On
Cleaving to God Attributed to Albert the Great (Albertus Magnus) |
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Chapter 10 That one should not be
concerned about feeling tangible devotion so much as Furthermore
you should not be much concerned about tangible devotion, the experience
of sweetness or tears, but rather that you should be mentally united
with God within yourself by a good will in your intellect. For what
pleases God above everything is a mind free from imaginations that is
images, ideas and the representations of created things. It befits a
monk to be indifferent to everything created so that he can turn easily
and barely to God alone within himself, be empty for him and cleave
to him. For this reason deny yourself so that you can follow Christ,
the Lord your God, in nakedness, who was himself poor, obedient, chaste,
humble and suffering, and in whose life and death many were scandalized,
as is clear from the Gospel accounts. After all, a soul which is separated
from the body pays no attention to what is done to its abandoned body
- whether it is burned, hanged, or reviled, and is in no way saddened
by the afflictions imposed on the body, but thinks only of the Now of
eternity and the One Thing which the Lord calls necessary in the Gospel.
So you too should treat your body as if you were no longer in the body,
but think always of the eternity of your soul in God, and direct your
thoughts carefully to that One Thing of which Christ said, For one thing
is necessary. (Luke 10.42) You will experience because of it great grace,
helping you towards the acquisition of nakedness of mind and simplicity
of heart. Indeed this One Thing is very much present with you if you
have made yourself bare of imaginations and all other entanglements,
and you will soon experience that this is so - namely when you can be
empty and cleave to God with a naked and resolute mind. In this way
you will remain unconquered in whatever may be inflicted on you, like
the holy martyrs, fathers, the elect, and indeed all the saints who
despised everything and only thought of their souls' security and eternity
in God. Armed in this way within, and united to God through a good will,
they spurned everything of the world as if their souls were already
separated from their bodies. Consider from this how much a good will
united with God is capable of, when by means of its pressing towards
God the soul is effectively separated the body in spirit and looks on
its outward man as it were from a distance, and as not belonging to
it. In this way it despises everything that is inflicted on itself or
on its flesh as if they were happening to someone else or not to a human
being at all. For He that is united with the Lord is one Spirit, (1
Corinthians 6.17) that is with him. So you should never dare to think
or imagine anything before the Lord your God that you would blush to
be heard or seen in before men, since your respect for God should be
even greater than for them. It is a matter of justice in fact that all
your thoughts and thinking should be raised to God alone, and the highest
point of your mind should only be directed to him as if nothing existed
but him, and holding to him may enjoy the perfect beginning of the life
to come.
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