I have been reading some writings of Saint Maximus the Confessor recently, including something that speaks about the theological virtues. I especially liked the last part, in which he says it is absurd to try to separate God's love from God's essence. This reminded me of a retreat conference on prayer two years ago that I have never forgotten: remember that the goal of the spiritual life is God, not the consolations of God.
Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things.
We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are still attached to anything worldly.
Dispassion engenders love, hope in God engenders dispassion, and patience and forbearance engender hope in God.
These in turn are the product of complete self-control, which itself springs from fear of God. Fear of God is the result of faith in God.
If you have faith in the Lord you will fear punishment, and this fear will lead you to control the passions.
Once you control the passions you will accept affliction patiently, and through such acceptance you will acquire hope in God.
Hope in God separates the intellect (nous) from every worldly attachment, and when the intellect is detached in this way it will acquire love for God.
The person who loves God values knowledge of God more than anything created by God, and pursues such knowledge ardently and ceaselessly.
If everything that exists was made by God and for God, and God is superior to the things made by Him, he who abandons what is superior and devotes himself to what is inferior shows that he values things made by God more than God Himself.
When your intellect is concentrated on the love of God you will pay little attention to visible things and will regard even your own body as something alien.
Since the soul is more noble than the body and God incomparably more noble than the world created by Him, he who values the body more than the soul and the world created by God more than the Creator Himself is simply a worshipper of idols.
If you distract your intellect from its love for God and concentrate it, not on God, but on some sensible object, you thereby show that you value the body more than the soul and the things made by God more than God Himself.
Since the light of spiritual knowledge is the intellect’s life, and since this light is engendered by love for God, it is rightly said that nothing is greater than divine love (cf. 1 Cor. 13:13).
When in the intensity of its love for God the intellect goes out of itself, then it has no sense of itself or of any created thing.
For when it is illumined by the infinite light of God, it becomes insensible to everything made by Him, just as the eye becomes insensible to the stars when the sun rises.
Maximus the Confessor (580-662): Four Hundred Texts on Love 1-10
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