I kissed her quickly. I know it was a holy assembly of holy thinkers, but I was betting that they’d forgive me.
‘This is the second-best best date ever,’ she said, as the sages sat up straight, three intellectual corner-men leaning away from Grumpy, the youngest sage, with fresh energy for the challenge.
‘This is digressive,’ Grumpy began. ‘I have found your technique, master-
‘Indeed,’ Ambitious added, hoping to trap Idriss in a snare of caste. ‘Can any of us escape the wheel of karma, and our Divinely appointed duties?’
‘If there is a Divine Source of all things, our rational and logical duty is to that Divine Source,’ Idriss replied. ‘Our only other duty is to the humanity that we share, and the planet that sustains us. Everything beyond that is a personal preference.’
‘Are we not born with a karmic duty?’ Ambitious pressed.
‘
The sages looked at one another, ashamed, perhaps, that they’d tried to trap Idriss in the quicksand of religion, while he kept lifting himself free on a branch of faith.
‘Does a personal God speak to you?’ Let Me See asked, tangling his long grey beard with knotted fingers, bruised on the inside from years of counting red amber meditation beads in cycles of one hundred and eight.
‘Such a lovely question,’ Idriss laughed gently. ‘I presume that you mean a God that cares about me, personally, and that I can communicate with, personally, while that God, who dreamt the universe into creation, is busily connecting with every consciousness like mine, wherever it arises. Is that correct?’
‘Precisely,’ the elderly guru said.
Idriss laughed to himself.
‘What’s the question?’ Vinson asked.
‘Does God walk the talk?’ Karla whispered quickly, smiling encouragement at Vinson.
‘I get it,’ Vinson whispered back happily. ‘Like, does God pick up the phone?’
‘I see the Divine in every minute that I live,’ Idriss answered. ‘And I receive constant affirmations. It is a language uncommon, of course. It is a spiritual language of coincidence and connection. I think you know, great sage, of what I speak?’
‘I do, Idriss,’ he replied, chuckling. ‘I do. Can you give an example?’
‘Every peaceful encounter with nature,’ Idriss said, ‘is a natural conversation with the Divine, which is why it is advisable to live as near to nature as you can.’
‘A fine example, great sage,’ Let Me See replied.
‘Extending your heart to put the light of affection in the eyes of a new friend, is a conversation with the Divine,’ Idriss said. ‘Honest meditation is the same conversation.’
‘You were imprecise, before, Idriss,’ he said. ‘Tell us, succinctly, what the meaning and purpose of life is.’
‘There are two questions in your challenge, as I said before,’ Idriss said. ‘And only one of them is a valid question.’
‘We have touched on this, and I still do not understand,’ Grumpy pouted.
‘Without a fully conscious Will to ask about the meaning of anything,’ Idriss answered patiently, ‘the question is not just meaningless, but impossible.’
‘But surely, master-
‘I repeat, the question
There was a pause, and I was glad, because I knew that if Vinson disturbed her concentration at that moment, Karla might shoot him, after the debate.
‘Asking the question
‘Thanks,’ Karla whispered, leaning against me.
‘Meaning is an attribute of Will,’ Idriss continued. ‘The valid question is what is the
‘Very well,’ Let Me See said, chuckling, ‘what is the purpose of life?’
‘The purpose of life is to express the set of positive characteristics to the most sophisticated degree that you can, by connecting with pure intention to others, and our planet, and to the Divine Source of all things.’
‘How do you define these positive characteristics, master-
‘The set of positive characteristics is found everywhere, in every place where people live humanely with one another. Life, consciousness, freedom, love, justice, fairness, honesty, mercy, affinity, courage, generosity, compassion, forgiveness, empathy and many beautiful others. They are always the same, everywhere that kind hearts survive to preserve them.’