IF it is a duty to apply to holy books the practice which the
Following of Christ bids us observe towards holy persons,
'not to dispute concerning the merits of the saints, as to who is
more holy than another, or greater in the kingdom of heaven,' it
will not be right to give the preference to the work which we are
now offering in a new form to the public, over the many, spiritual
books which have helped on souls in the way of perfection.
But it will not be right either to give to other books a preference
over this. Certainly Sancta Sophia has been of great
service in instructing beginners, in guiding proficients, and in
securing those that have arrived at some degree of perfection,
in the way along which Almighty God has called and led souls
that have been highly privileged; and the Holy Spirit, who
breatheth where He will, has through the words of the Venerable
Father Baker whispered to these souls, and has drawn them on
to a closer and closer union with Himself. Ever since the time
that I first became acquainted with the writings of Father
Augustine Baker, either in the epitome of them in which Father
Serenus Cressy has so successfully presented them in his compilation,
to which he gave the appropriate name which this book
bears, Sancta Sophia, Holy Wisdom, or in their extended and
full form, as they exist in various portions in some of our convents,
I felt the desire to enter upon the task, which by God's
blessing I have at last completed, of republishing with
Difficulties, which time has at last removed, have constantly been in my way. Duties of an imperative nature have ever attended me, and in the midst of them-though I have never lost sight of the task I had imposed upon myself--it has not been in my power to do more than a little at a time; and therefore the time has been long in proportion to the importance of the labour. In addition to reprinting the work, I felt that I ought to do two things,--to verify the quotations from the Fathers and spiritual writers, which are interspersed throughout the various treatises; and secondly to call attention to certain passages where explanation or even correction was demanded. The first of these tasks I have been compelled in great measure to abandon; the second, which is of greater importance, I have not neglected. But I must say a word upon both.
The task of verifying quotations from the authors referred
to in the writings of Father Baker has been, as is the case with
regard to all similar works, an exceedingly difficult and a hopeless
labour. I have spent hours upon hours and with very little
success. I remember many years ago reading in a note in some
edition of the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius,1 that the
Scripture quotations of that holy Saint and great Master of the
spiritual life are not always strictly correct; because it was
evident the Saint quoted from memory, without referring on each
occasion to the sacred text. Father Baker, in his reading of the
Fathers and of spiritual writers, seems to have noted down at
the time passages and words that struck him as bearing upon
the subject on which he happened to be then engaged. And
Father Cressy, in condensing the good Father's writings, cited
the name, but without any reference to the special treatise; and
thus in almost all instances no help is given towards a classical
verification of the authority, upon which a truth or principle
With regard to the second matter of explaining or even correcting
certain passages, I hope I have not been negligent. The
necessity of such explanations or corrections arises mainly from
the circumstances of the period in which Father Baker wrote,
and in which his writings were collected, condensed, and printed.
Father Baker wrote his treatises and gave his instructions to the
religious under his guidance, a short time before the Church was
called on to pronounce on the doctrines of Quietism. The same
difficulty, therefore, exists in regard to certain expressions of his,
as exists with regard to the writings of the Ante-Nicene Fathers.
Before the time in which the Church in the Council of Nicaea
found it necessary to enter more fully into the definition of the
terms of Substance, Nature, and Person, as predicated of the
Mysteries of the Blessed Trinity and the Incarnation, expressions
may have been sometimes used by perfectly orthodox theological
writers, which were capable of a wrong interpretation.
But when, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, the Church
defined with careful and logical precision what these sacred
Certainly some parts of Sancta Sophia would have been
omitted or expressed otherwise, had these two holy Fathers lived
to witness the controversy and its issue. Care has been taken
to call attention to these points. I hesitated for a time whether
I ought not altogether to omit such parts; but upon deliberation
and after taking counsel, I thought it better not to interfere
with the original, but to make the correction, or give a necessary
explanation, in a note. An instance will be found in treat. iii.
sect. iii. chap. vii. in reference to the prayer of silence of Don
Antonio de Rojas, which has been condemned by the Church;
though the censure was not affixed to it during Father Baker's
lifetime. That Father Baker was no Quietist and had no sympathy
with Quietism is especially evident from the prayer of
Acts, which he so fully explains and so warmly recommends
in the third section of the third treatise.2 And the collection
of Acts at the end of the work is of itself an evidence how
Although it may be safely said that there is no fear nowadays from Quietism in any general effect, for the active spirit of the time is so opposed to it, and even the prevalence and increase of vocations to active rather than contemplative orders in the Church render such a danger very unlikely, yet there may be a risk in individual cases of souls being misguided, unless they are on their guard, and receive caution from their directors against this possible evil. I trust that the danger signals which will be erected, where it seems necessary, will remove every objection which has been at any time felt, about allowing the free use in religious communities of this most useful and solid work on Mystical Theology.
A brief biography of the two good Fathers who have been respectively the author and compiler of the work will be appropriate. Some years ago, when I first undertook the task of preparing an edition of Sancta Sophia, I published a Life of Father Baker,3and appended to it an essay on the Spiritual Life, mainly grounded on the venerable Father's teaching. As that work is accessible, though I believe it is not very easy to procure, I shall limit myself at present to but a few details.
David, known in religion by the name of Augustine, Baker
was born in Abergavenny on the 9th of December 1575, of
Protestant parents. He received his early education at Christ's
Hospital in London, and at the age of fifteen went to the
University of Oxford, and entered as a commoner at Broadgates'
Hall, now known as Pembroke College. He remained at Oxford
For some years, before being promoted to the priesthood, he
was employed by his superiors in various employments, in which
his legal and historical knowledge was of great service. He
devoted himself very earnestly also to prayer and the exercises
of the spiritual life; and although he made such progress by his
earnestness and perseverance sometimes for six hours at a time
in prayer--as to have been rewarded by ecstasies, yet in his case
the course even of such love did not run over-smoothly, and from
time to time he seemed to fall back again from his advancement.
All this was the working of the Divine Spirit, both to ground
him more perfectly in humility, and to give him an experience
At this time the venerable Father's life was so thoroughly one of prayer, that he used sometimes to devote as many as eleven hours in the day to this holy practice. His health, however, was extremely delicate, and as he was threatened with consumption, he was ordered by his superiors to move to London, where it was hoped that occupation of a somewhat more active nature might be of advantage to him. He laboured, conjointly with Father Clement Reyner, in compiling the well known Apostolatus Benedictinorum, and began at that same period to write some of his spiritual treatises. He had to travel about to various parts of England and the Continent to consult documents, and at the same time that this change of occupation benefited his bodily health, it did not in the least interfere with his spiritual progress. He had now so perfectly grounded himself in the ascetical life, that no distractive employments could withdraw him from his habits of recollection. His life was hidden with Christ in God, and was what he himself so aptly calls such a life, 'a life of introversion.'
In Christmas of the year 1623, Father Rudesind Barlow,
President-General of the English Benedictine Congregation,
founded a community of Benedictine nuns at Cambray, and in
the following summer Father Baker was ordered to go and assist
in training the young community in the ways of the spiritual
life. Here he was in his true element; and the solid progress
made by his disciples was a proof of his skill and success as a
During the nine years that the venerable Father remained at
Cambray, he drew up many of his ascetical treatises at the
earnest request of the community, who were anxious to perpetuate
instructions which had been of such immense value to
themselves. Many of them are lost, but several are preserved,
The struggle between sickness and persecution, as to which
was to conquer in his regard, went on for three years, and at
last it was to end in 1641 in favour of sickness. The year 1641
was a fatal one for priests, but a rich one for martyrs. In that
year Bishop Challoner enumerates eighteen priests who were
condemned to death, and were either savagely executed or
harassed to death in prison. Among them were two of Father
Baker's
confreres,
Fathers Ambrose Barlow and Bartholomew Roe.
He himself was on the point of being seized, when he was struck
by a contagious fever, which scared away his pursuers. Though
he did not actually die upon the scaffold, to which he was on
the very point of being led, he may well be considered as a
It was in the year 1657, sixteen years after this holy Father's
death, that his friend and disciple, Father Serenus Cressy,
published the useful compilation of his writings, under the name of
Sancta Sophia. This Father, called in baptism Hugh Paulin,
and in religion Serenus, was born at Wakefield, in Yorkshire, in
the year 1605, the eventful year of Fawkes's Gunpowder Plot,
and the same year in which Father Baker was clothed in the
Abbey of St. Justina in Padua. He went to the University of
Oxford at the early age of fourteen, and in the year 1626, at
the age of twenty-one, became Fellow of Merton. He received
orders in the Church of England, and was appointed chaplain to
Lord Wentworth, afterwards Earl of Strafford of noted memory.
A little later he was chaplain to Lord Falkland; then he became
Canon of Windsor, and afterwards Dean of Leighlin, in
Ireland. He travelled as tutor to a young English nobleman,
and in the year 1646 became a convert, and was received into
the Church in Rome, where he happened to be at the time.
Next year, being in Paris, he published his
Exomologesis,
or
Motives of his Conversion, which he dedicated to the Carthusian
Fathers of Nieuport in Flanders, whom he at one time thought
of joining. However, owing to their very secluded mode of life,
he was directed to turn towards an Order in which his literary
capacitv might be of greater service, and he joined the Benedictine
Community of St. Gregory's at Douai, where he took his
Father Cressy was greatly esteemed by his religious brethren,
and held among them several offices of trust and responsibility,
and was for many years a member of the General Chapter. His
last missionary appointment was to the chaplaincy of Richard
Caryl, Esq., of East Grinstead, in Sussex, where he died the
death of the just on the 10th of August 1674, in the sixty-ninth
year of his age. It was towards the end of the time of his
residence as a conventual at Douai, that he drew up these
instructions from the writings of Father Baker, which in a
dedicatory letter to Father Laurence Reyner, President-General
of the English Benedictine Congregation, he declares to have
drawn up and published in obedience to his command. Not
obedience only, however, he adds, but gratitude urged him on
in his work of love; for to these instructions he, in that same
letter, attributes the hastening of his conversion to the faith,
and his call to join the Benedictine Order. May God in His
infinite mercy grant that these same words of wisdom and piety
may bring grace and inspire resolution into many a hesitating
It remains to make two or three observations in connexion with the teaching conveyed in the treasury of wisdom here laid open. Let me most earnestly recommend the reading of Father Cressy's Preface to the Reader, herein prefixed to the first Treatise. Possible objections are here anticipated and answered. Also I must invite very particular attention to the case of the holy Jesuit, Father Balthasar Alvarez, recorded in the 7th Chapter of Section 1, Treatise III., where we find a full and striking and most telling apology for the method of prayer, so strongly recommended by Father Baker. One great reason why so many break down in their attempts at arriving at perfection in the spiritual life is, because they are tied down too stiffly to the formal method of Discursive Prayer, and are not allowed free enough scope for the exercise of Acts and Affections. It is quite proper that upon the first entrance into the spiritual life, the soul should be well exercised in the use of the powers of the soul, and that the Understanding especially should be called into play. But to insist upon working the Understanding, even when the Will is ready at once to work, is not unlike insisting on the spelling of every word, or the parsing of every sentence, each time that we read a book or a newspaper. All our proficiency and skill would avail us nothing, if we were to be thus tied down; and the reading of books would indeed be anything but instructive and entertaining. Father Balthasar Alvarez, in the chapter just referred to, will be found to say:
'All internal discoursing with the understanding was to cease,
whensoever God enabled souls to actuate purely by the will.
Undoubtedly, as we have said, on the first entrance into the spiritual life it is important to attend to the instructions given upon Discursive Prayer, or ordinary Meditation.5 But it is not to be understood that this method is to be rigidly adhered to throughout. When Almighty God calls the soul to the Prayer of Acts, and afterwards of Aspirations, the soul ought to be allowed liberty to obey and follow the call. It is quite true that we should not attempt to run, until we have become steady enough upon our feet to stand or walk. But it is equally true that if we content ourselves with only standing or walking, when there is occasion for greater speed and activity, we shall be outstripped by others, who have learnt that where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty: who have heard the summons to work in the words: Why stand you here all the day idle? and have obeyed the command of the energetic St. Paul: So run that you may receive. For a great truth which Father Baker always keeps before us is, that we are not simply to satisfy ourselves that we devote a certain period each day to our mental prayer, but that we must aim at progress in Prayer, and that by becoming more practised and more perfect in that holy exercise, we may make corresponding progress in holiness of life, and ascending from virtue to virtue, may at last by closer union be allowed to see the God of gods in Sion.
In the same manner as Father Rothaan, S.J., in his most
practical and excellent instruction on
'the Method of Meditation,' gives an example how to meditate
on an eternal truth,
and works out the meditation, in order that it may serve as a
1. the Beginning; 2. the Body; 3. the Conclusion. In the BEGINNING we must, as usual, make our act of recollection of the Presence of God, pray for light, and by an act of sorrow remove sin, which obscures the soul, and then quiet the imagination, by picturing our Divine Lord standing before us, and addressing directly to us those words, which are His own.
Then passing on to the
BODY
of the Prayer, instead of arguing with myself, I address my words
in the form of Acts to
Almighty God, or to our Divine Lord; observing, usually, a
method in the Acts, beginning with the lower ones grounded on
Faith, and progressing towards the higher ones of Confidence
and Love. Thus may I pray.
Faith.
O my God, I believe these
words, and I accept in my soul the great truth they express.
Thou halt made my soul eternal, and therefore I fully see its
immense value. The world may try to convince and persuade
me through its false principles to follow it, and forget Thee;
but to whom shall I go but to Thee who hast the words of
eternal life? &c.
Sorrow. O my Divine Jesus, how sorry am I
that I have not hitherto felt this truth and acted up to it!
Every time I have sinned I have denied this truth by my own
willful act and deed. Never let me sin again, &c. Humility.
But who am I, that I should pretend to make such a promise?
I am weak by nature, and have weakened myself still more by
sin. I am Thy child: do Thou save me. Lord, save me, or I
perish, and I shall never gain the end for which alone Thou
hast made me, &c Supplication.
Give me grace, O my most
powerful and generous God, that I may ever live up to what I
now feel; and if this day any temptation come upon me, do
I feel that it is not necessary for me to say anything more by
way of Preface. But, submitting everything to the judgment
of the Holy See, I now commend the work which I have
prepared, to the blessing of God; and beg that He, from whom.
J. NORBERT SWEENEY, O.S.B.
St. John's Priory, Bath,1 Seager's translation of Father Rothaan's Spiritual Exercises, p. 142.
2 See especially treat. iii. sect. iii. chap. i. � 19, where he cautions against cessation of prayer.
3 Life and Spirit of Father Augustine Baker, &c. London, 1861 Catholic Publishing Company
4 See the list in Dodd. vol. iii. p. 308.
5 See Sancta Sophia, treat. iii. sect. ii. chap. ii.