The Power of Formlessness
There is a
story in many forms, in different cultures and traditions. It is a very old one
in
Then the God
of the wind goes and the same happens. ‘Who are you, what is your power?’ ‘Wind.
I can move anything with my energy, its impetus.’ ‘Move that straw.’ He finds he
cannot move it.
So the story
continues. One after one, Indra sends his messengers, all these great
irresistible powers which serve him, yet they can do absolutely nothing. Finally
he goes himself – the interview which follows does not matter, but the point of
the story is that even our most powerful instruments and agents will fail before
that which is formless. They can affect anything that has form, but before the
formless and what is blessed by the formless, they are completely helpless.
Such
traditional myths and stories are universal and have very practical
applications. We have the same also in the Christian tradition. What is
formless? In Exodus, I think it is 22, they went up the mountain and saw the God
of Israel – his body, as it were, the clearness of Heaven – clearness of space.
Well, that part is generally hastily passed over, but it is perhaps a little
hint that the same experience and teaching is there.
(The trustees
of the Trevor Leggett Adhyatma Yoga Trust gratefully acknowledge the permission
of The Zen Centre in London to reproduce this article which appeared in their
magazine Zen Traces, Volume 12 number 4, September 1990.)
|