WE have but one soul, Theotimus, and an indivisible one; but in that one soul there are various degrees of perfection, for it is living, sensible and reasonable; and according to these different degrees it has also different properties and inclinations by which it is moved to the avoidance or to the acceptance of things. For first, as we see that the vine hates, so to speak and avoids the cabbage, so that the one is pernicious to the other, and, on the contrary, is delighted in the olive; so we perceive a natural opposition between man and the serpent, so great that a man's fasting spittle is mortal to the serpent. On the contrary, man and the sheep have a wondrous affinity, and are agreeable one to the other. Now this inclination does not proceed from any knowledge that the one has of the hurtfulness of its contrary, or of the advantage of the one with which it has affinity, but only from a certain occult and secret quality which produces this insensible opposition and antipathy, or this complacency and sympathy.
Secondly, we have in us the sensitive appetite, whereby we are moved to the seeking and avoiding many things by the sensitive knowledge we have of them; not unlike to the animals, some of which have an appetite to one thing, some to another, according to the knowledge which they have that it suits them or not. In this appetite resides, or from it proceeds, the love which we call sensual or brutish, which yet properly speaking ought not to be termed love but simply appetite.
Thirdly, inasmuch as we are reasonable, we have a will, by
which we are led to seek after good, according as by reasoning
we know or judge it to be such. Now in our soul, taken as
reasonable, we manifestly observe two degrees of perfection,
which the great S. Augustine, and after him all the doctors,
have named two portions of the soul, inferior and superior.
That is called inferior which reasons and draws conclusions
according to what it learns and experiences by the senses; and
Now this superior part can reason according to two sorts of lights; either according to natural light, as the philosophers and all those who have reasoned by science did: or according to supernatural light, as do theologians and Christians, since they establish their reasoning upon faith and the revealed word of God, and still more especially those whose spirit is conducted by particular illustrations, inspirations, and heavenly motions. This is what S. Augustine said, namely, that it is by the superior portion of the soul that we adhere and apply ourselves to the observance of the eternal law.
Jacob, pressed by the extreme necessity of his family, let Benjamin be taken by his brethren into Egypt, which yet he did against his will, as the sacred History witnesses. In this he shows two wills, the one inferior, by which he grieved at sending him, the other superior, by which he took the resolution to part with him. For the reason which moved him to disapprove his departure was grounded on the pleasure which he felt in his presence and the pain he would feel in his absence, which are grounds that touch the senses and the feelings, but the resolution which he took to send him, was grounded upon the reason of the state of his family, from his foreseeing future and imminent necessities. Abraham, according to the inferior portion of his soul spoke words testifying in him a kind of diffidence when the angel announced unto him the happy tidings of a son. Shall a son, thinkest thou, be born to him that is a hundred years old?1 but according, to his superior part he believed in God and it was reputed to him unto justice.2 According to his inferior part, doubtless he was in great anguish when he was commanded to sacrifice his son: but according to his superior part he resolved courageously to sacrifice him.
We also daily experience in ourselves various contrary wills. A father sending his son either to court or to his studies, does not deny tears to his departure, testifying, that though according to his superior part, for the child's advancement in virtue, he wills his departure, yet according to his inferior part he has a repugnance to the separation. Again, though a girl be married to the contentment of her father and mother, yet when she takes their blessing she excites their tears, in such sort that though the superior will acquiesces in the departure, yet the inferior shows resistance. We must not hence infer that a man has two souls or two natures, as the Manicheans dreamed. No, says S. Augustine, in the 8th book, 10th chapter, of his Confessions, "but the will inticed by different baits, moved by different reasons, seems to be divided in itself while it is pulled two ways, until, making use of its liberty, it chooses the one or the other: for then the more efficacious will conquers, and gaining the day, leaves in the soul the feeling of the evil, that the struggle caused her, which we call reluctance (contrecoeur)."
But the example of our Saviour is admirable in this point
and being considered it leaves no further doubt touching the
distinction of the superior and inferior part of the soul. For
who amongst theologians knows not that he was perfectly
glorious from the instant of his conception in his virgin-mother's womb, and yet at the same time he was subject to
sadness, grief, and afflictions of heart. Nor must we say he
suffered only in the body, or only in the soul as sensitive, or,
which is the same thing, according to sense: for he attests
himself that before he suffered any exterior torment, or saw
the tormentors near him, his soul was sorrowful even unto
death. For which cause he prayed that the cup of his passion
might pass away from him, that is, that he might be excused
from drinking it; in which he manifestly shows the desire of
the inferior portion of his soul; which, dwelling upon the sad
and agonizing objects of the passion which was prepared for
him (the lively image whereof was represented to his imagination), he desired, by a most reasonable consequence, the
deliverance and escape from them, which he begs from his
1 Gen. xvii. 17.
2 Ib. xv. 6.