I have been slowly re-reading a book I first read a year ago. It is called
Original Goodness, written by Eknath Easwaren. He came here from India as a Fulbright Scholar to teach English literature. Eventually he moved to UC Berkeley where he taught both English literature and Indian meditation. He was a Hindu but his books are addressed to all, especially to Christians who made up the religious majority in his adopted country. He went to a Catholic Jesuit school as a child. Coming from an impoverished background, the priests “head-hunted” him, gave him a thorough education and he even went on too represent the school in competitions - even though he wasn’t Catholic! I have a few of his books - all of them are wonderful and I encourage you to buy them. His books draw on the spiritual traditions and beliefs of all the major world religions.
Original Goodness is a meditation on the beatitudes. One quote he gives is from a 14th century Christian mystic -
"
Goodness has no need to enter the soul, " wrote a fourteenth-century Catholic mystic, “
It is there already, simply unperceived”.
On the book jacket, it says this: “Love, compassion, meaning, hope, and freedom from fear are not qualities we need to acquire…We simply need to uncover what we already have.”
This is exactly what I believe to be the profound message we find in
Schindler’s List.
In Indian mysticism - Hinduism and Sikhism - this divine core of supreme goodness is called simply
atman, “the Self.” Jewish mysticism puts this idea into powerful imagery.
Shekinah, the Presence of God, is dispersed throughout creation in every creature, like sparks scattered from the pure flame of spirit that is the Lord. And each spark, apparently alone in the darkness of this material world, wanders the creation in exile, seeking to return to its divine source. In St. Augustine’s words “
You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in you.”
We often hear a lot about “original sin” from TV evangelists and many Christians but little about the
Original Goodness that precede original sin and is still present within our deepest core. The human being is made in the Image of God. At his deepest core, is God pure and simple. Our true self is God’s image - there is a spirit within us that the Bible tells us God ‘breathed into us’; unconditioned, universal, deathless; a divine core which cannot be separated from God - that spark of divinity which the Catholics mystics say is hidden in every one of us, regardless of our sins or past mistakes, is the perfect reflection of the One God - his Image.
“…I have spoken at times of a light in the soul, a light that is uncreated and uncreatable…to the extent that we can deny ourselves and turn away from created things, we shall find our unity and blessing in that little spark in the soul, which neither space nor time touches…As the Godhead is nameless, and all naming is alien to Him, so also the soul is nameless; for it is here the same God…To guage the soul we must guage it with God, for the Ground of God and the Ground of the Soul are one and the same…The knower and the known are one. Simple people imagine that they should see God, as if He stood there and they here. This is not so. God and I, we are one in knowledge…The seed of God is in us. Given an intelligent and hard-working farmer, it will thrive and grow up to God, whose seed it is, and accordingly its fruits will be God-nature. Pear seeds grow into pear trees, nut seeds into nut trees, and God-seed into God…You need not seek God here or there: he is no farther off than the door of the heart. There he stands and waits and waits until he finds you ready to open and let him in. You need not call him from a distance; to wait until you open for him is harder for him than for you…
Your opening and his entering are but one moment…”
***- Meister Eckhart (c. 1260 – c. 1327), Catholic Mystic & priest ***
“…My Me is God, nor do I recognise any other Me except my God Himself…Divine light entered my heart from His love that did never fully wane, though indeed, dear, I can understand how a person’s faith can at times flicker, for what is the mind to do with something that becomes the mind’s ruin: a God that consumes us in His grace. I have seen what you want; it is there, a Beloved of infinite tenderness…He has never left you. It is just that your soul is so vast that just like the earth in its innocence, it may think, “I do not feel my lover’s warmth against my face right now.” But look, dear, is not the sun reaching down its arms and always holding a continent in its light? God cannot leave us. It is just that our soul is so vast, we do not always feel His lips upon the veil…”
- Saint Catherine of Genoa (1447-1510), Catholic mystic
“…Even though it is covered up, because it is God that has sowed this seed in us, pressed it in, begotten it, it cannot be extirpated or die out; it glows and sparkles, burning and giving light, and always it moves upward toward God…”
- Origen (184 – 253), Catholic Church Father
I read the Beatitudes to focus myself upon “original goodness”
(continued…)