Walking Old Orchard Beach low-tide hard-pack sand just steps from my first winter-rental in 1981-82, reading Religion and Nothingness, the template was set for the next 45 years.
Meetingbrook Dogen & Francis Hermitage is the elaboration of that template.
“Absolute nothingness signals, for Eckhart, the point at which all modes of being are transcended, at which not only the various modes of created being but even the modes of divine being – such as Creator or Divine Love – are transcended. Creator, he says, is the Form of God that is bared to creatures and seen from the standpoint of creatures, and as such is not to be taken as what God is in himself, as the essence of God. It is the same when God is said to be Love or to be Good. The essence of God that renders ineffable each and every mode of being (and each and every Form) can only be expressed as absolute nothingness”
(Nishitani Keiji – Religion and Nothingness pg 61-62).
I suppose I’m still attempting to fulfill my reception of the Religion Medal graduating 8th grade from St Athanasius Parochial School in 1957.
What do I come away with these 70 years later?
You could say ‘absolutely nothing’.
You could say I am perched on the veritable fulcrum point of everything that seems to have two sides.
You could say these things, but my hearing is compromised.