Anne Dutton's 
    Letters on Spiritual Subjects
 
    My Beloved Brother in the Lord,
    I am a partaker of your joy in those rich love-feasts in our Lord's 
    banqueting-house with which you have been favored. O happy soul, how does 
    Jesus love you! And yet I must tell you He has but begun to love you.
    The love of Christ to you will pass on 
    in brighter displays from glory to glory, glancing upon you through time as 
    it passes by in its own everlasting round, in the state, in the majesty of a 
    God, of the Lord Jehovah. O, my brother, I would be undone if the love of 
    Christ were not just as it is, an infinite, strong, free, all-surpassing, 
    unchangeable, and eternal love; if it were not the love of the Lord to an 
    adulteress-bride, who by heart-idolatry looks to other gods, and loves 
    sacred raisin cakes. But O, amazing wonder, our Lord's love-language is, 
    "The Lord said to me, "Go, show your love to your wife again, though she is 
    loved by another and is an adulteress. Love her as the Lord loves the 
    Israelites, though they turn to other gods and love the sacred raisin 
    cakes!" Hosea 3:1
    The love of Christ being the love of the Lord, that has 
    all the immense fullness, glories, and perfections of the Godhead in it, 
    will always have a "yet" for us—a yet of continuance of infinite favor, a 
    yet of increasing display—notwithstanding all our unworthiness and 
    provocations. And O, surpassing wonder! Our Lord will say of us, as washed 
    in His blood, clothed with His righteousness, anointed with His Spirit, and 
    adorned with His graces, "How beautiful you are, my beloved, how beautiful! 
    Your eyes behind your veil are like doves!" What, say of an 
    adulteress-bride, who looks to other gods, even after redeemed by and 
    acquainted with the love of the Lord-Redeemer, "You have dove's eyes!" Oh, 
    none could say this but He who is the Lord, the God of love! It is His 
    language whose love has in it heights and depths, breadths and lengths, 
    which are infinite, passing knowledge. 
    And of His bride, black as she is in herself, by the 
    workings of sin in her corrupt nature, this Bridegroom will say,"How 
    beautiful you are, my beloved, how beautiful my love!" My love! Oh, there it 
    is! She is the object of Emanuel's love—of His heart-love, of His dying, 
    living love, of His time-love, of His eternal love—His soul is fixed upon 
    her; He loves her from Himself, He loves her in His own beauties cast upon 
    her; He loves her as Himself—as His own flesh—as nearly, as inseparably 
    related to Him. He will love her into love, into a full and glorious 
    conformity to His own bright image. He had the pattern of all her glory 
    given Him of old by His Father, when she was presented to Him in the mirror 
    of decree. She ravished His heart then; He took her in the everlasting 
    covenant, to love her ever; yes, though He must die for her, to bring her up 
    to her decreed life of glory. He has wrought her up unto all her perfect 
    beauty, her designed brightness in Himself. He is now working her up by His 
    Spirit in herself to that pattern-glory. Her future brightness is present in 
    His eye; and in all respects, from an infinity of grace and love, of flowing 
    delights, this Bridegroom says to His bride, "How beautiful you are, my 
    beloved, how beautiful! Your eyes behind your veil are like doves!" which 
    shows how fitly the eyes of Christ are set to look with delight upon His own 
    dove. 
    O! His eyes are as the eyes of doves (pure, piercing, 
    mild, loving), by the rivers of water (by the flows of infinite grace), 
    washed with milk (bathed in those milky streams), and fitly set to look upon 
    His spouse, His love, His dove, under all her miseries and mournings, with 
    boundless compassion, ardent desires, infinite delights, and almighty 
    influence, to look her into communion unto her full salvation by and eternal 
    glory with Him. Happy, thrice happy then, is that soul who can say of 
    Christ, that fairer than the sons of men, that altogether lovely Bridegroom, 
    who can love a black bride in and into His own beauty and brightness—this is 
    my beloved, and this is my friend!
    Such a sweet visit my Lord lately made me, such a glance, 
    such a taste, such a shine of His love He favored me with that broke, 
    melted, and overcame my heart; that made me long to serve Him here, yes, to 
    be with Him, to behold, to enjoy, to adore Him in the glory of His love, 
    which, with an heart-ravishing majesty, a soul-overcoming glory, so brightly 
    beamed upon me in this land of distance. And before that time, my Lord has 
    frequently of late applied many of His precious promises to my heart, which 
    foretell great things that He will yet do, in His infinite grace, for His 
    most unworthy worm. Praise Him for His amazing kindness to me, and pray that 
    His love may change me into its own image.