16.06.2013 Views

MY BELOVED IS MINE AND I AM HIS: SELF-KNOWLEDGE IN THE ...

MY BELOVED IS MINE AND I AM HIS: SELF-KNOWLEDGE IN THE ...

MY BELOVED IS MINE AND I AM HIS: SELF-KNOWLEDGE IN THE ...

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

nature when we contemplate him with a pure heart.” 328 The monk’s growing recognition<br />

of the Truth in himself, his brothers, and in Truth’s own nature will proceed through his<br />

growth in the three virtues of humility, compassionate charity, and contemplation<br />

respectively.<br />

For Bernard, moreover, the monk will ascend these three steps of Truth in order,<br />

because these steps are arranged according to a certain psychological sequence. The<br />

monk must seek the Truth in his brothers before seeking Truth in his own nature, and<br />

must seek the Truth in himself before seeking the Truth in his brothers. Christ, the Truth<br />

himself, indicated this progression in the ordering of his beatitudes: he places the<br />

merciful before the pure of heart, and the meek before the merciful (Mt 5:3-12). Having<br />

noted this order, Bernard then traces the relationships between these steps in turn.<br />

First, the monk must seek the Truth in himself before seeking it in his brothers.<br />

This is so, Bernard argues, because we can only truly perceive the Truth in another when<br />

we discern and learn compassion for the sufferings of others, and most especially their<br />

miseria; that is, how prone they are to sin and how easily they are tempted. Yet since we<br />

have no direct access to the sufferings others experience within themselves, we must<br />

learn to feel their miseria by learning to feel our own through a kind of creative empathy.<br />

As Bernard writes: “If you are to have a heart merciful towards another’s misery, you<br />

must first recognize your own misery, that you might find your neighbor’s mind in your<br />

328 Hum 6 (III, 20): “Inquirimus namque veritatem in nobis, in proximis, in sui natura. In nobis,<br />

nosmetipsos diiudicando; in proximis, eorum malis compatiendo; in sui natura, mundo corde<br />

contemplando.”<br />

215

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!