LXII
WHAT MANNER OF CHILD SHALL THIS BE?

        Puis puer iste erit? Etenim manus domini erat cum illo (Luc. 166).  'What manner of child shall this be? The hand of the Lord is with him.'  The hand of the Lord means the Holy Ghost, for two reasons.  First, because work is wrought with the hand; and next, because it is one with the arm and with the body.  All human actions start in the heart, extend to the limbs, and are done by the hand; so the seat of the soul being chiefly in the heart, in the heart is the mainspring of her energies. Likewise it is the Father who is the found and origin of all divine activity, and the Son is represented by his arm: as it says in the Magnificat, 'he hath shewed strength with his arm.'  Divine power proceeds from the body via the arm to the hand, whereby is signified the Holy Ghost, even as the soul which courses through the body and in material things proclaims her ghostly properties.  Wherefore we argue that the Holy Ghost is meant by the hand which wrought in this child.
        Now mark the state of the soul wherein God is apt to work.  He speaks of a child, suggesting pure joy, an unblemished state.  The soul God works in must be pure and clean.  A master says, 'The eternal wisdom tarries in Zion, her rest in that pure city': Zion meaning a height and a watch-tower (or resting-place).  Again, she must be withdrawn from mortal, impermanent things.  And thirdly, she must be on the watch for coming hindrances.  God comes out of kindness because of the love he bears to the soul.  He has endowed her with a godly light, the reflection of himself, so that he may be able freely to energise in her in his own likeness. Love cannot be without finding or making alike.  Suppose I have bidden a man, unless he have gotten some liking for me, he will never willingly follow me. And so with the soul which follows God: God's members must all do his bidding whether they want to or no.  If they do it reluctantly, then it is painful to him; no work is ever pleasant that is done without liking.
        No creature can do more than in her lies. The soul makes headway solely by the light that God has given her, that being her own, presented her by God as a bridal gift.  God comes in love with intent that the soul may arise, that in love she may energise above herself.  For love cannot be without finding her like or making alike, except in as far as God works in love passing soul. Soul does not ply the work of grace (since that is not her nature) till she is gotten yonder, where God is plying himself, where the work is as noble as the worker, his own nature, to wit.  As with light, for example.  In word it produces its like: heat and fire, and the harder the wind blows the fiercer the flame.  Now put love for the fire and the Holy Ghost for the wind: the stronger breathes the Holy Ghost the more all-consuming its fire, albeit not sudden; it keeps pace with the growth of the soul.  If the whole man were consumed at once it would not be well, for one might live a thousand years and still go on waxing in love.  Light acts upon flowers, making them grow and bear fruit; in living creatures it makes for life; in man it makes for happiness.  This comes by the graces of God which raises the soul to a higher power; for if the soul is to be like God she must transcend herself.  Amen.

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