to the same sins, they are the words of other spirits
than thine own (I mean some of the three touched before).
And thou for none such thoughts, be they never so thick,
so foul, nor so many (I mean for their first coming
in), but if it be for recklessness of againstanding,[307]
art no blame worthy. And not only releasing of
purgatory that thou hast deserved for the same sins
done before, what so they be, thou mayst deserve, if
thou stiffly againstand them, but also much grace
in this life, and much meed in the bliss of heaven.
But all those evil thoughts coming in to thee, stirring
thee to any sin, after that thou hast consented to
that same sin, and before that thou hast sorrow for
that consent, and art in will to be shriven thereof,
it is no peril to thee to take them to thyself,[308]
and for to shrive thee of them, as of thoughts of
thine own spirit; but for to take to thyself all other
thoughts, the which thou hast by very proof, as it
is shewed before, by the speeches of other spirits
than of thyself, therein lieth great peril, for so
mightest thou lightly misrule thy conscience, charging
a thing for sin the which is none; and this were great
error, and a mean to the greatest peril. For if
it were so that each evil thought and stirring to
sin were the work and the speech of none other spirit,
but only of man’s own spirit; then it would
follow by that that a man’s own spirit were a
very fiend, the which is apertly false and a damnable
woodness;[309] for though all it be so that a soul
may, by frailty and custom of sinning, fall in to so
much wretchedness, that it taketh on itself by bondage
of sin the office of the devil, stirring itself to
sin ever more and more, without any suggestion of
any other spirit (as it is said before), yet it is
not therefore a devil in kind, but it is a devil in
office, and may be cleped devilish, for it is in the
doing like to the devil, [that is to say, a stirrer
of itself unto sin, the which is the office of the
devil].[310] Nevertheless yet, for all this thraldom
to sin and devilishness in office, it may by grace
of contrition, of shrift, and of amending, recover
the freedom again, and be made saveable—yea,
and a full special God’s saint in this life,
that before was full damnable and full cursed in the
living.[311] And, therefore, as great a peril as it
is a soul that is fallen in sin, not for to charge
his conscience therewith, nor for to amend him thereof,
as great a peril it is, and, if it may be said, a
greater, a man for to charge his conscience with each
thought and stirring of sin that will come in him;
for, by such nice charging of conscience, might he
lightly run in to error of conscience, and so be led
in to despair all his life time. And the cause
of all this is lacking of knowing of discretion of
spirits, the which knowing may be gotten by very experience;
who so redely will look soon after that a soul have
been truly cleansed by confession as it is said before.
For fast after confession a soul is, as it were, a