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The Divine Feminine: Mother Of All Creation - by Anne Baring and Andrew Harvey

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The Divine Feminine

Exploring the Feminine Face of God throughout the World

Godsfield Press UK and Conari Press USA 1996

Anne Baring and Andrew Harvey

 

THE DIVINE FEMININE IN CHINA

Mother of all Creation

 

Once, in China, as elsewhere, there was a Mother who was before

heaven and earth came into being. Her image was woven into the age-

old beliefs of the people and the shamanic tradition which later

evolved into Taoism. In Chinese mythology the mother goddess has many

names and titles. One legend imagined her as an immense peach tree

which grew in the Garden of Paradise in the Kun-Lun mountains of the

West and was the support of the whole universe. The fruit of this

marvellous and magical tree ripened only after three thousand years,

bestowing immortality on whoever tasted it. The Garden of Paradise

belonged to the Queen of the Immortals, the Royal Mother of the West,

whose name was Hsi Wang Mu, goddess of eternal life. Other myths

describe her as the Mother or Grandmother, the primordial Heavenly

Being, the cosmic womb of all life, the gateway of heaven and earth.

Taoism developed on this foundation.

 

- More subtly and comprehensively than any other religious

tradition, Taoism (Daoism) nurtured the quintessence of the Divine

Feminine, keeping alive the feeling of relationship with the ground

of being as Primordial Mother. Somehow the Taoist sages discovered

how to develop the mind without losing touch with the soul and this

is why an understanding of their philosophy - China's priceless

legacy to humanity - is so important to us now.

 

- The origins of Taoism come from the shamanic practices and

oral traditions of the Bronze Age and beyond. Its earliest written

expression is the Book of Changes or I Ching, a book of divination

consisting of sixty four oracles which is thought to date to 3000-

1200 BC. The complementary images of yin and yang woven into the

sixty four hexagrams of the I Ching are not to be understood as two

separate expressions of the one indivisible life energy: earth and

heaven, feminine and masculine, female and male, for each contains

elements of the other and each cannot exist without the other. In

their passionate embrace, there is relationship, dialogue and

continual movement and change. The I Ching describes the flow of

energies of the Tao in relation to a particular time, place or

situation and helps the individual to balance the energies of yin and

yang and to listen to the deeper resonance of the One that is both.

 

- The elusive essence of Taoism is expressed in the Tao Te

Ching, the only work of the great sage Lao Tzu (born c. 604 BC.),

whom legend says was persuaded to write down the eighty-one sayings

by one of his disciples when, reaching the end of his life, he had

embarked on his last journey to the mountains of the West. The word

Tao means the fathomless Source, the One, the Deep. Te is the way the

Tao comes into being, growing organically like a plant from the deep

ground or source of life, from within outwards. Ching is the slow,

patient shaping of that growth through the activity of a creative

intelligence that is expressed as the organic patterning of all

instinctual life, like the DNA of the universe. " The Tao does

nothing, yet nothing is left undone. " The tradition of Taoism was

transmitted from master to pupil by a succession of shaman-sages,

many of whom were sublime artists and poets. In the midst of the

turmoil of the dynastic struggles that engulfed China for centuries

they followed the Tao, bringing together the outer world of

appearances with the inner one of Being.

 

- From the source which is both everything and nothing, and

whose image is the circle, came heaven and earth, yin and yang, the

two principles whose dynamic relationship brings into being the world

we see. The Tao is both the source and the creative process of life

that flows from it, imagined as a Mother who is the root of heaven

and earth, beyond all yet within all, giving birth to all, containing

all, nurturing all. The Way of Tao is to reconnect with the mother

source or ground, to be in it, like a bird in the air or a fish in

the sea, in touch with it, while living in the midst of what the

Taoists called the " sons " or " children " - the myriad forms that the

source takes in manifestation. It is to become aware of the presence

of the Tao in everything, to discover its rhythm and its dance, to

learn to trust it, no longer interfering with the flow of life by

manipulating, directing, resisting, controlling. It is to develop the

intuitive awareness of a mystery which only gradually unveils itself.

Following the Way of Tao requires a turning towards the hidden

withinness of things, a receptivity to instinctive feeling, enough

time to reflect on what is inconceivable and indescribable, beyond

the reach of mind or intellect, that can only be felt, intuited,

experienced at ever deeper depth. Action taken from this position of

balance and freedom will gradually become aligned to the harmony of

the Tao and will therefore embody its mysterious power and wisdom.

 

- The Taoists never separated nature from spirit, consciously

preserving the instinctive knowledge that life is One. No people

observed nature more passionately and minutely than the Chinese sages

or reached so deeply into the hidden heart of life, describing the

life and form of insects, animals, birds, flowers, trees, wind,

water, planets and stars. They felt the continuous flow and flux of

life as an underlying energy that was without beginning or end, that

was, like water, never static, never still, never fixed in separate

things or events, but always in a state of movement, a state of

changing and becoming. They called the art of going with the flow of

this energy Wu Wei, not-doing (Wu means not or non-, Wei means doing,

making, striving after goals), understanding it as relinquishing

control, not trying to force or manipulate life but attuning oneself

to the underlying rhythm and ever-changing modes of its being. The

stilling of the surface mind that is preoccupied with the ten

thousand things brings into being a deeper, more complete mind and an

integrated state of consciousness or creative power that they named

Te which enabled them not to interfere with life but to " enter the

forest without moving the grass; to enter the water without raising a

ripple. "

 

- They cherished the Tao with their brushstrokes, observing how

it flowed into the patterns of cloud and mist between earth and

mountain peak, or the rhythms of air currents and the eddying water

of rivers and streams, the opening of plum blossom in spring, the

graceful dance of bamboo and willow. They listened to the sounds that

can only be heard in the silence. They expressed their experience of

the Tao in their paintings, their poetry, the creation of their

temples and gardens and in their way of living which was essentially

one of withdrawal from the world to a place where they could live a

simple, contemplative life, concentrating on perfecting their

brushstokes in calligraphy and painting and their subtlety of

expression in the art of poetry. Humility, reverence, patience,

insight and wisdom were the qualities that they sought to cultivate.

 

- The Taoist artist or poet intuitively reached into the secret

essence of what he was observing, making himself one with it, then

inviting it to speak through him, so releasing the dynamic harmony

within it. He imposed nothing of himself on it but reflected the

creative soul of what he was observing through the highly developed

skills that he had cultivated over a lifetime of practice. Through

the perfection of his art, he did not define or explain the Tao

which, as Chuang-Tzu said, cannot be conveyed either by words or by

silence, but called it into focus so that it could be experienced by

the beholder. The Tao flows through the whole work as cosmic

Presence, at once transcendent in its mystery and immanent in its

form. The distillation of what the Taoist sages discovered is

bequeathed to us in the beauty and wisdom of their painting and

poetry, and in their profound understanding of the relationship

between body, soul and nature, and the eternal ground that underlies

and enfolds them all.

 

- Standing before one of the great Taoist paintings of the

T'ang or Sung dynasties or reading a poem by Wang Wei, we are

immediately transformed by them, able to let go of the things that

normally distract the mind and exhaust the body - the preoccupation

with the ten thousand things that the Taoists called " dust " . They put

us in touch with the center simply by relating us instantaneously to

the ground which unites everything. To rest in the quietness of mind

and humility of heart that the Taoist sage embodies, is to live in a

state of instinctive spontaneity that the Taoists named Tzu Jan - a

being-in-the-moment that can only exist, as in childhood, when the

effort to adapt to collective values and the need to accumulate

possessions, power or fame is of no importance. What exists is what

is. There is no need to change it by imposing the will. Change will

come about by changing the quality of one's own being. To feel what

needs to be said without striving to say it; to speak from the heart

in as few words as possible, to act when action is required,

responding to the needs of the moment without attachment to the

fruits of action, this was the essence of the Taoist vision. It was

essentially feminine, gentle, balanced, dynamic and wise.

 

The image of the primordial Mother was embedded deep within the soul

of the Chinese people who, as in Egypt, Sumer and India, turned to

her for help and support in time of need. She was particularly close

to women who prayed to her for the blessing of children, for a safe

delivery in childbirth, for the protection of their families, for the

healing of sickness. Their mother goddess was not a remote being but

a compassionate, accessible presence in their homes, in the sacred

mountains where they went on pilgrimages to her temples and shrines,

and in the valleys and vast forests where she could be felt, and

sometimes seen. Yet, like the goddesses in other early cultures, she

also had cosmic dimensions. Guardian of the waters, helper of the

souls of the dead in their passage to other realms, she was the Great

Mother who responded to the cry of all people who called upon her in

distress. She was the Spirit of Life itself, deeper than all knowing,

caring for suffering humanity, her child. Above all, she was the

embodiment of mercy, love, compassion and wisdom, the Protectress of

Life. Although she had many names and images in earlier times, these

eventually merged into one goddess who was called Kuan Yin - She who

hears, She who listens.

 

- By a fascinating process which saw the blending of different

religious traditions, the ancient Chinese Mother Goddess absorbed

elements of the Buddhist image of the bodhisattva Avalokitesvara, the

Tibetan mother goddess Tara and the Virgin Mary of Christianity,

whose statues were brought to China during the seventh century AD.

The name Kuan Yin was a translation of the sanscrit word

Avalokitesvara and means " The One Who Hears the Cries of the World. "

At first, following the Mahayana Buddhist tradition, this

compassionate being was imagined in male form, but from the fifth

century AD., the female form of Kuan Yin begins to appear in China

and by the tenth century it predominates.

 

- It was in the far north-west, at the interface between

Chinese, Tibetan and European civilizations, that the cult of Kuan

Yin took strongest root and it was from here that it spread over the

length and breadth of China and into Korea and Japan, grafted onto

the far older image of the Mother Goddess. Every province had its

local image and its own story about her. Taoist and Buddhist elements

were fused, creating an image of the Divine Feminine that was deeply

satisfying to the people. By the 16th century, Kuan Yin had become

the principal deity of China and Japan and is so today. Robed in

white, she is usually shown seated or standing on a lotus throne,

sometimes with a child on her lap or near her for she brings the

blessing of children to women.

 

- Chinese Buddhist texts describe her as being within a vast

circle of light that emanates from her body, her face gleaming

golden, surrounded with a garland of 8000 rays. The palms of her

hands radiate the colour of 500 lotus flowers. The tip of each finger

has 84,000 images, each emitting 84,000 rays whose gentle radiance

touches all things. All beings are drawn to her and compassionately

embraced by her. Meditation on this image is said to free them from

the endless cycle of birth and death.

 

- Two Chinese descriptions of Kuan Yin bring her to life, the

first from the Buddhist Lotus Sutra which imagines her as a cosmic

being devoted to saving the world through her wisdom and compassion,

the second from the 16th century:

 

Listen to the deeds of Kuan Yin

Responding compassionately on every side

With great vows, deep as the ocean,

Through inconceivable periods of time,

Serving innumerable Buddhas,

Giving great, clear, and pure vows...

To hear her name, to see her body,

To hold her in the heart, is not in vain,

For she can extinguish the suffering of existence...

 

Her knowledge fills out the four virtues,

Her wisdom suffuses her golden body.

Her necklace is hung with pearls and precious jade,

Her bracelet is composed of jewels.

Her hair is like dark clouds wondrously

arranged like curling dragons;

Her embroidered girdle sways like a phoenix's wing in flight.

Sea-green jade buttons,

A gown of pure silk,

Awash with Heavenly light;

Eyebrows as if crescent moons,

Eyes like stars.

A radiant jade face of divine joyfulness,

Scarlet lips, a splash of colour.

Her bottle of heavenly dew overflows,

Her willow twig rises from it in full flower.

She delivers from all the eight terrors,

Saves all living beings,

For boundless is her compassion.

She resides on T'ai Shan,

She dwells in the Southern Ocean.

She saves all the suffering when their cries reach her,

She never fails to answer their prayers,

Eternally divine and wonderful.

 

from Kuan Yin by Martin Palmer, Jay Ramsay, and Man-Ho Kwok

 

 

The Divine Feminine: Mother Of All Creation

Anne Baring and Andrew Harvey

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