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lectures14+15-第7部分

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with a gratified air to the Saints; as if contented with what He



had done: 'see the new present which my betrothed has given Me!'







〃One day; at chapel; she heard supernaturally sung the words



'Sanctus; Sanctus; Sanctus。' The son of God leaning towards her



like a sweet lover; and giving to her soul the softest kiss; said



to her at the second Sanctus:  'In this Sanctus addressed to my



person; receive with this kiss all the sanctity of my divinity



and of my humanity; and let it be to thee a sufficient



preparation for approaching the communion table。' And the next



following Sunday; while she was thanking God for this favor;



behold the Son of God; more beauteous than thousands of angels;



takes her in His arms as if He were proud of her and presents her



to God the Father; in that perfection of sanctity with which He



had dowered her。  And the Father took such delight in this soul



thus presented by His only son; that; as if unable longer to



restrain Himself; He gave her; and the Holy Ghost gave her also;



the sanctity attributed to each by His own Sanctusand thus she



remained endowed with the plenary fullness of the blessing of



Sanctity; bestowed on her by Omnipotence; by Wisdom; and by



Love。〃  Revelations de Sainte Gertrude; Paris; 1898; i。 44; 186。















Take Saint Teresa; for example; one of the ablest women; in many



respects; of whose life we have the record。  She had a powerful



intellect of the practical order。  She wrote admirable



descriptive psychology; possessed a will equal to any emergency;



great talent for politics and business; a buoyant disposition;



and a first…rate literary style。  She was tenaciously aspiring;



and put her whole life at the service of her religious ideals。 



Yet so paltry were these; according to our present way of



thinking; that (although I know that others have been moved



differently) I confess that my only feeling in reading her has



been pity that so much vitality of soul should have found such



poor employment。







In spite of the sufferings which she endured; there is a curious



flavor of superficiality about her genius。  A Birmingham



anthropologist; Dr。 Jordan; has divided the human race into two



types; whom he calls 〃shrews〃 and 〃nonshrews〃 respectively。'206'



The shrew…type is defined as possessing an 〃active unimpassioned



temperament。〃  In other words; shrews are the 〃motors;〃 rather



than the 〃sensories;〃'207' and their expressions are as a rule



more energetic than the feelings which appear to prompt them。 



Saint Teresa; paradoxical as such a judgment may sound; was a



typical shrew; in this sense of the term。  The bustle of her



style; as well as of her life; proves it。  Not only must she



receive unheard…of personal favors and spiritual graces from her



Saviour; but she must immediately write about them and exploiter



them professionally; and use her expertness to give instruction



to those less privileged。  Her voluble egotism; her sense; not of



radical bad being; as the really contrite have it; but of her



〃faults〃 and 〃imperfections〃 in the plural; her stereotyped



humility and return upon herself; as covered with 〃confusion〃 at



each new manifestation of God's singular partiality for a person



so unworthy; are typical of shrewdom:  a paramountly feeling



nature would be objectively lost in gratitude; and silent。  She



had some public instincts; it is true; she hated the Lutherans;



and longed for the church's triumph over them; but in the main



her idea of religion seems to have been that of an endless



amatory flirtationif one may say so without irreverence



between the devotee and the deity; and apart from helping younger



nuns to go in this direction by the inspiration of her example



and instruction; there is absolutely no human use in her; or sign



of any general human interest。  Yet the spirit of her age; far



from rebuking her; exalted her as superhuman。







'206'  Furneaux Jordan:  Character in Birth and Parentage; first



edition。 Later editions change the nomenclature。







'207' As to this distinction; see the admirably practical account



in J。 M。 Baldwin's little book; The Story of the Mind; 1898。















We have to pass a similar judgment on the whole notion of



saintship based on merits。  Any God who; on the one hand; can



care to keep a pedantically minute account of individual



shortcomings; and on the other can feel such partialities; and



load particular creatures with such insipid marks of favor; is



too small…minded a God for our credence。  When Luther; in his



immense manly way; swept off by a stroke of his hand the very



notion of a debit and credit account kept with individuals by the



Almighty; he stretched the soul's imagination and saved theology



from puerility。



 



So much for mere devotion; divorced from the intellectual



conceptions which might guide it towards bearing useful human



fruit。







The next saintly virtue in which we find excess is Purity。  In



theopathic characters; like those whom we have just considered;



the love of God must not be mixed with any other love。  Father



and mother; sisters; brothers; and friends are felt as



interfering distractions; for sensitiveness and narrowness; when



they occur together; as they often do; require above all things a



simplified world to dwell in。  Variety and confusion are too much



for their powers of comfortable adaptation。  But whereas your



aggressive pietist reaches his unity objectively; by forcibly



stamping disorder and divergence out; your retiring pietist



reaches his subjectively; leaving disorder in the world at large;



but making a smaller world in which he dwells himself and from



which he eliminates it altogether。  Thus; alongside of the church



militant with its prisons; dragonnades; and inquisition methods;



we have the church fugient; as one might call it; with its



hermitages; monasteries; and sectarian organizations; both



churches pursuing the same objectto unify the life;'208' and



simplify the spectacle presented to the soul。  A mind extremely



sensitive to inner discords will drop one external relation after



another; as interfering with the absorption of consciousness in



spiritual things。  Amusements must go first; then conventional



〃society;〃 then business; then family duties; until at last



seclusion; with a subdivision of the day into hours for stated



religious acts; is the only thing that can be borne。  The lives



of saints are a history of successive renunciations of



complication; one form of contact with the outer life being



dropped after another; to save
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