Inner Locution
is the name given to words arising within us,
seemingly from some divine inspiration or revelation.
These events are common throughout history, across cultures
and spiritual traditions, and they are deserving of
serious study.
They may take different forms but because of their mystical
nature they can cause problems for those who wish to
ratify or prove such events as valid. It is not the
purpose of this site to write an essay explaining the
various opinions on the subject; you can find these
elsewhere on the Web.
The intention here is to present one example while affirming
that we have, firmly in mind, the teachings of St John
of the Cross who analysed inner locutions and established
three kinds. He warned his readers of the dangers of
claiming such events for one’s own egoistic gratification.
Hence this site aims to offer this example of ‘Inner
Locution’ as a simple service to those who seek
a full, spiritual life and we leave it to others to
make any necessary judgments. If any word or phrase
‘lights up’ for you then that is validation
enough.
St John of the
Cross was a Sixteenth Century, Spanish, mystical
poet who wrote eloquently of his spiritual experiences
or ‘awakenings’. In the ‘The Living
Flame of Love’ he wrote:
‘How gently
and lovingly
You wake in my heart
Where in secret you dwell alone’
He then expands on these words and
writes:
‘For this awakening is a movement
of the Word in the substance of the soul, containing
such grandeur, dominion and glory, and intimate sweetness……..’
This ‘Word’
in its essence is beyond speech but, according to the
needs of the moment, it may be expressed in three different
ways according to St John of the Cross: as ‘Successive
words’, ‘Formal words’ and ‘Substantial
words’.
He explains these three forms in another work, ‘The
Ascent of Mount Carmel’, and states that only
the third form can be free of exploitation by the ego.
Successive words:
When the mind is illuminated, through a period of deep
recollection, so it is able to reason clearly and in
this state:
‘A person will reason about
the subject, proceeding from thought to thought, forming
precise words and judgments, deducing and discovering
some unknown truth, with so much ease and clarity, that
it will seem to him that he is doing nothing and that
another person is interiorly reasoning, answering and
teaching him.’
Formal Words:
These arise suddenly at any time of day and night without
a period of deep recollection:
‘Sometimes, these words are
very explicit and at other times not. They are like
ideas spoken to the spirit, either as a reply to something
or in another manner. At times only one word is spoken,
and then again, more than one; sometimes the locutions
are successive, like the others, for they may endure
while the soul is being taught, or while the subject
is being discussed. All these words come without intervention
of the spirit because they are received as though one
person were speaking to another.’
Substantial Words:
These issue from that deep centre of the soul where
the ‘human’ mingles with the ‘divine’
and where no impurity is possible. With the previous
two expressions of the Word the ego can claim the power
of the revelation but in this deep centre no demonic
force can penetrate; it is an area of the soul normally
hidden from ourselves. The word arising in this place
‘does more good for a person than a whole lifetime
of deeds.’
This is because the word is fully experienced in that
moment so that:
‘If Our Lord should say to
the soul “Be good,” it would immediately
be substantially good.’
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