Revelations of Divine Love by of Norwich Julian
CHAPTER LI
4801 words | Chapter 58
"He is the Head, and we be His members." "Therefore our Father nor may
nor will more blame assign to us than to His own Son, precious and
worthy Christ"
And then our Courteous Lord answered in shewing full mistily a
wonderful example of a Lord that hath a Servant: and He gave me sight
to my understanding of both. Which sight was shewed doubly in the
Lord and doubly in the Servant: the one part was shewed spiritually
in bodily likeness, and the other part was shewed more spiritually,
without bodily likeness.
For the first [sight], thus, I saw two persons in bodily likeness: that
is to say, a Lord and a Servant; and therewith God gave me spiritual
understanding. The Lord sitteth stately in rest and in peace; the
Servant standeth by afore his Lord reverently, ready to do his Lord's
will. The Lord looketh upon his Servant full lovingly and sweetly, and
meekly he sendeth him to a certain place to do his will. The Servant
not only he goeth, but suddenly he starteth, and runneth in great
haste, for love to do his Lord's will. And anon he falleth into a
slade,[1] and taketh full great hurt. And then he groaneth and moaneth
and waileth and struggleth, but he neither may rise nor help himself by
no manner of way.
And of all this the most mischief[2] that I saw him in, was failing of
comfort: for he could not turn his face to look upon his loving Lord,
which was to him full near,--in Whom is full comfort;--but as a man
that was feeble and unwise for the time, he turned his mind[3] to his
feeling and endured in woe.
In which woe he suffered seven great pains. The first was the sore
bruising that he took in his falling, which was to him feelable pain;
the second was the heaviness of his body; the third was feebleness
following from these two; the fourth, that he was blinded in his reason
and stunned in his mind, so far forth that almost he had forgotten his
own love; the fifth was that he might not rise; the sixth was most
marvellous to me, and that was that he lay all alone: I looked all
about and beheld, and far nor near, high nor low, I saw to him no help;
the seventh was that the place which he lay on was a long, hard, and
grievous [place].
I marvelled how this Servant might meekly suffer there all this woe,
and I beheld with carefulness to learn if I could perceive in him any
fault, or if the Lord should assign to him any blame. And in sooth
there was none seen: for only his goodwill and his great desire was
cause of his falling; and he was unlothful, and as good inwardly as
when he stood afore his Lord, ready to do his will. And right thus
continually his loving Lord full tenderly beholdeth him. But now with
a _double_ manner of Regard: one outward, full meekly and mildly,
with great ruth and pity,--and this was of the first [sight], another
_inward,_ more spiritually,--and this was shewed with a leading of mine
understanding into the Lord, [in the] which I saw Him highly rejoicing
for the worshipful restoring that He will and shall bring His Servant
to by His plenteous grace; and this was of that other shewing.
And now [was] my understanding led again into the first [sight]; both
keeping in mind. Then saith this courteous Lord in his meaning: _Lo,
lo, my loved Servant, what harm and distress he hath taken in my
service for my love,--yea, and for his goodwill. Is it not fitting that
I award him [for] his affright and his dread, his hurt and his maim
and all his woe? And not only this, but falleth it not to me to give
a gift that [shall] be better to him, and more worshipful, than his
own wholeness should have been?--or else methinketh I should do him no
grace._
And in this an inward spiritual Shewing of the Lord's meaning descended
into my soul: in which I saw that it behoveth needs to be, by virtue of
His great [Goodness] and His own worship, that His dearworthy Servant,
which He loved so much, should be verily and blissfully rewarded, above
that he should have been if he had not fallen. Yea, and so far forth,
that his falling and his woe, that he hath taken thereby, shall be
turned into high and overpassing worship and endless bliss.
And at this point the shewing of the example vanished, and our good
Lord led forth mine understanding in sight and in shewing of the
Revelation to the end. But notwithstanding all this forth-leading, the
marvelling over the example went never from me: for methought it was
given me for an answer to my desire, and yet could I not take therein
full understanding to mine ease at that time. For in the Servant that
was shewed for Adam, as I shall tell, I saw many diverse properties
that might in no manner of way be assigned[4] to single Adam. And
thus in that time I stood for much part in unknowing: for the full
understanding of this marvellous example was not given me in that time.
In which mighty example three properties of the Revelation be yet
greatly hid; and notwithstanding this [further forthleading], I saw and
understood that every Shewing is full of secret things [left hid].
And therefore me behoveth now to tell three properties in which I
am somewhat eased. The first is the beginning of teaching that I
understood therein, in the same time; the second is the inward teaching
that I have understood therein afterward; the third, all the whole
Revelation from the beginning to the end (that is to say of this Book)
which our Lord God of His goodness bringeth oftentimes freely to the
sight of mine understanding. And these three are so oned, as to my
understanding, that I cannot, nor may, dispart them. And by these
three, as one, I have teaching whereby I ought to believe and trust in
our Lord God, that of the same goodness of which He shewed it, and for
the same end, right so, of the same goodness and for the same end He
shall declare it to us when it is His will.
For, twenty years after the time of the Shewing, save three months,
I had teaching inwardly, as I shall tell: _It belongeth to thee to
take heed to all the properties and conditions that were shewed in the
example, though thou think that they be misty and indifferent[5] to thy
sight_. I assented willingly, with great desire, and inwardly [beheld]
with heedfulness[6] all the points and properties that were shewed in
the same time, as far forth as my wits and understanding would serve:
beginning my beholding at the Lord and at the Servant, and the manner
of sitting of the Lord, and the place that he sat on, and the colour of
his clothing and the manner of shape, and his countenance without, and
his nobleness and his goodness within; at the manner of standing of the
Servant, and the place where, and how; at his manner of clothing, the
colour and the shape; at his outward having and at his inward goodness
and his unloathfulness.
The Lord that sat stately in rest and in peace, I understood that He is
God. The Servant that stood afore the Lord, I understood that it was
shewed for Adam: that is to say, one man was shewed, that time, and his
falling, to make it thereby understood how God beholdeth All-Man and
his falling. For in the sight of God all man is one man, and one man
is all man. This man was hurt in his might and made full feeble; and
he was stunned in his understanding so that he [was] turned from the
beholding of his Lord. But his will was kept whole in God's sight;--for
his will I saw our Lord commend and approve. But himself was letted and
blinded from the knowing of this will; and this is to him great sorrow
and grievous distress: for neither doth he see clearly his loving Lord,
which is to him full meek and mild, nor doth he see truly what himself
is in the sight of his loving Lord. And well I wot when these two are
wisely and truly seen, we shall get rest and peace here in part, and
the fulness of the bliss of Heaven, by His plenteous grace.
And this was a beginning of teaching which I saw in the same time,
whereby I might come to know in what manner He beholdeth us in our sin.
And then I saw that only Pain blameth and punisheth, and our courteous
Lord comforteth and sorroweth; and ever He is to the soul in glad
Cheer, loving, and longing to bring us to His bliss.
The place that the Lord sat on was simple, on the earth, barren and
desert, alone in wilderness; his clothing was ample and full seemly,
as falleth to a Lord; the colour of his cloth was blue as azure, most
sad and fair, his cheer was merciful; the colour of his face was
fair-brown,--with full seemly features; his eyes were black, most fair
and seemly, shewing [_outward_] full of lovely _pity_, and [shewing],
_within_ him, an high Regard,[7] long and broad, all full of endless
heavens. And the lovely looking wherewith He looked upon His Servant
continually,--and especially in his falling,--methought it might melt
our hearts for love and burst them in two for joy. The fair looking
shewed [itself] of a seemly mingledness which was marvellous to behold:
the one [part] was Ruth and Pity, the other was Joy and Bliss. The
Joy and Bliss passeth as far Ruth and Pity as Heaven is above earth:
the Pity was earthly and the Bliss was heavenly: the Ruth and Pity of
the Father was [in regard] of the falling of Adam, which is His most
loved creature; the Joy and Bliss was [in regard] of His dearworthy
Son, which is even with the Father. The Merciful Beholding of His
Countenance[8] of love fulfilled all earth and descended down with Adam
into hell, with which continuant pity Adam was kept from endless death.
And thus Mercy and Pity dwelleth with mankind unto the time we come up
into Heaven.
But man is blinded in this life and therefore we may not see our
Father, God, as He is. And what time that He of His goodness
willeth to shew Himself to man, He sheweth Himself homely, as man.
Notwithstanding, I reason, in verity[9] we ought to know and believe
that the Father is not man.
But his sitting on the earth barren and desert, is to signify this:--He
made man's soul to be His own City and His dwelling-place: which is
most pleasing to Him of all His works. And what time that man was
fallen into sorrow and pain, he was not all seemly to serve in that
noble office; and therefore our Lord Father would prepare Himself
no other place, but would sit upon the earth abiding mankind, which
is mingled with earth, till what time by His grace His dearworthy
Son had brought again His City into the noble fairness with His hard
travail. The blueness of the clothing betokeneth His steadfastness; the
brownness of his fair face, with the seemly blackness of the eyes, was
most accordant to shew His holy soberness. The length and breadth of
his garments, which were fair, flaming about, betokeneth that He hath,
beclosed in Him, all Heavens, and all Joy and Bliss:[10] and this was
shewed in a touch [of time], where I have said: _Mine understanding
was led into the Lord_; in which [inward shewing] I saw Him highly
_rejoice_ for the worshipful restoring that He will and shall bring His
servant to by His plenteous grace.
And yet I marvelled, beholding the Lord and the Servant aforesaid. I
saw the Lord sit stately, and the Servant standing reverently afore his
Lord. In which Servant there is double understanding, one _without_,
another _within. Outwardly_:--he was clad simply, as a labourer which
were got ready for his toil;[11] and he stood full near the Lord--not
evenly in front[12] of him, but in part to one side, on the left. His
clothing was a white kirtle, single, old, and all defaced, dyed with
sweat of his body, strait-fitting to him, and short--as it were an
handful beneath the knee; [thread]bare, seeming as it should soon be
worn out, ready to be ragged and rent. And of this I marvelled greatly,
thinking: this is now an unseemly clothing for the Servant that is so
greatly loved to stand in afore so worshipful a Lord. And _inwardly_ in
him was shewed a ground of love: which love that he had to the Lord was
even-like[13] to the love that the Lord had to him.
The wisdom of the Servant saw inwardly that there was one thing to
do which should be to the worship of the Lord. And the Servant, for
love, having no regard to himself nor to nothing that might befall
him, hastily he started and ran at the sending of his Lord, to do that
thing which was his will and his worship. For it seemed by his outward
clothing as he had been a continuant labourer of long time, and by the
_inward sight_ that I had both of the Lord and the Servant it seemed
that he was a[14] new [one], that is to say, new beginning to travail:
which Servant was never sent out afore.
There was a treasure in the earth which the Lord loved. I marvelled and
thought what it might be, and I was answered in mine understanding: _It
is a food which is delectable and pleasant to the Lord_. For I saw the
Lord sit as a man, and I saw neither meat nor drink wherewith to serve
him. This was one marvel. Another marvel was that this majestic Lord
had no servant but one, and him he sent out. I beheld, thinking what
manner of labour it might be that the Servant should do. And then I
understood that he should do the greatest labour and hardest travail:
that is, he should be a gardener, delve and dyke, toil and sweat,
and turn the earth upside-down, and seek the deepness, and water the
plants in time. And in this he should continue his travail and make
sweet floods to run, and noble and plenteous fruits to spring, which he
should bring afore the Lord to serve him therewith to his desire. And
he should never turn again till he had prepared this food all ready as
he knew that it pleased the Lord. And then he should take this food,
with the drink in the food, and bear it full worshipfully afore the
Lord. And all this time the Lord should sit in the same place, abiding
his Servant whom he sent out.
And yet I marvelled from whence the Servant came. For I saw in the Lord
that HE hath within Himself endless life, and all manner of goodness,
save that treasure that was in the earth. And [also] _that_ [treasure]
was grounded in the Lord in marvellous deepness of endless love, but
it was not all to His worship till the Servant had thus nobly prepared
it, and brought it before Him in himself present. And without the Lord
was nothing but wilderness. And I understood not all what this example
meant, and therefore I marvelled whence the Servant came.
In the Servant is comprehended the Second Person in the Trinity; and
in the Servant is comprehended Adam: that is to say, All-Man. And
therefore when I say the _Son_, it meaneth the Godhead which is even
with the Father; and when I say the _Servant_, it meaneth Christ's
Manhood, which is rightful Adam. By the nearness of the Servant is
understood the Son, and by the standing on the left side is understood
Adam. The Lord is the Father, God; the Servant is the Son, Christ
Jesus; the Holy Ghost is Even[15] Love which is in them both.
When Adam fell, God's Son fell: because of the rightful oneing which
had been made in heaven, God's Son might not [be disparted] from Adam.
(For by Adam I understand All-Man.) Adam fell from life to death, into
the deep[16] of this wretched world, and after that into hell: God's
Son fell with Adam, into the deep[17] of the Maiden's womb, who was the
fairest daughter of Adam; and for this end: to excuse Adam from blame
in heaven and in earth; and mightily He fetched him out of hell.
By the wisdom and goodness that was in the Servant is understood
God's Son; by the poor clothing as a labourer standing near the left
side, is understood the Manhood and Adam, with all the scathe[18] and
feebleness that followeth. For in all this our good Lord shewed His own
Son and Adam but _one_ Man. The virtue and the goodness that we have is
of Jesus Christ, the feebleness and the blindness that we have is of
Adam: which two were shewed in the Servant.
And thus hath our good Lord Jesus taken upon Him all our blame, and
therefore our Father nor may nor will more blame assign to us than to
His own Son, dearworthy Christ. Thus was He, the Servant, afore His
coming into earth standing ready afore the Father in purpose, till what
time He would send Him to do that worshipful deed by which mankind was
brought again into heaven;--that is to say, notwithstanding that He is
God, even with the Father as anent the Godhead. But in His foreseeing
purpose that He would be Man, to save man in fulfilling of His Father's
will, so He stood afore His Father as a Servant, willingly[19] taking
upon Him all our charge. And then He started full readily at the
Father's will, and anon He fell full low, into the Maiden's womb,
having no regard to Himself nor to His hard pains.
The white kirtle is the flesh; the singleness is that there was right
nought atwix the Godhead and Manhood; the straitness is poverty; the
eld is of Adam's wearing; the defacing, of sweat of Adam's travail; the
shortness sheweth the Servant's labour.
And thus I saw the Son saying in His meaning[20]: _Lo! my dear Father,
I stand before Thee in Adam's kirtle, all ready to start and to run: I
would be in the earth to do Thy worship when it is Thy will to send me.
How long shall I desire?_ Full soothfastly wist the Son when it would
be the Father's will and how long He should desire: that is to say,
[He wist it] anent the Godhead: for He is the Wisdom of the Father;
wherefore this question was shewed with understanding of the _Manhood_
of Christ. For all mankind that shall be saved by the sweet Incarnation
and blissful Passion of Christ, all is the Manhood of Christ: for He
is the Head and we be His members. To which members the day and the
time is unknown when every passing woe and sorrow shall have an end,
and the everlasting joy and bliss shall be fulfilled; which day and
time for to see, all the Company of Heaven longeth. And all that shall
be under heaven that shall come thither, their way is by longing and
desire. Which desire and longing was shewed in the Servant's standing
afore the Lord,--or else thus in the Son's standing afore the Father in
Adam's kirtle. For the longing[21] and desire of all Mankind that shall
be saved appeared in Jesus: for Jesus is All that shall be saved, and
All that shall be saved is Jesus. And all of the Charity of God; with
obedience, meekness, and patience, and virtues that belong to us.
Also in this marvellous example I have teaching with me as it were
the beginning of an A.B.C., whereby I have some understanding of
our Lord's meaning. For the secret things of the Revelation be hid
therein;--notwithstanding that _all_ the Shewings are full of secret
things. The _sitting_ of the Father betokeneth His Godhead: that is
to say, by shewing of rest and peace: for in the Godhead may be no
travail.[22] And that He shewed Himself as _Lord_, betokeneth His
[governance] to our manhood. The _standing_ of the Servant betokeneth
travail; _on one side_, and on the _left_, betokeneth that he was not
all worthy to stand even-right afore the Lord; his _starting_ was the
Godhead, and the _running_ was the Manhood: for the Godhead started
from the Father into the Maiden's womb, falling into the taking of our
Kind. And in this falling he took great sore: the _sore_ that He took
was our flesh, in which He had also swiftly feeling of deadly pains.
That he stood _adread_ before the Lord and not even-right, betokeneth
that His clothing was not seemly[23] to stand in even-right afore the
Lord, nor _that_ might not, nor should not, be His office while He
was a labourer; nor also He might not sit in rest and peace with the
Lord till He had won His peace rightfully with His hard travail; and
that he stood by the _left_ side [betokeneth] that the Father left
His own Son, willingly,[24] in the Manhood to suffer all man's pains,
without sparing of Him. By that _his kirtle was in point to be ragged
and rent_, is understood the blows, the scourgings, the thorns and the
nails, the drawing and the dragging, His tender flesh rending. (As
I saw in some part [before] how the flesh was rent from the skull,
falling in pieces until the time when the bleeding ceased, and then
it began to dry again, cleaving to the bone.) And by the _struggling
and writhing, groaning and moaning,_ is understood that He might never
rise almightily from the time that He was fallen into the Maiden's
womb, till his body was slain and dead, He yielding the soul into the
Father's hands with all Mankind for whom He was sent.
And at this point He began first to shew His might: for He went into
Hell, and when He was there He raised up the great Root out of the deep
deepness which rightfully was knit to Him in high Heaven. The body was
in the grave till Easter-morrow, and from that time He lay nevermore.
For then was rightfully ended the struggling and the writhing, the
groaning and the moaning. And our foul deadly flesh that God's Son
took on Him, which was Adam's old kirtle, strait, [worn]-bare, and
short, was then by our Saviour made fair, new, white and bright and of
endless cleanness; loose and long[25]; fairer and richer than was then
the clothing which [before] I saw on the Father: for that clothing was
blue, but Christ's clothing is [coloured] now of a fair seemly medlour,
which is so marvellous that I can it not describe: for it is all of
very worships.
Now sitteth not the Son on earth in wilderness, but He sitteth in
His noblest Seat, which He made in Heaven most to His pleasing. Now
standeth not the Son afore the Father as a Servant afore the Lord
dreadingly, meanly clad, in part naked; but He standeth afore the
Father even-right, richly clad in blissful largeness, with a Crown
upon His head of precious richness. For it was shewed that _we be His
Crown_: which Crown is the Joy of the Father, the Worship of the Son,
the Satisfying of the Holy Ghost, and endless marvellous Bliss to all
that be in Heaven. Now standeth not the Son afore the Father on the
left side, as a labourer, but He sitteth on His Father's right hand,
in endless rest and peace.[26] (But it is not meant that the Son
sitteth on the right hand, side by side, as one man sitteth by another
in this life,--for there is no such sitting, as to my sight, in the
Trinity,--but He sitteth on His Father's right hand,--that is to say:
in the highest nobleness of the Father's joys.) Now is the Spouse,
God's Son, in peace with His loved Wife, which is the Fair Maiden of
endless Joy. Now sitteth the Son, Very God and Man, in His City in rest
and peace: which [City] His Father hath adight to Him of His endless
purpose; and the Father in the Son; and the Holy Ghost in the Father
and in the Son.
[1] _i.e._ a steep hollow place; a ravine.
[2] _i.e._ injury, harm.
[3] "entended."
[4] "aret" = reckoned.
[5] _i.e._ not of definite purport, indistinct.
[6] "avisement."
[7] MS. "within him an _heyward_ long and brode, all full of endless
hevyns." Cressy and Collins transcribe this word without explanation,
but give "heavenliness" for "heavens." It seems most likely that "hey"
has been written as if affixed to "ward" (_i.e. "regard," "deeming,"_
or _"reward"_), or else to _"reward,"_ meaning, as usual, _regard_
("Beholding"). See pp. 108 and 113.
If "_an heyward_"--"long and brode all full of endless hevyns,"--were
to be rendered as "an high reward," revealed for the future along
with, though less clearly than, the divine pity for the pains of the
present, reference might be made to Revelation ix. pp. 47, 50: "It is
a joy, a bliss, an endless satisfying to me that ever suffered Passion
for thee." ... "In this feeling mine understanding was lifted up into
Heaven: and there I saw three heavens"; and to Rev. x. p. 51: "then
with a glad Cheer our Lord looked into His Side and beheld, rejoicing.
With His sweet looking He led forth the understanding of His creature
by the same wound into His Side within. And then He shewed a fair
delectable place, and large enough for all mankind that shall be saved
to rest in peace and in love."
But "Regard" (scope of true, continuing, divine Sight, Insight,
All-comprehending sight) seems more likely to be the true rendering.
"Long and broad" go strangely with the word, but on p. 113 the _length
and breadth_ of the garments is interpreted immediately after the
colour of the eyes, and is said to betoken that "He hath in Him, all
Heavens, and all Joy and Bliss," and indeed these words but fill out
the idea of the more frequently used "high" to signify the "enclosing"
of "endless heavens:" that Sphere of "fulness" which is infinite.
With this passage may be compared one below, on p. 113: "The Merciful
Beholding of His loving Cheer fulfilled all earth and descended
down with Adam into hell, ... and thus Mercy and Pity dwelleth with
mankind unto the time we come up into Heaven." The other, the Inward,
the _high_ Beholding or Regard it not said to "fill" Heaven, but to
be "full of" endless Heavens. So elsewhere it is said that in our
_Sense-soul_, the lower part of human nature, _God dwells_, but that
our _Substance_, the higher part, _dwells in God_. (The regard of Mercy
and Pity is with the Sense-soul; the high Regard of Joy and Bliss is
with the Substance.) P. 132, chap. lv.: "I saw that our Substance is in
God, and also I saw that in our Sense-soul God is." lvi. p. 135:" The
worshipful City that our Lord Jesus sitteth in, it is our Sense-part,
in which He is enclosed; and our Nature-Substance is beclosed in Jesus,
with the blessed Soul of Christ sitting in rest in the Godhead."
[8] "lofly cher."
[9] "I reson sothly we owen."
[10] See p. 112, the "high reward."
[11] "which wer disposed to travel."
[12] "even fornempts" = strait opposite.
[13] _i.e._ equal (MS. "even like").
[14] S. de Cressy: "anaved"; MS. "anew."
[15] _i.e._ equal--see p. 114. "All of the Charity of God," the mutual
love that also embraces created souls, p. 118.
[16] "the slade."
[17] "the slade."
[18] "mischief."
[19] "wilfully" = voluntarily, of His own Will as God.
[20] purpose, intent, thought or speech.
[21] "langor."
[22] _i.e._ painful toil. "He sitteth ... in peace and rest. And
the Godhead ruleth and careth for heaven and earth and all that is"
(lxvii.).
[23] "honest."
[24] "wilfully."
[25] "wyde and syde" = wide and long.
[26] But see also xxxix. p. 81, lxxx. p. 194.
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