CHAPTER II
GODS INSCRUTABLE ESSENCE; THE DECREE OF
CREATION
O King, most high and wise Lord; How incomprehensible are thy
judgments, and inscrutable thy ways (Rom. 11, 24)! Invincible God, enduring forever and
whose beginning is unknown (Eccli. 18, 1)! Who can understand thy greatness and who can be
worthy of thy most magnificent works, or who can tell Thee why Thou hast created them
(Rom. 9, 20)? For Thou art exalted above all of them and our vision cannot reach Thee and
our understanding cannot comprehend Thee. Mayest Thou be blest, magnificent King, because
Thou hast deigned to show me, thy slave and a vile worm of the earth, great sacraments and
most sublime mysteries.
I saw the Most High, at the same time understanding how his Majesty is
in Himself; I received a clear intelligence and a true perception of what is meant by a
God, infinite in his substance and attributes, eternal, exalted above all, being three in
Person, and one true God. Three in Person, because of the three activities of knowing,
comprehending and loving each other; one, so as to secure the boon of eternal unity. It is
the trinity of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost. The Father is not made, nor
created, nor begotten, nor can He be generated or have a beginning. I perceived, that the
Son derives His origin from the Father alone by eternal generation; and that they are
equal in their duration from eternity; and that He is begotten by the fecundity of the
intelligence of the Father. The Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and the Son through
love. In their indivisible Trinity there is nothing which can be called first or last,
greater or smaller; all three Persons are equally eternal and eternally equal; there is
unity of essence in a trinity of persons. Nor are the persons mingled in order to form one
God, nor the divine substance separated or divided in order to form three Persons, being
distinct as the Father, as the Son and as the Holy Ghost. They are nevertheless one and
the same Divinity, equal in Each is the glory and majesty, the power, the eternity, the
immensity, the wisdom and sanctity, and all the attributes. And though there are three
Persons, in whom these infinite perfections subsist, He is the one and true God, the Holy,
the Just, the Powerful, the Eternal and the Measureless.
I also obtained an understanding of the manner in which this Trinity
comprehends Itself by simple vision, so that no new or distinct cognition is necessary:
the father knows that, which is known to the Son, and the Son and the Holy Ghost know that
which is in the intelligence of the Father. I understood how they love One another with
one and the same immense and eternal love; how there is a single, indivisible and equal
oneness of intelligence, love and action, how there is one simple, incorporeal and
indivisible nature, a divine essence of the true God, in which are joined and united all
the perfections in their highest and in an infinite degree.
I learnt also to understand the quality of these perfections of the
highest Lord: that He is beautiful without a blemish, great without quantity, good without
need of qualification, eternal without the duration of time, strong without any weakness,
living without touch of decay, true without deceit, present in all places, filling them
without occupying them, existing in all things without occupying any space. There is no
contradiction in his kindness, nor any defect in his wisdom. In his wisdom He is
inscrutable, in his decrees He is terrible, in his judgments just, in his thoughts most
hidden, in his words most true, in his works holy, in his riches affluent. To Him no space
is too wide, no narrowness causes restraint, his will does not vary, the sorrowful does
not cause Him pain, the past has not passed for Him, nor does the future happen in regard
to Him. O eternal Immensity, what illimitable expansion have I seen in Thee? What vastness
do I see in thy infinite Being? Vision does not terminate, nor ever exhaust itself in thy
abyss of being. This is the unchangeable Essence, the Being above all other beings, the
most perfect sanctity, the most constant truth; this is the infinite, the length, the
breadth, the height and the depth, the glory and its cause, rest without fatigue, goodness
immeasurable.
I understood, that the Most High was in the quiescent state of his own
being, when the three Persons (according to our way of understanding things), decreed to
communicate his perfections as a free gift. For greater clearness, I must remark, that God
comprehends in Himself all things by one indivisible, most simple and instantaneous act.
He does not go on from the understanding of one thing to the understanding of another like
we do, distinguishing and perceiving first one thing by an act of the understanding, and
after that proceeding to the knowledge of others by their connection with those already
known. God knows them conjointly all at once, without before or after, since all are
together and at once contained in the divine and uncreated knowledge and science, just as
they are comprehended and enclosed in his infinite Being, as in their first beginning.
Although, this divine knowledge is one, most simple and indivisible,
nevertheless since the things which I see are many, and since there is a certain order, by
which some are first and some come after, it is necessary to divide the knowledge of
Gods intelligence and the knowledge of his will into many instants, or into many
different acts, according as they correspond to the diverse orders of created things. For
as some of the creatures hold their existence because of others, there is a dependence of
one upon the other. Accordingly we say that God intended and decreed this before that, the
one on account of the other; and that if He had not desired or included in the science of
vision the one, He would not have desired the other. But by this way of speaking, we must
not try to convey the meaning that God placed many acts of intelligence, or of the will;
rather we must intend merely to indicate, that the creatures are dependent on each other
and that they succeed one another. In order to be able to comprehend the manner of
creation more easily, we apply the order of things as we see them objectively, to the acts
of the divine intelligence and will in creating them.
I understood, that this order comprises the following instants. The
first instant is: God recognizing his infinite attributes and perfections together with
the propensity and the ineffable inclination to communicate Himself outwardly. This
knowledge of God as being communicative ad extra comes first. The majesty of God,
beholding the nature of his infinite perfections, their virtue and efficacy operating with
magnificence, saw, that it was just and most proper, and, as it were, a duty and a
necessity, to communicate Himself and to follow that inclination of imparting and
exercising his liberality and mercy, by distributing outside of Himself with magnificence
the plenitude of the infinite treasures, contained in the Divinity. For, being infinite in
all things, it is much more natural that He communicate gifts and graces than that fire
should ascend, or the stone should gravitate towards its center, or that the sun should
diffuse its light. This unfathomable depth of perfections, this affluence of treasures,
this impetuous infinity of riches, is set in motion by its own inclinations to communicate
itself. At the same time God is in Himself conscious that to distribute gifts and graces,
is not to diminish his riches, but to increase them in the only possible way, by giving an
outlet to the inexhaustible fountain of his riches.
In this enlightenment and knowledge which I possess, two things hold my
lukewarm heart in wonder and inflame it unto annihilation. The first is the inclination
and urgent desire, which I see in God, and the strong will, to communicate his Divinity
and the treasures of his grace. The second is the unspeakable and incomprehensible
immensity of the good gifts, which I see He wishes to distribute according to this degree,
assigning them for this purpose and yet remaining infinite, as if He had not yet given
nothing. In this desire and inclination, which fills his Majesty I see Him prepared to
sanctify, justify, overwhelm with gifts and perfections all creatures together and each
one in particular for itself. He would be ready to give to each of the creatures more than
what is held by all the angels and seraphim together; even if all the drops in the ocean
and the grains of sand on their shores, all the stars, the planets and the elements, and
all creatures were capable of reason and of his gifts, they would receive them without
measure, provided they would dispose themselves and place no obstacle toward receiving
them. O fearful malice of sin, which alone is capable of holding up the impetuous stream
of such great and eternal gifts!
The second instant was to confirm and determine the object and
intention of this communication of the Divinity ad extra, namely, that it should
redound to his greater glory and to the exaltation of his Majesty and the manifestation of
his greatness. This his own exaltation God saw as the end, for which he would communicate
Himself, make Himself known by his liberality in the distribution of his attributes, and
set in motion his Omnipotence in order that He might be known, praised and glorified.
The third instant consisted in selecting and determining the order and
arrangement, or the mode of this communication, so as to realize in an adequate manner the
most exalted ends. The order namely, which it is proper should be maintained in regard to
the communications of the Godhead and its divine attributes; so that this activity of the
Lord may have its proper reasons and objects, and so that it might proceed with the most
beautiful and admirable sequence, harmony and subordination. In this instant was decreed
first of all, that the Divine Word should assume flesh and should become visible. The
perfection and the composition of the most holy humanity of Christ our Lord was decreed
and modeled in divine intelligence. Secondarily, also were formed the ideals of the rest
of men in imitation of the First. The divine mind prearranged the harmony and adornment of
the human nature composed of an organic body and a vivifying soul, endowed with faculties
to know and enjoy its Creator, to discern between good and evil, and with a free will to
love that same Lord.
The fourth instant was to determine the gifts and graces, which were to
be conferred upon the humanity of Christ, our Lord, in union with the Divinity. Here the
Most High opened the liberal hands of his Omnipotence and his other attributes, in order
to enrich the most sacred humanity and the soul of Christ with the highest possible
plenitude of his gifts and graces. Then was fulfilled what afterward David said: "The
stream of the river maketh the city of God joyful" (Ps. 45, 5). When the stream of
his gifts flowed toward the humanity of the Word, communicating to it all the infused
science, the grace and goodness of which his blessed soul was capable of grace and glory,
in order that from this impetuous stream they might partake in the manner in which it
afterwards really happened.
To this instant also, and, as it were, in natural sequence, pertain the
decree and predestination of the Mother of the Divine Word incarnate; for here, I
understand, was ordained that pure Creature before aught else whatever. Thus, before all
other creatures, was She conceived in the divine mind, in such manner and such state as
befitted and became the dignity, excellence and gifts of the humanity of her most holy
Son. To her flowed over, at once and immediately, the river of the Divinity and its
attributes with all its impetuousity, in as far as a mere creature is capable and as is
due to the dignity of the Mother of God.
In the knowledge of these exalted mysteries and decrees, I confess
myself ravished in admiration and transported beyond my proper self. Perceiving this most
holy and pure Creature formed and conceived in the divine mind from the beginning and
before all the ages, I joyously and exultingly magnify the Omnipotent for the admirable
and mysterious decree, by which He formed for us such a pure and grand, such a mysterious
and godlike Creature, worthy rather to be admired and praised by all beings, than to be
described by any one. In my admiration I can say with St. Dionysius the Areopagite:
"If faith would not instruct me, and if the understanding of what I see would not
teach me, that it is God, who has conceived her in his mind, and who alone could and can
in his Omnipotence form such an image of his Divinity, if this all were not present to my
mind, I might begin to doubt, whether the Virgin Mother contain not in Herself
Divinity."
O what tears flowed from my eyes, and what sorrowful astonishment
possessed my soul, to see that divine prodigy not acknowledged and that wonder of the Most
High not manifest to all the mortals. Much is known of it, but much more is unknown, as
this sealed book has not been opened. I am ravished in the perception of this tabernacle
of God, and I perceive that the Author of it is more admirable in her creation, than in
that of all the rest of the world, although the diversity of the creatures manifests the
wonderful power of their Creator. In this Queen alone are comprehended and contained more
treasures than in all the rest of things joined together, and the variety and preciousness
of her riches honor the Lord above all the multitudes of the other creatures.
Here (according to our way of understanding) the promise and, as it
were, the contract was made with the Word as to the degree of sanctity, and perfection and
the gifts and graces, which were to be possessed by Mary his Mother. Also as to the
protection, support and defense, which was to be provided for this true City of God, in
which his Majesty contemplated the graces and merits, which She earned for Herself, as
well as the fruits to be gathered for his people by the loving returns, which She was to
make to his Majesty. In the same instant, and as it were in the third and last place, God
determined to create a locality and an abode, where the incarnate Word and his Mother
should converse and dwell. For them primarily did He create the heaven and earth with its
stars and elements and all that is contained in them. Secondarily the intention and decree
included the creation of the members, of which Jesus was to be the Head, and of whom He
would be the King; in order that with kingly providence, all the necessary and befitting
arrangements might be made beforehand.
I pass over to the fifth instant, although in reality I have found
that, which I sought. In this fifth decree the creation of the angelic nature which is
more excellent and more like unto the spiritual being of the Divinity, was determined
upon, and at the same time the division or arrangement of the angelic hosts into nine
choirs and three hierarchies, was provided and decreed. As they are created first of all
for the glory of God, to assist before his divine Majesty and to know and love Him, so
secondarily they are ordained to assist, glorify and honor, reverence and serve the
deified humanity of the eternal Word, recognizing Him as Head, and honoring Him also in
his Mother, the most holy Mary, Queen of these same angels. Commission was given to these
angels, "to bear them up in their hands" in all their ways (Ps. 90, 12). In this
instant Christ our Lord earned for them by his infinite merits, present and foreseen, all
the grace, which they were to receive. He was constituted as their Head, Exemplar and
supreme King, of whom they should be subjects. Even of the number of angels had been
infinite, the merits of Christ our highest Good, would be abundantly sufficient to supply
them all with grace.
To this instant belongs also the predestination of the good, and the
reprobation of the bad angels. God saw in it, by means of his infinite science, all the
works of the former and of the latter and the propriety of predestinating, by his free
will and by his merciful liberality, those that would obey and give honor, and of
reprobating by his justice those who would rise up against his Majesty in pride and
disobedience on account of their disordered selflove. In the same instant also was decreed
the creation of the empyrean heaven, for the manifestation of his glory and the reward of
the good; also the earth and the heavenly bodies for the other creatures; moreover also in
the center or depth of the earth, hell, for the punishment of the bad angels.
In the sixth instant was decreed the creation of a people and the
congregation of men for Christ, who was already formed in the divine mind and will, and
according to his image and likeness man was to be made, in order, that the incarnate Word
might find brethren, similar but inferior to Himself and a people of his own nature, of
whom He might be the Head. In this instant was determined the order of creation of the
whole human race, which was to begin from one man and woman and propagate itself, until
the Virgin and her Son should be born in the predestined order. On account of the merits
of Christ our Savior, the graces and gifts were prearranged, and also original justice, if
they would only preserve it. The fall of Adam was foreseen and in him that of all others,
except of the Queen, who did not enter into this decree. As a remedy, it was ordained that
the most holy humanity should be capable of suffering. The predestined were chosen by free
grace, and the foreknown were reprobated with exact justice. All that was convenient and
necessary for the conservation of the human race and for obtaining the end of the
Redemption and the Predestination, was preordained, without interfering with the free will
of men; for such ordainment was more conformable to Gods nature and to divine
equity. There was no injustice done to them, for if with their free will they could sin,
so also could they abstain from sin by means of grace and the light of reason. God
violated the right of no one, since He forsook no one nor denied to any one that which is
necessary. Since his law is written in the hearts of men, nobody is excused for not
knowing and loving Him as the highest Good of all creation.
In the perception of these mysteries I saw with great clearness and
force the high motives which caused God to manifest and magnify Himself and which should
induce men to praise and adore the greatness of the Creator and Redeemer of all. I also
saw how tardy they are in the acknowledgment of these obligations and in making return for
these benefits; and I was made aware of the complaints and the indignation of the Most
High on account of this forgetfulness. His majesty commanded and exhorted me not to be
guilty of such ingratitude, but to offer Him a sacrifice of praise, and a new song, and
that I magnify Him in the name of all creatures.
O most high and incomprehensible Lord! Would that I had the love and
perfections of all the angels and the just in order to confess and praise worthily thy
greatness! I acknowledge, great and mighty Lord, that such a vile creature as I cannot
merit the memorable benefit of receiving this clear and exalted knowledge and light
concerning thy exalted Majesty. At the sight of thy greatness I perceive my littleness,
which before that happy hour was unknown to me; and I was ignorant of the greatness and
excellence of the virtue of humility, which is learnt in this science. I do not wish to
say that I now possess that virtue, but neither can I deny that I have been shown the
certain path which leads to it. Thy light, O most high Lord, illumines me and thy lamp
shows me the paths (Ps. 118, 105), so that I see what I have been and what I am, and fear
what I may become to be. Thou hast lighted up, most high King, my understanding and
inflamed my will with its most exalted object.
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