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HERE BEGINNETH THE SIXTEENTH CHAPTER
 
That by Virtue of this work a sinner truly turned and called to contemplation 
cometh sooner to perfection than by any other work; and by it soonest may get of 
God forgiveness of sins.
 
LOOK that no man think it presumption, that he that is the wretchedest sinner of 
this life dare take upon him after the time be that he have lawfully amended 
him, and after that he have felt him stirred to that life that is called 
contemplative, by the assent of his counsel and his conscience for to profer a 
meek stirring of love to his God, privily pressing upon the cloud of unknowing 
betwixt him and his God. When our Lord said to Mary, in person of all sinners 
that be called to contemplative life, "Thy sins be  forgiven thee," it 
was not for her great sorrow, nor for the remembering of her sins, nor yet for 
her meekness that she had in the beholding of her wretchedness only. But why 
then? Surely because she loved much.
Lo! here may men see what a privy pressing of love may purchase of our Lord, 
before all other works that man may think. And yet I grant well, that she had 
full much sorrow, and wept full sore for her sins, and full much she was meeked 
in remembrance of her wretchedness. And so should we do, that have been wretches 
and accustomed sinners; all our lifetime make hideous and wonderful sorrow for 
our sins, and full much be meeked in remembrance of our wretchedness.
But how? Surely as Mary did. She, although she might not feel the deep hearty 
sorrow of her sins--for why, all her lifetime she had them with her whereso she 
went, as it were in a burthen bounden together and laid up full privily in the 
hole of her  heart, in manner never to be forgotten--nevertheless yet, 
it may be said and affirmed by Scripture, that she had a more hearty sorrow, a 
more doleful desire, and a more deep sighing, and more she languished, yea! 
almost to the death, for lacking of love, although she had full much love (and 
have no wonder thereof, for it is the condition of a true lover that ever the 
more he loveth, the more he longeth for to love), than she had for any 
remembrance of her sins.
And yet she wist well, and felt well in herself in a sad soothfastness, that she 
was a wretch most foul of all other, and that her sins had made a division 
betwixt her and her God that she loved so much: and also that they were in great 
part cause of her languishing sickness for lacking of love. But what thereof? 
Came she therefore down from the height of desire into the deepness of her 
sinful life, and searched in the foul stinking fen and dunghill of her sins; 
searching  them up, by one and by one, with all the circumstances of 
them, and sorrowed and wept so upon them each one by itself? Nay, surely she did 
not so. And why? Because God let her wit by His grace within in her soul, that 
she should never so bring it about. For so might she sooner have raised in 
herself an ableness to have oft sinned, than to have purchased by that work any 
plain forgiveness of all her sins.
And therefore she hung up her love and her longing desire in this cloud of 
unknowing, and learned her to love a thing the which she might not see clearly 
in this life, by light of understanding in her reason, nor yet verily feel in 
sweetness of love in her affection. Insomuch, that she had ofttimes little 
special remembrance, whether that ever she had been a sinner or none. Yea, and 
full ofttimes I hope that she was so deeply disposed to the love of His Godhead 
that she had but right little special beholding  unto the beauty of 
His precious and His blessed body, in the which He sat full lovely speaking and 
preaching before her; nor yet to anything else, bodily or ghostly. That this be 
sooth, it seemeth by the gospel.  
 
 
 


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