LXXXII
THE FEAST OF THE MARTYRS
In
occasione gladii mortui sunt (Hebr. 1137). We read of the
blessed martyrs, whom we commemorate to-day as they were slain with the
sword. Quoth our Lord to his disciples, 'Blessed are ye when ye suffer for
my name's sake.' And according to the scriptures these martyrs suffered
death for Christ's name, being put to the sword.
Here we learn three things.
First, that they are dead. Man's sufferings in this world have an end. As St
Augustine says pain and the work of pain is finite and the reward is
infinite. --Secondly, that seeing this life is mortal, we have no need to
fear all the pain and travail falling to our lot, for it will end. Thirdly, that
it behoves us to emulate the dead in dispassion towards good and ill and pain of
every kind. The philosopher says heaven is immoveable. Referring to the
soul as being the heavenly man who is imperturbable. One master enquires,
If creatures are so vile, how comes it they so easily distract the soul from
God: is not the soul at her vilest better than heaven and all creatures? The
Doctor says it comes of minding too little about God. Were we to pay due heed to
God it would be nigh impossible to lapse. From which we draw the moral that we
ought in this world to emulate the dead. According to St Gregory, no one gets so
much of God as the man who is throughly dead.
The fourth point is the
weightiest. He speaks of their being dead. Death gives them
being. A philosopher says, 'Nature never breaks but to mend.' Air to fire,
for instance, is a change for the better; but air to water were destruction and
untowardness. If this is nature's way much more is it God's: he never
destroys without providing something better. The martyrs died: they lost their
life and found their being. The philosopher says, 'Most precious is being and
life, and knowledge is higher than life and nobler than being, for it knowing we
have life and being.' Yet life is nobler than being in the sense that a tree has
life whereas a stone has being. Again, take being pure and simple, as it is in
itself, and being transcends both knowledge and life, for in that it is being it
is both knowledge and life. They have, I say, lost their natural life and have
acquired being. The philosopher says it is the same thing as God. The
philosopher says, Being is pure, he is conscious of nothing but being; being is
his ring. God loves naught save his being, he thinks of naught save his being. I
say, all creatures are being. One master says some creatures are so nigh to God
and so instinct with divine light that they give being to other creatures. That
is not the case: being is too pure, too high, too much the same as God, for
anyone but God to be able to give being. God's idiosyncrasy is being. The
philosopher says one creature is able to give another life. For in being, mere
being, lies all that is at all. Being is the first name. Defect means lack of
being. Our whole life ought to be being. So far as our life is being, so far it
is in God. So far as our life is akin thereto, so far it is kin to God. There is
no life so feeble but taking it as being it excels anything life can ever boast.
I have no doubt of this, that if the soul had the remotest notion of what being
means she would never waver from it in an instant. The most trivial thing
perceived in God, a flower for example as espied in God, would be a think more
perfect than the universe. The vilest thing present in God as being is better
than angelic knowledge.
When angels turn to creaturely
knowledge, then it grows dark. St Augustine says, When angels know creatures in
God, twilight falls; when the soul knows God in creatures it is eventide. But
knowledge of creatures in God is the dawn. And when she knows God in himself as
pure essence, that is high noon. It should be the soul's desire to see, as
though in non-sense, this most noble being. We advocate dying in God, to the end
that he may raise us up to being which is better than life: the being of our
life subsists in, wherein our life is quickened into actuality. We ought to face
death willingly and die in order to obtain a better resurrection.
I said on one occasion that a bit of
wood is more precious than gold, a surprising statement. But a stone is nobler
(having being) than God and his Godhead without being, if is such a thing is
possible to abstract his being. That must be a vigorous life in which dead
things revive, in which even death is changed to life. To God naught dies: all
things are living in him. They being dead (as the scriptures says about the
martyrs) are quickened into life eternal, into the life where living is real
being. We must be so throughly dead as to be moved by neither good nor ill. What
we know we must know in its cause. We never really know anything in itself till
we know it in its cause. There is no understanding it until we apprehend it in
its origin. Just as life is never perfected till it returns to its
original source, wherein life is real being. The thing that keeps us from
remaining there is, as the philosopher explains, our being in contact with time.
What time can touch is temporal and mortal. The philosopher states that the
heavenly progression is eternal; true, it gives rise to time, and that makes it
mortal. In its course it is eternal, all unwitting of time; in other words, the
soul obeys the laws of abstract being. Another thing is its being full of
opposites. What are opposites? Good and bad, white and black are in opposition,
a thing which has no place in real being.
The philosopher says the soul is
given to the body for her perfecting. Soul apart from body possesses neither
intellect nor will: she is one with no attendant power of speech; true she has
it in her ground, in its root as it were, but not in fact. The soul is purified
in body by collecting things scattered and dispersed. The resultant of the five
senses, when these are recollected, gives her a common sense wherein everything
sums up to one. In the second place, she is purified by a saving habit, that
namely of liberation from the life which is in part and admission to the life
which is the whole. All that is scattered in nether things is gathered together
when the soul climbs up into the life where there are no opposites. The soul
knows no opposition when she enters the light of intellect. Anything short of
this light falls into death and dies. Perfection of soul consists, thirdly, in
absence of sensible affection. What is prone to aught other shall die, it cannot
last. We beseech thee Lord God to help us escape from the life that is divided
into the life that is united. So help us God. Amen.
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