Meister Eckhart: The Mystic Who Challenged the Church

Introduction: The Divine Spark Within

Meister Eckhart (c. 1260-1328) was a German Dominican friar, theologian, and mystic whose sermons electrified medieval Germany. He taught that every soul contains a "divine spark"—a piece of God that is uncreated and eternal. He preached that union with God requires letting go of everything, even God-as-concept, to find the Godhead beyond all names.

His teachings were so radical that the Church condemned 28 of his propositions as heretical in 1329, a year after his death. Yet Eckhart's influence endured: he shaped German mysticism, inspired Protestant Reformation, and today is studied by Buddhists, philosophers, and mystics worldwide for his profound insights into non-dual consciousness.

This is the seventh article in our Heretics & Mystics series. We now explore Eckhart's life, his revolutionary teachings, why the Church condemned him, and his surprising resonance with Zen Buddhism and modern spirituality.

Life: The Dominican Mystic (c. 1260-1328)

Early Years

Born: c. 1260, Hochheim (near Gotha), Thuringia (Germany)

Name: Eckhart von Hochheim ("Meister" = "Master," his academic title)

c. 1275: Entered Dominican Order in Erfurt

Education:

  • Studied at Dominican schools in Cologne
  • Possibly studied under Albertus Magnus (teacher of Thomas Aquinas)
  • University of Paris (theology degree)

Academic Career

1293-1294: Lectured at University of Paris

1302: Master of Theology degree (hence "Meister")

1303-1311: Provincial of Dominican Order in Saxony

  • Administrative role, overseeing monasteries
  • Founded new convents
  • Promoted education and reform

1311-1313: Taught at University of Paris again

Preaching Career

1314-1327: Preacher in Strasbourg and Cologne

Audience:

  • Dominican nuns and Beguines (women's spiritual communities)
  • Lay people in German (not Latin)
  • Educated and uneducated alike

Style:

  • Paradoxical, poetic, provocative
  • Used everyday language for mystical concepts
  • Challenged listeners to think deeply

Impact: Hugely popular, crowds flocked to hear him

Core Teachings: The Radical Mysticism

1. The Divine Spark (Fünklein)

Eckhart's claim: Every soul has an uncreated, eternal part—a "spark" or "ground" that is identical with God

Quotes:

  • "There is something in the soul which is uncreated and uncreatable; if the whole soul were such, it would be uncreated and uncreatable, and this is the Intellect."
  • "The eye with which I see God is the same eye with which God sees me."

Implication: At our deepest level, we ARE God (not just made by God)

Why heretical: Sounds like pantheism, denying distinction between Creator and creature

2. Detachment (Abgeschiedenheit)

Teaching: To unite with God, you must let go of everything—possessions, desires, even spiritual concepts

Radical detachment:

  • Let go of attachment to heaven and hell
  • Let go of attachment to God-as-image
  • Let go of self, will, knowledge
  • Become "empty" to be filled with God

Quote: "Man's last and highest parting occurs when, for God's sake, he takes leave of God."

Meaning: Let go of your concept of God to find the Godhead beyond concepts

3. The Godhead Beyond God

Distinction:

  • God: Personal, Trinity, Creator, acts in time
  • Godhead (Gottheit): Impersonal, beyond Trinity, eternal, unchanging, unknowable

Teaching: God "becomes" from the Godhead when creating; Godhead is the silent, eternal ground

Quote: "God and Godhead are as different as heaven and earth."

Why heretical: Seems to put something above the Christian God

4. The Birth of God in the Soul

Teaching: God is eternally being born in the soul

Not metaphor: Eckhart meant this literally—God's eternal generation of the Son happens in the soul

Quote: "What good is it to me if Mary gave birth to the son of God 1400 years ago and I do not also give birth to the son of God in my time and in my culture?"

Implication: Every soul can experience what Mary experienced—divine birth

5. Living Without Why

Teaching: True spiritual life has no purpose, no goal, no "why"

Quote: "The rose is without why; it blooms because it blooms."

Meaning:

  • Don't seek God for reward (heaven) or to avoid punishment (hell)
  • Don't even seek God "for God's sake"
  • Simply BE, without motive or goal

Radical: Undermines Church's system of sin, penance, and salvation

6. Poverty of Spirit

Teaching: True poverty is not just lacking possessions, but lacking will, knowledge, and even being

Quote: "A man should be so poor that he is not and has not a place for God to act in. To reserve a place would be to maintain distinctions."

Meaning: Become nothing so God can be everything

Why the Church Condemned Him

The Accusations (1326)

Who: Archbishop of Cologne, Heinrich von Virneburg

Why:

  • Eckhart's popularity threatened Church authority
  • His teachings seemed to make priests unnecessary
  • Beguines (women's communities) loved him—Church suspicious of women's spirituality
  • Political rivalry between Dominicans and Franciscans

Charges: Teaching heresy, misleading the faithful

Eckhart's Defense (1327)

Response: Eckhart preached a sermon defending himself

Key points:

  • "I may err but I cannot be a heretic, for the first belongs to the intellect, the second to the will."
  • Claimed he was misunderstood
  • Said he'd recant anything proven wrong
  • Appealed to Pope in Avignon

1327: Traveled to Avignon to defend himself before papal court

Death Before Verdict

1328: Eckhart died in Avignon (exact date unknown)

Cause: Unknown (possibly old age, ~68 years old)

Result: Died before trial concluded

Posthumous Condemnation (1329)

March 27, 1329: Pope John XXII issued bull In Agro Dominico

Condemned: 28 propositions from Eckhart's works

  • 17 declared heretical
  • 11 declared "suspect of heresy"

Examples of condemned propositions:

  1. "We are totally transformed into God and changed into him; in the same way as in the sacrament the bread is changed into the body of Christ."
  2. "Whatever the Scriptures say of Christ is also true of every good and divine man."
  3. "God is not good, nor better, nor best. Whoever says God is good is as wrong as if he called the sun black."

Caveat: Bull noted Eckhart recanted before death (possibly to soften condemnation)

Why Condemned?

Pantheism: Seemed to say humans are God

Undermining Church: Direct union with God = no need for priests, sacraments

Antinomianism: "Living without why" seemed to reject moral law

Confusing the faithful: Paradoxical language misunderstood by simple people

Influence: The Mystic Who Wouldn't Die

German Mysticism

Direct students:

  • Johannes Tauler (1300-1361): Dominican preacher, spread Eckhart's ideas
  • Henry Suso (1295-1366): Dominican mystic, defended Eckhart

Rhineland Mysticism: Movement inspired by Eckhart

Anonymous works: Theologia Germanica (14th century), influenced by Eckhart

Protestant Reformation

Martin Luther:

  • Read Theologia Germanica (Eckhartian text)
  • Published it (1516, 1518)
  • Praised it as second only to Bible
  • Eckhart's emphasis on inner faith vs. external works influenced Luther

Modern Philosophy

German Idealism:

  • Hegel: Studied Eckhart, influenced by dialectical thinking
  • Schopenhauer: Admired Eckhart's detachment and will-negation

Existentialism:

  • Heidegger: Wrote on Eckhart, influenced by his ontology

Comparative Mysticism

Eckhart and Zen Buddhism:

Similarities:

  • Non-dual consciousness (no separation between self and ultimate reality)
  • Letting go of concepts and attachments
  • Paradoxical language (koans vs. Eckhart's paradoxes)
  • "Living without why" = wu-wei (effortless action)
  • Emptiness (śūnyatā) = Eckhart's detachment

D.T. Suzuki (Zen scholar): Wrote extensively on Eckhart-Zen parallels

Thomas Merton (Catholic monk): Studied both Eckhart and Zen, saw deep connections

Modern Spirituality

Eckhart Tolle:

  • Took name from Meister Eckhart
  • Teaches presence, ego-dissolution (Eckhartian themes)

New Age: Eckhart's "divine spark" resonates with "we are all divine" teachings

Interfaith dialogue: Eckhart as bridge between Christianity and Eastern religions

Rehabilitation?

Catholic Church's Stance

Never officially rehabilitated

But:

  • Condemnation rarely mentioned
  • Many Catholic scholars study and praise Eckhart
  • Seen as legitimate mystic (if sometimes excessive)

Pope John Paul II (1985): Quoted Eckhart approvingly (rare for condemned heretic)

Modern Scholarship

Consensus:

  • Eckhart was orthodox in intent
  • His language was provocative but not heretical
  • Condemnation was political and based on misunderstanding
  • He's one of Christianity's greatest mystics

Key Quotes: Eckhart's Wisdom

On God:

  • "God is at home. It is we who have gone out for a walk."
  • "The eye through which I see God is the same eye through which God sees me; my eye and God's eye are one eye, one seeing, one knowing, one love."

On detachment:

  • "The most powerful prayer, one well-nigh omnipotent, and the worthiest work of all is the outcome of a quiet mind."
  • "He who would be serene and pure needs but one thing, detachment."

On the soul:

  • "The seed of God is in us. Given an intelligent and hard-working farmer, it will thrive and grow up to God, whose seed it is; and accordingly its fruits will be God-nature."

On being:

  • "To be full of things is to be empty of God. To be empty of things is to be full of God."

Conclusion: The Mystic Beyond Heresy

Meister Eckhart taught that God is not distant but intimate—closer than our own breath, the very ground of our being. His "divine spark" doctrine challenged Church hierarchy by suggesting every soul has direct access to the divine. For this, he was condemned as a heretic.

Yet his influence endured, shaping German mysticism, Protestant Reformation, and modern spirituality. Today, Christians, Buddhists, and secular seekers alike find wisdom in his paradoxes. The Church condemned him, but couldn't kill his ideas.

In the next article, we will explore The Beguines: Women's Spiritual Communities Crushed by Patriarchy. We will examine the medieval women who created independent spiritual communities, why they threatened the Church, and the martyrdom of Marguerite Porete, burned for teaching mystical union.

Eckhart's spark cannot be extinguished. It burns in every soul.

For Meister Eckhart, who taught the divine within. For the spark that cannot be condemned. For the Godhead beyond God. We awaken.

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Nicole Lau — UK certified Advanced Angel Healing Practitioner, PhD in Management, published author.

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