THAT THE LOVE WHICH IS IN HOPE IS VERY GOOD, THOUGH IMPERFECT.
THE love which we practise in hope goes indeed to God, Theotimus, but it returns to us; its sight is turned upon the divine goodness, yet with some respect to our own profit; it tends to that supreme perfection, but aiming at our own satisfaction. That is to say, it bears us to God, not because he is sovereignty good in himself, but because he is sovereignty good to us, in which as you see there is something of the our and the us, so that this love is truly love, but love of cupidity and self-interest. Yet I do not say that it does in such sort return to ourselves that it makes us love God only for the love of ourselves; O God! no: for the soul which should only love God for the love of herself, placing the end of the love which she bears to God in her own interest, would, alas! commit an extreme sacrilege. If a wife loved her husband only for the love of his servant, she would love her husband as a servant, and his servant as a husband: and the soul that only loves God for love of herself, loves herself as she ought to love God, and God as she ought to love herself.
But there is a great difference between this expression: I love
God for the good which I expect from him, and this: I only love
God for the good which I expect from him: as again it is a very different thing to say: I love God for myself: and I love
God for the love of myself. For when I say I love God for
myself, it is as if I said: I love to have God, I love that God
should be mine, should be my sovereign good; which is a holy
affection of the heavenly spouse, who a hundred times in excess
of delight protests: My beloved to me, and I to him, who feedeth
among the lilies.1 But to say: I love God for love of myself, is
as if one should say; the love which I bear to myself is the end
for which I love God; in such sort that the love of God would
This love, then, which we term hope, is a love of cupidity,
but of a holy and well-ordered cupidity, by means whereof we
do not draw God to us nor to our utility, but we adjoin ourselves unto him as to our final felicity. By this love we love
ourselves together with God, yet not preferring or equalizing
ourselves to him ; in this love the love of ourselves is mingled
with that of God, but that of God floats on the top; our own
love enters indeed, but as a simple motive, not as a principal
end; our own interest has some place there, but God holds the
principal rank. Yes, without doubt, Theotimus: for when we
love God as our sovereign good, we love him for a quality by
which we do not refer him to us but ourselves to him. We are
not his end, aim, or perfection, but he is ours; he does not appertain to us, but we to him; he depends not on us but we on
him; and, in a word, by the quality of sovereign good for
which we love him, he receives nothing of us, but we receive
of him. He exercises towards us his affluence and goodness,
and we our indigence and scarcity; so that to love God under
the title of sovereign good is to love him under an honourable
and respectful title, by which we acknowledge him to be our
perfection, repose and end, in the fruition of which our felicity
consists. Some goods there are which we use for ourselves
when we employ them, as our slaves, servants, horses, clothes:
and the love which we bear unto them is a love of pure cupidity,
since we love them only for our own profit. Other goods there
are which we possess, but with a possession which is reciprocal
and equal on each side, as in the case of our friends: for the
love we have unto them inasmuch as they content us is indeed
a love of cupidity, yet of an honest cupidity, by which they
are ours and we similarly theirs, they belong to us and we
equally to them. But there are yet other goods which we
possess with a possession of dependence, participation and
subjection, as we do the benevolence, or presence, or favour of
our pastors, princes, father, mother: fur the love which we
bear unto them is then truly a love of cupidity, when we love
them in that they are our pastors, our prince, our fathers,
And note, Theotimus, that in this love, the reason why we love (that is, why we apply our heart to the love of the good which we desire) is because it is our good; but the measure and quantity of this love depend on the excellence and dignity of the good which we love. We love our benefactors because they are such to us, but we love them more or less as they are more or less our benefactors. Why then do we love God, Theotimus, with this love of cupidity ? Because he is our good. But why do we sovereignty love him? Because he is our sovereign good.
But when I say we love God sovereignly, I do not therefore say that we love him with sovereign love. Sovereign love is only in charity, whereas in hope love is imperfect, because it does not tend to his infinite goodness as being such in itself, but only because it is such to us. Still, because in this kind of love there is no motive more excellent than that which proceeds from the consideration of the sovereign good, we say that by it we love sovereignly, though in real truth no one is able by virtue of this love either to keep God's commandments, or obtain life everlasting, because it is a love that yields more affection than effect, when it is not accompanied with charity.