The Tao Te Ching
mentions the concept of the “uncarved block” several times. Like a sculptor contemplating
a block of wood before work has begun on it, we are to contemplate our original
nature before time and space, genetics and upbringing, worked on us. Zen has
the concept of one’s original face. A Zen koan says, “Contemplate your original
face before you were born” or “Imagine your face before your parents were
born.” Christian scripture has the concept of our primordial nature that was known
by God and chosen in Christ “before the foundation of the world.”
When I was a young man working in my grandfather’s hardware
store, an old-timer remarked to me, “I knew you before you were a glint in your
father’s eye.” At the time I chuckled at the thought, but it has always stuck
with me. I have often applied it to my Heavenly Father. I was known before I
was. My individual earthly identity composed of body and mind is simply a passing
phenomenon. It is not my essential nature. It is a wave in the ocean, a whirl
in a stream, a breeze in the trees.
I practice a daily spiritual discipline of meditation. One
of my most common meditations is to simply rest in my true nature without
thoughts. My true nature is what I was before I was conceived in my mother’s
womb. It is who I was before there were humans, before life evolved on earth,
before our solar system was formed, before the Big Bang banged the universe
into existence. That is who – or better yet – what I am. That is who I am after
I die, after the elements of my body return to the earth and my psyche dies
with my brain. That is what I am now.
“I am who I am,” is the divine revelation that Moses
received on the slope of Mount Horeb. That understanding changed his life and
the course of Near Eastern religion. This revelation gave birth to the people of
Israel and was forever was imprinted on Western religious understanding of
divine identity. In India this revelation took the form of the statement: “That
thou art,” which is at the heart of the Upanishads. In the Hebrew Scriptures,
the psalm of the Sons of Korah commands us, “Be still and know that I am God.”
It is the same truth. We are. But we are not who we think we
are. We are not what we think. It is not about thinking at all. Not about
doctrines or theology or religion. It is not about feeling or willing or acting.
I am. I am who I am. We are who we are. We are what we have always been. We are
the uncarved block, the original face, which we were before the foundation of
the world. I am what I am, what I was, what I will be, what I am now. Before
and beyond time, I am.
This awareness is accessible in quiet meditation. It is not a
“spiritual experience” that is turned on or off. It is more basic than that. It
is the foundation of all experience. It is direct perception. It is awareness. There
is neither subject nor object in this reality. Consciousness. Being. It is that
from which individual awareness emerges. This is who we are. All of us together.
This is the One before and beyond the many. This is the uncarved block. That
thou art.
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