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

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In his ground-breaking study of medieval monastic culture and theology, The<br />

Love of Learning and the Desire for God, Leclercq observed that the writings of Gregory<br />

the Great, together with texts connected to Saint Benedict, exercised a “decisive,<br />

constant, and universal influence on the origin and development of medieval monastic<br />

culture in the West” and on the spiritual theology of Bernard in particular. 49 If we turn,<br />

then, to Gregory’s own Exposition of the Canticle, we find that his exegesis of Sg 1:7 is<br />

imbued with the spirit of Origen’s. Considering the verse first as Christ’s admonition to<br />

the individual soul, the pope teaches that “Above everything else, the soul should be<br />

concerned to know itself,” 50 a phrase Bernard will echo in his own commentary. For<br />

Gregory, if the soul takes care to know itself, it will “recognize that it is created in the<br />

image of God” and should not, therefore, “follow the likeness of beasts” in giving itself<br />

over to self-indulgence and the desire for the passing pleasures of this world. 51 Here<br />

Gregory adduces Ps 48:13, “Man, when he was set in honor, did not understand; he is<br />

compared to senseless beasts and made like them,” a verse Bernard will likewise invoke<br />

to explain how self-neglect and self-deception led to the fall of humanity’s first parents.<br />

Referring Sg 1:7 in turn to the Church, Gregory has the Bridegroom warn the faithful<br />

souls of the elect that they must continually remember that they have been made in the<br />

Bridegroom’s own image, and that if they neglect this truth, they will be compelled to<br />

49 Jean Leclercq, The Love of Learning and the Desire for God: A Study of Monastic Culture,<br />

trans. Catherine Misrahi, 3rd ed. (New York, Fordham University Press, 1982), 11.<br />

50 Expositio in Cantica canticorum 44 (SCh 314:134): “Omnis anima nihil debet amplius curare,<br />

quam ut se ipsam sciat.”<br />

51 Expositio in Cantica canticorum 44 (SCh 314:134): “Qui enim se ipsum scit, cognoscit quia ad<br />

imaginem dei factus est. Si ad imaginem dei factus est, non debeat similitudinem iumentorum sequi, siue<br />

in luxuria siue in appetitu praesenti dissolui.”<br />

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