Ennead III
Eighth tractate: Nature contemplation and the one
Written by Plotinus, 250 AD
- 1. Supposing we played a little before entering upon our serious
concern and maintained that all things are striving after Contemplation,
looking to Vision as their one end- and this, not merely beings endowed with
reason but even the unreasoning animals, the Principle that rules in growing
things, and the Earth that produces these- and that all achieve their purpose
in the measure possible to their kind, each attaining Vision and possessing
itself of the End in its own way and degree, some things in entire reality,
others in mimicry and in image- we would scarcely find anyone to endure so
strange a thesis. But in a discussion entirely among ourselves there is no risk
in a light handling of our own ideas.
- Well- in the play of this very moment am I engaged in the act of
Contemplation?
- Yes; I and all that enter this play are in Contemplation: our play
aims at Vision; and there is every reason to believe that child or man, in
sport or earnest, is playing or working only towards Vision, that every act is
an effort towards Vision; the compulsory act, which tends rather to bring the
Vision down to outward things, and the act thought of as voluntary, less
concerned with the outer, originate alike in the effort towards Vision.
- The case of Man will be treated later on; let us speak, first, of the
earth and of the trees and vegetation in general, asking ourselves what is the
nature of Contemplation in them, how we relate to any Contemplative activity
the labour and productiveness of the earth, how Nature, held to be devoid of
reason and even of conscious representation, can either harbour Contemplation
or produce by means of the Contemplation which it does not possess.
- 2. There is, obviously, no question here of hands or feet, of any
implement borrowed or inherent: Nature needs simply the Matter which it is to
work upon and bring under Form; its productivity cannot depend upon mechanical
operation. What driving or hoisting goes to produce all that variety of colour
and pattern?
- The wax-workers, whose methods have been cited as parallel to the
creative act of Nature, are unable to make colours; all they can do to impose
upon their handicraft colours taken from elsewhere. None the less there is a
parallel which demands attention: in the case of workers in such arts there
must be something locked within themselves, an efficacy not going out from them
and yet guiding their hands in all their creation; and this observation should
have indicated a similar phenomenon in Nature; it should be clear that this
indwelling efficacy, which makes without hands, must exist in Nature, no less
than in the craftsman- but, there, as a thing completely inbound. Nature need
possess no outgoing force as against that remaining within; the only moved
thing is Matter; there can be no moved phase in this Nature-Principle; any such
moved phase could not be the primal mover; this Nature-Principle is no such
moved entity; it is the unmoved Principle operating in the Kosmos.
- We may be answered that the Reason-Principle is, no doubt, unmoved,
but that the Nature-Principle, another being, operates by motion.
- But, if Nature entire is in question here, it is identical with the
Reason-Principle; and any part of it that is unmoved is the Reason-Principle.
The Nature-Principle must be an Ideal-Form, not a compound of Form and Matter;
there is no need for it to possess Matter, hot and cold: the Matter that
underlies it, on which it exercises its creative act, brings all that with it,
or, natively without quality, becomes hot and cold, and all the rest, when
brought under Reason: Matter, to become fire, demands the approach not of fire
but of a Reason-Principle.
- This is no slight evidence that in the animal and vegetable realms
the Reason-Principles are the makers and that Nature is a Reason-Principle
producing a second Reason-Principle, its offspring, which, in turn, while
itself, still, remaining intact, communicates something to the underlie,
Matter.
- The Reason-Principle presiding over visible Shape is the very
ultimate of its order, a dead thing unable to produce further: that which
produces in the created realm is the living Reason-Principle- brother no doubt,
to that which gives mere shape, but having life-giving power.
- 3. But if this Reason-Principle [Nature] is in act- and produces by
the process indicated- how can it have any part in Contemplation?
- To begin with, since in all its production it is stationary and
intact, a Reason-Principle self-indwelling, it is in its own nature a
Contemplative act. All doing must be guided by an Idea, and will therefore be
distinct from that Idea: the Reason-Principle then, as accompanying and guiding
the work, will be distinct from the work; not being action but Reason-Principle
it is, necessarily, Contemplation. Taking the Reason-Principle, the Logos, in
all its phases, the lowest and last springs from a mental act [in the higher
Logos] and is itself a contemplation, though only in the sense of being
contemplated, but above it stands the total Logos with its two distinguishable
phases, first, that identified not as Nature but as All-Soul and, next, that
operating in Nature and being itself the Nature-Principle.
- And does this Reason-Principle, Nature, spring from a contemplation?
- Wholly and solely?
- From self-contemplation, then? Or what are we to think? It derives
from a Contemplation and some contemplating Being; how are we to suppose it to
have Contemplation itself?
- The Contemplation springing from the reasoning faculty- that, I mean,
of planning its own content, it does not possess.
- But why not, since it is a phase of Life, a Reason-Principle and a
creative Power?
- Because to plan for a thing is to lack it: Nature does not lack; it
creates because it possesses. Its creative act is simply its possession of it
own characteristic Essence; now its Essence, since it is a Reason-Principle, is
to be at once an act of contemplation and an object of contemplation. In other
words, the, Nature-Principle produces by virtue of being an act of
contemplation, an object of contemplation and a Reason-Principle; on this
triple character depends its creative efficacy.
- Thus the act of production is seen to be in Nature an act of
contemplation, for creation is the outcome of a contemplation which never
becomes anything else, which never does anything else, but creates by simply
being a contemplation.
- 4. And Nature, asked why it brings forth its works, might answer if
it cared to listen and to speak:
- "It would have been more becoming to put no question but to learn in
silence just as I myself am silent and make no habit of talking. And what is
your lesson? This; that whatsoever comes into being is my is my vision, seen in
my silence, the vision that belongs to my character who, sprung from vision, am
vision-loving and create vision by the vision-seeing faculty within me. The
mathematicians from their vision draw their figures: but I draw nothing: I gaze
and the figures of the material world take being as if they fell from my
contemplation. As with my Mother (the All-Soul] and the Beings that begot me so
it is with me: they are born of a Contemplation and my birth is from them, not
by their Act but by their Being; they are the loftier Reason-Principles, they
contemplate themselves and I am born."
- Now what does this tell us?
- It tells: that what we know as Nature is a Soul, offspring of a yet
earlier Soul of more powerful life; that it possesses, therefore, in its
repose, a vision within itself; that it has no tendency upward nor even
downward but is at peace, steadfast, in its own Essence; that, in this
immutability accompanied by what may be called Self-Consciousness, it
possesses- within the measure of its possibility- a knowledge of the realm of
subsequent things perceived in virtue of that understanding and consciousness;
and, achieving thus a resplendent and delicious spectacle, has no further aim.
- Of course, while it may be convenient to speak of "understanding" or
"perception" in the Nature-Principle, this is not in the full sense applicable
to other beings; we are applying to sleep a word borrowed from the wake.
- For the Vision on which Nature broods, inactive, is a self-intuition,
a spectacle laid before it by virtue of its unaccompanied self-concentration
and by the fact that in itself it belongs to the order of intuition. It is a
Vision silent but somewhat blurred, for there exists another a clearer of which
Nature is the image: hence all that Nature produces is weak; the weaker act of
intuition produces the weaker object.
- In the same way, human beings, when weak on the side of
contemplation, find in action their trace of vision and of reason: their
spiritual feebleness unfits them for contemplation; they are left with a void,
because they cannot adequately seize the vision; yet they long for it; they are
hurried into action as their way to the vision which they cannot attain by
intellection. They act from the desire of seeing their action, and of making it
visible and sensible to others when the result shall prove fairly well equal to
the plan. Everywhere, doing and making will be found to be either an
attenuation or a complement of vision-attenuation if the doer was aiming only
at the thing done; complement if he is to possess something nobler to gaze upon
than the mere work produced.
- Given the power to contemplate the Authentic, who would run, of
choice, after its image?
- The relation of action to contemplation is indicated in the way
duller children, inapt to study and speculation, take to crafts and manual
labour.
- 5. This discussion of Nature has shown us how the origin of things is
a Contemplation: we may now take the matter up to the higher Soul; we find that
the Contemplation pursued by this, its instinct towards knowing and enquiring,
the birth pangs set up by the knowledge it attains, its teeming fullness, have
caused it- in itself, all one object of Vision- to produce another Vision [that
of the Kosmos]: it is just as a given science, complete in itself, becomes the
source and cause of what might be called a minor science in the student who
attains to some partial knowledge of all its divisions. But the visible objects
and the objects of intellectual contemplation of this later creation are dim
and helpless by the side of the content of the Soul.
- The primal phase of the Soul- inhabitant of the Supreme and, by its
participation in the Supreme, filled and illuminated- remains unchangeably
There; but in virtue of that first participation, that of the primal
participant, a secondary phase also participates in the Supreme, and this
secondary goes forth ceaselessly as Life streaming from Life; for energy runs
through the Universe and there is no extremity at which it dwindles out. But,
travel as far as it may, it never draws that first part of itself from the
place whence the outgoing began: if it did, it would no longer be everywhere
[its continuous Being would be broken and] it would be present at the end,
only, of its course.
- None the less that which goes forth cannot be equal to that which
remains.
- In sum, then:
- The Soul is to extend throughout the Universe, no spot void of its
energy: but, a prior is always different from its secondary, and energy is a
secondary, rising as it must from contemplation or act; act, however, is not at
this stage existent since it depends upon contemplation: therefore the Soul,
while its phases differ, must, in all of them, remain a contemplation and what
seems to be an act done under contemplation must be in reality that weakened
contemplation of which we have spoken: the engendered must respect the Kind,
but in weaker form, dwindled in the descent.
- All goes softly since nothing here demands the parade of thought or
act upon external things: it is a Soul in vision and, by this vision, creating
its own subsequent- this Principle [of Nature], itself also contemplative but
in the feebler degree since it lies further away and cannot reproduce the
quality or experiences of its prior- a Vision creates the Vision.
- [Such creative contemplation is not inexplicable] for no limit exists
either to contemplation or to its possible objects, and this explains how the
Soul is universal: where can this thing fail to be, which is one identical
thing in every Soul; Vision is not cabined within the bournes of magnitude.
- This, of course, does not mean that the Soul is present at the same
strength in each and every place and thing- any more than that it is at the
same strength in each of its own phases.
- The Charioteer [the Leading Principle of the Soul, in the Phaedrus
Myth] gives the two horses [its two dissonant faculties] what he has seen and
they, taking that gift, showed that they were hungry for what made that vision;
there was something lacking to them: if in their desire they acted, their
action aimed at what they craved for- and that was vision, and an object of
vision.
- 6. Action, thus, is set towards contemplation and an object of
contemplation, so that even those whose life is in doing have seeing as their
object; what they have not been able to achieve by the direct path, they hope
to come at by the circuit.
- Further: suppose they succeed; they desired a certain thing to come
about, not in order to be unaware of it but to know it, to see it present
before the mind: their success is the laying up of a vision. We act for the
sake of some good; this means not for something to remain outside ourselves,
not in order that we possess nothing but that we may hold the good of the
action. And hold it, where? Where but in the mind?
- Thus once more, action is brought back to contemplation: for [mind
or] Soul is a Reason-Principle and anything that one lays up in the Soul can be
no other than a Reason-Principle, a silent thing, the more certainly such a
principle as the impression made is the deeper.
- This vision achieved, the acting instinct pauses; the mind is
satisfied and seeks nothing further; the contemplation, in one so conditioned,
remains absorbed within as having acquired certainty to rest upon. The brighter
the certainty, the more tranquil is the contemplation as having acquired the
more perfect unity; and- for now we come to the serious treatment of the
subject-
- In proportion to the truth with which the knowing faculty knows, it
comes to identification with the object of its knowledge.
- As long as duality persists, the two lie apart, parallel as it were
to each other; there is a pair in which the two elements remain strange to one
another, as when Ideal-Principles laid up in the mind or Soul remain idle.
- Hence the Idea must not be left to lie outside but must be made one
identical thing with the soul of the novice so that he finds it really his own.
- The Soul, once domiciled within that Idea and brought to likeness
with it, becomes productive, active; what it always held by its primary nature
it now grasps with knowledge and applies in deed, so becoming, as it were, a
new thing and, informed as it now is by the purely intellectual, it sees [in
its outgoing act] as a stranger looking upon a strange world. It was, no doubt,
essentially a Reason-Principle, even an Intellectual Principle; but its
function is to see a [lower] realm which these do not see.
- For, it is a not a complete thing: it has a lack; it is incomplete in
regard to its Prior; yet it, also, has a tranquil vision of what it produces.
What it has once brought into being it produces no more, for all its
productiveness is determined by this lack: it produces for the purpose of
Contemplation, in the desire of knowing all its content: when there is question
of practical things it adapts its content to the outside order.
- The Soul has a greater content than Nature has and therefore it is
more tranquil; it is more nearly complete and therefore more contemplative. It
is, however, not perfect, and is all the more eager to penetrate the object of
contemplation, and it seeks the vision that comes by observation. It leaves its
native realm and busies itself elsewhere; then it returns, and it possesses its
vision by means of that phase of itself from which it had parted. The
self-indwelling Soul inclines less to such experiences.
- The Sage, then, is the man made over into a Reason-Principle: to
others he shows his act but in himself he is Vision: such a man is already set,
not merely in regard to exterior things but also within himself, towards what
is one and at rest: all his faculty and life are inward-bent.
- 7. Certain Principles, then, we may take to be established- some
self-evident, others brought out by our treatment above:
- All the forms of Authentic Existence spring from vision and are a
vision. Everything that springs from these Authentic Existences in their vision
is an object of vision-manifest to sensation or to true knowledge or to
surface-awareness. All act aims at this knowing; all impulse is towards
knowledge, all that springs from vision exists to produce Ideal-Form, that is a
fresh object of vision, so that universally, as images of their engendering
principles, they all produce objects of vision, Ideal-forms. In the engendering
of these sub-existences, imitations of the Authentic, it is made manifest that
the creating powers operate not for the sake of creation and action but in
order to produce an object of vision. This same vision is the ultimate purpose
of all the acts of the mind and, even further downward, of all sensation, since
sensation also is an effort towards knowledge; lower still, Nature, producing
similarly its subsequent principle, brings into being the vision and Idea that
we know in it. It is certain, also, that as the Firsts exist in vision all
other things must be straining towards the same condition; the starting point
is, universally, the goal.
- When living things reproduce their Kind, it is that the
Reason-Principles within stir them; the procreative act is the expression of a
contemplation, a travail towards the creation of many forms, many objects of
contemplation, so that the universe may be filled full with Reason-Principles
and that contemplation may be, as nearly as possible, endless: to bring
anything into being is to produce an Idea-Form and that again is to enrich the
universe with contemplation: all the failures, alike in being and in doing, are
but the swerving of visionaries from the object of vision: in the end the
sorriest craftsman is still a maker of forms, ungracefully. So Love, too, is
vision with the pursuit of Ideal-Form.
- 8. From this basis we proceed:
- In the advancing stages of Contemplation rising from that in Nature,
to that in the Soul and thence again to that in the Intellectual-Principle
itself- the object contemplated becomes progressively a more and more intimate
possession of the Contemplating Beings, more and more one thing with them; and
in the advanced Soul the objects of knowledge, well on the way towards the
Intellectual-Principle, are close to identity with their container.
- Hence we may conclude that, in the Intellectual-Principle Itself,
there is complete identity of Knower and Known, and this not by way of
domiciliation, as in the case of even the highest soul, but by Essence, by the
fact that, there, no distinction exists between Being and Knowing; we cannot
stop at a principle containing separate parts; there must always be a yet
higher, a principle above all such diversity.
- The Supreme must be an entity in which the two are one; it will,
therefore, be a Seeing that lives, not an object of vision like things existing
in something other than themselves: what exists in an outside element is some
mode of living-thing; it is not the Self-Living.
- Now admitting the existence of a living thing that is at once a
Thought and its object, it must be a Life distinct from the vegetative or
sensitive life or any other life determined by Soul.
- In a certain sense no doubt all lives are thoughts- but qualified as
thought vegetative, thought sensitive and thought psychic.
- What, then, makes them thoughts?
- The fact that they are Reason-Principles. Every life is some form of
thought, but of a dwindling clearness like the degrees of life itself. The
first and clearest Life and the first Intelligence are one Being. The First
Life, then, is an Intellection and the next form of Life is the next
Intellection and the last form of Life is the last form of Intellection. Thus
every Life, of the order strictly so called, is an Intellection.
- But while men may recognize grades in life they reject grade in
thought; to them there are thoughts [full and perfect] and anything else is no
thought.
- This is simply because they do not seek to establish what Life is.
- The essential is to observe that, here again, all reasoning shows
that whatever exists is a bye-work of visioning: if, then, the truest Life is
such by virtue of an Intellection and is identical with the truest
Intellection, then the truest Intellection is a living being; Contemplation and
its object constitute a living thing, a Life, two inextricably one.
- The duality, thus, is a unity; but how is this unity also a
plurality?
- The explanation is that in a unity there can be no seeing [a pure
unity has no room for vision and an object]; and in its Contemplation the One
is not acting as a Unity; if it were, the Intellectual-Principle cannot exist.
The Highest began as a unity but did not remain as it began; all unknown to
itself, it became manifold; it grew, as it were, pregnant: desiring universal
possession, it flung itself outward, though it were better had it never known
the desire by which a Secondary came into being: it is like a Circle [in the
Idea] which in projection becomes a figure, a surface, a circumference, a
centre, a system of radii, of upper and lower segments. The Whence is the
better; the Whither is less good: the Whence is not the same as the
Whence-followed-by-a-Whither; the Whence all alone is greater than with the
Whither added to it.
- The Intellectual-Principle on the other hand was never merely the
Principle of an inviolable unity; it was a universal as well and, being so, was
the Intellectual-Principle of all things. Being, thus, all things and the
Principle of all, it must essentially include this part of itself [this
element-of-plurality] which is universal and is all things: otherwise, it
contains a part which is not Intellectual-Principle: it will be a juxtaposition
of non-Intellectuals, a huddled heap waiting to be made over from the mass of
things into the Intellectual-Principle!
- We conclude that this Being is limitless and that, in all the outflow
from it, there is no lessening either in its emanation, since this also is the
entire universe, nor in itself, the starting point, since it is no assemblage
of parts [to be diminished by any outgo].
- 9. Clearly a Being of this nature is not the primal existent; there
must exist that which transcends it, that Being [the Absolute], to which all
our discussion has been leading.
- In the first place, Plurality is later than Unity. The
Intellectual-Principle is a number [= the expression of a plurality]; and
number derives from unity: the source of a number such as this must be the
authentically One. Further, it is the sum of an Intellectual-Being with the
object of its Intellection, so that it is a duality; and, given this duality,
we must find what exists before it.
- What is this?
- The Intellectual-Principle taken separately, perhaps?
- No: an Intellect is always inseparable from an intelligible object;
eliminate the intelligible, and the Intellectual-Principle disappears with it.
If, then, what we are seeking cannot be the Intellectual-Principle but must be
something that rejects the duality there present, then the Prior demanded by
that duality must be something on the further side of the
Intellectual-Principle.
- But might it not be the Intelligible object itself?
- No: for the Intelligible makes an equally inseparable duality with
the Intellectual-Principle.
- If, then, neither the Intellectual-Principle nor the Intelligible
Object can be the First Existent, what is?
- Our answer can only be:
- The source of both.
- What will This be; under what character can we picture It?
- It must be either Intellective or without Intellection: if
Intellective it is the Intellectual-Principle; if not, it will be without even
knowledge of itself- so that, either way, what is there so august about it?
- If we define it as The Good and the wholly simplex, we will, no
doubt, be telling the truth, but we will not be giving any certain and lucid
account of it as long as we have in mind no entity in which to lodge the
conception by which we define it.
- Yet: our knowledge of everything else comes by way of our
intelligence; our power is that of knowing the intelligible by means of the
intelligence: but this Entity transcends all of the intellectual nature; by
what direct intuition, then, can it be brought within our grasp?
- To this question the answer is that we can know it only in the degree
of human faculty: we indicate it by virtue of what in ourselves is like it.
- For in us, also, there is something of that Being; nay, nothing, ripe
for that participation, can be void of it.
- Wherever you be, you have only to range over against this omnipresent
Being that in you which is capable of drawing from It, and you have your share
in it: imagine a voice sounding over a vast waste of land, and not only over
the emptiness alone but over human beings; wherever you be in that great space
you have but to listen and you take the voice entire- entire though yet with a
difference.
- And what do we take when we thus point the Intelligence?
- The Intellectual-Principle in us must mount to its origins:
essentially a thing facing two ways, it must deliver itself over to those
powers within it which tend upward; if it seeks the vision of that Being, it
must become something more than Intellect.
- For the Intellectual-Principle is the earliest form of Life: it is
the Activity presiding over the outflowing of the universal Order- the outflow,
that is, of the first moment, not that of the continuous process.
- In its character as Life, as emanation, as containing all things in
their precise forms and not merely in the agglomerate mass- for this would be
to contain them imperfectly and inarticulately- it must of necessity derive
from some other Being, from one that does not emanate but is the Principle of
Emanation, of Life, of Intellect and of the Universe.
- For the Universe is not a Principle and Source: it springs from a
source, and that source cannot be the All or anything belonging to the All,
since it is to generate the All, and must be not a plurality but the Source of
plurality, since universally a begetting power is less complex than the
begotten. Thus the Being that has engendered the Intellectual-Principle must be
more simplex than the Intellectual-Principle.
- We may be told that this engendering Principle is the One-and-All.
- But, at that, it must be either each separate entity from among all
or it will be all things in the one mass.
- Now if it were the massed total of all, it must be of later origin
than any of the things of which it is the sum; if it precedes the total, it
differs from the things that make up the total and they from it: if it and the
total of things constitute a co-existence, it is not a Source. But what we are
probing for must be a Source; it must exist before all, that all may be
fashioned as sequel to it.
- As for the notion that it may be each separate entity of the All,
this would make a self-Identity into a what you like, where you like,
indifferently, and would, besides, abolish all distinction in things
themselves.
- Once more we see that this can be no thing among things but must be
prior to all things.
- 10. And what will such a Principle essentially be?
- The potentiality of the Universe: the potentiality whose
non-existence would mean the non-existence of all the Universe and even of the
Intellectual-Principle which is the primal Life and all Life.
- This Principle on the thither side of Life is the cause of Life- for
that Manifestation of Life which is the Universe of things is not the First
Activity; it is itself poured forth, so to speak, like water from a spring.
- Imagine a spring that has no source outside itself; it gives itself
to all the rivers, yet is never exhausted by what they take, but remains always
integrally as it was; the tides that proceed from it are at one within it
before they run their several ways, yet all, in some sense, know beforehand
down what channels they will pour their streams.
- Or: think of the Life coursing throughout some mighty tree while yet
it is the stationary Principle of the whole, in no sense scattered over all
that extent but, as it were, vested in the root: it is the giver of the entire
and manifold life of the tree, but remains unmoved itself, not manifold but the
Principle of that manifold life.
- And this surprises no one: though it is in fact astonishing how all
that varied vitality springs from the unvarying, and how that very manifoldness
could not be unless before the multiplicity there were something all
singleness; for, the Principle is not broken into parts to make the total; on
the contrary, such partition would destroy both; nothing would come into being
if its cause, thus broken up, changed character.
- Thus we are always brought back to The One.
- Every particular thing has a One of its own to which it may be
traced; the All has its One, its Prior but not yet the Absolute One; through
this we reach that Absolute One, where all such reference comes to an end.
- Now when we reach a One- the stationary Principle- in the tree, in
the animal, in Soul, in the All- we have in every case the most powerful, the
precious element: when we come to the One in the Authentically Existent Beings-
their Principle and source and potentiality- shall we lose confidence and
suspect it of being-nothing?
- Certainly this Absolute is none of the things of which it is the
source- its nature is that nothing can be affirmed of it- not existence, not
essence, not life- since it is That which transcends all these. But possess
yourself of it by the very elimination of Being and you hold a marvel.
Thrusting forward to This, attaining, and resting in its content, seek to grasp
it more and more- understanding it by that intuitive thrust alone, but knowing
its greatness by the Beings that follow upon it and exist by its power.
- Another approach:
- The Intellectual-Principle is a Seeing, and a Seeing which itself
sees; therefore it is a potentiality which has become effective.
- This implies the distinction of Matter and Form in it- as there must
be in all actual seeing- the Matter in this case being the Intelligibles which
the Intellectual-Principle contains and sees. All actual seeing implies
duality; before the seeing takes place there is the pure unity [of the power of
seeing]. That unity [of principle] acquires duality [in the act of seeing], and
the duality is [always to be traced back to] a unity.
- Now as our sight requires the world of sense for its satisfaction and
realization, so the vision in the Intellectual-Principle demands, for its
completion, The Good.
- It cannot be, itself, The Good, since then it would not need to see
or to perform any other Act; for The Good is the centre of all else, and it is
by means of The Good that every thing has Act, while the Good is in need of
nothing and therefore possesses nothing beyond itself.
- Once you have uttered "The Good," add no further thought: by any
addition, and in proportion to that addition, you introduce a deficiency.
- Do not even say that it has Intellection; you would be dividing it;
it would become a duality, Intellect and the Good. The Good has no need of the
Intellectual-Principle which, on the contrary, needs it, and, attaining it, is
shaped into Goodness and becomes perfect by it: the Form thus received, sprung
from the Good, brings it to likeness with the Good.
- Thus the traces of the Good discerned upon it must be taken as
indication of the nature of that Archetype: we form a conception of its
Authentic Being from its image playing upon the Intellectual-Principle. This
image of itself, it has communicated to the Intellect that contemplates it:
thus all the striving is on the side of the Intellect, which is the eternal
striver and eternally the attainer. The Being beyond neither strives, since it
feels no lack, nor attains, since it has no striving. And this marks it off
from the Intellectual-Principle, to which characteristically belongs the
striving, the concentrated strain towards its Form.
- Yet: The Intellectual-Principle; beautiful; the most beautiful of
all; lying lapped in pure light and in clear radiance; circumscribing the
Nature of the Authentic Existents; the original of which this beautiful world
is a shadow and an image; tranquil in the fullness of glory since in it there
is nothing devoid of intellect, nothing dark or out of rule; a living thing in
a life of blessedness: this, too, must overwhelm with awe any that has seen it,
and penetrated it, to become a unit of its Being.
- But: As one that looks up to the heavens and sees the splendour of
the stars thinks of the Maker and searches, so whoever has contemplated the
Intellectual Universe and known it and wondered for it must search after its
Maker too. What Being has raised so noble a fabric? And where? And how? Who has
begotten such a child, this Intellectual-Principle, this lovely abundance so
abundantly endowed?
- The Source of all this cannot be an Intellect; nor can it be an
abundant power: it must have been before Intellect and abundance were; these
are later and things of lack; abundance had to be made abundant and
Intellection needed to know.
- These are very near to the un-needing, to that which has no need of
Knowing, they have abundance and intellection authentically, as being the first
to possess. But, there is that before them which neither needs nor possesses
anything, since, needing or possessing anything else, it would not be what it
is- the Good.
Essene Nazarean Church of Mount Carmel
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email M. Rev. Abba James - Patriarch
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