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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Mediaeval Mystic, by Vincent Scully
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Mediaeval Mystic
+ A Short Account of the Life and Writings of Blessed John
+ Ruysbroeck, Canon Regular of Groenendael A.D. 1293-1381
+
+Author: Vincent Scully
+
+Release Date: June 13, 2011 [EBook #36407]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MEDIAEVAL MYSTIC ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ A MEDIÆVAL MYSTIC
+
+
+ A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE
+ AND WRITINGS OF BLESSED JOHN
+ RUYSBROECK, CANON REGULAR OF
+ GROENENDAEL A.D. 1293-1381
+
+ BY
+ DOM VINCENT SCULLY, C.R.L.
+
+ (_Permissu Superiorum_)
+
+
+ LONDON
+ THOMAS BAKER
+ MCMX
+
+
+ PRINTED BY
+ HAZELL, WATSON AND VINEY, LD.,
+ LONDON AND AYLESBURY.
+
+
+ TO
+ THE RIGHT REV. AUGUSTIN H. WHITE, C.R.L.
+ LORD ABBOT OF WALTHAM
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ Page
+ INTRODUCTION ix
+ I. EARLY YEARS AND EDUCATION 1
+ II. AS A SECULAR PRIEST IN BRUSSELS 6
+ III. FALSE MYSTICS 10
+ IV. THE HERMITAGE OF GROENENDAEL 17
+ V. THE CANONS REGULAR OF GROENENDAEL 25
+ VI. PRIOR OF GROENENDAEL 33
+ VII. RUYSBROECK'S TREE 43
+ VIII. A DIRECTOR OF SOULS 47
+ IX. RUYSBROECK AND GERARD GROOTE 50
+ X. RUYSBROECK AND WINDESHEIM 58
+ XI. THE WRITINGS OF RUYSBROECK 67
+ XII. THE TEACHING OF RUYSBROECK 93
+ XIII. SOME APPRECIATIONS 105
+ XIV. LAST DAYS 118
+ XV. THE CULTUS OF BLESSED JOHN RUYSBROECK 124
+
+
+
+
+ INTRODUCTION
+
+
+The object of the following unpretentious little volume is to give a
+simple and readable account in English of the life and writings of a
+remarkable Flemish Mystic of the fourteenth century, a contemporary of
+our own Walter Hilton. Though his memory and honour have never faded in
+his own native Belgium, and though France and Germany have vied with each
+other in spreading his teaching and singing his praises, the very name of
+Blessed John Ruysbroeck is practically unknown this side of the water. We
+are acquainted with only one small work in English dealing directly with
+the Saint or his work at all, viz. _Reflections from the Mirror of
+Mystic_,[1] giving the briefest sketch of his life and some short
+extracts from his writings as translated from the French rendering of
+Ernest Hello.
+
+The original authorities for the history of Ruysbroeck are practically
+reduced to one, the biography by Henry Pomerius, a Canon Regular of
+Groenendael, entitled _De Origine monasterii Viridisvallis una cum vitis
+B. Joannis Rusbrochii primi prioris hujus monasterii et aliquot
+coaetaneorum ejus_, re-edited by the Bollandists, Brussels, 1885. It is
+certain that a disciple of John Ruysbroeck, John of Scoenhoven, also of
+Groenendael, who undertook the defence of Blessed John's writings against
+Gerson, composed a short biography, but this was embodied in the work of
+Pomerius, and thereby as a separate volume fell out of use and memory.
+Pomerius had Scoenhoven's MS. to work upon, and some of Ruysbroeck's
+contemporaries were still living at Groenendael when he composed his
+biography there. The brief references by the Venerable Thomas à Kempis in
+his _Vita Gerardi Magni_ are likewise of great interest and intrinsic
+worth.
+
+For the purposes of this brief biography, which lays no claim whatever to
+original research, the compiler has made very great use of the labours of
+Dr. Auger, _De Doctrina et Meritis Joannis van Ruysbroeck_, Louvain, and
+Willem de Vreese, _Jean de Ruysbroeck_, an extract from the _Biographie
+Nationale_, published by l'Académie royale des sciences, des lettres et
+des beaux-arts de Belgique, Brussels, 1909. This indebtedness is
+especially true of the summarised analysis of the various works of
+Ruysbroeck.
+
+Later it may be possible to give a complete and faithful English
+rendering of all Ruysbroeck's Works from the critical edition which is at
+present preparing in Louvain; where there is an active revival of
+interest in this great and holy Mystic of the Netherlands.
+
+For the judgment of competent witnesses as to the permanent value and
+extraordinary sublimity of B. John's writings the reader is referred to
+the body of this work under the heading, _Some Appreciations_.
+
+The usual protest is made according to the Decrees of Urban VIII.
+concerning alleged miracles, etc., recorded in these pages.
+
+St. Ives, Cornwall,
+
+ _Feast of Our Lady's Nativity_, 1910.
+
+
+
+
+ A Mediæval Mystic
+
+
+
+
+ I
+
+ Early Years and Education
+
+
+Blessed John Ruysbroeck, surnamed the Admirable and the Divine Doctor, by
+common consent the greatest Mystic the Low Countries have ever produced,
+was born, A.D. 1293, at Ruysbroeck, a village some miles south of
+Brussels, lying between that city and Hal. According to the fashion of
+those days, especially with Religious, he was named after his birthplace,
+John van Ruysbroeck, or John Ruysbroeck. The Venerable à Kempis, the
+Latinised form of van Kempen, is a case in point; Thomas was so named
+after his native town, Kempen, though his patronymic was Haemerken. Of
+Ruysbroeck, however, we know of no other surname; neither do his
+biographers so much as mention his father. But like many another great
+servant of God, John was blessed with a good mother, a devout woman who
+trained her child from the cradle to walk in the paths of Christian piety
+and perfection. She is charged with only one fault, that she loved her
+son too tenderly!
+
+Perhaps we are to understand by this that the poor woman opposed the
+boy's early aspirations after a more retired life than could be found
+even in the peaceful shelter of his own pious home. This would also
+explain John's first recorded act. At the age of eleven years he ran away
+from home! How many a lad before and since has torn himself away from a
+loving mother's too fond embrace to quell the ardour of a restless spirit
+in the quest of adventure! John also was eager and dissatisfied; but the
+larger sphere for which he sighed was to be sought along the unaccustomed
+ways which lead to the sublime heights and the rarified atmosphere of
+mystic contemplation.
+
+The pious truant made his way to Brussels, there to call upon an uncle of
+his, one John Hinckaert, a major Canon of St. Gudule's. The son and heir
+of a wealthy magistrate of the city, and possessed, moreover, of a rich
+benefice, for many years John Hinckaert had been somewhat worldly in his
+ways; but one day Divine grace found him out as he was listening to a
+sermon, and drew him sweetly and strongly to a life of extreme simplicity
+and mortification. His example was soon followed by a fellow Canon, by
+name Francis van Coudenberg, a Master of Arts, possessed of considerable
+means, and a man of great repute with the people. These two agreed, for
+their mutual edification and support, to live together in common. Their
+material requirements were reduced to the barest necessaries; and the
+surplus of their revenue was distributed among the poor. In this devout
+household the lad John met with a kindly welcome; and there he found at
+once a home after his own heart in an atmosphere saturated with
+"other-worldliness" and prayer. His good uncle also took charge of his
+education. For four years Ruysbroeck followed the ordinary course of
+Humanities in the public schools of Brussels, and then, with a view to
+the priesthood, he devoted himself to the more congenial study of the
+sacred sciences.
+
+Meanwhile the bereaved mother had discovered the place of John's retreat
+and had quitted her village of Ruysbroeck to reside with him at Brussels.
+As, however, she was not permitted to dwell in the Presbytery, she made
+her abode in a _Béguinage_ hard by. Thus she had at least the consolation
+of seeing her son from time to time. She must have been much comforted
+also for the deprivation of his company by the constant evidence of his
+growing sanctity. And, further, we are assured that she set herself to
+make profit of her sacrifice by emulating in her own person the holy life
+of her son John, and his saintly masters, Hinckaert and van Coudenberg.
+
+
+
+
+ II
+
+ As a Secular Priest in Brussels
+
+
+In due course Canon Hinckaert procured for his nephew one of the lesser
+prebends of St. Gudule's, and John was ordained priest in the year 1317,
+at the age of twenty-four. His good mother did not survive to witness
+this happy event in the flesh, nevertheless even beyond the grave she had
+good cause to rejoice therein. After her departure from this world she
+had often appeared to her son, lamenting her pains, beseeching his
+prayers, and sighing for the day when he would be able to offer for her
+the holy Sacrifice. And John was unceasing in his supplications. But
+immediately after the celebration of his first Mass, as he related to his
+Religious Brethren later, God granted him a vision full of consolation:
+when the sacred oblation was accomplished, his mother came to visit and
+thank him for her deliverance from Purgatory. The touching incident is
+well worth recording, if only to show that it was through no lack of
+natural affection that the child John had so unceremoniously forsaken
+home and mother. Moreover, of these two holy souls it was singularly true
+that _having loved each other in life, in death they were not parted_,
+for they were privileged often to converse together, and finally it was
+from his mother that Ruysbroeck learned the date of his own approaching
+departure.
+
+For twenty-six years in all Blessed John lived as a secular priest in
+Brussels. Content with his modest chaplaincy in the Church of St. Gudule,
+and with his holy companions Hinckaert and van Coudenberg continuing
+happily in apostolic simplicity and poverty the Common Life on which he
+had entered a mere child, Ruysbroeck passed his days in peaceful
+retirement and almost uninterrupted prayer and contemplation.
+
+A characteristic episode of this period reveals to us the man as in a
+flash, his mean garb, his emaciated figure, his absorbed demeanour, his
+utter abandonment in God. He was passing through a square of Brussels one
+day, silent and recollected, as was his wont, when two laymen remarked
+him.
+
+"My God," exclaimed one, "would I were as holy as that priest!"
+
+"Nay, for my part," returned the other, "I would not be in his shoes for
+all the wealth of the world. I should never know a day's pleasure on
+earth."
+
+"Then you know nothing of the delights which God bestows, or of the
+delicious savour of the Holy Ghost," thought Ruysbroeck to himself, for
+he happened to overhear the words, and he proceeded tranquilly on his
+way.
+
+
+
+
+ III
+
+ False Mystics
+
+
+But with all his love of peace and retirement, when it was a question of
+guarding the integrity of the Faith and of warding off peril from
+immortal souls, Ruysbroeck hesitated not to stand in the breach; even
+though others of much higher position in the Church and of much higher
+repute for theological learning than the obscure chaplain of St. Gudule's
+should raise not a finger nor so much as utter a warning word.
+
+The student of history is well aware of the many and startling contrasts
+and contradictions presented by the Middle Ages. It was an epoch of
+magnificent virtues and of gross vices, of splendid heroism and of
+unspeakable cruelty, of superb generosity and of disgusting meanness,
+and, which is more to our point at present, of intense devotion and of
+the most revolting vagaries in doctrine and morals. While also on the one
+hand there was much genuine zeal, much earnest endeavour to reform crying
+abuses in Church and State; on the other hand hypocrites and fanatics
+abounded, who aimed at the destruction of the principle of authority on
+the plea of amending those in power, or who, the while they inveighed
+against the futility of a merely exterior religion and insisted on the
+supreme need of purity of heart, themselves fell into the excess of
+neglecting all external form, and at times all outward decency and
+observance of morality.
+
+In varying degrees these latter errors are to be encountered under one
+shape or another in every age; but at the period of which we treat they
+were especially intense and extreme. The _Beghards_ and the _Béguines_
+(when and where these broke loose from ecclesiastical control), the
+_Flagellants_, the _Brethren of the Free Spirit_ were chief of a group of
+extravagant sects which afflicted the Church in Italy, France, Germany,
+and the Netherlands; while England at the same time was disturbed by the
+fanaticism of the Lollards. In general their peculiar tenets were a
+strange admixture of pantheism, false mysticism, apparent austerity, and
+very real immorality. The following is one of their characteristic
+propositions, condemned by Clement V. in the Council of Vienna, A.D.
+1311-1312: "That those who are in the aforesaid grade of perfection and
+in the spirit of liberty (contemplatives) are not subject to human
+authority and are not obliged to obey any precepts of the Church, because
+(as they say) _where the spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty_."
+
+It so happened that contemporary with our Saint in Brussels was a
+prominent leader of the heretics of the _Free Spirit_, a woman whose name
+is given as Bloemardinne, a good type, to judge by the description of
+Ruysbroeck's biographer, of the whole genus of such teachers in those
+days and in our own.[2] So great was this creature's reputation for
+sanctity that it was commonly reported that two Seraphim accompanied her
+to the altar when she approached to receive Holy Communion. She always
+delivered her teachings, whether by word or in writing, seated on a
+throne of silver. At her demise this chair was presented to the reigning
+Duchess of Brabant. After Bloemardinne's death also cripples came to
+touch her body in the persuasion that they would be miraculously healed
+thereby. Her teaching was of the kind indicated above, concerned chiefly
+with the so-called liberty of the spirit; the passion of lust she had the
+impudence to call seraphic love. She issued numerous pamphlets remarkable
+for their subtlety; and by one means and another she managed to win and
+retain a very considerable number of disciples.
+
+Moved by zeal and compassion on witnessing the ruin and loss of souls
+thus effected, John Ruysbroeck set himself to confute this heretic's
+various publications point by point as they appeared. In consequence, he
+incurred not a little hostility and persecution. Possibly it was this
+opposition which finally decided Ruysbroeck and his holy companions to
+quit Brussels for the more peaceful retirement of the neighbouring forest
+of Soignes. But meanwhile he never for a moment desisted from his efforts
+in defence of the Faith, and in the propagation of the doctrines of sane
+mysticism. Of the treatises published professedly against Bloemardinne
+there is nothing extant. But in all his works Ruysbroeck keeps an eye on
+the errors of the day. He returns to them again and again, analysing
+their sources, describing their characteristics, indicating the mischief
+they work, and offering a reasoned and solid confutation. At the same
+time, with wondrous sureness and perspicacity, from the rich stores of
+his own intimate experience, he points out the safe and sure paths which
+lead the soul to loving union with God.
+
+Some thirty years after Ruysbroeck's death, in 1410, the Archbishop of
+Cambrai called his disciples, the Canons Regular of Groenendael, to come
+and aid him in preaching against the successors of the notorious
+Bloemardinne--a fact eloquent both of the obstinacy of this particular
+heresy and of Blessed John's reputation as its most vigorous opponent.
+
+
+
+
+ IV
+
+ The Hermitage of Groenendael
+
+
+It appears that it was on the suggestion of Francis van Coudenberg that
+the three holy priests resolved to abandon Brussels to seek elsewhere for
+themselves a refuge of greater security and retirement. It was through
+the influence also of van Coudenberg with John III., Duke of Brabant,
+that they obtained the cession of an ideal property for their purpose,
+the hermitage, namely, of Groenendael, with its lands and lake.
+
+The spot had already been sanctified by the prayers and penances of holy
+recluses for nigh forty years. The first to retire thither had been one
+John Busch, of the ducal house of Brabant, who, weary of the strife,
+frivolities, and perils of court life, obtained from his kinsman, John
+II., leave to retire into the forest of Soignes, to build himself a hut
+and enclose a space of land there to be cultivated with his own hands for
+his support. The deed of gift was dated the Friday after the Assumption
+of Mary, 1304, and it stipulated that on the death or departure of the
+grantee, another hermit should take his place, and so on for ever. In
+effect, the noble John Busch was succeeded by one Arnold of Diest, who,
+on entering, made a vow never to sally forth save on festivals for the
+purpose of hearing Mass and receiving Holy Communion in the Parish Church
+of St. Clement at Hoolaert. God rewarded this generous sacrifice by a
+singular favour: Arnold was passionately devoted to the memory of the
+Holy Apostles and Martyrs of Rome, and he was transported in spirit so
+frequently thither that the shrines and sanctuaries of the Eternal City
+became as familiar to him as to a native. When in a green old age he came
+to die, Arnold surprised the bystanders with the request that he should
+be laid to rest in the hermitage grounds. They objected that the
+enclosure was not consecrated: he responded that one day it would be the
+site of a monastery, the home of saintly Religious, and the Mother-house
+of a holy congregation. However, he was buried in the Parish Church of
+Hoolaert before the altar of St. Nicholas. His successor, Lambert, the
+last of the Groenendael hermits, was so poor in spirit as not to be
+attached even to his cell. He cheerfully yielded place to John Hinckaert,
+van Coudenberg, and Ruysbroeck, and retired to a cell which they had
+procured for him at Hoetendael, the modern Uccle. Groenendael was handed
+over to the three companions by the Duke of Brabant on Easter Wednesday,
+1343, on the condition that they should forthwith erect a house to
+accommodate a community of at least five, two of whom should be priests
+_viventes religiose_.
+
+The taking of possession is recorded in the Groenendael Chronicle thus:
+"In 1344 the aforesaid, with the bishop's consent, began to build a
+chapel in Groenendael. And the Vicars of Lord Guy, then Bishop of
+Cambrai, inspected the building on March 13, 1344, and decreed that it
+should be consecrated, together with a cemetery adjacent, two altars, and
+other necessary appurtenances. On the same day of the same year the said
+Vicars conferred on Dom Francis the cure of the brethren, the household,
+and the servants, appointing him their Father and Parish Priest. Then the
+same year, on March 17, the Venerable Lord Brother Matthias, Bishop of
+the Church of Trebizond (Coadjutor of Cambrai), by faculty and licence of
+the said Vicars of the Lord Bishop Guy, consecrated the aforesaid first
+church in the honour of St. James, and erected it into a Parochial Church
+for the same Dom Francis, his brethren and household."
+
+For five years Dom Francis van Coudenberg and his companions continued to
+live thus in community, bound by no other rule than their own profound
+spirit of prayer and intense desire of perfection. Nor were they long
+left to enjoy alone the solitude of their retreat. Many sought admission
+into their company; still larger numbers flocked from Brussels and
+elsewhere to seek spiritual aid and consolation. If he had consulted his
+own inclination and bent, Ruysbroeck would have denied himself to all;
+but van Coudenberg represented that they should not in charity refuse
+assistance to souls in need. And Blessed John yielded the more easily,
+remarks one of his biographers, because for his part he was assured of
+being able to repose in God amid the most distracting calls and absorbing
+occupations.
+
+One of their earliest associates, John van Leeuwen, attained a high
+reputation for sanctity. A poor and ignorant layman of Afflighem, he had
+offered his services as their domestic _gratis_. Before long he was known
+far and wide as the "Good Cook of Groenendael." The multitude of visitors
+upon whom he was called to attend left him but little leisure, yet he
+found time not only to be absorbed in prayer and contemplation, but even
+to compose treatises of an exalted spirituality. Like his master
+Ruysbroeck, whom he venerated profoundly, he was deeply recollected amid
+the most exacting duties, and frequently he was favoured with heavenly
+visions. It was while in a state of ecstasy that the sublime gifts and
+heroic holiness of Blessed John were revealed to him; ever after no terms
+seemed to him too exalted in which to describe the worth of the servant
+of God. The general esteem in which van Leeuwen himself was held is
+sufficiently attested by the inscription on his tomb: "Reliquiae Fratris
+Joannis de Leeuwis vulgo Boni Coci viri a Deo illuminati et scriptis
+mysticis clari obiit anno MCCCLXXVII. V. Februarii." _The Remains of
+Brother John van Leeuwen, commonly called the Good Cook, a man
+enlightened by God and renowned for his mystic writings. He died February
+5, 1377._
+
+Much more distracting to the recluses than the frequent visits of pilgrim
+penitents or the arrival of fresh neophytes was the constant coming and
+going of huntsmen from the household of the Duke of Brabant. The forest
+of Soignes, in which Groenendael is situate, was a favourite resort for
+the chase, and the position of the hermitage itself, within a few miles
+of the capital, made it a very convenient place of rest and refreshment
+for the hunters and their hounds. But the noise and bustle attendant on
+such company were scarcely conducive to the spirit of prayer, and the
+demands thus made on the hospitality of the young Community were a heavy
+drain on its resources. Nevertheless the solitaries were naturally
+fearful of giving offence to the followers of their Patron the Duke.
+Moreover, since they were not established as a regular Religious
+Community, they could not claim the privileges of the cloister.
+
+
+
+
+ V
+
+ The Canons Regular of Groenendael
+
+
+The inconveniences just noted, together with the continual increase in
+their numbers, gave point and force to a strong remonstrance addressed to
+Francis van Coudenberg and his Brethren by Pierre de Saulx, Prior of the
+Canons Regular of St. Victor, Paris, concerning the _irregularity_ of
+their unaccustomed manner of life. Herein the good Prior was in effect
+only voicing the opinion of many zealous and prudent leaders among both
+clergy and laity. The times were so rife in sects and societies of false
+mystics, and so much mischief was wrought under the guise of piety, that
+any form of community life outside the cloister and the three regular
+vows was regarded with strong suspicion and dislike. A few years later
+Gerard Groote, a disciple of Ruysbroeck, and Florence Radewyn, the first
+spiritual Director of the Venerable Thomas à Kempis, founded a lay
+association of _Devout Brothers and Sisters of the Common Life_, and this
+society also was subjected to a fierce opposition arising from the same
+sentiment of distrust for all religious movement outside the beaten
+track. Happily, the Brothers were able to weather the storm by producing
+irrefragable proofs of their orthodoxy, and of their entire submission to
+the ecclesiastical authorities. But also, by the advice and according to
+the desires of Gerard Groote himself, they placed themselves under the
+protection and guidance of a Religious Order springing from their own
+body, namely the Canons Regular of Windesheim, of which congregation the
+Venerable à Kempis was one of the earliest members as well as the
+brightest ornament.
+
+Prior Pierre de Saulx urged on van Coudenberg and his associates to
+regularise their status, silence suspicion, and escape the many
+inconveniences to which at present they were exposed by embracing the
+Rule and adopting the habit of some already established Religious Order.
+With edifying humility the Community of Groenendael accepted the reproof
+and its accompanying counsel; and applied at once to Peter Andrew, Bishop
+of Cambrai, for the necessary authorisation to adopt the Institute of the
+Canons Regular under the Rule of St. Augustin of Hippo. This permission
+the Ordinary granted most readily. With his own hands he clothed Francis
+van Coudenberg, John Ruysbroeck and their companions in the canonical
+habit, March 10, 1349, and the following day he appointed Dom Francis
+Provost,[3] and John Ruysbroeck he made Prior of the new Canonry. To van
+Coudenberg the other members of the Community, with one exception,
+professed canonical obedience, according to St. Augustin's Rule. The
+Bishop bestowed upon them many privileges and exemptions; while the Duke
+took them under his special protection and endowed them with sufficient
+revenues for the upkeep of a large establishment.
+
+The one exception noted above was Ruysbroeck's uncle and van Coudenberg's
+old friend and master, John Hinckaert. At this date John Ruysbroeck was
+fifty-six years of age, and Francis van Coudenberg was several years his
+senior. They must certainly have been men of great zeal and courage to
+undertake the full rigour and discipline of the Canonical Life, as they
+understood it, at so advanced an age. Hinckaert, again, was much older
+than either. And for fear lest out of consideration for his failing
+powers the others should be induced to temper in any degree the austerity
+of their observance, the good old man resolved to forgo for himself the
+happiness of joining them in the profession of the vows. We can picture
+what a source of regret this separation must have been to all three.
+However, Hinckaert remained as near his friends as possible until the
+end. A little cell was built just outside the cloister, and there after a
+few years he peacefully passed away, their predecessor to eternal glory
+as he had been their forerunner in the way of perfection.
+
+The Canon Regular, Prior Pierre de Saulx, had reason to be well content
+with the issue of his intervention in the affairs of Groenendael.
+Seventeen years later we find him addressing to the Community another
+characteristic rebuke. This time he complained of the formula of their
+profession, which ran as follows: "I, N. , offer and deliver myself
+with these gifts to the service of this Church of St. James, Apostle. And
+I promise God in the presence of clergy and people that I will abide here
+henceforth to the end of my days without proprietorship, according to the
+rule of the Canons and Blessed Augustin, to the best of my knowledge and
+power. I also promise stability to this place as long as in any way I can
+obtain what is needful for my soul and body, nor shall I for any motion
+of fickleness or under any pretext of a more strict Order change this
+habit or quit this cloister. I also promise obedience to all the prelates
+of the aforesaid Church whom the better part of the Community shall
+canonically elect, in order that I may receive a hundredfold and life
+everlasting."
+
+As a matter of fact, this form of profession was quite adequate.
+Implicitly it contained the vow of chastity, since chastity is an
+integral part of the Canonical Rule. However, the Prior of St. Victor
+resided in Paris, the metropolis of scholasticism, and he strenuously
+argued and maintained that, whereas chastity is one of the three
+essential vows of Religion, and the formula made no mention thereof, the
+said formula was incomplete, erroneous, contrary to the decretals and
+canonical sanctions. And again he urges the Provost and the Brethren to
+conform themselves in this, as in all else, to some fully authorised
+branch of the institute of the Canons Regular.
+
+Once more the good men humbly acquiesced; and it seems that they modelled
+their religious family upon the famous Congregation of St. Victor, of
+which their zealous counsellor was then the chief Superior.
+
+
+
+
+ VI
+
+ Prior of Groenendael
+
+
+Meanwhile the Community of Groenendael grew and flourished. The holy
+Prior continued to make progress in the practice of heroic virtue, his
+gifts of contemplation became ever more sublime, and still his reputation
+for sanctity increased. His contemporary biographers, after the fashion
+of their day, catalogue the Christian virtues, and one by one show how
+they excelled in him. Let it suffice here to remark that those virtues
+which he the most earnestly commends and the most highly exalts in his
+writings, he the most constantly exercised in his own person. Chief of
+these was humility, which he terms everywhere the foundation of
+perfection; then obedience to men and resignation to the will of God, a
+most tender devotion towards Jesus Christ in the Blessed Sacrament of the
+Altar, and, in fine, an ardent love of God and the neighbour. A few
+instances may be given in illustration.
+
+On one occasion Blessed John was seriously ill; consumed by fever and
+tortured by an intense thirst, he begged the Brother Infirmarian for a
+drink of water. The Provost, who happened to be present, forbade the
+draught, fearing it might do him harm. He was literally dying of thirst,
+and his lips were cracking, they were so parched, yet Ruysbroeck humbly
+acquiesced. But later, reflecting how great would be the grief and
+remorse of his friend and superior if he actually died of his agony, he
+quietly remarked: "Father Provost, if I have not a drink of water now I
+shall certainly not recover from this malady." Thereupon, in great alarm,
+Dom Francis immediately bade him drink. And from that moment the holy man
+began to regain his strength.
+
+Another and a continual proof of his humility was the willingness with
+which he took part in the heavy manual labour of the Community. His
+dignity, his advanced age, his inexperience in such work, the many other
+calls upon his time and strength--all this and the like the brethren
+urged as motives wherefore he should be exempt; but he refused to listen.
+Truth to tell, the material advantage from his toil was but little: his
+frame was enfeebled by years and austerities, and in his ignorance he was
+liable, for instance, to root up seedlings in the garden instead of
+weeds! But the spiritual gain to the Brethren was incalculable; there was
+not only the example of his humility, but of his unfailing recollection
+too. In the midst of his labour he never lost his sense of the nearness
+of God's presence. Indeed he was wont to say that it was easier for him
+to raise his soul to God than to lift his hand to his forehead.
+
+His humility also and his zeal for the regular observance prevented him
+ever seeking dispensation from the customary exercises of the community
+life, or exemption from any of the monastic austerities, vigils, or
+fasts.
+
+His love for the neighbour was shown by the readiness and affability with
+which he received and welcomed innumerable claimants on his sympathy,
+help, and counsel. No soul ever left his presence dissatisfied; every one
+went back from a visit to Groenendael greatly edified and inwardly
+refreshed. On one occasion the Brethren were distressed for the moment by
+an apparent exception. Two Parisian clerics had visited the holy old man
+and had demanded some word or motto for their guidance and encouragement.
+
+Ruysbroeck merely observed: "You are as holy as you wish to be."
+Suspecting him of sarcasm, the strangers retired deeply mortified, and
+they complained to the Canons that they were much disappointed in the
+Prior, who evidently was not so saintly a man as rumour had led them to
+believe. Learning the cause of their chagrin, some of the Brethren led
+the clerics back to Blessed John and begged him to explain his meaning.
+"But is it not simple?" he cried. "Is it not quite true? You are as holy
+as you wish. Your good-will is the measure of your sanctity. Look into
+yourselves and see what good-will you have, and you will behold also the
+standard of your holiness." And then the visitors retired appeased and
+edified.
+
+Naturally his own Brethren were the first and chief to benefit by the
+holy Prior's charity and zeal. He denied himself to none; he made himself
+all to all. Sometimes he gave a spiritual conference after Compline, and
+then perhaps he would be so carried away as he enlarged upon the goodness
+of God and the bliss of heaven, for instance, that neither he nor his
+listeners would note the passage of time. The midnight Office bell would
+surprise them still hanging upon his words. But such was the fervour
+infused by his burning eloquence that not one felt the loss of the three
+or four hours' accustomed sleep.
+
+Ruysbroeck always spoke without any immediate preparation; but it was
+characteristic of the man that when requested by the Canons or by
+strangers for a Conference, he would sometimes confess in all simplicity
+that inspiration was lacking, that he had nothing to say. It was the same
+with his written treatises: at the close of his life he was able to
+declare that he had never committed anything to writing save under the
+immediate motion of the Holy Spirit.
+
+As so often happens with the Saints, Blessed John's love for the
+neighbour overflowed in tenderness for his brothers and sisters of the
+lower creation also. Knowing this trait, the Canons would remark to him
+on the approach of winter: "See, Father Prior, it is snowing already.
+What will the poor little birds do now?" And with expressions of
+heartfelt compassion this sublime mystic, who was habitually lost in
+dizziest heights of contemplation, would give instructions that the
+feathered choristers outside the cloister should not be abandoned to
+perish of hunger.
+
+Very frequently in his works Blessed Ruysbroeck takes occasion to treat
+of the Holy Sacrament of the Altar, and ever he speaks of this sacred
+mystery in terms of the most vivid faith and intense devotion, discussing
+it as a supreme proof of God's love for men, on a par with the gifts of
+Creation, the Incarnation, and Redemption. His biographers tell us of his
+personal love for the Blessed Eucharist, and especially of his ecstatic
+devotion in offering the great Sacrifice. To the close of his long life,
+even when his failing sight could no longer distinguish the figure of the
+Crucified stamped upon the Host, nothing but grave sickness could hold
+him back from daily celebration. Sometimes he swooned from the excess of
+the sweetness with which his soul was inundated during the canon of the
+Mass.
+
+On one such occasion not only did he faint, but he seemed on the point of
+expiring, so that the terrified server reported the matter to the
+Provost. Attributing the faintness to advancing age and weakness, the
+Superior was about to forbid the holy old man to celebrate any more, when
+Blessed John humbly besought him to forbear, assuring him that the swoon
+was due not to the failing of years but to the overpowering of divine
+grace, _non propter senium sed divinae gratiae collatum xenium_. "Even
+to-day," he added, "Jesus Christ appeared to me, and filling my soul with
+a deliciousness all divine, He said to my heart, _Thou art Mine and I am
+thine_."
+
+Such heavenly favours seem to have been by no means rare with our Saint.
+He was frequently ravished with a vision of Our Divine Lord in His sacred
+Humanity. Christ appeared to him, accompanied by His Blessed Mother and a
+numerous retinue of Saints, and conversed familiarly with him. On one
+such occasion, penetrating his whole being with a sense of wondrous
+sweetness, He greeted him with ineffable condescension thus: "Thou art My
+dear son, in whom I am well pleased." Then Jesus Christ embraced him and
+presented him to Our Lady and the attendant Saints with the words:
+"Behold My chosen servant!"
+
+
+
+
+ VII
+
+ Ruysbroeck's Tree
+
+
+Whenever Blessed John felt the Spirit of God full upon him, even the
+solitude of the cloister was not sufficiently retired for the intimacy of
+the divine union. He would wander away into the depths of the forest
+surrounding the monastery, there to abandon himself to the action of the
+Holy Ghost undisturbed. On these occasions also he was wont to take with
+him a stylus and a wax tablet, in order to jot down such thoughts and
+lights as he was moved to preserve in writing. Of these notes a fair copy
+was made on his return to the Priory. Towards the end of his days, when
+his sight was failing and otherwise the effort of making these notes was
+too much for him, one of the Canons always accompanied him into the
+forest to write down at his dictation whatever he was moved to
+communicate. Sometimes days or whole weeks would pass, and for want of
+inspiration not a line nor a word would be added to the treatise in hand.
+But when again the Spirit breathed, he continued from the very sentence
+or phrase where he had paused, just as if there had been no interval
+between.
+
+One day the Saint had retired as usual into the forest, and the Brethren,
+knowing his occupation, respected his privacy. But when hours passed and
+there was no sign of his return, they became alarmed and set out to scour
+the woods in search of him. One of the Canons was especially intimate
+with the Prior and loved him most tenderly. Perhaps his anxiety urged him
+ahead of the rest. In a glade of the forest his eye lighted upon a
+wondrous scene. He perceived a tree as it were in flames. On nearer
+approach he discovered that it was in fact encircled with fire. And under
+the tree, in the midst of the mysterious conflagration, John Ruysbroeck
+was seated, manifestly rapt in ecstasy.
+
+The memory of this miracle was never lost in the Community. For
+generations the tree was known and venerated as _Ruysbroeck's Tree_. At
+the close of the fifteenth century the Prior, James van Dynter, planted a
+lime-tree in the same place, which received the respect shown hitherto to
+the original, which presumably had died down. When in 1577 the Canons
+were obliged to abandon Groenendael on account of the vexations of the
+religious wars, it is said that this tree withered away until only its
+bark was left; but when the Community returned in 1607, it revived and
+flourished again.
+
+This episode also has fixed the traditional representation of Blessed
+John Ruysbroeck. He is usually pictured seated under a tree, a stylus in
+his hand and a wax tablet resting on his knee, while Saint and tree alike
+are encircled in brilliant rays of celestial light.
+
+
+
+
+ VIII
+
+ A Director of Souls
+
+
+It is no wonder that as the fame of these and similar marvels spread
+abroad, multitudes of the faithful, young and old, clergy and laity,
+flocked to see and hear the holy Prior of Groenendael. They came to him
+from Flanders, Brabant, Holland, Germany, and France. Ruysbroeck received
+all with unvarying simple courtesy, and his unpremeditated words were
+ever found to meet exactly the needs of each. Many placed themselves
+unreservedly in his hands, and frequently sought his direction by
+correspondence, or came long distances to consult him in person.
+
+One of these penitents was the Baroness van Marke, of Rhode-St.-Agatha,
+which lies midway between Groenendael and Louvain. This lady conceived
+such a veneration for the holy Prior that when she went to visit him, she
+walked the journey, pilgrimwise, barefoot. Finally, his exhortations to
+flee and despise the passing vanities of the world prevailed so much with
+her that she entered a Convent of Poor Clares in Cologne, and her son
+Ingelbert joined the Community of Groenendael.
+
+We are told of another disciple, who once fell into a grievous sickness
+and at the same time into a still more grievous affliction of spirit. She
+sent for Blessed John, begging him to visit her. She told him of her
+distress; behold, she was abandoned by God, on the one hand no health or
+strength was left her to perform her accustomed works of mercy, and on
+the other hand physical suffering took away all taste for prayer! What
+was she to do? "You can do nothing more pleasing to God, my dear child,"
+responded the Saint, "than simply and utterly to submit to His holy will.
+Strive to forsake your own desires and to give Him thanks for all
+things." Such unction accompanied these simple and characteristic words
+that the good lady felt deeply consoled, and she repined no more.
+
+Among the more famous to frequent Groenendael, there to sit and learn at
+the feet of Ruysbroeck, is mentioned the well-known German mystic Tauler.
+But authorities are divided at present as to whether or no these visits
+to Groenendael can be fitted in with other ascertained facts of Tauler's
+life. However, it is certain that Tauler was well acquainted with the
+writings of our Saint; to a great extent he followed his method, and at
+times, in the free-and-easy style of those days, he did not hesitate to
+transfer bodily from Ruysbroeck's volumes into his own.
+
+
+
+
+ IX
+
+ Ruysbroeck and Gerard Groote
+
+
+A greater than Tauler, and one whose influence was eventually far more
+widespread, undoubtedly owed much to the recluse of Groenendael and
+freely acknowledged Blessed John his master. This was the famous Gerard
+Groote, the founder, as already noted, of the _Devout Brothers and
+Sisters of the Common Life_, and through them of the Windesheim
+Congregation of Canons Regular. The occasion and circumstances of
+Groote's first visit to Groenendael are narrated by the Venerable Thomas
+à Kempis in his _Vita Gerardi Magni_. The passage is so graphic and
+characteristic that it is well worth transcribing.[4]
+
+"The pious and humble Master Gerard, hearing of the great and widespread
+fame of John Ruysbroeck, a monk and Prior of the Monastery of Grünthal,
+near Brussels, went to the parts about Brabant, although the journey was
+long, in order to see in bodily presence this holy and most devout
+Father; for he longed to see face to face, and with his own eyes, one
+whom he had known hitherto only by common report and by his books; and to
+hear with his own ears that voice utter its words from a living human
+mouth--a voice as gracious as if it were the very mouthpiece of the Holy
+Ghost. He took with him therefore that revered man, Master John Cele, the
+director of the School of Zwolle, a devout and faithful lover of Jesus
+Christ; for their mind and heart were one in the Lord, and the fellowship
+of each was pleasant to the other, and this resolve was kindled within
+them that their journey, which was undertaken for the sake of spiritual
+edification, should redound in the case of each to the Glory of God.
+
+"There went also with them a faithful and devout layman, named Gerard the
+shoemaker, as their guide upon the narrow way, and their inseparable
+companion in this happy undertaking.
+
+"When they came to the place called Grünthal, they saw no lofty or
+elaborate buildings therein, but rather all the signs of simplicity of
+life and poverty, such as marked the first footsteps of our Heavenly
+King, when He, the Lord of Heaven, came upon this earth as a Virgin's
+Son, and in exceeding poverty. As they entered the gate of the monastery,
+that holy Father, the devout Prior, met them, being a man of great age,
+of kindly serenity, and one to be revered for his honourable character.
+He it was whom they had come to see, and saluting them with the greatest
+benignity as they advanced, and being taught by a revelation from God, he
+called upon Gerard by his very name and knew him, though he had never
+seen him before. After this salutation he took them with him into the
+inner parts of the cloister, as his most honoured guests, and with a
+cheerful countenance and a heart yet more joyful showed them all due
+courtesy and kindness, as if he were entertaining Jesus Christ Himself.
+
+"Gerard abode there for a few days conferring with this man of God about
+the Holy Scriptures; and from him he heard many heavenly secrets which,
+as he confessed, were past his understanding, so that in amazement he
+said with the Queen of Sheba, 'O excellent Father, thy wisdom and thy
+knowledge exceedeth the fame which I heard in mine own land; for by thy
+virtues thou hast surpassed thy fame.' After this he returned with his
+companions to his own city, greatly edified; and being as it were a
+purified creature, he pondered over what he had heard in his mind and
+often dwelt thereon in his heart; also he committed some of Ruysbroeck's
+sayings to writing, that they might not be forgotten.
+
+"This sojourn on his visit to the Prior was not a time of idleness, nor
+was the discourse of so holy a father barren; but the instruction of his
+living voice gave nurture to a fuller love and an increase of fresh zeal,
+as he testifies in a letter which he sent to these same brethren in the
+Grünthal, saying: 'I earnestly desire to be commended to your director
+and Prior, the footstool of whose feet I would fain be both in this life
+and in the life to come; for my heart is welded to him beyond all other
+men by love and reverence. I do still burn and sigh for your presence, to
+be renewed and inspired by your spirit and to be a partaker thereof.'"
+
+Other details of this interesting visit are supplied by the biographers
+of Ruysbroeck. Speaking in the fullness of the intimacy that had sprung
+up between them, Gerard Groote ventured to express surprise that, in
+dealing with the sublime matters which usually formed the subject of his
+discourse, the holy Prior should employ words and phrases which laid him
+open to the charge of those very errors, especially pantheism, against
+which his writings were commonly directed. It was then that Ruysbroeck
+declared that he had never set down aught in his books save by the
+inspiration of the Holy Ghost and in the presence of the Ever Blessed
+Trinity. This solemn assurance the holy man repeated to his brother
+Canons on his deathbed.
+
+On another point also, like the trained and exact theologian he was,
+Gerard Groote wished to correct his friend. He insisted that the
+boundless confidence which Ruysbroeck expressed in the mercy of God
+seemed to savour somewhat of presumption, and he proceeded to quote the
+most terrifying passages from Scripture anent the penalties of the
+wicked. Blessed John quietly replied: "Master Gerard, I assure you that
+you have quite failed to inspire me with fear. I am ready to bear with
+unruffled soul whatever the Lord shall destine for me in life or in
+death. I can conceive of nothing better, nothing safer, nothing more
+sweet. All my desires are restricted to this, that our Lord may ever find
+me prepared to accomplish His holy will."
+
+This first visit was the beginning of most cordial relations between
+Ruysbroeck and Gerard Groote. The latter returned several times to
+Groenendael and resided there for months together. He also corresponded
+frequently with the holy Prior and the Canons and translated some of our
+Saint's works into Latin. He read over his MSS. before publication, and
+begged him at times to change or modify expressions which might give a
+handle to the hostile or scandal to the weak. The writings of Ruysbroeck
+were likewise among those which were the most frequently transcribed and
+multiplied by the copyists of the _Devout Brothers of the Common Life_. A
+few years later one of the most diligent and skilled of these scribes was
+the future author of the _Imitation of Christ_.
+
+
+
+
+ X
+
+ Ruysbroeck and Windesheim
+
+
+In fact, widespread as was the influence of Blessed John Ruysbroeck on
+his contemporaries and incalculable as was the fruit of his writings in
+the many cloisters, through which they were rapidly diffused, the means
+by which Divine Providence chose chiefly to preserve and propagate his
+power was precisely this friendship with Gerard Groote. Gerard
+continually strove to imbue his own disciples with the spirit which he
+had imbibed from the Prior of Groenendael. For himself and for his
+followers he took as a rule of life the motto of Ruysbroeck, _to make it
+a chief study to meditate upon the life of Jesus Christ_. "Let the
+fountain-head of thy study and thy mirror of life be first the Gospel of
+Christ, for there is the life of Christ." The Scriptures should be read
+rather than the Fathers, and the New Testament more than the Old, _for
+there is the life of Christ_. And herein again what is profitable for a
+devout and spiritual life is to be sought rather than the subtleties of
+theology and the schools.
+
+When a friend of Gerard's, Reinalt Minnenvosch, projected the founding of
+a monastery, Groote advised him to establish a Priory of Canons Regular
+on the model of Groenendael. The Canonry of St. Saviour's at Emstein was
+the result. At Groote's request, a professed priest came from Groenendael
+to initiate the new Religious into the Canonical Life; and later it was
+at Emstein that the first members of Gerard's own Congregation of
+Windesheim made their noviciate preparatory to Profession.
+
+This was after Gerard Groote's death, but it was in accord with his
+express desire. Wishful to establish a Religious Institute in connection
+with his _Devout Brothers and Sisters of the Common Life_, who, whether
+lay or cleric, were dwelling together without the binding force of the
+vows, Gerard fixed upon the Order of Canons Regular for this purpose,
+principally, so Thomas à Kempis assures us, because of his profound
+veneration for the Prior and Brethren of Groenendael. "He was moved to
+institute this Order of Regulars chiefly by his singular reverence and
+love for the venerable Dom John Ruysbroeck, the first Prior of
+Groenendael, and of the other most exemplary Brethren living there
+religiously in the Regular Order."
+
+For further information concerning the _Devout Brothers_ and the
+Windesheim Canons the reader is referred to the various works which have
+been published of late years on the Venerable à Kempis.[5] Both Brothers
+and Canons were living examples of the mystic teachings of Ruysbroeck put
+to the test of daily practice. Flight from the pleasures and vanities of
+the world, unbounded humility, constant meditation on the life and
+especially the Passion of Jesus Christ, the most complete and absolute
+abandonment to the Divine Will, an intense devotion full of the personal
+love of God--these were the salient points of Blessed John's example and
+doctrine, perpetuated and propagated by the works, words, and writings of
+the Windesheim Canons Regular and their secular associates, the _Brothers
+of the Common Life_. It is scarcely needful to remark also that these are
+the chief features of the teaching of the _Imitation of Christ_, that
+golden little treatise, which, embodying the whole spirit of the School
+of Windesheim and Groenendael, has carried and still carries light,
+healing, and consolation to thousands upon thousands who have never so
+much as heard of either Windesheim or John Ruysbroeck.[6]
+
+It may be mentioned here that in 1409 the Priory of Groenendael was
+instituted the Mother-house of a congregation of that name. But a few
+years later this congregation, with its dependent Priories, was
+affiliated to the more numerous Windesheim Canons. Thus the twin
+institutes were merged into one, and the Windesheim Congregation became
+the direct heir of the virtues and teaching of Blessed John Ruysbroeck.
+But finally Windesheim was aggregated to the Lateran Congregation of
+Canons Regular; and thus it is that to-day the Canons Regular of the
+Lateran are privileged, with the clergy of Mechlin, to keep with proper
+Office and Mass the Feast of Blessed John Ruysbroeck.
+
+Connected thus intimately with Gerard Groote and Tauler, it is not
+surprising that Ruysbroeck shares with these, as with à Kempis, Suso, and
+others, the doubtful honour of being proclaimed in certain quarters as a
+precursor of the sixteenth-century "Reformation." In support of this
+position it is easy enough to gather together expressions of the most
+poignant sorrow and of the most bitter invective for the lax morality of
+clergy and laity, mendicant friars, and highly placed prelates. But the
+same argument would convict several Popes of being heralds of Luther! Not
+to labour the point at unnecessary length in a non-controversial work of
+this kind, let it suffice to mention the touchstone which never fails to
+distinguish the genuine reformer from the mere sectarian: while boldly
+attacking the vices of those in office, Blessed John Ruysbroeck never
+assails the office itself. He always speaks in the most submissive and
+reverent terms of the authority of the Church and of the dignity of the
+priesthood. His writings without exception treat in the orthodox sense on
+the subject of grace, the sacraments, etc. We have already remarked his
+ardent devotion towards the Blessed Eucharist. To this may be added a
+most tender love for the Virgin Mother of God. Note, finally, his
+frequent and fervent exhortations to the perfect observance of the three
+vows of religion, and one can imagine how comfortable he would feel in
+the company, say, of Luther and his renegade nun!
+
+
+
+
+ XI
+
+ The Writings of Ruysbroeck
+
+
+Blessed John's writings cannot be called voluminous, and yet for a purely
+contemplative author they are comparatively considerable. The list of his
+works authenticated up to the present--for earnest students are at work,
+and other MSS. may yet be discovered--comprises the following, giving an
+English equivalent for the Old Flemish or Latin titles: (1) The Kingdom
+of the Lovers of God; (2) The Splendour of the Spiritual Espousals; (3)
+The Brilliant; (4) Of Four Subtle Temptations; (5) Of the Christian
+Faith; (6) Of the Spiritual Tabernacle; (7) Of the Seven Cloisters; (8)
+The Mirror of Eternal Life, or, a Treatise on the Blessed Sacrament; (9)
+The Seven Degrees of Spiritual Love; (10) Of the Supreme Truth; (11) The
+Twelve Béguines. And these others are less certainly proved to be his:
+(12) Of the Twelve Virtues; (13) Seven Letters; (14) A Summary of the
+Spiritual Life; (15) Two Canticles; (16) A Short Prayer.
+
+Pending a complete and faithful English rendering of all these works, the
+following descriptive analysis of the principal of them may not prove
+unacceptable.
+
+
+ The Kingdom of the Lovers of God
+
+This treatise is a detailed interpretation and a mystic application of
+the text adapted from Wisdom x. 10: _Justum deduxit Dominus per vias
+rectus et ostendit illi regnum Dei_ in the Breviary Office of a
+Confessor. Upon these words Ruysbroeck bases a division of his work into
+five books. The first book treats of God, _Dominus_, His power and
+sovereignty. In the second Blessed John explains how Christ conducted,
+_deduxit_, man into the liberty of the children of God, chiefly by
+redemption and by the institution of the seven Sacraments. In the third
+he treats of the just man, _justum_, and works out eight items which
+render a man just, both in the active and in the contemplative life. The
+fourth book expounds the right ways, _vias rectas_, which lead to the
+Kingdom of God: _the exterior way_, namely, the material universe of
+three heavens and four elements, the contemplation of which should excite
+man to the praise of the Creator; _the way of natural light_, the
+acquisition of the seven virtues; finally, _the supernatural and divine
+way_, the infusion of the supernatural virtues and the gifts of the Holy
+Ghost. In the last book we have a disquisition on the kingdom of God,
+_ostendit illi regnum Dei_, of which we are told there are five aspects
+or divisions: the sensible kingdom, exterior to God, in which the author
+finds scope for a description of the last judgment and the qualities of
+risen bodies, the kingdom of nature, the kingdom of the Scriptures, the
+kingdom of grace and of glory, and finally the Divine Kingdom itself,
+which is God. This treatise is full of reflections and considerations of
+the most elevated order, and there is much therein that is by no means
+easy to grasp or understand.
+
+
+ The Splendour of the Spiritual Espousals
+
+For his text Ruysbroeck takes Matt. xxv. 6, _Ecce, sponsus venit, exite
+obviam ei_. He makes a division into three books, treating respectively
+of the active, the interior, and the contemplative life. Each book is
+further subdivided into four parts, corresponding to the four divisions
+of the text in each stage of perfection as follows. Ruysbroeck expounds
+and illustrates (1) the rôle of the vision, _ecce_; man must turn his
+eyes to God; (2) the divers comings of the Bridegroom, _sponsus venit_,
+the manner, namely, in which God approaches the soul; (3) the going forth
+of the soul on the path of the virtues, _exite_; (4) and finally, the
+embrace of the soul and the heavenly spouse. In no one work does Blessed
+Ruysbroeck give a complete account of his mystic teaching; but if his
+system were to be examined and explained by any one book, it would
+certainly be this of the _Spiritual Espousals_. It has always been
+considered as his chief work, and in this light also Ruysbroeck himself
+seems to have regarded it. He sent a copy of it himself to his friends in
+Germany, and expressed the desire that it might be multiplied and made
+known even to the foot of the mountains. In the four last chapters of the
+second book the author confutes some current errors of the day,
+apparently the teachings of Bloemardinne and almost certainly of Eckart.
+
+
+ The Brilliant
+
+Gerard Naghel tells us the story of the origin of this treatise. One day
+Ruysbroeck had been conversing with a certain hermit on matters
+spiritual, when on parting the latter begged the holy Prior to commit the
+matter of his discourse to writing for the edification of himself and
+others. To satisfy his desire, says Naghel, Ruysbroeck composed this
+work, which contains instruction sufficient to lead a man to perfection.
+The treatise seems a supplement, and in some sense a corrective of the
+_Spiritual Espousals_. After a brief description of the means by which
+the just man acquires the interior life and rises thence to the
+contemplative, the holy man shows how the precious stone, or white
+counter, _calculus candidus_, of Rev. ii. 17, is no other than Christ
+Himself, Who gives Himself without reserve to contemplative souls. God
+calls all men to intimate union with Himself. But not all men respond to
+His appeal. Sinners utterly despise the invitation; while the just
+respond, though these again in varying degrees. Some keep the
+commandments chiefly from fear of the penalties attached to
+transgression; they are as _mercenaries_. Others sincerely endeavour to
+conquer nature and unruly desires, they have true faith in God, and God
+is the only motive of their actions; these are the _faithful servants_.
+However, these still suffer many impediments from the exterior life which
+they lead, and a more intimate union is attained by the _intimate
+friends_, who observe the counsels as well as the precepts. Finally, the
+highest degree of union and contemplation is attained by the _hidden
+sons_, who are utterly divested of all self-love and self-seeking, and
+whose life is hidden with Christ in God.
+
+
+ Of Four Subtle Temptations
+
+In this tract Ruysbroeck inveighs against the chief errors and abuses of
+his own times. The first, says Ruysbroeck, is love of ease and comfort,
+indolence, the source of sensuality, and luxury, an abuse very prevalent
+in monasteries and among the clergy. The second is hypocrisy, which,
+under the cloak of a seeming austerity, claiming even visions and
+ecstasies, conceals a corrupt interior and depraved morals. The third is
+the desire to understand everything, to attain to the contemplation of
+the divine nature by the sheer force of the intellect, without the
+assistance of God's grace. The fourth and the most formidable is the
+so-called _liberty of spirit_, the error and heresy of those who, casting
+aside all interior effort, pretend to acquire contemplation by ludicrous
+mortifications, by extravagant bodily posturing, and by a senseless
+quietism. The third error is that of Eckart, and the fourth was proper to
+the Brothers and Sisters of the Free Spirit. Ruysbroeck concludes his
+tract with a discussion of the ways and means of avoiding these snares,
+viz. by holiness of life, the practice of all the virtues, obedience to
+superiors and the authority of the Church, and imitation of Jesus Christ.
+
+
+ Of the Christian Faith
+
+A dogmatic commentary on the Athanasian Creed. Starting with the
+principle that the true Christian Faith is indispensable for the union of
+the soul with God, Ruysbroeck proceeds to explain the chief tenets of our
+belief, and to show their bearing on the interior life. His explanations
+are brief, his speculations sublime. The more forcibly to exhort to the
+practice of virtue, he dwells at considerable length on the last
+judgment, on the rewards of the just, and on the penalties decreed to
+each particular class of sinner. His picture here of the happiness of
+heaven and the sufferings of hell is most apt and striking.
+
+
+ Of the Spiritual Tabernacle
+
+The most lengthy this of all Ruysbroeck's works. It consists of a mystic
+interpretation, a long-drawn-out allegory, in which the Tabernacle of the
+Old Testament is considered as a type of the course of love. The outer
+and the inner courts, the altar of sacrifice, the hangings, the pillars
+and their sockets, the rings, the names of the workmen, the seven-branch
+candlestick, the brazen laver, the priestly ornaments, the ephod and the
+twelve stones, the holy oils and the incense, the table of the loaves of
+proposition, the different sacrifices with the distinction between the
+clean and the unclean animals, the holy of holies, the ark and its
+appurtenances,--all are applied with a wealth of detail, which, however,
+never lacks dignity, and with a wondrous skill to Ruysbroeck's usual
+three divisions of the exterior moral life, the interior, and the purely
+contemplative. The Tabernacle was a subject which naturally lent itself
+to allegory and to mystic interpretation, and Hugh of St. Victor had
+already preceded our author, as doubtless also he inspired him with his
+_De Arca mystica_. Though sometimes the thread is lost in the
+multiplicity of details, this treatise is most attractive and contains
+some of the best pages of Blessed Ruysbroeck.
+
+
+ Of the Seven Cloisters
+
+This was composed for a penitent of our Saint, Margaret von Meerbeke, a
+Poor Clare of Brussels, and it gives a rule of life for Religious. The
+holy Prior traces out an order of the day, insisting especially on the
+need of cultivating the interior life; he mentions the virtues which his
+penitent should exercise, and inveighs against the abuses which have
+crept into convents, pointing out the danger of communication with the
+outer world. In all things Margaret should imitate the example of her
+foundress, St. Clare, who gained her glorious place in Heaven by shutting
+herself up within the seven cloisters. After dwelling on these, viz., by
+expounding seven means of retreating from the world and living close to
+God, the author turns again to practical details and condemns the
+softness and luxury of certain Religious in their dress. Each day, he
+says, should close with a peep into three books: the book of our own
+conscience, which shows the imperfections which must be purified; the
+book of the Life and Passion of our Lord, which we should imitate; and
+finally the book of eternal life, to which we ought to tend with all our
+strength.
+
+
+ The Mirror of Eternal Life
+
+This also was addressed to a nun, probably the same Poor Clare. It
+explains again the three degrees of the mystic life, but with special
+reference now to the cloister and the Blessed Eucharist. Some are in the
+purgative way: if they persevere in virtue and progress in perfection,
+they shall partake of the table, Ps. xxiii. 5, which is no other than the
+banquet of the Holy Eucharist. Ruysbroeck dwells on the virtues necessary
+for the worthy reception of the Sacrament, and narrates the manner of its
+institution by our Divine Lord at the Last Supper, showing what were the
+matter and form used by Christ. He discourses on the evidence of God's
+love to be found in this mystery of the altar; and then refutes
+objections as to the manner of the Divine Presence, expressly teaching
+Transubstantiation. Those who approach the altar rails are divided by him
+into seven classes, and here the author shows a wondrous and intimate
+knowledge of the working of the human heart. The treatise closes with a
+description of the contemplative life.
+
+
+ The Seven Degrees of Spiritual Love
+
+In a simile familiar to spiritual writers of all ages, Ruysbroeck
+compares life to a ladder, or stairway of seven steps, leading up to
+perfection and union with God. These stages are respectively: (1)
+Conformity with the holy will of God; (2) Voluntary poverty; (3) Purity
+of soul and chastity of body; (4) Humility, with her four daughters,
+obedience, gentleness, patience, and the forsaking of self-will; (5) The
+desire of the divine glory, involving three spiritual exercises, namely,
+acts of love and adoration, acts of supplication, and acts of
+thanksgiving; (6) The contemplative and perfect life, by which man
+finally attains the last stage of, (7) sublime ignorance. (Compare Walter
+Hilton's "darksome lightness" in his _Scale of Perfection_.)
+
+
+ Of the Supreme Truth
+
+This treatise was issued by way of explanation of some difficult passages
+in his first work, concerning especially the gift of counsel, and indeed
+as a kind of defence and apology of his whole mystic teaching. He
+protests that he has never admitted that the creature can be raised to a
+state of identity with God, and once more he explains his conception of
+the union of the soul with her Divine Spouse. There is a union common to
+all the just, brought about by the grace of God, with the forsaking of
+vice, the practice of virtue, and submission to the authority of the
+Church. Then there is a more intimate union, like unto that of fire and
+iron, which, when united, seem but one matter, though in fact they remain
+two distinct substances. Those who attain this love God and live in His
+presence, but as yet arrive not at a complete knowledge of His essence.
+After this again there is even a yet closer union, whereby the Eternal
+Father and man become one, not indeed with oneness of substantial unity,
+but in a oneness of love and bliss. It is evident that language here
+fails the holy author to express the sublimity of his concept and his
+experience; in his endeavour to show the intimacy of this last method of
+union he is driven to use expressions which, taken as they stand, have
+that pantheistic ring which it is his first object here to disclaim.
+
+
+ The Twelve Béguines
+
+After the _Tabernacle_, this is the most lengthy of our Saint's works,
+and it is of great importance as throwing considerable light on
+Ruysbroeck's ideas and system. We are introduced to twelve Béguines
+discoursing together on the love of Jesus Christ, whence an easy transit
+to the real subject-matter of the tract, the contemplative life. To
+attain the state of contemplation, four conditions are required: a ray of
+divine light, producing illumination, whence, on the part of the soul, a
+looking at God, or speculation, passing into contemplation, and this
+stage again merging into a state of sublime, ecstatic love. There are
+four distinct acts or states of love, corresponding respectively to each
+of these stages. Ruysbroeck also shows here the action of the Holy Ghost
+in forming the soul to a more intimate knowledge of God.
+
+The second part of the book then opens with a fresh order of ideas.
+Ruysbroeck divides mankind into good Christians and wicked men. Holiness
+consists of the union of the active and the contemplative life. There
+are, however, some who practise neither one nor the other and yet give
+themselves out as the most holy of all. Among these Ruysbroeck proceeds
+to distinguish four kinds of errors or heresies: (1) Errors against the
+Holy Ghost and His Grace; (2) Errors against God the Father and His
+power; (3) Errors against God the Son and His Sacred Humanity; and
+finally errors against God and all that makes up Christendom, namely, the
+Scriptures, the Church, and the Sacraments. On the other hand, the good
+Christian is one who loves God with all his heart and mind and soul and
+strength.
+
+Blessed John then goes on to discourse of the Divine Nature in Unity and
+Trinity. He also discusses man in his material and in his spiritual
+nature. The spiritual part of man alone he says, can elevate him to the
+mystic life (of which once more the three ways are expounded), and alone
+also can show him the reasons wherefore God created the universe. The
+three ways of the mystic life are symbolised by the three heavens. The
+stars and the planets exercise an influence on terrestrial creatures,
+that is to say, upon our bodies, for God alone can touch the soul,
+leading it to good and restraining it from evil. Thence also Ruysbroeck
+describes the various temperaments of men by reference to the planets and
+their conjunction with the signs of the zodiac.
+
+A chapter on our Divine Lord, held up as the Model Religious, serves as a
+transition to the third part, which is a treatise, largely symbolical, on
+the Passion of Christ, divided and subdivided according to the sequence
+of the Canonical Hours.
+
+This is perhaps the most discursive of Ruysbroeck's works, and in that
+sense the most difficult to follow, because of the number and length of
+the digressions. For instance, when he comes to speak of the planet
+Venus, he mentions the sign of the Balance, and this suggests a whole
+treatise of thirty-nine chapters on the _Balance of Divine Love_. The
+love of God for us, and all the blessings, spiritual and temporal, which
+flow from it, are cast into one pan of the balance, and we must weigh
+down the other pan with our virtues; and there follows a long
+disquisition on the virtues we should practise, prominent among which, as
+usual, he ranks humility. Here, further, he finds occasion to work out
+his distinction between the spirit and the reasonable soul; and the whole
+digression closes with a sad and striking comparison between the fervour
+of primitive Christianity and the laxity of his own days.
+
+Bossuet very severely criticised this work, holding it up as an example
+of forced allegories, and so forth, and speaking of Ruysbroeck as
+involved in the vain speculations of astrologers. This opinion, though
+not surprising, is not just, for the author is careful to insist that the
+planets have not influence on the will of man as such. But it is natural
+that Bossuet should regard such works with suspicion and dislike, for he
+had considerable trouble with false mystics, the quietists of his own
+day; and even Ruysbroeck's own friends and contemporaries found much in
+the volume that was strange, even to startling, and Gerard Groote advised
+him not to publish it in its entirety.
+
+
+ Of the Twelve Virtues
+
+The reader will not be surprised to learn that Blessed John contrives
+here to speak of considerably more virtues than just twelve. The
+principal and first is said to be humility, and this again twofold--one
+humility inspired by the contemplation of the power of God, the other by
+the consideration of His goodness. The daughter of humility is obedience,
+and obedience naturally involves denial of self-will, poverty of spirit,
+and patience in adversities. He then proceeds to treat very beautifully
+and at length of interior detachment, remarking that to secure this it is
+not necessary to flee external occupations, but that the attainment of
+perfection consists in a perfect abandonment to the will of God and the
+forsaking of our own will. When we have arrived thus far, we shall no
+longer sin. For past sins there must be continued sorrow, but external
+penances are not equally for all. And those who cannot endure great
+bodily austerities must apply themselves to imitate the austere life of
+Christ by interior self-denial.
+
+
+ The Letters of Ruysbroeck
+
+These are spiritual letters, of course, conferences in epistolary form.
+
+The first is addressed to Margaret van Meerbeke, the Poor Clare of
+Brussels mentioned above. Ruysbroeck writes: "When I was at your convent
+last summer, you appeared sad; methought God or some special friend had
+forsaken you; therefore am I writing you as follows." And he proceeds to
+console his spiritual daughter, and to warn her against the dangers which
+may be found even in the cloister. He declaims against the abuses which
+sometimes creep into monasteries, and almost always through _self-will_,
+whereas every Religious should strive to have all things _in common_, to
+be submissive to superiors and affable to all. The holy author closes
+with a description of the terrible punishments to be meted out to those
+Religious who fail to keep their rule and lead a holy life.
+
+The second, addressed to Matilda, the widow of John of Culemberg, is of
+more importance. After treating of the Apostles' Creed, the seven gifts
+of the Holy Ghost, the Decalogue, the vows of religion and the precepts
+of the Church, the Incarnation and death of Christ, Ruysbroeck expounds
+the Catholic doctrine on the seven Sacraments, and especially the Blessed
+Eucharist. He describes the fruits which flow from a worthy Communion,
+and treats again of the three ways of the contemplative life, and
+describes the elements of superessential contemplation.
+
+The third was sent to three Recluses of Cologne. Blessed John exhorts
+them to persevere in their holy manner of life. He treats of the
+spiritual life, comparing Christ to the precious pearl, the hidden
+treasure. And finally he earnestly exhorts them to constant meditation on
+the Passion of Our Lord.
+
+The fourth was addressed to Catherine of Louvain, a devout young lady
+living in the world; and the other three were likewise sent to persons in
+the world. All are full of wise spiritual maxims, and all insist on the
+need of humility and the abnegation of self-will.
+
+
+
+
+ XII
+
+ The Teaching of Ruysbroeck[7]
+
+
+In no one work, as already remarked, does Blessed John Ruysbroeck give a
+complete outline of his doctrines; the elements rather are to be found
+dispersed among the various treatises.
+
+In common with most of the German mystics, Ruysbroeck starts from God and
+comes down to man, and thence rises again to God, showing how the two are
+so closely united as to become one. In His essence God is simple unity,
+the one supremely pure and supernatural being, devoid of all mode, in
+Himself still and immovable, and yet at the same time the first cause and
+active principle of all things. This principle is the divine _nature_,
+which does not in reality differ from the essence, and which is fruitful
+in the Trinity. The Father is the essential principle, and yet He is
+consubstantial with the other two Persons. The Son, the uncreated Image
+of the Father, is the Eternal Wisdom. The Holy Ghost, proceeding from the
+other two, and returning unto them, is the eternal Love, which unites
+Father and Son. As regards Persons, God is eternally active: as regards
+essence, He abides in unbroken repose. Creatures have been existing as
+ideas in God from all eternity.
+
+In man, whose body is merely a perishable instrument, there is a
+spiritual, immortal principle, like unto God, though less than He. In
+this principle Ruysbroeck distinguishes, with a distinction of the
+reason, soul and spirit; the former is the principle of the merely human
+life, uniting together the lower powers; the other is the principle of
+man's supernatural life in God, gathering together his higher faculties.
+The soul has four inferior powers: the _irascible_, and the
+_concupiscible_, which two become bestial when not under the ruling of a
+virtuous will; _reason_, by which man is distinguished from the brute,
+and _freedom of choice_, an exercise of the higher faculty of the will.
+The spirit has the three superior faculties, memory, understanding, and
+will. In every man likewise there is a triple unity, or oneness: the
+unity of the lower faculties in the soul, the unity of the higher in the
+spirit, and the unity of the whole being in God, on Whom all things
+essentially depend for their being.
+
+Blessed John delivers the accepted teaching of the Church on the Fall,
+the Incarnation and Redemption, on the need and on the means of divine
+grace, the institution of the Sacraments, the establishment of the
+Church, the gifts of the Holy Ghost, etc.
+
+But coming now to his more purely mystical doctrine, we find that
+Ruysbroeck distinguishes three degrees, or states--the active life, the
+interior life, and the contemplative life. The active life consists of
+the effort to conquer sin and to draw nigh to God by exterior works. Here
+in Christ is the Divine Exemplar, for in His life He practised the three
+fundamental virtues of humility, charity, and patience. Humility is the
+foundation of the whole building, and it is exercised chiefly in
+obedience, which engenders the abdication of our own will, and patience,
+or submission in all things to the holy will of God. When a man has
+arrived so far, he can exercise charity, shown at this stage chiefly by
+compassion for Christ suffering on the Cross for all men, and bringing
+with her the four cardinal virtues of prudence, temperance, fortitude,
+and justice, whereby also the Christian is enabled to fight and conquer
+his three deadly enemies, the devil, the world, and the flesh.
+Perseverance in this active life is crowned by union with God, a union
+wherein God alone is regarded as the exemplar and the final end, wherein
+He alone is sought and loved. Thus does a man become a _Faithful
+Servant_.
+
+As yet, however, there is only an imperfect knowledge of God, and to
+become more closely united with God, as an _Intimate Friend_, one must
+strive to attain the second stage of the mystic way, namely the _interior
+life_. For this three preliminary conditions are requisite. On the part
+of God, there must be a yet stronger movement of divine grace, and on the
+part of man, an absolute recollection, with freedom from sensible images,
+attachments, and cares, and then the gathering together of all the powers
+in the unity of the Spirit. Christ, then, the Eternal Sun, enkindles in
+the soul thus duly prepared a divine fire, which engenders a warm,
+sensible love, a devotion full of ardent desires, with thankfulness for
+the divine mercies and affliction at one's own unworthiness. Then, as the
+action of the sun draws up the moisture in the form of vapour, to fall
+back again in refreshing and fertilising showers of rain, so if the soul
+persevere Christ sends down a fresh shower of consolations, which fill
+the whole being with a chaste pleasure and an indescribable sweetness
+superior to all the delights of the earth, rising even to a species of
+spiritual intoxication, which may manifest itself in outward acts. As yet
+there are no severe trials for the soul, but she must beware of pride and
+presumption, and of leaning too much on these sensible delights instead
+of on the Divine Giver. Meanwhile the Sun of Justice is reaching its
+apogee in the heavens, and Christ draws up all the powers of the soul, so
+that the heart is enlarged and fit to burst with love, and at the same
+time it begins to suffer from the wound of love, because of the urgency
+of the power drawing upward and its own impotency to follow; whence also
+a spiritual languishing, a very madness and impatience, or fever of love,
+capable even of wasting the bodily strength. Love is liable to be so
+intense at this stage, that visions and ecstacies are granted; but at the
+same time care must be taken against the delusions of the evil one.
+
+But thence the Sun enters on the sign of the Virgin and its downward
+path, that is, Christ hides Himself and deprives the soul of the warmth
+of sensible love and the like. It is the autumn, the time of gathering
+the really ripe and lasting fruits; but to the soul a time of seeming
+abandonment, aridity, darkness, etc. She must then beg the prayers of
+others, be glad to leave herself in God's hands, willing to suffer and to
+sacrifice all sweetness. Likewise, she must be careful not to compromise
+God's favour by seeking earthly pleasures and delights, the consolations
+of human friendship, and so forth.
+
+Then there is a second coming of the Divine Spouse, bringing with Him the
+gifts of the Holy Ghost, whereby He adorns the three supreme faculties of
+the spirit. Pure simplicity empties the memory of all external images and
+renders it stable. Spiritual brightness gives the intelligence a sure
+discernment of the virtues. And a spiritual fervour arouses the will to a
+boundless love for God and men.
+
+There is yet a third coming, which affects the supreme union of the
+spirit with God. It is a species of intimate contact with God in the very
+depths of the soul. The intellect cannot comprehend the manner of this
+union, it can only witness its effects upon the reason and the will. The
+power of loving increases with the intimacy of this union, and the
+intimacy increases the power of love; and hence also a kind of loving
+strife ensues, each wishing to possess the other and each wishing to give
+himself to the other utterly.
+
+This is the apogee of the interior life, the meeting, the union of the
+soul with God. It may be brought about in three different ways: (1) Man,
+struck by a light coming forth from God, forsakes all images; he is
+plunged into the union of fruitive love; he meets God without any medium,
+a spirit like unto Him; it is the state of absolute repose in God, utter
+emptiness and leisure. (2) At other times man adores God and consumes
+himself in continual love, which ceaselessly feeds on the presence of
+God; it is the mediate stage, the state of affective love, needful for
+the attainment of the preceding. (3) Finally, it is possible to unite
+enjoyment with activity: man enjoys a most profound peace and produces
+all the acts of love; he receives God; and His gifts in the superior
+faculties, images and sensations in the lower powers; it is the most
+perfect state, the state of combined activity and repose.
+
+Even so, it is not the most sublime state. Above the interior life there
+is the superessential contemplative life; above the _faithful friends_
+there are the _Intimate Sons_ of God. This third stage of perfection can
+never be acquired by any act of the intelligence or will; and so sublime
+is it that he only who has experienced it can attempt its description,
+and then in terms the most halting and imperfect. This contemplation
+consists in an absolute purity and simplicity of the understanding; it is
+a knowledge and possession of God, without modes, without limits, without
+medium, without any consciousness of the difference of His qualities.
+Nevertheless, it is not God, it is the light by which He is seen. It is
+the death and destruction of self to behold only the Being eternal and
+absolute. Its essence is union with God, the still contemplation of God,
+abandonment to God, so that He alone acts, and not the soul. This repose
+of the spirit engenders a supernatural contemplation of the Trinity
+without any medium, a feeling of bliss unspeakable, a sublime ignorance;
+the last consciousness of the difference between God and the
+creature--being and nothingness--disappears.
+
+This is the honeymoon of Christ with the soul, to which the preceding
+stages are only a preparation. The spirit is led from brightness to
+brightness; and since no medium comes between it and the divine
+splendour, since the brightness by which it sees is the light itself
+which it sees, in a certain sense itself becomes this brightness; it
+attains a consciousness of its own superessential being, of the unity of
+its essence in God.
+
+
+
+
+ XIII
+
+ Some Appreciations
+
+
+Arrived thus at the summit of mystic speculation, Ruysbroeck finds
+himself on the confines of pantheism. However, he constantly insists, as
+we have already remarked, on the essential difference between the created
+spirit and the Spirit Eternal. Man, he says, must become deiform as far
+as that is possible for the creature; in the union with God it is not the
+difference of personality which is destroyed, it is only the difference
+of will and of thought, the desire to be anything apart in oneself which
+must disappear. He declares: "There where I assert that we are one in
+God, I must be understood in this sense that we are one in love, not in
+essence or in nature." His own strenuous opposition to the pantheists of
+his day proves his orthodoxy in this matter; yet it must be confessed
+again that from the very nature of his sublime discourse, his expressions
+are at times exceedingly bold and seemingly unorthodox. The truth is that
+the resources of human language prove inadequate to describe even the
+foretaste on earth of that "which eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor
+hath it entered into the heart of man to conceive."
+
+In B. John's own lifetime Gerard Groote was alarmed, and wrote once to
+the Canons of Groenendael of a Doctor in Theology, and of one Henry of
+Hesse, who had declared that the _Spiritual Espousals_ contained errors.
+Twenty years after Ruysbroeck's death, John Gerson, the famous Chancellor
+of Paris, in a letter to one Bartholomew, a Carthusian, who had given him
+a copy of this treatise, praises the first two books, but declares that
+the third teaches a kind of pantheism. This charge brought forth a
+lengthy and spirited defence from a Canon Regular of Groenendael, named
+John Scoenhoven; and then in a second letter Gerson maintained his
+objections, but acquitted the holy author of all intentional error. A
+similar stand was taken later by Bossuet, who excuses Ruysbroeck but
+condemns his manner of expression. It must be remembered that these two
+were engaged in confuting false mystics, and naturally they would
+discredit the writings of even a holy man, however orthodox, which would
+appear to favour the erroneous tenets of their opponents. Once more, we
+remark that not only was Ruysbroeck manifestly free from all culpable
+error, but throughout in his own mind he never lost sight of the
+essential distinctions, though at times his language must necessarily
+sound exaggerated to unaccustomed ears.
+
+On the other hand, to outweigh the unfavourable opinion of these two
+French critics, we have a host of writers of Ruysbroeck's own and
+subsequent days who not only defend the orthodoxy of his writings, but
+who also speak of them in terms of the deepest admiration, and regard
+their author almost as inspired.
+
+We have already seen the esteem in which the holy Prior of Groenendael
+and his writings were held by Tauler, Gerard Groote, and the Venerable
+Thomas à Kempis, and the vigour with which his memory was vindicated by
+John of Scoenhoven, But his advocates were by no means confined to the
+limits of his own Order, period, or country.
+
+Henry van Herp, a Franciscan, compiled a _Mirror of Perfection_, taken
+almost exclusively from the _Spiritual Espousals_; and by his means the
+teachings of Blessed Ruysbroeck were propagated among the followers of
+St. Francis, particularly of the Third Order.
+
+Denys the Carthusian is unstinted in his praises. He calls him the
+_Divine Doctor_. "I name him the Divine Doctor," he writes, "because his
+only master was the Holy Ghost. Of this the abundance of wisdom wherewith
+he was gifted is a sure guarantee.... Ignorant man as I am, I confess
+that nowhere have I found such sublimity and such knowledge, save in the
+works of Denys the Areopagyte. But in his writings the difficulty arises
+especially from the style, whereas it is not so with the Prior of
+Groenendael.... As they say of Hugh of St. Victor that he is another St.
+Augustin, so I will say of Ruysbroeck that he is another Denys the
+Areopagyte."
+
+Thomas of Jesus, a Carmelite, in his _De Divina Oratione_, frequently
+quotes from Ruysbroeck and adopts his method.
+
+The Carthusian Surius translated all the works of Ruysbroeck into Latin,
+and this translation has been the chief source of familiarity with the
+Belgian mystic for readers and writers not acquainted with his native
+tongue. The following extracts from the _Introduction_ to Surius's
+translation seem worth quoting for the sake of some who may imagine that
+the works of Blessed John Ruysbroeck can be of profit only to those who
+are far advanced in the contemplative life:
+
+"I do not believe there is a man who can approach these magnificent and
+simple pages without great and singular profit. Let none excuse himself
+from reading this book on the plea of the inaccessible sublimity of
+Ruysbroeck. The great man has accommodated himself to all, and the most
+abandoned soul on earth may find again on reading him the path of
+salvation. Arrows dart from the pages of Ruysbroeck, aimed by no hand of
+man, but by the hand of God; and deeply they embed themselves in the soul
+of the reader who is a sinner. Innocent reader, reader of unstained robe,
+Ruysbroeck is at once most lowly and most sublime. In his description of
+the _Spiritual Espousals_ he surpasses admiration, he surpasses praise;
+all the commencement, all the progress, all the height, all the
+transcendent perfection of the spiritual life is there."
+
+It was from Surius that the Benedictine Blosius, or Louis de Blois,
+learned to know and appreciate Ruysbroeck. His works are impregnated with
+the teachings of the Mystic of Groenendael, and his well-known
+_Consolatio Pusillanimum_ (_Comfort for the Fainthearted_) is replete
+with extracts taken from Ruysbroeck.
+
+Lessius, the Jesuit Theological Professor of Louvain University, used to
+say that he read Blessed John Ruysbroeck daily; and he would add that if
+his holy works had emanated from the Society they would not have remained
+in obscurity so long.
+
+In more recent times Ernest Hello brought our Saint to France by a
+translation of extracts, prefaced by an anonymous contemporary life,
+which was first published in 1869. In his own _Introduction_, Hello
+writes: "Among those who, soaring beyond the realms of human light, have
+sought refuge in the shadow of the great altar, the grandest, according
+to Denys the Carthusian, are St. Denys the Areopagyte and John Ruysbroeck
+the Admirable. St. Denys lays down the general laws of mystic theology,
+John Ruysbroeck applies them. St. Denys presents the lamp, John
+Ruysbroeck kindles the flame. Both are blind with excess of light, both
+immovable with excess of motion. Speech with them is a visit paid to men
+from motives of charity. Silence is their native land. The beauty of
+their language is the condescendence of their goodness; the sacred
+darkness in which they spread their eagle wings is their ocean, their
+booty, their glory."
+
+Reviewing the work of Hello, Louis Veuillot, the French Catholic
+publicist, remarked:
+
+"Ruysbroeck was illiterate. He was a humble Flemish priest of the
+fifteenth century. None the less, in the order of genius the uncultured
+Ruysbroeck, as a theologian, and consequently as a philosopher and a
+poet, is as far above Bossuet as Dante, for instance, is above Boileau.
+Face to face with the mysteries that shroud God and man, Bossuet seeks,
+argues, and, so to speak, gropes; Ruysbroeck knows, describes, or rather
+sings, and contemplates. This illiterate mystic of an obscure age finds
+himself at home in the sublime as in his own sphere; he speaks of what is
+familiar to him; the wise doctor of the world remains without. Bossuet
+does not enter, he does not open, he does not see. Bossuet spins words,
+Ruysbroeck pours out streams of light. It seems as if Bossuet were that
+mighty wind which was heard in the Upper Chamber; the brief words of
+Ruysbroeck are the tongues of fire, living and enlightening flame."
+
+Truly has Time brought its revenge in such a comparison by a compatriot
+of Bossuet with Ruysbroeck.
+
+Finally, Maeterlinck brought out his translation of the _Spiritual
+Espousals_ in 1891 with a characteristic appreciation of the Flemish
+mystic. And Maeterlinck's name has given a strong impetus to the
+popularity, so to speak, of Blessed Ruysbroeck in modern France. But
+neither of these translations can be regarded as authoritative or exact.
+
+The real, scholarly work towards extending and encouraging the cult of
+Blessed John Ruysbroeck, whether among the learned or the devout, is
+being performed, as is seemly, in the Catholic University of his native
+Belgium, namely, at Louvain, where a Chair has been instituted for the
+study of Old Flemish, chiefly for the sake of a correct understanding and
+rendering of the writings of the Holy Mystic of Groenendael.
+
+And here we may note that while it is customary with some to speak of
+Ruysbroeck as illiterate, this term must be taken in a strictly limited
+sense. Possibly, he could not have composed in fluent and elegant Latin:
+he was not a classical scholar; but certainly the Latin of the Bible and
+the Fathers was quite familiar to him. His writings, moreover, display an
+intimate knowledge of the Scriptures, the Fathers, theology, liturgy,
+apologetics. The natural science of the day was not unknown, as witness
+his applications from astronomy, and, it must be confessed, from
+astrology. With St. Denys the Areopagyte he shows himself very intimate,
+and his pages contain whole passages borrowed or adapted from St. Anselm,
+St. Ambrose, St. Gregory, and especially St. Augustin. Nearer his own
+days St. Bernard and Hugh of St. Victor seem to have influenced him very
+considerably.
+
+Experts in Old Flemish assure us that his style is most chaste, his
+language vigorous and clear. He was in truth a poet. When carried away by
+the beauty or sublimity of his subject, he indulges in a wealth of
+imagery, comparison, metaphor, astounding at times in boldness and
+originality. Occasionally even he lapsed into verse; but on the whole his
+verse is of less beauty and strength than his prose, as he himself seems
+to have been aware. On the other hand, his prose, after the manner of St.
+Bernard, St. Bonaventure, the two Victors, and later Thomas à Kempis,
+frequently gives evidence of deliberate rhythm and rhyme. In a word, far
+from being illiterate in the strict sense of the word, Blessed John was
+well acquainted with all the rules and arts of rhetoric; he knew how to
+employ them; and for all the sublimity of his discourse he did not
+disdain the use of these aids to interest and persuasion. Finally, it is
+to be noted that we are expressly informed by contemporaries of
+Ruysbroeck that he wrote by preference in the vulgar tongue, the more
+readily and effectively to meet and refute the erroneous doctrines
+published in the language of the people by the false mystics of his day.
+
+
+
+
+ XIV
+
+ Last Days
+
+
+Of the life of our Saint there remains little to be told save the record
+of the last days and the after glory. He had attained the good old age of
+eighty-eight, when his mother appeared in a vision to warn him to make
+ready for the approaching end. It must seem to us there was little need
+for such warning to one whose whole life had been one long preparation
+for the coming of the Spouse! He was taken with dysentery, accompanied by
+fever, and for his greater comfort, and that his lifelong friend van
+Coudenberg might be at hand to console and assist him, they put him to
+bed in the Provost's chamber. But the humble Prior besought them to treat
+him as any of the lowliest brethren and to bear him to the common
+infirmary. This was accordingly done. There he lay for a fortnight,
+gradually wasting away with the burning fever, and still more, doubtless,
+with his burning desires to be dissolved and to be with Christ, for he
+was constantly heard murmuring such ejaculations as that of the Psalmist,
+_Sicut desiderat cervus ad fontes aquarum_. He received all the last
+rites, and the end came in the greatest peace, while his weeping brethren
+prayed around him, on the Octave day of St. Catherine, V.M., December 2,
+1381, in the eighty-eighth year of his age, the sixty-fourth of his
+priesthood.
+
+That same night the Dean of Diest, watching by the holy remains, seemed
+to behold our Saint, clad in the priestly vestments and all radiant with
+glory, ascend the altar steps as if to celebrate the sacred mysteries.
+The Dean had always held Ruysbroeck in the deepest veneration and, having
+some skill in medicine, he had come over to Groenendael on hearing of the
+Prior's illness to see whether he could administer any relief. His
+charity was rewarded by the edifying sight of his happy death, and by
+this consoling vision after.
+
+And, as the Venerable à Kempis informs us, "God also revealed to Gerard
+[Groote] the death of this most beloved Father, which revelation he made
+manifest in the hearing of many of the citizens by the tolling of the
+bells; and more privately he made known to certain of his friends that
+the soul of the Prior, after but one hour of Purgatory, had passed to the
+glory of Heaven." We may note here that à Kempis himself was a child of
+three years when Ruysbroeck was called to his reward. Gerard Groote
+followed his friend and spiritual father to the grave three years later.
+
+The Groenendael Canons offered the holy Sacrifice and all the wonted
+suffrages for their departed Prior's repose, but they prayed with the
+conviction that they needed his impetration rather than he theirs. They
+were all eager to possess themselves of any little thing which had been
+his. Some cut off locks of his hair, and one managed to secure a tooth!
+Appropriately enough, this relic later cured a Mechlin lady of a severe
+attack of toothache. However, in all simplicity the Brethren laid Blessed
+John to rest in the little chapel which his own hands had helped to
+raise.
+
+Five years later his saintly associate, the Provost Francis van
+Coudenberg, rejoined him beyond the grave. The Bishop of Cambrai, John
+T'Serclaes, came to assist at the obsequies. During his visit he heard so
+much of the heroic virtues of the late Prior that he ordered an
+exhumation of Ruysbroeck's body with a view to a more honourable burial
+by the side of the Provost in the new church, which had now replaced the
+little chapel. They were all filled with awe and wonder to find the
+entire body, save only the tip of the nose, incorrupt, and the priestly
+vestments intact. Also a most sweet odour exhaled from the holy remains.
+To satisfy the devotion of the people, the Bishop commanded that the body
+should be exposed to their veneration for three days. On the third day,
+amid a vast concourse of the faithful, Ruysbroeck was laid to rest by the
+side and in the tomb of his lifelong friend van Coudenberg. Over the
+sepulchre was placed the following simple inscription:
+
+ _Hic jacet translatus Devotus Pater
+ D. Joannes de Ruysbroeck
+ I. Prior hujus monasterii
+ Qui obiit anno Domini
+ MCCCLXXXI
+ II. Die Decembris_
+
+"Here lies transferred the Devout Father, Dom John of Ruysbroeck, First
+Prior of this cloister, who departed in the year of the Lord 1381,
+December 2."
+
+
+
+
+ XV
+
+ The Cultus of Blessed John Ruysbroeck
+
+
+Numerous pilgrims now wended their way to visit Ruysbroeck's tomb.
+Ex-votos were suspended there in acknowledgment of favours received. His
+picture also was honoured in various churches. And each year on the
+Monday following Trinity Sunday the Chapter of St. Gudule's came over to
+Groenendael to assist the Canons at a Mass sung in his honour. In a word,
+on all sides the holy Prior was regarded and, as far as possible, treated
+as a Saint in glory.
+
+Yielding to representations and entreaties from many quarters, James
+Roonen, Archbishop of Mechlin, ordered another translation of the
+remains, November 1622. This was duly performed with all the prescribed
+formalities. The skeleton was found entire. The bones were carefully
+taken and reverently washed and then placed in a new reliquary. The water
+used in this cleansing emitted a delicious odour, and it was afterwards
+instrumental in effecting many miraculous cures. The Infanta Isabella of
+Spain laid the foundation stone of a chapel to be erected at her expense
+near _Ruysbroeck's Tree_ as a suitable shrine for the relics. She also
+provided a magnificent sarcophagus. As this chapel was outside the
+monastic enclosure, ladies were now able to pay their devotions at
+Ruysbroeck's tomb itself, whereas hitherto they had been able to
+reverence the relics only from a distance.
+
+So far, however, no authoritative recognition of the heroic virtues of
+John Ruysbroeck had come from Rome. In 1624 the Archbishop commissioned
+the learned Albert le Mire to draw up the necessary preliminary documents
+to be submitted to the Sacred Congregation. These were approved, and
+three commissioners were appointed to Initiate the apostolic process, so
+called. Their labours were completed by 1627. Then, on account of the
+wars and other troubles which afflicted the Low Countries at the time,
+the Cause was suspended.
+
+When the French overran the Netherlands in 1667, to prevent profanation
+of the holy relics, they were carried to a place of greater safety in
+Brussels; they were restored again in 1670. In 1783 the Priory itself
+shared the fate of so many other Religious Houses, and was suppressed by
+the Emperor Joseph II.; whereupon the relics were again transferred to
+Brussels and laid to rest in a side-chapel of St. Gudule's.
+
+Another attempt was then made by the Chapter of St. Gudule's to obtain
+from Rome an authorised Office and Mass in honour of John Ruysbroeck. The
+petition was favourably received; but once more there was a violent
+interruption, this time from the upheaval of the French Revolution.
+
+St. Gudule's was sacked by the _sans-culottes_ in 1793, and the reliquary
+of Ruysbroeck was desecrated. It is said, however, that the relics were
+not actually dispersed, and that they were afterwards sealed up again by
+a Notary named Neuwens; but unhappily at the present day all trace of
+them has disappeared.
+
+Finally, in 1885, the late Cardinal Goosens, Archbishop of Mechlin,
+approached the Sacred Congregation once more, and a tribunal was
+appointed to examine into the Cause, February 8, 1900. This was brought
+to a happy issue in 1908 by a Decree of the Sacred Congregation, dated
+December 1st, and approved by His Holiness, Pius X., December 9,
+confirming the cultus "shown from time immemorial to the Venerable
+Servant of God, John Ruysbroeck, Canon Regular, called the Blessed."
+Later, August 24, 1909, the Congregation granted and approved an Office
+and Mass of Blessed John Ruysbroeck for the Mechlin clergy. The privilege
+of this Office and Mass has also been extended to the Canons Regular of
+the Lateran, who are the lineal representatives of the Canons of
+Groenendael and Windesheim, and therefore in a special sense the children
+of Blessed John.
+
+For the moment there may seem to be but little in common between this
+Mediæval Mystic and the bustling modern world, so little as to suggest
+the thought that Blessed Ruysbroeck can have no message to deliver to our
+day. On the contrary, the Solitary of the Forest of Soignes stands for a
+profound truth, oblivion of which is rendering Society sick unto death
+to-day. John Ruysbroeck preaches to the world its utter need of God.
+
+For the Catholic he enforces his lesson in a special manner. Unlike false
+mystics, who invariably pretend to dispense themselves and their
+adherents from the chief normal means of grace, namely the Sacraments,
+Ruysbroeck insists upon frequent recourse to the Sacraments, but more
+especially to the Blessed Eucharist, as the speediest and most
+efficacious means of bringing each soul into true union with God. Our
+present Holy Father, desirous and ambitious of "restoring all things in
+Christ," has pointed to the same divine remedy for the renewal of our
+souls. May there not be seen in this a providential reason wherefore the
+solemn beatification of this holy Religious has been delayed six
+centuries, to be reserved to our own days?
+
+The proper prayers of our Saint's Mass beautifully summarise the lessons
+of his life as follows:
+
+
+ Collect
+
+God, Who didst vouchsafe to adorn Blessed John, Thy Confessor, with
+sublime holiness of life and with heavenly gifts, grant us, through his
+merits, and after his example, to despise the fleeting things of the
+world, and to desire only the joys of heaven.
+
+
+ Secret
+
+May the intercession of Blessed John, who in offering the Sacrifice
+merited to overflow with heavenly delights, make us worthy, we beseech
+Thee, Lord, of the bread of angels.
+
+
+ Post-Communion
+
+We beseech Thee, Lord, by the intercession of Blessed John, grant to us
+who are refreshed with the heavenly banquet, that, delivered from worldly
+desires, we may be ever fervent in Thy love.
+
+
+
+
+ Footnotes
+
+
+[1]By Earle Bailie. London: Thomas Baker. 1905.
+
+[2]_Cf._ the Polish sect of _Mariavites_, or _Mystic Priests_, under the
+ misguidance of the woman Mary Frances, whose extravagances were
+ condemned by Rome, September 1904, and again April 1906.
+
+[3]Provost is the equivalent in a College of Clergy of the Abbot in a
+ Monastery; though many Congregations of Canons Regular have borrowed
+ the title and style of Abbot from the monastic institute.
+
+[4]Translation by J. P. Arthur. _The Founders of the New Devotion._ Kegan
+ Paul. 1905.
+
+[5]Especially: _Outlines of the Life of Thomas à Kempis_. By Sir Francis
+ Cruise. _C.T.S._ of Ireland. _Thomas à Kempis_. By the same. London:
+ Kegan Paul. _Life of the Venerable Thomas à Kempis_. By Dom Scully.
+ London: Washbourne. _Thomas à Kempis and the Brothers of the Common
+ Life_. By Kettlewell. London: Kegan Paul. _Thomas à Kempis, His Age
+ and His Book_. By De Montmorency, London: Methuen.
+
+[6]Father Sharpe, in his recent admirable volume, _Mysticism: Its True
+ Nature and Value_, writes thus of the mystic teaching, properly so
+ called, of à Kempis's world-famous masterpiece: "_The Imitation of
+ Christ_ ... probably owes much of its vast popularity to its constant
+ recurrence to the elementary duties of religion and morality, and its
+ insistence on the necessity of their performance as the prerequisite
+ of the more exalted spiritual states. The 'purgative,' 'illuminative,'
+ and 'unitive' ways are seen, so to speak, together, and are dealt with
+ as aspects or constituents of the Christian life as a whole, to the
+ completeness of which all three are necessary and, in different ways,
+ of equal importance. The purely mystical passages are comparatively
+ few and short; and the abundance of practical directions the book
+ contains has sometimes caused its mystical character to be entirely
+ overlooked. This disproportion, however, is quite sufficiently to be
+ accounted for by the character of the work, which is that of a
+ directory of spiritual life in general, and not a scientific treatise
+ on any particular department of it. In such a book attempts at
+ describing the indescribable phenomena of mysticism would obviously
+ have been out of place, whereas the practical details of the lower and
+ preliminary states admit of and require minute explanation. But the
+ tone of the whole book is mystical, and the most commonplace duties
+ and the most humiliating strivings with temptation are in a manner
+ illuminated and glorified by the brilliancy of the result to which
+ they tend. Thus, in point of fact, the higher and lower elements, the
+ mystical and the non-mystical, the purgative, the illuminative and the
+ unitive, are blended in actual human experience" (pp. 188, 189).
+
+[7]The whole subject of mystic theology is excellently well treated by
+ Rev. A. B. Sharpe, M.A., in a volume entitled _Mysticism: Its True
+ Nature and Value_, already quoted, just published by Sands & Co. There
+ is frequent reference to our Saint and his writings.
+
+
+ FINIS
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Notes
+
+
+--Silently corrected a few palpable typos.
+
+--Moved footnotes from page footer to end of text
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Mediaeval Mystic, by Vincent Scully
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Mediaeval Mystic
+ A Short Account of the Life and Writings of Blessed John
+ Ruysbroeck, Canon Regular of Groenendael A.D. 1293-1381
+
+Author: Vincent Scully
+
+Release Date: June 13, 2011 [EBook #36407]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MEDIAEVAL MYSTIC ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<h1>A MEDI&AElig;VAL MYSTIC</h1>
+<p class="center">A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE
+<br />AND WRITINGS OF BLESSED JOHN
+<br />RUYSBROECK, CANON REGULAR OF
+<br />GROENENDAEL A.D. 1293-1381</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="smaller">BY</span>
+<br />DOM VINCENT SCULLY, C.R.L.</p>
+<p class="center">(<i>Permissu Superiorum</i>)</p>
+<p class="tbcenter">LONDON
+<br />THOMAS BAKER
+<br /><span class="small">MCMX</span></p>
+<p class="tbcenter"><span class="smaller">PRINTED BY
+<br />HAZELL, WATSON AND VINEY, LD.,
+<br />LONDON AND AYLESBURY.</span></p>
+<p class="tbcenter">TO
+<br />THE RIGHT REV. AUGUSTIN H. WHITE, C.R.L.
+<br /><span class="small">LORD ABBOT OF WALTHAM</span></p>
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+<dl class="toc">
+<dt class="sc">Page</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c1">INTRODUCTION</a> ix</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c2"><span>I. </span>EARLY YEARS AND EDUCATION</a> 1</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c3"><span>II. </span>AS A SECULAR PRIEST IN BRUSSELS</a> 6</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c4"><span>III. </span>FALSE MYSTICS</a> 10</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c5"><span>IV. </span>THE HERMITAGE OF GROENENDAEL</a> 17</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c6"><span>V. </span>THE CANONS REGULAR OF GROENENDAEL</a> 25</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c7"><span>VI. </span>PRIOR OF GROENENDAEL</a> 33</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c8"><span>VII. </span>RUYSBROECK&rsquo;S TREE</a> 43</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c9"><span>VIII. </span>A DIRECTOR OF SOULS</a> 47</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c10"><span>IX. </span>RUYSBROECK AND GERARD GROOTE</a> 50</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c11"><span>X. </span>RUYSBROECK AND WINDESHEIM</a> 58</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c12"><span>XI. </span>THE WRITINGS OF RUYSBROECK</a> 67</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c13"><span>XII. </span>THE TEACHING OF RUYSBROECK</a> 93</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c14"><span>XIII. </span>SOME APPRECIATIONS</a> 105</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c15"><span>XIV. </span>LAST DAYS</a> 118</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c16"><span>XV. </span>THE CULTUS OF BLESSED JOHN RUYSBROECK</a> 124</dt>
+</dl>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_ix">[ix]</div>
+<h2 id="c1">INTRODUCTION</h2>
+<p>The object of the following unpretentious
+little volume is to give a simple and readable
+account in English of the life and writings
+of a remarkable Flemish Mystic of the fourteenth
+century, a contemporary of our own
+Walter Hilton. Though his memory and
+honour have never faded in his own native
+Belgium, and though France and Germany
+have vied with each other in spreading his
+teaching and singing his praises, the very
+name of Blessed John Ruysbroeck is practically
+unknown this side of the water. We
+are acquainted with only one small work in
+English dealing directly with the Saint or
+his work at all, viz. <i>Reflections from the Mirror
+<span class="pb" id="Page_x">[x]</span>
+of Mystic</i>,<sup><a id="fr_1" href="#fn_1">[1]</a></sup> giving the briefest sketch of his
+life and some short extracts from his writings
+as translated from the French rendering of
+Ernest Hello.</p>
+<p>The original authorities for the history of
+Ruysbroeck are practically reduced to one,
+the biography by Henry Pomerius, a Canon
+Regular of Groenendael, entitled <i>De Origine
+monasterii Viridisvallis una cum vitis B.
+Joannis Rusbrochii primi prioris hujus
+monasterii et aliquot coaetaneorum ejus</i>, re-edited
+by the Bollandists, Brussels, 1885. It
+is certain that a disciple of John Ruysbroeck,
+John of Scoenhoven, also of Groenendael,
+who undertook the defence of Blessed John&rsquo;s
+writings against Gerson, composed a short
+biography, but this was embodied in the work
+of Pomerius, and thereby as a separate
+volume fell out of use and memory. Pomerius
+<span class="pb" id="Page_xi">[xi]</span>
+had Scoenhoven&rsquo;s MS. to work upon, and
+some of Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s contemporaries were
+still living at Groenendael when he composed
+his biography there. The brief references
+by the Venerable Thomas &agrave; Kempis in
+his <i>Vita Gerardi Magni</i> are likewise of great
+interest and intrinsic worth.</p>
+<p>For the purposes of this brief biography,
+which lays no claim whatever to original
+research, the compiler has made very great
+use of the labours of Dr. Auger, <i>De Doctrina
+et Meritis Joannis van Ruysbroeck</i>, Louvain,
+and Willem de Vreese, <i>Jean de Ruysbroeck</i>,
+an extract from the <i>Biographie Nationale</i>,
+published by l&rsquo;Acad&eacute;mie royale des sciences,
+des lettres et des beaux-arts de Belgique,
+Brussels, 1909. This indebtedness is especially
+true of the summarised analysis of the various
+works of Ruysbroeck.</p>
+<p>Later it may be possible to give a complete
+and faithful English rendering of all
+<span class="pb" id="Page_xii">[xii]</span>
+Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s Works from the critical edition
+which is at present preparing in Louvain;
+where there is an active revival of interest in
+this great and holy Mystic of the Netherlands.</p>
+<p>For the judgment of competent witnesses
+as to the permanent value and extraordinary
+sublimity of B. John&rsquo;s writings the reader
+is referred to the body of this work under
+the heading, <i>Some Appreciations</i>.</p>
+<p>The usual protest is made according to
+the Decrees of Urban VIII. concerning alleged
+miracles, etc., recorded in these pages.</p>
+<p><span class="small"><span class="sc">St. Ives, Cornwall,</span></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="small"><i>Feast of Our Lady&rsquo;s Nativity</i>, 1910.</span></p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_1">[1]</div>
+<h1>A Medi&aelig;val Mystic</h1>
+<h2 id="c2">I
+<br /><span class="sc">Early Years and Education</span></h2>
+<p>Blessed John Ruysbroeck, surnamed the
+Admirable and the Divine Doctor, by common
+consent the greatest Mystic the Low Countries
+have ever produced, was born, <span class="sc">A.D.</span> 1293,
+at Ruysbroeck, a village some miles south
+of Brussels, lying between that city and Hal.
+According to the fashion of those days, especially
+with Religious, he was named after
+his birthplace, John van Ruysbroeck, or John
+Ruysbroeck. The Venerable &agrave; Kempis, the
+Latinised form of van Kempen, is a case
+in point; Thomas was so named after his
+native town, Kempen, though his patronymic
+<span class="pb" id="Page_2">[2]</span>
+was Haemerken. Of Ruysbroeck,
+however, we know of no other surname;
+neither do his biographers so much as mention
+his father. But like many another great
+servant of God, John was blessed with a
+good mother, a devout woman who trained
+her child from the cradle to walk in the paths
+of Christian piety and perfection. She is
+charged with only one fault, that she loved
+her son too tenderly!</p>
+<p>Perhaps we are to understand by this
+that the poor woman opposed the boy&rsquo;s early
+aspirations after a more retired life than
+could be found even in the peaceful shelter
+of his own pious home. This would also
+explain John&rsquo;s first recorded act. At the age
+of eleven years he ran away from home!
+How many a lad before and since has torn
+himself away from a loving mother&rsquo;s too
+fond embrace to quell the ardour of a restless
+spirit in the quest of adventure! John
+<span class="pb" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
+also was eager and dissatisfied; but the larger
+sphere for which he sighed was to be sought
+along the unaccustomed ways which lead to
+the sublime heights and the rarified atmosphere
+of mystic contemplation.</p>
+<p>The pious truant made his way to Brussels,
+there to call upon an uncle of his, one John
+Hinckaert, a major Canon of St. Gudule&rsquo;s.
+The son and heir of a wealthy magistrate of
+the city, and possessed, moreover, of a rich
+benefice, for many years John Hinckaert had
+been somewhat worldly in his ways; but one
+day Divine grace found him out as he was
+listening to a sermon, and drew him sweetly
+and strongly to a life of extreme simplicity
+and mortification. His example was soon
+followed by a fellow Canon, by name Francis
+van Coudenberg, a Master of Arts, possessed
+of considerable means, and a man of great
+repute with the people. These two agreed,
+for their mutual edification and support, to
+<span class="pb" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
+live together in common. Their material
+requirements were reduced to the barest
+necessaries; and the surplus of their revenue
+was distributed among the poor. In this
+devout household the lad John met with a
+kindly welcome; and there he found at
+once a home after his own heart in an atmosphere
+saturated with &ldquo;other-worldliness&rdquo;
+and prayer. His good uncle also took charge
+of his education. For four years Ruysbroeck
+followed the ordinary course of Humanities
+in the public schools of Brussels, and then,
+with a view to the priesthood, he devoted
+himself to the more congenial study of the
+sacred sciences.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the bereaved mother had discovered
+the place of John&rsquo;s retreat and had
+quitted her village of Ruysbroeck to reside
+with him at Brussels. As, however, she was
+not permitted to dwell in the Presbytery, she
+made her abode in a <i>B&eacute;guinage</i> hard by.
+<span class="pb" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
+Thus she had at least the consolation of seeing
+her son from time to time. She must have
+been much comforted also for the deprivation
+of his company by the constant evidence
+of his growing sanctity. And, further, we
+are assured that she set herself to make
+profit of her sacrifice by emulating in her
+own person the holy life of her son John,
+and his saintly masters, Hinckaert and van
+Coudenberg.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_6">[6]</div>
+<h2 id="c3">II
+<br /><span class="sc">As a Secular Priest in Brussels</span></h2>
+<p>In due course Canon Hinckaert procured
+for his nephew one of the lesser prebends of
+St. Gudule&rsquo;s, and John was ordained priest
+in the year 1317, at the age of twenty-four.
+His good mother did not survive to witness
+this happy event in the flesh, nevertheless
+even beyond the grave she had good cause to
+rejoice therein. After her departure from
+this world she had often appeared to her
+son, lamenting her pains, beseeching his
+prayers, and sighing for the day when he would
+be able to offer for her the holy Sacrifice.
+And John was unceasing in his supplications.
+But immediately after the celebration of
+his first Mass, as he related to his Religious
+<span class="pb" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
+Brethren later, God granted him a vision full
+of consolation: when the sacred oblation
+was accomplished, his mother came to visit
+and thank him for her deliverance from
+Purgatory. The touching incident is well
+worth recording, if only to show that it
+was through no lack of natural affection
+that the child John had so unceremoniously
+forsaken home and mother. Moreover, of
+these two holy souls it was singularly true
+that <i>having loved each other in life, in death
+they were not parted</i>, for they were privileged
+often to converse together, and finally
+it was from his mother that Ruysbroeck
+learned the date of his own approaching
+departure.</p>
+<p>For twenty-six years in all Blessed John
+lived as a secular priest in Brussels. Content
+with his modest chaplaincy in the
+Church of St. Gudule, and with his holy
+companions Hinckaert and van Coudenberg
+<span class="pb" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
+continuing happily in apostolic simplicity
+and poverty the Common Life on which
+he had entered a mere child, Ruysbroeck
+passed his days in peaceful retirement and
+almost uninterrupted prayer and contemplation.</p>
+<p>A characteristic episode of this period
+reveals to us the man as in a flash, his
+mean garb, his emaciated figure, his absorbed
+demeanour, his utter abandonment
+in God. He was passing through a square
+of Brussels one day, silent and recollected,
+as was his wont, when two laymen remarked
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My God,&rdquo; exclaimed one, &ldquo;would I were
+as holy as that priest!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, for my part,&rdquo; returned the other,
+&ldquo;I would not be in his shoes for all the
+wealth of the world. I should never know
+a day&rsquo;s pleasure on earth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you know nothing of the delights
+<span class="pb" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
+which God bestows, or of the delicious savour
+of the Holy Ghost,&rdquo; thought Ruysbroeck to
+himself, for he happened to overhear the
+words, and he proceeded tranquilly on his
+way.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_10">[10]</div>
+<h2 id="c4">III
+<br /><span class="sc">False Mystics</span></h2>
+<p>But with all his love of peace and retirement,
+when it was a question of guarding
+the integrity of the Faith and of warding
+off peril from immortal souls, Ruysbroeck
+hesitated not to stand in the breach; even
+though others of much higher position in
+the Church and of much higher repute
+for theological learning than the obscure
+chaplain of St. Gudule&rsquo;s should raise not
+a finger nor so much as utter a warning
+word.</p>
+<p>The student of history is well aware of the
+many and startling contrasts and contradictions
+presented by the Middle Ages. It
+was an epoch of magnificent virtues and of
+<span class="pb" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
+gross vices, of splendid heroism and of unspeakable
+cruelty, of superb generosity and
+of disgusting meanness, and, which is more
+to our point at present, of intense devotion
+and of the most revolting vagaries in doctrine
+and morals. While also on the one hand
+there was much genuine zeal, much earnest
+endeavour to reform crying abuses in Church
+and State; on the other hand hypocrites
+and fanatics abounded, who aimed at the
+destruction of the principle of authority
+on the plea of amending those in power,
+or who, the while they inveighed against
+the futility of a merely exterior religion
+and insisted on the supreme need of purity
+of heart, themselves fell into the excess
+of neglecting all external form, and at
+times all outward decency and observance
+of morality.</p>
+<p>In varying degrees these latter errors are
+to be encountered under one shape or another
+<span class="pb" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
+in every age; but at the period of which we
+treat they were especially intense and extreme.
+The <i>Beghards</i> and the <i>B&eacute;guines</i>
+(when and where these broke loose from
+ecclesiastical control), the <i>Flagellants</i>, the
+<i>Brethren of the Free Spirit</i> were chief of a
+group of extravagant sects which afflicted
+the Church in Italy, France, Germany, and
+the Netherlands; while England at the
+same time was disturbed by the fanaticism of
+the Lollards. In general their peculiar tenets
+were a strange admixture of pantheism, false
+mysticism, apparent austerity, and very real
+immorality. The following is one of their
+characteristic propositions, condemned by
+Clement V. in the Council of Vienna, <span class="sc">A.D.</span>
+1311-1312: &ldquo;That those who are in the
+aforesaid grade of perfection and in the spirit
+of liberty (contemplatives) are not subject to
+human authority and are not obliged to obey
+any precepts of the Church, because (as they
+<span class="pb" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
+say) <i>where the spirit of the Lord is, there is
+liberty</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It so happened that contemporary with our
+Saint in Brussels was a prominent leader of
+the heretics of the <i>Free Spirit</i>, a woman
+whose name is given as Bloemardinne, a good
+type, to judge by the description of Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s
+biographer, of the whole genus of
+such teachers in those days and in our
+own.<sup><a id="fr_2" href="#fn_2">[2]</a></sup>
+So great was this creature&rsquo;s reputation for
+sanctity that it was commonly reported that
+two Seraphim accompanied her to the altar
+when she approached to receive Holy Communion.
+She always delivered her teachings,
+whether by word or in writing, seated
+on a throne of silver. At her demise this
+chair was presented to the reigning Duchess
+of Brabant. After Bloemardinne&rsquo;s death
+<span class="pb" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
+also cripples came to touch her body in the
+persuasion that they would be miraculously
+healed thereby. Her teaching was of the
+kind indicated above, concerned chiefly with
+the so-called liberty of the spirit; the passion
+of lust she had the impudence to call seraphic
+love. She issued numerous pamphlets
+remarkable for their subtlety; and by
+one means and another she managed to win
+and retain a very considerable number of
+disciples.</p>
+<p>Moved by zeal and compassion on witnessing
+the ruin and loss of souls thus effected,
+John Ruysbroeck set himself to confute this
+heretic&rsquo;s various publications point by point
+as they appeared. In consequence, he incurred
+not a little hostility and persecution.
+Possibly it was this opposition which finally
+decided Ruysbroeck and his holy companions
+to quit Brussels for the more peaceful retirement
+of the neighbouring forest of Soignes.
+<span class="pb" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
+But meanwhile he never for a moment
+desisted from his efforts in defence of the
+Faith, and in the propagation of the doctrines
+of sane mysticism. Of the treatises published
+professedly against Bloemardinne there
+is nothing extant. But in all his works
+Ruysbroeck keeps an eye on the errors of
+the day. He returns to them again and
+again, analysing their sources, describing their
+characteristics, indicating the mischief they
+work, and offering a reasoned and solid
+confutation. At the same time, with
+wondrous sureness and perspicacity, from
+the rich stores of his own intimate experience,
+he points out the safe and sure
+paths which lead the soul to loving union
+with God.</p>
+<p>Some thirty years after Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s death,
+in 1410, the Archbishop of Cambrai called
+his disciples, the Canons Regular of Groenendael,
+to come and aid him in preaching
+<span class="pb" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
+against the successors of the notorious
+Bloemardinne&mdash;a fact eloquent both of the
+obstinacy of this particular heresy and of
+Blessed John&rsquo;s reputation as its most vigorous
+opponent.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_17">[17]</div>
+<h2 id="c5">IV
+<br /><span class="sc">The Hermitage of Groenendael</span></h2>
+<p>It appears that it was on the suggestion
+of Francis van Coudenberg that the three holy
+priests resolved to abandon Brussels to seek
+elsewhere for themselves a refuge of greater
+security and retirement. It was through
+the influence also of van Coudenberg with
+John III., Duke of Brabant, that they obtained
+the cession of an ideal property for
+their purpose, the hermitage, namely, of
+Groenendael, with its lands and lake.</p>
+<p>The spot had already been sanctified by
+the prayers and penances of holy recluses
+for nigh forty years. The first to retire
+thither had been one John Busch, of the
+ducal house of Brabant, who, weary of the
+<span class="pb" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
+strife, frivolities, and perils of court life,
+obtained from his kinsman, John II., leave
+to retire into the forest of Soignes, to build
+himself a hut and enclose a space of land
+there to be cultivated with his own hands for
+his support. The deed of gift was dated
+the Friday after the Assumption of Mary,
+1304, and it stipulated that on the death or
+departure of the grantee, another hermit
+should take his place, and so on for ever.
+In effect, the noble John Busch was succeeded
+by one Arnold of Diest, who, on entering,
+made a vow never to sally forth save on
+festivals for the purpose of hearing Mass and
+receiving Holy Communion in the Parish
+Church of St. Clement at Hoolaert. God
+rewarded this generous sacrifice by a singular
+favour: Arnold was passionately devoted
+to the memory of the Holy Apostles and
+Martyrs of Rome, and he was transported in
+spirit so frequently thither that the shrines
+<span class="pb" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
+and sanctuaries of the Eternal City became
+as familiar to him as to a native. When in a
+green old age he came to die, Arnold surprised
+the bystanders with the request that he
+should be laid to rest in the hermitage grounds.
+They objected that the enclosure was not
+consecrated: he responded that one day it
+would be the site of a monastery, the home
+of saintly Religious, and the Mother-house
+of a holy congregation. However, he was
+buried in the Parish Church of Hoolaert before
+the altar of St. Nicholas. His successor,
+Lambert, the last of the Groenendael hermits,
+was so poor in spirit as not to be
+attached even to his cell. He cheerfully
+yielded place to John Hinckaert, van Coudenberg,
+and Ruysbroeck, and retired to a cell
+which they had procured for him at Hoetendael,
+the modern Uccle. Groenendael was
+handed over to the three companions by the
+Duke of Brabant on Easter Wednesday, 1343,
+<span class="pb" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
+on the condition that they should forthwith
+erect a house to accommodate a community
+of at least five, two of whom should be priests
+<i>viventes religiose</i>.</p>
+<p>The taking of possession is recorded in
+the Groenendael Chronicle thus: &ldquo;In 1344
+the aforesaid, with the bishop&rsquo;s consent, began
+to build a chapel in Groenendael. And the
+Vicars of Lord Guy, then Bishop of Cambrai,
+inspected the building on March 13, 1344,
+and decreed that it should be consecrated,
+together with a cemetery adjacent, two
+altars, and other necessary appurtenances.
+On the same day of the same year the said
+Vicars conferred on Dom Francis the cure of
+the brethren, the household, and the servants,
+appointing him their Father and Parish
+Priest. Then the same year, on March 17, the
+Venerable Lord Brother Matthias, Bishop of
+the Church of Trebizond (Coadjutor of Cambrai),
+by faculty and licence of the said
+<span class="pb" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
+Vicars of the Lord Bishop Guy, consecrated
+the aforesaid first church in the honour of
+St. James, and erected it into a Parochial
+Church for the same Dom Francis, his brethren
+and household.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For five years Dom Francis van Coudenberg
+and his companions continued to live
+thus in community, bound by no other rule
+than their own profound spirit of prayer
+and intense desire of perfection. Nor were
+they long left to enjoy alone the solitude of
+their retreat. Many sought admission into
+their company; still larger numbers flocked
+from Brussels and elsewhere to seek spiritual
+aid and consolation. If he had consulted
+his own inclination and bent, Ruysbroeck
+would have denied himself to all; but van
+Coudenberg represented that they should
+not in charity refuse assistance to souls in
+need. And Blessed John yielded the more
+easily, remarks one of his biographers, because
+<span class="pb" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
+for his part he was assured of being able
+to repose in God amid the most distracting
+calls and absorbing occupations.</p>
+<p>One of their earliest associates, John van
+Leeuwen, attained a high reputation for
+sanctity. A poor and ignorant layman of
+Afflighem, he had offered his services as their
+domestic <i>gratis</i>. Before long he was known
+far and wide as the &ldquo;Good Cook of Groenendael.&rdquo;
+The multitude of visitors upon whom
+he was called to attend left him but little
+leisure, yet he found time not only to be
+absorbed in prayer and contemplation, but
+even to compose treatises of an exalted
+spirituality. Like his master Ruysbroeck,
+whom he venerated profoundly, he was deeply
+recollected amid the most exacting duties,
+and frequently he was favoured with heavenly
+visions. It was while in a state of ecstasy
+that the sublime gifts and heroic holiness of
+Blessed John were revealed to him; ever after
+<span class="pb" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
+no terms seemed to him too exalted in which
+to describe the worth of the servant of God.
+The general esteem in which van Leeuwen
+himself was held is sufficiently attested by
+the inscription on his tomb: &ldquo;Reliquiae
+Fratris Joannis de Leeuwis vulgo Boni Coci
+viri a Deo illuminati et scriptis mysticis
+clari obiit anno MCCCLXXVII. V. Februarii.&rdquo;
+<i>The Remains of Brother John van Leeuwen,
+commonly called the Good Cook, a man enlightened
+by God and renowned for his mystic
+writings. He died February 5, 1377.</i></p>
+<p>Much more distracting to the recluses than
+the frequent visits of pilgrim penitents or the
+arrival of fresh neophytes was the constant
+coming and going of huntsmen from the
+household of the Duke of Brabant. The
+forest of Soignes, in which Groenendael
+is situate, was a favourite resort for the
+chase, and the position of the hermitage
+itself, within a few miles of the capital, made
+<span class="pb" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
+it a very convenient place of rest and refreshment
+for the hunters and their hounds.
+But the noise and bustle attendant on such
+company were scarcely conducive to the
+spirit of prayer, and the demands thus made
+on the hospitality of the young Community
+were a heavy drain on its resources. Nevertheless
+the solitaries were naturally fearful
+of giving offence to the followers of their
+Patron the Duke. Moreover, since they were
+not established as a regular Religious Community,
+they could not claim the privileges
+of the cloister.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_25">[25]</div>
+<h2 id="c6">V
+<br /><span class="sc">The Canons Regular of Groenendael</span></h2>
+<p>The inconveniences just noted, together
+with the continual increase in their numbers,
+gave point and force to a strong remonstrance
+addressed to Francis van Coudenberg
+and his Brethren by Pierre de Saulx,
+Prior of the Canons Regular of St. Victor,
+Paris, concerning the <i>irregularity</i> of their
+unaccustomed manner of life. Herein the
+good Prior was in effect only voicing the
+opinion of many zealous and prudent leaders
+among both clergy and laity. The times
+were so rife in sects and societies of false
+mystics, and so much mischief was wrought
+under the guise of piety, that any form of
+community life outside the cloister and the
+<span class="pb" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
+three regular vows was regarded with strong
+suspicion and dislike. A few years later
+Gerard Groote, a disciple of Ruysbroeck,
+and Florence Radewyn, the first spiritual
+Director of the Venerable Thomas &agrave; Kempis,
+founded a lay association of <i>Devout Brothers
+and Sisters of the Common Life</i>, and this
+society also was subjected to a fierce opposition
+arising from the same sentiment of
+distrust for all religious movement outside
+the beaten track. Happily, the Brothers were
+able to weather the storm by producing
+irrefragable proofs of their orthodoxy, and
+of their entire submission to the ecclesiastical
+authorities. But also, by the advice and
+according to the desires of Gerard Groote
+himself, they placed themselves under the
+protection and guidance of a Religious Order
+springing from their own body, namely the
+Canons Regular of Windesheim, of which
+congregation the Venerable &agrave; Kempis was
+<span class="pb" id="Page_27">[27]</span>
+one of the earliest members as well as the
+brightest ornament.</p>
+<p>Prior Pierre de Saulx urged on van
+Coudenberg and his associates to regularise
+their status, silence suspicion, and escape
+the many inconveniences to which at
+present they were exposed by embracing
+the Rule and adopting the habit of some
+already established Religious Order. With
+edifying humility the Community of Groenendael
+accepted the reproof and its accompanying
+counsel; and applied at once
+to Peter Andrew, Bishop of Cambrai, for
+the necessary authorisation to adopt the
+Institute of the Canons Regular under the
+Rule of St. Augustin of Hippo. This permission
+the Ordinary granted most readily.
+With his own hands he clothed Francis
+van Coudenberg, John Ruysbroeck and
+their companions in the canonical habit,
+March 10, 1349, and the following day
+<span class="pb" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
+he appointed Dom Francis Provost,<sup><a id="fr_3" href="#fn_3">[3]</a></sup> and
+John Ruysbroeck he made Prior of the
+new Canonry. To van Coudenberg the
+other members of the Community, with one
+exception, professed canonical obedience,
+according to St. Augustin&rsquo;s Rule. The Bishop
+bestowed upon them many privileges and
+exemptions; while the Duke took them
+under his special protection and endowed
+them with sufficient revenues for the upkeep
+of a large establishment.</p>
+<p>The one exception noted above was Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s
+uncle and van Coudenberg&rsquo;s old
+friend and master, John Hinckaert. At this
+date John Ruysbroeck was fifty-six years
+of age, and Francis van Coudenberg was
+several years his senior. They must certainly
+have been men of great zeal and courage to
+<span class="pb" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
+undertake the full rigour and discipline of
+the Canonical Life, as they understood it,
+at so advanced an age. Hinckaert, again,
+was much older than either. And for fear
+lest out of consideration for his failing
+powers the others should be induced to
+temper in any degree the austerity of their
+observance, the good old man resolved to
+forgo for himself the happiness of joining
+them in the profession of the vows. We
+can picture what a source of regret this
+separation must have been to all three.
+However, Hinckaert remained as near his
+friends as possible until the end. A little
+cell was built just outside the cloister, and
+there after a few years he peacefully passed
+away, their predecessor to eternal glory as
+he had been their forerunner in the way
+of perfection.</p>
+<p>The Canon Regular, Prior Pierre de Saulx,
+had reason to be well content with the issue
+<span class="pb" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
+of his intervention in the affairs of
+Groenendael. Seventeen years later we find
+him addressing to the Community another
+characteristic rebuke. This time he complained of
+the formula of their profession, which ran as follows:
+&ldquo;I, N. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;, offer
+and deliver myself with these gifts to the service
+of this Church of St. James, Apostle. And I
+promise God in the presence of clergy and
+people that I will abide here henceforth to
+the end of my days without proprietorship,
+according to the rule of the Canons and
+Blessed Augustin, to the best of my knowledge
+and power. I also promise stability
+to this place as long as in any way I can
+obtain what is needful for my soul and body,
+nor shall I for any motion of fickleness or
+under any pretext of a more strict Order
+change this habit or quit this cloister. I
+also promise obedience to all the prelates of
+the aforesaid Church whom the better part
+<span class="pb" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
+of the Community shall canonically elect, in
+order that I may receive a hundredfold and
+life everlasting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As a matter of fact, this form of profession
+was quite adequate. Implicitly it
+contained the vow of chastity, since chastity
+is an integral part of the Canonical
+Rule. However, the Prior of St. Victor
+resided in Paris, the metropolis of scholasticism,
+and he strenuously argued and
+maintained that, whereas chastity is one
+of the three essential vows of Religion,
+and the formula made no mention thereof,
+the said formula was incomplete, erroneous,
+contrary to the decretals and canonical
+sanctions. And again he urges the Provost
+and the Brethren to conform themselves
+in this, as in all else, to some fully
+authorised branch of the institute of the
+Canons Regular.</p>
+<p>Once more the good men humbly acquiesced;
+<span class="pb" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
+and it seems that they modelled
+their religious family upon the famous Congregation
+of St. Victor, of which their zealous
+counsellor was then the chief Superior.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_33">[33]</div>
+<h2 id="c7">VI
+<br /><span class="sc">Prior of Groenendael</span></h2>
+<p>Meanwhile the Community of Groenendael
+grew and flourished. The holy Prior continued
+to make progress in the practice of
+heroic virtue, his gifts of contemplation
+became ever more sublime, and still his
+reputation for sanctity increased. His contemporary
+biographers, after the fashion of
+their day, catalogue the Christian virtues, and
+one by one show how they excelled in him.
+Let it suffice here to remark that those
+virtues which he the most earnestly commends
+and the most highly exalts in his
+writings, he the most constantly exercised in
+his own person. Chief of these was humility,
+which he terms everywhere the foundation
+<span class="pb" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
+of perfection; then obedience to men and
+resignation to the will of God, a most
+tender devotion towards Jesus Christ in
+the Blessed Sacrament of the Altar, and,
+in fine, an ardent love of God and the
+neighbour. A few instances may be given
+in illustration.</p>
+<p>On one occasion Blessed John was seriously
+ill; consumed by fever and tortured by an
+intense thirst, he begged the Brother Infirmarian
+for a drink of water. The Provost,
+who happened to be present, forbade the
+draught, fearing it might do him harm. He
+was literally dying of thirst, and his lips were
+cracking, they were so parched, yet Ruysbroeck
+humbly acquiesced. But later, reflecting
+how great would be the grief and
+remorse of his friend and superior if he
+actually died of his agony, he quietly remarked:
+&ldquo;Father Provost, if I have not
+a drink of water now I shall certainly not
+<span class="pb" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
+recover from this malady.&rdquo; Thereupon, in
+great alarm, Dom Francis immediately bade
+him drink. And from that moment the holy
+man began to regain his strength.</p>
+<p>Another and a continual proof of his
+humility was the willingness with which he
+took part in the heavy manual labour of the
+Community. His dignity, his advanced age,
+his inexperience in such work, the many
+other calls upon his time and strength&mdash;all this
+and the like the brethren urged as motives
+wherefore he should be exempt; but he
+refused to listen. Truth to tell, the material
+advantage from his toil was but little: his
+frame was enfeebled by years and austerities,
+and in his ignorance he was liable, for instance,
+to root up seedlings in the garden instead of
+weeds! But the spiritual gain to the
+Brethren was incalculable; there was not
+only the example of his humility, but of his
+unfailing recollection too. In the midst of
+<span class="pb" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
+his labour he never lost his sense of the
+nearness of God&rsquo;s presence. Indeed he was
+wont to say that it was easier for him to raise
+his soul to God than to lift his hand to his
+forehead.</p>
+<p>His humility also and his zeal for the
+regular observance prevented him ever seeking
+dispensation from the customary exercises
+of the community life, or exemption from
+any of the monastic austerities, vigils, or
+fasts.</p>
+<p>His love for the neighbour was shown by
+the readiness and affability with which he
+received and welcomed innumerable claimants
+on his sympathy, help, and counsel. No soul
+ever left his presence dissatisfied; every one
+went back from a visit to Groenendael greatly
+edified and inwardly refreshed. On one
+occasion the Brethren were distressed for the
+moment by an apparent exception. Two
+Parisian clerics had visited the holy old man
+<span class="pb" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
+and had demanded some word or motto for
+their guidance and encouragement.</p>
+<p>Ruysbroeck merely observed: &ldquo;You are
+as holy as you wish to be.&rdquo; Suspecting him
+of sarcasm, the strangers retired deeply
+mortified, and they complained to the Canons
+that they were much disappointed in the
+Prior, who evidently was not so saintly a man
+as rumour had led them to believe. Learning
+the cause of their chagrin, some of the
+Brethren led the clerics back to Blessed John
+and begged him to explain his meaning.
+&ldquo;But is it not simple?&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Is it
+not quite true? You are as holy as you
+wish. Your good-will is the measure of
+your sanctity. Look into yourselves and
+see what good-will you have, and you will
+behold also the standard of your holiness.&rdquo;
+And then the visitors retired appeased and
+edified.</p>
+<p>Naturally his own Brethren were the first
+<span class="pb" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
+and chief to benefit by the holy Prior&rsquo;s charity
+and zeal. He denied himself to none; he
+made himself all to all. Sometimes he gave
+a spiritual conference after Compline, and
+then perhaps he would be so carried away
+as he enlarged upon the goodness of God
+and the bliss of heaven, for instance, that
+neither he nor his listeners would note the
+passage of time. The midnight Office bell
+would surprise them still hanging upon his
+words. But such was the fervour infused
+by his burning eloquence that not one felt
+the loss of the three or four hours&rsquo; accustomed
+sleep.</p>
+<p>Ruysbroeck always spoke without any
+immediate preparation; but it was characteristic
+of the man that when requested
+by the Canons or by strangers for a Conference,
+he would sometimes confess in
+all simplicity that inspiration was lacking,
+that he had nothing to say. It was the
+<span class="pb" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
+same with his written treatises: at the close
+of his life he was able to declare that he
+had never committed anything to writing
+save under the immediate motion of the
+Holy Spirit.</p>
+<p>As so often happens with the Saints,
+Blessed John&rsquo;s love for the neighbour overflowed
+in tenderness for his brothers and
+sisters of the lower creation also. Knowing
+this trait, the Canons would remark to him
+on the approach of winter: &ldquo;See, Father
+Prior, it is snowing already. What will the
+poor little birds do now?&rdquo; And with expressions
+of heartfelt compassion this sublime
+mystic, who was habitually lost in dizziest
+heights of contemplation, would give instructions
+that the feathered choristers outside the
+cloister should not be abandoned to perish of
+hunger.</p>
+<p>Very frequently in his works Blessed Ruysbroeck
+takes occasion to treat of the Holy
+<span class="pb" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
+Sacrament of the Altar, and ever he speaks
+of this sacred mystery in terms of the most
+vivid faith and intense devotion, discussing
+it as a supreme proof of God&rsquo;s love for men,
+on a par with the gifts of Creation, the Incarnation,
+and Redemption. His biographers
+tell us of his personal love for the Blessed
+Eucharist, and especially of his ecstatic devotion
+in offering the great Sacrifice. To the
+close of his long life, even when his failing
+sight could no longer distinguish the figure of
+the Crucified stamped upon the Host, nothing
+but grave sickness could hold him back from
+daily celebration. Sometimes he swooned
+from the excess of the sweetness with which
+his soul was inundated during the canon of
+the Mass.</p>
+<p>On one such occasion not only did he faint,
+but he seemed on the point of expiring, so
+that the terrified server reported the matter
+to the Provost. Attributing the faintness
+<span class="pb" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
+to advancing age and weakness, the Superior
+was about to forbid the holy old man to
+celebrate any more, when Blessed John
+humbly besought him to forbear, assuring
+him that the swoon was due not to the failing
+of years but to the overpowering of divine
+grace, <i>non propter senium sed divinae gratiae
+collatum xenium</i>. &ldquo;Even to-day,&rdquo; he added,
+&ldquo;Jesus Christ appeared to me, and filling
+my soul with a deliciousness all divine, He
+said to my heart, <i>Thou art Mine and I am
+thine</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Such heavenly favours seem to have been
+by no means rare with our Saint. He was
+frequently ravished with a vision of Our
+Divine Lord in His sacred Humanity. Christ
+appeared to him, accompanied by His Blessed
+Mother and a numerous retinue of Saints,
+and conversed familiarly with him. On one
+such occasion, penetrating his whole being
+with a sense of wondrous sweetness, He
+<span class="pb" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
+greeted him with ineffable condescension
+thus: &ldquo;Thou art My dear son, in whom I am
+well pleased.&rdquo; Then Jesus Christ embraced
+him and presented him to Our Lady and the
+attendant Saints with the words: &ldquo;Behold
+My chosen servant!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_43">[43]</div>
+<h2 id="c8">VII
+<br /><span class="sc">Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s Tree</span></h2>
+<p>Whenever Blessed John felt the Spirit of
+God full upon him, even the solitude of the
+cloister was not sufficiently retired for the
+intimacy of the divine union. He would
+wander away into the depths of the forest
+surrounding the monastery, there to abandon
+himself to the action of the Holy Ghost undisturbed.
+On these occasions also he was
+wont to take with him a stylus and a wax
+tablet, in order to jot down such thoughts
+and lights as he was moved to preserve in
+writing. Of these notes a fair copy was made
+on his return to the Priory. Towards the end
+of his days, when his sight was failing and
+otherwise the effort of making these notes was
+<span class="pb" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
+too much for him, one of the Canons always
+accompanied him into the forest to write down
+at his dictation whatever he was moved to
+communicate. Sometimes days or whole
+weeks would pass, and for want of inspiration
+not a line nor a word would be added to the
+treatise in hand. But when again the Spirit
+breathed, he continued from the very sentence
+or phrase where he had paused, just as if
+there had been no interval between.</p>
+<p>One day the Saint had retired as usual
+into the forest, and the Brethren, knowing his
+occupation, respected his privacy. But when
+hours passed and there was no sign of his
+return, they became alarmed and set out to
+scour the woods in search of him. One of the
+Canons was especially intimate with the
+Prior and loved him most tenderly. Perhaps
+his anxiety urged him ahead of the rest. In
+a glade of the forest his eye lighted upon a
+wondrous scene. He perceived a tree as
+<span class="pb" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
+it were in flames. On nearer approach he
+discovered that it was in fact encircled with
+fire. And under the tree, in the midst of the
+mysterious conflagration, John Ruysbroeck
+was seated, manifestly rapt in ecstasy.</p>
+<p>The memory of this miracle was never lost
+in the Community. For generations the
+tree was known and venerated as <i>Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s
+Tree</i>. At the close of the fifteenth century
+the Prior, James van Dynter, planted a lime-tree
+in the same place, which received the
+respect shown hitherto to the original, which
+presumably had died down. When in 1577
+the Canons were obliged to abandon Groenendael
+on account of the vexations of the
+religious wars, it is said that this tree withered
+away until only its bark was left; but when
+the Community returned in 1607, it revived
+and flourished again.</p>
+<p>This episode also has fixed the traditional
+representation of Blessed John Ruysbroeck.
+<span class="pb" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
+He is usually pictured seated under a tree,
+a stylus in his hand and a wax tablet resting
+on his knee, while Saint and tree alike
+are encircled in brilliant rays of celestial
+light.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_47">[47]</div>
+<h2 id="c9">VIII
+<br /><span class="sc">A Director of Souls</span></h2>
+<p>It is no wonder that as the fame of these
+and similar marvels spread abroad, multitudes
+of the faithful, young and old, clergy
+and laity, flocked to see and hear the holy
+Prior of Groenendael. They came to him
+from Flanders, Brabant, Holland, Germany,
+and France. Ruysbroeck received all with
+unvarying simple courtesy, and his unpremeditated
+words were ever found to meet
+exactly the needs of each. Many placed
+themselves unreservedly in his hands, and
+frequently sought his direction by correspondence,
+or came long distances to consult
+him in person.</p>
+<p>One of these penitents was the Baroness
+<span class="pb" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
+van Marke, of Rhode-St.-Agatha, which lies
+midway between Groenendael and Louvain.
+This lady conceived such a veneration for the
+holy Prior that when she went to visit him,
+she walked the journey, pilgrimwise, barefoot.
+Finally, his exhortations to flee and despise
+the passing vanities of the world prevailed
+so much with her that she entered a Convent
+of Poor Clares in Cologne, and her son Ingelbert
+joined the Community of Groenendael.</p>
+<p>We are told of another disciple, who once
+fell into a grievous sickness and at the same
+time into a still more grievous affliction of
+spirit. She sent for Blessed John, begging
+him to visit her. She told him of her distress;
+behold, she was abandoned by God, on the
+one hand no health or strength was left her
+to perform her accustomed works of mercy,
+and on the other hand physical suffering took
+away all taste for prayer! What was she to
+do? &ldquo;You can do nothing more pleasing
+<span class="pb" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
+to God, my dear child,&rdquo; responded the Saint,
+&ldquo;than simply and utterly to submit to His
+holy will. Strive to forsake your own desires
+and to give Him thanks for all things.&rdquo;
+Such unction accompanied these simple and
+characteristic words that the good lady felt
+deeply consoled, and she repined no more.</p>
+<p>Among the more famous to frequent Groenendael,
+there to sit and learn at the feet of
+Ruysbroeck, is mentioned the well-known
+German mystic Tauler. But authorities are
+divided at present as to whether or no these
+visits to Groenendael can be fitted in with
+other ascertained facts of Tauler&rsquo;s life. However,
+it is certain that Tauler was well acquainted
+with the writings of our Saint;
+to a great extent he followed his method, and
+at times, in the free-and-easy style of those
+days, he did not hesitate to transfer bodily
+from Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s volumes into his own.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_50">[50]</div>
+<h2 id="c10">IX
+<br /><span class="sc">Ruysbroeck and Gerard Groote</span></h2>
+<p>A greater than Tauler, and one whose influence
+was eventually far more widespread,
+undoubtedly owed much to the recluse of
+Groenendael and freely acknowledged Blessed
+John his master. This was the famous Gerard
+Groote, the founder, as already noted, of the
+<i>Devout Brothers and Sisters of the Common
+Life</i>, and through them of the Windesheim
+Congregation of Canons Regular. The occasion
+and circumstances of Groote&rsquo;s first visit
+to Groenendael are narrated by the Venerable
+Thomas &agrave; Kempis in his <i>Vita Gerardi Magni</i>.
+The passage is so graphic and characteristic
+that it is well worth transcribing.<sup><a id="fr_4" href="#fn_4">[4]</a></sup></p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_51">[51]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;The pious and humble Master Gerard,
+hearing of the great and widespread fame of
+John Ruysbroeck, a monk and Prior of the
+Monastery of Gr&uuml;nthal, near Brussels, went
+to the parts about Brabant, although the
+journey was long, in order to see in bodily
+presence this holy and most devout Father;
+for he longed to see face to face, and with his
+own eyes, one whom he had known hitherto
+only by common report and by his books;
+and to hear with his own ears that voice
+utter its words from a living human mouth&mdash;a
+voice as gracious as if it were the very
+mouthpiece of the Holy Ghost. He took
+with him therefore that revered man, Master
+John Cele, the director of the School of
+Zwolle, a devout and faithful lover of Jesus
+Christ; for their mind and heart were one
+in the Lord, and the fellowship of each was
+pleasant to the other, and this resolve was
+kindled within them that their journey, which
+<span class="pb" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
+was undertaken for the sake of spiritual
+edification, should redound in the case of
+each to the Glory of God.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There went also with them a faithful
+and devout layman, named Gerard the shoemaker,
+as their guide upon the narrow way,
+and their inseparable companion in this
+happy undertaking.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When they came to the place called Gr&uuml;nthal,
+they saw no lofty or elaborate buildings
+therein, but rather all the signs of simplicity
+of life and poverty, such as marked the first
+footsteps of our Heavenly King, when He,
+the Lord of Heaven, came upon this earth as
+a Virgin&rsquo;s Son, and in exceeding poverty.
+As they entered the gate of the monastery,
+that holy Father, the devout Prior, met them,
+being a man of great age, of kindly serenity,
+and one to be revered for his honourable
+character. He it was whom they had come
+to see, and saluting them with the greatest
+<span class="pb" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
+benignity as they advanced, and being taught
+by a revelation from God, he called upon
+Gerard by his very name and knew him,
+though he had never seen him before. After
+this salutation he took them with him into
+the inner parts of the cloister, as his most
+honoured guests, and with a cheerful countenance
+and a heart yet more joyful showed
+them all due courtesy and kindness, as if he
+were entertaining Jesus Christ Himself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gerard abode there for a few days conferring
+with this man of God about the Holy
+Scriptures; and from him he heard many
+heavenly secrets which, as he confessed,
+were past his understanding, so that in amazement
+he said with the Queen of Sheba, &lsquo;O
+excellent Father, thy wisdom and thy knowledge
+exceedeth the fame which I heard in
+mine own land; for by thy virtues thou
+hast surpassed thy fame.&rsquo; After this he
+returned with his companions to his own city,
+<span class="pb" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
+greatly edified; and being as it were a purified
+creature, he pondered over what he had
+heard in his mind and often dwelt thereon
+in his heart; also he committed some of
+Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s sayings to writing, that they
+might not be forgotten.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This sojourn on his visit to the Prior was
+not a time of idleness, nor was the discourse
+of so holy a father barren; but the instruction
+of his living voice gave nurture to a fuller love
+and an increase of fresh zeal, as he testifies
+in a letter which he sent to these same brethren
+in the Gr&uuml;nthal, saying: &lsquo;I earnestly desire
+to be commended to your director and Prior,
+the footstool of whose feet I would fain be
+both in this life and in the life to come;
+for my heart is welded to him beyond all
+other men by love and reverence. I do still
+burn and sigh for your presence, to be renewed
+and inspired by your spirit and to be a partaker
+thereof.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_55">[55]</div>
+<p>Other details of this interesting visit are
+supplied by the biographers of Ruysbroeck.
+Speaking in the fullness of the intimacy that
+had sprung up between them, Gerard Groote
+ventured to express surprise that, in dealing
+with the sublime matters which usually
+formed the subject of his discourse, the holy
+Prior should employ words and phrases which
+laid him open to the charge of those very
+errors, especially pantheism, against which
+his writings were commonly directed. It
+was then that Ruysbroeck declared that he
+had never set down aught in his books save
+by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost and in
+the presence of the Ever Blessed Trinity.
+This solemn assurance the holy man repeated
+to his brother Canons on his deathbed.</p>
+<p>On another point also, like the trained and
+exact theologian he was, Gerard Groote wished
+to correct his friend. He insisted that the
+boundless confidence which Ruysbroeck expressed
+<span class="pb" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
+in the mercy of God seemed to savour
+somewhat of presumption, and he proceeded
+to quote the most terrifying passages from
+Scripture anent the penalties of the wicked.
+Blessed John quietly replied: &ldquo;Master
+Gerard, I assure you that you have quite
+failed to inspire me with fear. I am ready
+to bear with unruffled soul whatever the Lord
+shall destine for me in life or in death. I
+can conceive of nothing better, nothing safer,
+nothing more sweet. All my desires are restricted
+to this, that our Lord may ever find
+me prepared to accomplish His holy will.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This first visit was the beginning of most
+cordial relations between Ruysbroeck and
+Gerard Groote. The latter returned several
+times to Groenendael and resided there for
+months together. He also corresponded frequently
+with the holy Prior and the Canons
+and translated some of our Saint&rsquo;s works
+into Latin. He read over his MSS. before
+<span class="pb" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
+publication, and begged him at times to
+change or modify expressions which might
+give a handle to the hostile or scandal to the
+weak. The writings of Ruysbroeck were
+likewise among those which were the most
+frequently transcribed and multiplied by
+the copyists of the <i>Devout Brothers of the
+Common Life</i>. A few years later one of the
+most diligent and skilled of these scribes was
+the future author of the <i>Imitation of Christ</i>.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_58">[58]</div>
+<h2 id="c11">X
+<br /><span class="sc">Ruysbroeck and Windesheim</span></h2>
+<p>In fact, widespread as was the influence of
+Blessed John Ruysbroeck on his contemporaries
+and incalculable as was the fruit of
+his writings in the many cloisters, through
+which they were rapidly diffused, the means
+by which Divine Providence chose chiefly
+to preserve and propagate his power was
+precisely this friendship with Gerard Groote.
+Gerard continually strove to imbue his own
+disciples with the spirit which he had imbibed
+from the Prior of Groenendael. For
+himself and for his followers he took as a
+rule of life the motto of Ruysbroeck, <i>to make
+it a chief study to meditate upon the life of
+Jesus Christ</i>. &ldquo;Let the fountain-head of thy
+<span class="pb" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
+study and thy mirror of life be first the
+Gospel of Christ, for there is the life of
+Christ.&rdquo; The Scriptures should be read
+rather than the Fathers, and the New
+Testament more than the Old, <i>for there is
+the life of Christ</i>. And herein again what is
+profitable for a devout and spiritual life is
+to be sought rather than the subtleties of
+theology and the schools.</p>
+<p>When a friend of Gerard&rsquo;s, Reinalt Minnenvosch,
+projected the founding of a monastery,
+Groote advised him to establish a Priory of
+Canons Regular on the model of Groenendael.
+The Canonry of St. Saviour&rsquo;s at Emstein was
+the result. At Groote&rsquo;s request, a professed
+priest came from Groenendael to initiate
+the new Religious into the Canonical Life;
+and later it was at Emstein that the first
+members of Gerard&rsquo;s own Congregation of
+Windesheim made their noviciate preparatory
+to Profession.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_60">[60]</div>
+<p>This was after Gerard Groote&rsquo;s death, but
+it was in accord with his express desire.
+Wishful to establish a Religious Institute in
+connection with his <i>Devout Brothers and
+Sisters of the Common Life</i>, who, whether
+lay or cleric, were dwelling together without
+the binding force of the vows, Gerard fixed
+upon the Order of Canons Regular for this
+purpose, principally, so Thomas &agrave; Kempis
+assures us, because of his profound veneration
+for the Prior and Brethren of Groenendael.
+&ldquo;He was moved to institute this
+Order of Regulars chiefly by his singular
+reverence and love for the venerable Dom
+John Ruysbroeck, the first Prior of Groenendael,
+and of the other most exemplary
+Brethren living there religiously in the
+Regular Order.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For further information concerning the
+<i>Devout Brothers</i> and the Windesheim Canons
+the reader is referred to the various works
+<span class="pb" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
+which have been published of late years on
+the Venerable &agrave; Kempis.<sup><a id="fr_5" href="#fn_5">[5]</a></sup> Both Brothers
+and Canons were living examples of the
+mystic teachings of Ruysbroeck put to the
+test of daily practice. Flight from the
+pleasures and vanities of the world, unbounded
+humility, constant meditation on
+the life and especially the Passion of Jesus
+Christ, the most complete and absolute
+abandonment to the Divine Will, an intense
+devotion full of the personal love of God&mdash;these
+were the salient points of Blessed John&rsquo;s
+example and doctrine, perpetuated and propagated
+by the works, words, and writings of
+the Windesheim Canons Regular and their
+<span class="pb" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
+secular associates, the <i>Brothers of the Common
+Life</i>. It is scarcely needful to remark also
+that these are the chief features of the
+teaching of the <i>Imitation of Christ</i>, that
+golden little treatise, which, embodying the
+whole spirit of the School of Windesheim
+and Groenendael, has carried and still
+carries light, healing, and consolation to
+thousands upon thousands who have never
+so much as heard of either Windesheim or
+John Ruysbroeck.<sup><a id="fr_6" href="#fn_6">[6]</a></sup></p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_63">[63]</div>
+<p>It may be mentioned here that in 1409
+the Priory of Groenendael was instituted
+the Mother-house of a congregation of that
+name. But a few years later this congregation,
+with its dependent Priories, was affiliated
+to the more numerous Windesheim Canons.
+Thus the twin institutes were merged into
+one, and the Windesheim Congregation became
+<span class="pb" id="Page_64">[64]</span>
+the direct heir of the virtues and
+teaching of Blessed John Ruysbroeck. But
+finally Windesheim was aggregated to the
+Lateran Congregation of Canons Regular;
+and thus it is that to-day the Canons
+Regular of the Lateran are privileged, with
+the clergy of Mechlin, to keep with proper
+Office and Mass the Feast of Blessed John
+Ruysbroeck.</p>
+<p>Connected thus intimately with Gerard
+Groote and Tauler, it is not surprising that
+Ruysbroeck shares with these, as with &agrave;
+Kempis, Suso, and others, the doubtful
+honour of being proclaimed in certain
+quarters as a precursor of the sixteenth-century
+&ldquo;Reformation.&rdquo; In support of
+this position it is easy enough to gather
+together expressions of the most poignant
+sorrow and of the most bitter invective
+for the lax morality of clergy and laity,
+mendicant friars, and highly placed prelates.
+<span class="pb" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
+But the same argument would
+convict several Popes of being heralds of
+Luther! Not to labour the point at unnecessary
+length in a non-controversial work
+of this kind, let it suffice to mention the
+touchstone which never fails to distinguish
+the genuine reformer from the mere sectarian:
+while boldly attacking the vices of
+those in office, Blessed John Ruysbroeck
+never assails the office itself. He always
+speaks in the most submissive and reverent
+terms of the authority of the Church and
+of the dignity of the priesthood. His
+writings without exception treat in the
+orthodox sense on the subject of grace,
+the sacraments, etc. We have already remarked
+his ardent devotion towards the
+Blessed Eucharist. To this may be added
+a most tender love for the Virgin Mother
+of God. Note, finally, his frequent and
+fervent exhortations to the perfect observance
+<span class="pb" id="Page_66">[66]</span>
+of the three vows of religion, and one
+can imagine how comfortable he would feel
+in the company, say, of Luther and his
+renegade nun!</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_67">[67]</div>
+<h2 id="c12">XI
+<br />The Writings of Ruysbroeck</h2>
+<p>Blessed John&rsquo;s writings cannot be called
+voluminous, and yet for a purely contemplative
+author they are comparatively considerable.
+The list of his works authenticated
+up to the present&mdash;for earnest students
+are at work, and other MSS. may yet be
+discovered&mdash;comprises the following, giving
+an English equivalent for the Old Flemish
+or Latin titles: (1) The Kingdom of the
+Lovers of God; (2) The Splendour of the
+Spiritual Espousals; (3) The Brilliant; (4)
+Of Four Subtle Temptations; (5) Of the
+Christian Faith; (6) Of the Spiritual Tabernacle;
+(7) Of the Seven Cloisters; (8) The
+Mirror of Eternal Life, or, a Treatise on the
+<span class="pb" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
+Blessed Sacrament; (9) The Seven Degrees of
+Spiritual Love; (10) Of the Supreme Truth;
+(11) The Twelve B&eacute;guines. And these others
+are less certainly proved to be his: (12) Of
+the Twelve Virtues; (13) Seven Letters; (14)
+A Summary of the Spiritual Life; (15) Two
+Canticles; (16) A Short Prayer.</p>
+<p>Pending a complete and faithful English
+rendering of all these works, the following
+descriptive analysis of the principal of them
+may not prove unacceptable.</p>
+<h3>The Kingdom of the Lovers of God</h3>
+<p>This treatise is a detailed interpretation
+and a mystic application of the text
+adapted from Wisdom x. 10: <i>Justum deduxit
+Dominus per vias rectus et ostendit illi regnum
+Dei</i> in the Breviary Office of a Confessor.
+Upon these words Ruysbroeck bases a division
+of his work into five books. The first book
+<span class="pb" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
+treats of God, <i>Dominus</i>, His power and
+sovereignty. In the second Blessed John
+explains how Christ conducted, <i>deduxit</i>, man
+into the liberty of the children of God, chiefly
+by redemption and by the institution of the
+seven Sacraments. In the third he treats
+of the just man, <i>justum</i>, and works out eight
+items which render a man just, both in the
+active and in the contemplative life. The
+fourth book expounds the right ways, <i>vias
+rectas</i>, which lead to the Kingdom of God:
+<i>the exterior way</i>, namely, the material universe
+of three heavens and four elements, the contemplation
+of which should excite man to the
+praise of the Creator; <i>the way of natural
+light</i>, the acquisition of the seven virtues;
+finally, <i>the supernatural and divine way</i>, the
+infusion of the supernatural virtues and the
+gifts of the Holy Ghost. In the last book
+we have a disquisition on the kingdom of
+God, <i>ostendit illi regnum Dei</i>, of which we
+<span class="pb" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
+are told there are five aspects or divisions:
+the sensible kingdom, exterior to God, in
+which the author finds scope for a description
+of the last judgment and the qualities
+of risen bodies, the kingdom of nature, the
+kingdom of the Scriptures, the kingdom of
+grace and of glory, and finally the Divine
+Kingdom itself, which is God. This treatise
+is full of reflections and considerations of
+the most elevated order, and there is much
+therein that is by no means easy to grasp
+or understand.</p>
+<h3>The Splendour of the Spiritual Espousals</h3>
+<p>For his text Ruysbroeck takes Matt. xxv. 6,
+<i>Ecce, sponsus venit, exite obviam ei</i>. He
+makes a division into three books, treating
+respectively of the active, the interior, and the
+contemplative life. Each book is further
+subdivided into four parts, corresponding to
+<span class="pb" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
+the four divisions of the text in each stage
+of perfection as follows. Ruysbroeck expounds
+and illustrates (1) the r&ocirc;le of the
+vision, <i>ecce</i>; man must turn his eyes to God;
+(2) the divers comings of the Bridegroom,
+<i>sponsus venit</i>, the manner, namely, in which
+God approaches the soul; (3) the going forth
+of the soul on the path of the virtues, <i>exite</i>;
+(4) and finally, the embrace of the soul and
+the heavenly spouse. In no one work does
+Blessed Ruysbroeck give a complete account
+of his mystic teaching; but if his system
+were to be examined and explained by any
+one book, it would certainly be this of the
+<i>Spiritual Espousals</i>. It has always been
+considered as his chief work, and in this
+light also Ruysbroeck himself seems to
+have regarded it. He sent a copy of it
+himself to his friends in Germany, and
+expressed the desire that it might be multiplied
+and made known even to the foot
+<span class="pb" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
+of the mountains. In the four last chapters
+of the second book the author confutes
+some current errors of the day, apparently
+the teachings of Bloemardinne and almost
+certainly of Eckart.</p>
+<h3>The Brilliant</h3>
+<p>Gerard Naghel tells us the story of the
+origin of this treatise. One day Ruysbroeck
+had been conversing with a certain hermit
+on matters spiritual, when on parting the
+latter begged the holy Prior to commit the
+matter of his discourse to writing for the
+edification of himself and others. To satisfy
+his desire, says Naghel, Ruysbroeck composed
+this work, which contains instruction
+sufficient to lead a man to perfection. The
+treatise seems a supplement, and in some
+sense a corrective of the <i>Spiritual Espousals</i>.
+After a brief description of the means by
+<span class="pb" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
+which the just man acquires the interior life
+and rises thence to the contemplative, the
+holy man shows how the precious stone, or
+white counter, <i>calculus candidus</i>, of Rev. ii.
+17, is no other than Christ Himself, Who
+gives Himself without reserve to contemplative
+souls. God calls all men to intimate
+union with Himself. But not all men respond
+to His appeal. Sinners utterly despise the
+invitation; while the just respond, though
+these again in varying degrees. Some keep
+the commandments chiefly from fear of
+the penalties attached to transgression; they
+are as <i>mercenaries</i>. Others sincerely endeavour
+to conquer nature and unruly desires,
+they have true faith in God, and God is the
+only motive of their actions; these are the
+<i>faithful servants</i>. However, these still suffer
+many impediments from the exterior life
+which they lead, and a more intimate union
+is attained by the <i>intimate friends</i>, who
+<span class="pb" id="Page_74">[74]</span>
+observe the counsels as well as the precepts.
+Finally, the highest degree of union and
+contemplation is attained by the <i>hidden sons</i>,
+who are utterly divested of all self-love and
+self-seeking, and whose life is hidden with
+Christ in God.</p>
+<h3>Of Four Subtle Temptations</h3>
+<p>In this tract Ruysbroeck inveighs against
+the chief errors and abuses of his own times.
+The first, says Ruysbroeck, is love of ease
+and comfort, indolence, the source of sensuality,
+and luxury, an abuse very prevalent
+in monasteries and among the clergy. The
+second is hypocrisy, which, under the cloak
+of a seeming austerity, claiming even visions
+and ecstasies, conceals a corrupt interior and
+depraved morals. The third is the desire to
+understand everything, to attain to the contemplation
+of the divine nature by the sheer
+<span class="pb" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
+force of the intellect, without the assistance
+of God&rsquo;s grace. The fourth and the most
+formidable is the so-called <i>liberty of spirit</i>,
+the error and heresy of those who, casting
+aside all interior effort, pretend to acquire
+contemplation by ludicrous mortifications,
+by extravagant bodily posturing, and by a
+senseless quietism. The third error is that of
+Eckart, and the fourth was proper to the
+Brothers and Sisters of the Free Spirit. Ruysbroeck
+concludes his tract with a discussion
+of the ways and means of avoiding these
+snares, viz. by holiness of life, the practice
+of all the virtues, obedience to superiors and
+the authority of the Church, and imitation
+of Jesus Christ.</p>
+<h3>Of the Christian Faith</h3>
+<p>A dogmatic commentary on the Athanasian
+Creed. Starting with the principle that
+<span class="pb" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
+the true Christian Faith is indispensable for
+the union of the soul with God, Ruysbroeck
+proceeds to explain the chief tenets of our
+belief, and to show their bearing on the
+interior life. His explanations are brief,
+his speculations sublime. The more forcibly
+to exhort to the practice of virtue, he dwells
+at considerable length on the last judgment,
+on the rewards of the just, and on the
+penalties decreed to each particular class of
+sinner. His picture here of the happiness
+of heaven and the sufferings of hell is most
+apt and striking.</p>
+<h3>Of the Spiritual Tabernacle</h3>
+<p>The most lengthy this of all Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s
+works. It consists of a mystic interpretation,
+a long-drawn-out allegory, in which
+the Tabernacle of the Old Testament is
+considered as a type of the course of love.
+<span class="pb" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
+The outer and the inner courts, the altar
+of sacrifice, the hangings, the pillars and
+their sockets, the rings, the names of the
+workmen, the seven-branch candlestick, the
+brazen laver, the priestly ornaments, the
+ephod and the twelve stones, the holy oils
+and the incense, the table of the loaves
+of proposition, the different sacrifices with
+the distinction between the clean and the
+unclean animals, the holy of holies, the
+ark and its appurtenances,&mdash;all are applied
+with a wealth of detail, which, however,
+never lacks dignity, and with a wondrous
+skill to Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s usual three divisions
+of the exterior moral life, the interior,
+and the purely contemplative. The Tabernacle
+was a subject which naturally lent
+itself to allegory and to mystic interpretation,
+and Hugh of St. Victor had already
+preceded our author, as doubtless also he
+inspired him with his <i>De Arca mystica</i>.
+<span class="pb" id="Page_78">[78]</span>
+Though sometimes the thread is lost in the
+multiplicity of details, this treatise is most
+attractive and contains some of the best
+pages of Blessed Ruysbroeck.</p>
+<h3>Of the Seven Cloisters</h3>
+<p>This was composed for a penitent of our
+Saint, Margaret von Meerbeke, a Poor Clare
+of Brussels, and it gives a rule of life for
+Religious. The holy Prior traces out an
+order of the day, insisting especially on
+the need of cultivating the interior life;
+he mentions the virtues which his penitent
+should exercise, and inveighs against the
+abuses which have crept into convents,
+pointing out the danger of communication
+with the outer world. In all things Margaret
+should imitate the example of her
+foundress, St. Clare, who gained her glorious
+place in Heaven by shutting herself up
+<span class="pb" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
+within the seven cloisters. After dwelling
+on these, viz., by expounding seven means
+of retreating from the world and living
+close to God, the author turns again to
+practical details and condemns the softness
+and luxury of certain Religious in their
+dress. Each day, he says, should close
+with a peep into three books: the book
+of our own conscience, which shows the
+imperfections which must be purified; the
+book of the Life and Passion of our Lord,
+which we should imitate; and finally the
+book of eternal life, to which we ought to
+tend with all our strength.</p>
+<h3>The Mirror of Eternal Life</h3>
+<p>This also was addressed to a nun, probably
+the same Poor Clare. It explains again the
+three degrees of the mystic life, but with
+special reference now to the cloister and the
+<span class="pb" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
+Blessed Eucharist. Some are in the purgative
+way: if they persevere in virtue and
+progress in perfection, they shall partake of
+the table, Ps. xxiii. 5, which is no other
+than the banquet of the Holy Eucharist.
+Ruysbroeck dwells on the virtues necessary
+for the worthy reception of the Sacrament,
+and narrates the manner of its institution by
+our Divine Lord at the Last Supper, showing
+what were the matter and form used by
+Christ. He discourses on the evidence of
+God&rsquo;s love to be found in this mystery of the
+altar; and then refutes objections as to the
+manner of the Divine Presence, expressly
+teaching Transubstantiation. Those who
+approach the altar rails are divided by him
+into seven classes, and here the author shows
+a wondrous and intimate knowledge of the
+working of the human heart. The treatise
+closes with a description of the contemplative
+life.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_81">[81]</div>
+<h3>The Seven Degrees of Spiritual Love</h3>
+<p>In a simile familiar to spiritual writers of
+all ages, Ruysbroeck compares life to a ladder,
+or stairway of seven steps, leading up to
+perfection and union with God. These stages
+are respectively: (1) Conformity with the
+holy will of God; (2) Voluntary poverty;
+(3) Purity of soul and chastity of body;
+(4) Humility, with her four daughters, obedience,
+gentleness, patience, and the forsaking
+of self-will; (5) The desire of the divine
+glory, involving three spiritual exercises,
+namely, acts of love and adoration, acts
+of supplication, and acts of thanksgiving;
+(6) The contemplative and perfect life, by
+which man finally attains the last stage of,
+(7) sublime ignorance. (Compare Walter
+Hilton&rsquo;s &ldquo;darksome lightness&rdquo; in his <i>Scale
+of Perfection</i>.)</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_82">[82]</div>
+<h3>Of the Supreme Truth</h3>
+<p>This treatise was issued by way of explanation
+of some difficult passages in his first
+work, concerning especially the gift of counsel,
+and indeed as a kind of defence and apology
+of his whole mystic teaching. He protests
+that he has never admitted that the creature
+can be raised to a state of identity with God,
+and once more he explains his conception of
+the union of the soul with her Divine Spouse.
+There is a union common to all the just,
+brought about by the grace of God, with the
+forsaking of vice, the practice of virtue, and
+submission to the authority of the Church.
+Then there is a more intimate union, like
+unto that of fire and iron, which, when united,
+seem but one matter, though in fact they
+remain two distinct substances. Those who
+attain this love God and live in His presence,
+but as yet arrive not at a complete knowledge
+<span class="pb" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
+of His essence. After this again there
+is even a yet closer union, whereby the
+Eternal Father and man become one, not
+indeed with oneness of substantial unity,
+but in a oneness of love and bliss. It is
+evident that language here fails the holy
+author to express the sublimity of his concept
+and his experience; in his endeavour
+to show the intimacy of this last method of
+union he is driven to use expressions which,
+taken as they stand, have that pantheistic
+ring which it is his first object here to
+disclaim.</p>
+<h3>The Twelve B&eacute;guines</h3>
+<p>After the <i>Tabernacle</i>, this is the most
+lengthy of our Saint&rsquo;s works, and it is of great
+importance as throwing considerable light
+on Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s ideas and system. We are
+introduced to twelve B&eacute;guines discoursing
+together on the love of Jesus Christ, whence
+<span class="pb" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
+an easy transit to the real subject-matter
+of the tract, the contemplative life. To
+attain the state of contemplation, four conditions
+are required: a ray of divine light,
+producing illumination, whence, on the part
+of the soul, a looking at God, or speculation,
+passing into contemplation, and this stage
+again merging into a state of sublime, ecstatic
+love. There are four distinct acts or states
+of love, corresponding respectively to each
+of these stages. Ruysbroeck also shows
+here the action of the Holy Ghost in forming
+the soul to a more intimate knowledge of
+God.</p>
+<p>The second part of the book then opens
+with a fresh order of ideas. Ruysbroeck
+divides mankind into good Christians and
+wicked men. Holiness consists of the union
+of the active and the contemplative life.
+There are, however, some who practise neither
+one nor the other and yet give themselves out
+<span class="pb" id="Page_85">[85]</span>
+as the most holy of all. Among these Ruysbroeck
+proceeds to distinguish four kinds of
+errors or heresies: (1) Errors against the
+Holy Ghost and His Grace; (2) Errors
+against God the Father and His power; (3)
+Errors against God the Son and His Sacred
+Humanity; and finally errors against God
+and all that makes up Christendom, namely,
+the Scriptures, the Church, and the Sacraments.
+On the other hand, the good Christian
+is one who loves God with all his heart and
+mind and soul and strength.</p>
+<p>Blessed John then goes on to discourse of
+the Divine Nature in Unity and Trinity. He
+also discusses man in his material and in his
+spiritual nature. The spiritual part of man
+alone he says, can elevate him to the mystic
+life (of which once more the three ways are
+expounded), and alone also can show him
+the reasons wherefore God created the
+universe. The three ways of the mystic life
+<span class="pb" id="Page_86">[86]</span>
+are symbolised by the three heavens. The
+stars and the planets exercise an influence
+on terrestrial creatures, that is to say, upon
+our bodies, for God alone can touch the soul,
+leading it to good and restraining it from
+evil. Thence also Ruysbroeck describes the
+various temperaments of men by reference
+to the planets and their conjunction with
+the signs of the zodiac.</p>
+<p>A chapter on our Divine Lord, held up as
+the Model Religious, serves as a transition
+to the third part, which is a treatise, largely
+symbolical, on the Passion of Christ, divided
+and subdivided according to the sequence
+of the Canonical Hours.</p>
+<p>This is perhaps the most discursive of Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s
+works, and in that sense the most
+difficult to follow, because of the number and
+length of the digressions. For instance, when
+he comes to speak of the planet Venus, he
+mentions the sign of the Balance, and this
+<span class="pb" id="Page_87">[87]</span>
+suggests a whole treatise of thirty-nine
+chapters on the <i>Balance of Divine Love</i>.
+The love of God for us, and all the blessings,
+spiritual and temporal, which flow from it, are
+cast into one pan of the balance, and we must
+weigh down the other pan with our virtues;
+and there follows a long disquisition on the
+virtues we should practise, prominent among
+which, as usual, he ranks humility. Here,
+further, he finds occasion to work out his
+distinction between the spirit and the reasonable
+soul; and the whole digression closes
+with a sad and striking comparison between
+the fervour of primitive Christianity and the
+laxity of his own days.</p>
+<p>Bossuet very severely criticised this work,
+holding it up as an example of forced allegories,
+and so forth, and speaking of Ruysbroeck
+as involved in the vain speculations
+of astrologers. This opinion, though not
+surprising, is not just, for the author is careful
+<span class="pb" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
+to insist that the planets have not influence
+on the will of man as such. But it is natural
+that Bossuet should regard such works with
+suspicion and dislike, for he had considerable
+trouble with false mystics, the quietists of
+his own day; and even Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s own
+friends and contemporaries found much in the
+volume that was strange, even to startling,
+and Gerard Groote advised him not to publish
+it in its entirety.</p>
+<h3>Of the Twelve Virtues</h3>
+<p>The reader will not be surprised to learn
+that Blessed John contrives here to speak
+of considerably more virtues than just twelve.
+The principal and first is said to be humility,
+and this again twofold&mdash;one humility inspired
+by the contemplation of the power of God,
+the other by the consideration of His goodness.
+The daughter of humility is obedience, and
+<span class="pb" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
+obedience naturally involves denial of self-will,
+poverty of spirit, and patience in adversities.
+He then proceeds to treat very
+beautifully and at length of interior detachment,
+remarking that to secure this it is not
+necessary to flee external occupations, but
+that the attainment of perfection consists in
+a perfect abandonment to the will of God and
+the forsaking of our own will. When we
+have arrived thus far, we shall no longer sin.
+For past sins there must be continued sorrow,
+but external penances are not equally for all.
+And those who cannot endure great bodily
+austerities must apply themselves to imitate
+the austere life of Christ by interior self-denial.</p>
+<h3>The Letters of Ruysbroeck</h3>
+<p>These are spiritual letters, of course, conferences
+in epistolary form.</p>
+<p>The first is addressed to Margaret van
+<span class="pb" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
+Meerbeke, the Poor Clare of Brussels mentioned
+above. Ruysbroeck writes: &ldquo;When I
+was at your convent last summer, you appeared
+sad; methought God or some special
+friend had forsaken you; therefore am I
+writing you as follows.&rdquo; And he proceeds to
+console his spiritual daughter, and to warn
+her against the dangers which may be found
+even in the cloister. He declaims against the
+abuses which sometimes creep into monasteries,
+and almost always through <i>self-will</i>,
+whereas every Religious should strive to have
+all things <i>in common</i>, to be submissive to
+superiors and affable to all. The holy author
+closes with a description of the terrible
+punishments to be meted out to those Religious
+who fail to keep their rule and lead
+a holy life.</p>
+<p>The second, addressed to Matilda, the
+widow of John of Culemberg, is of more importance.
+After treating of the Apostles&rsquo;
+<span class="pb" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
+Creed, the seven gifts of the Holy Ghost, the
+Decalogue, the vows of religion and the precepts
+of the Church, the Incarnation and
+death of Christ, Ruysbroeck expounds the
+Catholic doctrine on the seven Sacraments,
+and especially the Blessed Eucharist. He
+describes the fruits which flow from a
+worthy Communion, and treats again of
+the three ways of the contemplative life,
+and describes the elements of superessential
+contemplation.</p>
+<p>The third was sent to three Recluses of
+Cologne. Blessed John exhorts them to
+persevere in their holy manner of life. He
+treats of the spiritual life, comparing Christ
+to the precious pearl, the hidden treasure.
+And finally he earnestly exhorts them to
+constant meditation on the Passion of Our
+Lord.</p>
+<p>The fourth was addressed to Catherine of
+Louvain, a devout young lady living in the
+<span class="pb" id="Page_92">[92]</span>
+world; and the other three were likewise
+sent to persons in the world. All are full of
+wise spiritual maxims, and all insist on the
+need of humility and the abnegation of self-will.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_93">[93]</div>
+<h2 id="c13">XII
+<br /><span class="sc">The Teaching of Ruysbroeck</span><sup><a id="fr_7" href="#fn_7">[7]</a></sup></h2>
+<p>In no one work, as already remarked, does
+Blessed John Ruysbroeck give a complete
+outline of his doctrines; the elements rather
+are to be found dispersed among the various
+treatises.</p>
+<p>In common with most of the German
+mystics, Ruysbroeck starts from God and
+comes down to man, and thence rises again
+to God, showing how the two are so closely
+united as to become one. In His essence
+God is simple unity, the one supremely pure
+<span class="pb" id="Page_94">[94]</span>
+and supernatural being, devoid of all mode,
+in Himself still and immovable, and yet at
+the same time the first cause and active
+principle of all things. This principle is the
+divine <i>nature</i>, which does not in reality differ
+from the essence, and which is fruitful in the
+Trinity. The Father is the essential principle,
+and yet He is consubstantial with the other
+two Persons. The Son, the uncreated Image
+of the Father, is the Eternal Wisdom. The
+Holy Ghost, proceeding from the other two,
+and returning unto them, is the eternal Love,
+which unites Father and Son. As regards
+Persons, God is eternally active: as regards
+essence, He abides in unbroken repose.
+Creatures have been existing as ideas in God
+from all eternity.</p>
+<p>In man, whose body is merely a perishable
+instrument, there is a spiritual, immortal
+principle, like unto God, though less than
+He. In this principle Ruysbroeck distinguishes,
+<span class="pb" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
+with a distinction of the reason, soul
+and spirit; the former is the principle of the
+merely human life, uniting together the lower
+powers; the other is the principle of man&rsquo;s
+supernatural life in God, gathering together
+his higher faculties. The soul has four inferior
+powers: the <i>irascible</i>, and the <i>concupiscible</i>,
+which two become bestial when not under
+the ruling of a virtuous will; <i>reason</i>, by which
+man is distinguished from the brute, and
+<i>freedom of choice</i>, an exercise of the higher
+faculty of the will. The spirit has the three
+superior faculties, memory, understanding,
+and will. In every man likewise there is a
+triple unity, or oneness: the unity of the
+lower faculties in the soul, the unity of the
+higher in the spirit, and the unity of the
+whole being in God, on Whom all things
+essentially depend for their being.</p>
+<p>Blessed John delivers the accepted teaching
+of the Church on the Fall, the Incarnation and
+<span class="pb" id="Page_96">[96]</span>
+Redemption, on the need and on the means
+of divine grace, the institution of the Sacraments,
+the establishment of the Church, the
+gifts of the Holy Ghost, etc.</p>
+<p>But coming now to his more purely mystical
+doctrine, we find that Ruysbroeck distinguishes
+three degrees, or states&mdash;the active
+life, the interior life, and the contemplative life.
+The active life consists of the effort to conquer
+sin and to draw nigh to God by exterior works.
+Here in Christ is the Divine Exemplar, for
+in His life He practised the three fundamental
+virtues of humility, charity, and patience.
+Humility is the foundation of the whole
+building, and it is exercised chiefly in obedience,
+which engenders the abdication of our
+own will, and patience, or submission in all
+things to the holy will of God. When a man
+has arrived so far, he can exercise charity,
+shown at this stage chiefly by compassion for
+Christ suffering on the Cross for all men, and
+<span class="pb" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
+bringing with her the four cardinal virtues of
+prudence, temperance, fortitude, and justice,
+whereby also the Christian is enabled to fight
+and conquer his three deadly enemies, the
+devil, the world, and the flesh. Perseverance
+in this active life is crowned by union with
+God, a union wherein God alone is regarded
+as the exemplar and the final end, wherein He
+alone is sought and loved. Thus does a man
+become a <i>Faithful Servant</i>.</p>
+<p>As yet, however, there is only an imperfect
+knowledge of God, and to become more closely
+united with God, as an <i>Intimate Friend</i>, one
+must strive to attain the second stage of the
+mystic way, namely the <i>interior life</i>. For
+this three preliminary conditions are requisite.
+On the part of God, there must be a yet
+stronger movement of divine grace, and on
+the part of man, an absolute recollection,
+with freedom from sensible images, attachments,
+and cares, and then the gathering
+<span class="pb" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
+together of all the powers in the unity of the
+Spirit. Christ, then, the Eternal Sun, enkindles
+in the soul thus duly prepared a divine fire,
+which engenders a warm, sensible love, a
+devotion full of ardent desires, with thankfulness
+for the divine mercies and affliction at
+one&rsquo;s own unworthiness. Then, as the action
+of the sun draws up the moisture in the form
+of vapour, to fall back again in refreshing
+and fertilising showers of rain, so if the soul
+persevere Christ sends down a fresh shower
+of consolations, which fill the whole being
+with a chaste pleasure and an indescribable
+sweetness superior to all the delights of the
+earth, rising even to a species of spiritual
+intoxication, which may manifest itself in
+outward acts. As yet there are no severe
+trials for the soul, but she must beware of
+pride and presumption, and of leaning too
+much on these sensible delights instead of on
+the Divine Giver. Meanwhile the Sun of
+<span class="pb" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
+Justice is reaching its apogee in the heavens,
+and Christ draws up all the powers of the
+soul, so that the heart is enlarged and fit to
+burst with love, and at the same time it begins
+to suffer from the wound of love, because of
+the urgency of the power drawing upward
+and its own impotency to follow; whence also
+a spiritual languishing, a very madness and
+impatience, or fever of love, capable even of
+wasting the bodily strength. Love is liable
+to be so intense at this stage, that visions
+and ecstacies are granted; but at the same
+time care must be taken against the delusions
+of the evil one.</p>
+<p>But thence the Sun enters on the sign of
+the Virgin and its downward path, that is,
+Christ hides Himself and deprives the soul
+of the warmth of sensible love and the like.
+It is the autumn, the time of gathering the
+really ripe and lasting fruits; but to the
+soul a time of seeming abandonment, aridity,
+<span class="pb" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
+darkness, etc. She must then beg the prayers
+of others, be glad to leave herself in God&rsquo;s
+hands, willing to suffer and to sacrifice all
+sweetness. Likewise, she must be careful
+not to compromise God&rsquo;s favour by seeking
+earthly pleasures and delights, the consolations
+of human friendship, and so forth.</p>
+<p>Then there is a second coming of the Divine
+Spouse, bringing with Him the gifts of the
+Holy Ghost, whereby He adorns the three
+supreme faculties of the spirit. Pure simplicity
+empties the memory of all external
+images and renders it stable. Spiritual
+brightness gives the intelligence a sure discernment
+of the virtues. And a spiritual
+fervour arouses the will to a boundless love
+for God and men.</p>
+<p>There is yet a third coming, which affects
+the supreme union of the spirit with God. It
+is a species of intimate contact with God in
+the very depths of the soul. The intellect
+<span class="pb" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
+cannot comprehend the manner of this union,
+it can only witness its effects upon the
+reason and the will. The power of loving
+increases with the intimacy of this union,
+and the intimacy increases the power of
+love; and hence also a kind of loving strife
+ensues, each wishing to possess the other
+and each wishing to give himself to the
+other utterly.</p>
+<p>This is the apogee of the interior life, the
+meeting, the union of the soul with God. It
+may be brought about in three different ways:
+(1) Man, struck by a light coming forth from
+God, forsakes all images; he is plunged into
+the union of fruitive love; he meets God
+without any medium, a spirit like unto
+Him; it is the state of absolute repose in
+God, utter emptiness and leisure. (2) At
+other times man adores God and consumes
+himself in continual love, which ceaselessly
+feeds on the presence of God; it is the mediate
+<span class="pb" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
+stage, the state of affective love, needful for
+the attainment of the preceding. (3) Finally,
+it is possible to unite enjoyment with activity:
+man enjoys a most profound peace and produces
+all the acts of love; he receives God;
+and His gifts in the superior faculties, images
+and sensations in the lower powers; it is the
+most perfect state, the state of combined
+activity and repose.</p>
+<p>Even so, it is not the most sublime state.
+Above the interior life there is the superessential
+contemplative life; above the <i>faithful
+friends</i> there are the <i>Intimate Sons</i> of God.
+This third stage of perfection can never be
+acquired by any act of the intelligence or
+will; and so sublime is it that he only who
+has experienced it can attempt its description,
+and then in terms the most halting and imperfect.
+This contemplation consists in an
+absolute purity and simplicity of the understanding;
+it is a knowledge and possession of
+<span class="pb" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
+God, without modes, without limits, without
+medium, without any consciousness of the
+difference of His qualities. Nevertheless, it
+is not God, it is the light by which He is seen.
+It is the death and destruction of self to
+behold only the Being eternal and absolute.
+Its essence is union with God, the still contemplation
+of God, abandonment to God, so
+that He alone acts, and not the soul. This
+repose of the spirit engenders a supernatural
+contemplation of the Trinity without any
+medium, a feeling of bliss unspeakable, a
+sublime ignorance; the last consciousness of
+the difference between God and the creature&mdash;being
+and nothingness&mdash;disappears.</p>
+<p>This is the honeymoon of Christ with the
+soul, to which the preceding stages are only
+a preparation. The spirit is led from brightness
+to brightness; and since no medium
+comes between it and the divine splendour,
+since the brightness by which it sees is the
+<span class="pb" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
+light itself which it sees, in a certain sense
+itself becomes this brightness; it attains a
+consciousness of its own superessential being,
+of the unity of its essence in God.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_105">[105]</div>
+<h2 id="c14">XIII
+<br /><span class="sc">Some Appreciations</span></h2>
+<p>Arrived thus at the summit of mystic speculation,
+Ruysbroeck finds himself on the
+confines of pantheism. However, he constantly
+insists, as we have already remarked,
+on the essential difference between the created
+spirit and the Spirit Eternal. Man, he says,
+must become deiform as far as that is possible
+for the creature; in the union with God it
+is not the difference of personality which is
+destroyed, it is only the difference of will and
+of thought, the desire to be anything apart
+in oneself which must disappear. He declares:
+&ldquo;There where I assert that we are
+one in God, I must be understood in this
+sense that we are one in love, not in essence
+or in nature.&rdquo; His own strenuous opposition
+<span class="pb" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
+to the pantheists of his day proves his
+orthodoxy in this matter; yet it must be
+confessed again that from the very nature
+of his sublime discourse, his expressions are
+at times exceedingly bold and seemingly
+unorthodox. The truth is that the resources
+of human language prove inadequate to describe
+even the foretaste on earth of that
+&ldquo;which eye hath not seen, nor ear heard,
+nor hath it entered into the heart of man to
+conceive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In B. John&rsquo;s own lifetime Gerard Groote
+was alarmed, and wrote once to the Canons
+of Groenendael of a Doctor in Theology, and
+of one Henry of Hesse, who had declared that
+the <i>Spiritual Espousals</i> contained errors.
+Twenty years after Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s death, John
+Gerson, the famous Chancellor of Paris, in a
+letter to one Bartholomew, a Carthusian, who
+had given him a copy of this treatise, praises
+the first two books, but declares that the
+<span class="pb" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
+third teaches a kind of pantheism. This
+charge brought forth a lengthy and spirited
+defence from a Canon Regular of Groenendael,
+named John Scoenhoven; and then in a
+second letter Gerson maintained his objections,
+but acquitted the holy author of all
+intentional error. A similar stand was taken
+later by Bossuet, who excuses Ruysbroeck
+but condemns his manner of expression. It
+must be remembered that these two were
+engaged in confuting false mystics, and
+naturally they would discredit the writings of
+even a holy man, however orthodox, which
+would appear to favour the erroneous tenets
+of their opponents. Once more, we remark
+that not only was Ruysbroeck manifestly free
+from all culpable error, but throughout in his
+own mind he never lost sight of the essential
+distinctions, though at times his language
+must necessarily sound exaggerated to unaccustomed
+ears.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_108">[108]</div>
+<p>On the other hand, to outweigh the unfavourable
+opinion of these two French
+critics, we have a host of writers of Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s
+own and subsequent days who not
+only defend the orthodoxy of his writings,
+but who also speak of them in terms of the
+deepest admiration, and regard their author
+almost as inspired.</p>
+<p>We have already seen the esteem in which
+the holy Prior of Groenendael and his writings
+were held by Tauler, Gerard Groote, and the
+Venerable Thomas &agrave; Kempis, and the vigour
+with which his memory was vindicated by
+John of Scoenhoven, But his advocates
+were by no means confined to the limits of
+his own Order, period, or country.</p>
+<p>Henry van Herp, a Franciscan, compiled
+a <i>Mirror of Perfection</i>, taken almost exclusively
+from the <i>Spiritual Espousals</i>; and
+by his means the teachings of Blessed
+Ruysbroeck were propagated among the
+<span class="pb" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
+followers of St. Francis, particularly of the
+Third Order.</p>
+<p>Denys the Carthusian is unstinted in his
+praises. He calls him the <i>Divine Doctor</i>.
+&ldquo;I name him the Divine Doctor,&rdquo; he writes,
+&ldquo;because his only master was the Holy Ghost.
+Of this the abundance of wisdom wherewith
+he was gifted is a sure guarantee.... Ignorant
+man as I am, I confess that nowhere have
+I found such sublimity and such knowledge,
+save in the works of Denys the Areopagyte.
+But in his writings the difficulty arises especially
+from the style, whereas it is not so with
+the Prior of Groenendael.... As they say
+of Hugh of St. Victor that he is another St.
+Augustin, so I will say of Ruysbroeck that he
+is another Denys the Areopagyte.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thomas of Jesus, a Carmelite, in his
+<i>De Divina Oratione</i>, frequently quotes from
+Ruysbroeck and adopts his method.</p>
+<p>The Carthusian Surius translated all the
+<span class="pb" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
+works of Ruysbroeck into Latin, and this
+translation has been the chief source of
+familiarity with the Belgian mystic for readers
+and writers not acquainted with his native
+tongue. The following extracts from the
+<i>Introduction</i> to Surius&rsquo;s translation seem worth
+quoting for the sake of some who may imagine
+that the works of Blessed John Ruysbroeck
+can be of profit only to those who are far
+advanced in the contemplative life:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not believe there is a man who can
+approach these magnificent and simple pages
+without great and singular profit. Let none
+excuse himself from reading this book on the
+plea of the inaccessible sublimity of Ruysbroeck.
+The great man has accommodated
+himself to all, and the most abandoned soul
+on earth may find again on reading him the
+path of salvation. Arrows dart from the pages
+of Ruysbroeck, aimed by no hand of man, but
+by the hand of God; and deeply they embed
+<span class="pb" id="Page_111">[111]</span>
+themselves in the soul of the reader who is a
+sinner. Innocent reader, reader of unstained
+robe, Ruysbroeck is at once most lowly and
+most sublime. In his description of the
+<i>Spiritual Espousals</i> he surpasses admiration,
+he surpasses praise; all the commencement,
+all the progress, all the height, all the transcendent
+perfection of the spiritual life is
+there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was from Surius that the Benedictine
+Blosius, or Louis de Blois, learned to know
+and appreciate Ruysbroeck. His works are
+impregnated with the teachings of the Mystic
+of Groenendael, and his well-known <i>Consolatio
+Pusillanimum</i> (<i>Comfort for the Fainthearted</i>)
+is replete with extracts taken from
+Ruysbroeck.</p>
+<p>Lessius, the Jesuit Theological Professor
+of Louvain University, used to say that he
+read Blessed John Ruysbroeck daily; and
+he would add that if his holy works had
+<span class="pb" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
+emanated from the Society they would not
+have remained in obscurity so long.</p>
+<p>In more recent times Ernest Hello brought
+our Saint to France by a translation of
+extracts, prefaced by an anonymous contemporary
+life, which was first published in
+1869. In his own <i>Introduction</i>, Hello writes:
+&ldquo;Among those who, soaring beyond the
+realms of human light, have sought refuge in
+the shadow of the great altar, the grandest,
+according to Denys the Carthusian, are St.
+Denys the Areopagyte and John Ruysbroeck
+the Admirable. St. Denys lays down the
+general laws of mystic theology, John Ruysbroeck
+applies them. St. Denys presents
+the lamp, John Ruysbroeck kindles the flame.
+Both are blind with excess of light, both
+immovable with excess of motion. Speech
+with them is a visit paid to men from motives
+of charity. Silence is their native land. The
+beauty of their language is the condescendence
+<span class="pb" id="Page_113">[113]</span>
+of their goodness; the sacred darkness
+in which they spread their eagle wings is
+their ocean, their booty, their glory.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Reviewing the work of Hello, Louis Veuillot,
+the French Catholic publicist, remarked:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ruysbroeck was illiterate. He was a
+humble Flemish priest of the fifteenth century.
+None the less, in the order of genius the uncultured
+Ruysbroeck, as a theologian, and
+consequently as a philosopher and a poet,
+is as far above Bossuet as Dante, for instance,
+is above Boileau. Face to face with the
+mysteries that shroud God and man, Bossuet
+seeks, argues, and, so to speak, gropes; Ruysbroeck
+knows, describes, or rather sings, and
+contemplates. This illiterate mystic of an
+obscure age finds himself at home in the sublime
+as in his own sphere; he speaks of what
+is familiar to him; the wise doctor of the
+world remains without. Bossuet does not
+enter, he does not open, he does not see.
+<span class="pb" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
+Bossuet spins words, Ruysbroeck pours out
+streams of light. It seems as if Bossuet
+were that mighty wind which was heard in the
+Upper Chamber; the brief words of Ruysbroeck
+are the tongues of fire, living and
+enlightening flame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Truly has Time brought its revenge in such
+a comparison by a compatriot of Bossuet
+with Ruysbroeck.</p>
+<p>Finally, Maeterlinck brought out his translation
+of the <i>Spiritual Espousals</i> in 1891 with
+a characteristic appreciation of the Flemish
+mystic. And Maeterlinck&rsquo;s name has given a
+strong impetus to the popularity, so to speak,
+of Blessed Ruysbroeck in modern France.
+But neither of these translations can be
+regarded as authoritative or exact.</p>
+<p>The real, scholarly work towards extending
+and encouraging the cult of Blessed John
+Ruysbroeck, whether among the learned or
+the devout, is being performed, as is seemly,
+<span class="pb" id="Page_115">[115]</span>
+in the Catholic University of his native Belgium,
+namely, at Louvain, where a Chair
+has been instituted for the study of Old
+Flemish, chiefly for the sake of a correct understanding
+and rendering of the writings
+of the Holy Mystic of Groenendael.</p>
+<p>And here we may note that while it is
+customary with some to speak of Ruysbroeck
+as illiterate, this term must be taken in a
+strictly limited sense. Possibly, he could not
+have composed in fluent and elegant Latin:
+he was not a classical scholar; but certainly
+the Latin of the Bible and the Fathers was
+quite familiar to him. His writings, moreover,
+display an intimate knowledge of the Scriptures,
+the Fathers, theology, liturgy, apologetics.
+The natural science of the day was not
+unknown, as witness his applications from
+astronomy, and, it must be confessed, from
+astrology. With St. Denys the Areopagyte
+he shows himself very intimate, and his pages
+<span class="pb" id="Page_116">[116]</span>
+contain whole passages borrowed or adapted
+from St. Anselm, St. Ambrose, St. Gregory,
+and especially St. Augustin. Nearer his
+own days St. Bernard and Hugh of St. Victor
+seem to have influenced him very considerably.</p>
+<p>Experts in Old Flemish assure us that his
+style is most chaste, his language vigorous
+and clear. He was in truth a poet. When
+carried away by the beauty or sublimity of
+his subject, he indulges in a wealth of imagery,
+comparison, metaphor, astounding at times
+in boldness and originality. Occasionally
+even he lapsed into verse; but on the whole
+his verse is of less beauty and strength than
+his prose, as he himself seems to have been
+aware. On the other hand, his prose, after
+the manner of St. Bernard, St. Bonaventure,
+the two Victors, and later Thomas &agrave; Kempis,
+frequently gives evidence of deliberate rhythm
+and rhyme. In a word, far from being illiterate
+<span class="pb" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
+in the strict sense of the word, Blessed
+John was well acquainted with all the rules
+and arts of rhetoric; he knew how to employ
+them; and for all the sublimity of his discourse
+he did not disdain the use of these
+aids to interest and persuasion. Finally, it
+is to be noted that we are expressly informed
+by contemporaries of Ruysbroeck that he
+wrote by preference in the vulgar tongue, the
+more readily and effectively to meet and
+refute the erroneous doctrines published in
+the language of the people by the false
+mystics of his day.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_118">[118]</div>
+<h2 id="c15">XIV
+<br /><span class="sc">Last Days</span></h2>
+<p>Of the life of our Saint there remains little
+to be told save the record of the last days
+and the after glory. He had attained the
+good old age of eighty-eight, when his mother
+appeared in a vision to warn him to make
+ready for the approaching end. It must seem
+to us there was little need for such warning to
+one whose whole life had been one long preparation
+for the coming of the Spouse! He
+was taken with dysentery, accompanied by
+fever, and for his greater comfort, and that
+his lifelong friend van Coudenberg might be
+at hand to console and assist him, they put
+him to bed in the Provost&rsquo;s chamber. But
+the humble Prior besought them to treat him
+as any of the lowliest brethren and to bear
+<span class="pb" id="Page_119">[119]</span>
+him to the common infirmary. This was
+accordingly done. There he lay for a fortnight,
+gradually wasting away with the burning
+fever, and still more, doubtless, with his
+burning desires to be dissolved and to be with
+Christ, for he was constantly heard murmuring
+such ejaculations as that of the Psalmist,
+<i>Sicut desiderat cervus ad fontes aquarum</i>. He
+received all the last rites, and the end came
+in the greatest peace, while his weeping
+brethren prayed around him, on the Octave
+day of St. Catherine, V.M., December 2, 1381,
+in the eighty-eighth year of his age, the sixty-fourth
+of his priesthood.</p>
+<p>That same night the Dean of Diest,
+watching by the holy remains, seemed to
+behold our Saint, clad in the priestly vestments
+and all radiant with glory, ascend the
+altar steps as if to celebrate the sacred mysteries.
+The Dean had always held Ruysbroeck
+in the deepest veneration and, having
+<span class="pb" id="Page_120">[120]</span>
+some skill in medicine, he had come over to
+Groenendael on hearing of the Prior&rsquo;s illness
+to see whether he could administer any relief.
+His charity was rewarded by the edifying
+sight of his happy death, and by this consoling
+vision after.</p>
+<p>And, as the Venerable &agrave; Kempis informs
+us, &ldquo;God also revealed to Gerard [Groote]
+the death of this most beloved Father, which
+revelation he made manifest in the hearing
+of many of the citizens by the tolling of the
+bells; and more privately he made known
+to certain of his friends that the soul of the
+Prior, after but one hour of Purgatory, had
+passed to the glory of Heaven.&rdquo; We may
+note here that &agrave; Kempis himself was a child
+of three years when Ruysbroeck was called
+to his reward. Gerard Groote followed his
+friend and spiritual father to the grave three
+years later.</p>
+<p>The Groenendael Canons offered the holy
+<span class="pb" id="Page_121">[121]</span>
+Sacrifice and all the wonted suffrages for their
+departed Prior&rsquo;s repose, but they prayed with
+the conviction that they needed his impetration
+rather than he theirs. They were all
+eager to possess themselves of any little thing
+which had been his. Some cut off locks of
+his hair, and one managed to secure a tooth!
+Appropriately enough, this relic later cured a
+Mechlin lady of a severe attack of toothache.
+However, in all simplicity the Brethren laid
+Blessed John to rest in the little chapel which
+his own hands had helped to raise.</p>
+<p>Five years later his saintly associate, the
+Provost Francis van Coudenberg, rejoined
+him beyond the grave. The Bishop of Cambrai,
+John T&rsquo;Serclaes, came to assist at the
+obsequies. During his visit he heard so
+much of the heroic virtues of the late Prior
+that he ordered an exhumation of Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s
+body with a view to a more honourable
+burial by the side of the Provost in the
+<span class="pb" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
+new church, which had now replaced the
+little chapel. They were all filled with awe
+and wonder to find the entire body, save
+only the tip of the nose, incorrupt, and the
+priestly vestments intact. Also a most sweet
+odour exhaled from the holy remains. To
+satisfy the devotion of the people, the Bishop
+commanded that the body should be exposed
+to their veneration for three days.
+On the third day, amid a vast concourse of
+the faithful, Ruysbroeck was laid to rest by
+the side and in the tomb of his lifelong
+friend van Coudenberg. Over the sepulchre
+was placed the following simple inscription:</p>
+<p class="center"><i>Hic jacet translatus Devotus Pater
+<br />D. Joannes de Ruysbroeck
+<br />I. Prior hujus monasterii
+<br />Qui obiit anno Domini
+<br />MCCCLXXXI
+<br />II. Die Decembris</i></p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_123">[123]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Here lies transferred the Devout Father,
+Dom John of Ruysbroeck, First Prior of this
+cloister, who departed in the year of the
+Lord 1381, December 2.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_124">[124]</div>
+<h2 id="c16">XV
+<br /><span class="sc">The Cultus of Blessed John Ruysbroeck</span></h2>
+<p>Numerous pilgrims now wended their way
+to visit Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s tomb. Ex-votos were
+suspended there in acknowledgment of
+favours received. His picture also was
+honoured in various churches. And each
+year on the Monday following Trinity Sunday
+the Chapter of St. Gudule&rsquo;s came over to
+Groenendael to assist the Canons at a Mass
+sung in his honour. In a word, on all sides
+the holy Prior was regarded and, as far as
+possible, treated as a Saint in glory.</p>
+<p>Yielding to representations and entreaties
+from many quarters, James Roonen, Archbishop
+of Mechlin, ordered another translation
+of the remains, November 1622. This
+<span class="pb" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
+was duly performed with all the prescribed
+formalities. The skeleton was found entire.
+The bones were carefully taken and reverently
+washed and then placed in a new reliquary.
+The water used in this cleansing emitted a
+delicious odour, and it was afterwards instrumental
+in effecting many miraculous cures.
+The Infanta Isabella of Spain laid the foundation
+stone of a chapel to be erected at her
+expense near <i>Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s Tree</i> as a suitable
+shrine for the relics. She also provided a
+magnificent sarcophagus. As this chapel was
+outside the monastic enclosure, ladies were
+now able to pay their devotions at Ruysbroeck&rsquo;s
+tomb itself, whereas hitherto they
+had been able to reverence the relics only
+from a distance.</p>
+<p>So far, however, no authoritative recognition
+of the heroic virtues of John Ruysbroeck had
+come from Rome. In 1624 the Archbishop
+commissioned the learned Albert le Mire to
+<span class="pb" id="Page_126">[126]</span>
+draw up the necessary preliminary documents
+to be submitted to the Sacred Congregation.
+These were approved, and three
+commissioners were appointed to Initiate
+the apostolic process, so called. Their labours
+were completed by 1627. Then, on account
+of the wars and other troubles which afflicted
+the Low Countries at the time, the Cause
+was suspended.</p>
+<p>When the French overran the Netherlands
+in 1667, to prevent profanation of the holy
+relics, they were carried to a place of greater
+safety in Brussels; they were restored again
+in 1670. In 1783 the Priory itself shared
+the fate of so many other Religious Houses,
+and was suppressed by the Emperor Joseph II.;
+whereupon the relics were again transferred
+to Brussels and laid to rest in a side-chapel
+of St. Gudule&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>Another attempt was then made by the
+Chapter of St. Gudule&rsquo;s to obtain from Rome
+<span class="pb" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
+an authorised Office and Mass in honour of
+John Ruysbroeck. The petition was favourably
+received; but once more there was a
+violent interruption, this time from the upheaval
+of the French Revolution.</p>
+<p>St. Gudule&rsquo;s was sacked by the <i>sans-culottes</i>
+in 1793, and the reliquary of Ruysbroeck
+was desecrated. It is said, however,
+that the relics were not actually dispersed,
+and that they were afterwards sealed up
+again by a Notary named Neuwens; but
+unhappily at the present day all trace of
+them has disappeared.</p>
+<p>Finally, in 1885, the late Cardinal Goosens,
+Archbishop of Mechlin, approached the Sacred
+Congregation once more, and a tribunal was appointed
+to examine into the Cause, February 8,
+1900. This was brought to a happy issue in
+1908 by a Decree of the Sacred Congregation,
+dated December 1st, and approved by His
+Holiness, Pius X., December 9, confirming the
+<span class="pb" id="Page_128">[128]</span>
+cultus &ldquo;shown from time immemorial to the
+Venerable Servant of God, John Ruysbroeck,
+Canon Regular, called the Blessed.&rdquo; Later,
+August 24, 1909, the Congregation granted
+and approved an Office and Mass of Blessed
+John Ruysbroeck for the Mechlin clergy.
+The privilege of this Office and Mass has also
+been extended to the Canons Regular of
+the Lateran, who are the lineal representatives
+of the Canons of Groenendael and
+Windesheim, and therefore in a special sense
+the children of Blessed John.</p>
+<p>For the moment there may seem to be
+but little in common between this Medi&aelig;val
+Mystic and the bustling modern world, so
+little as to suggest the thought that Blessed
+Ruysbroeck can have no message to deliver
+to our day. On the contrary, the Solitary
+of the Forest of Soignes stands for a profound
+truth, oblivion of which is rendering Society
+sick unto death to-day. John Ruysbroeck
+<span class="pb" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
+preaches to the world its utter need of
+God.</p>
+<p>For the Catholic he enforces his lesson in
+a special manner. Unlike false mystics, who
+invariably pretend to dispense themselves
+and their adherents from the chief normal
+means of grace, namely the Sacraments,
+Ruysbroeck insists upon frequent recourse
+to the Sacraments, but more especially to the
+Blessed Eucharist, as the speediest and most
+efficacious means of bringing each soul into
+true union with God. Our present Holy
+Father, desirous and ambitious of &ldquo;restoring
+all things in Christ,&rdquo; has pointed to the
+same divine remedy for the renewal of our
+souls. May there not be seen in this a
+providential reason wherefore the solemn
+beatification of this holy Religious has been
+delayed six centuries, to be reserved to our
+own days?</p>
+<p>The proper prayers of our Saint&rsquo;s Mass
+<span class="pb" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
+beautifully summarise the lessons of his life
+as follows:</p>
+<h3>Collect</h3>
+<p>God, Who didst vouchsafe to adorn
+Blessed John, Thy Confessor, with sublime
+holiness of life and with heavenly gifts,
+grant us, through his merits, and after his
+example, to despise the fleeting things of
+the world, and to desire only the joys of
+heaven.</p>
+<h3>Secret</h3>
+<p>May the intercession of Blessed John,
+who in offering the Sacrifice merited to
+overflow with heavenly delights, make us
+worthy, we beseech Thee, Lord, of the
+bread of angels.</p>
+<h3>Post-Communion</h3>
+<p>We beseech Thee, Lord, by the intercession
+<span class="pb" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
+of Blessed John, grant to us who are
+refreshed with the heavenly banquet, that,
+delivered from worldly desires, we may be
+ever fervent in Thy love.</p>
+<h2>Footnotes</h2>
+<div class="fnblock">
+<div class="fndef"><sup><a id="fn_1" href="#fr_1">[1]</a></sup>By Earle Bailie. London: Thomas Baker.
+1905.
+</div>
+<div class="fndef"><sup><a id="fn_2" href="#fr_2">[2]</a></sup><i>Cf.</i> the Polish sect of <i>Mariavites</i>,
+or <i>Mystic Priests</i>,
+under the misguidance of the woman Mary Frances,
+whose extravagances were condemned by Rome, September
+1904, and again April 1906.
+</div>
+<div class="fndef"><sup><a id="fn_3" href="#fr_3">[3]</a></sup>Provost is
+the equivalent in a College of Clergy of the
+Abbot in a Monastery; though many Congregations of
+Canons Regular have borrowed the title and style of
+Abbot from the monastic institute.
+</div>
+<div class="fndef"><sup><a id="fn_4" href="#fr_4">[4]</a></sup>Translation
+by J. P. Arthur. <i>The Founders of the New
+Devotion.</i> Kegan Paul. 1905.
+</div>
+<div class="fndef"><sup><a id="fn_5" href="#fr_5">[5]</a></sup>Especially: <i>Outlines
+of the Life of Thomas &agrave; Kempis</i>.
+By Sir Francis Cruise. <i>C.T.S.</i> of Ireland. <i>Thomas &agrave;
+Kempis</i>. By the same. London: Kegan Paul. <i>Life
+of the Venerable Thomas &agrave; Kempis</i>. By Dom Scully.
+London: Washbourne. <i>Thomas &agrave; Kempis and the
+Brothers of the Common Life</i>. By Kettlewell. London:
+Kegan Paul. <i>Thomas &agrave; Kempis, His Age and His Book</i>.
+By De Montmorency, London: Methuen.
+</div>
+<div class="fndef"><sup><a id="fn_6" href="#fr_6">[6]</a></sup>Father Sharpe, in his recent admirable
+volume, <i>Mysticism:
+Its True Nature and Value</i>, writes thus of the mystic
+teaching, properly so called, of &agrave; Kempis&rsquo;s world-famous
+masterpiece: &ldquo;<i>The Imitation of Christ</i> ... probably owes
+much of its vast popularity to its constant recurrence to
+the elementary duties of religion and morality, and its
+insistence on the necessity of their performance as the
+prerequisite of the more exalted spiritual states. The
+&lsquo;purgative,&rsquo; &lsquo;illuminative,&rsquo; and
+&lsquo;unitive&rsquo; ways are
+seen, so to speak, together, and are dealt with as aspects
+or constituents of the Christian life as a whole, to the
+completeness of which all three are necessary and, in different
+ways, of equal importance. The purely mystical
+passages are comparatively few and short; and the abundance
+of practical directions the book contains has sometimes
+caused its mystical character to be entirely overlooked.
+This disproportion, however, is quite sufficiently
+to be accounted for by the character of the work, which
+is that of a directory of spiritual life in general, and not a
+scientific treatise on any particular department of it. In
+such a book attempts at describing the indescribable
+phenomena of mysticism would obviously have been out
+of place, whereas the practical details of the lower and
+preliminary states admit of and require minute explanation.
+But the tone of the whole book is mystical, and the
+most commonplace duties and the most humiliating strivings
+with temptation are in a manner illuminated and
+glorified by the brilliancy of the result to which they tend.
+Thus, in point of fact, the higher and lower elements, the
+mystical and the non-mystical, the purgative, the illuminative
+and the unitive, are blended in actual human experience&rdquo;
+(pp. 188, 189).
+</div>
+<div class="fndef"><sup><a id="fn_7" href="#fr_7">[7]</a></sup>The whole subject
+of mystic theology is excellently
+well treated by Rev. A. B. Sharpe, M.A., in a volume
+entitled <i>Mysticism: Its True Nature and Value</i>, already
+quoted, just published by Sands &amp; Co. There is frequent
+reference to our Saint and his writings.
+</div>
+</div>
+<p class="tbcenter"><span class="small">FINIS</span></p>
+<h2 id="ctn">Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
+<ul>
+<li>Silently corrected a few palpable typos.</li>
+<li>Moved footnotes from page footer to end of text</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Mediaeval Mystic, by Vincent Scully
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Mediaeval Mystic, by Vincent Scully
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Mediaeval Mystic
+ A Short Account of the Life and Writings of Blessed John
+ Ruysbroeck, Canon Regular of Groenendael A.D. 1293-1381
+
+Author: Vincent Scully
+
+Release Date: June 13, 2011 [EBook #36407]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MEDIAEVAL MYSTIC ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ A MEDIAEVAL MYSTIC
+
+
+ A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE
+ AND WRITINGS OF BLESSED JOHN
+ RUYSBROECK, CANON REGULAR OF
+ GROENENDAEL A.D. 1293-1381
+
+ BY
+ DOM VINCENT SCULLY, C.R.L.
+
+ (_Permissu Superiorum_)
+
+
+ LONDON
+ THOMAS BAKER
+ MCMX
+
+
+ PRINTED BY
+ HAZELL, WATSON AND VINEY, LD.,
+ LONDON AND AYLESBURY.
+
+
+ TO
+ THE RIGHT REV. AUGUSTIN H. WHITE, C.R.L.
+ LORD ABBOT OF WALTHAM
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ Page
+ INTRODUCTION ix
+ I. EARLY YEARS AND EDUCATION 1
+ II. AS A SECULAR PRIEST IN BRUSSELS 6
+ III. FALSE MYSTICS 10
+ IV. THE HERMITAGE OF GROENENDAEL 17
+ V. THE CANONS REGULAR OF GROENENDAEL 25
+ VI. PRIOR OF GROENENDAEL 33
+ VII. RUYSBROECK'S TREE 43
+ VIII. A DIRECTOR OF SOULS 47
+ IX. RUYSBROECK AND GERARD GROOTE 50
+ X. RUYSBROECK AND WINDESHEIM 58
+ XI. THE WRITINGS OF RUYSBROECK 67
+ XII. THE TEACHING OF RUYSBROECK 93
+ XIII. SOME APPRECIATIONS 105
+ XIV. LAST DAYS 118
+ XV. THE CULTUS OF BLESSED JOHN RUYSBROECK 124
+
+
+
+
+ INTRODUCTION
+
+
+The object of the following unpretentious little volume is to give a
+simple and readable account in English of the life and writings of a
+remarkable Flemish Mystic of the fourteenth century, a contemporary of
+our own Walter Hilton. Though his memory and honour have never faded in
+his own native Belgium, and though France and Germany have vied with each
+other in spreading his teaching and singing his praises, the very name of
+Blessed John Ruysbroeck is practically unknown this side of the water. We
+are acquainted with only one small work in English dealing directly with
+the Saint or his work at all, viz. _Reflections from the Mirror of
+Mystic_,[1] giving the briefest sketch of his life and some short
+extracts from his writings as translated from the French rendering of
+Ernest Hello.
+
+The original authorities for the history of Ruysbroeck are practically
+reduced to one, the biography by Henry Pomerius, a Canon Regular of
+Groenendael, entitled _De Origine monasterii Viridisvallis una cum vitis
+B. Joannis Rusbrochii primi prioris hujus monasterii et aliquot
+coaetaneorum ejus_, re-edited by the Bollandists, Brussels, 1885. It is
+certain that a disciple of John Ruysbroeck, John of Scoenhoven, also of
+Groenendael, who undertook the defence of Blessed John's writings against
+Gerson, composed a short biography, but this was embodied in the work of
+Pomerius, and thereby as a separate volume fell out of use and memory.
+Pomerius had Scoenhoven's MS. to work upon, and some of Ruysbroeck's
+contemporaries were still living at Groenendael when he composed his
+biography there. The brief references by the Venerable Thomas a Kempis in
+his _Vita Gerardi Magni_ are likewise of great interest and intrinsic
+worth.
+
+For the purposes of this brief biography, which lays no claim whatever to
+original research, the compiler has made very great use of the labours of
+Dr. Auger, _De Doctrina et Meritis Joannis van Ruysbroeck_, Louvain, and
+Willem de Vreese, _Jean de Ruysbroeck_, an extract from the _Biographie
+Nationale_, published by l'Academie royale des sciences, des lettres et
+des beaux-arts de Belgique, Brussels, 1909. This indebtedness is
+especially true of the summarised analysis of the various works of
+Ruysbroeck.
+
+Later it may be possible to give a complete and faithful English
+rendering of all Ruysbroeck's Works from the critical edition which is at
+present preparing in Louvain; where there is an active revival of
+interest in this great and holy Mystic of the Netherlands.
+
+For the judgment of competent witnesses as to the permanent value and
+extraordinary sublimity of B. John's writings the reader is referred to
+the body of this work under the heading, _Some Appreciations_.
+
+The usual protest is made according to the Decrees of Urban VIII.
+concerning alleged miracles, etc., recorded in these pages.
+
+St. Ives, Cornwall,
+
+ _Feast of Our Lady's Nativity_, 1910.
+
+
+
+
+ A Mediaeval Mystic
+
+
+
+
+ I
+
+ Early Years and Education
+
+
+Blessed John Ruysbroeck, surnamed the Admirable and the Divine Doctor, by
+common consent the greatest Mystic the Low Countries have ever produced,
+was born, A.D. 1293, at Ruysbroeck, a village some miles south of
+Brussels, lying between that city and Hal. According to the fashion of
+those days, especially with Religious, he was named after his birthplace,
+John van Ruysbroeck, or John Ruysbroeck. The Venerable a Kempis, the
+Latinised form of van Kempen, is a case in point; Thomas was so named
+after his native town, Kempen, though his patronymic was Haemerken. Of
+Ruysbroeck, however, we know of no other surname; neither do his
+biographers so much as mention his father. But like many another great
+servant of God, John was blessed with a good mother, a devout woman who
+trained her child from the cradle to walk in the paths of Christian piety
+and perfection. She is charged with only one fault, that she loved her
+son too tenderly!
+
+Perhaps we are to understand by this that the poor woman opposed the
+boy's early aspirations after a more retired life than could be found
+even in the peaceful shelter of his own pious home. This would also
+explain John's first recorded act. At the age of eleven years he ran away
+from home! How many a lad before and since has torn himself away from a
+loving mother's too fond embrace to quell the ardour of a restless spirit
+in the quest of adventure! John also was eager and dissatisfied; but the
+larger sphere for which he sighed was to be sought along the unaccustomed
+ways which lead to the sublime heights and the rarified atmosphere of
+mystic contemplation.
+
+The pious truant made his way to Brussels, there to call upon an uncle of
+his, one John Hinckaert, a major Canon of St. Gudule's. The son and heir
+of a wealthy magistrate of the city, and possessed, moreover, of a rich
+benefice, for many years John Hinckaert had been somewhat worldly in his
+ways; but one day Divine grace found him out as he was listening to a
+sermon, and drew him sweetly and strongly to a life of extreme simplicity
+and mortification. His example was soon followed by a fellow Canon, by
+name Francis van Coudenberg, a Master of Arts, possessed of considerable
+means, and a man of great repute with the people. These two agreed, for
+their mutual edification and support, to live together in common. Their
+material requirements were reduced to the barest necessaries; and the
+surplus of their revenue was distributed among the poor. In this devout
+household the lad John met with a kindly welcome; and there he found at
+once a home after his own heart in an atmosphere saturated with
+"other-worldliness" and prayer. His good uncle also took charge of his
+education. For four years Ruysbroeck followed the ordinary course of
+Humanities in the public schools of Brussels, and then, with a view to
+the priesthood, he devoted himself to the more congenial study of the
+sacred sciences.
+
+Meanwhile the bereaved mother had discovered the place of John's retreat
+and had quitted her village of Ruysbroeck to reside with him at Brussels.
+As, however, she was not permitted to dwell in the Presbytery, she made
+her abode in a _Beguinage_ hard by. Thus she had at least the consolation
+of seeing her son from time to time. She must have been much comforted
+also for the deprivation of his company by the constant evidence of his
+growing sanctity. And, further, we are assured that she set herself to
+make profit of her sacrifice by emulating in her own person the holy life
+of her son John, and his saintly masters, Hinckaert and van Coudenberg.
+
+
+
+
+ II
+
+ As a Secular Priest in Brussels
+
+
+In due course Canon Hinckaert procured for his nephew one of the lesser
+prebends of St. Gudule's, and John was ordained priest in the year 1317,
+at the age of twenty-four. His good mother did not survive to witness
+this happy event in the flesh, nevertheless even beyond the grave she had
+good cause to rejoice therein. After her departure from this world she
+had often appeared to her son, lamenting her pains, beseeching his
+prayers, and sighing for the day when he would be able to offer for her
+the holy Sacrifice. And John was unceasing in his supplications. But
+immediately after the celebration of his first Mass, as he related to his
+Religious Brethren later, God granted him a vision full of consolation:
+when the sacred oblation was accomplished, his mother came to visit and
+thank him for her deliverance from Purgatory. The touching incident is
+well worth recording, if only to show that it was through no lack of
+natural affection that the child John had so unceremoniously forsaken
+home and mother. Moreover, of these two holy souls it was singularly true
+that _having loved each other in life, in death they were not parted_,
+for they were privileged often to converse together, and finally it was
+from his mother that Ruysbroeck learned the date of his own approaching
+departure.
+
+For twenty-six years in all Blessed John lived as a secular priest in
+Brussels. Content with his modest chaplaincy in the Church of St. Gudule,
+and with his holy companions Hinckaert and van Coudenberg continuing
+happily in apostolic simplicity and poverty the Common Life on which he
+had entered a mere child, Ruysbroeck passed his days in peaceful
+retirement and almost uninterrupted prayer and contemplation.
+
+A characteristic episode of this period reveals to us the man as in a
+flash, his mean garb, his emaciated figure, his absorbed demeanour, his
+utter abandonment in God. He was passing through a square of Brussels one
+day, silent and recollected, as was his wont, when two laymen remarked
+him.
+
+"My God," exclaimed one, "would I were as holy as that priest!"
+
+"Nay, for my part," returned the other, "I would not be in his shoes for
+all the wealth of the world. I should never know a day's pleasure on
+earth."
+
+"Then you know nothing of the delights which God bestows, or of the
+delicious savour of the Holy Ghost," thought Ruysbroeck to himself, for
+he happened to overhear the words, and he proceeded tranquilly on his
+way.
+
+
+
+
+ III
+
+ False Mystics
+
+
+But with all his love of peace and retirement, when it was a question of
+guarding the integrity of the Faith and of warding off peril from
+immortal souls, Ruysbroeck hesitated not to stand in the breach; even
+though others of much higher position in the Church and of much higher
+repute for theological learning than the obscure chaplain of St. Gudule's
+should raise not a finger nor so much as utter a warning word.
+
+The student of history is well aware of the many and startling contrasts
+and contradictions presented by the Middle Ages. It was an epoch of
+magnificent virtues and of gross vices, of splendid heroism and of
+unspeakable cruelty, of superb generosity and of disgusting meanness,
+and, which is more to our point at present, of intense devotion and of
+the most revolting vagaries in doctrine and morals. While also on the one
+hand there was much genuine zeal, much earnest endeavour to reform crying
+abuses in Church and State; on the other hand hypocrites and fanatics
+abounded, who aimed at the destruction of the principle of authority on
+the plea of amending those in power, or who, the while they inveighed
+against the futility of a merely exterior religion and insisted on the
+supreme need of purity of heart, themselves fell into the excess of
+neglecting all external form, and at times all outward decency and
+observance of morality.
+
+In varying degrees these latter errors are to be encountered under one
+shape or another in every age; but at the period of which we treat they
+were especially intense and extreme. The _Beghards_ and the _Beguines_
+(when and where these broke loose from ecclesiastical control), the
+_Flagellants_, the _Brethren of the Free Spirit_ were chief of a group of
+extravagant sects which afflicted the Church in Italy, France, Germany,
+and the Netherlands; while England at the same time was disturbed by the
+fanaticism of the Lollards. In general their peculiar tenets were a
+strange admixture of pantheism, false mysticism, apparent austerity, and
+very real immorality. The following is one of their characteristic
+propositions, condemned by Clement V. in the Council of Vienna, A.D.
+1311-1312: "That those who are in the aforesaid grade of perfection and
+in the spirit of liberty (contemplatives) are not subject to human
+authority and are not obliged to obey any precepts of the Church, because
+(as they say) _where the spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty_."
+
+It so happened that contemporary with our Saint in Brussels was a
+prominent leader of the heretics of the _Free Spirit_, a woman whose name
+is given as Bloemardinne, a good type, to judge by the description of
+Ruysbroeck's biographer, of the whole genus of such teachers in those
+days and in our own.[2] So great was this creature's reputation for
+sanctity that it was commonly reported that two Seraphim accompanied her
+to the altar when she approached to receive Holy Communion. She always
+delivered her teachings, whether by word or in writing, seated on a
+throne of silver. At her demise this chair was presented to the reigning
+Duchess of Brabant. After Bloemardinne's death also cripples came to
+touch her body in the persuasion that they would be miraculously healed
+thereby. Her teaching was of the kind indicated above, concerned chiefly
+with the so-called liberty of the spirit; the passion of lust she had the
+impudence to call seraphic love. She issued numerous pamphlets remarkable
+for their subtlety; and by one means and another she managed to win and
+retain a very considerable number of disciples.
+
+Moved by zeal and compassion on witnessing the ruin and loss of souls
+thus effected, John Ruysbroeck set himself to confute this heretic's
+various publications point by point as they appeared. In consequence, he
+incurred not a little hostility and persecution. Possibly it was this
+opposition which finally decided Ruysbroeck and his holy companions to
+quit Brussels for the more peaceful retirement of the neighbouring forest
+of Soignes. But meanwhile he never for a moment desisted from his efforts
+in defence of the Faith, and in the propagation of the doctrines of sane
+mysticism. Of the treatises published professedly against Bloemardinne
+there is nothing extant. But in all his works Ruysbroeck keeps an eye on
+the errors of the day. He returns to them again and again, analysing
+their sources, describing their characteristics, indicating the mischief
+they work, and offering a reasoned and solid confutation. At the same
+time, with wondrous sureness and perspicacity, from the rich stores of
+his own intimate experience, he points out the safe and sure paths which
+lead the soul to loving union with God.
+
+Some thirty years after Ruysbroeck's death, in 1410, the Archbishop of
+Cambrai called his disciples, the Canons Regular of Groenendael, to come
+and aid him in preaching against the successors of the notorious
+Bloemardinne--a fact eloquent both of the obstinacy of this particular
+heresy and of Blessed John's reputation as its most vigorous opponent.
+
+
+
+
+ IV
+
+ The Hermitage of Groenendael
+
+
+It appears that it was on the suggestion of Francis van Coudenberg that
+the three holy priests resolved to abandon Brussels to seek elsewhere for
+themselves a refuge of greater security and retirement. It was through
+the influence also of van Coudenberg with John III., Duke of Brabant,
+that they obtained the cession of an ideal property for their purpose,
+the hermitage, namely, of Groenendael, with its lands and lake.
+
+The spot had already been sanctified by the prayers and penances of holy
+recluses for nigh forty years. The first to retire thither had been one
+John Busch, of the ducal house of Brabant, who, weary of the strife,
+frivolities, and perils of court life, obtained from his kinsman, John
+II., leave to retire into the forest of Soignes, to build himself a hut
+and enclose a space of land there to be cultivated with his own hands for
+his support. The deed of gift was dated the Friday after the Assumption
+of Mary, 1304, and it stipulated that on the death or departure of the
+grantee, another hermit should take his place, and so on for ever. In
+effect, the noble John Busch was succeeded by one Arnold of Diest, who,
+on entering, made a vow never to sally forth save on festivals for the
+purpose of hearing Mass and receiving Holy Communion in the Parish Church
+of St. Clement at Hoolaert. God rewarded this generous sacrifice by a
+singular favour: Arnold was passionately devoted to the memory of the
+Holy Apostles and Martyrs of Rome, and he was transported in spirit so
+frequently thither that the shrines and sanctuaries of the Eternal City
+became as familiar to him as to a native. When in a green old age he came
+to die, Arnold surprised the bystanders with the request that he should
+be laid to rest in the hermitage grounds. They objected that the
+enclosure was not consecrated: he responded that one day it would be the
+site of a monastery, the home of saintly Religious, and the Mother-house
+of a holy congregation. However, he was buried in the Parish Church of
+Hoolaert before the altar of St. Nicholas. His successor, Lambert, the
+last of the Groenendael hermits, was so poor in spirit as not to be
+attached even to his cell. He cheerfully yielded place to John Hinckaert,
+van Coudenberg, and Ruysbroeck, and retired to a cell which they had
+procured for him at Hoetendael, the modern Uccle. Groenendael was handed
+over to the three companions by the Duke of Brabant on Easter Wednesday,
+1343, on the condition that they should forthwith erect a house to
+accommodate a community of at least five, two of whom should be priests
+_viventes religiose_.
+
+The taking of possession is recorded in the Groenendael Chronicle thus:
+"In 1344 the aforesaid, with the bishop's consent, began to build a
+chapel in Groenendael. And the Vicars of Lord Guy, then Bishop of
+Cambrai, inspected the building on March 13, 1344, and decreed that it
+should be consecrated, together with a cemetery adjacent, two altars, and
+other necessary appurtenances. On the same day of the same year the said
+Vicars conferred on Dom Francis the cure of the brethren, the household,
+and the servants, appointing him their Father and Parish Priest. Then the
+same year, on March 17, the Venerable Lord Brother Matthias, Bishop of
+the Church of Trebizond (Coadjutor of Cambrai), by faculty and licence of
+the said Vicars of the Lord Bishop Guy, consecrated the aforesaid first
+church in the honour of St. James, and erected it into a Parochial Church
+for the same Dom Francis, his brethren and household."
+
+For five years Dom Francis van Coudenberg and his companions continued to
+live thus in community, bound by no other rule than their own profound
+spirit of prayer and intense desire of perfection. Nor were they long
+left to enjoy alone the solitude of their retreat. Many sought admission
+into their company; still larger numbers flocked from Brussels and
+elsewhere to seek spiritual aid and consolation. If he had consulted his
+own inclination and bent, Ruysbroeck would have denied himself to all;
+but van Coudenberg represented that they should not in charity refuse
+assistance to souls in need. And Blessed John yielded the more easily,
+remarks one of his biographers, because for his part he was assured of
+being able to repose in God amid the most distracting calls and absorbing
+occupations.
+
+One of their earliest associates, John van Leeuwen, attained a high
+reputation for sanctity. A poor and ignorant layman of Afflighem, he had
+offered his services as their domestic _gratis_. Before long he was known
+far and wide as the "Good Cook of Groenendael." The multitude of visitors
+upon whom he was called to attend left him but little leisure, yet he
+found time not only to be absorbed in prayer and contemplation, but even
+to compose treatises of an exalted spirituality. Like his master
+Ruysbroeck, whom he venerated profoundly, he was deeply recollected amid
+the most exacting duties, and frequently he was favoured with heavenly
+visions. It was while in a state of ecstasy that the sublime gifts and
+heroic holiness of Blessed John were revealed to him; ever after no terms
+seemed to him too exalted in which to describe the worth of the servant
+of God. The general esteem in which van Leeuwen himself was held is
+sufficiently attested by the inscription on his tomb: "Reliquiae Fratris
+Joannis de Leeuwis vulgo Boni Coci viri a Deo illuminati et scriptis
+mysticis clari obiit anno MCCCLXXVII. V. Februarii." _The Remains of
+Brother John van Leeuwen, commonly called the Good Cook, a man
+enlightened by God and renowned for his mystic writings. He died February
+5, 1377._
+
+Much more distracting to the recluses than the frequent visits of pilgrim
+penitents or the arrival of fresh neophytes was the constant coming and
+going of huntsmen from the household of the Duke of Brabant. The forest
+of Soignes, in which Groenendael is situate, was a favourite resort for
+the chase, and the position of the hermitage itself, within a few miles
+of the capital, made it a very convenient place of rest and refreshment
+for the hunters and their hounds. But the noise and bustle attendant on
+such company were scarcely conducive to the spirit of prayer, and the
+demands thus made on the hospitality of the young Community were a heavy
+drain on its resources. Nevertheless the solitaries were naturally
+fearful of giving offence to the followers of their Patron the Duke.
+Moreover, since they were not established as a regular Religious
+Community, they could not claim the privileges of the cloister.
+
+
+
+
+ V
+
+ The Canons Regular of Groenendael
+
+
+The inconveniences just noted, together with the continual increase in
+their numbers, gave point and force to a strong remonstrance addressed to
+Francis van Coudenberg and his Brethren by Pierre de Saulx, Prior of the
+Canons Regular of St. Victor, Paris, concerning the _irregularity_ of
+their unaccustomed manner of life. Herein the good Prior was in effect
+only voicing the opinion of many zealous and prudent leaders among both
+clergy and laity. The times were so rife in sects and societies of false
+mystics, and so much mischief was wrought under the guise of piety, that
+any form of community life outside the cloister and the three regular
+vows was regarded with strong suspicion and dislike. A few years later
+Gerard Groote, a disciple of Ruysbroeck, and Florence Radewyn, the first
+spiritual Director of the Venerable Thomas a Kempis, founded a lay
+association of _Devout Brothers and Sisters of the Common Life_, and this
+society also was subjected to a fierce opposition arising from the same
+sentiment of distrust for all religious movement outside the beaten
+track. Happily, the Brothers were able to weather the storm by producing
+irrefragable proofs of their orthodoxy, and of their entire submission to
+the ecclesiastical authorities. But also, by the advice and according to
+the desires of Gerard Groote himself, they placed themselves under the
+protection and guidance of a Religious Order springing from their own
+body, namely the Canons Regular of Windesheim, of which congregation the
+Venerable a Kempis was one of the earliest members as well as the
+brightest ornament.
+
+Prior Pierre de Saulx urged on van Coudenberg and his associates to
+regularise their status, silence suspicion, and escape the many
+inconveniences to which at present they were exposed by embracing the
+Rule and adopting the habit of some already established Religious Order.
+With edifying humility the Community of Groenendael accepted the reproof
+and its accompanying counsel; and applied at once to Peter Andrew, Bishop
+of Cambrai, for the necessary authorisation to adopt the Institute of the
+Canons Regular under the Rule of St. Augustin of Hippo. This permission
+the Ordinary granted most readily. With his own hands he clothed Francis
+van Coudenberg, John Ruysbroeck and their companions in the canonical
+habit, March 10, 1349, and the following day he appointed Dom Francis
+Provost,[3] and John Ruysbroeck he made Prior of the new Canonry. To van
+Coudenberg the other members of the Community, with one exception,
+professed canonical obedience, according to St. Augustin's Rule. The
+Bishop bestowed upon them many privileges and exemptions; while the Duke
+took them under his special protection and endowed them with sufficient
+revenues for the upkeep of a large establishment.
+
+The one exception noted above was Ruysbroeck's uncle and van Coudenberg's
+old friend and master, John Hinckaert. At this date John Ruysbroeck was
+fifty-six years of age, and Francis van Coudenberg was several years his
+senior. They must certainly have been men of great zeal and courage to
+undertake the full rigour and discipline of the Canonical Life, as they
+understood it, at so advanced an age. Hinckaert, again, was much older
+than either. And for fear lest out of consideration for his failing
+powers the others should be induced to temper in any degree the austerity
+of their observance, the good old man resolved to forgo for himself the
+happiness of joining them in the profession of the vows. We can picture
+what a source of regret this separation must have been to all three.
+However, Hinckaert remained as near his friends as possible until the
+end. A little cell was built just outside the cloister, and there after a
+few years he peacefully passed away, their predecessor to eternal glory
+as he had been their forerunner in the way of perfection.
+
+The Canon Regular, Prior Pierre de Saulx, had reason to be well content
+with the issue of his intervention in the affairs of Groenendael.
+Seventeen years later we find him addressing to the Community another
+characteristic rebuke. This time he complained of the formula of their
+profession, which ran as follows: "I, N. , offer and deliver myself
+with these gifts to the service of this Church of St. James, Apostle. And
+I promise God in the presence of clergy and people that I will abide here
+henceforth to the end of my days without proprietorship, according to the
+rule of the Canons and Blessed Augustin, to the best of my knowledge and
+power. I also promise stability to this place as long as in any way I can
+obtain what is needful for my soul and body, nor shall I for any motion
+of fickleness or under any pretext of a more strict Order change this
+habit or quit this cloister. I also promise obedience to all the prelates
+of the aforesaid Church whom the better part of the Community shall
+canonically elect, in order that I may receive a hundredfold and life
+everlasting."
+
+As a matter of fact, this form of profession was quite adequate.
+Implicitly it contained the vow of chastity, since chastity is an
+integral part of the Canonical Rule. However, the Prior of St. Victor
+resided in Paris, the metropolis of scholasticism, and he strenuously
+argued and maintained that, whereas chastity is one of the three
+essential vows of Religion, and the formula made no mention thereof, the
+said formula was incomplete, erroneous, contrary to the decretals and
+canonical sanctions. And again he urges the Provost and the Brethren to
+conform themselves in this, as in all else, to some fully authorised
+branch of the institute of the Canons Regular.
+
+Once more the good men humbly acquiesced; and it seems that they modelled
+their religious family upon the famous Congregation of St. Victor, of
+which their zealous counsellor was then the chief Superior.
+
+
+
+
+ VI
+
+ Prior of Groenendael
+
+
+Meanwhile the Community of Groenendael grew and flourished. The holy
+Prior continued to make progress in the practice of heroic virtue, his
+gifts of contemplation became ever more sublime, and still his reputation
+for sanctity increased. His contemporary biographers, after the fashion
+of their day, catalogue the Christian virtues, and one by one show how
+they excelled in him. Let it suffice here to remark that those virtues
+which he the most earnestly commends and the most highly exalts in his
+writings, he the most constantly exercised in his own person. Chief of
+these was humility, which he terms everywhere the foundation of
+perfection; then obedience to men and resignation to the will of God, a
+most tender devotion towards Jesus Christ in the Blessed Sacrament of the
+Altar, and, in fine, an ardent love of God and the neighbour. A few
+instances may be given in illustration.
+
+On one occasion Blessed John was seriously ill; consumed by fever and
+tortured by an intense thirst, he begged the Brother Infirmarian for a
+drink of water. The Provost, who happened to be present, forbade the
+draught, fearing it might do him harm. He was literally dying of thirst,
+and his lips were cracking, they were so parched, yet Ruysbroeck humbly
+acquiesced. But later, reflecting how great would be the grief and
+remorse of his friend and superior if he actually died of his agony, he
+quietly remarked: "Father Provost, if I have not a drink of water now I
+shall certainly not recover from this malady." Thereupon, in great alarm,
+Dom Francis immediately bade him drink. And from that moment the holy man
+began to regain his strength.
+
+Another and a continual proof of his humility was the willingness with
+which he took part in the heavy manual labour of the Community. His
+dignity, his advanced age, his inexperience in such work, the many other
+calls upon his time and strength--all this and the like the brethren
+urged as motives wherefore he should be exempt; but he refused to listen.
+Truth to tell, the material advantage from his toil was but little: his
+frame was enfeebled by years and austerities, and in his ignorance he was
+liable, for instance, to root up seedlings in the garden instead of
+weeds! But the spiritual gain to the Brethren was incalculable; there was
+not only the example of his humility, but of his unfailing recollection
+too. In the midst of his labour he never lost his sense of the nearness
+of God's presence. Indeed he was wont to say that it was easier for him
+to raise his soul to God than to lift his hand to his forehead.
+
+His humility also and his zeal for the regular observance prevented him
+ever seeking dispensation from the customary exercises of the community
+life, or exemption from any of the monastic austerities, vigils, or
+fasts.
+
+His love for the neighbour was shown by the readiness and affability with
+which he received and welcomed innumerable claimants on his sympathy,
+help, and counsel. No soul ever left his presence dissatisfied; every one
+went back from a visit to Groenendael greatly edified and inwardly
+refreshed. On one occasion the Brethren were distressed for the moment by
+an apparent exception. Two Parisian clerics had visited the holy old man
+and had demanded some word or motto for their guidance and encouragement.
+
+Ruysbroeck merely observed: "You are as holy as you wish to be."
+Suspecting him of sarcasm, the strangers retired deeply mortified, and
+they complained to the Canons that they were much disappointed in the
+Prior, who evidently was not so saintly a man as rumour had led them to
+believe. Learning the cause of their chagrin, some of the Brethren led
+the clerics back to Blessed John and begged him to explain his meaning.
+"But is it not simple?" he cried. "Is it not quite true? You are as holy
+as you wish. Your good-will is the measure of your sanctity. Look into
+yourselves and see what good-will you have, and you will behold also the
+standard of your holiness." And then the visitors retired appeased and
+edified.
+
+Naturally his own Brethren were the first and chief to benefit by the
+holy Prior's charity and zeal. He denied himself to none; he made himself
+all to all. Sometimes he gave a spiritual conference after Compline, and
+then perhaps he would be so carried away as he enlarged upon the goodness
+of God and the bliss of heaven, for instance, that neither he nor his
+listeners would note the passage of time. The midnight Office bell would
+surprise them still hanging upon his words. But such was the fervour
+infused by his burning eloquence that not one felt the loss of the three
+or four hours' accustomed sleep.
+
+Ruysbroeck always spoke without any immediate preparation; but it was
+characteristic of the man that when requested by the Canons or by
+strangers for a Conference, he would sometimes confess in all simplicity
+that inspiration was lacking, that he had nothing to say. It was the same
+with his written treatises: at the close of his life he was able to
+declare that he had never committed anything to writing save under the
+immediate motion of the Holy Spirit.
+
+As so often happens with the Saints, Blessed John's love for the
+neighbour overflowed in tenderness for his brothers and sisters of the
+lower creation also. Knowing this trait, the Canons would remark to him
+on the approach of winter: "See, Father Prior, it is snowing already.
+What will the poor little birds do now?" And with expressions of
+heartfelt compassion this sublime mystic, who was habitually lost in
+dizziest heights of contemplation, would give instructions that the
+feathered choristers outside the cloister should not be abandoned to
+perish of hunger.
+
+Very frequently in his works Blessed Ruysbroeck takes occasion to treat
+of the Holy Sacrament of the Altar, and ever he speaks of this sacred
+mystery in terms of the most vivid faith and intense devotion, discussing
+it as a supreme proof of God's love for men, on a par with the gifts of
+Creation, the Incarnation, and Redemption. His biographers tell us of his
+personal love for the Blessed Eucharist, and especially of his ecstatic
+devotion in offering the great Sacrifice. To the close of his long life,
+even when his failing sight could no longer distinguish the figure of the
+Crucified stamped upon the Host, nothing but grave sickness could hold
+him back from daily celebration. Sometimes he swooned from the excess of
+the sweetness with which his soul was inundated during the canon of the
+Mass.
+
+On one such occasion not only did he faint, but he seemed on the point of
+expiring, so that the terrified server reported the matter to the
+Provost. Attributing the faintness to advancing age and weakness, the
+Superior was about to forbid the holy old man to celebrate any more, when
+Blessed John humbly besought him to forbear, assuring him that the swoon
+was due not to the failing of years but to the overpowering of divine
+grace, _non propter senium sed divinae gratiae collatum xenium_. "Even
+to-day," he added, "Jesus Christ appeared to me, and filling my soul with
+a deliciousness all divine, He said to my heart, _Thou art Mine and I am
+thine_."
+
+Such heavenly favours seem to have been by no means rare with our Saint.
+He was frequently ravished with a vision of Our Divine Lord in His sacred
+Humanity. Christ appeared to him, accompanied by His Blessed Mother and a
+numerous retinue of Saints, and conversed familiarly with him. On one
+such occasion, penetrating his whole being with a sense of wondrous
+sweetness, He greeted him with ineffable condescension thus: "Thou art My
+dear son, in whom I am well pleased." Then Jesus Christ embraced him and
+presented him to Our Lady and the attendant Saints with the words:
+"Behold My chosen servant!"
+
+
+
+
+ VII
+
+ Ruysbroeck's Tree
+
+
+Whenever Blessed John felt the Spirit of God full upon him, even the
+solitude of the cloister was not sufficiently retired for the intimacy of
+the divine union. He would wander away into the depths of the forest
+surrounding the monastery, there to abandon himself to the action of the
+Holy Ghost undisturbed. On these occasions also he was wont to take with
+him a stylus and a wax tablet, in order to jot down such thoughts and
+lights as he was moved to preserve in writing. Of these notes a fair copy
+was made on his return to the Priory. Towards the end of his days, when
+his sight was failing and otherwise the effort of making these notes was
+too much for him, one of the Canons always accompanied him into the
+forest to write down at his dictation whatever he was moved to
+communicate. Sometimes days or whole weeks would pass, and for want of
+inspiration not a line nor a word would be added to the treatise in hand.
+But when again the Spirit breathed, he continued from the very sentence
+or phrase where he had paused, just as if there had been no interval
+between.
+
+One day the Saint had retired as usual into the forest, and the Brethren,
+knowing his occupation, respected his privacy. But when hours passed and
+there was no sign of his return, they became alarmed and set out to scour
+the woods in search of him. One of the Canons was especially intimate
+with the Prior and loved him most tenderly. Perhaps his anxiety urged him
+ahead of the rest. In a glade of the forest his eye lighted upon a
+wondrous scene. He perceived a tree as it were in flames. On nearer
+approach he discovered that it was in fact encircled with fire. And under
+the tree, in the midst of the mysterious conflagration, John Ruysbroeck
+was seated, manifestly rapt in ecstasy.
+
+The memory of this miracle was never lost in the Community. For
+generations the tree was known and venerated as _Ruysbroeck's Tree_. At
+the close of the fifteenth century the Prior, James van Dynter, planted a
+lime-tree in the same place, which received the respect shown hitherto to
+the original, which presumably had died down. When in 1577 the Canons
+were obliged to abandon Groenendael on account of the vexations of the
+religious wars, it is said that this tree withered away until only its
+bark was left; but when the Community returned in 1607, it revived and
+flourished again.
+
+This episode also has fixed the traditional representation of Blessed
+John Ruysbroeck. He is usually pictured seated under a tree, a stylus in
+his hand and a wax tablet resting on his knee, while Saint and tree alike
+are encircled in brilliant rays of celestial light.
+
+
+
+
+ VIII
+
+ A Director of Souls
+
+
+It is no wonder that as the fame of these and similar marvels spread
+abroad, multitudes of the faithful, young and old, clergy and laity,
+flocked to see and hear the holy Prior of Groenendael. They came to him
+from Flanders, Brabant, Holland, Germany, and France. Ruysbroeck received
+all with unvarying simple courtesy, and his unpremeditated words were
+ever found to meet exactly the needs of each. Many placed themselves
+unreservedly in his hands, and frequently sought his direction by
+correspondence, or came long distances to consult him in person.
+
+One of these penitents was the Baroness van Marke, of Rhode-St.-Agatha,
+which lies midway between Groenendael and Louvain. This lady conceived
+such a veneration for the holy Prior that when she went to visit him, she
+walked the journey, pilgrimwise, barefoot. Finally, his exhortations to
+flee and despise the passing vanities of the world prevailed so much with
+her that she entered a Convent of Poor Clares in Cologne, and her son
+Ingelbert joined the Community of Groenendael.
+
+We are told of another disciple, who once fell into a grievous sickness
+and at the same time into a still more grievous affliction of spirit. She
+sent for Blessed John, begging him to visit her. She told him of her
+distress; behold, she was abandoned by God, on the one hand no health or
+strength was left her to perform her accustomed works of mercy, and on
+the other hand physical suffering took away all taste for prayer! What
+was she to do? "You can do nothing more pleasing to God, my dear child,"
+responded the Saint, "than simply and utterly to submit to His holy will.
+Strive to forsake your own desires and to give Him thanks for all
+things." Such unction accompanied these simple and characteristic words
+that the good lady felt deeply consoled, and she repined no more.
+
+Among the more famous to frequent Groenendael, there to sit and learn at
+the feet of Ruysbroeck, is mentioned the well-known German mystic Tauler.
+But authorities are divided at present as to whether or no these visits
+to Groenendael can be fitted in with other ascertained facts of Tauler's
+life. However, it is certain that Tauler was well acquainted with the
+writings of our Saint; to a great extent he followed his method, and at
+times, in the free-and-easy style of those days, he did not hesitate to
+transfer bodily from Ruysbroeck's volumes into his own.
+
+
+
+
+ IX
+
+ Ruysbroeck and Gerard Groote
+
+
+A greater than Tauler, and one whose influence was eventually far more
+widespread, undoubtedly owed much to the recluse of Groenendael and
+freely acknowledged Blessed John his master. This was the famous Gerard
+Groote, the founder, as already noted, of the _Devout Brothers and
+Sisters of the Common Life_, and through them of the Windesheim
+Congregation of Canons Regular. The occasion and circumstances of
+Groote's first visit to Groenendael are narrated by the Venerable Thomas
+a Kempis in his _Vita Gerardi Magni_. The passage is so graphic and
+characteristic that it is well worth transcribing.[4]
+
+"The pious and humble Master Gerard, hearing of the great and widespread
+fame of John Ruysbroeck, a monk and Prior of the Monastery of Gruenthal,
+near Brussels, went to the parts about Brabant, although the journey was
+long, in order to see in bodily presence this holy and most devout
+Father; for he longed to see face to face, and with his own eyes, one
+whom he had known hitherto only by common report and by his books; and to
+hear with his own ears that voice utter its words from a living human
+mouth--a voice as gracious as if it were the very mouthpiece of the Holy
+Ghost. He took with him therefore that revered man, Master John Cele, the
+director of the School of Zwolle, a devout and faithful lover of Jesus
+Christ; for their mind and heart were one in the Lord, and the fellowship
+of each was pleasant to the other, and this resolve was kindled within
+them that their journey, which was undertaken for the sake of spiritual
+edification, should redound in the case of each to the Glory of God.
+
+"There went also with them a faithful and devout layman, named Gerard the
+shoemaker, as their guide upon the narrow way, and their inseparable
+companion in this happy undertaking.
+
+"When they came to the place called Gruenthal, they saw no lofty or
+elaborate buildings therein, but rather all the signs of simplicity of
+life and poverty, such as marked the first footsteps of our Heavenly
+King, when He, the Lord of Heaven, came upon this earth as a Virgin's
+Son, and in exceeding poverty. As they entered the gate of the monastery,
+that holy Father, the devout Prior, met them, being a man of great age,
+of kindly serenity, and one to be revered for his honourable character.
+He it was whom they had come to see, and saluting them with the greatest
+benignity as they advanced, and being taught by a revelation from God, he
+called upon Gerard by his very name and knew him, though he had never
+seen him before. After this salutation he took them with him into the
+inner parts of the cloister, as his most honoured guests, and with a
+cheerful countenance and a heart yet more joyful showed them all due
+courtesy and kindness, as if he were entertaining Jesus Christ Himself.
+
+"Gerard abode there for a few days conferring with this man of God about
+the Holy Scriptures; and from him he heard many heavenly secrets which,
+as he confessed, were past his understanding, so that in amazement he
+said with the Queen of Sheba, 'O excellent Father, thy wisdom and thy
+knowledge exceedeth the fame which I heard in mine own land; for by thy
+virtues thou hast surpassed thy fame.' After this he returned with his
+companions to his own city, greatly edified; and being as it were a
+purified creature, he pondered over what he had heard in his mind and
+often dwelt thereon in his heart; also he committed some of Ruysbroeck's
+sayings to writing, that they might not be forgotten.
+
+"This sojourn on his visit to the Prior was not a time of idleness, nor
+was the discourse of so holy a father barren; but the instruction of his
+living voice gave nurture to a fuller love and an increase of fresh zeal,
+as he testifies in a letter which he sent to these same brethren in the
+Gruenthal, saying: 'I earnestly desire to be commended to your director
+and Prior, the footstool of whose feet I would fain be both in this life
+and in the life to come; for my heart is welded to him beyond all other
+men by love and reverence. I do still burn and sigh for your presence, to
+be renewed and inspired by your spirit and to be a partaker thereof.'"
+
+Other details of this interesting visit are supplied by the biographers
+of Ruysbroeck. Speaking in the fullness of the intimacy that had sprung
+up between them, Gerard Groote ventured to express surprise that, in
+dealing with the sublime matters which usually formed the subject of his
+discourse, the holy Prior should employ words and phrases which laid him
+open to the charge of those very errors, especially pantheism, against
+which his writings were commonly directed. It was then that Ruysbroeck
+declared that he had never set down aught in his books save by the
+inspiration of the Holy Ghost and in the presence of the Ever Blessed
+Trinity. This solemn assurance the holy man repeated to his brother
+Canons on his deathbed.
+
+On another point also, like the trained and exact theologian he was,
+Gerard Groote wished to correct his friend. He insisted that the
+boundless confidence which Ruysbroeck expressed in the mercy of God
+seemed to savour somewhat of presumption, and he proceeded to quote the
+most terrifying passages from Scripture anent the penalties of the
+wicked. Blessed John quietly replied: "Master Gerard, I assure you that
+you have quite failed to inspire me with fear. I am ready to bear with
+unruffled soul whatever the Lord shall destine for me in life or in
+death. I can conceive of nothing better, nothing safer, nothing more
+sweet. All my desires are restricted to this, that our Lord may ever find
+me prepared to accomplish His holy will."
+
+This first visit was the beginning of most cordial relations between
+Ruysbroeck and Gerard Groote. The latter returned several times to
+Groenendael and resided there for months together. He also corresponded
+frequently with the holy Prior and the Canons and translated some of our
+Saint's works into Latin. He read over his MSS. before publication, and
+begged him at times to change or modify expressions which might give a
+handle to the hostile or scandal to the weak. The writings of Ruysbroeck
+were likewise among those which were the most frequently transcribed and
+multiplied by the copyists of the _Devout Brothers of the Common Life_. A
+few years later one of the most diligent and skilled of these scribes was
+the future author of the _Imitation of Christ_.
+
+
+
+
+ X
+
+ Ruysbroeck and Windesheim
+
+
+In fact, widespread as was the influence of Blessed John Ruysbroeck on
+his contemporaries and incalculable as was the fruit of his writings in
+the many cloisters, through which they were rapidly diffused, the means
+by which Divine Providence chose chiefly to preserve and propagate his
+power was precisely this friendship with Gerard Groote. Gerard
+continually strove to imbue his own disciples with the spirit which he
+had imbibed from the Prior of Groenendael. For himself and for his
+followers he took as a rule of life the motto of Ruysbroeck, _to make it
+a chief study to meditate upon the life of Jesus Christ_. "Let the
+fountain-head of thy study and thy mirror of life be first the Gospel of
+Christ, for there is the life of Christ." The Scriptures should be read
+rather than the Fathers, and the New Testament more than the Old, _for
+there is the life of Christ_. And herein again what is profitable for a
+devout and spiritual life is to be sought rather than the subtleties of
+theology and the schools.
+
+When a friend of Gerard's, Reinalt Minnenvosch, projected the founding of
+a monastery, Groote advised him to establish a Priory of Canons Regular
+on the model of Groenendael. The Canonry of St. Saviour's at Emstein was
+the result. At Groote's request, a professed priest came from Groenendael
+to initiate the new Religious into the Canonical Life; and later it was
+at Emstein that the first members of Gerard's own Congregation of
+Windesheim made their noviciate preparatory to Profession.
+
+This was after Gerard Groote's death, but it was in accord with his
+express desire. Wishful to establish a Religious Institute in connection
+with his _Devout Brothers and Sisters of the Common Life_, who, whether
+lay or cleric, were dwelling together without the binding force of the
+vows, Gerard fixed upon the Order of Canons Regular for this purpose,
+principally, so Thomas a Kempis assures us, because of his profound
+veneration for the Prior and Brethren of Groenendael. "He was moved to
+institute this Order of Regulars chiefly by his singular reverence and
+love for the venerable Dom John Ruysbroeck, the first Prior of
+Groenendael, and of the other most exemplary Brethren living there
+religiously in the Regular Order."
+
+For further information concerning the _Devout Brothers_ and the
+Windesheim Canons the reader is referred to the various works which have
+been published of late years on the Venerable a Kempis.[5] Both Brothers
+and Canons were living examples of the mystic teachings of Ruysbroeck put
+to the test of daily practice. Flight from the pleasures and vanities of
+the world, unbounded humility, constant meditation on the life and
+especially the Passion of Jesus Christ, the most complete and absolute
+abandonment to the Divine Will, an intense devotion full of the personal
+love of God--these were the salient points of Blessed John's example and
+doctrine, perpetuated and propagated by the works, words, and writings of
+the Windesheim Canons Regular and their secular associates, the _Brothers
+of the Common Life_. It is scarcely needful to remark also that these are
+the chief features of the teaching of the _Imitation of Christ_, that
+golden little treatise, which, embodying the whole spirit of the School
+of Windesheim and Groenendael, has carried and still carries light,
+healing, and consolation to thousands upon thousands who have never so
+much as heard of either Windesheim or John Ruysbroeck.[6]
+
+It may be mentioned here that in 1409 the Priory of Groenendael was
+instituted the Mother-house of a congregation of that name. But a few
+years later this congregation, with its dependent Priories, was
+affiliated to the more numerous Windesheim Canons. Thus the twin
+institutes were merged into one, and the Windesheim Congregation became
+the direct heir of the virtues and teaching of Blessed John Ruysbroeck.
+But finally Windesheim was aggregated to the Lateran Congregation of
+Canons Regular; and thus it is that to-day the Canons Regular of the
+Lateran are privileged, with the clergy of Mechlin, to keep with proper
+Office and Mass the Feast of Blessed John Ruysbroeck.
+
+Connected thus intimately with Gerard Groote and Tauler, it is not
+surprising that Ruysbroeck shares with these, as with a Kempis, Suso, and
+others, the doubtful honour of being proclaimed in certain quarters as a
+precursor of the sixteenth-century "Reformation." In support of this
+position it is easy enough to gather together expressions of the most
+poignant sorrow and of the most bitter invective for the lax morality of
+clergy and laity, mendicant friars, and highly placed prelates. But the
+same argument would convict several Popes of being heralds of Luther! Not
+to labour the point at unnecessary length in a non-controversial work of
+this kind, let it suffice to mention the touchstone which never fails to
+distinguish the genuine reformer from the mere sectarian: while boldly
+attacking the vices of those in office, Blessed John Ruysbroeck never
+assails the office itself. He always speaks in the most submissive and
+reverent terms of the authority of the Church and of the dignity of the
+priesthood. His writings without exception treat in the orthodox sense on
+the subject of grace, the sacraments, etc. We have already remarked his
+ardent devotion towards the Blessed Eucharist. To this may be added a
+most tender love for the Virgin Mother of God. Note, finally, his
+frequent and fervent exhortations to the perfect observance of the three
+vows of religion, and one can imagine how comfortable he would feel in
+the company, say, of Luther and his renegade nun!
+
+
+
+
+ XI
+
+ The Writings of Ruysbroeck
+
+
+Blessed John's writings cannot be called voluminous, and yet for a purely
+contemplative author they are comparatively considerable. The list of his
+works authenticated up to the present--for earnest students are at work,
+and other MSS. may yet be discovered--comprises the following, giving an
+English equivalent for the Old Flemish or Latin titles: (1) The Kingdom
+of the Lovers of God; (2) The Splendour of the Spiritual Espousals; (3)
+The Brilliant; (4) Of Four Subtle Temptations; (5) Of the Christian
+Faith; (6) Of the Spiritual Tabernacle; (7) Of the Seven Cloisters; (8)
+The Mirror of Eternal Life, or, a Treatise on the Blessed Sacrament; (9)
+The Seven Degrees of Spiritual Love; (10) Of the Supreme Truth; (11) The
+Twelve Beguines. And these others are less certainly proved to be his:
+(12) Of the Twelve Virtues; (13) Seven Letters; (14) A Summary of the
+Spiritual Life; (15) Two Canticles; (16) A Short Prayer.
+
+Pending a complete and faithful English rendering of all these works, the
+following descriptive analysis of the principal of them may not prove
+unacceptable.
+
+
+ The Kingdom of the Lovers of God
+
+This treatise is a detailed interpretation and a mystic application of
+the text adapted from Wisdom x. 10: _Justum deduxit Dominus per vias
+rectus et ostendit illi regnum Dei_ in the Breviary Office of a
+Confessor. Upon these words Ruysbroeck bases a division of his work into
+five books. The first book treats of God, _Dominus_, His power and
+sovereignty. In the second Blessed John explains how Christ conducted,
+_deduxit_, man into the liberty of the children of God, chiefly by
+redemption and by the institution of the seven Sacraments. In the third
+he treats of the just man, _justum_, and works out eight items which
+render a man just, both in the active and in the contemplative life. The
+fourth book expounds the right ways, _vias rectas_, which lead to the
+Kingdom of God: _the exterior way_, namely, the material universe of
+three heavens and four elements, the contemplation of which should excite
+man to the praise of the Creator; _the way of natural light_, the
+acquisition of the seven virtues; finally, _the supernatural and divine
+way_, the infusion of the supernatural virtues and the gifts of the Holy
+Ghost. In the last book we have a disquisition on the kingdom of God,
+_ostendit illi regnum Dei_, of which we are told there are five aspects
+or divisions: the sensible kingdom, exterior to God, in which the author
+finds scope for a description of the last judgment and the qualities of
+risen bodies, the kingdom of nature, the kingdom of the Scriptures, the
+kingdom of grace and of glory, and finally the Divine Kingdom itself,
+which is God. This treatise is full of reflections and considerations of
+the most elevated order, and there is much therein that is by no means
+easy to grasp or understand.
+
+
+ The Splendour of the Spiritual Espousals
+
+For his text Ruysbroeck takes Matt. xxv. 6, _Ecce, sponsus venit, exite
+obviam ei_. He makes a division into three books, treating respectively
+of the active, the interior, and the contemplative life. Each book is
+further subdivided into four parts, corresponding to the four divisions
+of the text in each stage of perfection as follows. Ruysbroeck expounds
+and illustrates (1) the role of the vision, _ecce_; man must turn his
+eyes to God; (2) the divers comings of the Bridegroom, _sponsus venit_,
+the manner, namely, in which God approaches the soul; (3) the going forth
+of the soul on the path of the virtues, _exite_; (4) and finally, the
+embrace of the soul and the heavenly spouse. In no one work does Blessed
+Ruysbroeck give a complete account of his mystic teaching; but if his
+system were to be examined and explained by any one book, it would
+certainly be this of the _Spiritual Espousals_. It has always been
+considered as his chief work, and in this light also Ruysbroeck himself
+seems to have regarded it. He sent a copy of it himself to his friends in
+Germany, and expressed the desire that it might be multiplied and made
+known even to the foot of the mountains. In the four last chapters of the
+second book the author confutes some current errors of the day,
+apparently the teachings of Bloemardinne and almost certainly of Eckart.
+
+
+ The Brilliant
+
+Gerard Naghel tells us the story of the origin of this treatise. One day
+Ruysbroeck had been conversing with a certain hermit on matters
+spiritual, when on parting the latter begged the holy Prior to commit the
+matter of his discourse to writing for the edification of himself and
+others. To satisfy his desire, says Naghel, Ruysbroeck composed this
+work, which contains instruction sufficient to lead a man to perfection.
+The treatise seems a supplement, and in some sense a corrective of the
+_Spiritual Espousals_. After a brief description of the means by which
+the just man acquires the interior life and rises thence to the
+contemplative, the holy man shows how the precious stone, or white
+counter, _calculus candidus_, of Rev. ii. 17, is no other than Christ
+Himself, Who gives Himself without reserve to contemplative souls. God
+calls all men to intimate union with Himself. But not all men respond to
+His appeal. Sinners utterly despise the invitation; while the just
+respond, though these again in varying degrees. Some keep the
+commandments chiefly from fear of the penalties attached to
+transgression; they are as _mercenaries_. Others sincerely endeavour to
+conquer nature and unruly desires, they have true faith in God, and God
+is the only motive of their actions; these are the _faithful servants_.
+However, these still suffer many impediments from the exterior life which
+they lead, and a more intimate union is attained by the _intimate
+friends_, who observe the counsels as well as the precepts. Finally, the
+highest degree of union and contemplation is attained by the _hidden
+sons_, who are utterly divested of all self-love and self-seeking, and
+whose life is hidden with Christ in God.
+
+
+ Of Four Subtle Temptations
+
+In this tract Ruysbroeck inveighs against the chief errors and abuses of
+his own times. The first, says Ruysbroeck, is love of ease and comfort,
+indolence, the source of sensuality, and luxury, an abuse very prevalent
+in monasteries and among the clergy. The second is hypocrisy, which,
+under the cloak of a seeming austerity, claiming even visions and
+ecstasies, conceals a corrupt interior and depraved morals. The third is
+the desire to understand everything, to attain to the contemplation of
+the divine nature by the sheer force of the intellect, without the
+assistance of God's grace. The fourth and the most formidable is the
+so-called _liberty of spirit_, the error and heresy of those who, casting
+aside all interior effort, pretend to acquire contemplation by ludicrous
+mortifications, by extravagant bodily posturing, and by a senseless
+quietism. The third error is that of Eckart, and the fourth was proper to
+the Brothers and Sisters of the Free Spirit. Ruysbroeck concludes his
+tract with a discussion of the ways and means of avoiding these snares,
+viz. by holiness of life, the practice of all the virtues, obedience to
+superiors and the authority of the Church, and imitation of Jesus Christ.
+
+
+ Of the Christian Faith
+
+A dogmatic commentary on the Athanasian Creed. Starting with the
+principle that the true Christian Faith is indispensable for the union of
+the soul with God, Ruysbroeck proceeds to explain the chief tenets of our
+belief, and to show their bearing on the interior life. His explanations
+are brief, his speculations sublime. The more forcibly to exhort to the
+practice of virtue, he dwells at considerable length on the last
+judgment, on the rewards of the just, and on the penalties decreed to
+each particular class of sinner. His picture here of the happiness of
+heaven and the sufferings of hell is most apt and striking.
+
+
+ Of the Spiritual Tabernacle
+
+The most lengthy this of all Ruysbroeck's works. It consists of a mystic
+interpretation, a long-drawn-out allegory, in which the Tabernacle of the
+Old Testament is considered as a type of the course of love. The outer
+and the inner courts, the altar of sacrifice, the hangings, the pillars
+and their sockets, the rings, the names of the workmen, the seven-branch
+candlestick, the brazen laver, the priestly ornaments, the ephod and the
+twelve stones, the holy oils and the incense, the table of the loaves of
+proposition, the different sacrifices with the distinction between the
+clean and the unclean animals, the holy of holies, the ark and its
+appurtenances,--all are applied with a wealth of detail, which, however,
+never lacks dignity, and with a wondrous skill to Ruysbroeck's usual
+three divisions of the exterior moral life, the interior, and the purely
+contemplative. The Tabernacle was a subject which naturally lent itself
+to allegory and to mystic interpretation, and Hugh of St. Victor had
+already preceded our author, as doubtless also he inspired him with his
+_De Arca mystica_. Though sometimes the thread is lost in the
+multiplicity of details, this treatise is most attractive and contains
+some of the best pages of Blessed Ruysbroeck.
+
+
+ Of the Seven Cloisters
+
+This was composed for a penitent of our Saint, Margaret von Meerbeke, a
+Poor Clare of Brussels, and it gives a rule of life for Religious. The
+holy Prior traces out an order of the day, insisting especially on the
+need of cultivating the interior life; he mentions the virtues which his
+penitent should exercise, and inveighs against the abuses which have
+crept into convents, pointing out the danger of communication with the
+outer world. In all things Margaret should imitate the example of her
+foundress, St. Clare, who gained her glorious place in Heaven by shutting
+herself up within the seven cloisters. After dwelling on these, viz., by
+expounding seven means of retreating from the world and living close to
+God, the author turns again to practical details and condemns the
+softness and luxury of certain Religious in their dress. Each day, he
+says, should close with a peep into three books: the book of our own
+conscience, which shows the imperfections which must be purified; the
+book of the Life and Passion of our Lord, which we should imitate; and
+finally the book of eternal life, to which we ought to tend with all our
+strength.
+
+
+ The Mirror of Eternal Life
+
+This also was addressed to a nun, probably the same Poor Clare. It
+explains again the three degrees of the mystic life, but with special
+reference now to the cloister and the Blessed Eucharist. Some are in the
+purgative way: if they persevere in virtue and progress in perfection,
+they shall partake of the table, Ps. xxiii. 5, which is no other than the
+banquet of the Holy Eucharist. Ruysbroeck dwells on the virtues necessary
+for the worthy reception of the Sacrament, and narrates the manner of its
+institution by our Divine Lord at the Last Supper, showing what were the
+matter and form used by Christ. He discourses on the evidence of God's
+love to be found in this mystery of the altar; and then refutes
+objections as to the manner of the Divine Presence, expressly teaching
+Transubstantiation. Those who approach the altar rails are divided by him
+into seven classes, and here the author shows a wondrous and intimate
+knowledge of the working of the human heart. The treatise closes with a
+description of the contemplative life.
+
+
+ The Seven Degrees of Spiritual Love
+
+In a simile familiar to spiritual writers of all ages, Ruysbroeck
+compares life to a ladder, or stairway of seven steps, leading up to
+perfection and union with God. These stages are respectively: (1)
+Conformity with the holy will of God; (2) Voluntary poverty; (3) Purity
+of soul and chastity of body; (4) Humility, with her four daughters,
+obedience, gentleness, patience, and the forsaking of self-will; (5) The
+desire of the divine glory, involving three spiritual exercises, namely,
+acts of love and adoration, acts of supplication, and acts of
+thanksgiving; (6) The contemplative and perfect life, by which man
+finally attains the last stage of, (7) sublime ignorance. (Compare Walter
+Hilton's "darksome lightness" in his _Scale of Perfection_.)
+
+
+ Of the Supreme Truth
+
+This treatise was issued by way of explanation of some difficult passages
+in his first work, concerning especially the gift of counsel, and indeed
+as a kind of defence and apology of his whole mystic teaching. He
+protests that he has never admitted that the creature can be raised to a
+state of identity with God, and once more he explains his conception of
+the union of the soul with her Divine Spouse. There is a union common to
+all the just, brought about by the grace of God, with the forsaking of
+vice, the practice of virtue, and submission to the authority of the
+Church. Then there is a more intimate union, like unto that of fire and
+iron, which, when united, seem but one matter, though in fact they remain
+two distinct substances. Those who attain this love God and live in His
+presence, but as yet arrive not at a complete knowledge of His essence.
+After this again there is even a yet closer union, whereby the Eternal
+Father and man become one, not indeed with oneness of substantial unity,
+but in a oneness of love and bliss. It is evident that language here
+fails the holy author to express the sublimity of his concept and his
+experience; in his endeavour to show the intimacy of this last method of
+union he is driven to use expressions which, taken as they stand, have
+that pantheistic ring which it is his first object here to disclaim.
+
+
+ The Twelve Beguines
+
+After the _Tabernacle_, this is the most lengthy of our Saint's works,
+and it is of great importance as throwing considerable light on
+Ruysbroeck's ideas and system. We are introduced to twelve Beguines
+discoursing together on the love of Jesus Christ, whence an easy transit
+to the real subject-matter of the tract, the contemplative life. To
+attain the state of contemplation, four conditions are required: a ray of
+divine light, producing illumination, whence, on the part of the soul, a
+looking at God, or speculation, passing into contemplation, and this
+stage again merging into a state of sublime, ecstatic love. There are
+four distinct acts or states of love, corresponding respectively to each
+of these stages. Ruysbroeck also shows here the action of the Holy Ghost
+in forming the soul to a more intimate knowledge of God.
+
+The second part of the book then opens with a fresh order of ideas.
+Ruysbroeck divides mankind into good Christians and wicked men. Holiness
+consists of the union of the active and the contemplative life. There
+are, however, some who practise neither one nor the other and yet give
+themselves out as the most holy of all. Among these Ruysbroeck proceeds
+to distinguish four kinds of errors or heresies: (1) Errors against the
+Holy Ghost and His Grace; (2) Errors against God the Father and His
+power; (3) Errors against God the Son and His Sacred Humanity; and
+finally errors against God and all that makes up Christendom, namely, the
+Scriptures, the Church, and the Sacraments. On the other hand, the good
+Christian is one who loves God with all his heart and mind and soul and
+strength.
+
+Blessed John then goes on to discourse of the Divine Nature in Unity and
+Trinity. He also discusses man in his material and in his spiritual
+nature. The spiritual part of man alone he says, can elevate him to the
+mystic life (of which once more the three ways are expounded), and alone
+also can show him the reasons wherefore God created the universe. The
+three ways of the mystic life are symbolised by the three heavens. The
+stars and the planets exercise an influence on terrestrial creatures,
+that is to say, upon our bodies, for God alone can touch the soul,
+leading it to good and restraining it from evil. Thence also Ruysbroeck
+describes the various temperaments of men by reference to the planets and
+their conjunction with the signs of the zodiac.
+
+A chapter on our Divine Lord, held up as the Model Religious, serves as a
+transition to the third part, which is a treatise, largely symbolical, on
+the Passion of Christ, divided and subdivided according to the sequence
+of the Canonical Hours.
+
+This is perhaps the most discursive of Ruysbroeck's works, and in that
+sense the most difficult to follow, because of the number and length of
+the digressions. For instance, when he comes to speak of the planet
+Venus, he mentions the sign of the Balance, and this suggests a whole
+treatise of thirty-nine chapters on the _Balance of Divine Love_. The
+love of God for us, and all the blessings, spiritual and temporal, which
+flow from it, are cast into one pan of the balance, and we must weigh
+down the other pan with our virtues; and there follows a long
+disquisition on the virtues we should practise, prominent among which, as
+usual, he ranks humility. Here, further, he finds occasion to work out
+his distinction between the spirit and the reasonable soul; and the whole
+digression closes with a sad and striking comparison between the fervour
+of primitive Christianity and the laxity of his own days.
+
+Bossuet very severely criticised this work, holding it up as an example
+of forced allegories, and so forth, and speaking of Ruysbroeck as
+involved in the vain speculations of astrologers. This opinion, though
+not surprising, is not just, for the author is careful to insist that the
+planets have not influence on the will of man as such. But it is natural
+that Bossuet should regard such works with suspicion and dislike, for he
+had considerable trouble with false mystics, the quietists of his own
+day; and even Ruysbroeck's own friends and contemporaries found much in
+the volume that was strange, even to startling, and Gerard Groote advised
+him not to publish it in its entirety.
+
+
+ Of the Twelve Virtues
+
+The reader will not be surprised to learn that Blessed John contrives
+here to speak of considerably more virtues than just twelve. The
+principal and first is said to be humility, and this again twofold--one
+humility inspired by the contemplation of the power of God, the other by
+the consideration of His goodness. The daughter of humility is obedience,
+and obedience naturally involves denial of self-will, poverty of spirit,
+and patience in adversities. He then proceeds to treat very beautifully
+and at length of interior detachment, remarking that to secure this it is
+not necessary to flee external occupations, but that the attainment of
+perfection consists in a perfect abandonment to the will of God and the
+forsaking of our own will. When we have arrived thus far, we shall no
+longer sin. For past sins there must be continued sorrow, but external
+penances are not equally for all. And those who cannot endure great
+bodily austerities must apply themselves to imitate the austere life of
+Christ by interior self-denial.
+
+
+ The Letters of Ruysbroeck
+
+These are spiritual letters, of course, conferences in epistolary form.
+
+The first is addressed to Margaret van Meerbeke, the Poor Clare of
+Brussels mentioned above. Ruysbroeck writes: "When I was at your convent
+last summer, you appeared sad; methought God or some special friend had
+forsaken you; therefore am I writing you as follows." And he proceeds to
+console his spiritual daughter, and to warn her against the dangers which
+may be found even in the cloister. He declaims against the abuses which
+sometimes creep into monasteries, and almost always through _self-will_,
+whereas every Religious should strive to have all things _in common_, to
+be submissive to superiors and affable to all. The holy author closes
+with a description of the terrible punishments to be meted out to those
+Religious who fail to keep their rule and lead a holy life.
+
+The second, addressed to Matilda, the widow of John of Culemberg, is of
+more importance. After treating of the Apostles' Creed, the seven gifts
+of the Holy Ghost, the Decalogue, the vows of religion and the precepts
+of the Church, the Incarnation and death of Christ, Ruysbroeck expounds
+the Catholic doctrine on the seven Sacraments, and especially the Blessed
+Eucharist. He describes the fruits which flow from a worthy Communion,
+and treats again of the three ways of the contemplative life, and
+describes the elements of superessential contemplation.
+
+The third was sent to three Recluses of Cologne. Blessed John exhorts
+them to persevere in their holy manner of life. He treats of the
+spiritual life, comparing Christ to the precious pearl, the hidden
+treasure. And finally he earnestly exhorts them to constant meditation on
+the Passion of Our Lord.
+
+The fourth was addressed to Catherine of Louvain, a devout young lady
+living in the world; and the other three were likewise sent to persons in
+the world. All are full of wise spiritual maxims, and all insist on the
+need of humility and the abnegation of self-will.
+
+
+
+
+ XII
+
+ The Teaching of Ruysbroeck[7]
+
+
+In no one work, as already remarked, does Blessed John Ruysbroeck give a
+complete outline of his doctrines; the elements rather are to be found
+dispersed among the various treatises.
+
+In common with most of the German mystics, Ruysbroeck starts from God and
+comes down to man, and thence rises again to God, showing how the two are
+so closely united as to become one. In His essence God is simple unity,
+the one supremely pure and supernatural being, devoid of all mode, in
+Himself still and immovable, and yet at the same time the first cause and
+active principle of all things. This principle is the divine _nature_,
+which does not in reality differ from the essence, and which is fruitful
+in the Trinity. The Father is the essential principle, and yet He is
+consubstantial with the other two Persons. The Son, the uncreated Image
+of the Father, is the Eternal Wisdom. The Holy Ghost, proceeding from the
+other two, and returning unto them, is the eternal Love, which unites
+Father and Son. As regards Persons, God is eternally active: as regards
+essence, He abides in unbroken repose. Creatures have been existing as
+ideas in God from all eternity.
+
+In man, whose body is merely a perishable instrument, there is a
+spiritual, immortal principle, like unto God, though less than He. In
+this principle Ruysbroeck distinguishes, with a distinction of the
+reason, soul and spirit; the former is the principle of the merely human
+life, uniting together the lower powers; the other is the principle of
+man's supernatural life in God, gathering together his higher faculties.
+The soul has four inferior powers: the _irascible_, and the
+_concupiscible_, which two become bestial when not under the ruling of a
+virtuous will; _reason_, by which man is distinguished from the brute,
+and _freedom of choice_, an exercise of the higher faculty of the will.
+The spirit has the three superior faculties, memory, understanding, and
+will. In every man likewise there is a triple unity, or oneness: the
+unity of the lower faculties in the soul, the unity of the higher in the
+spirit, and the unity of the whole being in God, on Whom all things
+essentially depend for their being.
+
+Blessed John delivers the accepted teaching of the Church on the Fall,
+the Incarnation and Redemption, on the need and on the means of divine
+grace, the institution of the Sacraments, the establishment of the
+Church, the gifts of the Holy Ghost, etc.
+
+But coming now to his more purely mystical doctrine, we find that
+Ruysbroeck distinguishes three degrees, or states--the active life, the
+interior life, and the contemplative life. The active life consists of
+the effort to conquer sin and to draw nigh to God by exterior works. Here
+in Christ is the Divine Exemplar, for in His life He practised the three
+fundamental virtues of humility, charity, and patience. Humility is the
+foundation of the whole building, and it is exercised chiefly in
+obedience, which engenders the abdication of our own will, and patience,
+or submission in all things to the holy will of God. When a man has
+arrived so far, he can exercise charity, shown at this stage chiefly by
+compassion for Christ suffering on the Cross for all men, and bringing
+with her the four cardinal virtues of prudence, temperance, fortitude,
+and justice, whereby also the Christian is enabled to fight and conquer
+his three deadly enemies, the devil, the world, and the flesh.
+Perseverance in this active life is crowned by union with God, a union
+wherein God alone is regarded as the exemplar and the final end, wherein
+He alone is sought and loved. Thus does a man become a _Faithful
+Servant_.
+
+As yet, however, there is only an imperfect knowledge of God, and to
+become more closely united with God, as an _Intimate Friend_, one must
+strive to attain the second stage of the mystic way, namely the _interior
+life_. For this three preliminary conditions are requisite. On the part
+of God, there must be a yet stronger movement of divine grace, and on the
+part of man, an absolute recollection, with freedom from sensible images,
+attachments, and cares, and then the gathering together of all the powers
+in the unity of the Spirit. Christ, then, the Eternal Sun, enkindles in
+the soul thus duly prepared a divine fire, which engenders a warm,
+sensible love, a devotion full of ardent desires, with thankfulness for
+the divine mercies and affliction at one's own unworthiness. Then, as the
+action of the sun draws up the moisture in the form of vapour, to fall
+back again in refreshing and fertilising showers of rain, so if the soul
+persevere Christ sends down a fresh shower of consolations, which fill
+the whole being with a chaste pleasure and an indescribable sweetness
+superior to all the delights of the earth, rising even to a species of
+spiritual intoxication, which may manifest itself in outward acts. As yet
+there are no severe trials for the soul, but she must beware of pride and
+presumption, and of leaning too much on these sensible delights instead
+of on the Divine Giver. Meanwhile the Sun of Justice is reaching its
+apogee in the heavens, and Christ draws up all the powers of the soul, so
+that the heart is enlarged and fit to burst with love, and at the same
+time it begins to suffer from the wound of love, because of the urgency
+of the power drawing upward and its own impotency to follow; whence also
+a spiritual languishing, a very madness and impatience, or fever of love,
+capable even of wasting the bodily strength. Love is liable to be so
+intense at this stage, that visions and ecstacies are granted; but at the
+same time care must be taken against the delusions of the evil one.
+
+But thence the Sun enters on the sign of the Virgin and its downward
+path, that is, Christ hides Himself and deprives the soul of the warmth
+of sensible love and the like. It is the autumn, the time of gathering
+the really ripe and lasting fruits; but to the soul a time of seeming
+abandonment, aridity, darkness, etc. She must then beg the prayers of
+others, be glad to leave herself in God's hands, willing to suffer and to
+sacrifice all sweetness. Likewise, she must be careful not to compromise
+God's favour by seeking earthly pleasures and delights, the consolations
+of human friendship, and so forth.
+
+Then there is a second coming of the Divine Spouse, bringing with Him the
+gifts of the Holy Ghost, whereby He adorns the three supreme faculties of
+the spirit. Pure simplicity empties the memory of all external images and
+renders it stable. Spiritual brightness gives the intelligence a sure
+discernment of the virtues. And a spiritual fervour arouses the will to a
+boundless love for God and men.
+
+There is yet a third coming, which affects the supreme union of the
+spirit with God. It is a species of intimate contact with God in the very
+depths of the soul. The intellect cannot comprehend the manner of this
+union, it can only witness its effects upon the reason and the will. The
+power of loving increases with the intimacy of this union, and the
+intimacy increases the power of love; and hence also a kind of loving
+strife ensues, each wishing to possess the other and each wishing to give
+himself to the other utterly.
+
+This is the apogee of the interior life, the meeting, the union of the
+soul with God. It may be brought about in three different ways: (1) Man,
+struck by a light coming forth from God, forsakes all images; he is
+plunged into the union of fruitive love; he meets God without any medium,
+a spirit like unto Him; it is the state of absolute repose in God, utter
+emptiness and leisure. (2) At other times man adores God and consumes
+himself in continual love, which ceaselessly feeds on the presence of
+God; it is the mediate stage, the state of affective love, needful for
+the attainment of the preceding. (3) Finally, it is possible to unite
+enjoyment with activity: man enjoys a most profound peace and produces
+all the acts of love; he receives God; and His gifts in the superior
+faculties, images and sensations in the lower powers; it is the most
+perfect state, the state of combined activity and repose.
+
+Even so, it is not the most sublime state. Above the interior life there
+is the superessential contemplative life; above the _faithful friends_
+there are the _Intimate Sons_ of God. This third stage of perfection can
+never be acquired by any act of the intelligence or will; and so sublime
+is it that he only who has experienced it can attempt its description,
+and then in terms the most halting and imperfect. This contemplation
+consists in an absolute purity and simplicity of the understanding; it is
+a knowledge and possession of God, without modes, without limits, without
+medium, without any consciousness of the difference of His qualities.
+Nevertheless, it is not God, it is the light by which He is seen. It is
+the death and destruction of self to behold only the Being eternal and
+absolute. Its essence is union with God, the still contemplation of God,
+abandonment to God, so that He alone acts, and not the soul. This repose
+of the spirit engenders a supernatural contemplation of the Trinity
+without any medium, a feeling of bliss unspeakable, a sublime ignorance;
+the last consciousness of the difference between God and the
+creature--being and nothingness--disappears.
+
+This is the honeymoon of Christ with the soul, to which the preceding
+stages are only a preparation. The spirit is led from brightness to
+brightness; and since no medium comes between it and the divine
+splendour, since the brightness by which it sees is the light itself
+which it sees, in a certain sense itself becomes this brightness; it
+attains a consciousness of its own superessential being, of the unity of
+its essence in God.
+
+
+
+
+ XIII
+
+ Some Appreciations
+
+
+Arrived thus at the summit of mystic speculation, Ruysbroeck finds
+himself on the confines of pantheism. However, he constantly insists, as
+we have already remarked, on the essential difference between the created
+spirit and the Spirit Eternal. Man, he says, must become deiform as far
+as that is possible for the creature; in the union with God it is not the
+difference of personality which is destroyed, it is only the difference
+of will and of thought, the desire to be anything apart in oneself which
+must disappear. He declares: "There where I assert that we are one in
+God, I must be understood in this sense that we are one in love, not in
+essence or in nature." His own strenuous opposition to the pantheists of
+his day proves his orthodoxy in this matter; yet it must be confessed
+again that from the very nature of his sublime discourse, his expressions
+are at times exceedingly bold and seemingly unorthodox. The truth is that
+the resources of human language prove inadequate to describe even the
+foretaste on earth of that "which eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor
+hath it entered into the heart of man to conceive."
+
+In B. John's own lifetime Gerard Groote was alarmed, and wrote once to
+the Canons of Groenendael of a Doctor in Theology, and of one Henry of
+Hesse, who had declared that the _Spiritual Espousals_ contained errors.
+Twenty years after Ruysbroeck's death, John Gerson, the famous Chancellor
+of Paris, in a letter to one Bartholomew, a Carthusian, who had given him
+a copy of this treatise, praises the first two books, but declares that
+the third teaches a kind of pantheism. This charge brought forth a
+lengthy and spirited defence from a Canon Regular of Groenendael, named
+John Scoenhoven; and then in a second letter Gerson maintained his
+objections, but acquitted the holy author of all intentional error. A
+similar stand was taken later by Bossuet, who excuses Ruysbroeck but
+condemns his manner of expression. It must be remembered that these two
+were engaged in confuting false mystics, and naturally they would
+discredit the writings of even a holy man, however orthodox, which would
+appear to favour the erroneous tenets of their opponents. Once more, we
+remark that not only was Ruysbroeck manifestly free from all culpable
+error, but throughout in his own mind he never lost sight of the
+essential distinctions, though at times his language must necessarily
+sound exaggerated to unaccustomed ears.
+
+On the other hand, to outweigh the unfavourable opinion of these two
+French critics, we have a host of writers of Ruysbroeck's own and
+subsequent days who not only defend the orthodoxy of his writings, but
+who also speak of them in terms of the deepest admiration, and regard
+their author almost as inspired.
+
+We have already seen the esteem in which the holy Prior of Groenendael
+and his writings were held by Tauler, Gerard Groote, and the Venerable
+Thomas a Kempis, and the vigour with which his memory was vindicated by
+John of Scoenhoven, But his advocates were by no means confined to the
+limits of his own Order, period, or country.
+
+Henry van Herp, a Franciscan, compiled a _Mirror of Perfection_, taken
+almost exclusively from the _Spiritual Espousals_; and by his means the
+teachings of Blessed Ruysbroeck were propagated among the followers of
+St. Francis, particularly of the Third Order.
+
+Denys the Carthusian is unstinted in his praises. He calls him the
+_Divine Doctor_. "I name him the Divine Doctor," he writes, "because his
+only master was the Holy Ghost. Of this the abundance of wisdom wherewith
+he was gifted is a sure guarantee.... Ignorant man as I am, I confess
+that nowhere have I found such sublimity and such knowledge, save in the
+works of Denys the Areopagyte. But in his writings the difficulty arises
+especially from the style, whereas it is not so with the Prior of
+Groenendael.... As they say of Hugh of St. Victor that he is another St.
+Augustin, so I will say of Ruysbroeck that he is another Denys the
+Areopagyte."
+
+Thomas of Jesus, a Carmelite, in his _De Divina Oratione_, frequently
+quotes from Ruysbroeck and adopts his method.
+
+The Carthusian Surius translated all the works of Ruysbroeck into Latin,
+and this translation has been the chief source of familiarity with the
+Belgian mystic for readers and writers not acquainted with his native
+tongue. The following extracts from the _Introduction_ to Surius's
+translation seem worth quoting for the sake of some who may imagine that
+the works of Blessed John Ruysbroeck can be of profit only to those who
+are far advanced in the contemplative life:
+
+"I do not believe there is a man who can approach these magnificent and
+simple pages without great and singular profit. Let none excuse himself
+from reading this book on the plea of the inaccessible sublimity of
+Ruysbroeck. The great man has accommodated himself to all, and the most
+abandoned soul on earth may find again on reading him the path of
+salvation. Arrows dart from the pages of Ruysbroeck, aimed by no hand of
+man, but by the hand of God; and deeply they embed themselves in the soul
+of the reader who is a sinner. Innocent reader, reader of unstained robe,
+Ruysbroeck is at once most lowly and most sublime. In his description of
+the _Spiritual Espousals_ he surpasses admiration, he surpasses praise;
+all the commencement, all the progress, all the height, all the
+transcendent perfection of the spiritual life is there."
+
+It was from Surius that the Benedictine Blosius, or Louis de Blois,
+learned to know and appreciate Ruysbroeck. His works are impregnated with
+the teachings of the Mystic of Groenendael, and his well-known
+_Consolatio Pusillanimum_ (_Comfort for the Fainthearted_) is replete
+with extracts taken from Ruysbroeck.
+
+Lessius, the Jesuit Theological Professor of Louvain University, used to
+say that he read Blessed John Ruysbroeck daily; and he would add that if
+his holy works had emanated from the Society they would not have remained
+in obscurity so long.
+
+In more recent times Ernest Hello brought our Saint to France by a
+translation of extracts, prefaced by an anonymous contemporary life,
+which was first published in 1869. In his own _Introduction_, Hello
+writes: "Among those who, soaring beyond the realms of human light, have
+sought refuge in the shadow of the great altar, the grandest, according
+to Denys the Carthusian, are St. Denys the Areopagyte and John Ruysbroeck
+the Admirable. St. Denys lays down the general laws of mystic theology,
+John Ruysbroeck applies them. St. Denys presents the lamp, John
+Ruysbroeck kindles the flame. Both are blind with excess of light, both
+immovable with excess of motion. Speech with them is a visit paid to men
+from motives of charity. Silence is their native land. The beauty of
+their language is the condescendence of their goodness; the sacred
+darkness in which they spread their eagle wings is their ocean, their
+booty, their glory."
+
+Reviewing the work of Hello, Louis Veuillot, the French Catholic
+publicist, remarked:
+
+"Ruysbroeck was illiterate. He was a humble Flemish priest of the
+fifteenth century. None the less, in the order of genius the uncultured
+Ruysbroeck, as a theologian, and consequently as a philosopher and a
+poet, is as far above Bossuet as Dante, for instance, is above Boileau.
+Face to face with the mysteries that shroud God and man, Bossuet seeks,
+argues, and, so to speak, gropes; Ruysbroeck knows, describes, or rather
+sings, and contemplates. This illiterate mystic of an obscure age finds
+himself at home in the sublime as in his own sphere; he speaks of what is
+familiar to him; the wise doctor of the world remains without. Bossuet
+does not enter, he does not open, he does not see. Bossuet spins words,
+Ruysbroeck pours out streams of light. It seems as if Bossuet were that
+mighty wind which was heard in the Upper Chamber; the brief words of
+Ruysbroeck are the tongues of fire, living and enlightening flame."
+
+Truly has Time brought its revenge in such a comparison by a compatriot
+of Bossuet with Ruysbroeck.
+
+Finally, Maeterlinck brought out his translation of the _Spiritual
+Espousals_ in 1891 with a characteristic appreciation of the Flemish
+mystic. And Maeterlinck's name has given a strong impetus to the
+popularity, so to speak, of Blessed Ruysbroeck in modern France. But
+neither of these translations can be regarded as authoritative or exact.
+
+The real, scholarly work towards extending and encouraging the cult of
+Blessed John Ruysbroeck, whether among the learned or the devout, is
+being performed, as is seemly, in the Catholic University of his native
+Belgium, namely, at Louvain, where a Chair has been instituted for the
+study of Old Flemish, chiefly for the sake of a correct understanding and
+rendering of the writings of the Holy Mystic of Groenendael.
+
+And here we may note that while it is customary with some to speak of
+Ruysbroeck as illiterate, this term must be taken in a strictly limited
+sense. Possibly, he could not have composed in fluent and elegant Latin:
+he was not a classical scholar; but certainly the Latin of the Bible and
+the Fathers was quite familiar to him. His writings, moreover, display an
+intimate knowledge of the Scriptures, the Fathers, theology, liturgy,
+apologetics. The natural science of the day was not unknown, as witness
+his applications from astronomy, and, it must be confessed, from
+astrology. With St. Denys the Areopagyte he shows himself very intimate,
+and his pages contain whole passages borrowed or adapted from St. Anselm,
+St. Ambrose, St. Gregory, and especially St. Augustin. Nearer his own
+days St. Bernard and Hugh of St. Victor seem to have influenced him very
+considerably.
+
+Experts in Old Flemish assure us that his style is most chaste, his
+language vigorous and clear. He was in truth a poet. When carried away by
+the beauty or sublimity of his subject, he indulges in a wealth of
+imagery, comparison, metaphor, astounding at times in boldness and
+originality. Occasionally even he lapsed into verse; but on the whole his
+verse is of less beauty and strength than his prose, as he himself seems
+to have been aware. On the other hand, his prose, after the manner of St.
+Bernard, St. Bonaventure, the two Victors, and later Thomas a Kempis,
+frequently gives evidence of deliberate rhythm and rhyme. In a word, far
+from being illiterate in the strict sense of the word, Blessed John was
+well acquainted with all the rules and arts of rhetoric; he knew how to
+employ them; and for all the sublimity of his discourse he did not
+disdain the use of these aids to interest and persuasion. Finally, it is
+to be noted that we are expressly informed by contemporaries of
+Ruysbroeck that he wrote by preference in the vulgar tongue, the more
+readily and effectively to meet and refute the erroneous doctrines
+published in the language of the people by the false mystics of his day.
+
+
+
+
+ XIV
+
+ Last Days
+
+
+Of the life of our Saint there remains little to be told save the record
+of the last days and the after glory. He had attained the good old age of
+eighty-eight, when his mother appeared in a vision to warn him to make
+ready for the approaching end. It must seem to us there was little need
+for such warning to one whose whole life had been one long preparation
+for the coming of the Spouse! He was taken with dysentery, accompanied by
+fever, and for his greater comfort, and that his lifelong friend van
+Coudenberg might be at hand to console and assist him, they put him to
+bed in the Provost's chamber. But the humble Prior besought them to treat
+him as any of the lowliest brethren and to bear him to the common
+infirmary. This was accordingly done. There he lay for a fortnight,
+gradually wasting away with the burning fever, and still more, doubtless,
+with his burning desires to be dissolved and to be with Christ, for he
+was constantly heard murmuring such ejaculations as that of the Psalmist,
+_Sicut desiderat cervus ad fontes aquarum_. He received all the last
+rites, and the end came in the greatest peace, while his weeping brethren
+prayed around him, on the Octave day of St. Catherine, V.M., December 2,
+1381, in the eighty-eighth year of his age, the sixty-fourth of his
+priesthood.
+
+That same night the Dean of Diest, watching by the holy remains, seemed
+to behold our Saint, clad in the priestly vestments and all radiant with
+glory, ascend the altar steps as if to celebrate the sacred mysteries.
+The Dean had always held Ruysbroeck in the deepest veneration and, having
+some skill in medicine, he had come over to Groenendael on hearing of the
+Prior's illness to see whether he could administer any relief. His
+charity was rewarded by the edifying sight of his happy death, and by
+this consoling vision after.
+
+And, as the Venerable a Kempis informs us, "God also revealed to Gerard
+[Groote] the death of this most beloved Father, which revelation he made
+manifest in the hearing of many of the citizens by the tolling of the
+bells; and more privately he made known to certain of his friends that
+the soul of the Prior, after but one hour of Purgatory, had passed to the
+glory of Heaven." We may note here that a Kempis himself was a child of
+three years when Ruysbroeck was called to his reward. Gerard Groote
+followed his friend and spiritual father to the grave three years later.
+
+The Groenendael Canons offered the holy Sacrifice and all the wonted
+suffrages for their departed Prior's repose, but they prayed with the
+conviction that they needed his impetration rather than he theirs. They
+were all eager to possess themselves of any little thing which had been
+his. Some cut off locks of his hair, and one managed to secure a tooth!
+Appropriately enough, this relic later cured a Mechlin lady of a severe
+attack of toothache. However, in all simplicity the Brethren laid Blessed
+John to rest in the little chapel which his own hands had helped to
+raise.
+
+Five years later his saintly associate, the Provost Francis van
+Coudenberg, rejoined him beyond the grave. The Bishop of Cambrai, John
+T'Serclaes, came to assist at the obsequies. During his visit he heard so
+much of the heroic virtues of the late Prior that he ordered an
+exhumation of Ruysbroeck's body with a view to a more honourable burial
+by the side of the Provost in the new church, which had now replaced the
+little chapel. They were all filled with awe and wonder to find the
+entire body, save only the tip of the nose, incorrupt, and the priestly
+vestments intact. Also a most sweet odour exhaled from the holy remains.
+To satisfy the devotion of the people, the Bishop commanded that the body
+should be exposed to their veneration for three days. On the third day,
+amid a vast concourse of the faithful, Ruysbroeck was laid to rest by the
+side and in the tomb of his lifelong friend van Coudenberg. Over the
+sepulchre was placed the following simple inscription:
+
+ _Hic jacet translatus Devotus Pater
+ D. Joannes de Ruysbroeck
+ I. Prior hujus monasterii
+ Qui obiit anno Domini
+ MCCCLXXXI
+ II. Die Decembris_
+
+"Here lies transferred the Devout Father, Dom John of Ruysbroeck, First
+Prior of this cloister, who departed in the year of the Lord 1381,
+December 2."
+
+
+
+
+ XV
+
+ The Cultus of Blessed John Ruysbroeck
+
+
+Numerous pilgrims now wended their way to visit Ruysbroeck's tomb.
+Ex-votos were suspended there in acknowledgment of favours received. His
+picture also was honoured in various churches. And each year on the
+Monday following Trinity Sunday the Chapter of St. Gudule's came over to
+Groenendael to assist the Canons at a Mass sung in his honour. In a word,
+on all sides the holy Prior was regarded and, as far as possible, treated
+as a Saint in glory.
+
+Yielding to representations and entreaties from many quarters, James
+Roonen, Archbishop of Mechlin, ordered another translation of the
+remains, November 1622. This was duly performed with all the prescribed
+formalities. The skeleton was found entire. The bones were carefully
+taken and reverently washed and then placed in a new reliquary. The water
+used in this cleansing emitted a delicious odour, and it was afterwards
+instrumental in effecting many miraculous cures. The Infanta Isabella of
+Spain laid the foundation stone of a chapel to be erected at her expense
+near _Ruysbroeck's Tree_ as a suitable shrine for the relics. She also
+provided a magnificent sarcophagus. As this chapel was outside the
+monastic enclosure, ladies were now able to pay their devotions at
+Ruysbroeck's tomb itself, whereas hitherto they had been able to
+reverence the relics only from a distance.
+
+So far, however, no authoritative recognition of the heroic virtues of
+John Ruysbroeck had come from Rome. In 1624 the Archbishop commissioned
+the learned Albert le Mire to draw up the necessary preliminary documents
+to be submitted to the Sacred Congregation. These were approved, and
+three commissioners were appointed to Initiate the apostolic process, so
+called. Their labours were completed by 1627. Then, on account of the
+wars and other troubles which afflicted the Low Countries at the time,
+the Cause was suspended.
+
+When the French overran the Netherlands in 1667, to prevent profanation
+of the holy relics, they were carried to a place of greater safety in
+Brussels; they were restored again in 1670. In 1783 the Priory itself
+shared the fate of so many other Religious Houses, and was suppressed by
+the Emperor Joseph II.; whereupon the relics were again transferred to
+Brussels and laid to rest in a side-chapel of St. Gudule's.
+
+Another attempt was then made by the Chapter of St. Gudule's to obtain
+from Rome an authorised Office and Mass in honour of John Ruysbroeck. The
+petition was favourably received; but once more there was a violent
+interruption, this time from the upheaval of the French Revolution.
+
+St. Gudule's was sacked by the _sans-culottes_ in 1793, and the reliquary
+of Ruysbroeck was desecrated. It is said, however, that the relics were
+not actually dispersed, and that they were afterwards sealed up again by
+a Notary named Neuwens; but unhappily at the present day all trace of
+them has disappeared.
+
+Finally, in 1885, the late Cardinal Goosens, Archbishop of Mechlin,
+approached the Sacred Congregation once more, and a tribunal was
+appointed to examine into the Cause, February 8, 1900. This was brought
+to a happy issue in 1908 by a Decree of the Sacred Congregation, dated
+December 1st, and approved by His Holiness, Pius X., December 9,
+confirming the cultus "shown from time immemorial to the Venerable
+Servant of God, John Ruysbroeck, Canon Regular, called the Blessed."
+Later, August 24, 1909, the Congregation granted and approved an Office
+and Mass of Blessed John Ruysbroeck for the Mechlin clergy. The privilege
+of this Office and Mass has also been extended to the Canons Regular of
+the Lateran, who are the lineal representatives of the Canons of
+Groenendael and Windesheim, and therefore in a special sense the children
+of Blessed John.
+
+For the moment there may seem to be but little in common between this
+Mediaeval Mystic and the bustling modern world, so little as to suggest
+the thought that Blessed Ruysbroeck can have no message to deliver to our
+day. On the contrary, the Solitary of the Forest of Soignes stands for a
+profound truth, oblivion of which is rendering Society sick unto death
+to-day. John Ruysbroeck preaches to the world its utter need of God.
+
+For the Catholic he enforces his lesson in a special manner. Unlike false
+mystics, who invariably pretend to dispense themselves and their
+adherents from the chief normal means of grace, namely the Sacraments,
+Ruysbroeck insists upon frequent recourse to the Sacraments, but more
+especially to the Blessed Eucharist, as the speediest and most
+efficacious means of bringing each soul into true union with God. Our
+present Holy Father, desirous and ambitious of "restoring all things in
+Christ," has pointed to the same divine remedy for the renewal of our
+souls. May there not be seen in this a providential reason wherefore the
+solemn beatification of this holy Religious has been delayed six
+centuries, to be reserved to our own days?
+
+The proper prayers of our Saint's Mass beautifully summarise the lessons
+of his life as follows:
+
+
+ Collect
+
+God, Who didst vouchsafe to adorn Blessed John, Thy Confessor, with
+sublime holiness of life and with heavenly gifts, grant us, through his
+merits, and after his example, to despise the fleeting things of the
+world, and to desire only the joys of heaven.
+
+
+ Secret
+
+May the intercession of Blessed John, who in offering the Sacrifice
+merited to overflow with heavenly delights, make us worthy, we beseech
+Thee, Lord, of the bread of angels.
+
+
+ Post-Communion
+
+We beseech Thee, Lord, by the intercession of Blessed John, grant to us
+who are refreshed with the heavenly banquet, that, delivered from worldly
+desires, we may be ever fervent in Thy love.
+
+
+
+
+ Footnotes
+
+
+[1]By Earle Bailie. London: Thomas Baker. 1905.
+
+[2]_Cf._ the Polish sect of _Mariavites_, or _Mystic Priests_, under the
+ misguidance of the woman Mary Frances, whose extravagances were
+ condemned by Rome, September 1904, and again April 1906.
+
+[3]Provost is the equivalent in a College of Clergy of the Abbot in a
+ Monastery; though many Congregations of Canons Regular have borrowed
+ the title and style of Abbot from the monastic institute.
+
+[4]Translation by J. P. Arthur. _The Founders of the New Devotion._ Kegan
+ Paul. 1905.
+
+[5]Especially: _Outlines of the Life of Thomas a Kempis_. By Sir Francis
+ Cruise. _C.T.S._ of Ireland. _Thomas a Kempis_. By the same. London:
+ Kegan Paul. _Life of the Venerable Thomas a Kempis_. By Dom Scully.
+ London: Washbourne. _Thomas a Kempis and the Brothers of the Common
+ Life_. By Kettlewell. London: Kegan Paul. _Thomas a Kempis, His Age
+ and His Book_. By De Montmorency, London: Methuen.
+
+[6]Father Sharpe, in his recent admirable volume, _Mysticism: Its True
+ Nature and Value_, writes thus of the mystic teaching, properly so
+ called, of a Kempis's world-famous masterpiece: "_The Imitation of
+ Christ_ ... probably owes much of its vast popularity to its constant
+ recurrence to the elementary duties of religion and morality, and its
+ insistence on the necessity of their performance as the prerequisite
+ of the more exalted spiritual states. The 'purgative,' 'illuminative,'
+ and 'unitive' ways are seen, so to speak, together, and are dealt with
+ as aspects or constituents of the Christian life as a whole, to the
+ completeness of which all three are necessary and, in different ways,
+ of equal importance. The purely mystical passages are comparatively
+ few and short; and the abundance of practical directions the book
+ contains has sometimes caused its mystical character to be entirely
+ overlooked. This disproportion, however, is quite sufficiently to be
+ accounted for by the character of the work, which is that of a
+ directory of spiritual life in general, and not a scientific treatise
+ on any particular department of it. In such a book attempts at
+ describing the indescribable phenomena of mysticism would obviously
+ have been out of place, whereas the practical details of the lower and
+ preliminary states admit of and require minute explanation. But the
+ tone of the whole book is mystical, and the most commonplace duties
+ and the most humiliating strivings with temptation are in a manner
+ illuminated and glorified by the brilliancy of the result to which
+ they tend. Thus, in point of fact, the higher and lower elements, the
+ mystical and the non-mystical, the purgative, the illuminative and the
+ unitive, are blended in actual human experience" (pp. 188, 189).
+
+[7]The whole subject of mystic theology is excellently well treated by
+ Rev. A. B. Sharpe, M.A., in a volume entitled _Mysticism: Its True
+ Nature and Value_, already quoted, just published by Sands & Co. There
+ is frequent reference to our Saint and his writings.
+
+
+ FINIS
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Notes
+
+
+--Silently corrected a few palpable typos.
+
+--Moved footnotes from page footer to end of text
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Mediaeval Mystic, by Vincent Scully
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