Photograph by George Angus |
“God is not found in the soul by adding anything
but by a process of subtraction.”
Meister
Eckhart
This past week we’ve started
renovating the kitchen. It has been very hard work, ironically not so much
renovating but taking down, breaking open, stripping. This morning I stand in
the empty shell and look at all the patched cracks, the open rafters, all the
wiring and pipes exposed and I ask Matilda: “Will it ever look better again?” “It
will,” she says, “ you know that you often have to break to restore.”
I find it no mere coincidence
that right now I am busy reading T.S. Eliot’s Four Quartets as part of our Living School material. In the fourth
section or “movement” of the second
Quartet I came across this line: “And that, to be restored, our sickness must
grow worse.”
Breaking, stripping, entering darkness,
vulnerability, weakness – all elements of the soil from which new growth
sprouts. It is a rule of the spiritual life and lies at the heart of
Christianity.
“While
Jews clamor for miraculous demonstrations and Greeks go in for philosophical
wisdom, we go right on proclaiming Christ, the Crucified. Jews treat this like
an anti-miracle--and Greeks pass it off as absurd. But to us who are personally
called by God himself - both Jews and Greeks - Christ is God's ultimate miracle
and wisdom all wrapped up in one. Human wisdom is so tinny, so impotent, next
to the seeming absurdity of God. Human strength can't begin to compete with
God's "weakness." (1 Cor 1:22 – 25, The Message)
It saddens me to see how so
much of current religion does everything in its power to avoid these very “weakness”
elements. The latter is often regarded as sin, attacks from evil and the focus
is much more on a clamor for miraculous demonstrations and current cultural
wisdom.
Matthew Fox writes in his book
“Original Blessing”:
“Religion too has become very light-oriented
in the West. The religion of Positivism is almost all light. And the
sentimental hymns that ignore the dark or reduce it anthropomorphically to
human sin and therefore to salvation contribute to the excessive lightning of
our world.
What price have we paid as a people for all
this light? We have become afraid of the dark. Afraid of no light. Of silence,
therefore. Of image-lessness. We whore after more – more images, more light,
more profits, more goodies. And, if [Meister] Eckhart is correct about the
power of subtraction versus the power of addition, our souls in the process
shrivel up. For growth of the human person takes place in the dark. Under
ground. In subterranean passages. There, where ‘no image has ever reached the
soul’s foundation,’ God alone works. A light-oriented spirituality is
superficial, surface-like, lacking as it does the deep, dark roots that nourish
and surprise and ground the large tree.”
I must
confess, when starting with the renovations on Monday, I never expected that it
would lead to theological thoughts a week later. Hopefully the end result where
the kitchen itself is concerned will surprise me just as much.
George
As ek swak is is ek sterk want dan kom Sy krag tot volle werking... dis alles so raak beskryf danki G!
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