Bl. Henry Suso A LITTLE BOOK OF ETERNAL WISDOM

 BLESSED HENRY SUSO’S PREFACE TO HIS BOOK

 CHAPTER I.How Some Persons Are Unconsciously Attracted by God

 CHAPTER II. WHAT HAPPENED BEFORE THE CRUCIFIXION

 CHAPTER III. How It Was With Him on The Cross According to The Exterior Man

 CHAPTER IV. How Very Faithful His Passion Was

 CHAPTER V. How The Soul Attains Hearty Repentance and Gently Pardon Under the Cross

 CHAPTER VI. How Deceitful The Love of This World is, And How Amiable God Is

 CHAPTER VII. How Lovely God Is

 CHAPTER VIII. An Explanation of Three Things Which Most of All Might Be Likely To Be Repugnant To A Loving Heart In God. One Is, How He Can Appear So

 CHAPTER IX. The Second Thing.—Why God, After Rejoicing The Heart, Often Withdraws Himself From His Friends, By Which His True Presence is Made Known

 CHAPTER X. The Third Thing.—Why God Permits His Friends To Suffer So Much Temporal Suffering

 CHAPTER XI. On The Everlasting Pains of Hell

 CHAPTER XII. On The Immeasurable Joys of Heaven

 CHAPTER XIII. On The Immeasurable Dignity of Temporal Suffering

 CHAPTER XIV. On The Unspeakable Advantages to Be Derived From Meditating on The Divine Passion

 CHAPTER XV. From The Fond Caresses Which The Soul Has Has With God Beneath The Cross, She Returns Again To His Passion

 CHAPTER XVI. On The Worthy Praise of The Pure Queen of Heaven

 CHAPTER XVII. On The Unutterable Heart-Rending Grief of The Pure Queen of Heaven

 CHAPTER XVIII. How It Was With Him At That Hour in Regard of His Interior Man

 CHAPTER XIX. On The Taking Down From the Cross

 CHAPTER XX. On The Lamentable Separation of the Grave

 CHAPTER XXI. How We Should Learn to Die, And of The Nature of An Unprovided Death

 CHAPTER XXII. How One Should Live An Interior and Godly Life

 CHAPTER XXIII. How We Ought Lovingly To Receive God

 CHAPTER XXIV. A Prayer To Be Said When Thou Goest To Receive Our Lord’s Holy Body

 CHAPTER XXV. How We Should At All Times Praise God

CHAPTER IV. How Very Faithful His Passion Was

The Servant.—Lord, if I forget Thy worth, Thy gifts, Thy benefits, and all things, still one thing moves me and goes to my very heart; this is, when I well reflect not only on the way of our salvation, but also on its unfathomably faithful way. Dear Lord, many a one so bestows a gift on another, that his love and faith are better known by his way than by his gift. A small gift in a faithful way is often better than a great one without this way. Now Lord, not only is Thy gift so great, but also the way of it, methinks, is so unfathomably faithful. Thou didst not only suffer death for me, but Thou didst also seek whatever is deepest in love, whatever is most intimate and hidden, in which suffering can or may be experienced. Thou didst really do as though Thou hadst said: Behold all hearts, if ever a heart was so full of love; look on all my limbs; the noblest limb I have is my heart; my very heart have I permitted to be pierced through, to be slain and consumed, and bruised into small pieces, that nothing in me or upon me might remain unbestowed, so that ye might know my love. Alas! Lord, how was it in Thy mind, or what were Thy thoughts? Might one not indeed learn something farther on this head?

Eternal Wisdom.—Never was there a thirsty mouth that longed so ardently for the cool fountain, nor a dying man for the pleasant days of life, as I longed to help all sinners and to render Myself beloved of them. Sooner couldst thou recall the days that are gone, sooner couldst thou make green all withered flowers, and gather up every drop of rain, than possess the power to measure the love which I bear to thee and all mankind. And, therefore, was I so covered with marks of love that one could not have placed the small point of a needle on any spot of My lacerated body that had not its particular love-mark. My right arm stretched out; My left very grievously distended; My right foot perforated; My left cruelly transfixed; that I hung fainting, and in great distress of My divine limbs; all My delicate members were immovably fastened to the hard bed of the cross. My hot blood, because of My anguish, burst forth in many a wild gush, which overflowed My expiring body, so that it was a most piteous sight to see. Behold a lamentable thing! My young, My fair and blooming body began to fade, to wither and pine away, My weary and tender back had a hard pillow on the rough cross, My heavy body gave way, My whole frame was gashed with wounds, and like one great sore, and all this My loving heart willingly endured.