The Golden Sequence
A Fourfold Study of the
Spiritual Life
EVELYN UNDERHILL
FELLOW OF KING S COLLEGE, LONDON
COPYRIGHT,
1933, BY E. P. DUTTON & CO., INC.
ALL
RIGHTS RESERVED
PRINTED IN U.S.A.
FIRST EDITION
TO
LUCY MENZIES
WITH MUCH LOVE
page xi
CONTENTS
Preface
SPIRIT
I WHAT is SPIRIT?
II GOD is SPIRIT
III SPIRIT AS POWER
IV SPIRIT AS PERSON
V THE REVELATION OF SPIRIT
SPIRITUAL LIFE
I CREATED SPIRIT
II MAN NATURAL AND SUPERNATURAL
III CREATIVE SPIRIT
IV LIFE FINITE AND INFINITE
V THE GIFTS OF THE SPIRIT
VI THE TWOFOLD LIFE
PURIFICATION
I THE ESSENCE OF PURGATION
II THE CLEANSING OF THE SENSES
III THE CLEANSING OF THE INTELLECT
IV MEMORY AND IMAGINATION
V WILL AND LOVE
page xii
PRAYER
I THE SPAN OF PRAYER
II ADORATION
III COMMUNION
IV ACTION
V CONCLUSION
PREFACE
page vii
I
"THIS is a personal little book. Its aim is not the establishment of some new thesis. It merely represents the precipitation of my own thoughts, as they have moved to and fro during the last few years, along a line which has the spiritual doctrine of St. John of the Cross at one end, and the philosophy of Professor Whitehead at the other: though I fear that few traces of the influence of these august god-parents appear in the finished result. The book, then, does not pretend to completeness; and is not to be regarded as a treatise, still less as a manual of the spiritual life. It consists of what ancient writers on these themes were accustomed to call 'considerations'; offered to those who share the writer's passion for the exploration of the realities, and interpretation of the experiences, which are signified by the familiar words and symbols of dogmatic religion.
I am sure that this passion even where it takes the form of an exaggerated impatience of traditional language and practice is on the whole a symptom of spiritual vitality; and that its legitimate demands should be met, with candour and without nervousness, by those who adhere to Christian theism and believe its majestic declarations to be the best of
page viii
all answers to the problem of human life. For
although it is almost certainly an error, to speak of
the 'modern soul'
as though it were distinct in
kind from all that have gone before, and had nothing
to learn from its spiritual ancestors; yet the great
changes which have come with the present century,
and especially the new proportion in which the
universe is now seen by us, have deeply affected our
attitude towards those realities which do not change.
The ancient language of faith can no longer be taken
for granted. Its terms must be re-examined, if
their abiding significance is to be understood. And
it is surely a work of piety to do this; and bring
back into currency these lovely tokens of our
spiritual Patria and spiritual wealth.
For the times are crucial for the future of human
religion. On one hand it tends more and more
towards a shallow immanentism, an emphasis upon
the here-and-now, which replaces adoration by
altruism, and Charity by humanitarian sentiment.
This pious naturalism abounds in good works; but
it lacks the creative energy which comes only from
the eternal sources of power. On the other hand,
the fresh acknowledgement of the Transcendent,
the awe-struck sense of God, the prophetic insistence
on the Holy, which distinguishes the work of Otto,
Barth and Brunner, and their numerous disciples,
has brought with it a crushing sense of helplessness;
of an unbridged gap between action and contemplation,
between the human and the divine. It is the
peculiar work of the Christian doctrine of the Spirit,
page ix
to fill this gap ; and weave together the temporal
and eternal strands in our strange human experience
of reality, without any declension from that deep
acknowledgement of Transcendent Majesty, that
sense of our creaturely status over against the
Eternal, which is the very salt of religion.
The title of the book is that given by liturgic
custom to the noblest of all Christian hymns, the Veni Sancte Spiritus; well known in a somewhat
pedestrian translation to users of our standard
English hymn-books. For these studies began as
an attempt to enter more deeply into its unfathomable
meaning, give a wider, richer and more supple
interpretation to the neglected doctrine which it
declares, and bring its phrases into direct relation
with the interior experiences of men. Though
here and there my meditations may seem to wander
far from their inspiring cause, to me its music has
been always present; and will, I hope, be heard
by my readers too. The four sections into which
the work has fallen, do represent in some sense the
fourfold relation between the created spirit and
that Spirit Increate: for they cover first the revelation
of its reality and the movement of response
which it incites in us, and then the two capital
means without which our destiny as spiritual beings
can never be fulfilled. Some who read these pages
will certainly complain, because little is said about
Fellowship and Service; activities which nowadays
are often regarded as the substance, instead of the
symptoms, of a living Christianity. To these critics I can only say, that the subject of the book is that
essential life, out of which real fellowship and service
must proceed; for these are not the essence but the
expression of the spiritual life in man. The saints
abound in fellowship and service, because they are
abandoned to the Spirit, and see life in relation to
God, instead of God in relation to life; and therefore
seize with delight on every circumstance of
life, as material for the expression of Charity. This
resort to first principles, this surrender to the priority
of Spirit, and the embodiment of our faith in such
meek devotional practice and symbolic action as
shall stimulate the transcendental sense: this, I
believe, is the chief spiritual lack of the modern
world.
The first and last sections of this book incorporate
the substance of a few passages which have already
appeared in a paper on 'God and Spirit' read before
the Anglican Fellowship, and afterwards printed in
Theology; and in an article on 'Prayer and the
Divine Immanence' contributed to The Expository
Times. This material has been revised and largely
rewritten for the purpose of the present work.
E. U.
Whitsuntide, 1932
page xiv
Veni, Sancte Spiritus,
Et emitte coelitus
Lucis tuae radium.
Veni, pater pauperum,
Veni, dator munerum,
Veni, lumen cordium.
Consolator optime,
Dulcis hospes animae,
Dulce refrigerium.
In labore requies,
In aestu temperies,
In fletu solatium.
O Lux beatissima,
Reple cordis intima
Tuorum ndelium.
Sine tuo numine,
Nihil est in homine,
Nihil est innoxium.
Lava quod est sordidum,
Riga quod est aridum,
Sana quod est saucium.
Flecte quod est rigidum,
Fove quod est frigidum,
Rege quod est devium.
Da tuis fidelibus,
In te confidentibus,
Sacrum septenarium.
Da virtutis meritum,
Da salutis exitum,
Da perenne gaudium.
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1906 - The Miracles of Our Lady Saint Mary
1911 - Mysticism
1912 - Introduction to The Cloud of Unknowing
1913 - The Mystic Way
1914 - Introduction: Richard Rolle - The Fire of Love
1915 - Practical Mysticism
1915 - Introduction: Songs of Kabir
1916 - Introduction: John of Ruysbroeck
1920 - The Essentials of Mysticism, and other Essays
1922 - The Spiral Way
1922 - The Life of the Spirit and the Life of Today (Upton Lectures)
1926 - Concerning the Inner Life
1928 - Man and the Supernatural
1929 - The House of the Soul
1933 - The Golden Sequence
1933 - Mixed Pasture: Twelve Essays
1936 - The Spiritual Life
1943 - Introduction to the Letters of Evelyn Underhill
by Charles Williams
COPYRIGHT
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DCW
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