LXXX
THERE IS ONE POWER IN THE SOUL
Adolescens,
tibi dico: surge (Luc. 714). We read in St Luke's gospel
about a youth who was dead. And our Lord came and took compassion on him
and touched him and said, 'Young man, I say unto thee, I command thee, Arise!'
Now you must know that in all good
people God is present all at once and there is something in the soul wherein God
lives and something in the soul where the soul lives in God, and if the soul
turns outwards towards external things she dies and God dies also in the
soul. But he does not die in himself at all and he is alive to
himself. Just as, when the soul leaves the body the body dies and the soul
lives on in herself, so God may be dead to the soul and alive to himself.
And know, there is one power in the soul wider than wide heaven, which is so
incredibly extensive that we are unable to define it, and yet this power is much
vaster still.
Mark now. In this exalted power the
Father is saying to the one-begotten Son, 'Young man, arise!' It is God,
and the closeness of its union with the soul is past belief, for God is so lofty
in himself that nothing whatsoever can attain thereto by understanding. It
is wider than that heavens, aye than all the angels, albeit one angelic spark is
the cause of all the life on earth. Desire is far-reaching, limitless. All that
man can conceive, all that heart can desire, that is not God. Where desire
and understanding end, in the darkness, there shines God.
Quoth our Lord: 'Young man, I say unto thee, Arise!' If
I am to hear God speaking in me I must be wholly estranged from all that is
mine, as strange as I am to things under the sea, and especially from time. The
soul is as young in herself as when she was made, for age as relating to her is
an affair of the body, affecting her use of its senses. As one philosopher
observes, an old man with the eyes of youth would see just as well as a boy. I
made a statement yesterday which seems almost incredible. I said that Jerusalem
is as near my soul as the ground I stand on now. 'Aye in good sooth, a
thousand leagues beyond Jerusalem is every whit as night my soul as my own body
is, of that I am as sure as of my being a man, and to any learned clerk it is
not hard to understand.' Know then that my soul is as young as when I was
created, aye, much younger. And I tell you, I should be ashamed were she not
younger to-morrow than to-day.
The soul has two powers which have
nothing whatever to do with the body, namely intellect and will, which function
above time. Oh, if only the soul's eyes were opened so that her understanding
might behold the truth! Then it would be easy to a man to give up
everything as to give up peas and lentils, aye upon my soul, to him all things
would be but vanity. There are some who give up things for love albeit
greatly prizing what they leave. But to this man who knows in truth, it
matters not one whit that he should leave himself and everything, for anyone who
takes this course has all things for his own in truth.
There is one power in the soul to
which all things are alike sweet; the very worst and the very best are all the
same in this power which takes things above here and now. Now meaning
time and here meaning place. This place I am in now, suppose I went out
of myself and were entirely empty, why then I ween the heavenly Sire would bear
his only Son within my mind so clearly that my spirit would bear him back
again. Verily, were my spirit as ready as the soul of our Lord Jesus
Christ, then would the Father energise in me as perfectly as in his one-begotten
Son, no less, seeing that he loves me with the selfsame love wherewith he loves
himself.
St John said, 'In the beginning was
the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God.' Now to hear this
Word in the Father (where it is absolutely silent), in a man must be quite quiet
and wholly free from images, aye, and forms as well. A man must be so true
to God that nothing whatever can gladden him or sadden him. He must see
all things in God, as they are there.
He says, 'Young man, I say unto thee,
Arise!' meaning to effect this thing himself. If someone tells me to carry
one stone he may as well tell me a hundred if he is going to do it himself. If
he orders a hundredweight load he may just as well make it a thousand if it is
for his own back. And God will do this work himself if only we will wait
and not resist. If the would soul would but stay within, she would have
everything there. There is one power in the soul and that not merely power but
being; and not merely being: it radiates life and is so pure, so high and so
innately noble that creatures cannot live in it; none but God can abide
therein. Nay, even God himself is forbidden there so far as he is subject
to condition. God cannot enter there in any guise: God is only there in
his absolute divinity.
Then, the fact of his speaking the
words, 'Young man, I say unto thee.' What is God's speaking? It is his working
and God's work is so noble, so sublime, that God alone can do it. You must
understand then, that our whole perfection, our entire happiness, will lie in
traversing and transcending all creatureliness, all time and all limitation and
getting into the cause which is causeless. We pay thee O Lord, that we may
be one and indwelling. So help us God. Amen.
Return Back to the Meister Eckhart Page