I
am rereading The Cloud of Unknowing and The Book of Privy Counseling by an
anonymous Christian writer of the 14th Century. The books are a spiritual guide on
contemplative prayer.
Their underlying
message is that the only way to truly “know” God is to give up all preconceived
notions or “knowledge” about God, surrendering, instead, to what the author
calls “unknowingness.” A glimpse of the
true nature of God will then arise. A
similar idea is in Vedanta.
When
I first read these books five years ago, I was inspired greatly, and am feeling
so again today. But one aspect of them
bothers me. They use the word “love” a
lot, regarding both God’s relationship to us and our relationship to him.
Love
is a loaded term, with much baggage, and it means different things to different
people. Thus, when it is used to
describe our relationship with the divine, it is confusing, misleading, because
it feels like the wrong word. We think
of it as ordinary, everyday love.
But
love on this level defies definition, in the same way that God himself cannot
be defined. In place of “love,” it seems
to me better to say that it is something
like love? God’s love for us and our love for God
resembles love, but it is not love.
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