce it. Without it we
cannot be discontented; with it we cannot be content.
473. Let us imagine a body full of thinking members.
474. Members. To commence with that.--To regulate the love which we owe to
ourselves, we must imagine a body full of thinking members, for we are members
of the whole, and must see how each member should love itself, etc....
475. If the feet and the hands had a will of their own, they could only be in
their order in submitting this particular will to the primary will which
governs the whole body. Apart from that, they are in disorder and mischief; but
in willing only the good of the body, they accomplish their own good.
476. We must love God only and hate self only.
If the foot had always been ignorant that it belonged to the body, and that
there was a body on which it depended, if it had only had the knowledge and the
love of self, and if it came to know that it belonged to a body on which it
depended, what regret, what shame for its past life, for having been useless to
the body which inspired its life, which would have annihilated it if it had
rejected it and separated it from itself, as it kept itself apart from the
body! What prayers for its preservation in it! And with what submission would
it allow itself to be governed by the will which rules the body, even to
consenting, if necessary, to be cut off, or it would lose its character as
member! For every member must be quite willing to perish for the body, for
which alone the whole is.
477. It is false that we are worthy of the love of others; it is unfair that we
should desire it. If we were born reasonable and impartial, knowing ourselves
and others, we should not give this bias to our will. However, we are born with
it; therefore born unjust, for all tends to self. This is contrary to all
order. We must consider the general good; and the propensity to self is the
beginning of all disorder, in war, in politics, in economy, and in the
particular body of man. The will is therefore depraved.
If the members of natural and civil communities tend towards the weal of the
body, the communities themselves ought to look to another more general body of
which they are members. We ought, therefore, to look to the whole. We are,
therefore, born unjust and depraved.
478. When we want to think of God, is there nothing which turns us away, and
tempts us to think of something else? All this is bad, and is born in us.
479. If there is a God, we must love Him only and not the creatures of a day.
The reasoning of the ungodly in the Book of Wisdom is only based upon the
nonexistence of God. "On that supposition," say they, "let us take delight in
the creatures." That is the worst that can happen. But if there were a God to
love, they would not have come to this conclusion, but to quite the contrary.
And this is the conclusion of the wise: "There is a God; let us therefore not
take delight in the creatures."
Therefore all that incites us to attach ourselves to the creatures is bad;
since it prevents us from serving God if we know Him, or from seeking Him if we
know Him not. Now we are full of lust. Therefore we are full of evil; therefore
we ought to hate ourselves and all that excited us to attach ourselves to any
other object than God only.
480. To make the members happy, they must have one will and submit it to the
body.
481. The examples of the noble deaths of the Lacedaemonians and others scarce
touch us. For what good is it to us? But the example of the death of the
martyrs touches us; for they are "our members." We have a common tie with them.
Their resolution can form ours, not only by example, but because it has perhaps
deserved ours. There is nothing of this in the examples of the heathen. We have
no tie with them; as we do not become rich by seeing a stranger who is so, but
in fact by seeing a father or a husband who is so.
482. Morality.--God having made the heavens and the earth, which do not feel
the happiness of their being, He has willed to make beings who should know it,
and who should compose a body of thinking members. For our members do not feel
the happiness of their union, of their wonderful intelligence, of the care
which has been taken to infuse into them minds, and to make them grow and
endure. How happy they would be if they saw and felt it! But for this they
would need to have intelligence to know it, and good-will to consent to that of
the universal soul. But if, having received intelligence, they employed it to
retain nourishment for themselves without allowing it to pass to the other
members, they would be not only unjust, but also miserable, and would hate
rather than love themselves; their blessedness, as well as their duty,
consisting in their consent to the guidance of the whole soul to which they
belong, which loves them better than they love themselves.
483. To be a member is to have neither life, being, nor movement, except
through the spirit of the body, and for the body.
The separate member, seeing no longer the body to which it belongs, has only a
perishing and dying existence. Yet it believes it is a whole, and, seeing not
the body on which it depends, it believes it depends only on self and desires
to make itself both centre and body. But not having in itself a principle of
life, it only goes astray and is astonished in the uncertainty of its being;
perceiving in fact that it is not a body, and still not seeing that it is a
member of a body. In short, when it comes to know itself, it has returned, as
it were, to its own home, and loves itself only for the body. It deplores its
past wanderings.
It cannot by its nature love any other thing, except for itself and to subject
it to self, because each thing loves itself more than all. But, in loving the
body, it loves itself, because it only exists in it, by it, and for it. Qui
adhaeret Deo unus spiritus est.76
The body loves the hand; and the hand, if it had a will, should love itself in
the same way as it is loved by the soul. All love which goes beyond this is
unfair.
Adhaerens Deo unus spiritus est. We love ourselves, because we are members of
Jesus Christ. We love Jesus Christ, because He is the body of which we are
members. All is one, one is in the other, like the Three Persons.
484. Two laws suffice to rule the whole Christian Republic better than all the
laws of statecraft.
485. The true and only virtue, then, is to hate self (for we are hateful on
account of lust) and to seek a truly lovable being to love. But as we cannot
love what is outside ourselves, we must love a being who is in us and is not
ourselves; and that is true of each and all men. Now, only the Universal Being
is such. The kingdom of God is within us; the universal good is within us, is
ourselves--and not ourselves.
486. The dignity of man in his innocence consisted in using and having dominion
over the creatures, but now in separating himself from them and subjecting
himself to them.
487. Every religion is false which, as to its faith, does not worship one God
as the origin of everything and which, as to its morality, does not love one
only God as the object of everything.
488.... But it is impossible that God should ever be the end, if He is not the
beginning. We lift our eyes on high, but lean upon the sand; and the earth will
dissolve, and we shall fall whilst looking at the heavens.
489. If there is one sole source of everything, there is one sole end of
everything; everything through Him, everything for Him. The true religion,
then, must teach us to worship Him only, and to love Him only. But as we find
ourselves unable to worship what we know not, and to love any other object but
ourselves, the religion which instructs us in these duties must instruct us
also of this inability, and teach us also the remedies for it. It teaches us
that by one man all was lost, and the bond broken between God and us, and that
by one man the bond is renewed.
We are born so averse to this love of God, and it is so necessary, that we must
be born guilty, or God would be unjust.
490. Men, not being accustomed to form merit, but only to recompense it where
they find it formed, judge of God by themselves.
491. The true religion must have as a characteristic the obligation to love
God. This is very just, and yet no other religion has commanded this; ours has
done so. It must also be aware of human lust and weakness; ours is so. It must
have adduced remedies for this; one is prayer. No other religion has asked of
God to love and follow Him.
492. He who hates not in himself his self-love, and that instinct which leads
him to make himself God, is indeed blinded. Who does not see that there is
nothing so opposed to justice and truth? For it is false that we deserve this,
and it is unfair and impossible to attain it, since all demand the same thing.
It is, then, a manifest injustice which is innate in us, of which we cannot get
rid, and of which we must get rid.
Yet no religion has indicated that this was a sin; or that we were born in it;
or that we were obliged to resist it; or has thought of giving us remedies for
it.
493. The true religion teaches our duties; our weaknesses, pride, and lust; and
the remedies, humility and mortification.
494. The true religion must teach greatness and misery; must lead to the esteem
and contempt of self, to love and to hate.
495. If it is an extraordinary blindness to live without investigating what we
are, it is a terrible one to live an evil life, while believing in God.
496. Experience makes us see an enormous difference between piety and
goodness.
497. Against those who, trusting to the mercy of God, live heedlessly, without
doing good works.--As the two sources of our sins are pride and sloth, God has
revealed to us two of His attributes to cure them, mercy and justice. The
property of justice is to humble pride, however holy may be our works, et non
intres injudicium, etc.; and the property of mercy is to combat sloth by
exhorting to good works, according to that passage: "The goodness of God
leadeth to repentance, and that other of the Ninevites: "Let us do penance to
see if peradventure He will pity us." And thus mercy is so far from authorising
slackness that it is on the contrary the quality which formally attacks it; so
that instead of saying, "If there were no mercy in God we should have to make
every kind of effort after virtue," we must say, on the contrary, that it is
because there is mercy in God that we must make every kind of effort.
498. It is true there is difficulty in entering into godliness. But this
difficulty does not arise from the religion which begins in us, but from the
irreligion which is still there. If our senses were not opposed to penitence,
and if our corruption were not opposed to the purity of God, there would be
nothing in this painful to us. We suffer only in proportion as the vice which
is natural to us resists supernatural grace. Our heart feels torn asunder
between these opposed efforts. But it would be very unfair to impute this
violence to God, who is drawing us on, instead of to the world, which is
holding us back. It is as a child, which a mother tears from the arms of
robbers, in the pain it suffers, should love the loving and legitimate violence
of her who procures its liberty, and detest only the impetuous and tyrannical
violence of those who detain it unjustly. The most cruel war which God can make
with men in this life is to leave them without that war which He came to bring.
"I came to send war," He says, "and to teach them of this war. I came to bring
fire and the sword." Before Him the world lived in this false peace.
499. External works.--There nothing so perilous as what pleases God and man.
For those states, which please God and man, have one property which pleases
God, and another which pleases men; as the greatness of Saint Teresa. What
pleased God was her deep humility in the midst of her revelations; what pleased
men was her light. And so we torment ourselves to imitate her discourses,
thinking to imitate her conditions, and not so much to love what God loves and
to put ourselves in the state which God loves.
It is better not to fast, and be thereby humbled, than to fast and be
self-satisfied therewith. The Pharisee and the Publican.
What use will memory be to me, if it can alike hurt and help me, and all
depends upon the blessing of God, who gives only to things done for Him,
according to His rules and in His ways, the manner being thus as important as
the thing and perhaps more; since God can bring forth good out of evil, and
without God we bring forth evil out of good?
500. The meaning of the words, good and evil.
501. First step: to be blamed for doing evil, and praised for doing good.
Second step: to be neither praised nor blamed.
502. Abraham took nothing for himself, but only for his servants. So the
righteous man takes for himself nothing of the world, nor of the applause of
the world, but only for his passions, which he uses as their master, saying to
the one, "Go," and to another, "Come." Sub te erit appetitus
tuus.77 The passions thus subdued are virtues. Even God
attributes to Himself avarice, jealousy, anger; and these are virtues as well
as kindness, pity, constancy, which are also passions. We must employ them as
slaves, and, leaving to them their food, prevent the soul from taking any of
it, For, when the passions become masters, they are vices; and they give their
nutriment to the soul, and the soul nourishes itself upon it and is poisoned.
503. Philosophers have consecrated the vices by placing them in God Himself.
Christians have consecrated the virtues.
504. The just man acts by faith in the least things; when he reproves his
servants, he desires their conversion by the Spirit of God, and prays God to
correct them; and he expects as much from God as from his own reproofs, and
prays God to bless his corrections. And so in all his other actions he proceeds
with the Spirit of God; and his actions deceive us by reason of the... or
suspension of the Spirit of God in him; and he repents in his affliction.
505. All things can be deadly to us, even the things made to serve us; as in
nature walls can kill us, and stairs can kill us, if we do not walk
circumspectly.
The least movement affects all nature; the entire sea changes because of a
rock. Thus, in grace, the least action affects everything by its consequences;
therefore everything is important.
In each action we must look beyond the action at our past, present, and future
state, and at others whom it affects, and see the relations of all those
things. And then we shall be very cautious.
506. Let God not impute to us our sins, that is to say, all the consequences
and results of our sins, which are dreadful, even those of the smallest faults,
if we wish to follow them out mercilessly!
507. The spirit of grace; the hardness of the heart; external circumstances.
508. Grace is indeed needed to turn a man into a saint; and he who doubts it
does not know what a saint or a man is.
509. Philosophers.--A fine thing to cry to a man who does not know himself,
that he should come of himself to God! And a fine thing to say so to a man who
does know himself!
510. Man is not worthy of God, but he is not incapable of being made worthy.
It is unworthy of God to unite Himself to wretched man; but it is not unworthy
of God to pull him out of his misery.
511. If we would say that man is too insignificant to deserve communion with
God, we must indeed be very great to judge of it.
512. It is, in peculiar phraseology, wholly the body of Jesus Christ, but it
cannot be said to be the whole body of Jesus Christ. The union of two things
without change does not enable us to say that one becomes the other; the soul
thus being united to the body, the fire to the timber, without change. But
change is necessary to make the form of the one become the form of the other;
thus the union of the Word to man. Because my body without my soul would not
make the body of a man; therefore my soul united to any matter whatsoever will
make my body. It does not distinguish the necessary condition from the
sufficient condition; the union is necessary, but not sufficient. The left arm
is not the right.
Impenetrability is a property of matter.
Identity de numero in regard to the same time requires the identity of
matter.
Thus if God united my soul to a body in China, the same body, idem numero would
be in China.
The same river which runs there is idem numero as that which runs at the same
time in China.
513. Why God has established prayer.
1. To communicate to His creatures the dignity of causality.
2. To teach us from whom our virtue comes.
3. To make us deserve other virtues by work.
(But to keep His own pre-eminence, He grants prayer to whom He pleases.)
Objection: But we believe that we hold prayer of ourselves.
This is absurd; for since, though having faith, we cannot have virtues, how
should we have faith? Is there a greater distance between infidelity and faith
than between faith and virtue?
Merit. This word is ambiguous.
Meruit habere Redemptorem.78
Meruit tam sacra membra tangere.79
Digno tam sacra membra tangere.80
Non sum dignus.81
Qui manducat indignus.82
Dignus est accipere.83
Dignare me.84
God is only bound according to His promises. He has promised to grant justice
to prayers; He has never promised prayer only to the children of promise.
Saint Augustine has distinctly said that strength would be taken away from the
righteous. But it is by chance that he said it; for it might have happened that
the occasion of saying it did not present itself. But his principles make us
see that, when the occasion for it presented itself, it was impossible that he
should not say it, or that he should say anything to the contrary. It is then
rather that he was forced to say it, when the occasion presented itself, than
that he said it, when the occasion presented itself, the one being of
necessity, the other of chance. But the two are all that we can ask.
514. "Work out your own salvation with fear."
Proofs of prayer. Petenti dabitur.[85]
Therefore it is in our power to ask. On the other hand, there is God. So it is
not in our power, since the obtaining of (the grace) to pray to Him is not in
our power. For since salvation is not in us, and the obtaining of such grace is
from Him, prayer is not in our power.
The righteous man should then hope no more in God, for he ought not to hope,
but to strive to obtain what he wants.
Let us conclude then that, since man is now unrighteous since the first sin,
and God is unwilling that he should thereby not be estranged from Him, it is
only by a first effect that he is not estranged.
Therefore, those who depart from God have not this first effect without which
they are not estranged from God, and those who do not depart from God have this
first effect. Therefore, those whom we have seen possessed for some time of
grace by this first effect, cease to pray, for want of this first effect.
Then God abandons the first in this sense.
515. The elect will be ignorant of their virtues, and the outcast of the
greatness of their sins: "Lord, when saw we Thee an hungered, thirsty"? etc.
516. Romans 3:27. Boasting is excluded. By what law? Of works? Nay, but by
faith. Then faith is not within our power like the deeds of the law, and it is
given to us in another way.
517. Comfort yourselves. It is not from yourselves that you should expect
grace; but, on the contrary, it is in expecting nothing from yourselves that
you must hope for it.
518. Every condition, and even the martyrs, have to fear, according to
Scripture. The greatest pain of purgatory is the uncertainty of the judgement.
Deus absconditus.86
519. John 8. Multi crediderunt in eum. Dicebat ergo Jesus: "Si manseritis...
VERE mei discipuli eritis, et VERITAS LIBERABIT VOS." Responderunt: "Semen
Abrahae sumus, et nemini servimus unquam."[87]
There is a great difference between disciples and true disciples. We recognise
them by telling them that the truth will make them free; for if they answer
that they are free and that it is in their power to come out of slavery to the
devil, they are indeed disciples, but not true disciples.
520. The law has not destroyed nature, but has instructed it; grace has not
destroyed the law, but has made it act. Faith received at baptism is the source
of the whole life of Christians and of the converted.
521. Grace will always be in the world, and nature also; so that the former is
in some sort natural. And thus there will always be Pelagians, and always
Catholics, and always strife; because the first birth makes the one, and the
grace of the second birth the other.
522. The law imposed what it did not give. Grace gives what it imposes.
523. All faith consists in Jesus Christ and in Adam, and all morality in lust
and in grace.
524. There is no doctrine more appropriate to man than this, which teaches him
his double capacity of receiving and of losing grace, because of the double
peril to which he is exposed, of despair or of pride.
525. The philosophers did not prescribe feelings suitable to the two states.
They inspired feelings of pure greatness, and that is not man's state.
They inspired feelings of pure littleness, and that is not man's state.
There must be feelings of humility, not from nature, but from penitence, not to
rest in them, but to go on to greatness. There must be feelings of greatness,
not from merit, but from grace, and after having passed through humiliation.
526. Misery induces despair, pride induces presumption. The Incarnation shows
man the greatness of his misery by the greatness of the remedy which he
required.
527. The knowledge of God without that of man's misery causes pride. The
knowledge of man's misery without that of God causes despair. The knowledge of
Jesus Christ constitutes the middle course, because in Him we find both God and
our misery.
528. Jesus Christ is a God whom we approach without pride and before whom we
humble ourselves without despair.
529.... Not a degradation which renders us incapable of good, nor a holiness
exempt from evil.
530. A person told me one day that on coming from confession he felt great joy
and confidence. Another told me that he remained in fear. Whereupon I thought
that these two together would make one good man, and that each was wanting in
that he had not the feeling of the other. The same often happens in other
things.
531. He who knows the will of his master will be beaten with more blows,
because of the power he has by his knowledge. Qui justus est, justificetur
adhuc,88 because of the power he has by justice. From him who
has received most, will the greatest reckoning be demanded, because of the
power he has by this help.
532. Scripture has provided passages of consolation and of warning for all
conditions.
Nature seems to have done the same thing by her two infinities, natural and
moral; for we shall always have the higher and the lower, the more clever and
the less clever, the most exalted and the meanest, in order to humble our pride
and exalt our humility.
533. Comminutum cor (Saint Paul).[89]
This is the Christian character. Alba has named you, I know you no more
(Corneille). That is the inhuman character. The human character is the
opposite.
534. There are only two kinds of men: the righteous who believe themselves
sinners; the rest, sinners, who believe themselves righteous.
535. We owe a great debt to those who point out faults. For they mortify us.
They teach us that we have been despised. They do not prevent our being so in
the future; for we have many other faults for which we may be despised. They
prepare for us the exercise of correction and freedom from fault.
536. Man is so made that by continually telling him he is a fool he believes
it, and by continually telling it to himself he makes himself believe it. For
man holds an inward talk with his self alone, which it behoves him to regulate
well: Corrumpunt bonos mores colloquia prava.90 We must keep
silent as much as possible and talk with ourselves only of God, whom we know to
be true; and thus we convince ourselves of the truth.
537. Christianity is strange. It bids man recognise that he is vile, even
abominable, and bids him desire to be like God. Without such a counterpoise,
this dignity would make him horribly vain, or this humiliation would make him
terribly abject.
538. With how little pride does a Christian believe himself united to God! With
how little humiliation does he place himself on a level with the worms of
earth!
A glorious manner to welcome life and death, good and evil!
539. What difference in point of obedience is there between a soldier and a
Carthusian monk? For both are equally under obedience and dependent, both
engaged in equally painful exercises. But the soldier always hopes to command
and never attains this, for even captains and princes are ever slaves and
dependants; still he ever hopes and ever works to attain this. Whereas the
Carthusian monk makes a vow to be always dependent. So they do not differ in
their perpetual thraldom, in which both of them always exist, but in the hope,
which one always has, and the other never.
540. The hope which Christians have of possessing an infinite good is mingled
with real enjoyment as well as with fear; for it is not as with those who
should hope for a kingdom, of which they, being subjects, would have nothing;
but they hope for holiness, for freedom from injustice, and they have something
of this.
541. None is so happy as a true Christian, nor so reasonable, virtuous, or
amiable.
542. The Christian religion alone makes man altogether lovable and happy. In
honesty, we cannot perhaps be altogether lovable and happy.
543. Preface.--The metaphysical proofs of God are so remote from the reasoning
of men, and so complicated, that they make little impression; and if they
should be of service to some, it would be only during the moment that they see
such demonstration; but an hour afterwards they fear they have been mistaken.
Quod curiositate cognoverunt superbia amiserunt.91
This is the result of the knowledge of God obtained without Jesus Christ; it is
communion without a mediator with the God whom they have known without a
mediator. Whereas those who have known God by a mediator know their own
wretchedness.
544. The God of the Christians is a God who makes the soul feel that He is her
only good, that her only rest is in Him, that her only delight is in loving
Him; and who makes her at the same time abhor the obstacles which keep her back
and prevent her from loving God with all her strength. Self-love and lust,
which hinder us, are unbearable to her. Thus God makes her feel that she has
this root of self-love which destroys her, and which He alone can cure.
545. Jesus Christ did nothing but teach men that they loved themselves, that
they were slaves, blind, sick, wretched, and sinners; that He must deliver
them, enlighten, bless, and heal them; that this would be effected by hating
self, and by following Him through suffering and the death on the cross.
546. Without Jesus Christ man must be in vice and misery; with Jesus Christ man
is free from vice and misery; in Him is all our virtue and all our happiness.
Apart from Him there is but vice, misery, darkness, death, despair.
547. We know God only by Jesus Christ. Without this mediator, all communion
with God is taken away; through Jesus Christ we know God. All those who have
claimed to know God, and to prove Him without Jesus Christ, have had only weak
proofs. But in proof of Jesus Christ we have the prophecies, which are solid
and palpable proofs. And these prophecies, being accomplished and proved true
by the event, mark the certainty of these truths and, therefore, the divinity
of Christ. In Him, then, and through Him, we know God. Apart from Him, and
without the Scripture, without original sin, without a necessary mediator
promised and come, we cannot absolutely prove God, nor teach right doctrine and
right morality. But through Jesus Christ, and in Jesus Christ, we prove God,
and teach morality and doctrine. Jesus Christ is, then, the true God of men.
But we know at the same time our wretchedness; for this God is none other than
the Saviour of our wretchedness. So we can only know God well by knowing our
iniquities. Therefore those who have known God, without knowing their
wretchedness, have not glorified Him, but have glorified themselves. Quia...
non cognovit per sapientiam... placuit Deo per stultitiam praedicationis salvos
facere.92
548. Not only do we know God by Jesus Christ alone, but we know ourselves only
by Jesus Christ. We know life and death only through Jesus Christ. Apart from
Jesus Christ, we do not know what is our life, nor our death, nor God, nor
ourselves.
Thus without the Scripture, which has Jesus Christ alone for its object, we
know nothing, and see only darkness and confusion in the nature of God and in
our own nature.
549. It is not only impossible but useless to know God without Jesus Christ.
They have not departed from Him, but approached; they have not humbled
themselves, but...
Quo quisque optimus est, pessimus, si hoc ipsum, quod optimus est, adscribat
sibi.93
550. I love poverty because He loved it. I love riches because they afford me
the means of helping the very poor. I keep faith with everybody; I do not
render evil to those who wrong me, but I wish them a lot like mine, in which I
receive neither evil nor good from men. I try to be just, true, sincere, and
faithful to all men; I have a tender heart for those to whom God has more
closely united me; and whether I am alone, or seen of men, I do all my actions
in the sight of God, who must judge of them, and to whom I have consecrated
them all.
These are my sentiments; and every day of my life I bless my Redeemer, who has
implanted them in me, and who, of a man full of weakness, of miseries, of lust,
of pride, and of ambition, has made a man free from all these evils by the
power of His grace, to which all the glory of it is due, as of myself I have
only misery and error.
551. Dignior plagis quam osculis non timeo quia amo.[94]
552. The Sepulchre of Jesus Christ.--Jesus Christ was dead, but seen on the
Cross. He was dead, and hidden in the Sepulchre.
Jesus Christ was buried by the saints alone.
Jesus Christ wrought no miracle at the Sepulchre.
Only the saints entered it.
It is there, not on the Cross, that Jesus Christ takes a new life.
It is the last mystery of the Passion and the Redemption.
Jesus Christ had nowhere to rest on earth but in the Sepulchre. His enemies
only ceased to persecute Him at the Sepulchre.
553. The Mystery of Jesus.--Jesus suffers in His passions the torments which
men inflict upon Him; but in His agony He suffers the torments which He
inflicts on himself; turbare semetipsum.95 This is a
suffering from no human, but an almighty hand, for He must be almighty to bear
it.
Jesus seeks some comfort at least in His three dearest friends, and they are
asleep. He prays them to bear with Him for a little, and they leave Him with
entire indifference, having so little compassion that it could not prevent
their sleeping even for a moment. And thus Jesus was left alone to the wrath of
God.
Jesus is alone on the earth, without any one not only to feel and share His
suffering, but even to know of it; He and Heaven were alone in that
knowledge.
Jesus is in a garden, not of delight as the first Adam, where he lost himself
and the whole human race, but in one of agony, where He saved himself and the
whole human race.
He suffers this affliction and this desertion in the horror of night.
I believe that Jesus never complained but on this single occasion; but then He
complained as if he could no longer bear His extreme suffering. "My soul is
sorrowful, even unto death."
Jesus seeks companionship and comfort from men. This is the sole occasion in
all His life, as it seems to me. But He receives it not, for His disciples are
asleep. Jesus will be in agony even to the end of the world. We must not sleep
during that time.
Jesus, in the midst of this universal desertion, including that of His own
friends chosen to watch with Him, finding them asleep, is vexed because of the
danger to which they expose, not Him, but themselves; He cautions them for
their own safety and their own good, with a sincere tenderness for them during
their ingratitude, and warns them that the spirit is willing and the flesh
weak.
Jesus, finding them still asleep, without being restrained by any consideration
for themselves or for Him, has the kindness not to waken them and leaves them
in repose.
Jesus prays, uncertain of the will of His Father, and fears death; but, when He
knows it, He goes forward to offer Himself to death. Eamus.96
Processit (John).[97]
Jesus asked of men and was not heard.
Jesus, while His disciples slept, wrought their salvation. He has wrought that
of each of the righteous while they slept, both in their nothingness before
their birth, and in their sins after their birth.
He prays only once that the cup pass away, and then with submission; and twice
that it come if necessary.
Jesus is weary.
Jesus, seeing all His friends asleep and all His enemies wakeful, commits
Himself entirely to His Father.
Jesus does not regard in Judas his enmity, but the order of God, which He loves
and admits, since He calls him friend.
Jesus tears Himself away from His disciples to enter into His agony; we must
tear ourselves away from our nearest and dearest to imitate Him.
Jesus being in agony and in the greatest affliction, let us pray longer.
We implore the mercy of God, not that He may leave us at peace in our vices,
that He may deliver us from them.
If God gave us masters by His own hand, oh! how necessary for us to obey them
with a good heart! Necessity and events follow infallibly.
"Console thyself, thou wouldst not seek Me, if thou hadst not found Me.
"I thought of thee in Mine agony, I have sweated such drops of blood for
thee.
"It is tempting Me rather than proving thyself, to think if thou wouldst do
such and such a thing on an occasion which has not happened; I shall act in
thee if it occur.
"Let thyself be guided by My rules; see how well I have led the Virgin and the
saints who have let Me act in them.
"The Father loves all that I do.
"Dost thou wish that it always cost Me the blood of My humanity, without thy
shedding tears?
"Thy conversion is My affair; fear not, and pray with confidence as for Me.
"I am present with thee by My Word in Scripture, by My Spirit in the Church and
by inspiration, by My power in the priests, by My prayer in the faithful.
"Physicians will not heal thee, for thou wilt die at last. But it is I who heal
thee and make the body immortal.
"Suffer bodily chains and servitude, I deliver thee at present only from
spiritual servitude.
"I am more a friend to thee than such and such an one, for I have done for thee
more then they; they would not have suffered what I have suffered from thee,
and they would not have died for thee as I have done in the time of thine
infidelities and cruelties, and as I am ready to do, and do, among My elect and
at the Holy Sacrament."
"If thou knewest thy sins, thou wouldst lose heart."
I shall lose it then, Lord, for on Thy assurance I believe their malice.
"No, for I, by whom thou learnest, can heal thee of them, and what I say to
thee is a sign that I will heal thee. In proportion to thy expiation of them,
thou wilt know them, and it will be said to thee: 'Behold thy sins are forgiven
thee.' Repent, then, for thy hidden sins, and for the secret malice of those
which thou knowest."
Lord, I give Thee all.
"I love thee more ardently than thou hast loved thine abominations, ut immundus
pro luto.
"To Me be the glory, not to thee, worm of the earth.
"Ask thy confessor, when My own words are to thee occasion of evil, vanity, or
curiosity."
I see in me depths of pride, curiosity, and lust. There is no relation between
me and God, nor Jesus Christ the Righteous. But He has been made sin for me;
all Thy scourges are fallen upon Him. He is more abominable than I, and, far
from abhorring me, He holds Himself honoured that I go to Him and succour
Him.
But He has healed Himself, and still more so will He heal me.
I must add my wounds to His, and join myself to Him; and He will save me in
saving Himself. But this must not be postponed to the future.
Eritis sicut dii scientes bonum et malum.98 Each one creates
his god, when judging, "This is good or bad"; and men mourn or rejoice too much
at events.
Do little things as though they were great, because of the majesty of Jesus
Christ who does them in us and who lives our life; and do the greatest things
as though they were little and easy, because of His omnipotence.
554. It seems to me that Jesus Christ only allowed His wounds to be touched
after His resurrection: Noli me tangere.[99]
We must unite ourselves only to His sufferings.
At the Last Supper He gave Himself in communion as about to die; to the
disciples at Emmaus as risen from the dead; to the whole Church as ascended
into heaven.
555. "Compare not thyself with others, but with Me. If thou dost not find Me in
those with whom thou comparest thyself, thou comparest thyself to one who is
abominable. If thou findest Me in them, compare thyself to Me. But whom wilt
thou compare? Thyself, or Me in thee? If it is thyself, it is one who is
abominable. If it is I, thou comparest Me to Myself. Now I am God in all.
"I speak to thee, and often counsel thee, because thy director cannot speak to
thee, for I do not want thee to lack a guide.
"And perhaps I do so at his prayers, and thus he leads thee without thy seeing
it. Thou wouldst not seek Me, if thou didst not possess Me.
"Be not therefore troubled."
64"What you seek without knowing, religion will announce to you."
Pascal misquotes Acts 17:23. "Whom therefore ye ignorantly worship, him declare
I unto you."
65Prov. 8:31. "And my delights were with the sons of men."
66Joel 2:28. "I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh."
67Ps. 82:6. "Ye are gods."
68Is. 40:6. "All flesh is grass."
69Ps. 49:12, 13. "He is like the beasts that perish; this their way
is their folly."
70Eccles. 3:18. "I said in mine heart concerning the estate of the
sons of men."
[71]1 Cor. 1:25 "The foolishness of God is
wiser than men; and the weakness of God is stronger than men."
[72]Ovid, Metamorphoses, iii. "No one
is happy before death."
[73]1 John 2:16.
74Cor. 1:31. "He that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord."
75John 14:6. "I am the way, the truth, and the life."
761 Cor. 6:17. "But he that is joined unto the Lord is one
spirit."
77Gen. 4:7. "Unto thee shall be his desire."
78Office for Holy Saturday. "Which won for us a Saviour."
79Office for Good Friday. "Which won for us God's hallowed members
to embrace."
80Hymn Vexilla regis. "Worthy God's hallowed members to
embrace."
81Luke 7:6 "I am not worthy."
821 Cor. 11:29. "Who eateth unworthily."
83Rev. 4:11. "Thou art worthy to receive."
84Office of the Holy Virgin. "Make me worthy."
[85]Matthew, 7:7, "Ask and it shall be given
you."
86Is. 45:15.
[87]John 8:30-33. "Many believed on him. Then
Jesus said: 'If ye continue... then ye are my disciples indeed, and the truth
shall make you free.' They answered him: 'We be Abraham's seed, and were never
in bondage to any man.'"
88Rev. 22:11. "He that is righteous, let him be righteous still."
[89]Circumcidentes cor. Rom. 2.
"Circumcision is that of the heart."
901 Cor. 15:33. "Evil communications corrupt good manners."
91"What they have found by their curiosity, they have lost by their
pride." Quod curiositate invenerunt, superbia perdiderunt. St.
Augustine, Sermon cxli.
921 Cor. 1:21. "Which... by wisdom knew not... it pleased God by the
foolishness of preaching to save them that believe."
93St. Bernard, Sermones in Cantica Canticorum, lxxxiv. "The
better one is, the worse one becomes, if one attributes the cause of this
goodness to one's self."
[94]Ibid. "Meriting blows more than
kisses, I fear not, because I love."
95John 11:33. Et turbarit seipsum. "And he troubled
himself."
96Matt. 26:46. "Let us be going."
[97]Matt. 18:2. "Jesus went forth."
98Gen. 3:5. "Ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil."
[99]John 20:17. "Touch me not."
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