On
Cleaving to God Attributed to Albert the Great (Albertus Magnus) |
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Chapter 9 How much the contemplation of God is to be preferred to all other exercises Now since all
things other than God are the effect and work of the Creator himself,
their having ability and being is a limited power and existence, and
being as they are created out of nothing, they are circumscribed by
the effects of their nothingness, while their tendency of themselves
towards nothingness means that we receive our existence, preservation
and activity moment by moment from the Creator himself, along with whatever
other qualities created things may have, just as we receive their insufficiency
to any action of themselves, both with regard to themselves and to others,
in relation to him whose operation they are, they remain as a nothing
before something which exists, and as something finite before what is
infinite. For this reason let all our actual contemplation, life and
activity take place in him alone, about him, for him and towards him
who is able and capable to produce with a single nod of his will things
infinitely more perfect than any that exist now. No contemplation and
fruition of love, whether intellectual or affective, is more useful,
more perfect and more satisfying than that which is of God himself,
the Creator, our supreme and true Good, from whom, through whom and
to whom are all things. He is infinitely satisfying both to himself
and to all others, who contains within himself in absolute simplicity
and from all eternity the perfection of all things, in whom there is
nothing which is not himself, before whom and through whom remain the
causes of all things impermanent, and in whom dwell the unchanging origins
of all changing things, while even the eternal reasons of all temporal
things, rational and irrational, abide in him. He brings everything
to completion, and fills all things, in general and in particular, completely
and essentially with himself. He is more intimately and more really
present to everything by his being than each thing is to itself, for
in him all things are united together, and live in him eternally. What
is more, if someone, out of weakness or from lack of intellectual practice,
is detained longer in the contemplation of created things, this supreme,
true and fruitful contemplation may still be seen as possible for mortal
man, so that there may take place an upward leap in all his contemplations
and meditations, whether about created things or the Creator, and the
appreciation of God the Creator himself, the One and Three, may surge
up within so that he come to burn with the fire of divine love and the
true life in himself and in others, in such a way as to make him deserving
of the joy of eternal life. Even in this one should bear in mind the
difference between the contemplation of faithful Catholics and that
of pagan philosophers, for the contemplation of the philosophers is
for the perfection of the contemplator himself, and consequently it
is confined to the intellect and their aim in it is intellectual knowledge.
But the contemplation of the Saints, and of Catholics, is for the love
of him that is of the God they are contemplating. As a result it is
not confined in the final analysis to the intellect in knowledge, but
crosses over into the will through love. That is why the Saints in their
contemplation have the love of God as their principal aim, since it
is more satisfying to know and possess even the Lord Jesus Christ spiritually
through grace than physically or even really but without grace. Furthermore,
while the soul is withdrawn from everything and is turned within, the
eye of contemplation is opened and sets itself up a ladder by which
it can pass to the contemplation of God. By this contemplation the soul
is set on fire for eternal things by the heavenly and divine good things
it experiences, and views all the things of time from a distance and
as if they were nothing. Hence when we approach God by the way of negation,
we first deny him everything that can be experienced by the body, the
senses and the imagination, secondly even things experienceable by the
intellect, and finally even being itself in so far as it is found in
created things. This, so far as the nature of the way is concerned,
is the best means of union with God, according to Dionysius. And this
is the cloud in which God is said to dwell, which Moses entered, and
through this came to the inaccessible light. Certainly, it is not the
spiritual which comes first, but the natural, (1 Corinthians 15.46)
so one must proceed by the usual order of things, from active work to
the quiet of contemplation, and from moral virtues to spiritual and
contemplative realities. Finally, my soul, why are you uselessly preoccupied
with so many things, and always busy with them? Seek out and love the
one supreme good, in which is all that is worth seeking, and that will
be enough for you. Unhappy therefore is he who knows and possesses everything
other than this, and does not know this. While if he knows everything
as well as this, it is not from knowing them that he is better off but
because of this. That is why John says, “This is eternal life,
to know Thee,” etc. (John 17.3) and the prophet says, I will be
satisfied when your glory becomes manifest. (Psalm 17.15)
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