October
15th, Feast of St. Teresa of Avila
Today’s saint, Teresa of Avila,
is honored by the Church as the “Doctor of Prayer” – and so indeed she is. Of
all the spiritiual treatises on the life of prayer, the writings of the
Carmalite Reformer stand at the head. From among these writings, it has been
recognized by many that “The Interior Castle” deserves a special pride of place
as the greatest (or, at least, one of the greatest) works on the nature of
prayer. Together with “The Dark Night of the Soul” by St. John of the Cross,
St. Teresa’s “Castle” is arguably the greatest treatise on the spiritual life.
Rather than considering, in
this little post, the progression of the soul through the seven mansions of St.
Teresa – which progress is the most often-noted aspect of the little book – we will
benefit greatly from a prior consideration of St. Teresa’s conception of the
soul in God, and God in the soul.
The
Interior Castle – The soul in God
In the opening pages of “The
Interior Castle”, St. Teresa describes how she came to the metaphor of the
castle and it’s meaning:
“WHILE I was beseeching Our Lord to-day that He would speak
through me, since I could find nothing to say and had no idea how to begin to
carry out the obligation laid upon me by obedience, a thought occurred to me
which I will now set down, in order to have some foundation on which to build.
I began to think of the soul as if it were a castle made of a single diamond or
of very clear crystal, in which there are many rooms, just as in Heaven there
are many mansions.
“Let us now imagine that this castle, as I have said,
contains many mansions, some above, others below, others at each side; and in
the centre and midst of them all is the chiefest mansion where the most secret
things pass between God and the soul. You must think over this comparison very
carefully; perhaps God will be pleased to use it to show you something of the
favours which He is pleased to grant to souls, and of the differences between
them.
“Now let us return to our beautiful and delightful castle
and see how we can enter it. […] You will have read certain books on prayer
which advise the soul to enter within itself: and that is exactly what this
means. […] As far as I can understand, the door of entry into this castle is
prayer and meditation: I do not say mental prayer rather than vocal, for, if it
is prayer at all, it must be accompanied by meditation.”
St. Teresa sees the soul as a
castle of many rooms or mansions – we say, by way of addition, that the soul is
a spiritual universe, far greater and more beautiful than the material universe
(and how much more valuable!).
The interior castle is the soul
herself, and in the heart of this castle dwells the Lord – so long, at least,
as the soul is in the state of grace. Indeed, even if a man should fall from
grace, God still dwells in his soul insofar as the Almighty keeps the soul in
existence. If the Lord is present to the soul in mortal sin, how much more does
he dwell within that soul which is united to him through supernatural charity!
Do
Christians turn inward or outward in prayer?
St. Teresa is extremely clear: “You
will have read certain books on prayer which advise the soul to enter within
itself: and that is exactly what this means.” For the Doctor of Prayer,
Christian prayer is a turn inward – St. Anselm put this well when he wrote in
his Proslogion: “Up now, slight man!
flee, for a little while, your occupations; hide yourself, for a time, from
your disturbing thoughts. Cast aside, now, your burdensome cares, and put away
your toilsome business. Yield room for some little time to God; and rest for a
little time in him. Enter the inner chamber of your mind; shut out all thoughts
save that of God, and such as can aid you in seeking him; close your door and
seek him.”
Our Savior said it most beautifully,
But thou when thou shalt pray, enter into
thy chamber, and having shut the door, pray to thy Father in secret: and thy
Father who seeth in secret will repay thee. (Matthew 6:6) The Church
Fathers interpret the inner chamber as the heart of the soul, wherein we enter
even when we pray publicly if only we pray with our heart and mind.
Christian prayer is not so much
characterized by a looking out to the world, to creation, but rather it is a
looking inward.
Even the highest ecstasy is an
inward movement – St. Teresa places these ecstatic movements in the higher
mansion as we progress further and further into the heart of the soul.
Christian
prayer, as distinct from other traditions
Now we see that Christian
prayer is quite distinct from other forms of prayer. Consider, for example, the
prayer of the pagan naturalists. The pagans worshiped the created world and were
amazed by the stars, the planets, and also the earth. But they failed to look
inward, at least they did not do so sufficiently. It is on this account that
St. Augustine rebukes them: “People travel to wonder at the height of
mountains, at the huge waves of the sea, at the long courses of rivers, at the
vast compass of the ocean, at the circular motion of the stars; and they pass
by themselves without wondering.”
Likewise, consider how
different is Christian prayer from that of the Buddhist. While most of Buddhism
seeks self-annihilation, the Christian recognizes that the self is all the more
exalted and elevated as it is given to God. The Christian does not desire to
destroy himself and his desires, but rather strives to see the true desire
which the soul has for her Creator. The Christian does not pray that God should
subsume him and he should utterly disappear, rather he says: “Lord take me from
myself and give me to yourself, so that I may truly be myself in you.”
Sanctifying grace, the indwelling of the Trinity
Does not this discussion of
prayer risk the danger of self-absorption? How can we reconcile this inward
movement of prayer with the necessity of being rid of inordinate self-love?
Ought not the soul to love God first above all else – and how can this be if
she must first turn inward upon herself?
The key to this dilemma lies in
the recognition that the soul is not loved for herself alone, but rather for
whom she is in God. Yes, the inward turn is not a self-absorption, because the
soul seeks not her own will as she retreats from the world but rather seeks her
Creator who dwells within her.
This is why true prayer – we mean,
meditative prayer which is the door of the interior life and of union with God –
can only be had by one in the state of grace. Unless God dwell in the center of
the soul through sanctifying grace, the inward turn of the soul will remain
purely natural and will not be efficacious unto eternal life.
The inward movement of the life
of prayer, when conceived of in terms of God indwelling within the soul through
sanctifying grace, is no longer a self-absorption but is much more a
recognition of the ultimate authority which God himself has over the soul.
Recognizing that the Trinity dwells in the innermost mansion of the sanctified
soul teaches us that he alone rules over the soul, and that the soul belongs
more to God than to herself.
And, lest we should fall into
Pelgianism – thinking that we have the ability, from our own natural powers, to
enter into the mansions through our own effort as though it were not entirely a
grace from God – St. Teresa reminds us at the very end of here treatise:
“It is true that, however strong you may think yourselves,
you cannot enter all the Mansions by your own efforts: the Lord of the Castle
Himself must admit you to them. So, if you meet with any resistance, I advise
you not to make any effort to get in, for if you do you will displease Him so
much that He will never admit you. He is a great Lover of humility. If you
consider yourselves unworthy of entering even the third Mansions, He will more
quickly give you the will to reach the fifth, and thenceforward you may serve
Him by going to these Mansions again and again, till He brings you into the
Mansion which He reserves as His own”
St.
Teresa of Avila, Pray for us!
"Late have I loved you, Beauty so ancient and so new, late have I loved you! You were within, but I outside, seeking there for you, and upon the shapely things you have made I rushed headlong, I misshapen. You were with me, but I was not with you. They held me back far from you, those things which would have no being were they not in you.
ReplyDeleteYou called, shouted, broke through my deafness; you flared, blazed banished my blindness; you lavished your fragrance, I gasped, and now I pant for you; I tasted you, and I hunger and thirst; you touched me, and I burned for your peace."
From St. Augustine's Confessions. We see the theme of Interiority all throughout the Confessions, and in his writings on Prayer. So just, once again, to point out the harmony of our Christian Tradition that you have rightly summarized in this post. I will be linking this one to my blog it is marvelous.
Father Ryan,
ReplyDeleteExcellent analysis of St. Teresa's concept of the soul in God and God in the soul. As a lay Carmelite of the Ancient Order (it's cold up here, we gotta wear shoes!) we still study St. Teresa, and you have masterfully summarized her concept, and brought in the wisdom of the Fathers and Theologians.
Even the contrast to the ancient pagans and Buddhists! Who said, "When the Creator is denied, the creature vanishes"? To me this sort of summarizes both certain kinds of Buddhism and the current secular humanism. The first philosophical question we must answer is, "Am I here or not?" The Buddhists and modern "neonihilists" have answered, "No" or "Whatever", which is pretty close to no.
You keep your wonderful analysis of the meaning of prayer grounded in the truth that we must be in the state of grace to be able to truly receive the Lord in prayer. I'd go on, but I'm all excited, I gotta go pray!!! God bless, Father.