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A single leaf, nearly two-thirds torn, floats idly down a mountain stream, passing from light into darkness into light again. Refracted through the crystalline currents, a bed of smooth, staid stones cries, "Eternity! Everlasting!" but the leaf drifts on. And I, splashing my way upstream, thinking myself the keeper of this shadowed domain, bend hurriedly to pluck the leaf from my path. Then, for just a moment, I hesitate, to listen as the rivulets lap against my legs, longing to hear in them Heraclitus' lonely, elegiac lament: "All things are in process; nothing stays still. Upon those that step into the same rivers different and different waters flow." But only the rocks sing on -- their same, unchanging song of the stream's secret source. And though I, still deaf to the cry, hear but the half-uttered echos of my fleeting thoughts, I can see, as the radiant flux of the night again turns the leaf into light, how at last we, too, shall step into that same river twice. At death -- when in the new-found kenosis of time, all will be one.
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Sep 3, 2018
Sep 3, 2018 at 3:52 PM UTC
The Whole
A single leaf, nearly two-thirds torn, floats idly down a mountain stream, passing from light into darkness into light again. Refracted through the crystalline currents, a bed of smooth, staid stones cries, "Eternity! Everlasting!" but the leaf drifts on. And I, splashing my way upstream, thinking myself the keeper of this shadowed domain, bend hurriedly to pluck the leaf from my path. Then, for just a moment, I hesitate, to listen as the rivulets lap against my legs, longing to hear in them Heraclitus' lonely, elegiac lament: "All things are in process; nothing stays still. Upon those that step into the same rivers different and different waters flow." But only the rocks sing on -- their same, unchanging song of the stream's secret source. And though I, still deaf to the cry, hear but the half-uttered echos of my fleeting thoughts, I can see, as the radiant flux of the night again turns the leaf into light, how at last we, too, shall step into that same river twice. At death -- when in the new-found kenosis of time, all will be one.
"Kenosis" is a theological term that means self-emptying. It's usually applied to the Incarnation of Christ. But I mean it in a more existential sense, of our -- and time's -- self-emptying at death.
arliced
Written by
M/Kansas
Sep 3, 2018
Sep 3, 2018 at 3:52 PM UTC
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