When the
soul wishes to experience something she throws an image of the experience out
before her and enters into her own image.
The words are from Meister Eckhart, the medieval
German theologian and mystic who knew about the laws of the larger reality
through direct experience. I first read then and jotted them down as an
undergraduate, eons ago. They turn up now and then unexpectedly, as they did
just now in an old journal. I went looking just now for the exact source (the
history professor in me dies hard) and I see that you can order a Meister
Eckhart Quote Bag with this inscription.
I'm tickled by the notion that instead of putting
this quote in your bag of tricks, you might want to try packing what you carry
through the day inside the thought.
It's a thought that demands walking meditation.
Travel with it, and see how it shapes and illuminates your day. Then test it
against your dreams.
The medieval master is telling us something
vitally important about our relationship with time and about the secret of
manifestation. He draws us to think about the confluence between what medieval
theologians called the Aevum - the realm between time and eternity - and events
in our world. It is in the Aevum that the incidents and circumstances of our
physical lives are generated, in this understanding, through the agency of
imagination, that great faculty of soul. On most days, most of us, sequestered
from soul and its knowing, are merely receivers of the results of choices made
in this realm that is hidden from the ordinary mind.
Who knew where we stood?
In an aevum maybe, where time's conferred
with the beginning we gave it,
but with no end in sight.
These beckoning lines are from a poem titled
"Aevum" by M.E.Caballero-Robb. They strengthen the enjoinder to walk
through a day - why not today? - with Meister Eckhart's thought. That means
asking, of whatever develops during the day, What
image am I now entering? And, Where and how was this image created?
Then, energized by these reflections, we go the
long step further, which is to seek to be present, as conscious co-creators, in
the place where soul makes its choices on what we - as its vehicles - will
experience in the world.
Do I sound like a mystic? Very well, you may call
me a mystic, but I would say that I am a mystic of a very practical order. We
are talking about how worlds are made.
By the way, a more famous Meister Eckhart quote is
this: "If the only prayer you said in your life was Thank You, that would
suffice." That is my own philosophy of prayer, and it is the practice of
people who live close to the Earth as well as the heavens, and give thanks
daily for its gifts. Oh yes, you can get that on a "quote bag" too.
Drawing by Robert Moss
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