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Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of Clairvaux
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ON LOVING GOD
by St. Bernard of Clairvaux
DEDICATION
To the illustrious Lord Haimeric,
Cardinal Deacon of the Roman Church, and Chancellor: Bernard, called
Abbot of Clairvaux, wisheth long life in the Lord and death in the
Lord.
Hitherto you have been wont to seek
prayers from me, not the solving of problems; although I count
myself sufficient for neither. My profession shows that, if not my
conversation; and to speak truth, I lack the diligence and the
ability that are most essential. Yet I am glad that you turn again
for spiritual counsel, instead of busying yourself about carnal
matters: I only wish you had gone to some one better equipped than I
am. Still, learned and simple give the same excuse and one can
hardly tell whether it comes from modesty or from ignorance, unless
obedience to the task assigned shall reveal. So, take from my
poverty what I can give you, lest I should seem to play the
philosopher, by reason of my silence. Only, I do not promise to
answer other questions you may raise. This one, as to loving God, I
will deal with as He shall teach me; for it is sweetest, it can be
handled most safely, and it will be most profitable. Keep the others
for wiser men.
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter I. Why we should love God and the measure of
that love
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter I.
Why we should love God and the measure of that
love
You want me to tell you why God is to
be loved and how much. I answer, the reason for loving God is God
Himself; and the measure of love due to Him is immeasurable love. Is
this plain? Doubtless, to a thoughtful man; but I am debtor to the
unwise also. A word to the wise is sufficient; but I must consider
simple folk too. Therefore I set myself joyfully to explain more in
detail what is meant above.
We are to love God for Himself,
because of a twofold reason; nothing is more reasonable, nothing
more profitable. When one asks, Why should I love God? he may mean,
What is lovely in God? or What shall I gain by loving God? In either
case, the same sufficient cause of love exists, namely, God Himself.
And first, of His title to our love.
Could any title be greater than this, that He gave Himself for us
unworthy wretches? And being God, what better gift could He offer
than Himself? Hence, if one seeks for God’s claim upon our love here
is the chiefest: Because He first loved us (I John 4.19).
Ought He not to be loved in return,
when we think who loved, whom He loved, and how much He loved? For
who is He that loved? The same of whom every spirit testifies: ‘Thou
art my God: my goods are nothing unto Thee’ (Ps. 16.2, Vulg.). And is not His love that
wonderful charity which ‘seeketh not her own’? (I Cor.13.5). But for
whom was such unutterable love made manifest? The apostle tells us:
‘When we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of His
Son’ (Rom. 5.10). So it was God who loved us, loved us
freely, and loved us while yet we were enemies. And how great was
this love of His? St. John answers: ‘God so loved the world that He
gave His only-begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should
not perish, but have everlasting life’ (John 3.16). St. Paul adds: ‘He spared not His own
Son, but delivered Him up for us all’ (Rom. 8.32);
and the son says of Himself, ‘Greater love hath no man than this,
that a man lay down his life for his friends’ (John
15.13).
This is the claim which God the holy,
the supreme, the omnipotent, has upon men, defiled and base and
weak. Some one may urge that this is true of mankind, but not of
angels. True, since for angels it was not needful. He who succored
men in their time of need, preserved angels from such need; and even
as His love for sinful men wrought wondrously in them so that they
should not remain sinful, so that same love which in equal measure
He poured out upon angels kept them altogether free from sin.
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter II. On loving God. How much god deserves
love from man in recognition of His gifts, both material and
spiritual: and how these gifts should be cherished without neglect
of the Giver
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter II.
On loving God. How much god deserves love from man
in recognition of His gifts, both material and spiritual: and how
these gifts should be cherished without neglect of the Giver
Those who admit the truth of what I
have said know, I am sure, why we are bound to love God. But if
unbelievers will not grant it, their ingratitude is at once
confounded by His innumerable benefits, lavished on our race, and
plainly discerned by the senses. Who is it that gives food to all
flesh, light to every eye, air to all that breathe? It would be
foolish to begin a catalogue, since I have just called them
innumerable: but I name, as notable instances, food, sunlight and
air; not because they are God’s best gifts, but because they are
essential to bodily life. Man must seek in his own higher nature for
the highest gifts; and these are dignity, wisdom and virtue. By
dignity I mean free-will, whereby he not only excels all other
earthly creatures, but has dominion over them. Wisdom is the power
whereby he recognizes this dignity, and perceives also that it is no
accomplishment of his own. And virtue impels man to seek eagerly for
Him who is man’s Source, and to lay fast hold on Him when He has
been found.
Now, these three best gifts have each a
twofold character. Dignity appears not only as the prerogative of
human nature, but also as the cause of that fear and dread of man
which is upon every beast of the earth. Wisdom perceives this
distinction, but owns that though in us, it is, like all good
qualities, not of us. And lastly, virtue moves us to search eagerly
for an Author, and, when we have found Him, teaches us to cling to
Him yet more eagerly. Consider too that dignity without wisdom is
nothing worth; and wisdom is harmful without virtue, as this
argument following shows: There is no glory in having a gift without
knowing it. But to know only that you have it, without knowing that
it is not of yourself that you have it, means self-glorying, but no
true glory in God. And so the apostle says to men in such cases,
‘What hast thou that thou didst not receive? Now, if thou didst
receive it, why dost thou glory as if thou hadst not received it? (I Cor. 4.7).
He asks, Why dost thou glory? but goes on, as if thou hadst not
received it, showing that the guilt is not in glorying over a
possession, but in glorying as though it had not been received. And
rightly such glorying is called vain-glory, since it has not the
solid foundation of truth. The apostle shows how to discern the true
glory from the false, when he says, He that glorieth, let him glory
in the Lord, that is, in the Truth, since our Lord is Truth (I Cor. 1.31; John 14.6).
We must know, then, what we are, and
that it is not of ourselves that we are what we are. Unless we know
this thoroughly, either we shall not glory at all, or our glorying
will be vain. Finally, it is written, ‘If thou know not, go thy way
forth by the footsteps of the flock’ (Cant. 1.8). And this is right. For man, being in
honor, if he know not his own honor, may fitly be compared, because
of such ignorance, to the beasts that perish. Not knowing himself as
the creature that is distinguished from the irrational brutes by the
possession of reason, he commences to be confounded with them
because, ignorant of his own true glory which is within, he is led
captive by his curiosity, and concerns himself with external,
sensual things. So he is made to resemble the lower orders by not
knowing that he has been more highly endowed than they.
We must be on our guard against this
ignorance. We must not rank ourselves too low; and with still
greater care we must see that we do not think of ourselves more
highly than we ought to think, as happens when we foolishly impute
to ourselves whatever good may be in us. But far more than either of
these kinds of ignorance, we must hate and shun that presumption
which would lead us to glory in goods not our own, knowing that they
are not of ourselves but of God, and yet not fearing to rob God of
the honor due unto Him. For mere ignorance, as in the first
instance, does not glory at all; and mere wisdom, as in the second,
while it has a kind of glory, yet does not glory in the Lord. In the
third evil case, however, man sins not in ignorance but
deliberately, usurping the glory which belongs to God. And this
arrogance is a more grievous and deadly fault than the ignorance of
the second, since it contemns God, while the other knows Him not.
Ignorance is brutal, arrogance is devilish. Pride only, the chief of
all iniquities, can make us treat gifts as if they were rightful
attributes of our nature, and, while receiving benefits, rob our
Benefactor of His due glory.
Wherefore to dignity and wisdom we must
add virtue, the proper fruit of them both. Virtue seeks and finds
Him who is the Author and Giver of all good, and who must be in all
things glorified; otherwise, one who knows what is right yet fails
to perform it, will be beaten with many stripes (Luke 12.47). Why? you may ask. Because he has
failed to put his knowledge to good effect, but rather has imagined
mischief upon his bed (PS. 36.4); like a wicked servant, he has
turned aside to seize the glory which, his own knowledge assured
him, belonged only to his good Lord and Master. It is plain,
therefore, that dignity without wisdom is useless and that wisdom
without virtue is accursed. But when one possesses virtue, then
wisdom and dignity are not dangerous but blessed. Such a man calls
on God and lauds Him, confessing from a full heart, ‘Not unto us, O
Lord, not unto us, but unto Thy name give glory’ (PS. 115.1). Which
is to say, ‘O Lord, we claim no knowledge, no distinction for
ourselves; all is Thine, since from Thee all things do come.’
But we have digressed too far in the
wish to prove that even those who know not Christ are sufficiently
admonished by the natural law, and by their own endowments of soul
and body, to love God for God’s own sake. To sum up: what infidel
does not know that he has received light, air, food—all things
necessary for his own body’s life—from Him alone who giveth food to
all flesh (Ps. 136.25), who maketh His sun to rise on the
evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust
(Matt. 5.45). Who is so impious as to attribute
the peculiar eminence of humanity to any other except to Him who
saith, in Genesis, ‘Let us make man in Our image, after Our
likeness’? (Gen. 1.26). Who else could be the Bestower of
wisdom, but He that teacheth man knowledge? (Ps. 94.10).
Who else could bestow virtue except the Lord of virtue? Therefore
even the infidel who knows not Christ but does at least know
himself, is bound to love God for God’s own sake. He is unpardonable
if he does not love the Lord his God with all his heart, and with
all his soul, and with all his mind; for his own innate justice and
common sense cry out from within that he is bound wholly to love
God, from whom he has received all things. But it is hard, nay
rather, impossible, for a man by his own strength or in the power of
free-will to render all things to God from whom they came, without
rather turning them aside, each to his own account, even as it is
written, ‘For all seek their own’ (Phil. 2.21); and again,
‘The imagination of man’s heart is evil from his youth’ (Gen. 8.21).
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter III. What greater incentives Christians
have, more than the heathen, to love God
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter III.
What greater incentives Christians have, more than
the heathen, to love God
The faithful know how much need they
have of Jesus and Him crucified; but though they wonder and rejoice
at the ineffable love made manifest in Him, they are not daunted at
having no more than their own poor souls to give in return for such
great and condescending charity. They love all the more, because
they know themselves to be loved so exceedingly; but to whom little
is given the same loveth little (Luke 7.47).
Neither Jew nor pagan feels the pangs of love as doth the Church,
which saith, ‘Stay me with flagons, comfort me with apples; for I am
sick of love’ (Cant. 2.5). She beholds
King Solomon, with the crown wherewith his mother crowned him in the
day of his espousals; she sees the Sole-begotten of the Father
bearing the heavy burden of His Cross; she sees the Lord of all
power and might bruised and spat upon, the Author of life and glory
transfixed with nails, smitten by the lance, overwhelmed with
mockery, and at last laying down His precious life for His friends.
Contemplating this the sword of love pierces through her own soul
also and she cried aloud, ‘Stay me with flagons, comfort me with
apples; for I am sick of love.’ The fruits which the Spouse gathers
from the Tree of Life in the midst of the garden of her Beloved, are
pomegranates (Cant.
4.13), borrowing their taste from the Bread of heaven,
and their color from the Blood of Christ. She sees death dying and
its author overthrown: she beholds captivity led captive from hell
to earth, from earth to heaven, so ‘that at the name of Jesus every
knee should bow, of things in heaven and things in earth and things
under the earth’ (Phil.
2.10). The earth under the ancient curse brought forth
thorns and thistles; but now the Church beholds it laughing with
flowers and restored by the grace of a new benediction. Mindful of
the verse, ‘My heart danceth for joy, and in my song will I praise
Him’, she refreshes herself with the fruits of His Passion which she
gathers from the Tree of the Cross, and with the flowers of His
Resurrection whose fragrance invites the frequent visits of her
Spouse.
Then it is that He exclaims, ‘Behold
thou art fair, My beloved, yea pleasant: also our bed is green’ (Cant.
1.16). She shows her desire for His coming and whence she
hopes to obtain it; not because of her own merits but because of the
flowers of that field which God hath blessed. Christ who willed to
be conceived and brought up in Nazareth, that is, the town of
branches, delights in such blossoms. Pleased by such heavenly
fragrance the bridegroom rejoices to revisit the heart’s chamber
when He finds it adorned with fruits and decked with flowers—that
is, meditating on the mystery of His Passion or on the glory of His
Resurrection.
The tokens of the Passion we recognize
as the fruitage of the ages of the past, appearing in the fullness
of time during the reign of sin and death (Gal. 4.4). But it is the glory of the
Resurrection, in the new springtime of regenerating grace, that the
fresh flowers of the later age come forth, whose fruit shall be
given without measure at the general resurrection, when time shall
be no more. And so it is written, ‘The winter is past, the rain is
over and gone, the flowers appear on the earth’ (Cant. 2.11 f); signifying that summer has come
back with Him who dissolves icy death into the spring of a new life
and says, ‘Behold, I make all things new’ (Rev. 21.5). His Body sown
in the grave has blossomed in the Resurrection (I
Cor. 15.42); and in like manner our valleys and fields
which were barren or frozen, as if dead, glow with reviving life and
warmth.
The Father of Christ who makes all
things new, is well pleased with the freshness of those flowers and
fruits, and the beauty of the field which breathes forth such
heavenly fragrance; and He says in benediction, ‘See, the smell of
My Son is as the smell of a field which the Lord hath blessed’ (Gen. 27.27). Blessed to overflowing, indeed,
since of His fullness have all we received (John 1.16).
But the Bride may come when she pleases and gather flowers and
fruits therewith to adorn the inmost recesses of her conscience;
that the Bridegroom when He cometh may find the chamber of her heart
redolent with perfume.
So it behoves us, if we would have
Christ for a frequent guest, to fill our hearts with faithful
meditations on the mercy He showed in dying for us, and on His
mighty power in rising again from the dead. To this David testified
when he sang, ‘God spake once, and twice I have also heard the same;
that power belongeth unto God; and that Thou, Lord, art merciful (Ps. 62.11f). And surely there is proof enough and
to spare in that Christ died for our sins and rose again for our
justification, and ascended into heaven that He might protect us
from on high, and sent the Holy Spirit for our comfort. Hereafter He
will come again for the consummation of our bliss. In His Death He
displayed His mercy, in His Resurrection His power; both combine to
manifest His glory.
The Bride desires to be stayed with
flagons and comforted with apples, because she knows how easily the
warmth of love can languish and grow cold; but such helps are only
until she has entered into the bride chamber. There she will receive
His long-desired caresses even as she sighs, ‘His left hand is under
my head and His right hand doth embrace me’ (Cant. 2.6). Then she will perceive how far the
embrace of the right hand excels all sweetness, and that the left
hand with which He at first caressed her cannot be compared to it.
She will understand what she has heard: ‘It is the spirit that
quickeneth; the flesh profiteth nothing’ (John 6.63). She will prove what she hath read:
‘My memorial is sweeter than honey, and mine inheritance than the
honey-comb’ (Ecclus. 24.20). What is written elsewhere,
‘The memorial of Thine abundant kindness shall be showed’ (Ps. 145.7),
refers doubtless to those of whom the Psalmist had said just before:
‘One generation shall praise Thy works unto another and declare Thy
power’ (Ps. 145.4). Among us on the earth there is His
memory; but in the Kingdom of heaven His very Presence. That
Presence is the joy of those who have already attained to beatitude;
the memory is the comfort of us who are still wayfarers, journeying
towards the Fatherland.
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter IV. Of those who find comfort in there
collection of God, or are fittest for His love
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter IV.
Of those who find comfort in there collection of
God, or are fittest for His love
But it will be well to note what class
of people takes comfort in the thought of God. Surely not that
perverse and crooked generation to whom it was said, ‘Woe unto you
that are rich; for ye have received your consolation’ (Luke 6.24). Rather, those
who can say with truth, ‘My soul refuseth comfort’ (Ps. 77.2).
For it is meet that those who are not satisfied by the present
should be sustained by the thought of the future, and that the
contemplation of eternal happiness should solace those who scorn to
drink from the river of transitory joys. That is the generation of
them that seek the Lord, even of them that seek, not their own, but
the face of the God of Jacob. To them that long for the presence of
the living God, the thought of Him is sweetest itself: but there is
no satiety, rather an ever-increasing appetite, even as the
Scripture bears witness, ‘they that eat me shall yet be hungry’ (Ecclus. 24.21); and if the one an-hungred
spake, ‘When I awake up after Thy likeness, I shall be satisfied
with it.’ Yea, blessed even now are they which do hunger and thirst
after righteousness, for they, and they only, shall be filled. Woe
to you, wicked and perverse generation; woe to you, foolish and
abandoned people, who hate Christ’s memory, and dread His second
Advent! Well may you fear, who will not now seek deliverance from
the snare of the hunter; because ‘they that will be rich fall into
temptation and a snare, and into many foolish and hurtful lusts’ (I Tim. 6.9). In that day we shall not escape the
dreadful sentence of condemnation, ‘Depart from Me, ye cursed, into
everlasting fire’ (Matt. 25.41). O dreadful sentence indeed, O
hard saying! How much harder to bear than that other saying which we
repeat daily in church, in memory of the Passion: ‘Whoso eateth My
flesh and drinketh My blood hath eternal life’ (John 6.54). That
signifies, whoso honors My death and after My example mortifies his
members which are upon the earth (Col. 3.5) shall have eternal
life, even as the apostle says, ‘If we suffer, we shall also reign
with Him’ (II Tim. 2.12). And yet many even today recoil
from these words and go away, saying by their action if not with
their lips, ‘This is a hard saying; who can hear it?’ (John 6.60).
‘A generation that set not their heart aright, and whose spirit
cleaveth not steadfastly unto God’ (Ps. 78.8),
but chooseth rather to trust in uncertain riches, it is disturbed at
the very name of the Cross, and counts the memory of the Passion
intolerable. How can such sustain the burden of that fearful
sentence, ‘Depart from Me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire,
prepared for the devil and his angels’? ‘On whomsoever that stone
shall fall it will grind him to powder’ (Luke 20.18); but ‘the generation of the faithful
shall be blessed’ (Ps. 112.2), since, like
the apostle, they labor that whether present or absent they may be
accepted of the Lord (II Cor. 5.9). At the last day they too shall
hear the Judge pronounce their award, ‘Come, ye blessed of My
Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of
the world’ (Matt. 25.34).
In that day those who set not their
hearts aright will feel, too late, how easy is Christ’s yoke, to
which they would not bend their necks and how light His burden, in
comparison with the pains they must then endure. O wretched slaves
of Mammon, you cannot glory in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ
while you trust in treasures laid up on earth: you cannot taste and
see how gracious the Lord is, while you are hungering for gold. If
you have not rejoiced at the thought of His coming, that day will be
indeed a day of wrath to you.
But the believing soul longs and faints
for God; she rests sweetly in the contemplation of Him. She glories
in the reproach of the Cross, until the glory of His face shall be
revealed. Like the Bride, the dove of Christ, that is covered with
silver wings (Ps. 68.13),
white with innocence and purity, she reposes in the thought of Thine
abundant kindness, Lord Jesus; and above all she longs for that day
when in the joyful splendor of Thy saints, gleaming with the
radiance of the Beatific Vision, her feathers shall be like gold,
resplendent with the joy of Thy countenance.
Rightly then may she exult, ‘His left
hand is under my head and His right hand doth embrace me.’ The left
hand signifies the memory of that matchless love, which moved Him to
lay down His life for His friends; and the right hand is the
Beatific Vision which He hath promised to His own, and the delight
they have in His presence. The Psalmist sings rapturously, ‘At Thy
right hand there is pleasure for evermore’ (Ps. 16.11):
so we are warranted in explaining the right hand as that divine and
deifying joy of His presence.
Rightly too is that wondrous and
ever-memorable love symbolized as His left hand, upon which the
Bride rests her head until iniquity be done away: for He sustains
the purpose of her mind, lest it should be turned aside to earthly,
carnal desires. For the flesh wars against the spirit: ‘The
corruptible body presseth down the soul, and the earthly tabernacle
weigheth down the mind that museth upon many things’ (Wisdom 9.15).
What could result from the contemplation of compassion so marvelous
and so undeserved, favor so free and so well attested, kindness so
unexpected, clemency so unconquerable, grace so amazing except that
the soul should withdraw from all sinful affections, reject all that
is inconsistent with God’s love, and yield herself wholly to
heavenly things? No wonder is it that the Bride, moved by the
perfume of these unctions, runs swiftly, all on fire with love, yet
reckons herself as loving all too little in return for the
Bridegroom’s love. And rightly, since it is no great matter that a
little dust should be all consumed with love of that Majesty which
loved her first and which revealed itself as wholly bent on saving
her. For ‘God so loved the world that He gave His only-begotten Son,
that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish but have
everlasting life’ (John 3.16). This sets
forth the Father’s love. But ‘He hath poured out His soul unto
death,’ was written of the Son (Isa. 53.12). And of the
Holy Spirit it is said, ‘The Comforter which is the Holy Ghost whom
the Father will send in My name, He shall teach you all things, and
bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto
you’ (John 14.26).
It is plain, therefore, that God loves us, and loves us with all His
heart; for the Holy Trinity altogether loves us, if we may venture
so to speak of the infinite and incomprehensible Godhead who is
essentially one.
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter V. Of the Christian's debt of love, how
great it is
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter V.
Of the Christian’s debt of love, how great it is
From the contemplation of what has
been said, we see plainly that God is to be loved, and that He has a
just claim upon our love. But the infidel does not acknowledge the
Son of God, and so he can know neither the Father nor the Holy
Spirit; for he that honoureth not the Son, honoureth not the Father
which sent Him, nor the Spirit whom He hath sent (John 5.23).
He knows less of God than we; no wonder that he loves God less. This
much he understands at least—that he owes all he is to his Creator.
But how will it be with me? For I know that my God is not merely the
bounteous Bestower of my life, the generous Provider for all my
needs, the pitiful Consoler of all my sorrows, the wise Guide of my
course: but that He is far more than all that. He saves me with an
abundant deliverance: He is my eternal Preserver, the portion of my
inheritance, my glory. Even so it is written, ‘With Him is plenteous
redemption’ (Ps. 130.7); and again, ‘He
entered in once into the holy place, having obtained eternal
redemption for us’ (Heb. 9.12). Of His salvation it is written, ‘He
forsaketh not His that be godly; but they are preserved for ever’ (Ps. 37.28); and of His bounty, ‘Good measure,
pressed down and shaken together, and running over, shall men give
into your bosom’ (Luke 6.38); and in another place, ‘Eye hath not
seen nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man,
those things which God hath prepared for them that love Him’ (I Cor. 2.9).
He will glorify us, even as the apostle beareth witness, saying, ‘We
look for the Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall change our
vile body that it may be fashioned like unto His glorious body’ (Phil. 3.20f); and again, ‘I reckon that the
sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with
the glory which shall be revealed in us’ (Rom. 8.18); and once more,
‘Our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a
far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory; while we look not at
the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen (II Cor.
4.17f).
’What shall I render unto the Lord for
all His benefits towards me?’ (Ps. 116.12). Reason and
natural justice alike move me to give up myself wholly to loving Him
to whom I owe all that I have and am. But faith shows me that I
should love Him far more than I love myself, as I come to realize
that He hath given me not my own life only, but even Himself. Yet,
before the time of full revelation had come, before the Word was
made flesh, died on the Cross, came forth from the grave, and
returned to His Father; before God had shown us how much He loved us
by all this plenitude of grace, the commandment had been uttered,
‘Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and with all
thy soul and with all thy might’ (Deut. 6.5), that is, with all thy being, all thy
knowledge, all thy powers. And it was not unjust for God to claim
this from His own work and gifts. Why should not the creature love
his Creator, who gave him the power to love? Why should he not love
Him with all his being, since it is by His gift alone that he can do
anything that is good? It was God’s creative grace that out of
nothingness raised us to the dignity of manhood; and from this
appears our duty to love Him, and the justice of His claim to that
love. But how infinitely is the benefit increased when we bethink
ourselves of His fulfillment of the promise, ‘thou, Lord, shalt save
both man and beast: how excellent is Thy mercy, O Lord! ’ (Ps. 36.6f.). For we, who
‘turned our glory into the similitude of a calf that eateth hay’ (Ps. 106.20), by our evil deeds debased ourselves
so that we might be compared unto the beasts that perish. I owe all
that I am to Him who made me: but how can I pay my debt to Him who
redeemed me, and in such wondrous wise? Creation was not so vast a
work as redemption; for it is written of man and of all things that
were made, ‘He spake the word, and they were made’ (Ps. 148.5). But to redeem that creation which
sprang into being at His word, how much He spake, what wonders He
wrought, what hardships He endured, what shames He suffered!
Therefore what reward shall I give unto the Lord for all the
benefits which He hath done unto me? In the first creation He gave
me myself; but in His new creation He gave me Himself, and by that
gift restored to me the self that I had lost. Created first and then
restored, I owe Him myself twice over in return for myself. But what
have I to offer Him for the gift of Himself? Could I multiply myself
a thousand-fold and then give Him all, what would that be in
comparison with God?
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter VI. A brief summary
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter VI.
A brief summary
Admit that God deserves to be loved
very much, yea, boundlessly, because He loved us first, He infinite
and we nothing, loved us, miserable sinners, with a love so great
and so free. This is why I said at the beginning that the measure of
our love to God is to love immeasurably. For since our love is
toward God, who is infinite and immeasurable, how can we bound or
limit the love we owe Him? Besides, our love is not a gift but a
debt. And since it is the Godhead who loves us, Himself boundless,
eternal, supreme love, of whose greatness there is no end, yea, and
His wisdom is infinite, whose peace passeth all understanding; since
it is He who loves us, I say, can we think of repaying Him
grudgingly? ‘I will love Thee, O Lord, my strength. The Lord is my
rock and my fortress and my deliverer, my God, my strength, in whom
I will trust’ (Ps. 18.1f). He is all that I need, all that I long
for. My God and my help, I will love Thee for Thy great goodness;
not so much as I might, surely, but as much as I can. I cannot love
Thee as Thou deservest to be loved, for I cannot love Thee more than
my own feebleness permits. I will love Thee more when Thou deemest
me worthy to receive greater capacity for loving; yet never so
perfectly as Thou hast deserved of me. ‘Thine eyes did see my
substance, yet being unperfect; and in Thy book all my members were
written’ (PS. 139.16). Yet Thou recordest in that book all who do
what they can, even though they cannot do what they ought. Surely I
have said enough to show how God should be loved and why. But who
has felt, who can know, who express, how much we should love him.
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter VII. Of love toward God not without reward:
and how the hunger of man's heart cannot be satisfied with earthly
things
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter VII.
Of love toward God not without reward: and how the
hunger of man’s heart cannot be satisfied with earthly things
And now let us consider what profit we
shall have from loving God. Even though our knowledge of this is
imperfect, still that is better than to ignore it altogether. I have
already said (when it was a question of wherefore and in what manner
God should be loved) that there was a double reason constraining us:
His right and our advantage. Having written as best I can, though
unworthily, of God’s right to be loved. I have still to treat of the
recompense which that love brings. For although God would be loved
without respect of reward, yet He wills not to leave love
unrewarded. True charity cannot be left destitute, even though she
is unselfish and seeketh not her own (I Cor. 13.5). Love is an affection of the soul,
not a contract: it cannot rise from a mere agreement, nor is it so
to be gained. It is spontaneous in its origin and impulse; and true
love is its own satisfaction. It has its reward; but that reward is
the object beloved. For whatever you seem to love, if it is on
account of something else, what you do really love is that something
else, not the apparent object of desire. St. Paul did not preach the
Gospel that he might earn his bread; he ate that he might be
strengthened for his ministry. What he loved was not bread, but the
Gospel. True love does not demand a reward, but it deserves one.
Surely no one offers to pay for love; yet some recompense is due to
one who loves, and if his love endures he will doubtless receive it.
On a lower plane of action, it is the
reluctant, not the eager, whom we urge by promises of reward. Who
would think of paying a man to do what he was yearning to do
already? For instance no one would hire a hungry man to eat, or a
thirsty man to drink, or a mother to nurse her own child. Who would
think of bribing a farmer to dress his own vineyard, or to dig about
his orchard, or to rebuild his house? So, all the more, one who
loves God truly asks no other recompense than God Himself; for if he
should demand anything else it would be the prize that he loved and
not God.
It is natural for a man to desire what
he reckons better than that which he has already, and be satisfied
with nothing which lacks that special quality which he misses. Thus,
if it is for her beauty that he loves his wife, he will cast longing
eyes after a fairer woman. If he is clad in a rich garment, he will
covet a costlier one; and no matter how rich he may be he will envy
a man richer than himself. Do we not see people every day, endowed
with vast estates, who keep on joining field to field, dreaming of
wider boundaries for their lands? Those who dwell in palaces are
ever adding house to house, continually building up and tearing
down, remodeling and changing. Men in high places are driven by
insatiable ambition to clutch at still greater prizes. And nowhere
is there any final satisfaction, because nothing there can be
defined as absolutely the best or highest. But it is natural that
nothing should content a man’s desires but the very best, as he
reckons it. Is it not, then, mad folly always to be craving for
things which can never quiet our longings, much less satisfy them?
No matter how many such things one has, he is always lusting after
what he has not; never at peace, he sighs for new possessions.
Discontented, he spends himself in fruitless toil, and finds only
weariness in the evanescent and unreal pleasures of the world. In
his greediness, he counts all that he has clutched as nothing in
comparison with what is beyond his grasp, and loses all pleasure in
his actual possessions by longing after what he has not, yet covets.
No man can ever hope to own all things. Even the little one does
possess is got only with toil and is held in fear; since each is
certain to lose what he hath when God’s day, appointed though
unrevealed, shall come. But the perverted will struggles towards the
ultimate good by devious ways, yearning after satisfaction, yet led
astray by vanity and deceived by wickedness. Ah, if you wish to
attain to the consummation of all desire, so that nothing
unfulfilled will be left, why weary yourself with fruitless efforts,
running hither and thither, only to die long before the goal is
reached?
It is so that these impious ones wander
in a circle, longing after something to gratify their yearnings, yet
madly rejecting that which alone can bring them to their desired
end, not by exhaustion but by attainment. They wear themselves out
in vain travail, without reaching their blessed consummation,
because they delight in creatures, not in the Creator. They want to
traverse creation, trying all things one by one, rather than think
of coming to Him who is Lord of all. And if their utmost longing
were realized, so that they should have all the world for their own,
yet without possessing Him who is the Author of all being, then the
same law of their desires would make them contemn what they had and
restlessly seek Him whom they still lacked, that is, God Himself.
Rest is in Him alone. Man knows no peace in the world; but he has no
disturbance when he is with God. And so the soul says with
confidence, ‘Whom have I in heaven but Thee; and there is none upon
earth that I desire in comparison of Thee. God is the strength of my
heart, and my portion for ever. It is good for me to hold me fast by
God, to put my trust in the Lord God’ (Ps. 73.25ff). Even by this way one would
eventually come to God, if only he might have time to test all
lesser goods in turn.
But life is too short, strength too
feeble, and competitors too many, for that course to be practicable.
One could never reach the end, though he were to weary himself with
the long effort and fruitless toil of testing everything that might
seem desirable. It would be far easier and better to make the assay
in imagination rather than in experiment. For the mind is swifter in
operation and keener in discrimination than the bodily senses, to
this very purpose that it may go before the sensuous affections so
that they may cleave to nothing which the mind has found worthless.
And so it is written, ‘Prove all things: hold fast that which is
good’ (I
Thess. 5.21). Which is to say that right judgment should
prepare the way for the heart. Otherwise we may not ascend into the
hill of the Lord nor rise up in His holy place (Ps. 24.3). We should have no
profit in possessing a rational mind if we were to follow the
impulse of the senses, like brute beasts, with no regard at all to
reason. Those whom reason does not guide in their course may indeed
run, but not in the appointed race-track, neglecting the apostolic
counsel, ‘So run that ye may obtain’. For how could they obtain the
prize who put that last of all in their endeavor and run round after
everything else first?
But as for the righteous man, it is not
so with him. He remembers the condemnation pronounced on the
multitude who wander after vanity, who travel the broad way that
leads to death (Matt. 7.13);
and he chooses the King’s highway, turning aside neither to the
right hand nor to the left (Num. 20.17), even as the
prophet saith, ‘The way of the just is uprightness (Isa. 26.7).
Warned by wholesome counsel he shuns the perilous road, and heeds
the direction that shortens the search, forbidding covetousness and
commanding that he sell all that he hath and give to the poor (Matt. 19.21). Blessed, truly, are the poor, for
theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven (Matt. 5.3). They which run
in a race, run all, but distinction is made among the racers. ‘The
Lord knoweth the way of the righteous: and the way of the ungodly
shall perish’ (Ps. 1.6).
‘A small thing that the righteous hath is better than great riches
of the ungodly’ (Ps. 37.16). Even as the
Preacher saith, and the fool discovereth, ‘He that loveth silver
shall not be satisfied with silver’ (Eccles. 5.10). But
Christ saith, ‘Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after
righteousness, for they shall be filled’ (Matt. 5.6). Righteousness
is the natural and essential food of the soul, which can no more be
satisfied by earthly treasures than the hunger of the body can be
satisfied by air. If you should see a starving man standing with
mouth open to the wind, inhaling draughts of air as if in hope of
gratifying his hunger, you would think him lunatic. But it is no
less foolish to imagine that the soul can be satisfied with worldly
things which only inflate it without feeding it. What have spiritual
gifts to do with carnal appetites, or carnal with spiritual? Praise
the Lord, O my soul: who satisfieth thy mouth with good things (Ps. 103.1ff). He bestows bounty immeasurable; He
provokes thee to good, He preserves thee in goodness; He prevents,
He sustains, He fills thee. He moves thee to longing, and it is He
for whom thou longest.
I have said already that the motive for
loving God is God Himself. And I spoke truly, for He is as well the
efficient cause as the final object of our love. He gives the
occasion for love, He creates the affection, He brings the desire to
good effect. He is such that love to Him is a natural due; and so
hope in Him is natural, since our present love would be vain did we
not hope to love Him perfectly some day. Our love is prepared and
rewarded by His. He loves us first, out of His great tenderness;
then we are bound to repay Him with love; and we are permitted to
cherish exultant hopes in Him. ‘He is rich unto all that call upon
Him’ (Rom. 10.12),
yet He has no gift for them better than Himself. He gives Himself as
prize and reward: He is the refreshment of holy soul, the ransom of
those in captivity. ‘The Lord is good unto them that wait for Him’ (Lam. 3.25). What will He be then to those who
gain His presence? But here is a paradox, that no one can seek the
Lord who has not already found Him. It is Thy will, O God, to be
found that Thou mayest be sought, to be sought that Thou mayest the
more truly be found. But though Thou canst be sought and found, Thou
canst not be forestalled. For if we say, ‘Early shall my prayer come
before Thee’ (Ps. 88.13), yet doubtless
all prayer would be lukewarm unless it was animated by Thine
inspiration.
We have spoken of the consummation of
love towards God: now to consider whence such love begins.
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter VIII. Of the first degree of love: wherein
man loves God for self's sake
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter VIII.
Of the first degree of love: wherein man loves God
for self’s sake
Love is one of the four natural
affections, which it is needless to name since everyone knows them.
And because love is natural, it is only right to love the Author of
nature first of all. Hence comes the first and great commandment,
‘Thou shalt love the Lord thy God.’ But nature is so frail and weak
that necessity compels her to love herself first; and this is carnal
love, wherewith man loves himself first and selfishly, as it is
written, ‘That was not first which is spiritual but that which is
natural; and afterward that which is spiritual’ (I Cor. 15.46). This
is not as the precept ordains but as nature directs: ‘No man ever
yet hated his own flesh’ (Eph. 5.29). But if, as is likely, this same love
should grow excessive and, refusing to be contained within the
restraining banks of necessity, should overflow into the fields of
voluptuousness, then a command checks the flood, as if by a dike:
‘Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself’. And this is right: for he
who shares our nature should share our love, itself the fruit of
nature. Wherefore if a man find it a burden, I will not say only to
relieve his brother’s needs, but to minister to his brother’s
pleasures, let him mortify those same affections in himself, lest he
become a transgressor. He may cherish himself as tenderly as he
chooses, if only he remembers to show the same indulgence to his
neighbor. This is the curb of temperance imposed on thee, O man, by
the law of life and conscience, lest thou shouldest follow thine own
lusts to destruction, or become enslaved by those passions which are
the enemies of thy true welfare. Far better divide thine enjoyments
with thy neighbor than with these enemies. And if, after the counsel
of the son of Sirach, thou goest not after thy desires but
refrainest thyself from thine appetites (Ecclus. 18.30); if according to the apostolic
precept having food and raiment thou art therewith content (I Tim. 6.8),
then thou wilt find it easy to abstain from fleshly lusts which war
against the soul, and to divide with thy neighbors what thou hast
refused to thine own desires. That is a temperate and righteous love
which practices self-denial in order to minister to a brother’s
necessity. So our selfish love grows truly social, when it includes
our neighbors in its circle.
But if thou art reduced to want by such
benevolence, what then? What indeed, except to pray with all
confidence unto Him who giveth to all men liberally and upbraideth
not (James 1.5),
who openeth His hand and filleth all things living with
plenteousness (Ps. 145.16). For
doubtless He that giveth to most men more than they need will not
fail thee as to the necessaries of life, even as He hath promised:
‘Seek ye the Kingdom of God, and all those things shall be added
unto you’ (Luke 12.31).
God freely promises all things needful to those who deny themselves
for love of their neighbors; and to bear the yoke of modesty and
sobriety, rather than to let sin reign in our mortal body (Rom. 6.12),
that is indeed to seek the Kingdom of God and to implore His aid
against the tyranny of sin. It is surely justice to share our
natural gifts with those who share our nature.
But if we are to love our neighbors as
we ought, we must have regard to God also: for it is only in God
that we can pay that debt of love aright. Now a man cannot love his
neighbor in God, except he love God Himself; wherefore we must love
God first, in order to love our neighbors in Him. This too, like all
good things, is the Lord’s doing, that we should love Him, for He
hath endowed us with the possibility of love. He who created nature
sustains it; nature is so constituted that its Maker is its
protector for ever. Without Him nature could not have begun to be;
without Him it could not subsist at all. That we might not be
ignorant of this, or vainly attribute to ourselves the beneficence
of our Creator, God has determined in the depths of His wise counsel
that we should be subject to tribulations. So when man’s strength
fails and God comes to his aid, it is meet and right that man,
rescued by God’s hand, should glorify Him, as it is written, ‘Call
upon Me in the time of trouble; so will I hear thee, and thou shalt
praise Me’ (Ps. 50.15).
In such wise man, animal and carnal by nature, and loving only
himself, begins to love God by reason of that very self-love; since
he learns that in God he can accomplish all things that are good,
and that without God he can do nothing.
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter IX. Of the second and third degrees of love
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter IX.
Of the second and third degrees of love
So then in the beginning man loves God,
not for God’s sake, but for his own. It is something for him to know
how little he can do by himself and how much by God’s help, and in
that knowledge to order himself rightly towards God, his sure
support. But when tribulations, recurring again and again, constrain
him to turn to God for unfailing help, would not even a heart as
hard as iron, as cold as marble, be softened by the goodness of such
a Savior, so that he would love God not altogether selfishly, but
because He is God? Let frequent troubles drive us to frequent
supplications; and surely, tasting, we must see how gracious the
Lord is (Ps. 34.8).
Thereupon His goodness once realized draws us to love Him
unselfishly, yet more than our own needs impel us to love Him
selfishly: even as the Samaritans told the woman who announced that
it was Christ who was at the well: ‘Now we believe, not because of
thy saying: for we have heard Him ourselves, and know that this is
indeed the Christ, the savior of the world’ (John 4.42). We likewise bear the same witness to
our own fleshly nature, saying, ‘No longer do we love God because of
our necessity, but because we have tasted and seen how gracious the
Lord is’. Our temporal wants have a speech of their own, proclaiming
the benefits they have received from God’s favor. Once this is
recognized it will not be hard to fulfill the commandment touching
love to our neighbors; for whosoever loves God aright loves all
God’s creatures. Such love is pure, and finds no burden in the
precept bidding us purify our souls, in obeying the truth through
the Spirit unto unfeigned love of the brethren (I Peter
1.22). Loving as he ought, he counts that command only
just. Such love is thankworthy, since it is spontaneous; pure, since
it is shown not in word nor tongue, but in deed and truth (I John
3.18); just, since it repays what it has received. Whoso
loves in this fashion, loves even as he is loved, and seeks no more
his own but the things which are Christ’s, even as Jesus sought not
His own welfare, but ours, or rather ourselves. Such was the
psalmist’s love when he sang: ‘O give thanks unto the Lord, for He
is gracious’ (Ps. 118.1).
Whosoever praises God for His essential goodness, and not merely
because of the benefits He has bestowed, does really love God for
God’s sake, and not selfishly. The psalmist was not speaking of such
love when he said: ‘So long as thou doest well unto thyself, men
will speak good of thee’(Ps. 49.18). The third degree of love, we
have now seen, is to love God on His own account, solely because He
is God.
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter X. Of the fourth degree of love: wherein man
does not even love self save for God's sake
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter X.
Of the fourth degree of love: wherein man does not
even love self save for God’s sake
How blessed is he who reaches the
fourth degree of love, wherein one loves himself only in God! Thy
righteousness standeth like the strong mountains, O God. Such love
as this is God’s hill, in the which it pleaseth Him to dwell. ‘Who
shall ascend into the hill of the Lord?’ ‘O that I had wings like a
dove; for then would I flee away and be at rest.’ ‘At Salem is His
tabernacle; and His dwelling in Sion.’ ‘Woe is me, that I am
constrained to dwell with Mesech! ’ (Ps. 24.3; 55.6; 76.2;
120.5). When shall this flesh and blood, this earthen vessel which
is my soul’s tabernacle, attain thereto? When shall my soul, rapt
with divine love and altogether self-forgetting, yea, become like a
broken vessel, yearn wholly for God, and, joined unto the Lord, be
one spirit with Him? When shall she exclaim, ‘My flesh and my heart
faileth; but God is the strength of my heart and my portion for
ever’ (Ps. 73.26). I would count
him blessed and holy to whom such rapture has been vouchsafed in
this mortal life, for even an instant to lose thyself, as if thou
wert emptied and lost and swallowed up in God, is no human love; it
is celestial. But if sometimes a poor mortal feels that heavenly joy
for a rapturous moment, then this wretched life envies his
happiness, the malice of daily trifles disturbs him, this body of
death weighs him down, the needs of the flesh are imperative, the
weakness of corruption fails him, and above all brotherly love calls
him back to duty. Alas! that voice summons him to re-enter his own
round of existence; and he must ever cry out lamentably, ‘O Lord, I
am oppressed: undertake for me’ (Isa. 38.14); and again, ‘O wretched man that I
am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death?’ (Rom. 7.24).
Seeing that the Scripture saith, God
has made all for His own glory (Isa. 43.7), surely His
creatures ought to conform themselves, as much as they can, to His
will. In Him should all our affections center, so that in all things
we should seek only to do His will, not to please ourselves. And
real happiness will come, not in gratifying our desires or in
gaining transient pleasures, but in accomplishing God’s will for us:
even as we pray every day: ‘Thy will be done in earth as it is in
heaven’ (Matt. 6.10). O chaste
and holy love! O sweet and gracious affection! O pure and cleansed
purpose, thoroughly washed and purged from any admixture of
selfishness, and sweetened by contact with the divine will! To reach
this state is to become godlike. As a drop of water poured into wine
loses itself, and takes the color and savor of wine; or as a bar of
iron, heated red-hot, becomes like fire itself, forgetting its own
nature; or as the air, radiant with sun-beams, seems not so much to
be illuminated as to be light itself; so in the saints all human
affections melt away by some unspeakable transmutation into the will
of God. For how could God be all in all, if anything merely human
remained in man? The substance will endure, but in another beauty, a
higher power, a greater glory. When will that be? Who will see, who
possess it? ‘When shall I come to appear before the presence of
God?’ (Ps. 42.2). ‘My heart hath
talked of Thee, Seek ye My face: Thy face, Lord, will I seek’ (Ps.
27.8). Lord, thinkest Thou that I, even I shall see Thy
holy temple?
In this life, I think, we cannot fully
and perfectly obey that precept, ‘Thou shalt love the Lord thy God
with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy
strength, and with all thy mind’ (Luke 10.27). For here the heart must take
thought for the body; and the soul must energize the flesh; and the
strength must guard itself from impairment. And by God’s favor, must
seek to increase. It is therefore impossible to offer up all our
being to God, to yearn altogether for His face, so long as we must
accommodate our purposes and aspirations to these fragile, sickly
bodies of ours. Wherefore the soul may hope to possess the fourth
degree of love, or rather to be possessed by it, only when it has
been clothed upon with that spiritual and immortal body, which will
be perfect, peaceful, lovely, and in everything wholly subjected to
the spirit. And to this degree no human effort can attain: it is in
God’s power to give it to whom He wills. Then the soul will easily
reach that highest stage, because no lusts of the flesh will retard
its eager entrance into the joy of its Lord, and no troubles will
disturb its peace. May we not think that the holy martyrs enjoyed
this grace, in some degree at least, before they laid down their
victorious bodies? Surely that was immeasurable strength of love
which enraptured their souls, enabling them to laugh at fleshly
torments and to yield their lives gladly. But even though the
frightful pain could not destroy their peace of mind, it must have
impaired somewhat its perfection.
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter XI. Of the attainment of this perfection of
love only at the resurrection
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter XI.
Of the attainment of this perfection of love only
at the resurrection
What of the souls already released
from their bodies? We believe that they are overwhelmed in that vast
sea of eternal light and of luminous eternity. But no one denies
that they still hope and desire to receive their bodies again:
whence it is plain that they are not yet wholly transformed, and
that something of self remains yet unsurrendered. Not until death is
swallowed up in victory, and perennial light overflows the uttermost
bounds of darkness, not until celestial glory clothes our bodies,
can our souls be freed entirely from self and give themselves up to
God. For until then souls are bound to bodies, if not by a vital
connection of sense, still by natural affection; so that without
their bodies they cannot attain to their perfect consummation, nor
would they if they could. And although there is no defect in the
soul itself before the restoration of its body, since it has already
attained to the highest state of which it is by itself capable, yet
the spirit would not yearn for reunion with the flesh if without the
flesh it could be consummated.
And finally, ‘Right dear in the sight
of the Lord is the death of His saints’ (Ps. 116.15). But if
their death is precious, what must such a life as theirs be! No
wonder that the body shall seem to add fresh glory to the spirit;
for though it is weak and mortal, it has availed not a little for
mutual help. How truly he spake who said, ‘All things work together
for good to them that love God’ (Rom. 8.28). The body is a help to the soul that
loves God, even when it is ill, even when it is dead, and all the
more when it is raised again from the dead: for illness is an aid to
penitence; death is the gate of rest; and the resurrection will
bring consummation. So, rightly, the soul would not be perfected
without the body, since she recognizes that in every condition it
has been needful to her good.
The flesh then is a good and faithful
comrade for a good soul: since even when it is a burden it assists;
when the help ceases, the burden ceases too; and when once more the
assistance begins, there is no longer a burden. The first state is
toilsome, but fruitful; the second is idle, but not monotonous: the
third is glorious. Hear how the Bridegroom in Canticles bids us to
this threefold progress: ‘Eat, O friends; drink, yea, drink
abundantly, O beloved’ (Cant. 5.1). He offers food to those who are
laboring with bodily toil; then He calls the resting souls whose
bodies are laid aside, to drink; and finally He urges those who have
resumed their bodies to drink abundantly. Surely those He styles
‘beloved’ must overflow with charity; and that is the difference
between them and the others, whom He calls not ‘beloved’ but
‘friends’. Those who yet groan in the body are dear to Him,
according to the love that they have; those released from the bonds
of flesh are dearer because they have become readier and abler to
love than hitherto. But beyond either of these classes are those
whom He calls ‘beloved’: for they have received the second garment,
that is, their glorified bodies, so that now nothing of self remains
to hinder or disturb them, and they yield themselves eagerly and
entirely to loving God. This cannot be so with the others; for the
first have the weight of the body to bear, and the second desires
the body again with something of selfish expectation.
At first then the faithful soul eats
her bread, but alas! in the sweat of her face. Dwelling in the
flesh, she walks as yet by faith, which must work through love. As
faith without works is dead, so work itself is food for her; even as
our Lord saith, ‘My meat is to do the will of Him that sent Me’ (John 4.34). When the
flesh is laid aside, she eats no more the bread of carefulness, but
is allowed to drink deeply of the wine of love, as if after a
repast. But the wine is not yet unmingled; even as the Bridegroom
saith in another place, ‘I have drunk My wine with My milk’ (Cant. 5.1). For the soul
mixes with the wine of God’s love the milk of natural affection,
that is, the desire for her body and its glorification. She glows
with the wine of holy love which she has drunk; but she is not yet
all on fire, for she has tempered the potency of that wine with
milk. The unmingled wine would enrapture the soul and make her
wholly unconscious of self; but here is no such transport for she is
still desirous of her body. When that desire is appeased, when the
one lack is supplied, what should hinder her then from yielding
herself utterly to God, losing her own likeness and being made like
unto Him? At last she attains to that chalice of the heavenly
wisdom, of which it is written, ‘My cup shall be full.’ Now indeed
she is refreshed with the abundance of the house of God, where all
selfish, carking care is done away, and where, for ever safe, she
drinks the fruit of the vine, new and pure, with Christ in the
Kingdom of His Father (Matt. 26.29).
It is Wisdom who spreads this
threefold supper where all the repast is love; Wisdom who feeds the
toilers, who gives drink to those who rest, who floods with rapture
those that reign with Christ. Even as at an earthly banquet custom
and nature serve meat first and then wine, so here. Before death,
while we are still in mortal flesh, we eat the labors of our hands,
we swallow with an effort the food so gained; but after death, we
shall begin eagerly to drink in the spiritual life and finally,
reunited to our bodies, and rejoicing in fullness of delight, we
shall be refreshed with immortality. This is what the Bridegroom
means when He saith: ‘Eat, O friends; drink, yea, drink abundantly,
O beloved.’ Eat before death; begin to drink after death; drink
abundantly after the resurrection. Rightly are they called beloved
who have drunk abundantly of love; rightly do they drink abundantly
who are worthy to be brought to the marriage supper of the Lamb,
eating and drinking at His table in His Kingdom (Rev. 19.9; Luke 22.30). At that supper, He shall present to
Himself a glorious Church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such
thing (Eph. 5.27). Then truly shall He refresh His
beloved; then He shall give them drink of His pleasures, as out of
the river (Ps. 36.8). While the Bridegroom clasps the Bride
in tender, pure embrace, then the rivers of the flood thereof shall
make glad the city of God (Ps. 46.4). And this refers
to the Son of God Himself, who will come forth and serve them, even
as He hath promised; so that in that day the righteous shall be glad
and rejoice before God: they shall also be merry and joyful (Ps. 68.3).
Here indeed is appeasement without weariness: here never-quenched
thirst for knowledge, without distress; here eternal and infinite
desire which knows no want; here, finally, is that sober inebriation
which comes not from drinking new wine but from enjoying God (Acts 2.13).
The fourth degree of love is attained for ever when we love God only
and supremely, when we do not even love ourselves except for God’s
sake; so that He Himself is the reward of them that love Him, the
everlasting reward of an everlasting love.
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter XII. Of love: out of a letter to the
Carthusians
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter XII.
Of love: out of a letter to the Carthusians
I remember writing a letter to the
holy Carthusian brethren, wherein I discussed these degrees of love,
and spoke of charity in other words, although not in another sense,
than here. It may be well to repeat a portion of that letter, since
it is easier to copy than to dictate anew.
To love our neighbor’s welfare as much
as our own: that is true and sincere charity out of a pure heart,
and of a good conscience, and of faith unfeigned (I Tim. 1.5). Whosoever
loves his own prosperity only is proved thereby not to love good for
its own sake, since he loves it on his own account. And so he cannot
sing with the psalmist, ‘O give thanks unto the Lord, for He is
gracious’ (Ps. 118.1). Such a man would praise God, not
because He is goodness, but because He has been good to him: he
could take to himself the reproach of the same writer, ‘So long as
Thou doest well unto him, he will speak good of Thee’ (Ps. 49.18, Vulg.). One
praises God because He is mighty, another because He is gracious,
yet another solely because He is essential goodness. The first is a
slave and fears for himself; the second is greedy, desiring further
benefits; but the third is a son who honors his Father. He who
fears, he who profits, are both concerned about self-interest. Only
in the son is that charity which seeketh not her own (I Cor. 13.5). Wherefore I take this saying,
‘The law of the Lord is an undefiled law, converting the soul’ (Ps.
19.7) to be of charity; because charity alone is able to
turn the soul away from love of self and of the world to pure love
of God. Neither fear nor self-interest can convert the soul. They
may change the appearance, perhaps even the conduct, but never the
object of supreme desire. Sometimes a slave may do God’s work; but
because he does not toil voluntarily, he remains in bondage. So a
mercenary may serve God, but because he puts a price on his service,
he is enchained by his own greediness. For where there is
self-interest there is isolation; and such isolation is like the
dark corner of a room where dust and rust befoul. Fear is the motive
which constrains the slave; greed binds the selfish man, by which he
is tempted when he is drawn away by his own lust and enticed (James 1.14). But neither fear nor self-interest
is undefiled, nor can they convert the soul. Only charity can
convert the soul, freeing it from unworthy motives.
Next, I call it undefiled because it
never keeps back anything of its own for itself. When a man boasts
of nothing as his very own, surely all that he has is God’s; and
what is God’s cannot be unclean. The undefiled law of the Lord is
that love which bids men seek not their own, but every man another’s
wealth. It is called the law of the Lord as much because He lives in
accordance with it as because no man has it except by gift from Him.
Nor is it improper to say that even God lives by law, when that law
is the law of love. For what preserves the glorious and ineffable
Unity of the blessed Trinity, except love? Charity, the law of the
Lord, joins the Three Persons into the unity of the Godhead and
unites the holy Trinity in the bond of peace. Do not suppose me to
imply that charity exists as an accidental quality of Deity; for
whatever could be conceived of as wanting in the divine Nature is
not God. No, it is the very substance of the Godhead; and my
assertion is neither novel nor extraordinary, since St. John says,
‘God is love’ (I John 4.8).
One may therefore say with truth that love is at once God and the
gift of God, essential love imparting the quality of love. Where the
word refers to the Giver, it is the name of His very being; where
the gift is meant, it is the name of a quality. Love is the eternal
law whereby the universe was created and is ruled. Since all things
are ordered in measure and number and weight, and nothing is left
outside the realm of law, that universal law cannot itself be
without a law, which is itself. So love though it did not create
itself, does surely govern itself by its own decree.
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter XIII. Of the law of self-will and desire, of
slaves and hirelings
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter XIII.
Of the law of self-will and desire, of slaves and
hirelings
Furthermore, the slave and the hireling
have a law, not from the Lord, but of their own contriving; the one
does not love God, the other loves something else more than God.
They have a law of their own, not of God, I say; yet it is subject
to the law of the Lord. For though they can make laws for
themselves, they cannot supplant the changeless order of the eternal
law. Each man is a law unto himself, when he sets up his will
against the universal law, perversely striving to rival his Creator,
to be wholly independent, making his will his only law. What a heavy
and burdensome yoke upon all the sons of Adam, bowing down our
necks, so that our life draweth nigh unto hell. ‘O wretched man that
I am! Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?’ (Rom. 7.24). I am weighed down, I am almost
overwhelmed, so that ‘If the Lord had not helped me, it had not
failed but my soul had been put to silence’ (Ps. 94.17). Job was
groaning under this load when he lamented: ‘Why hast Thou set me as
a mark against Thee, so that I am a burden to myself?’ (Job 7.20).
He was a burden to himself through the law which was of his own
devising: yet he could not escape God’s law, for he was set as a
mark against God. The eternal law of righteousness ordains that he
who will not submit to God’s sweet rule shall suffer the bitter
tyranny of self: but he who wears the easy yoke and light burden of
love (Matt.
11.30) will escape the intolerable weight of his own
self-will. Wondrously and justly does that eternal law retain rebels
in subjection, so that they are unable to escape. They are subject
to God’s power, yet deprived of happiness with Him, unable to dwell
with God in light and rest and glory everlasting. O Lord my God,
‘why dost Thou not pardon my transgression and take away mine
iniquity?’ (Job 7.21). Then freed from
the weight of my own will, I can breathe easily under the light
burden of love. I shall not be coerced by fear, nor allured by
mercenary desires; for I shall be led by the Spirit of God, that
free Spirit whereby Thy sons are led, which beareth witness with my
spirit that I am among the children of God (Rom. 8.16). So shall I be under that law which is
Thine; and as Thou art, so shall I be in the world. Whosoever do
what the apostle bids, ‘Owe no man anything, but to love one
another’ (Rom. 13.8), are doubtless even in this life
conformed to God’s likeness: they are neither slaves nor hirelings
but sons.
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter XIV. Of the law of the love of sons
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard of
Clairvaux, Chapter XIV.
Of the law of the love of sons
Now the children have their law, even
though it is written, ‘The law is not made for a righteous man’ (I Tim. 1.9).
For it must be remembered that there is one law having to do with
the spirit of servitude, given to fear, and another with the spirit
of liberty, given in tenderness. The children are not constrained by
the first, yet they could not exist without the second: even as St.
Paul writes, ‘Ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to
fear; but ye have received the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry,
Abba, Father’ (Rom. 8.15).
And again to show that that same righteous man was not under the
law, he says: ‘To them that are under the law, I became as under the
law, that I might gain them that are under the law; to them that are
without law, as without law (being not without law to God, but under
the law to Christ)’ (I Cor. 9.20f). So it is rightly said, not that
the righteous do not have a law, but, ‘The law is not made for a
righteous man’, that is, it is not imposed on rebels but freely
given to those willingly obedient, by Him whose goodness established
it. Wherefore the Lord saith meekly: ‘Take My yoke upon you’, which
may be paraphrased thus: ‘I do not force it on you, if you are
reluctant; but if you will you may bear it. Otherwise it will be
weariness, not rest, that you shall find for your souls.’
Love is a good and pleasant law; it is
not only easy to bear, but it makes the laws of slaves and hirelings
tolerable; not destroying but completing them; as the Lord saith: ‘I
am not come to destroy the law, but to fulfill’ (Matt. 5.17). It tempers
the fear of the slave, it regulates the desires of the hireling, it
mitigates the severity of each. Love is never without fear, but it
is godly fear. Love is never without desire, but it is lawful
desire. So love perfects the law of service by infusing devotion; it
perfects the law of wages by restraining covetousness. Devotion
mixed with fear does not destroy it, but purges it. Then the burden
of fear which was intolerable while it was only servile, becomes
tolerable; and the fear itself remains ever pure and filial. For
though we read: ‘Perfect love casteth out fear’ (I John
4.18), we understand by that the suffering which is never
absent from servile fear, the cause being put for the effect, as
often elsewhere. So, too, self-interest is restrained within due
bounds when love supervenes; for then it rejects evil things
altogether, prefers better things to those merely good, and cares
for the good only on account of the better. In like manner, by God’s
grace, it will come about that man will love his body and all things
pertaining to his body, for the sake of his soul. He will love his
soul for God’s sake; and he will love God for Himself alone.
Christian book, On Loving God, by St. Bernard
of Clairvaux, Chapter XV. Of the four degrees of love, and of the
blessed state of the heavenly fatherland
Christian book, On Loving God, by St.
Bernard of Clairvaux, Chapter XV.
Of the four degrees of love, and of the blessed
state of the heavenly fatherland
Nevertheless, since we are carnal and
are born of the lust of the flesh, it must be that our desire and
our love shall have its beginning in the flesh. But rightly guided
by the grace of God through these degrees, it will have its
consummation in the spirit: for that was not first which is
spiritual but that which is natural; and afterward that which is
spiritual (I Cor. 15.46). And we
must bear the image of the earthy first, before we can bear the
image of the heavenly. At first, man loves himself for his own sake.
That is the flesh, which can appreciate nothing beyond itself. Next,
he perceives that he cannot exist by himself, and so begins by faith
to seek after God, and to love Him as something necessary to his own
welfare. That is the second degree, to love God, not for God’s sake,
but selfishly. But when he has learned to worship God and to seek
Him aright, meditating on God, reading God’s Word, praying and
obeying His commandments, he comes gradually to know what God is,
and finds Him altogether lovely. So, having tasted and seen how
gracious the Lord is (Ps. 34.8), he advances to the third degree, when
he loves God, not merely as his benefactor but as God. Surely he
must remain long in this state; and I know not whether it would be
possible to make further progress in this life to that fourth degree
and perfect condition wherein man loves himself solely for God’s
sake. Let any who have attained so far bear record; I confess it
seems beyond my powers. Doubtless it will be reached when the good
and faithful servant shall have entered into the joy of his Lord (Matt. 25.21), and been satisfied with the
plenteousness of God’s house (Ps. 36.8). For then in
wondrous wise he will forget himself and as if delivered from self,
he will grow wholly God’s. Joined unto the Lord, he will then be one
spirit with Him (I Cor. 6.17). This was what the prophet meant,
I think, when he said: ’ I will go forth in the strength of the Lord
God: and will make mention of Thy righteousness only’ (Ps. 71.16).
Surely he knew that when he should go forth in the spiritual
strength of the Lord, he would have been freed from the infirmities
of the flesh, and would have nothing carnal to think of, but would
be wholly filled in his spirit with the righteousness of the Lord.
In that day the members of Christ can
say of themselves what St. Paul testified concerning their Head:
‘Yea, though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now
henceforth know we Him no more’ (II Cor. 5.16). None shall thereafter know
himself after the flesh; for ‘flesh and blood cannot inherit the
Kingdom of God’ (I Cor. 15.50). Not that there will be no true
substance of the flesh, but all carnal needs will be taken away, and
the love of the flesh will be swallowed up in the love of the
spirit, so that our weak human affections will be made divinely
strong. Then the net of charity which as it is drawn through the
great and wide sea doth not cease to gather every kind of fish, will
be drawn to the shore; and the bad will be cast away, while only the
good will be kept (Matt. 13.48). In this
life the net of all-including love gathers every kind of fish into
its wide folds, becoming all things to all men, sharing adversity or
prosperity, rejoicing with them that do rejoice, and weeping with
them that weep (Rom. 12.15). But when the net is drawn to shore,
whatever causes pain will be rejected, like the bad fish, while only
what is pleasant and joyous will be kept. Do you not recall how St.
Paul said: ‘Who is weak and I am not weak? Who is offended and I
burn not?’ And yet weakness and offense were far from him. So too he
bewailed many which had sinned already and had not repented, though
he was neither the sinner nor the penitent. But there is a city made
glad by the rivers of the flood of grace (Ps. 46.4),
and whose gates the Lord loveth more than all the dwellings of Jacob
(Ps. 87.2). In it is no place for lamentation over
those condemned to everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his
angels (Matt. 25.41). In these earthly dwellings,
though men may rejoice, yet they have still other battles to fight,
other mortal perils to undergo. But in the heavenly Fatherland no
sorrow nor sadness can enter: as it is written, ‘The habitation of
all rejoicing ones is in Thee’ (Ps. 87. 7, Vulg.); and again, ‘Everlasting joy
shall be unto them’ (Isa. 61.7). Nor could they
recall things piteous, for then they will make mention of God’s
righteousness only. Accordingly, there will be no need for the
exercise of compassion, for no misery will be there to inspire pity.
Indexes
Indexes
Index of Scripture References
Index of Scripture References
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Books
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