THE TWO EYES
We should remember the saying that the soul of Christ had two
eyes, a right eye and a left eye. In the beginning, when the soul of Christ was
created, she fixed her right eye upon eternity and the Godhead, and remained in
the full beholding and fruition of the Divine essence and eternal perfection;
and thus remained unmoved by all the accidents and labours, the suffering,
anguish, and pain, that befell the outer man. But with the left eye she looked
upon the creation, and beheld all things that are therein, and observed how the
creatures differ from each other, how they are better or worse, nobler or baser;
and after this manner was the outer man of Christ ordered. Thus the inner man of
Christ, according to the right eye of His soul, stood in the full exercise of
His Divine nature, in perfect blessedness, joy, and eternal peace. But the outer
man and the left eye of the soul of Christ stood with Him in perfect suffering,
in all His tribulations, afflictions and labours; in such a way that the inner
or right eye remained unmoved, unimpeded and untouched by all the labour,
suffering, woe, and misery that happened to the outer man. It has been said that
when Jesus was bound to the pillar and scourged, and when He hung on the cross,
according to the outer man, the inner man, a soul according to the right eye,
stood in as full possession of Divine joy and blessedness as it did after the
ascension, or as it does now. Even so His outer man, or soul according to the
left eye, was never impeded, disturbed, or troubled by the inward eye in its
contemplation of the outward things which pertained to it. The created soul of
man has also two eyes. The one is the power of looking into eternity, the other
the power of looking into time and the creatures, of perceiving how they differ
from each other, of giving sustenance and other things necessary to the body,
and ordering and ruling it for the best. But these two eyes of the soul cannot
both perform their office at once; if the soul would look with the right eye
into eternity, the left eye must be shut, and must cease to work: it must be as
if it were dead. For if the left eye is discharging its office towards outward
things—if it is holding conversation with time and the creatures—then the
right eye must be impeded in its working, which is contemplation. Therefore, he
who would have one must let the other go; for no man can serve two masters. vii.
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