On
Cleaving to God Attributed to Albert the Great (Albertus Magnus) |
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Chapter 1 On the highest and supreme perfection of man, in so far as it is possible in this life I have had the
idea of writing something for myself on and about the state of complete
and full abstraction from everything and of cleaving freely, confidently,
nakedly and firmly to God alone, so as to describe it fully (in so far
as it is possible in this abode of exile and pilgrimage), especially
since the goal of Christian perfection is the love by which we cleave
to God. In fact everyone is obligated, to this loving cleaving to God
as necessary for salvation, in the form of observing the commandments
and conforming to the divine will, and the observation of the commandments
excludes everything that is contrary to the nature and habit of love,
including mortal sin. Members of religious orders have committed themselves
in addition to evangelical perfection, and to the things that constitute
a voluntary and counseled perfection by means of which one may arrive
more quickly to the supreme goal which is God. The observation of these
additional commitments excludes as well the things that hinder the working
and fervor of love, and without which one can come to God, and these
include the renunciation of all things, of both body and mind, exactly
as one's vow of profession entails. Since indeed the Lord God is Spirit,
and those who worship him must worship in spirit and in truth, in other
words, by knowledge and love, that is, understanding and desire, stripped
of all images. This is what is referred to in Matthew 6.6, 'When you
pray, enter into your inner chamber,' that is, your inner heart, 'and
having closed the door,' that is of your senses, and there with a pure
heart and a clear conscience, and with faith unfeigned, 'pray to your
Father,' in spirit and in truth, 'in secret.' This can be done best
when a man is disengaged and removed from everything else and completely
recollected within himself. There, in the presence of Jesus Christ,
with everything, in general and individually, excluded and wiped out,
the mind alone turns in security confidently to the Lord its God with
its desire. In this way it pours itself forth into him in full sincerity
with its whole heart and the yearning of its love, in the most inward
part of all its faculties, and is plunged, enlarged, set on fire and
dissolved into him.
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