The simple ground of Being
"As I was coming here today I considered how to preach to you clearly so that you would understand me properly, and I hit on an analogy. If you can understand it, you will be able to grasp my meaning and get to the bottom of all that I have ever preached about. The analogy is with my eye and wood. When my eye is open it is an eye: when it is shut it is still the same eye; and the wood is neither more nor less by reason of my seeing it. Now mark me well: Suppose my
eye, being one and single in itself, falls on the wood with vision, then
though each thing stays as it is, yet in the very act of seeing they are
so much at one that we can really say 'eye-wood,' and the wood is my I have sometimes spoken of a light that is in the soul, which is
uncreated and uncreatable. I continually touch on this light in my
sermons: it is the light which lays straight hold of God, unveiled and
bare, as He is in Himself, that is, it catches Him in the act of begetting.
So I can truly say that this light is far more at one with God than it
is with any of the powers with which it has unity of being. For you
should know, this light is no nobler in my soul's essence than the Therefore I say, if a man turns away from self and from all created things, then - to the extent that you do this - you will attain to oneness and blessedness in your soul's spark, which time and place never touched. This spark is opposed to all creatures: it wants nothing but God, naked, just as He is. It is not satisfied with the Father or the Son or the Holy Ghost, or all three Persons so far as they preserve their several properties. I declare in truth, this light would not be satisfied with the unity of the whole fertility of the divine nature. In fact I will say still more, which sounds even stranger: I declare in all truth, by the eternal and everlasting truth, that this light is not content with the simple changeless divine being which neither gives nor takes: rather it seeks to know whence this being comes, it wants to get into its simple ground, into the silent desert into which no distinction ever peeped, of Father, Son or Holy Ghost. In the inmost part, where none is at home, there that light finds satisfaction, and there it is more one than it is in itself: for this ground is an impartible stillness, motionless in itself, and by this immobility all things are moved, and all those receive life that live of themselves, being endowed with reason."
Excerpt taken from the complete mystical works, Meister Eckhart, pages 309-311.
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