Wednesday, March 19, 2025

St.John of the Cross,The Dark Night of the Soul

                                     St.John of the Cross(1542-1591)

 

St. John of the Cross is known in Christian circles as a great mystic and an author of mystical works. As a companion and counselor of St.Teresa of Avila, he grew in mystical experience and became a founder of a new order of Carmelite spirituality. Even as a young friar, he caught the attention of St.Teresa of Avila because of his theological knowledge, deep attachment to Jesus, and mystical experiences. Surprisingly, in the 20th century, he had another great disciple and fan in the US. , T.S. Eliot, the father of modern English poetry. T.S. Eliot passed through very dark experiences as a Christian and St. John of the Cross and his works became a source of comfort and strength for him. The following quote from East Coker in the Four Quartets shows the profound influence of John of the Cross on his life :

“You say I am repeating

Something I have said before. I shall say it again.

Shall I say it again? In order to arrive there,

To arrive where you are, to get from where you are not,

    You must go by a way wherein there is no ecstasy.

In order to arrive at what you do not know

    You must go by a way which is the way of ignorance.

In order to possess what you do not possess

    You must go by the way of dispossession.

In order to arrive at what you are not

    You must go through the way in which you are not.

And what you do not know is the only thing you know

And what you own is what you do not own

And where you are is where you are not.”

It is very easy to see that T.S.Eliot is expatiating upon the theme of detachment enunciated by St.John of the Cross in the following lines from The Ascent to Mount Carmel:

“In order to arrive at that which thou knowest not,
Thou must go by a way which thou knowest not,
In order to arrive at that which thou possessest not,
Thou must go by a way that thou possessest not.
In order to arrive at that which thou are not,
Thou must go through that which thou art not.

(“The Ascent of Mount Carmel” I, xiii)

Reading the biography of St.John of the Cross is excruciatingly painful. Although his father belonged to the nobility, he was disinherited on account of marriage to a lady from a poor background. The father left his hometown to live at his wife’s place. John’s father passed away when he was very young. His mother took the children to their ancestral place but the family was not welcoming. She then left the place and got John admitted to an orphanage. However, through his studiousness, others noted him, and he was appointed as a caretaker of an infirmary. He was very kind to the patients and took care of their needs. His education was taken care of by a kind gentleman. He helped him to join a college nearby and after his studies, John decided to join the Carmelite monastery. There he developed a great thirst for holiness and lived a rigorous ascetic life. It was there that he came into contact with St.Teresa of Avila. Although he was young, St.Teresa chose him as her confessor and of other sisters of her convent as she was drawn by his scholarship and deep attachment to Christ. He became a part of the Reform movement started by St.Teresa in the Carmelite monastic system. John was entrusted with creating the reform for monks and encouraged to start monasteries for them. The new monks and sisters in the new movement began to be known as discalced Carmelites.

Many of the monks in the monasteries that followed the traditional system did not like the initiative of St.John and hence they imprisoned him in a room with no convenience, as a prisoner, for almost six months. He had to endure their insults, punishments, and all kinds of inhuman treatment. He lived like a condemned prisoner in a prison-like cell. He suffered all these inhuman treatments because of his thirst for a pure and more authentic monastic life. He escaped from the prison after six months and ran away to a distant place as he was afraid he would be caught and punished again. With the help of St. Teresa of Avila, he continued his ministry of being a spiritual father and confessor to the sisters of the new movement. In the end, he died in a monastery where the superior was very antagonistic to him. With a lot of pain on account of his breathing problems and skin blisters,  he breathed his last.

When we look at his life, we become amazed at the suffering he endured just because he wanted to be a holy priest. He was compassionate to the poor, the sick, and the suffering and whenever it was possible he spent his time caring for the sick. He knew that he had to help his mother and brothers as they were still not financially successful. He got a chance to visit his mother only a couple of times. He couldn’t be present at the deathbed of his beloved mother when she breathed her last.

It is  in these dark moments of his life that he composed his beautiful poem,The Dark Night of the Soul, explaining in allegorical images the comfort and solace one gets in union with Jesus. One has to pass through the dark night, through a life of detachment, through the world of suffering and hardship ,to  reach this state of perfect bliss with Jesus.

                                    The Dark Night of the Soul

In a dark night,
With anxious love inflamed,
O, happy lot!
Forth unobserved I went,
My house being now at rest.


II.

In darkness and in safety,
By the secret ladder, disguised,
O, happy lot!
In darkness and concealment,
My house being now at rest.


III.

In that happy night,
In secret, seen of none,
Seeing nought myself,
Without other light or guide
Save that which in my heart was burning.


IV.

That light guided me
More surely than the noonday sun
To the place where He was waiting for me,
Whom I knew well,
And where none appeared.


V.

O, guiding night;
O, night more lovely than the dawn;
O, night that hast united
The lover with His beloved,
And changed her into her love.


VI.

On my flowery bosom,
Kept whole for Him alone,
There He reposed and slept;
And I cherished Him, and the waving
Of the cedars fanned Him.


VII.

As His hair floated in the breeze
That from the turret blew,
He struck me on the neck
With His gentle hand,
And all sensation left me.


VIII.

I continued in oblivion lost,
My head was resting on my love;
Lost to all things and myself,
And, amid the lilies forgotten,
Threw all my cares away.

o

 

SSt.John gives a detailed exposition of the meaning of the Dark Night in his commentary, Ascent to Mt.Carmel.

   What this poem tells an ordinary person is that the soul is searching for union with Christ and when it becomes united with Jesus, it experiences unbounded bliss. Everyone who goes through suffering and purification of senses and of spirit in his holy pilgrimage to Jesus, finds in the end this happy union that takes away all the pain of suffering and purifications.

  This poem is thus a source of consolation to all those who suffer on account of their attachment to Jesus.

  The following  quote from John of the Cross is a source of great comfort and peace:

“   "In the twilight of life, God will not judge us  on our earthly possessions and human successes, but on how well  we have loved.”