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St.
John of the Cross
Founder
(with St. Teresa) of the Discalced Carmelites, doctor of mystic theology,
b. at Hontoveros, Old Castile, 24 June, 1542; d. at Ubeda, Andalusia,
14 Dec., 1591. John de Yepes, youngest child of Gonzalo de Yepes and Catherine
Alvarez, poor silk weavers of Toledo, knew from his earliest years the
hardships of life. The father, originally of a good family but disinherited
on account of his marriage below his rank, died in the prime of his youth;
the widow, assisted by her eldest son, was scarcely able to provide the
bare necessities. John was sent to the poor school at Medina del Campo,
whither the family had gone to live, and proved an attentive and diligent
pupil; but when apprenticed to an artisan, he seemed incapable of learning
anything. Thereupon the governor of the hospital of Medina took him into
his service, and for seven years John divided his time between waiting
on the poorest of the poor, and frequenting a school established by the
Jesuits. Already at that early age he treated his body with the utmost
rigor; twice he was saved from certain death by the intervention of the
Blessed Virgin. Anxious about his future life, he was told in prayer that
he was to serve God in an order the ancient perfection of which he was
to help bring back again. The Carmelites having founded a house at Medina,
he there received the habit on 24 February, 1563, and took the name of
John of St. Matthias. After profession he obtained leave from his superiors
to follow to the letter the original Carmelite rule without the mitigation's
granted by various popes. He was sent to Salamanca for the higher studies,
and was ordained priest in 1567; at his first Mass he received the assurance
that he should preserve his baptismal innocence. But, shrinking from the
responsibilities of the priesthood, he determined to join the Carthusians.
However,
before taking any further step he made the acquaintance of St. Teresa,
who had come to Medina to found a convent of nuns, and who persuaded him
to remain in the Carmelite Order and to assist her in the establishment
of a monastery of friars carrying out the primitive rule. He accompanied
her to Valladolid in order to gain practical experience of the manner
of life led by the reformed nuns. A small house having been offered, St.
John resolved to try at once the new form of life, although St. Teresa
did not think anyone, however great his spirituality, could bear the discomforts
of that hovel. He was joined by two companions, an ex-prior and a lay
brother, with whom he inaugurated the reform among friars, 28 Nov., 1568.
St. Teresa has left a classical description of the sort of life led by
these first Discalced Carmelites, in chaps.xiii and xiv of her "Book
of Foundations". John of the Cross, as he now called himself, became
the first master of novices, and laid the foundation of the spiritual
edifice which soon was to assume majestic proportions. He filled various
posts in different places until St. Teresa called him to Avila as director
and confessor to the convent of the Incarnation, of which she had been
appointed prioress. He remained there, with a few interruptions, for over
five years. Meanwhile, the reform spread rapidly, and, partly through
the confusion caused by contradictory orders issued by the general and
the general chapter on one hand, and the Apostolic nuncio on the other,
and partly through human passion which sometimes ran high, its existence
became seriously endangered.
St. John
was ordered by his provincial to return to the house of his profession
(Medina), and, on his refusing to do so, owing to the fact that he held
his office not from the order but from the Apostolic delegate, he was
taken prisoner in the night of 3 December, 1577, and carried off to Toledo,
where he suffered for more than nine months close imprisonment in a narrow,
stifling cell, together with such additional punishment as might have
been called for in the case of one guilty of the most serious crimes.
In the midst of his sufferings he was visited with heavenly consolations,
and some of his exquisite poetry dates from that period. He made good
his escape in a miraculous manner, August, 1578. During the next years
he was chiefly occupied with the foundation and government of monasteries
at Baeza, Granada, Cordova, Segovia, and elsewhere, but took no prominent
part in the negotiations which led to the establishment of a separate
government for the Discalced Carmelites. After the death of St. Teresa
(4 Oct.,1582), when the two parties of the Moderates under Jerome Gratian,
and the Zelanti under Nicholas Doria struggled for the upper hand, St.
John supported the former and shared his fate. For some time he filled
the post of vicar provincial of Andalusia, but when Doria changed the
government of the order, concentrating all power in the hands of a permanent
committee, St. John resisted and, supporting the nuns in their endeavor
to secure the papal approbation of their constitutions, drew upon himself
the displeasure of the superior, who deprived him of his offices and relegated
him to one of the poorest monasteries, where he fell seriously ill. One
of his opponents went so far as to go form to monastery gathering materials
in order to bring grave charges against him, hoping for his expulsion
from the order which he had helped to found.
As his
illness increased he was removed to the monastery of Ubeda, where he at
first was treated very unkindly, his constant prayer, "to suffer
and to be despised", being thus literally fulfilled almost to the
end of his life. But at last even his adversaries came to acknowledge
his sanctity, and his funeral was the occasion of a great outburst of
enthusiasm. The body, still incorrupt, as has been ascertained within
the last few years, was removed to Segovia, only a small portion remaining
at Ubeda; there was some litigation about its possession. A strange phenomenon,
for which no satisfactory explanation has been given, has frequently been
observed in connexion with the relics of St. John of the Cross: Francis
de Yepes, the brother of the saint, and after him many other persons have
noticed the appearance in his relics of images of Christ on the Cross,
the Blessed Virgin, St. Elias, St. Francis Xavier, or other saints, according
to the devotion of the beholder. The beatification took place on 25 Jan.,
1675, the translation of his body on 21 May of the same year, and the
canonization on 27 Dec., 1726.
He left
the following works, which for the first time appeared at Barcelona in
1619.
"The
Ascent of Mount Carmel", an explanation of some verses beginning:
"In a dark night with anxious love inflamed". This work was
to have comprised four books, but breaks off in the middle of the third.
"The Dark Night of the Soul", another explanation of the same
verses, breaking off in the second book. Both these works were written
soon after his escape from prison, and, though incomplete, supplement
each other, forming a full treatise on mystic theology.
An explanation of the "Spiritual Canticle", (a paraphrase of
the Canticle of Canticles) beginning "Where hast Thou hidden Thyself?"
composed part during his imprisonment, and completed and commented upon
some years later at the request of Venerable Anne of Jesus.
An explanation of a poem beginning: "O Living Flame of Love",
written about 1584 at the bidding of Dona Ana de Penalosa.
Some instructions and precautions on matters spiritual.
Some twenty letters, chiefly to his penitents. Unfortunately the bulk
of his correspondence, including numerous letters to and from St. Teresa,
was destroyed, partly by himself, partly during the persecutions to which
he fell a victim.
"Poems", of which twenty-six have been hitherto published, viz.,
twenty in the older editions, and recently six more, discovered partly
at the National Library at Madrid, and partly at the convent of Carmelite
nuns at Pamplona.
"A Collection of Spiritual Maxims" (in some editions to the
number of one hundred, and in others three hundred and sixty-five) can
scarcely count as an independent work, as they are culled from his writings.
It has been recorded that during his studies St. John particularly relished
psychology; this is amply borne out by his writings. He was not what one
would term a scholar, but he was intimately acquainted with the "Summa"
of St. Thomas Aquinas, as almost every page of his works proves. Holy
Scripture he seems to have known by heart, yet he evidently obtained his
knowledge more by meditation than in the lecture room. But there is no
vestige of influence on him of the mystical teaching of the Fathers, the
Aeropagite, Augustine, Gregory, Bernard, Bonaventure,etc., Hugh of St.
Victor, or the German Dominican school. The few quotations from patristic
works are easily traced to the Breviary or the "Summa". In the
absence of any conscious or unconscious influence of earlier mystical
schools, his own system, like that of St. Teresa, whose influence is obvious
throughout, might be termed empirical mysticism. They both start from
their own experience, St. Teresa avowedly so, while St. John, who hardly
ever speaks of himself, "invents nothing" (to quote Cardinal
Wiseman), "borrows nothing from others, but gives us clearly the
results of his own experience in himself and others. He presents you with
a portrait, not with a fancy picture. He represents the ideal of one who
has passed, as he had done, through the career of the spiritual life,
through its struggles and its victories".
His axiom
is that the soul must empty itself of self in order to be filled with
God, that it must be purified of the last traces of earthly dross before
it is fit to become united with God. In the application of this simple
maxim he shows the most uncompromising logic. Supposing the soul with
which he deals to be habitually in the state of grace and pushing forward
to better things, he overtakes it on the very road leading it, in its
opinion to God, and lays open before its eyes a number of sores of which
it was altogether ignorant, viz. what he terms the spiritual capital sins.
Not until these are removed (a most formidable task) is it fit to be admitted
to what he calls the "Dark Night", which consists in the passive
purgation, where God by heavy trials, particularly interior ones, perfects
and completes what the soul had begun of its own accord. It is now passive,
but not inert, for by submitting to the Divine operation it cooperates
in the measure of its power. Here lies one of the essential differences
between St. John's mysticism and a false quietism. The perfect purgation
of the soul in the present life leaves it free to act with wonderful energy:
in fact it might almost be said to obtain a share in God's omnipotence,
as is shown in the marvelous deeds of so many saints. As the soul emerges
from the Dark Night it enters into the full moonlight described in the
"Spiritual Canticle" and the "Living Flame of Love".
St. John leads it to the highest heights, in fact to the point where it
becomes a"partaker of the Divine Nature". It is here that the
necessity of the previous cleansing is clearly perceived the pain of the
mortification of all the senses and the powers and faculties of the soul
being amply repaid by the glory which is now being revealed in it.
St. John
has often been represented as a grim character; nothing could be more
untrue. He was indeed austere in the extreme with himself, and, to some
extent, also with others, but both from his writings and from the depositions
of those who knew him, we see in him a man overflowing with charity and
kindness, a poetical mind deeply influenced by all that is beautiful and
attractive.
The best
life of St. John of the Cross was written by JEROME DE SAN JOSÉ
(Madrid, 1641), but, not being approved by the superiors, it was not incorporated
in the chronicles of the order, and the author lost his position of annalist
on account of it.
BENEDICT
ZIMMERMAN
Transcribed by Marie Jutras
The
Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII
Copyright © 1910 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, October 1, 1910. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
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