XXIV
ST JOHN SAW IN A VISION

                St John saw in a vision a lamb standing on Mount Sion and with him stood forty and four who were not of this world nor had they wifely names.  These were all virgins who stood next the lamb, and when the lamb inclined they inclined with him, singing with the lamb a new song and having their names and the name of their Father written in their foreheads.
               John says, 'I looked and lo, a lamb stood on the mountain.' I say, John himself was that mountain whereon he saw the lamb, and whoso sees the Lamb of God must himself be the mountain, ascending to his highest, purest part.
               Again.  He says he saw a lamb standing upon a mountain:  when one thing stands upon another its lowest point touches the other's highest.  God touches all things and remains untouched.  God is above all things standing in himself and his instance sustains all creatures.  Creatures have an uppermost and undermost.  God has not.  God is over everything and is not touched by anything.  All creatures seek outside themselves, in one another, what they lack.  God does not.  God does not look outside himself: everything that creatures have God has entire in him; he is the floor, the roof of creatures.  True, one is prior to another down to the very last, one being born before another: though creatures give not of her being to him, yet she keeps some of his.  God is a simple presence, a stay-at-home in himself.  With any creature, as regards her noble nature, the more she sits at home the more of herself she gives out.  A common stone, like limestone, for example, gives itself out a stone and nothing more. But a precious stone, this has great power because of something in it, some interior fastness wherein it rears its head and, so to speak, peers out.  According to the masters, no creature is so stay-at-home as body and soul, nor goes so far afield as the soul's highest part.
               He says, 'I saw a lamb standing.'  From which we learn four things.  First, the lamb is fed and clothed and that in goodly fashion, which to our mind looks as though we, having gotten so much from God and that so goodly, are bound to seek in all we do only his honour and his glory.  Again, the lamb stood.  It is good for friend to stand by friend.  God stands by us, is standing by us, steady and unmoved.  He says: 'There stood with him a multitude, each having written in his forehead his name and the name of his Father.'  Let at least God's name be written in us.  We must bear God's image in us and his light must lighten us, if we would be John.

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