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Hexagram 45 · Line 4

Gathering for the Whole

Hexagram 45 · Line 4 meaning

"Great good fortune. No blame."
Parent hexagram
45

Ts'ui is the hexagram of assembly: waters collecting into the lake, people collecting around a centre. Where Holding Together showed union's principle, this is union's mass event — family, community, movement, congregation — with all the power and all the volatility of the gathered.

Direct answer

Hexagram 45 line 4 means you're gathering for the common good, not for private advantage — collecting people around the true centre rather than around yourself. Precisely that selflessness earns the verdict: great good fortune, no blame, unconditional, where almost every other line carries a warning. Keep working for the whole, and obstacles that trap the self-serving dissolve.

The image explained

Line 4 stands just below the ruler — the minister's place, where showing off is fatal and service is everything. The verdict is famously bare: "great good fortune, no blame," with no condition attached. That bareness is the point. Every other gathering position hedges its blessing, because self-interest keeps creeping in at the centre or the edge. Here it doesn't. The line describes the gatherer who convenes people around the shared purpose above them all, taking no cut for himself — and unselfishness, in assembly as everywhere, is the one fully protected position. Nothing needs adding to it.

What to do now

Do the assembling work, and do it for the whole — organise the effort, connect the people, build the coalition around the shared centre rather than around your own standing. Take no private cut; claim no faction as yours. Don't let a hint of self-promotion creep in, because the moment you gather people around yourself instead of the purpose, the unconditional verdict evaporates. Serve the centre openly. This is the rare line where doing the selfless thing is also, plainly, the fortunate one.

Transformation

The change toward Hexagram 8

When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 8, Holding Together. The fit is exact: gathering for the whole matures into genuine union. Where Gathering Together is the mass event, Holding Together is its lasting bond — people held not by a leader's pull but by a true centre they all orient by. The selfless assembling you're doing now is precisely what lets the group cohere for the long term. Serve the whole, and the crowd becomes a community; the gathering settles into something that holds.

This line in context
In love

you're building the shared world selflessly — the wedding, the joined families, the common circle. Serve the bond over your standing, and fortune is complete. Full love reading

In career

you convene people around the mission, not your name. That selflessness is what makes this the safest, brightest position in the whole reading. Full career reading

For a decision

choose the move that serves everyone, not just you — the one action here that meets no warning at all. Blockages clear for the unselfish choice. Full timing reading

Reflection

Am I gathering these people around a shared purpose, or quietly around myself?

Where could I do the selfless organising work that no one else is stepping up to do?

Read this line well

Keep the line inside the full reading

A changing line becomes useful when you read it in the right order and keep it tied to the wider hexagram pattern.

1. Start with Hexagram 45

Read the parent hexagram first so Line 4 stays anchored in the actual situation rather than floating as a detached slogan.

2. Stay with Line 4

Let this line show where the pressure, correction, or opening is most active right now. It is usually the sharpest instruction in the cast.

3. Then read the direction of change

Only after that should you compare the transformed figure and decide what movement this changing line is pointing toward.

If you want the wider method behind this sequence, read how to consult the I Ching or go deeper with the changing-lines guide.

All six lines

Read the full line sequence

Line 1

Sincerity Not Carried Through

"Sincere, but not to the end — so there is sometimes confusion, sometimes gathering. But call out, and after one grasp of the hand you can laugh again. Do not regret; going is without blame."

Hexagram 45 line 1 means your sincerity is real but hasn't held its aim. You're drawn to a true centre, yet the crowd's other pulls keep tugging you off it, and that oscillation is what breeds the confusion. The counsel is disarmingly simple: call out. Reach openly for the centre, and one grasp of the hand ends it.

Read line 1 in full
Line 2

Letting Oneself Be Drawn

"Letting oneself be drawn brings good fortune and no blame. With sincerity, even a small offering furthers."

Hexagram 45 line 2 means the right gathering works by attraction, not effort. Yield to the genuine pull — toward the true people, the true centre — rather than manufacturing connections or forcing your way in. What draws mutually needs no engineering; what has to be forced was never a true gathering. Bring what you have honestly; sincerity dignifies the small offering.

Read line 2 in full
Line 3

Gathering Amid Sighs

"Gathering together amid sighs: nothing furthers. Going is without blame — slight humiliation."

Hexagram 45 line 3 means you're outside the circle looking in — the group has formed and you're not in it, sighing at the edge, perhaps through your own earlier missteps. Forcing the entrance furthers nothing. The way in is humble: ally with whoever near the centre will receive you, and accept the small humiliation of joining from a lower position.

Read line 3 in full
Line 4

Gathering for the Whole

"Great good fortune. No blame."

Hexagram 45 line 4 means you're gathering for the common good, not for private advantage — collecting people around the true centre rather than around yourself. Precisely that selflessness earns the verdict: great good fortune, no blame, unconditional, where almost every other line carries a warning. Keep working for the whole, and obstacles that trap the self-serving dissolve.

Current line
Line 5

Position Without Full Trust

"Gathering with position brings no blame. But where some are not yet sincere in the work, sublime and enduring steadfastness is needed — then remorse vanishes."

Hexagram 45 line 5 means you hold the leading place, but adherence is incomplete: some have gathered around your position, not around you or the principle, and their sincerity is pending. This carries no blame. The counsel is patience — don't force or campaign for their conviction. Only sublime, enduring steadfastness wins the deeper trust, and grows it slowly.

Read line 5 in full
Line 6

Lamenting at the Edge

"Lamenting and sighing, floods of tears. No blame."

Hexagram 45 line 6 means the grief of exclusion has broken open — your goodwill mistaken, your place denied, the sorrow spilling into tears at the gathering's edge. The line's kindness is its verdict: no blame. The distress is the beginning of the return, because grief at separation proves the longing was real. Let the tears be the reach they are.

Read line 6 in full
Situation meanings

Read this hexagram in context

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Oracle

Consult the I Ching with Hexagram 45 in mind

If Line 4 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.