Page:Blaise Pascal works.djvu/233

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TYPOLOGY
225

666

Fascination. Somnum suum.[1] Figura hujus mundi.[2]

The Eucharist. Comedes panem tuum.[3] Panem nostrum.[4]

Inimici Dei terram lingent.[5] Sinners lick the dust, that is to say, love earthly pleasures.

The Old Testament contained the types of future joy, and the New contains the means of arriving at it. The types were of joy; the means of penitence; and nevertheless the Paschal Lamb was eaten with bitter herbs, cum amaritudinibus.[6]

Singularis sum ego donec transeam.[7]—Jesus Christ before His death was almost the only martyr.


667

Typical.—The expressions, sword, shield. Potentissime.


668

We are estranged, only by departing from charity. Our prayers and our virtues are abominable before God, if they are not the prayers and the virtues of Jesus Christ. And our sins will never be the object of [mercy], but of the justice of God, if they are not [those of] Jesus Christ. He has adopted our sins, and has [admitted] us into union [with Him], for virtues are [His own, and] sins are foreign to Him; while virtues [are] foreign to us, and our sins are our own.

Let us change the rule which we have hitherto chosen for judging what is good. We had our own will as our rule. Let us now take the will of [God]; all that He wills is good and right to us, all that He does not will is [bad].

All that God does not permit is forbidden. Sins are forbidden by the general declaration that God has made, that He did not allow them. Other things which He has left without general prohibition, and which for that reason are said to be permitted, are nevertheless not always permitted.

  1. Psalms, lxxvi. 5.
  2. 1 Cor., vii. 31.
  3. Deut., viii. 9.
  4. Luke, xi. 3.
  5. Psalms, lxxii. 9.
  6. Exodus, xii. 8.
  7. Psalms, cxli. 10.
hc xlviii (h)