The Ladder of Divine Ascent

Thursday, July 24, 2014

LADDER OF DIVINE ASCENT STEP 30

Step 30 On Love - Achieving the Heights of the Virtues


On Faith, Hope, and Love – These three virtues are at the top of the ladder, but Love is the greatest (1 Cor. 13), and the one who loves shares in the divine life because God is Love.  But such resurrection into Love always follows death to the world, and Climacus continues to speak about dying to the world throughout this step. Reverence is an essential aspect of Love, as well: “The growth of fear is the starting point of love.”  Fear and love are two sides of the same coin, so Climacus can say without contradicting himself “Lucky the man who loves and longs for God as a smitten lover does for his beloved.  Lucky the man whose fear of God is in no way less than the fear of the accused in front of a judge.”  I can’t help but see the two natures of Christ in this quote. Fully God and fully human, Jesus embodies both the divine pursuit of humanity and perfect human reverence of the Father. Revering the Father as humanity ought, “He offered up both prayers and supplications with loud crying and tears to the One who was able to save Him from death, and He was heard because of His piety” (Hebrews 5:7).  In God’s love for humanity, Christ pursued His Beloved with love “as strong as death” (Song of Songs 8:6). His love and his reverence continue at the right hand of the Father where he ever lives as “a merciful and faithful high priest” (Hebrews 2:17).  And this dual-nature is what we are called to aspire to live into: a reverent love which both pursues union with God and seeks to intercede on behalf of all creation before Him.

In closing our study, we come to the thirtieth step…..

And now at last, after all that has been said, there remains that triad, faith, hope and love. bringing and securing the union of all. “But the greatest of these is love” (1 Cor. 13:13), since that is the very nature of God Himself.

As we remarked in the very beginning of our study, the Ladder of Divine Ascent is a way to union with God.  This is the goal of the spiritual life: direct, unhindered and undistracted communion with the Holy Trinity.  Everything that St. John has outlined, the negative and the positive, has been presented with this goal in mind: to prepare ourselves to know God and, in knowing God, to experience Eternal Life.  

What is the highest pinnacle of the knowledge of God?  When is our labor no longer preparation for, but actual enjoyment of the presence of God?  St. John answers: "when we love."  St. John begins by defining love.  But given that it is a divine attribute, St. John proceeds with caution.

The man who wants to talk about love is undertaking to speak about God.  But it is risky to talk about God and could even be dangerous for the unwary.  Angels know how to speak about love, but even they do so only in proportion to the light within them.
"God is love" (1 John 4:16).  But someone eager to define this is blindly striving to measure the sand in the ocean.

"Love, by its nature, is a resemblance to God, insofar as this is humanly possible.  In its activity it is inebriation of the soul."

Love is the banishment of every sort of contrariness, for love thinks no evil.

St. John then speaks of the attitudes and aspirations of those who love and how they find themselves consumed by their desire for God.  Wholly transformed by love they begin to take on heavenly qualities - sustained and strengthened in ways unknown.

"Not even a mother clings to her nursing child as a son of love clings to the Lord at all times."

In still another place, he writes:

"Love grants prophecy, miracles, It is an abyss of illumination, a fountain of fire, bubbling up to inflame the thirsty soul.  It is the condition of angels, and the progress of eternity."  

It is truly significant that St. John isolates love as the highest expression of spirituality.  For those of us who have grown up in the West, we have tended to associate great spiritual progress with either intellectual achievement or social action.  Neither of these is antithetical (defined means to be opposed to, contrasting with, contrary to, contradictory to,conflicting with, incompatible with, irreconcilable with, inconsistent with, at variance with, at odds with) to the spiritual life, but neither represents its highest attainment either.  The person who truly knows God knows that God is love, that He is full and complete love.

This too is an important consideration.  We all from time to time love.  Love is something we do and something we give.  At best, love is an "attribute" which is part of our inner selves.  In this respect, for us, love is most often "premeditated."  We think and plan to love.  This is the beginning of the spiritual life.  

Those fully deified do not "love" as an expression of forethought or will, but they themselves have become love.  Here is where true union with God takes place.  To know the heart of God is to know love.  "Love" is not just an attribute of God, which takes its place among the other "attributes" of God.  Love is God and God is love.  

Everything He does, even His punishment and wrath against sin, is an expression of His love. To love is to be obsessed by and with the thing or person which is loved.  The deified ones are completely overtaken by desire for God Himself.  St. John explains:

"Someone truly in love keeps before his mind's eye the face of the beloved and embraces it there tenderly. Even during sleep the longing continues unappeased and he murmurs to his beloved. That is how it is for the body. And that is how it is for the spirit. A man wounded by love had this to say about himself - and it really amazes me - “I sleep (because nature commends this) but my heart is awake (because of the abundance of my love)"  (Song of Songs 5:2).  You should take note, my brother, that the stag, which is the soul, destroys reptiles and then, inflamed by love, as if struck by an arrow, it longs and grows faint for the love of God” (Psalm 41:1).

Holy love has a way of consuming some.  This is what is meant by the one who said, "You have ravished our hearts, ravished them" (Song of Songs 4:9).  And it makes others bright and overjoyed.  In this regard it has been said: "My heart was full of trust and I was helped, and my flesh has revived" (Ps. 27:7).  For when the heart is cheerful, the face beams (cf. Prov. 15:13), and a man flooded with the love of God reveals in his body, as if in a mirror, the splendor of his soul, a glory like that of Moses when he came face to face with God (cf. Exod. 34:29-35).
           
Men who have attained this angelic state often forget to eat, and I really think they do not even miss their food.  No wonder, since an opposite desire drives out the very wish to eat, and indeed I suspect that the bodies of these incorruptible men are immune to sickness, for their bodies have been sanctified and rendered incorruptible by the flame of chastity which has put out the flame [of passions].  My belief is that they accept without any pleasure the food set out in front of them, for just as subterranean waters nourish the roots of a plant, the fires of heaven are there to sustain their souls.

This kind of consuming and exhilarating love for God is a gift, a grace, which comes from Him.  This is the mystical side of the spiritual life.  We can prepare ourselves to receive God's love; this is the ascetical side.  But true love comes from God and draws us back to God.  Having ascended the Ladder through the practice of the virtues, at its pinnacle, we encounter the Eternal Mystery, we are drawn into that Light, we come out of darkness into that Light which is the out pour of God’s love, and in this we learn the meaning of the parable:

"We love because He first loved us."  (1 John 4:19).

Most beautiful of all the virtues, tell us where you feed your flock, where you take your noonday rest (cf. Song of Songs 1:7).  Enlighten us, end our thirst, lead us, show us the way, since we long to soar up to you.  You rule everything, and now you have enraptured my soul.  I am unable to hold in your flame, and therefore I will go forward praising you. "You rule the power of the sea, you make gentle (and deaden) the surge of its waves.  You make humble the proud thought as a wounded man.  With your powerful arm you have scattered your enemies" (cf. Ps. 88:9-10), and you have made your lovers invincible.

We encounter Someone bigger, more powerful and more real than all of our feeble attempts to understand Him.  We find the End of our search, and in experiencing Him, realize the End to be simply the Beginning.

God is love! Until we make the connection, we will live tragically misguided and misguiding lives. Our lives will be empty, counterfeit, destructive expressions of what might and should have been.  Augustine said: “Our souls are restless until they find their rest in Thee.”

Our souls only rest in true love, and it is God alone who loves mankind.

How often I wanted to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her brood under her wings…    Matt 21:37,  Luke 13:34

Hear the Father, Our Lord and Savior say to you…...My love, you will never be able to know how beautiful I am unless you get away from the grossness of the flesh.  

Until we come to this understanding, we will never truly KNOW Him in His fullness.. The “GROSSNESS” of the flesh, our wicked ways, will prevent us from growth.. It will robs us of our true spiritual life..  Sin cannot stand in the presence of God. We are told to “mortify: the flesh (Rom 8:13). We are to crucify the flesh (Gal 2:20) And again, until we get away from the grossness of the flesh, as he states, we will never know how beautiful He is in his fullness..

So let this ladder teach you the spiritual union of the virtues. And I am there on the summit, for us the great man said, a man who knew well: “Remaining now are faith, hope and love, these three.  But love is the greatest of  them all” (1 Cor 13:13).











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