From a sermon...
“Love is sufficient of itself, it gives pleasure by itself
and because of itself. It is its own merit, its own reward. Love looks for no
cause outside itself, no effect beyond itself. Its profit lies in its practice.
I love because I love, I love that I may love. Love is a great thing so long as
it continually returns to its fountainhead, flows back to its source, always
drawing from there the water which constantly replenishes it. Of all the
movements, sensations and feelings of the soul, love is the only one in which
the creature can respond to the Creator and make some sort of similar return
however unequal though it be. For when God loves, all he desires is to be loved
in return; the sole purpose of his love is to be loved, in the knowledge that
those who love him are made happy by their love of him.
The Bridegroom’s love, or rather the love which is the
Bridegroom, asks in return nothing but faithful love. Let the beloved, then,
love in return. Should not a bride love, and above all, Love’s bride? Could it
be that Love not be loved?
Rightly then does she give up all other feelings and give
herself wholly to love alone; in giving love back, all she can do is to respond
to love. And when she has poured out her whole being in love, what is that in
comparison with the unceasing torrent of that original source? Clearly, lover
and Love, soul and Word, bride and Bridegroom, creature and Creator do not flow
with the same volume; one might as well equate a thirsty man with the fountain.
What then of the bride’s hope, her aching desire, her passionate
love, her confident assurance? Is all this to wilt just because she cannot
match stride for stride with her giant, any more than she can vie with honey
for sweetness, rival the lamb for gentleness, show herself as white as the
lily, burn as bright as the sun, be equal in love with him who is Love? No. It
is true that the creature loves less because she is less. But if she loves with
her whole being, nothing is lacking where everything is given. To love so
ardently then is to share the marriage bond; she cannot love so much and not be
totally loved, and it is in the perfect union of two hearts that complete and
total marriage consists. Or are we to doubt that the soul is loved by the Word
first and with a greater love?”
~St. Bernard of Clairvaux
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