Welcome! I am a contemplative thinker and photographer from Colorado. In this blog, you'll discover photographs that I've taken on my hiking and backpacking trips, mostly in the American West. I've paired these with my favorite inspirational and philosophical quotes - literary passages that emphasize the innate spirituality of the natural world. I hope you enjoy them!

If you'd like to purchase photo-quote greeting cards, please go to www.NaturePhoto-QuoteCards.com .


In the Spirit of Wildness,

Stephen Hatch
Fort Collins, Colorado

P.S. There's a label index at the bottom of the blog.

Showing posts with label Johannes Tauler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Johannes Tauler. Show all posts

Friday, December 23, 2011

Christmas is the Birth of God's Self-Understanding within Us


"The Father [the transcendent Ground of the Godhead] turns to Himself with His divine comprehension.  He sees Himself with a luminous understanding of the essential abyss of His eternal being, and out of this pure comprehension of Himself He utters the Word which is His Son.  The eternal birth of the Son is nothing else than the Father's own knowing of Himself.  The Son remains within the Godhead in unity of essence, and proceeds from the Father in difference of Person.

"Now it is certain that if God is to be born in the soul, . . . it must [like the Father] turn in toward itself, must recall itself, and concentrate all its faculties within itself . . . If a person would prepare an empty place in the depths of his soul there can be no doubt that God must fill it at once . . . So you must be silent.  Then God will be born in you, utter His word in you and you shall hear it.

"If we want God to be born in our soul as He was in Mary's soul, we must know what were the qualities of Mary.  First, all of us should inwardly be a pure virgin.  This is how Mary lived, with no thought for anything except the things of God; all her fruitfulness was hidden in her soul.  'All the splendor of the king's daughter is within' [Song of Songs]; this is true of every inward virgin.  Next Sunday - on Christmas Eve - we sing these words: "'When all around was silence and everything was utterly still, when the night had run its course, then, O Lord, Your almighty Word came down from the royal throne [of spaciousness].'  This is how it must be with us: perfect stillness all around, everything in deepest silence.  Then we can hear the Word."

Johannes Tauler, 14th century Germany

Please note:

The divine Source is often called "Father" and referred to as "He" not because God is a male being, but because transcendence, beyondness and formlessness are masculine qualities.  These qualities, are, however filled with a sense of presence that we experience as personal. In addition, the term "Daughter" or "Sophia" could be substituted for the word "Son" because the mirror of self-awareness in which Transcendence sees itself contains "mirror-images" that have their source within the world of immanence, form and flow, all of which are feminine qualities.  Here we might remember that the word "matter" comes from the word "Mater" - mother.

Photo: The moon and Venus, Canyonlands National Park, UT, November 26, 2011

Sunday, December 11, 2011

We Know Union with God in the Abyss of the Soul


"Only the divine abyss, God in all His immensity, can bring union about.  Sharing in the divine immensity, it defies all measurements.  In this state the soul, purified and enlightened, sinks into the divine darkness, into a tranquil silence and inconceivable and ineffable union.  It is absorbed in God.  In this abyss it loses itself, and knows nothing of God or of itself . . ."

Johannes Tauler, 14th century Germany

"In centering prayer, you intend to go to your inmost being, where you believe God dwells.  As you persevere, you will gradually develop new habits and new capacities, one of which is the ability to be conscious of two levels of awareness at the same time.  You can be aware of the noise in or around you, and yet you recognize that your attention is grasped by something at a deeper level that is impossible to define but is nonetheless real . . . God is much more intimate and accessible than we think.  If the Lord reaches up and pulls you down, great! You may sink into interior silence . . ."

Thomas Keating

Photo: The Joint Trail, Canyonlands National Park, UT, November 27, 2011