Ennead VI
Ninth tractate: On the good, or the one
Written by Plotinus, 250 AD
- 1. It is in virtue of unity that beings are beings.
- This is equally true of things whose existence is primal and of all
that are in any degree to be numbered among beings. What could exist at all
except as one thing? Deprived of unity, a thing ceases to be what it is called:
no army unless as a unity: a chorus, a flock, must be one thing. Even house and
ship demand unity, one house, one ship; unity gone, neither remains thus even
continuous magnitudes could not exist without an inherent unity; break them
apart and their very being is altered in the measure of the breach of unity.
- Take plant and animal; the material form stands a unity; fallen from
that into a litter of fragments, the things have lost their being; what was is
no longer there; it is replaced by quite other things- as many others,
precisely, as possess unity.
- Health, similarly, is the condition of a body acting as a co-ordinate
unity. Beauty appears when limbs and features are controlled by this principle,
unity. Moral excellence is of a soul acting as a concordant total, brought to
unity.
- Come thus to soul- which brings all to unity, making, moulding,
shaping, ranging to order- there is a temptation to say "Soul is the bestower
of unity; soul therefore is the unity." But soul bestows other characteristics
upon material things and yet remains distinct from its gift: shape, Ideal-Form
and the rest are all distinct from the giving soul; so, clearly, with this gift
of unity; soul to make things unities looks out upon the unity just as it makes
man by looking upon Man, realizing in the man the unity belonging to Man.
- Anything that can be described as a unity is so in the precise degree
in which it holds a characteristic being; the less or more the degree of the
being, the less or more the unity. Soul, while distinct from unity's very self,
is a thing of the greater unity in proportion as it is of the greater, the
authentic, being. Absolute unity it is not: it is soul and one soul, the unity
in some sense a concomitant; there are two things, soul and soul's unity as
there is body with body's unity. The looser aggregates, such as a choir, are
furthest from unity, the more compact are the nearer; soul is nearer yet but
still a participant.
- Is soul to be identified with unity on the ground that unless it were
one thing it could not be soul? No; unity is equally necessary to every other
thing, yet unity stands distinct from them; body and unity are not identical;
body, too; is still a participant.
- Besides, the soul, even the collective soul for all its absence of
part, is a manifold: it has diverse powers- reasoning, desiring, perceiving-
all held together by this chain of unity. Itself a unity, soul confers unity,
but also accepts it.
- 2. It may be suggested that, while in the unities of the partial
order the essence and the unity are distinct, yet in collective existence, in
Real Being, they are identical, so that when we have grasped Being we hold
unity; Real Being would coincide with Unity. Thus, taking the
Intellectual-Principle as Essential Being, that principle and the Unity
Absolute would be at once Primal Being and Pure Unity, purveying, accordingly,
to the rest of things something of Being and something, in proportion, of the
unity which is itself.
- There is nothing with which the unity would be more plausibly
identified than with Being; either it is Being as a given man is man or it will
correspond to the Number which rules in the realm of the particular; it will be
a number applying to a certain unique thing as the number two applies to
others.
- Now if Number is a thing among things, then clearly so this unity
must be; we would have to discover what thing of things it is. If Number is not
a thing but an operation of the mind moving out to reckon, then the unity will
not be a thing.
- We found that anything losing unity loses its being; we are therefore
obliged to enquire whether the unity in particulars is identical with the
being, and unity absolute identical with collective being.
- Now the being of the particular is a manifold; unity cannot be a
manifold; there must therefore be a distinction between Being and Unity. Thus a
man is at once a reasoning living being and a total of parts; his variety is
held together by his unity; man therefore and unity are different- man a thing
of parts against unity partless. Much more must Collective Being, as container
of all existence, be a manifold and therefore distinct from the unity in which
it is but participant.
- Again, Collective Being contains life and intelligence- it is no dead
thing- and so, once more, is a manifold.
- If Being is identical with Intellectual-Principle, even at that it is
a manifold; all the more so when count is taken of the Ideal Forms in it; for
the Idea, particular or collective, is, after all, a numerable agglomeration
whose unity is that of a kosmos.
- Above all, unity is The First: but Intellectual-Principle, Ideas and
Being, cannot be so; for any member of the realm of Forms is an aggregation, a
compound, and therefore- since components must precede their compound- is a
later.
- Other considerations also go to show that the Intellectual-Principle
cannot be the First. Intellect must be above the Intellectual Act: at least in
its higher phase, that not concerned with the outer universe, it must be intent
upon its Prior; its introversion is a conversion upon the Principle.
- Considered as at once Thinker and Object of its Thought, it is dual,
not simplex, not The Unity: considered as looking beyond itself, it must look
to a better, to a prior: looking simultaneously upon itself and upon its
Transcendent, it is, once more, not a First.
- There is no other way of stating Intellectual-Principle than as that
which, holding itself in the presence of The Good and First and looking towards
That, is self-present also, self-knowing and Knowing itself as All-Being: thus
manifold, it is far from being The Unity.
- In sum: The Unity cannot be the total of beings, for so its oneness
is annulled; it cannot be the Intellectual-Principle, for so it would be that
total which the Intellectual-Principle is; nor is it Being, for Being is the
manifold of things.
- 3. What then must The Unity be, what nature is left for it?
- No wonder that to state it is not easy; even Being and Form are not
easy, though we have a way, an approach through the Ideas.
- The soul or mind reaching towards the formless finds itself
incompetent to grasp where nothing bounds it or to take impression where the
impinging reality is diffuse; in sheer dread of holding to nothingness, it
slips away. The state is painful; often it seeks relief by retreating from all
this vagueness to the region of sense, there to rest as on solid ground, just
as the sight distressed by the minute rests with pleasure on the bold.
- Soul must see in its own way; this is by coalescence, unification;
but in seeking thus to know the Unity it is prevented by that very unification
from recognising that it has found; it cannot distinguish itself from the
object of this intuition. Nonetheless, this is our one resource if our
philosophy is to give us knowledge of The Unity.
- We are in search of unity; we are to come to know the principle of
all, the Good and First; therefore we may not stand away from the realm of
Firsts and lie prostrate among the lasts: we must strike for those Firsts,
rising from things of sense which are the lasts. Cleared of all evil in our
intention towards The Good, we must ascend to the Principle within ourselves;
from many, we must become one; only so do we attain to knowledge of that which
is Principle and Unity. We shape ourselves into Intellectual-Principle; we make
over our soul in trust to Intellectual-Principle and set it firmly in That;
thus what That sees the soul will waken to see; it is through the
Intellectual-Principle that we have this vision of The Unity; it must be our
care to bring over nothing whatever from sense, to allow nothing even of soul
to enter into Intellectual-Principle: with Intellect pure, and with the summit
of Intellect, we are to see the All-Pure.
- If quester has the impression of extension or shape or mass attaching
to That Nature he has not been led by Intellectual-Principle which is not of
the order to see such things; the activity has been of sense and of the
judgement following upon sense: only Intellectual-Principle can inform us of
the things of its scope; its competence is upon its priors, its content and its
issue: but even its content is outside of sense; and still purer, still less
touched by multiplicity, are its priors, or rather its Prior.
- The Unity, then, is not Intellectual-Principle but something higher
still: Intellectual-Principle is still a being but that First is no being but
precedent to all Being; it cannot be a being, for a being has what we may call
the shape of its reality but The Unity is without shape, even shape
Intellectual.
- Generative of all, The Unity is none of all; neither thing nor
quantity nor quality nor intellect nor soul; not in motion, not at rest, not in
place, not in time: it is the self-defined, unique in form or, better,
formless, existing before Form was, or Movement or Rest, all of which are
attachments of Being and make Being the manifold it is.
- But how, if not in movement, can it be otherwise than at rest?
- The answer is that movement and rest are states pertaining to Being,
which necessarily has one or the other or both. Besides, anything at rest must
be so in virtue of Rest as something distinct: Unity at rest becomes the ground
of an attribute and at once ceases to be a simplex.
- Note, similarly, that, when we speak of this First as Cause, we are
affirming something happening not to it but to us, the fact that we take from
this Self-Enclosed: strictly we should put neither a This nor a That to it; we
hover, as it were, about it, seeking the statement of an experience of our own,
sometimes nearing this Reality, sometimes baffled by the enigma in which it
dwells.
- 4. The main part of the difficulty is that awareness of this
Principle comes neither by knowing nor by the Intellection that discovers the
Intellectual Beings but by a presence overpassing all knowledge. In knowing,
soul or mind abandons its unity; it cannot remain a simplex: knowing is taking
account of things; that accounting is multiple; the mind, thus plunging into
number and multiplicity, departs from unity.
- Our way then takes us beyond knowing; there may be no wandering from
unity; knowing and knowable must all be left aside; every object of thought,
even the highest, we must pass by, for all that is good is later than This and
derives from This as from the sun all the light of the day.
- "Not to be told; not to be written": in our writing and telling we
are but urging towards it: out of discussion we call to vision: to those
desiring to see, we point the path; our teaching is of the road and the
travelling; the seeing must be the very act of one that has made this choice.
- There are those that have not attained to see. The soul has not come
to know the splendour There; it has not felt and clutched to itself that
love-passion of vision known to lover come to rest where he loves. Or struck
perhaps by that authentic light, all the soul lit by the nearness gained, we
have gone weighted from beneath; the vision is frustrate; we should go without
burden and we go carrying that which can but keep us back; we are not yet made
over into unity.
- From none is that Principle absent and yet from all: present, it
remains absent save to those fit to receive, disciplined into some accordance,
able to touch it closely by their likeness and by that kindred power within
themselves through which, remaining as it was when it came to them from the
Supreme, they are enabled to see in so far as God may at all be seen.
- Failure to attain may be due to such impediment or to lack of the
guiding thought that establishes trust; impediment we must charge against
ourselves and strive by entire renunciation to become emancipate; where there
is distrust for lack of convincing reason, further considerations may be
applied:
- 5. Those to whom existence comes about by chance and automatic action
and is held together by material forces have drifted far from God and from the
concept of unity; we are not here addressing them but only such as accept
another nature than body and have some conception of soul.
- Soul must be sounded to the depths, understood as an emanation from
Intellectual-Principle and as holding its value by a Reason-Principle thence
infused. Next this Intellect must be apprehended, an Intellect other than the
reasoning faculty known as the rational principle; with reasoning we are
already in the region of separation and movement: our sciences are
Reason-Principles lodged in soul or mind, having manifestly acquired their
character by the presence in the soul of Intellectual-Principle, source of all
knowing.
- Thus we come to see Intellectual-Principle almost as an object of
sense: the Intellectual Kosmos is perceptible as standing above soul, father to
soul: we know Intellectual-Principle as the motionless, not subject to change,
containing, we must think, all things; a multiple but at once indivisible and
comporting difference. It is not discriminate as are the Reason-Principles,
which can in fact be known one by one: yet its content is not a confusion;
every item stands forth distinctly, just as in a science the entire content
holds as an indivisible and yet each item is a self-standing verity.
- Now a plurality thus concentrated like the Intellectual Kosmos is
close upon The First- and reason certifies its existence as surely as that of
soul- yet, though of higher sovereignty than soul, it is not The First since it
is not a unity, not simplex as unity, principle over all multiplicity, must be.
- Before it there is That which must transcend the noblest of the
things of Being: there must be a prior to this Principle which aiming towards
unity is yet not unity but a thing in unity's likeness. From this highest it is
not sundered; it too is self-present: so close to the unity, it cannot be
articulated: and yet it is a principle which in some measure has dared
secession.
- That awesome Prior, The Unity, is not a being, for so its unity would
be vested in something else: strictly no name is apt to it, but since name it
we must there is a certain rough fitness in designating it as unity with the
understanding that it is not the unity of some other thing.
- Thus it eludes our knowledge, so that the nearer approach to it is
through its offspring, Being: we know it as cause of existence to
Intellectual-Principle, as fount of all that is best, as the efficacy which,
self-perduring and undiminishing, generates all beings and is not to be counted
among these its derivatives, to all of which it must be prior.
- This we can but name The Unity, indicating it to each other by a
designation that points to the concept of its partlessness while we are in
reality striving to bring our own minds to unity. We are not to think of such
unity and partlessness as belong to point or monad; the veritable unity is the
source of all such quantity which could not exist unless first there existed
Being and Being's Prior: we are not, then, to think in the order of point and
monad but to use these- in their rejection of magnitude and partition- as
symbols for the higher concept.
- 6. In what sense, then, do we assert this Unity, and how is it to be
adjusted to our mental processes?
- Its oneness must not be entitled to that of monad and point: for
these the mind abstracts extension and numerical quantity and rests upon the
very minutest possible, ending no doubt in the partless but still in something
that began as a partible and is always lodged in something other than itself.
The Unity was never in any other and never belonged to the partible: nor is its
impartibility that of extreme minuteness; on the contrary it is great beyond
anything, great not in extension but in power, sizeless by its very greatness
as even its immediate sequents are impartible not in mass but in might. We must
therefore take the Unity as infinite not in measureless extension or numerable
quantity but in fathomless depths of power.
- Think of The One as Mind or as God, you think too meanly; use all the
resources of understanding to conceive this Unity and, again, it is more
authentically one than God, even though you reach for God's unity beyond the
unity the most perfect you can conceive. For This is utterly a self-existent,
with no concomitant whatever. This self-sufficing is the essence of its unity.
Something there must be supremely adequate, autonomous, all-transcending, most
utterly without need.
- Any manifold, anything beneath The Unity, is dependent; combined from
various constituents, its essential nature goes in need of unity; but unity
cannot need itself; it stands unity accomplished. Again, a manifold depends
upon all its factors; and furthermore each of those factors in turn- as
necessarily inbound with the rest and not self-standing- sets up a similar need
both to its associates and to the total so constituted.
- The sovranly self-sufficing principle will be Unity-Absolute, for
only in this Unity is there a nature above all need, whether within itself or
in regard to the rest of things. Unity seeks nothing towards its being or its
well-being or its safehold upon existence; cause to all, how can it acquire its
character outside of itself or know any good outside? The good of its being can
be no borrowing: This is The Good. Nor has it station; it needs no standing
ground as if inadequate to its own sustaining; what calls for such
underpropping is the soulless, some material mass that must be based or fall.
This is base to all, cause of universal existence and of ordered station. All
that demands place is in need; a First cannot go in need of its sequents: all
need is effort towards a first principle; the First, principle to all, must be
utterly without need. If the Unity be seeking, it must inevitably be seeking to
be something other than itself; it is seeking its own destroyer. Whatever may
be said to be in need of a good is needing a preserver; nothing can be a good
to The Unity, therefore.
- Neither can it have will to anything; it is a Beyond-Good, not even
to itself a good but to such beings only as may be of quality to have part with
it. Nor has it Intellection; that would comport diversity: nor Movement; it is
prior to Movement as to Intellection.
- To what could its Intellection be directed? To itself? But that would
imply a previous ignorance; it would be dependent upon that Intellection in
order to knowledge of itself; but it is the self-sufficing. Yet this absence of
self-knowing does not comport ignorance; ignorance is of something outside- a
knower ignorant of a knowable- but in the Solitary there is neither knowing nor
anything unknown. Unity, self-present, it has no need of self-intellection:
indeed this "self-presence" were better left out, the more surely to preserve
the unity; we must eliminate all knowing and all association, all intellection
whether internal or external. It is not to be though of as having but as being
Intellection; Intellection does not itself perform the intellective act but is
the cause of the act in something else, and cause is not to be identified with
caused: most assuredly the cause of all is not a thing within that all.
- This Principle is not, therefore, to be identified with the good of
which it is the source; it is good in the unique mode of being The Good above
all that is good.
- 7. If the mind reels before something thus alien to all we know, we
must take our stand on the things of this realm and strive thence to see. But,
in the looking, beware of throwing outward; this Principle does not lie away
somewhere leaving the rest void; to those of power to reach, it is present; to
the inapt, absent. In our daily affairs we cannot hold an object in mind if we
have given ourselves elsewhere, occupied upon some other matter; that very
thing must be before us to be truly the object of observation. So here also;
preoccupied by the impress of something else, we are withheld under that
pressure from becoming aware of The Unity; a mind gripped and fastened by some
definite thing cannot take the print of the very contrary. As Matter, it is
agreed, must be void of quality in order to accept the types of the universe,
so and much more must the soul be kept formless if there is to be no infixed
impediment to prevent it being brimmed and lit by the Primal Principle.
- In sum, we must withdraw from all the extern, pointed wholly inwards;
no leaning to the outer; the total of things ignored, first in their relation
to us and later in the very idea; the self put out of mind in the contemplation
of the Supreme; all the commerce so closely There that, if report were
possible, one might become to others reporter of that communion.
- Such converse, we may suppose, was that of Minos, thence known as the
Familiar of Zeus; and in that memory he established the laws which report it,
enlarged to that task by his vision There. Some, on the other hand, there will
be to disdain such citizen service, choosing to remain in the higher: these
will be those that have seen much.
- God- we read- is outside of none, present unperceived to all; we
break away from Him, or rather from ourselves; what we turn from we cannot
reach; astray ourselves, we cannot go in search of another; a child distraught
will not recognise its father; to find ourselves is to know our source.
- 8. Every soul that knows its history is aware, also, that its
movement, unthwarted, is not that of an outgoing line; its natural course may
be likened to that in which a circle turns not upon some external but on its
own centre, the point to which it owes its rise. The soul's movement will be
about its source; to this it will hold, poised intent towards that unity to
which all souls should move and the divine souls always move, divine in virtue
of that movement; for to be a god is to be integral with the Supreme; what
stands away is man still multiple, or beast.
- Is then this "centre" of our souls the Principle for which we are
seeking?
- We must look yet further: we must admit a Principle in which all
these centres coincide: it will be a centre by analogy with the centre of the
circle we know. The soul is not a circle in the sense of the geometric figure
but in that it at once contains the Primal Nature [as centre] and is contained
by it [as circumference], that it owes its origin to such a centre and still
more that the soul, uncontaminated, is a self-contained entity.
- In our present state- part of our being weighed down by the body, as
one might have the feet under water with all the rest untouched- we bear-
ourselves aloft by that- intact part and, in that, hold through our own centre
to the centre of all the centres, just as the centres of the great circles of a
sphere coincide with that of the sphere to which all belong. Thus we are
secure.
- If these circles were material and not spiritual, the link with the
centres would be local; they would lie round it where it lay at some distant
point: since the souls are of the Intellectual, and the Supreme still loftier,
we understand that contact is otherwise procured, that is by those powers which
connect Intellectual agent with Intellectual Object; this all the more, since
the Intellect grasps the Intellectual object by the way of similarity,
identity, in the sure link of kindred. Material mass cannot blend into other
material mass: unbodied beings are not under this bodily limitation; their
separation is solely that of otherness, of differentiation; in the absence of
otherness, it is similars mutually present.
- Thus the Supreme as containing no otherness is ever present with us;
we with it when we put otherness away. It is not that the Supreme reaches out
to us seeking our communion: we reach towards the Supreme; it is we that become
present. We are always before it: but we do not always look: thus a choir,
singing set in due order about the conductor, may turn away from that centre to
which all should attend: let it but face aright and it sings with beauty,
present effectively. We are ever before the Supreme- cut off is utter
dissolution; we can no longer be- but we do not always attend: when we look,
our Term is attained; this is rest; this is the end of singing ill; effectively
before Him, we lift a choral song full of God.
- 9. In this choiring, the soul looks upon the wellspring of Life,
wellspring also of Intellect, beginning of Being, fount of Good, root of Soul.
It is not that these are poured out from the Supreme lessening it as if it were
a thing of mass. At that the emanants would be perishable; but they are
eternal; they spring from an eternal principle, which produces them not by its
fragmentation but in virtue of its intact identity: therefore they too hold
firm; so long as the sun shines, so long there will be light.
- We have not been cut away; we are not separate, what though the
body-nature has closed about us to press us to itself; we breathe and hold our
ground because the Supreme does not give and pass but gives on for ever, so
long as it remains what it is.
- Our being is the fuller for our turning Thither; this is our
prosperity; to hold aloof is loneliness and lessening. Here is the soul's
peace, outside of evil, refuge taken in the place clean of wrong; here it has
its Act, its true knowing; here it is immune. Here is living, the true; that of
to-day, all living apart from Him, is but a shadow, a mimicry. Life in the
Supreme is the native activity of Intellect; in virtue of that converse it
brings forth gods, brings forth beauty, brings forth righteousness, brings
forth all moral good; for of all these the soul is pregnant when it has been
filled with God. This state is its first and its final, because from God it
comes, its good lies There, and, once turned to God again, it is what it was.
Life here, with the things of earth, is a sinking, a defeat, a failing of the
wing.
- That our good is There is shown by the very love inborn with the
soul; hence the constant linking of the Love-God with the Psyches in story and
picture; the soul, other than God but sprung of Him, must needs love. So long
as it is There, it holds the heavenly love; here its love is the baser; There
the soul is Aphrodite of the heavens; here, turned harlot, Aphrodite of the
public ways: yet the soul is always an Aphrodite. This is the intention of the
myth which tells of Aphrodite's birth and Eros born with her.
- The soul in its nature loves God and longs to be at one with Him in
the noble love of a daughter for a noble father; but coming to human birth and
lured by the courtships of this sphere, she takes up with another love, a
mortal, leaves her father and falls.
- But one day coming to hate her shame, she puts away the evil of
earth, once more seeks the father, and finds her peace.
- Those to whom all this experience is strange may understand by way of
our earthly longings and the joy we have in winning to what we most desire-
remembering always that here what we love is perishable, hurtful, that our
loving is of mimicries and turns awry because all was a mistake, our good was
not here, this was not what we sought; There only is our veritable love and
There we may hold it and be with it, possess it in its verity no longer
submerged in alien flesh. Any that have seen know what I have in mind: the soul
takes another life as it approaches God; thus restored it feels that the
dispenser of true life is There to see, that now we have nothing to look for
but, far otherwise, that we must put aside all else and rest in This alone,
This become, This alone, all the earthly environment done away, in haste to be
free, impatient of any bond holding us to the baser, so that with our being
entire we may cling about This, no part in us remaining but through it we have
touch with God.
- Thus we have all the vision that may be of Him and of ourselves; but
it is of a self-wrought to splendour, brimmed with the Intellectual light,
become that very light, pure, buoyant, unburdened, raised to Godhood or,
better, knowing its Godhood, all aflame then- but crushed out once more if it
should take up the discarded burden.
- 10. But how comes the soul not to keep that ground?
- Because it has not yet escaped wholly: but there will be the time of
vision unbroken, the self hindered no longer by any hindrance of body. Not that
those hindrances beset that in us which has veritably seen; it is the other
phase of the soul that suffers and that only when we withdraw from vision and
take to knowing by proof, by evidence, by the reasoning processes of the mental
habit. Such logic is not to be confounded with that act of ours in the vision;
it is not our reason that has seen; it is something greater than reason,
reason's Prior, as far above reason as the very object of that thought must be.
- In our self-seeing There, the self is seen as belonging to that
order, or rather we are merged into that self in us which has the quality of
that order. It is a knowing of the self restored to its purity. No doubt we
should not speak of seeing; but we cannot help talking in dualities, seen and
seer, instead of, boldly, the achievement of unity. In this seeing, we neither
hold an object nor trace distinction; there is no two. The man is changed, no
longer himself nor self-belonging; he is merged with the Supreme, sunken into
it, one with it: centre coincides with centre, for on this higher plane things
that touch at all are one; only in separation is there duality; by our holding
away, the Supreme is set outside. This is why the vision baffles telling; we
cannot detach the Supreme to state it; if we have seen something thus detached
we have failed of the Supreme which is to be known only as one with ourselves.
- 11. This is the purport of that rule of our Mysteries: Nothing
Divulged to the Uninitiate: the Supreme is not to be made a common story, the
holy things may not be uncovered to the stranger, to any that has not himself
attained to see. There were not two; beholder was one with beheld; it was not a
vision compassed but a unity apprehended. The man formed by this mingling with
the Supreme must- if he only remember- carry its image impressed upon him: he
is become the Unity, nothing within him or without inducing any diversity; no
movement now, no passion, no outlooking desire, once this ascent is achieved;
reasoning is in abeyance and all Intellection and even, to dare the word, the
very self; caught away, filled with God, he has in perfect stillness attained
isolation; all the being calmed, he turns neither to this side nor to that, not
even inwards to himself; utterly resting he has become very rest. He belongs no
longer to the order of the beautiful; he has risen beyond beauty; he has
overpassed even the choir of the virtues; he is like one who, having penetrated
the inner sanctuary, leaves the temple images behind him- though these become
once more first objects of regard when he leaves the holies; for There his
converse was not with image, not with trace, but with the very Truth in the
view of which all the rest is but of secondary concern.
- There, indeed, it was scarcely vision, unless of a mode unknown; it
was a going forth from the self, a simplifying, a renunciation, a reach towards
contact and at the same time a repose, a meditation towards adjustment. This is
the only seeing of what lies within the holies: to look otherwise is to fail.
- Things here are signs; they show therefore to the wiser teachers how
the supreme God is known; the instructed priest reading the sign may enter the
holy place and make real the vision of the inaccessible.
- Even those that have never found entry must admit the existence of
that invisible; they will know their source and Principle since by principle
they see principle and are linked with it, by like they have contact with like
and so they grasp all of the divine that lies within the scope of mind. Until
the seeing comes they are still craving something, that which only the vision
can give; this Term, attained only by those that have overpassed all, is the
All-Transcending.
- It is not in the soul's nature to touch utter nothingness; the lowest
descent is into evil and, so far, into non-being: but to utter nothing, never.
When the soul begins again to mount, it comes not to something alien but to its
very self; thus detached, it is not in nothingness but in itself; self-gathered
it is no longer in the order of being; it is in the Supreme.
- There is thus a converse in virtue of which the essential man
outgrows Being, becomes identical with the Transcendent of Being. The self thus
lifted, we are in the likeness of the Supreme: if from that heightened self we
pass still higher- image to archetype- we have won the Term of all our
journeying. Fallen back again, we awaken the virtue within until we know
ourselves all order once more; once more we are lightened of the burden and
move by virtue towards Intellectual-Principle and through the Wisdom in That to
the Supreme.
- This is the life of gods and of the godlike and blessed among men,
liberation from the alien that besets us here, a life taking no pleasure in the
things of earth, the passing of solitary to solitary.
- THE END .
Essene Nazarean Church of Mount Carmel
For more information,
email M. Rev. Abba James - Patriarch
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