On
Cleaving to God Attributed to Albert the Great (Albertus Magnus) |
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Chapter 15 How contempt of himself can be produced in a man, and how useful it is Furthermore
the more a man recognizes his own insignificance, the more he fully
and the more clearly he becomes aware to the divine majesty and the
more a man is low in his own eyes for the sake of God, the truth and
justice, the more precious he is in the eyes of God. For this reason
let us strive with the whole strength of our desire to consider ourselves
the lowest of all and to consider ourselves unworthy of any favor. We
should strive to be displeasing to ourselves and pleasing only to God,
while regarded as low and unworthy of consideration by others. Above
all not to be moved by difficulties, afflictions and insults, and not
to be upset by those who inflict such things on us, or entertain evil
thoughts against them or be indignant, but to believe steadfastly and
with equanimity in all insults, slights, blows and dereliction that
it is only appropriate. For in truth he who is really penitent and grieving
before God hates to be honored and loved by all, and does not try to
manipulate things so as to avoid being to some degree hated, neglected
and despised right to the end, so that he can be truly humbled and sincerely
cleave to God alone with a pure heart. Indeed, for loving God alone
and hating oneself more than anything, and desiring to be despised by
others we do not require external work or physical strength, but rather
physical solitude, the labor of the heart, and peace of mind so that,
as it were, by labor of the heart and the disposition of the inmost
mind, one may rise up, casting off from oneself lower and physical things,
and so soar up, ascending to things heavenly and divine. For indeed
in so doing we changed into God, and this will especially take place
when without judgment, condemnation or contempt of our neighbor, we
choose rather to be considered as scum and a disgrace by everyone and
to be despised as unclean filth by everyone than to experience all sorts
of different delicacies or to be honored and exalted by men, or enjoy
all sorts of transitory physical forms of well-being and comfort. We
should not desire any pleasure of this present, mortal and physical
life but rather to mourn, bewail and lament our offences, faults and
sins without ceasing, and to perfectly despise and annihilate ourselves,
and from day to day to be considered more and more abject by others,
while in all our insignificance we become worthless even in our own
eyes, so that we can be pleasing to God alone, love him alone, and cleave
to him alone. We should not wish to be concerned about anything except
the Lord Jesus Christ himself who alone should reside in our affections,
and we should not be concerned or anxious about anything except him
on whose dominion and providence everything in general and individually
depends. So from now on it should not be your aim to seek enjoyment
but to truly mourn with all your heart. For that reason, if you do not
mourn, mourn for that, while if you do mourn, mourn especially that
you have brought the cause of your pain on yourself by your own great
offences and infinite sins. For just as a condemned man on receiving
his sentence does not concern himself about the seating of the spectators,
so he who laments and is genuinely mourning is not interested in pleasures,
resentment, fame or wrongs or things of that sort. And just as townsfolk
and contemned criminals have different accommodation, the state and
position of those who are mourning and have committed offences deserving
punishment ought to be completely different from those who are innocent
and under no obligation. Otherwise there would be no difference between
the guilty and the innocent in matters of punishment and reward. The
result would be great dereliction of duty, and evil behavior would have
more freedom than goodness. So everything must be renounced, everything
despised, everything rejected and avoided, so that we can lay a firm
foundation of penitent grieving. Then, loving Jesus Christ in reality,
yearning for him, and holding him in one's heart, in reality experiencing
pain for one's sins and faults, in reality seeking to know the coming
Kingdom, while with true faith bearing in mind the reality of the torments
and eternal judgment, and firmly and fully taking up the recollection
and fear of one's own death, we should be aware of nothing else, and
not care or be worried about anything else. For that reason, he who
hurries towards the blessed state of impassibility and towards God should
reckon himself to have experienced great loss every day that he is not
insulted and despised. Impassibility after all is freedom from vices
and passions and purity of heart and the adornment of all virtues. So
consider yourself as already dead since there is no doubt that you have
got to die. And as a final thought let this be the test for you of whether
any thought, word or action of yours is of God, whether you are made
more humble because of it, more inward and more recollected and established
in God. If you find it is otherwise in yourself, you should be suspicious
about it, whether it be not according to God, unacceptable to you and
not to your benefit.
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