
CHAPTER II
OF FAITH
All those things which can be thought with the heart, or spoken with the tongue, or seen
with the eyes, or felt with the hands, are as nothing in comparison with those which we
can neither think, nor see, nor touch. All the saints and wise men who have passed away,
and all those who are now in this present life, and all those who shall come after us, -
all those who have spoken or written, or shall speak or write of God, - shall never be
able to show forth so much of him as a grain of millet in comparison with the whole extent
of heaven and earth; nay, a thousand thousand times less. For all that is written of God
is but as the lisping prattle of a mother to her babe, who could not understand her words
did she speak after any other manner. Brother Giles said once to a secular judge:
"Dost thou believe that the gifts of God are great?" And the judge said: "I
believe it." To which Brother Giles replied: "I will show thee that thou dost
not truly believe it." And then he said to him: "What is the value of thy
worldly possessions?" The judge answered: "Perhaps about a thousand
pounds." Then Brother Giles said: "Wouldst thou give this property to thine for
ten thousand pounds?" The judge answered, with hesitation: "Assuredly, I would
do so willingly." Then Brother Giles said: "It is a thing most certain that all
the possessions of this world are nothing worth in comparison with heavenly things;
wherefore, then, givest thou not these possessions of thine to Christ, that thou mayst
purchase riches celestial and eternal?" Then the judge, being wise with the foolish
wisdom of the world, made answer to the pure and simple Brother Giles: "Dost thou
believe, Brother Giles, that there is any man whose outward acts accord perfectly with the
measure of his internal belief?" Brother Giles replied: "Listen, my beloved: it
is most certain that all the saints have truly striven to carry into effect, to the utmost
extent of their power, all that they knew and understood to be the will of God; and those
things which they were unable to effect in external act, they fulfilled by the holy desire
of their will, which supplied their defect of power to perform the action." Said
Brother Giles again: "If any man had perfect faith, he would soon arrive at
perfection, and attain to a full assurance of his salvation. What harm or what injury
could any temporal adversity in this present life do to the man who, with firm faith,
looketh forward to that eternal and supreme and most perfect blessedness? And what can any
prosperity, or temporal good in this world avail the wretched man who looketh forward to
eternal woe! Nevertheless, let no man, how sinful soever he be, despair, so long as he
liveth, of the infinite mercy of God; inasmuch as there is not a tree in the world so
twisted and knotted and gnarled but may be fashioned and polished and beautiful by the
hand of man; so likewise there is no man in this world so wicked and so sinful but God can
convert him, and adorn him with singular graces and many gifts of virtue."
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