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Collected Works of St. John of the Cross
Sayings of Light and Love
Dichos de Luz y Amor
by
St. John of the Cross
From: The Collected Works Of St. John Of The Cross,
translated by Kieran Kavanaugh, OCD, and Otilio Rodriguez, OCD, revised edition
(1991), copyright ICS Publications.
Introduction
In the style of the apothegms of the Desert Fathers, John of
the Cross's teaching first comes in these hard, clean,
unsentimental sayings that overflow with spiritual wisdom.
They give to their recipients treasures that must first be
unlocked; as maxims they were to be repeated and mulled over.
While he was spiritual director in Avila, before he had
undertaken any of his larger treatises, John jotted down many
thoughts and counsels for the guidance of those whom he
directed, probably similar to the ones expressed in the later
collections. None of those earlier sayings has come down to
us, but we know from witnesses that this practice was
characteristic of the Carmelite confessor at that time.
After John's imprisonment in Toledo, when he took up spiritual
direction again, this time in Andalusia, he returned once more
to the practice of condensing his thought into concise
spiritual counsels for his penitents. They could keep them for
inspiration, so as to be stirred in the Lord's service and
love. Sometimes these sayings were directed to the particular
needs of an individual; at other times they were destined more
for a group of persons. The number of sayings that circulated
must have been large, but comparatively few have come down to
us, and they come through different collections.
The most distinguished collection is contained in an autograph manuscript,
the largest autograph we have from John. Restored in 1976 and reproduced in a
facsimile edition, the manuscript is preserved in the church Santa Maria la Mayor
in Andajar (Jaén). In his prologue to this collection, John calls his maxims
"sayings of light and love". The title, Sayings of Light and Love, comes then
from John's own words, and provides a good general designation for the other collections
as well. Footnotes will indicate where one collection ends and another begins
and the source from which each comes.
Sometimes, rather than being counsels destined for others,
these sayings have an autobiographical coloring, as for
example in the celebrated Prayer of a Soul Taken with Love.
Here John in a profound experience of spiritual poverty
becomes aware that God has pardoned him and given him
everything in Jesus Christ; love then carries him off in a
lyric outburst.
Though these sayings do not follow in any systematic order, we do find in
them the important themes that the Carmelite friar developed at length in his
major works. What he there expounds in detail, he here compresses into dense aphorisms.
Much difficulty lies in deciding whether many of the maxims attributed to John
actually did come from his pen, or disciples culled them from his sermons and
conferences, or if they are simply spurious. Omitting the counsels of Madre Magdalena
because they are repetitions of those given in chapter 13 of the first book of
the The Ascent of Mount Carmel, we include here only those sayings that editors
have considered trustworthy.
Prologue
O my God and my delight, for your love I have also desired to give my soul
to composing these sayings of light and love concerning you. Since, although I
can express them in words, I do not have the works and virtues they imply (which
is what pleases you, O my Lord, more than the words and wisdom they contain),
may others, perhaps stirred by them, go forward in your service and love -- in
which I am wanting. I will thereby find consolation, that these sayings be an
occasion for your finding in others the things that I lack. Lord, you love discretion,
you love light, you love love; these three you love above the other operations
of the soul. Hence these will be sayings of discretion for the wayfarer, of light
for the way, and of love in the wayfaring. May there be nothing of worldly rhetoric
in them or the long-winded and dry eloquence of weak and artificial human wisdom,
which never pleases you. Let us speak to the heart words bathed in sweetness and
love that do indeed please you, removing obstacles and stumbling blocks from the
paths of many souls who unknowingly trip and unconsciously walk in the path of
error -- poor souls who think they are right in what concerns the following of
your beloved Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, in becoming like him, imitating his life,
actions, and virtues, and the form of his nakedness and purity of spirit. Father
of mercies, come to our aid, for without you, Lord, we can do nothing.
- The Lord has always revealed to mortals the treasures of his wisdom and his
spirit, but now that the face of evil bares itself more and more, so does the
Lord bare his treasures more.
- O Lord, my God, who will seek you with simple and pure love, and not find
that you are all one can desire, for you show yourself first and go out to meet
those who seek you?
- Though the path is plain and smooth for people of good will, those who walk
it will not travel far, and will do so only with difficulty if they do not have
good feet, courage, and tenacity of spirit.
- It is better to be burdened and in company with the strong than to be unburdened
and with the weak. When you are burdened you are close to God, your strength,
who abides with the afflicted. When you are relieved of the burden you are close
to yourself, your own weakness; for virtue and strength of soul grow and are confirmed
in the trials of patience.
- Whoever wants to stand alone without the support of a master and guide will
be like the tree that stands alone in a field without a proprietor. No matter
how much the tree bears, passers-by will pick the fruit before it ripens.
- A tree that is cultivated and guarded through the care of its owner produces
its fruit at the expected time.
- The virtuous soul that is alone and without a master is like a lone burning
coal; it will grow colder rather than hotter.
- Those who fall alone remain alone in their fall, and they value their soul
little since they entrust it to themselves alone.
- If you do not fear falling alone, do you presume that you will rise up alone?
Consider how much more can be accomplished by two together than by one alone.
- Whoever falls while heavily laden will find it difficult to rise under the
burden.
- The blind person who falls will not be able to get up alone; the blind person
who does get up alone will go off on the wrong road.
- God desires the smallest degree of purity of conscience in you more than
all the works you can perform.
- God desires the least degree of obedience and submissiveness more than all
those services you think of rendering him.
- God values in you the inclination to dryness and suffering for love of him
more than all the consolations, spiritual visions, and meditations you could possibly
have.
- Deny your desires and you will find what your heart longs for. For how do
you know if any desire of yours is according to God?
- O sweetest love of God, so little known, whoever has found this rich mine
is at rest!
- Since a double measure of bitterness must follow the doing of your own will,
do not do it even though you remain in single bitterness.
- The soul that carries within itself the least appetite for worldly things
bears more unseemliness and impurity in its journey to God than if it were troubled
by all the hideous and annoying temptations and darknesses describable; for, so
long as it does not consent to these temptations, a soul thus tried can approach
God confidently, by doing the will of His Majesty, who proclaims: Come to me,
all you who labor and are heavily burdened, and I will refresh you [Mt. 11:28].
- The soul that in aridity and trial submits to the dictates of reason is more
pleasing to God than one that does everything with consolation, yet fails in this
submission.
- God is more pleased by one work, however small, done secretly, without desire
that it be known, than a thousand done with the desire that people know of them.
Those who work for God with purest love not only care nothing about whether others
see their works, but do not even seek that God himself know of them. Such persons
would not cease to render God the same services, with the same joy and purity
of love, even if God were never to know of these.
- The pure and whole work done for God in a pure heart merits a whole kingdom
for its owner.
- A bird caught in birdlime has a twofold task: It must free itself and cleanse
itself. And by satisfying their appetites, people suffer in a twofold way: They
must detach themselves and, after being detached, clean themselves of what has
clung to them.
- Those who do not allow their appetites to carry them away will soar in their
spirit as swiftly as the bird that lacks no feathers.
- The fly that clings to honey hinders its flight, and the soul that allows
itself attachment to spiritual sweetness hinders its own liberty and contemplation.
- Withdraw from creatures if you desire to preserve, clear and simple in your
soul, the image of God. Empty your spirit and withdraw far from them and you will
walk in divine lights, for God is not like creatures.
Prayer of a Soul Taken with Love
- Lord God, my Beloved, if you still remember my sins in such a way that you
do not do what I beg of you, do your will concerning them, my God, which is what
I most desire, and exercise your goodness and mercy, and you will be known through
them. And if you are waiting for my good works so as to hear my prayer through
their means, grant them to me, and work them for me, and the sufferings you desire
to accept, and let it be done. But if you are not waiting for my works, what is
it that makes you wait, my most clement Lord? Why do you delay? For if, after
all, I am to receive the grace and mercy that I entreat of you in your Son, take
my mite, since you desire it, and grant me this blessing, since you also desire
that.
Who can free themselves from lowly manners and limitations if you do not lift
them to yourself, my God, in purity of love? How will human beings begotten and
nurtured in lowliness rise up to you, Lord, if you do not raise them with your
hand that made them?
You will not take from me, my God, what you once gave me in your only Son, Jesus
Christ, in whom you gave me all I desire. Hence I rejoice that if I wait for you,
you will not delay.
With what procrastinations do you wait, since from this very moment you can love
God in your heart?
- Mine are the heavens and mine is the earth. Mine are the nations, the just
are mine, and mine the sinners. The angels are mine, and the Mother of God, and
all things are mine; and God himself is mine and for me, because Christ is mine
and all for me. What do you ask, then, and seek, my soul? Yours is all of this,
and all is for you. Do not engage yourself in something less or pay heed to the
crumbs that fall from your Father's table. Go forth and exult in your Glory! Hide
yourself in it and rejoice, and you will obtain the supplications of your heart.
- The very pure spirit does not bother about the regard of others or human respect,
but communes inwardly with God, alone and in solitude as to all forms, and with
delightful tranquility, for the knowledge of God is received in divine silence.
- A soul enkindled with love is a gentle, meek, humble, and patient soul.
- A soul that is hard because of self-love grows harder.
- O good Jesus, if you do not soften it, it will ever continue in its natural
hardness.
- If you lose an opportunity you will be like one who lets the bird fly away;
you will never get it back.
- I didn't know you, my Lord, because I still desired to know and relish things.
- Well and good if all things change, Lord God, provided we are rooted in you.
- One human thought alone is worth more than the entire world, hence God alone
is worthy of it.
- For the insensible, what you do not feel; for the sensible, the senses; and
for the spirit of God, thought.
- Reflect that your guardian angel does not always move your desire for an action,
but he does always enlighten your reason. Hence, in order to practice virtue do
not wait until you feel like it, for your reason and intellect are sufficient.
- When fixed on something else, one's appetite leaves no room for the angel
to move it.
- My spirit has become dry because it forgets to feed on you.
- What you most seek and desire you will not find by this way of yours, nor
through high contemplation, but in much humility and submission of heart.
- Do not tire yourself, for you will not enter into the savor and sweetness
of spirit if you do not apply yourself to the mortification of all this that you
desire.
- Reflect that the most delicate flower loses its fragrance and withers fastest;
therefore guard yourself against seeking to walk in a spirit of delight, for you
will not be constant. Choose rather for yourself a robust spirit, detached from
everything, and you will discover abundant peace and sweetness, for delicious
and durable fruit is gathered in a cold and dry climate.
- Bear in mind that your flesh is weak and that no worldly thing can comfort
or strengthen your spirit, for what is born of the world is world and what is
born of the flesh is flesh. The good spirit is born only of the Spirit of God,
who communicates himself neither through the world nor through the flesh.
- Be attentive to your reason in order to do what it tells you concerning the
way to God. It will be more valuable before your God than all the works you perform
without this attentiveness and all the spiritual delights you seek.
- Blessed are they who, setting aside their own pleasure and inclination, consider
things according to reason and justice before doing them.
- If you make use of your reason, you are like one who eats substantial food;
but if you are moved by the satisfaction of your will, you are like one who eats
insipid fruit.
- Lord, you return gladly and lovingly to lift up the one who offends you, but
I do not turn to raise and honor the one who annoys me.
- O mighty Lord, if a spark from the empire of your justice effects so much
in the mortal ruler who governs the nations, what will your all-powerful justice
do with the righteous and the sinner?
- If you purify your soul of attachments and desires, you will understand things
spiritually. If you deny your appetite for them, you will enjoy their truth, understanding
what is certain in them.
- O Lord, my God, you are no stranger to those who do not estrange themselves
from you. How do they say that it is you who absent yourself?
- That person has truly mastered all things who is not moved to joy by the satisfaction
they afford or saddened by their insipidness.
- If you wish to attain holy recollection, you will do so not by receiving but
by denying.
- Going everywhere, my God, with you, everywhere things will happen as I desire
for you.
- Souls will be unable to reach perfection who do not strive to be content with
having nothing, in such fashion that their natural and spiritual desire is satisfied
with emptiness; for this is necessary in order to reach the highest tranquility
and peace of spirit. Hence the love of God in the pure and simple soul is almost
continually in act.
- Since God is inaccessible, be careful not to concern yourself with all that
your faculties can comprehend and your senses feel, so that you do not become
satisfied with less and lose the lightness of soul suitable for going to him.
- The soul that journeys to God, but does not shake off its cares and quiet
its appetites, is like one who drags a cart uphill.
- It is not God's will that a soul be disturbed by anything or suffer trials,
for if one suffers trials in the adversities of the world it is because of a weakness
in virtue. The perfect soul rejoices in what afflicts the imperfect one.
- This way of life contains very little business and bustling, and demands mortification
of the will more than knowledge. The less one takes of things and pleasures the
farther one advances along this way.
- Think not that pleasing God lies so much in doing a great deal as in doing
it with good will, without possessiveness and human respect.
- When evening comes, you will be examined in love. Learn to love as God desires
to be loved and abandon your own ways of acting.
- See that you do not interfere in the affairs of others, nor even allow them
to pass through your memory; for perhaps you will be unable to accomplish your
own task.
- Because the virtues you have in mind do not shine in your neighbor, do not
think that your neighbor will not be precious in God's sight for reasons that
you have not in mind.
- Human beings know neither how to rejoice properly nor how to grieve properly,
for they do not understand the distance between good and evil.
- See that you are not suddenly saddened by the adversities of this world, for
you do not know the good they bring, being ordained in the judgments of God for
the everlasting joy of the elect.
- Do not rejoice in temporal prosperity, since you do not know if it gives you
assurance of eternal life.
- In tribulation, immediately draw near to God with trust, and you will receive
strength, enlightenment, and instruction.
- In joys and pleasures, immediately draw near to God in fear and truth, and
you will be neither deceived nor involved in vanity.
- Take God for your bridegroom and friend, and walk with him continually; and
you will not sin and will learn to love, and the things you must do will work
out prosperously for you.
- You will without labor subject the nations and bring things to serve you if
you forget them and yourself as well.
- Abide in peace, banish cares, take no account of all that happens, and you
will serve God according to his good pleasure, and rest in him.
- Consider that God reigns only in the peaceful and disinterested soul.
- Although you perform many works, if you do not deny your will and submit yourself,
losing all solicitude about yourself and your affairs, you will not make progress.
- What does it profit you to give God one thing if he asks of you another? Consider
what it is God wants, and then do it. You will as a result satisfy your heart
better than with something toward which you yourself are inclined.
- How is it you dare to relax so fearlessly, since you must appear before God
to render an account of the least word and thought?
- Reflect that many are called but few are chosen [Mt. 22:14] and that, if you
are not careful, your perdition is more certain than your salvation, especially
since the path to eternal life is so constricted [Mt. 7:14].
- Do not rejoice vainly, for you know how many sins you have committed and you
do not know how you stand before God; but have fear together with confidence.
- Since, when the hour of reckoning comes, you will be sorry for not having
used this time in the service of God, why do you not arrange and use it now as
you would wish to have done were you dying?
- If you desire that devotion be born in your spirit and that the love of God
and the desire for divine things increase, cleanse your soul of every desire,
attachment, and ambition in such a way that you have no concern about anything.
Just as a sick person is immediately aware of good health once the bad humor has
been thrown off and a desire to eat is felt, so will you recover your health,
in God, if you cure yourself as was said. Without doing this, you will not advance
no matter how much you do.
- If you desire to discover peace and consolation for your soul and to serve
God truly, do not find your satisfaction in what you have left behind, because
in that which now concerns you you may be as impeded as you were before, or even
more. But leave as well all these other things and attend to one thing alone that
brings all these with it (namely, holy solitude, together with prayer and spiritual
and divine reading), and persevere there in forgetfulness of all things. For if
these things are not incumbent on you, you will be more pleasing to God in knowing
how to guard and perfect yourself than by gaining all other things together; what
profit would there be for one to gain the whole world and suffer the loss of one's
soul? [Mt. 16:26]. [1]
- Bridle your tongue and your thoughts very much, direct your affection habitually
toward God, and your spirit will be divinely enkindled.
- Feed not your spirit on anything but God. Cast off concern about things, and
bear peace and recollection in your heart.
- Keep spiritually tranquil in a loving attentiveness to God, and when it is
necessary to speak, let it be with the same calm and peace.
- Preserve a habitual remembrance of eternal life, recalling that those who
hold themselves the lowest and poorest and least of all will enjoy the highest
dominion and glory in God.
- Rejoice habitually in God, who is your salvation [Lk. 1:47], and reflect that
it is good to suffer in any way for him who is good.
- Reflect how necessary it is to be enemies of self and to walk to perfection
by the path of holy rigor, and understand that every word spoken without the order
of obedience is laid to your account by God.
- Have an intimate desire that His Majesty grant you what he knows you lack
for his honor.
- Crucified inwardly and outwardly with Christ, you will live in this life with
fullness and satisfaction of soul, and possess your soul in patience [Lk. 21:19].
- Preserve a loving attentiveness to God with no desire to feel or understand
any particular thing concerning him.
- Keep habitual confidence in God, esteeming in yourself and in your Sisters
those things that God most values, which are spiritual goods.
- Enter within yourself and work in the presence of your Bridegroom, who is
ever present loving you.
- Be hostile to admitting into your soul things that of themselves have no spiritual
substance, lest they make you lose your liking for devotion and recollection.
- Let Christ crucified be enough for you, and with him suffer and take your
rest, and hence annihilate yourself in all inward and outward things.
- Endeavor always that things be not for you, nor you for them, but forgetful
of all, abide in recollection with your Bridegroom.
- Have great love for trials and think of them as but a small way of pleasing
your Bridegroom, who did not hesitate to die for you.
- Bear fortitude in your heart against all things that move you to that which
is not God, and be a friend of the Passion of Christ.
- Be interiorly detached from all things and do not seek pleasure in any temporal
thing, and your soul will concentrate on goods you do not know.
- The soul that walks in love neither tires others nor grows tired.
- The poor one who is naked will be clothed; and the soul that is naked of desires
and whims, God will clothe with his purity, pleasure, and will.
- There are souls that wallow in the mire like animals, and there are others
that soar like birds, which purify and cleanse themselves in the air.
- The Father spoke one Word, which was his Son, and this Word he speaks always
in eternal silence, and in silence must it be heard by the soul.
- We must adjust our trials to ourselves, and not ourselves to our trials.
- He who seeks not the cross of Christ seeks not the glory of Christ.
- To be taken with love for a soul, God does not look on its greatness, but
on the greatness of its humility.
- "Whoever is ashamed to confess me before others, I shall be ashamed to
confess before My Father," says the Lord [Mt. 10:33].
- Frequent combing gives the hair more luster and makes it easier to comb; a
soul that frequently examines its thoughts, words, and deeds, which are its hair,
doing all things for the love of God, will have lustrous hair. Then the Bridegroom
will look on the neck of the bride and thereby be captivated; and will be wounded
by one of her eyes, that is, by the purity of intention she has in all she does.
If in combing hair one wants it to have luster, one begins from the crown. All
our works must begin from the crown (the love of God) if we wish them to be pure
and lustrous.[2]
- Heaven is stable and is not subject to generation; and souls of a heavenly
nature are stable and not subject to the engendering of desires or of anything
else, for in their way they resemble God who does not move forever.
- Eat not in forbidden pastures (those of this life), because blessed are they
who hunger and thirst for justice, for they will be satisfied [Mt. 5:6]. What
God seeks, he being himself God by nature, is to make us gods through participation,
just as fire converts all things into fire.
- All the goodness we possess is lent to us, and God considers it his own work.
God and his work is God.
- Wisdom enters through love, silence, and mortification. It is great wisdom
to know how to be silent and to look at neither the remarks, nor the deeds, nor
the lives of others.
- All for me and nothing for you.
- All for you and nothing for me.
- Allow yourself to be taught, allow yourself to receive orders, allow yourself
to be subjected and despised, and you will be perfect.
- Any appetite causes five kinds of harm in the soul: first, disquiet; second,
turbidity; third, defilement; fourth, weakness; fifth, obscurity [3]
- Perfection does not lie in the virtues that the soul knows it has, but in
the virtues that our Lord sees in it. This is a closed book; hence one has no
reason for presumption, but must remain prostrate on the ground with respect to
self.
- Love consists not in feeling great things but in having great detachment
and in suffering for the Beloved.
- The entire world is not worthy of a human being's thought, for this belongs
to God alone; any thought, therefore, not centered on God is stolen from him.
- Not all the faculties and senses have to be employed in things, but only
those that are required; as for the others, leave them unoccupied for God.
- Ignoring the imperfections of others, preserving silence and a continual
communion with God will eradicate great imperfections from the soul and make it
the possessor of great virtues.
- There are three signs of inner recollection: first, a lack of satisfaction
in passing things; second, a liking for solitude and silence, and an attentiveness
to all that is more perfect; third, the considerations, meditations and acts that
formerly helped the soul now hinder it, and it brings to prayer no other support
than faith, hope, and love.[4]
- If a soul has more patience in suffering and more forbearance in going without
satisfaction, the sign is there of its being more proficient in virtue.
- The traits of the solitary bird are five: first, it seeks the highest place;
second, it withstands no company; third, it holds its beak in the air; fourth,
it has no definite color; fifth, it sings sweetly. These traits must be possessed
by the contemplative soul. It must rise above passing things, paying no more heed
to them than if they did not exist. It must likewise be so fond of silence and
solitude that it does not tolerate the company of another creature. It must hold
its beak in the air of the Holy Spirit, responding to his inspirations, that by
so doing it may become worthy of his company. It must have no definite color,
desiring to do nothing definite other than the will of God. It must sing sweetly
in the contemplation and love of its Bridegroom.[5]
- Habitual voluntary imperfections that are never completely overcome not only
hinder the divine union, but also the attainment of perfection. Such imperfections
are: the habit of being very talkative; a small unconquered attachment, such as
to a person, to clothing, to a cell, a book, or to the way food is prepared, and
to other conversations and little satisfactions in tasting things, in knowing,
and hearing, and the like.[6]
- If you wish to glory in yourself, but do not wish to appear ignorant and
foolish, discard the things that are not yours and you will have glory in what
remains. But certainly if you discard all that is not yours, nothing will be left,
since you must not glory in anything if you do not want to fall into vanity. But
let us descend now especially to those graces, the gifts that make people pleasing
in God's sight. It is certain that you must not glory in these gifts, for you
do not even know if you possess them.
- Oh, how sweet your presence will be to me, you who are the supreme good!
I must draw near you in silence and uncover your feet that you may be pleased
to unite me to you in marriage [Ru. 3:7], and I will not rest until I rejoice
in your arms. Now I ask you, Lord, not to abandon me at any time in my recollection,
for I am a squanderer of my soul.
- Detached from exterior things, dispossessed of interior things, disappropriated
of the things of God -- neither will prosperity detain you nor adversity hinder
you.
- The devil fears a soul united to God as he does God himself. [7]
- The purest suffering produces the purest understanding.[8]
- The soul that desires God to surrender himself to it entirely must surrender
itself entirely to him without keeping anything for itself.
- The soul that has reached the union of love does not even experience the
first motions of sin.
- Old friends of God scarcely ever fail him, for they stand above all that
can make them fail. [9]
- My Beloved, all that is rugged and toilsome I desire for myself, and all
that is sweet and delightful I desire for you. [10]
- What we need most in order to make progress is to be silent before this great
God with our appetite and with our tongue, for the language he best hears is silent
love.
- The submission of a servant is necessary in seeking God. In outward things
light helps to prevent one from falling; but in the things of God just the opposite
is true: It is better for the soul not to see if it is to be more secure.
- More is gained in one hour from God's good things than in a whole lifetime
from your own.
- Love to be unknown both by yourself and by others. Never look at the good
or evil of others.
- Walk in solitude with God; act according to the just measure; hide the blessings
of God.
- To lose always and let everyone else win is a trait of valiant souls, generous
spirits, and unselfish hearts; it is their manner to give rather than receive
even to the extent of giving themselves. They consider it a heavy burden to possess
themselves, and it pleases them more to be possessed by others and withdrawn from
themselves, since we belong more to that infinite Good than we do to ourselves.
- It is seriously wrong to have more regard for God's blessings than for God
himself: prayer and detachment.
- Look at that infinite knowledge and that hidden secret. What peace, what
love, what silence is in that divine bosom! How lofty the science God teaches
there, which is what we call the anagogical acts that so enkindle the heart.
- The secret of one's conscience is considerably harmed and damaged as often
as its fruits are manifested to others, for then one receives as reward the fruit
of fleeting fame.
- Speak little and do not meddle in matters about which you are not asked.
- Strive always to keep God present and to preserve within yourself the purity
he teaches you.
- Do not excuse yourself or refuse to be corrected by all; listen to every
reproof with a serene countenance; think that God utters it.
- Live as though only God and yourself were in this world, so that your heart
may not be detained by anything human.
- Consider it the mercy of God that someone occasionally speaks a good word
to you, for you deserve none.
- Never allow yourself to pour out your heart, even though it be but for the
space of a Creed.
- Never listen to talk about the weaknesses of others, and if someone complains
of another, you can tell her humbly to say nothing of it to you
- Do not complain about anyone, or ask for anything; and if it is necessary
for you to ask, let it be with few words.
- Do not refuse work even though it seems that you cannot do it. Let all find
compassion in you.
- Do not contradict; by no means speak words that are not pure.
- Let your speech be such that no one may be offended, and let it concern things
that would not cause you regret were all to know of them.
- Do not refuse anything you possess, even though you may need it.
- Be silent concerning what God may have given you and recall that saying of
the bride: My secret for myself [Is. 24:16].
- Strive to preserve your heart in peace; let no event of this world disturb
it; reflect that all must come to an end.
- Take neither great nor little notice of who is with you or against you, and
try always to please God. Ask him that his will be done in you. Love him intensely,
as he deserves to be loved.
- Twelve stars for reaching the highest perfection: love of God, love of neighbor,
obedience, chastity, poverty, attendance at choir, penance, humility, mortification,
prayer, silence, peace.
- Never take others for your example in the tasks you have to perform, however
holy they may be, for the devil will set their imperfections before you. But imitate
Christ, who is supremely perfect and supremely holy, and you will never err.
- Seek in reading and you will find in meditation; knock in prayer and it will
be opened to you in contemplation.[11]
- The further you withdraw from earthly things the closer you approach heavenly
things and the more you find in God.
- Whoever knows how to die in all will have life in all.
- Abandon evil, do good, and seek peace [Ps. 34:14].
- Anyone who complains or grumbles is not perfect, nor even a good Christian.
- The humble are those who hide in their own nothingness and know how to abandon
themselves to God.
- The meek are those who know how to suffer their neighbor and themselves.
- If you desire to be perfect, sell your will, give it to the poor in spirit,
come to Christ in meekness and humility, and follow him to Calvary and the sepulcher.
- Those who trust in themselves are worse than the devil.
- Those who do not love their neighbor abhor God.
- Anyone who does things lukewarmly is close to falling.
- Whoever flees prayer flees all that is good.
- Conquering the tongue is better than fasting on bread and water.
- Suffering for God is better than working miracles.
- Oh, what blessings we will enjoy in the vision of the Most Blessed Trinity!
- Do not be suspicious of your brother, for you will lose purity of heart.
- As for trials, the more the better.
- What does anyone know who doesn't know how to suffer for Christ?
Footnotes
1. The autography manuscript ends here abruptly. The following saying are the
MAXIMS ON LOVE gathered by the Discalced Carmelite nuns in Beas. A manuscript
copy is preserved in the Silverian archives in Burgos.
2. Cf. Canticle 31, 5-6.
3. Cf. Ascent 1, 6-10.
4. For more on these signs of contemplation, cf. Ascent 2, 13-14; Night 1, 9.
5. Cf. Canticle 15, 24.
6. Cf. Ascent 1, 11, 3-4. The following maxims are from the edition of
Gerona, published in 1650.
7. Cf. Canticle 24, 4.
8. Cf. Canticle 36, 12.
9. Cf. Canticle 25, 9-11.
10. Cf. Canticle 28, 10.
11. This saying comes from the Cathrusian Guigo II's SCALA PARADISI, chapter
2, in Migne, PL 40, 998. The counsels that follow come from an old manuscript
belonging to the Carmelite nuns in Antequera. A copy is preserved in the
National Library of Madrid.