At times, the question comes down to God and the soul.
As in: which is which? Is one in the other? Is there no-other? Is realizing one's soul realizing God?
Is there, so to speak, a creating of the world from within oneself when the undifferentiated suchness of isomorphic existentiality emerges into and onto the visible, tangible and cosmic plane of the ontotheologic landscape/horizon? (cf. International Journal of Philosophical Studies Vol.8(3), 297–327; 2000, Ontotheology? Understanding Heidegger’s Destruktion of Metaphysics * Iain Thomson
Have we not understood the nature of reality, the nature of self, the nature of God?
God and the soul -- that too is what Eckhart desired to know. Nothing more, but nothing less either. At one place in the fifty-third of the German sermons the Meister summarizes the content of his preaching in terms of four general themes that are really aspects of the correlative mysteries of God and the soul: 12 "When I preach I always speak of detachment (abegescheidenheit) and that man shall be free of himself and of all things. Second, that man shall be formed anew (ingebildet) in the simple goodness that is God. Third, that man shall think of the great nobility that God has bestowed on the soul in order that he miraculously come to God. Fourth, [I speak of] the purity of the divine nature -- any brightness that is in the divine nature is ineffable. God is a word, a word that is not spoken."13 Eckhart's proclamation of the necessity of inner detachment from the self and from all created things is a necessary precondition to union with God because only a totally naked soul can receive the naked hidden God -- "the greater the nudity, the greater the union."14 Man must make a pilgrimage into the desert with him in order to encounter the wilderness (einoede, wüestunge) of the hidden Godhead.15. Perfect union with God on the one hand is a reformation, a recreation, a remaking (inbilden) of man back into the simple ground of God; on the other, it is a recognition of the Godlike nobility that the soul never loses, an intellectual conversion to the noble part of the soul that Eckhart speaks of as the vünkelin, the bürgelin, or the grunt.16 Finally, since the soul is truly divine in its innermost ground, and since the goal of life is the attainment not just of similarity and unity but of true and undifferentiated oneness with God,17 the pure ineffability of the divine nature will always be the most fundamental theme of the mystical preacher's message.
(--pp.4-5 The God beyond God: Theology and Mysticism in the Thought of Meister Eckhart, by Bernard McGinn, in The Journal of Religion, Jan.,1981, Vol 61, Mo.1, {Jan.1981} pp.1-19, The University of Chicago Press)
https://www.jstor.org/stable/1202156, or, https://www.scribd.com/document/522620024/McGinn-The-God-beyond-God-Theology-and-Mysticism-in-the-Thought-of-Meister-Eckhart
We wonder. We wonder about our origin, about the origins of all that is, about the process of emergence, from where? and into what?
We look everywhere, with telescopes and satellites, meditation and contemplation, colloquy and wordless silence in the face of what is presenting itself.
3. Lebemeister or Lesemeister? Eckhart as Mystic, Theologian, and Philosopher
In much contemporary spiritual literature, various popular new-age tomes, and not a little academic scholarship, Meister Eckhart has been characterized first and foremost as a mystic—and only secondarily as a theologian or philosopher. This characterization has to do, in part, with the recovery of Eckhart’s vernacular works by nineteenth-century Romantic and Idealist movements in Germany for whom the so-called “mystics” symbolized the representatives and custodians of “true” religion (Schmidt 2003). (Eckhart’s more “scholarly” Latin writings were not discovered until the second half of the nineteenth century by which time he had already been claimed for mysticism.) Relatedly, Eckhart’s vernacular works lent themselves well to a growing interest in religious perennialism and a desire in the burgeoning fields of religious studies, philosophy of religion, and religious psychology to locate parallels between the attitudes, experiences, and ideas found in Christianity and those of other religious and spiritual traditions (Griffioen 2021: 9–12). Already in Volume 2 of The World as Will and Representation (1844), Schopenhauer compared Eckhart’s ideas with those found in Buddhism, Sufism, and the Upanishads (Schopenhauer 1844 [2018]), and Rudolf Otto compared the Meister to Shankara in his influential 1926 Mysticism East and West (Otto 1926 [1932]). Since then, Eckhart has often been set alongside other figures sometimes claimed for mysticism—e.g., Abraham Abulafia, Ibn ‘Arabi, Rumi, Zhuangzi, and Zhu Xi, to name just a few—and his work has been compared to traditions as wide ranging as Advaita Vedanta, Confucianism, Sufism, Taoism, Zen Buddhism, and Zoharic Kabbalism, among others. Indeed, Eckhart remains a significant touchstone for scholars of comparative mysticism today. https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/meister-eckhart/
This morning, rain. Firebox and portable heaters stand in vigil for expired furnace. Chocolate milk and Mrs. Dunster's Crunch Nuggets attend this time before dawn. Bodhi-Chitta, the cat, wonders, if I am sitting here on the wohnküche couch, why hasn't her breakfast appeared?
These day I am aware of entropy, the gradual decline into disorder that is my physical and mental disestablishment.
I'm not looking for God. (Unless, in effect, I might be doing the looking for God?)
Still, it is the season of Advent, that mostly commercial selling time of materials for presents and celebratory occasions that seamlessly coincide with religious holidays and natural cycles having to do with light, inner and outer, mehr licht, enlightenment, and eternal return in all its aspects.
I open the winter drapes. I step outside to feel the morning mist and fog, the quiet scrunch underfoot.
It is the time of prayer. Laudes and Prime chanting from France. Cats are given their morning bowls. Donuts and milk are put away. Two logs placed into firebox.
I think of the Korean Zen Master Seung Sahn. One of the dharma teachers in his school writes:
For many of us, answering the big questions and developing a “spiritual” connection or–what we would call in our tradition–finding your “True Self” or “Big I” seems to take a certain amount of effort and dedication over years. That is why it is so often said that the time to start is now. “Hurry, hurry. Soon dead.” You might have read some words like from our founding teacher, Zen Master Seung Sahn. https://colinbeavan.com/how-to-find-time-for-your-spiritual-practice/
It is actually a cheerful meditation "Hurry, hurry, Soon dead."
Faint light appears outside windows in dooryard. Snow on ground and branches give definition.
It is the anniversary of Thomas Merton's death. Here the well-known Merton prayer.
We are grateful for his life.