Book III
OF THE PROGRESS AND PERFECTION OF LOVE.
CHAPTER XIV. THAT THE HOLY LIGHT OF GLORY WILL SERVE FOR THE UNION OF THE BLESSED SPIRITS WITH GOD.
|
The created understanding then shall see the divine essence, without any
medium of species or representation; yet not without a certain excellent
light which disposes, elevates, and strengthens it, to raise its view so
high, and to an object so sublime and resplendent. For as the owl has a
sight strong enough to bear the sombre light of a clear night, but not
strong enough to stand the mid-day light, which is too brilliant to be borne
by eyes so dim and weak; so our understanding, which is strong enough to
consider natural truths by its discourse, yea even the supernatural things
of grace by the light of faith, is not yet able, by the light of either
nature or faith, to attain unto the view of the divine substance in itself.
Wherefore the sweetness of the eternal wisdom determined not to apply His
essence to our understanding till He had prepared, strengthened and fitted
it to receive a sight so eminent, and so disproportionate to its natural
condition as is the view of the Divinity. So the sun, the sovereign object
of our corporal eyes amongst natural things, does not present itself unto
our view without sending first its rays, by means whereof we may be able to
see it, so that we only see it by its light. Yet there is a difference
between the rays which the sun casts upon our corporal eyes and the light
which God will create in our understandings in heaven: for the sun's rays do
not fortify our corporal eyes when they are weak and unable to see, but
rather blind them, dazzling and confounding their infirm vision: whereas, on
the contrary, this sacred light of glory, finding our understandings unapt
and unable to behold the Divinity, raises, strengthens and perfects them so
excellently, that by an incomprehensible marvel they behold and contemplate
the abyss of the divine brightness in itself with a fixed and direct gaze,
not being dazzled or beaten back by the infinite greatness of its splendour.
In like manner, therefore, as God has given us the light of reason, by which
we may know Him as Author of nature, and the light of faith by which we
consider Him as source of grace, so will He bestow upon us the light of
glory by which we shall contemplate Him as the fountain of beatitude and
eternal life: but a fountain, Theotimus, which we shall not contemplate afar
off as we do now by faith, but which we shall see by the light of glory
while plunged and swallowed up in it.
Divers, who, fishing for precious stones, go down into the water, take oil,
says Pliny, in their mouths, that by scattering it, they may have more light
to see in the waters where they swim. Theotimus, a blessed soul having
entered and plunged into the ocean of the divine essence, God will pour into
its understanding the sacred light of glory, which will enlighten it in this
abyss of inaccessible light, that so by the light of glory we may see the
light of the Divinity. For with Thee is the fountain of life; and in Thy
light we shall see light. [176]
[176] Ps. xxxv. 10.
|