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Blessed Henry Suso
(Also called Amandus, a name adopted in his writings). German mystic, born at Constance on 21 March, about 1295; died at Ulm, 25 January, 1366; declared Blessed in 1831 by Gregory XVI, who assigned his feast in the Dominican Order to 2 March.
HIS LIFE
His father belonged to the noble family of Berg; his mother, a holy woman from whom he took his name, to a family of Sus (or Süs). When thirteen years of age he entered the Dominican convent at Constance, where he made his preparatory, philosophical, and theological studies.
From 1324 to 1327 he took a supplementary course in theology in the Dominican
studium generale at Cologne, where he sat at the feet of Johann Eckhart, the
Master
, and probably at the side of Tauler, both celebrated mystics. Returning
to Constance, he was appointed to the office of lector, from which he seems to
have been removed some time between 1329 and 1334. In the latter year he began
his apostolic career. About 1343 he was elected prior of a convent, probably at
Diessenhofen. Five years later he was sent from Constance to Ulrn where he
remained until his death.
Suso's life as a mystic began in his eighteenth year, when giving up his
careless habits of the five preceding years, he made himself the Servant of the
Eternal Wisdom
, which he identified with the Divine essence and, in a concrete
form, with the personal Eternal Wisdom made man. Henceforth a burning love for
the Eternal Wisdom dominated his thoughts and controlled his actions. He had
frequent visions and ecstasies, practised severe austerities (which he prudently
moderated in maturer years), and bore with rare patience corporal afflictions,
bitter persecutions and grievous calumnies.
He became foremost among the Friends of God in the work of restoring religious observance in the cloisters. His influence was especially strong in many convents of women, particularly in the Dominican convent of Katherinenthal, a famous nursery of mysticism in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, and in that of Toss, where lived the mystic Elsbeth Stagel, who turned some of his Latin into German, collected and preserved most of his extant letters, and drew from him the history of his life which he himself afterwards developed and published.
In the world he was esteemed as a preacher, and was heard in the cities and towns of Swabia, Switzerland, Alsace, and the Netherlands. His apostolate, however, was not with the masses, but rather with individuals of all classes who were drawn to him by his singularly attractive personality, and to whom he became a personal director in the spiritual life.
It has often been incorrectly said that he established among the Friends of
God a society which he called the Brotherhood of the Eternal Wisdom. The
so-called Rule of the Brotherhood of the Eternal Wisdom is but a free
translation of a chapter of his Horologium Sapientiae
, and did not make its
appearance until the fifteenth century.
HIS WRITINGS
The first writing from the pen of Suso was the Büchlein der Wahrheit
, which
he issued while a student at Cologne. Its doctrine was unfavourably criticized
in some circles - very probably on account of its author's close relations with
Eckhart, who had just been called upon to explain or to reject certain
propositions - but it was found to be entirely orthodox.
As in this, so in his other writings Suso, while betraying Eckhart's
influence, always avoided the errors of the Master
. The book was really
written in part against the pantheistic teachings of the Beghards, and against
the libertine teachings of the Brethren of the Free Spirit. Father Denifle
considers it the most difficult little book
among the writings of the German
mystics.
Whereas in this book Suso speaks as a contemplative and to the intellect, in
his next, Das Büchlein der ewigen Weisheit
, published early in 1328, he is
eminently practical and speaks out of the fullness of his heart to simple men
who still have imperfections to be put off
. Bihlmeyer accepts Denifle's
judgment that it is the most beautiful fruit of German mysticism
, and places
it next to the HomilieEine Homilie (von griech.„ὁμιλεῖν”, „vertraut miteinander reden”) ist eine Art von Predigt. Während eine Predigt die Großtaten Gottes preist (lat. „praedicare”, „preisen”) und Menschen für den Glauben begeistern will, hat die Homilie lehrhaften Charakter. s
of St. Bernard, and the Imitation of Christ
by
Thomas à Kempis. In the second half of the fourteenth and in the fifteenth
century there was no more widely read meditation book m the German language.
In 1334 Suso translated this work into Latin, but in doing so added
considerably to its contents, and made of it an almost entirely new book, to
which he gave the name Horologium Sapientiae
. Even more elevating than the
original, finished in language, rich in figure, rhythmic in movement, it became
a favourite book in the cloisters at the close of the Middle Ages, not only in
Germany, but also in the Netherlands, France, Italy, and England.
To the same period of Suso's literary activity may belong Das Minnebüchlein
but its authenticity is doubtful.
After retiring to Ulm Suso wrote the story of his inner life (Vita
or
Leben Seuses
), revised the Büchlein der Wahrheit
, and the Büchlein der
ewigen Weisheit
, all of which, together with eleven of his letters (the
Briefbüchlein
), and a prologue, he formed into one book known as the Exemplar
Seuses
.
Besides the above-mentioned writings we have also five sermons by Suso and a collection of twenty-eight of his letters (Grosses Briefbuch), which may be found in Bihlmeyer's edition.
Suso is called by Wackernagel and others a Minnesinger in prose and in the
spiritual order.
The mutual love of God and man which is his principal theme
gives warmth and colour to his style. He used the full and flexible Alamannian
idiom with rare skill, and contributed much to the formation of good German
prose, especially by giving new shades of meaning to words employed to describe
inner sensations. His intellectual equipment was characteristic of the schoolmen
of his age. In his doctrine there was never the least trace of an unorthodox
tendency.
For centuries he exercised an influence upon spiritual writers. Among his readers and admirers were Thomas à Kempis and Bl. Peter Canisius.
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