“When you dwell in thought on important or profound matters, dwell also in the Spirit. Reason and Light combined give the truest fount of insight.”
–Aphorism 2
This is very simple advice, easy to understand in
a literal sense, and making very little use of symbolism of imagery.
Technically, ‘Light’ is imagery, but it is such standard imagery
for Quakers that it barely counts; it is one of the terms we use,
largely regardless of specific theological views, for the Divine, or
an aspect of the Divine, or a way of looking at the Divine. Early
Friends spoke of the “Light of Christ”, seeing it as an
expression of the work of the Holy Spirit upon those who are open to
it. Indeed, it is a clear reflection of the Pentecostal essence of
the Quaker way, however different we might be now from those churches
referred to as ‘Pentecostal’ today.
The idea of Pentecostal Christianity is a focus on
the Holy Spirit’s work among Christians today, in reference to the
events commemorated by the festival of Pentecost – the descent of
the Holy Spirit upon the apostles (and other followers of Jesus).
This happened during the Jewish Feast of Weeks, Shavuot,
commemorating Moses’ receipt of the law – the Torah – on Mount
Sinai, as well as marking the wheat harvest in Israel. Shavuot occurs
on the 50th
day after Passover (according to some traditions), and was thus also
known in the language of the New Testament, Koine Greek (including by
some Hellenistic Jews of the first century CE), as Pentēkostē,
or ‘fiftieth’. That word is also used in the Septuagint, the key
Koine translation of the Hebrew scriptures, to refer to the “year
of Jubilee” that occurred every fifty years, but its use to refer
to Shavuot is key to its importance as a term in Christianity. It was
adopted to commemorate the events of Shavuot so long ago – counting
the 50 days from Easter, which marks events that occurred at
Passover, though Easter and Passover now no longer necessarily
coincide.