T’aego is right.
He guesses, or sees, what many of us long for.
A faith.
That what is there is there.
No matter how dull our minds.
No matter how clouded our perception.
No matter how dusking our hope.
There is something bright and clear,
without falsity, without biases,
tranquil and unmoving,
possessed of vast consciousness,
fundamentally without birth, death and discrimination,
without names and forms and words.
It engulfs space and covers
all of heaven and earth,
all of form and sound,
and is equipped to function.
T’aego (1301-1382)
Taego Bou (Korean: 태고보우; Hanja: 太古普愚, 23 October 1301 – 27 January 1383), alternatively romanized as Taego Bowoo or Taego Bowu, was a Korean Seon master who lived in Goryeo, was the cofounder of the Jogye Order with Jinul, and is credited as the founder of the modern Taego Order.
When Zen Master Seung Sahn (called by his students Dae Soen Sa Nim, or "Great Honored Zen Teacher”) came to America from Korea in 1972, I sat with him in Manhattan and in Providence. I was not a formal student, only interested. (Inter-esse -- to be between)
Jesuit priest, poet, and peace-advocate Daniel Berrigan used the word “interesting” as a revelation to me as I walked beside him in Norristown PA (1981) during one of his court trials. He would say the word there and elsewhere as if it were a holy word.
Seung Sahn and Daniel Berrigan were interesting to me.
Something that is taking place between what you consider “me” and that which just might be the "sacred non-self.”
That holy place holding together an entropic material/spiritual universe which is perennially flying off from itself into diverse and disordered realms of the unknown.
Between order and disorder, between this and that, between heaven and hell, we are “interesting.”
Are we, as “interesting,” that which unknowingly finds ourselves placed between the centrifugal and the centripetal as necessary beings, (compare “Christs”) as that which holds-to-itself in a time of rampant self-annihilation and elimination?
To be “interesting” is to be “between” that which is whole and that which is whole, That is, that which is wholly unknown and that which is wholly known.
To exist as itself.
Throughout.
Is this what is meant by the practice of nearing God?
Is this what a true practitioner of a holy path is doing?
Placing one’s-self between what-is there and what-is-not here?
Being absurdly willing to stand in the place of unknowing between the completely unknown and the wholly known?
To be there with dignity and forbearance, with vulnerability and trust, with humility and good humor?
Throughout.
Unafraid to see and learn truth; unafraid to experience and notate untruth?
To be between throughout.
