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To his description of “the ecstasy of work and life”, Saint Francis adds two important clarifications
that remain valid for us today. The first offers a practical criterion for discerning the authenticity of
this style of life, while the second concerns its deepest source. As the criterion of discernment, he
states that while, on the one hand, this ecstasy entails genuine self-renunciation, on the other it
does not mean fleeing from life. We should constantly remind ourselves of this, lest we risk
straying from the right path. In a word, those who think they are rising to God, yet fail to love their
neighbour, are deceiving both themselves and others.
Here we find the same criterion that Francis used to measure true devotion. “If you see a person
who in prayer has raptures that exalt him above himself to God, and yet has no ecstasy of life, that
is, he does not lead a life elevated and joined to God, above all by means of constant charity,
believe me, Theotimus, all his raptures are exceedingly dubious and dangerous”. His conclusion is
incisive: “Being above ourselves in prayer, but beneath ourselves in life and action, being angelic
in meditation, but brutish in conversation, is a true sign that such raptures and ecstasies are
nothing other than diversions and deceits of the evil spirit”. [51] In essence, this is what Paul
already pointed out to the Corinthians in his “hymn to charity”: “If I have prophetic powers, and
understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but
have not love, I am nothing. If I give away all I have, and if I deliver my body to be burned, but do
not have love, I gain nothing” ( 1 Cor 13:2-3).
For Saint Francis de Sales, then, while the Christian life is never without ecstasy, ecstasy is
inauthentic apart from a truly Christian life. Indeed, life without ecstasy risks being reduced to blind
obedience, a Gospel bereft of joy. On the other hand, ecstasy without life easily falls prey to the
illusions and deceptions of the Evil one. The great polarities of the Christian life cannot be
resolved and eliminated. If anything, each preserves the authenticity of the other. Truth, then, does
not exist without justice, pleasure without responsibility, spontaneity without law, and vice versa.
As for the deepest source of this ecstasy, Saint Francis astutely traces it to the love made
manifest by the incarnate Son. If indeed “love is the first act and principle of our devout or spiritual
life, through which we live, feel, and are moved” and “the spiritual life is such as our affective
movements are”, then it becomes clear that “a heart without affection has no love”, and that “a
heart that has love is not without affection”. [52] The source of this love that attracts the heart is
the life of Jesus Christ. “Nothing sways the human heart as much as love”, and this is most
evident in the fact that “Jesus Christ died for us; he gave us life through his death. We live only
because he died, and died for us, as ours and in us”. [53]
These words are profoundly moving; they reveal not only a clear and insightful understanding of
the relationship between God and humanity, but also the deep bond of affection between Francis
de Sales and the Lord Jesus. The ecstasy of life and action is no abstract reality, but shines forth
in the charity of Christ that culminates on the cross. That love, far from mortifying our existence,
makes it radiate with extraordinary brightness.