The Language of the Divine (言語): The Word, the Self, and th…
The Language of the Divine (言語): The Word, the Self, and the Kingdom Within
I. The Etymology of Divine Speech: From the Word to the Self
Language (言語) is not a mere human invention for transmitting information; at its essence, it is a sacred, tripartite spiritual movement.
* The Word (言):It begins with receiving the divine Logos—the absolute Truth of God.
* The Self (吾): It requires meditating upon this Word until it penetrates, transforms, and becomes one with the inner self.
* The Proclamation (言語):** Only then is it birthed into true expression, a localized embodiment of the divine voice meant to be shared with the world.
For Christians, this process demands a rigorous, faithful engagement with the Word. It is not an academic exercise but a spiritual alchemy: studying, contemplating, and practicing the Truth until we embody it with absolute fidelity. This is how language transcends human rhetoric, wielding the power to stir the soul, inspire action, and structurally transform the world.
II. The Inward Revelation: Unleashing the Divine Spark
The *Gospel of Thomas*, a text that historically invites deep contemplation, captures this transformative dynamic with striking clarity. In Saying 70, Jesus declares:
“If you bring forth what is within you, what you have will save you. If you do not have that within you, what you do not have will kill you.”
Through these words, Christ unveils a profound, foundational truth rooted in Genesis: humankind was created in the image and likeness of God (*Imago Dei*). This divine spark within us is not a passive artifact; it is a living reality that must be actively nurtured and expressed.
To bring forth what is within is to allow the indwelling Holy Spirit to manifest through our lives—this is the path of true salvation and fruitfulness. Conversely, to ignore, suppress, or bury this inner truth under the weight of worldly conditioning is to choose spiritual atrophy and eventual death.
III. Shattering Traditions: The Radical Newness of the Kingdom
Two millennia ago, Jesus’ teachings broke through the calcified, rigid traditions of the religious elite, offering a revolutionary message of hope. He did not come to reform external structures but to shift the location of spiritual reality. He spoke of the Kingdom of God not as a distant, geopolitical promise, but as an immediate, present reality accessible through a radically transformed life.
The *Gospel of Thomas* echoes the canonical Gospels in emphasizing this departure from empty, external rituals—such as performative fasting or legalistic compliance—urging instead an inward renewal. As Jesus famously proclaimed:
“New wine must be put into new wineskins.” (cf. Luke 5:38)
This was a cosmic summons to understand the true purpose of human existence and the actual abode of eternal life. The "new wineskin" is a mind and heart completely undone and remade by the Divine, capable of holding the volatile, living power of the Gospel.
* The Old Wineskin: External Rituals \rightarrow Rigid Frameworks \rightarrow Spiritual Stagnation
* The New Wineskin:Inward Renewal \rightarrow Indwelling Christ \rightarrow Eternal Transformation
IV. Beyond Labels: Facing the Pharisaic Blindness
Christ’s language was inherently unsettling to the status quo. Unlike the scribes and Pharisees who relied on institutional authority and legalistic frameworks, Jesus spoke with a universal authority that transitioned beyond conventional human categories. His parables—such as the Sower, the Harvest, and the Laborers (cf. Matthew 13)—point to a divine economy where the Word is lavishly sown, takes deep root within the human heart, and bears supernatural fruit.
To dismiss these deep, interior teachings as mere “Gnosticism” or "detached mysticism"—as some modern, overly scholastic theologians are quick to do—is to echo the tragic blindness of the ancient Pharisees. They missed the living Messiah because He did not fit into their systematic boxes. They failed to grasp that the radical newness of His message required not a sharper intellect, but a broken and contrite heart.
V. Knowing the Self as a Child of God
The Christian calling is an invitation to identity. We are summoned to recognize ourselves not as orphans of the cosmos, but as authentic children of God, bearing the divine presence within our very beings. This truth resonates powerfully in Saying 3 of the *Gospel of Thomas*:
“When you know yourselves, then you will be known, and you will understand that you are children of the living Father. But if you do not know yourselves, then you live in poverty, and you are the poverty.”
To "know oneself" in this sacred context has nothing to do with modern, introspective narcissism or secular self-help. Rather, it is a profound theological encounter with the indwelling Christ. It is looking into the mirror of the Divine and realizing that your truest identity is found in Him.
To live without this self-knowledge is to live in absolute spiritual bankruptcy…