I have avoided blogging about my yin-yang research on this blog, but a bunch of things have come up in my life recently that show that this information is actually supremely relevant to all of my work. So I'm going to start blogging a little bit about this. Here's a brief introduction to the concept of yin and yang. I'm certainly not an expert in it, but I have devoted a lot of time to researching and pondering it, so I ask your understanding about the things I may not have 100% spot-on. But I do believe this is a decent introduction to the topic.
Introduction
My
studies of the masculine and feminine as they relate to the gospel of
Jesus Christ are what led me to the study of yin and yang, because while
the Bible does explain some of this concept, and the Book of Mormon
does too, Chinese philosophy seems to really delve deeply into it. I am often amazed at the parallels I find between the Tao Te Ching and the Sermon on the Mount.
My favorite translation of the Tao Te Ching is
here.
This particular translation contains phrases that are especially
meaningful to those who have been privileged to worship in the temple;
other translations don't contain the same phraseology. Having an accurate translation makes all the difference to
extracting the divine wisdom from the TTC.
Obviously, read it with prayer to know what is true and what is not! Remember
the teachings of Joseph Smith:
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Joseph Smith. |
“Mormonism
is truth; and every man who embraces it feels himself at liberty to
embrace every truth: [...]
“…
Mormonism
is truth, in other words the doctrine of the Latter-day Saints, is
truth. … The first and fundamental principle of our holy religion is,
that we believe that we have a right to embrace all, and every item of
truth, without limitation or without being circumscribed or prohibited
by the creeds or superstitious notions of men, or by the dominations of
one another, when that truth is clearly demonstrated to our minds, and
we have the highest degree of evidence of the same.”
5
As
Latter-day Saints, we have a unique understanding of truth, and that
truth can be gathered and out to be embraced, whether it's from another
creed or not. The TTC, to me, holds a lot of truth, and when I am open
to it and approach it with prayer and a Gospel perspective enlightened
by the Holy Bible and the Book of Mormon, I learn a lot that blesses my
life.
So, to kick off a discussion of yin and yang, I must begin with the first chapter of the
Tao Teh Ching. Emphasis mine:
The Tao that can be spoken is not the eternal Tao
The name that can be named is not the eternal name
The nameless is the origin of Heaven and Earth
The named is the mother of myriad things
Thus, constantly without desire, one observes its essence
Constantly with desire, one observes its manifestations
These two emerge together but differ in name
The unity is said to be the mystery
Mystery of mysteries, the door to all wonders
There is SO MUCH in this chapter, but the important thing here is that the "nameless," the "origin of Heaven and Earth," or masculine/yang force, is inherently
different from the "named," feminine force, "mother of myriad things." However, although they have different roles and abilities (essence vs. manifestation), and although they "differ in name," they "emerge together," and it is only when they experience unity that the "door to all wonders" is opened.
Latter-day Saints, please enjoy these concepts from a temple perspective.
The Basics of Yin and Yang
What are the differences between yang and yin? If you Google it,
you'll find a bunch of charts that list out the qualities that make them
different.
This site outlines the basics.
Yang
is masculine. It is hard, bright, logical, independent, and active. Yin
is feminine, soft, dark, emotional, dependent, and passive. Yang is
action; yin is rest. The sun, the greater light, is yang. The moon, the
lesser light, is yin. Yang is dominant, yin is submissive. Yang is
demanding, yin is cooperative. Yang is loud, yin is quiet. Yang is
penetrative, yin is receptive.
Yang and yin complement
each other and create each other, or at least illuminate each other. They contain the seeds of each other.
There is a yin-yang scale, and there is a yin-yang entity. The typical yin-yang symbol that you see around is called the
taijitu. It expresses the idea that although yin and yang may
look dual, they are in fact
non-dual and complementary, each a
holon inside a holon.
A Scale And An Entity
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The united yin-yang, or taijitu.
Thanks, Clipart!
Each side contains the other,
brings forth the other,
fits into the other. |
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Yin and yang are both a way of measuring, and a self-contained entity. I explain below how yin and yang status can be relative; yet at the same time, the yin-yang combines to become one unity. The "door to all wonders," if you will. Let's put it this way: just as men and women are masculine and feminine respectively on their own, and we all fall into a ranking of more and less feminine or masculine, depending, at the same time, through temple marriage, the feminine and masculine unite into a perfect unity that is the beginning of all creation.
The scale I often refer to as "yin and yang," or with reference to the separate parts; the whole, sealed unity, I often refer to as the yin-yang. But this isn't a hard and fast rule with me. You'll see as you delve into the study of yin and yang that there are so many nuances and fascinating aspects of the concept that the terminology must shift depending on what you're discussing.
Relative Yin and Yang
The yin or yang status of everything is relative to everything else.
For
example, water is yin to steam, but yang to ice. In the Gospel, the
wife is yin to the husband, and the husband is yang to her, but the
husband is yin to Christ (
Ephesians 5:23). And though men are yang to women, women are yang to children, and humans are yang to nature. And so on.
God made Eve for Adam because it is not good for man to be alone (
Genesis 2:18); woman was created to be a helper for the man (
1 Corinthians 11:9).
This form of duality, of the masculine as dominant and the leader, and the
feminine as the submissive and cooperative, is good and part of the
divine order. The submissive party is not "less" because of her role;
God loves His sons and daughters equally. A leader can't lead if no one follows; a follower can't follow if there's no one to lead. A man without a woman is as
useless and futile as is a woman without a man. Each is completed by the
other, as long as they are acting in their proper roles. This is the
only way families can be created and people can progress. From
the Book of Mormon, we learn that without this peculiar form of duality, humankind "
would have had no a; wherefore they would have remained in a state of innocence, having no b, for they knew no misery; doing no good, for they knew no c" (2 Nephi 2:23).
Yin-Yang: Dual, or Non-Dual?
Understanding the yin-yang duality is useful for understanding human relationships and relationships between humans and everything else in the world. But one thing that recently entered my awareness is the idea that gender duality in its perfected form
is also not dual. It is
non-dual. Perfect femininity is not the opposite of perfect masculinity, any more than it is impossible for God to be both fully transcendent and fully immanent. The whole thing seems paradoxical, but that is only because paradox is the only way for a duality mindset to interpret non-duality. And I am beginning to suspect that one of the effects of Adam's Fall was the transition from a non-dual mindset to a dual one.
As an example of the non-duality of yin and yang, the feminine force is not truly separate from the masculine force, because
it naturally contains the masculine force. Women give birth to men. Similarly, masculine energy naturally contains a spark of the feminine force--a masculine contribution is necessary for the spark of life in a woman's womb. In this way, the two forces of femininity and masculinity are not dual: they are co-existent, differing, and inherently
non-dual. It's a concept that is difficult to grasp, living in a world of opposites. But while there is a scale of duality relating to the yin and the yang, there is also an inherent non-duality about them as well.
When we at last witness femininity and masculinity in perfected form, I believe we will find that the feminine and the masculine enhance each other, create each other, strengthen each other, and contain each other. A perfectly dual non-duality.
Gospel Precedent For Non-Duality
One of my favorite bloggers and a personal inspiration to me, Progressive Prophetess, has
blogged about spiritual paradoxes. This concept of seemingly inconsistent gospel ideas is not new. For example, consider the admonition to both hunger and thirst after righteousness,
and feast on the words of Christ. Here are a few more examples from her blog (which are actually taken from the scriptures):
- God is no respecter of persons, He loves all the same /The concept of the elect
- Be anxiously engaged in a good cause / Patiently wait on the Lord
- I am a vengeful God / I am a merciful God
- Lose your life/ Find it
- We are responsible for our own salvation / Eternal marriage is necessary for exaltation
- Exercise faith to be healed / Everything is as it should be. Accept the will of the Lord
- Give everything away in order to get everything
- The Gospel is simple. The simpleness of the way/ The mysteries of God can't be comprehended
- We are spiritual beings/ We are carnal beings
- Zion is a physical place/ Zion is in our hearts
- Travel without purse or script. God provides/ God cares for those who care for themselves
Seemingly-dual non-duality is actually a thing in the gospel. These "paradoxes" listed are really not paradoxes; they co-exist with perfection. The only problem is that right now, our minds are not equipped to fully process non-duality.
Yin and Yang: Good and Evil?
Although yin and yang seem dual in some ways, they are truly a non-duality. Their polarity only appears that way because the human mind is primed for opposites and not non-duality. When I first began studying yin and yang, I was heartbroken because
obviously yang was good, and that meant that yin was...
evil.
Obviously.
Only, actually not.
There is a yin-yang scale in this universe, obviously--the yin and yang of things is relative, as covered above--but neither yin nor yang participates on the good-evil spectrum as good or evil. Neither yin nor yang identifies with good or evil. They are just not on the same scale. They do not occupy the same heirarchy, the same space, or anything like that.
Both good and evil can be measured along the yin-yang scale, however. Just as God is yang to Jesus, and They are yang to the angels in heaven, so we would presume that Lucifer is yang to his own army of devils.
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From an etsy shop here. |
This leads me to wonder if in fact the concept of yin and yang is even bigger than good versus evil, because even good and evil play by its rules, in that way I just mentioned. This would explain why evil
hates the yin-yang structure and scale. Yin-yang is the force behind creation. Evil hates creation. And the scale of the yin-yang--the idea that everything is more or less yin or yang than everything else--is also abhorrent to the "son of the morning" whose plan for God's children involved exact equality.
To the extent that the yin-yang is a self-contained entity, while it is non-dual in and of itself, it
does appear to be dual with evil. The yin-yang, the divinely united combination of feminine and masculine, is the ultimate creative force, and, I suspect, the
only truly creative force. The yin-yang in its perfection is the opposite of destruction.
Yin, Yang, and God
In my research on the names of God, I came across a fascinating tidbit the other day. We are all probably aware of the name "Elohim" in reference to God. One thing that has always struck me about that name is that it is actually plural (indicated by the -im suffix).
However, there's more to that name than just the peculiarly plural nature of it. Examine this tidbit courtesy of
Wikipedia:
A common title of God in the Hebrew Bible is Elohim (Hebrew: אלהים), as opposed to other titles of God in Judaism. The root Eloah אלה is a feminine noun, meaning goddess, also used in poetry and late prose (e.g., the Book of Job)
and ending with the masculine plural suffix "-im" ים creating a word
that indicates a plurality of both masculine and feminine essences, yet
in a singular identity.
It appears that it is an established aspect of Judaism as well as Mormonism that God is made up of both masculine and feminine essences. We just also understand that in the context of eternal marriage. I will let you ponder that without further comment.
Conclusion
We've probably all seen yin-yang symbols on keychains and bumper stickers, but the ideas contained in the symbol and the teachings it roots in are anything but keychain- or bumper sticker-simple. Although at church we don't typically frame the gospel in these terms, which may seem more suited for only Oriental philosophy, this concept is inherent in the gospel and understanding it sheds a lot of light on many other gospel concepts.