The Mystical Thought Of Meister Eckhart -

Eckhart describes this state using the "Eye" metaphor: "The eye with which I see God is the same eye with which God sees me". It suggests a shared consciousness rather than a relationship between two separate beings. 3. Gelassenheit (Detachment or Releasement)

Once detached, one lives sunder warumbe (without a why), performing good acts not for a reward (even heaven) but because they flow naturally from the divine ground. 4. The Birth of the Word in the Soul Meister Eckhart - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy The Mystical Thought of Meister Eckhart

A person must become "poor" in spirit, meaning they must be free of all "this and that"—including their own will and even their ideas about God. Eckhart describes this state using the "Eye" metaphor:

Meister Eckhart (c. 1260–1328) stands as one of the most provocative figures in the history of Western mysticism. A Dominican friar and "Meister" (Master of Theology), his thought famously pushed the boundaries of medieval orthodoxy, leading to the posthumous condemnation of several of his propositions. Meister Eckhart (c

The soul's ultimate goal is a "breakthrough" ( durchbrechen ) beyond God as creator to this silent, "superessential nothingness" of the Godhead. 2. The Grunt (The Ground of the Soul)