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"There he goes -- one of God's own prototypes
-- a high powered mutant of
some kind never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live and
too rare to die.'
-Hunter S. Thompson
The Eternal Thou
The inborn Thou is expressed and realized in
each relation, writes Buber, but it is consummated
only in the direct relation with the Eternal Thou, ‘the Thou that by its nature cannot
become It.’
This Thou is met by every man who addresses God by whatever name and even by that man
who does not believe in God yet addresses ‘the Thou of his life, as a Thou that
cannot be limited
by another.’ ‘All God’s names are hallowed, for in them He is not merely spoken about,
but also
spoken to.’ Our speaking to God, our meeting Him is not mere waiting and openness for the
advent of grace. Man must go forth to the meeting with God, for here too the relation means
being chosen and choosing, suffering and action in one. Hence we must be concerned not about
God’s side -- grace -- but about our side -- will. ‘Grace concerns us in so far as we go
out to it
and persist in its presence; but it is not our object.’ (I and Thou, op. cit., p. 75 f.)
To go out to the meeting with the Eternal Thou,
a man must have become a whole being, one
who does not intervene in the world and one in whom no separate and partial action stirs. To go
out to this meeting he need not lay aside the world of sense as though it were illusory or go
beyond sense-experience. Nor need he have recourse to a world of ideas and values. Ideas and
values cannot become presentness for us, and every experience, even the most spiritual, can yield
us only an It. Only the barrier of separation must be destroyed, and this cannot be done through
any formula, precept, or spiritual exercise. ‘The one thing that matters’ is ‘full
acceptance of the
present.’ Of course, the destruction of separateness and the acceptance of the present
presuppose that the more separated a man has become, the more difficult will be the venture and
the more elemental the turning. But this does not mean giving up the I, as mystical writings
usually suppose, for the I is essential to this as to every relation. What must be given up is the self-
asserting instinct ‘that makes a man flee to the possessing of things before the unreliable, perilous
world of relation.’ (Ibid., p. 76 ff.)
‘He who enters the absolute relation is
concerned with nothing isolated any more.’ He sees all
things in the Thou and thus establishes the world on its true basis. God cannot be sought, He can
only be met. Of course He is Barth’s ‘wholly Other’ and Otto’s Mysterium
Tremendum, but He
is also the wholly Same, ‘nearer to me than my I.’ He cannot be spatially located
in the
transcendence beyond things or the immanence within things and then sought and found.
If
you explore the life of things and of conditioned being you come to the unfathomable, if
you deny the life of things and of conditioned being you stand before nothingness, if you
hallow this life you meet the living God. (Ibid., p. 78 f.)
It is foolish to seek God, ‘for there
is nothing in which He could not be found.’ It is hopeless to
turn aside from the course of one’s life, for with ‘all the wisdom of solitude and all the
power of
concentrated being,’ a man would still miss God. Rather one must go one’s way and simply
wish
that it might be the way. The meeting with God is ‘a finding without seeking, a discovering
of the
primal, of origin.’ The man who thus waits and finds is like the perfected man of the Tao: ‘He
is
composed before all things and makes contact with them which helps them,’ and when he has
found he does not turn from things but meets them in the one event. Thus the finding ‘is not the
end, but only the eternal middle, of the way.’ Like the Tao, God cannot be inferred in anything,
but unlike the Tao, God can be met and addressed. ‘God is the Being that is directly, most nearly,
and lastingly over against us, that may properly only be addressed, not expressed.’ (Ibid.,
p. 80.)
To make the relation to God into a feeling is
to relativize and psychologize it. True relation is a
coincidentia oppositorum, an absolute which gathers up the poles of feeling into itself. Though
one has at times felt oneself simply dependent on God, one has also in this dependence felt
oneself really free. And in one’s freedom one acts not only as a creature but as co-creator with
God, able through one’s actions and through one’s life to alter the fate of the world and
even,
according to the Kabbalah, to reunite God with His exiled Shekinah. If God did not need man, if
man were simply dependent and nothing else, there would be no meaning to man’s life or to the
world. ‘The world is not divine sport, it is divine destiny.’
You
know always in your heart that you need God more than everything, but do you not
know too that God needs you -- in the fullness of His eternity needs you? . . . You need
God, in order to be-- and God needs you, for the very meaning of your life. (Ibid. p. 82.)
This primal reality of relation is not contradicted
by the experience of the mystics if that
experience is rightly understood. There are two kinds of happening in which duality is no longer
experienced. The first is the soul’s becoming a unity. This takes place within man and it is
decisive in fitting him for the work of the spirit. He may then either go out to the meeting with
mystery or fall back on the enjoyment and dissipation of his concentrated being. The second takes
place not within man but between man and God. It is a moment of ecstasy in which what is felt to
be ‘union’ is actually the dynamic of relation. Here on the brink the meeting is felt so
forcibly in
its vital unity that the I and the Thou between which it is established are forgotten.
In lived reality, even in ‘inner’
reality, there is no ‘unity of being.’ Reality exists only in effective,
mutual action, and ‘the most powerful and deepest reality exists where everything enters into
the
effective action, without reserve . . . the united I and the boundless Thou.’ The
doctrine of
mystical absorption is based on ‘the colossal illusion of the human spirit that is bent back on
itself,
that spirit exists in man.’ In renouncing the meaning of spirit as relation, as between man and
what is not man, man makes the world and God into functions of the human soul. In actuality, the
world is not in man nor is man entirely included within the world. The image of the world is in
man but not its reality, and man bears within himself the sense of self, that cannot be included in
the world. What matters is how man causes his attitude of soul to grow to real life that acts upon
the world.
I
know nothing of a ‘world’ and a ‘life in the world’ that might separate a man
from God.
What is thus described is actually life with an alienated world of It, which experiences
and uses. He who truly goes out to meet the world goes out also to God. Concentration
and outgoing are necessary, both in truth, at once the one and the other, which is the
One. (I and Thou, op. cit., pp. 85-95)
The misinterpretation of relation as union has
led both eastern and western mystics to make union
with God a goal in itself and to turn away from the responsibility of the I for the Thou. To seek
consciously to become a saint, or attain ‘union,’ as is advocated by some modern mystics,
(See
for example the writings of Gerald Heard, in particular The Third Morality [New York: William
Morrow, London: Cassell, 1937], chaps. viii-xi, Pain, Sex, and Time [New York: Harper &
Brothers, London: Cassell, 1939], chaps. xi-xii, xvi; A Preface to Prayer [New York: Harper &
Brothers, 1944 London: Cassell, 1945]; and The Eternal Gospel [New York: Harper & Brothers
1946, London: Cassell, 1948, chap. xi]) is to abandon oneself to the world of It -- the world of
conscious aims and purposes supported by a collection of means, such as spiritual exercises,
abstinence, and recollection. Greater for us than this ‘phenomenon of the brink,’ writes
Buber, is
‘the central reality of the everyday hour on earth, with a streak of sun on a maple twig and the
glimpse of the eternal Thou.’ (I and Thou, op. cit., p.87 f.) Reality is to be found
not in the pure
and lasting but in the whole of man, not in ecstasy beyond the world of the senses but in the
hallowing of the everyday.
We may know remoteness from God, but we do not
know the absence of God, for ‘it is we only
who are not always there.’ ‘Every real relation in the world is consummated in the interchange
of
actual and potential being, but in pure relation -- in the relation of man to God -- potential is still
actual being. It is only our nature that compels us to draw the Eternal Thou into the world and the
talk of It. By virtue of this great privilege of pure relation there exists the unbroken world of Thou
which binds up the isolated moments of relation in a life of world solidarity.
By
virtue of this privilege . . . spirit can penetrate and transform the world of It. By
virtue of this privilege we are not given up to alienation from the world and the loss of
reality by the I -- to domination by the ghostly. Turning is the recognition of the Centre
and the act of turning again to it. In this act of the being the buried relational power of
man rises again, the wave that carries all the sphere of relation swells in living streams to
give new life to our world.’ (Ibid p. 98 ff.)
It is this unbroken world of Thou which assures
us that relation can never fall apart into complete
duality, that evil can never become radically real and absolute. Without this limit to the reality of
evil we would have no assurance that I-It can become I- Thou, that men and cultures can turn
back to God in the fundamental act of reversal, the teshavah. Without this limit the world of
It
would be evil in itself and incapable of being redeemed. Buber describes the relation of the world
to what is not the world as a
double
movement, of estrangement from the primal Source, in virtue of which the
universe is sustained in the process of becoming, and of turning toward the primal
Source, in virtue of which the universe is released in being.... Both parts of this
movement develop, fraught with destiny, in time, and are compassed by grace in the
timeless creation that is, incomprehensibly, at once emancipation and preservation,
release and binding. Our knowledge of twofold nature is silent before the paradox of the
primal mystery. (Ibid., p. 100 f.)
This primal twofold movement underlies three
of the most important aspects of Buber’s I-Thou
philosophy. The first is the alternation between I-Thou and I-It. The second is the alternation
between summons, the approach to the meeting with the eternal Thou, and sending, the going
forth from that meeting to the world of men. The third is the alternation between revelation, in
which the relational act takes place anew and flows into cultural and religious forms, and the
turning, in which man turns from the rigidified forms of religion to the direct meeting with the
Eternal Thou. Evil for Buber is the predominance of I-It through a too great estrangement from
the primal Source and good the permeation of the world of It by I-Thou through a constant return
to the primal Source. As in Buber’s Hasidic philosophy the ‘evil impulse’ can be used
to serve
God, so I-It, the movement away from the primal Source, can serve as the basis for an ever
greater realization of I-Thou in the world of It.
There are three spheres, says Buber, in which
the world of relation is built: our life with nature,
our life with men, and our life with ‘intelligible essences.’ Each of these gates leads
into the
presence of the Word, but when the full meeting takes place they ‘are united in one gateway of
real life.’ Of the three spheres, our life with man ‘is the main portal into whose opening
the two
side-gates leads, and in which they are included.’ It is here alone that the moments of relation
are
bound together by speech, and here alone ‘as reality that cannot be lost’ are ‘knowing
and being
known, loving and being loved.’ The relation with man is thus ‘the real simile of the relation
with
God,’ for ‘in it true address receives true response.’ But in God’s response
all the universe is
made manifest as language. (I and Thou, op. cit., p. 101 ff.)
Solitude is necessary for relation with God.
It frees one from experiencing and using, and it
purifies one before going out to the great meeting. But the solitude which means absence of
relation and the stronghold of isolation, the solitude in which man conducts a dialogue with
himself, cannot lead man to God. Similarly, we do not come to God through putting away our
‘idols’ -- our finite goods such as our nation, art, power, knowledge, or money -- and allowing
the
diverted religious act to return to the fitting object. These finite goods always mean using and
possessing, and one cannot use or possess God. He who is dominated by an idol has no way to
God but the turning, ‘which is a change not only of goal but also of the nature of his movement.’
(Ibid., pp. 103-106.)
He who has relation with the Eternal Thou also
has relation with the Thou of the world. To view
the religious man as one who does not need to take his stand in any relation to the world and
living beings is falsely to divide life ‘between a real relation with God and an unreal relation
of I
and It with the world.’ No matter how inward he may be, the ‘religious’ man
still lives in the
world. Therefore, if he does not have an I-Thou relation with the world, he necessarily makes the
world into an It. He treats it as a means for his sustenance or as an object for his contemplation.
‘You cannot both truly pray to God and profit by the world. He who knows the world as
something by which he is to profit knows God also in the same way.’ (Ibid., p. 107)
In the moment of supreme meeting man receives
revelation, but this revelation is neither
experience nor knowledge. It is ‘a presence as power’ which transforms him into a different
being from what he was when he entered the meeting. This Presence and power include three
things: ‘the whole fullness of real mutual action,’ ‘the inexpressible confirmation
of meaning,’ and
the call to confirm this meaning ‘in this life and in relation with this world.’ But as
the meaning
cannot be transmitted and made into knowledge, so the confirmation of it cannot be transmitted as
‘a valid Ought,’ a formula, or a set of prescriptions.
The
meaning that has been received can be proved true by each man only in the
singleness of his being and the singleness of his life.... As we reach the meeting with the
simple Thou on our lips, so with the Thou on our lips we leave it and return to the world.
(Ibid., pp. 109-114)
Man can only succeed in raising relation to
constancy if he embodies it ‘in the whole stuff of life,’
‘if he realizes God anew in the world according to his strength and to the measure of each day.’
This is not a question of completely overcoming the relation of It but of so penetrating it with
Thou ‘that relation wins in it a shining streaming constancy: the moments of supreme meeting are
then not flashes in darkness but like the rising moon in a clear starlit night.’ Man cannot gain
constancy of relation through directly concerning himself with God; for ‘reflexion,’ bending
back
towards God, makes Him into an object. It is the man who has been sent forth to whom God
remains present. (Ibid., p. 114 ff.)
The mighty revelations at the base of the great
religions are the same in being as the quiet ones
that happen at all times. Revelation ‘does not pour itself into the world through him who receives
it as through a funnel; it comes to him and seizes his whole elemental being in all its particular
nature and fuses with it.’ But there is a qualitative difference in the relation of the various
ages of
history to God. In some, human spirit is suppressed and buried; in some, it matures in readiness
for full relation; in some, the relation takes place and with it fresh expansion of being. Thus in the
course of history elemental human stuff is transformed, and ‘ever new provinces of the world and
the spirit . . . are summoned to divine form.’
The form that is created as a result of this
theophany is a fusion of Thou and It. God remains
near this form so long as belief and cult are united and purified through true prayer. With
degeneration of prayer the power to enter into relation is buried under increasing objectification,
and ‘it becomes increasingly difficult . . . to say Thou with the whole undivided being.’
In order to
be able to say it, man must finally come out of the false security of community into the final
solitude of the venture of the infinite.
This
course is not circular. It is the way. In each new aeon fate becomes more
oppressive, turning more shattering. And the theophany becomes ever nearer,
increasingly near to the sphere that lies between beings, to the Kingdom that is hidden in
our midst, there between us. History is a mysterious approach. Every spiral of its way
leads us both into profounder perversion and more fundamental turning. But the event
that from the side of the world is called turning is called from God’s side salvation. (I
and Thou, op. cit., pp 116-120)
The fundamental beliefs of Buber’s I-Thou
philosophy are the reality of the I-Thou relation into
which no deception can penetrate, the reality of the meeting between God and man which
transforms man’s being, and the reality of the turning which puts a limit to man’s movement
away
from God. On the basis of these beliefs Buber has defined evil as the predominance of the world
of It to the exclusion of relation, and he has conceived of the redemption of evil as taking place in
the primal movement of the turning which brings man back to God and back to solidarity of
relation with man and the world. Relation is ‘good’ and alienation ‘evil.’ Yet
the times of
alienation may prepare the forces that will be directed, when the turning comes, not only to the
earthly forms of relation but to the Eternal Thou.
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