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Hexagram 6 · Line 5

The Just Arbiter

Hexagram 6 · Line 5 meaning

"To bring the dispute before the just one brings supreme good fortune."
Parent hexagram
6

Sung is the hexagram of contention — heaven and water moving in opposite directions, two natures that cannot meet. It describes conflict with others, with circumstances, with fate itself; but its deepest teaching is that all outer conflict is rooted in inner conflict. When we view the world, other people, or ourselves negatively, the war has already begun inside.

Direct answer

Hexagram 6 line 5 means when a conflict must be resolved, entrust it to an authority that's genuinely impartial — in outer life, a fair arbiter; in inner life, the Sage and the course of fate. Handing the matter over isn't weakness but the deepest confidence: if your cause is right, it will be upheld more completely than your own advocacy could manage. Trusting a higher wisdom brings peace of mind and a resolution that serves the greater good.

The image explained

The fifth line is the place of the just ruler, and here it embodies the one figure the whole hexagram has been pointing to: the impartial one who can settle what the parties cannot. The move this line asks for runs against every instinct of conflict — to stop advocating for yourself and place the matter in hands that have no stake. That looks like surrendering control, and it's actually the opposite: it's the confidence that truth doesn't need your relentless pushing to prevail. "Supreme good fortune" attaches to it because a resolution reached through fair judgment holds, where one seized by force reopens. The strength here is trust — in fairness, in the Sage, in the way things rightly resolve.

What to do now

Do find the genuinely impartial party and hand the dispute over — a fair mediator, a trusted authority, an honest process — and then actually let go of it. Stop building your case in your head; stop advocating past the point of usefulness. If your cause is sound, trust that impartial judgment will carry it further than your own arguing ever could. Inwardly, entrust the outcome to the Sage and the course of fate rather than clutching at control. Don't confuse this with passivity: it's an active, deliberate act of confidence. Place the matter before the just one, and let the resolution come clean.

Transformation

The change toward Hexagram 64

When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 64, Before Completion — the threshold of order not quite reached, the crossing begun and finished only by those who keep listening to the very end. The link is the delicacy of resolution: handing the dispute to the just one begins the final crossing, but it isn't complete until you let the process finish without snatching it back. Before Completion warns of the little fox that wets its tail at the last step by stopping too soon. The change tells you to trust the impartial crossing all the way over — don't reopen the case at the finish, and the good order arrives.

This line in context
In love

a fair third party — or honest mediation — can settle this cleanly. Trust the impartial route; if your cause is right, it will be upheld. Full love reading

In career

take the dispute to fair arbitration rather than fighting it yourself. Trusting an impartial process resolves what advocacy can't. Full career reading

For a decision

hand the call to a fair authority or honest process instead of forcing your own verdict. The impartial route brings the sound outcome. Full timing reading

Reflection

Who is genuinely impartial enough to settle this — and can I actually let them?

Where is my need to keep advocating standing in the way of a clean resolution?

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 6

Read the parent hexagram first so Line 5 stays anchored in the actual situation rather than floating as a detached slogan.

2. Stay with Line 5

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

Dropping the Quarrel Early

"If the matter is not pursued, there is a little gossip. In the end, good fortune."

Hexagram 6 line 1 means address the conflict at its very birth — by declining it. Disengage before positions harden, even though withdrawing draws a little criticism and talk. Don't become invested in changing the other side or in having the last word; the ego's stake in the argument is the real danger. A little gossip is a small price for the good fortune of a quarrel that never grew.

Read line 1 in full
Line 2

Retreat Before Superior Force

"One cannot win this contest. Turn back and yield, and your own people remain free of harm."

Hexagram 6 line 2 means the opposing force is genuinely stronger, and retreat is not defeat but wisdom. Recognise a fight driven by ego, withdraw, and stay neutral — letting the situation unfold without you. This protects more than yourself; it spares everyone connected to you from being dragged into the consequences. Keep a clear mind, stay out of the heat of the moment, and wait for the guidance that comes to the still.

Read line 2 in full
Line 3

Living on Proven Virtue

"Nourish yourself on long-proven virtue. Steadfastness amid danger brings good fortune in the end. If you serve a king, do not seek the credit."

Hexagram 6 line 3 means in contentious times, safety lies in what you've already made your own — your established character, not new claims or conquests. Work behind the scenes, serve the greater good, and let recognition go; the ego's push for fame in the middle of conflict only invites attack. Resist the urge to intervene where others seem to be going wrong. Let your light show through actions, not words.

Read line 3 in full
Line 4

Turning Back to Peace

"One cannot win this contest. Turn back, accept what fate has allotted, change your attitude, and find peace in steadfastness. Good fortune."

Hexagram 6 line 4 means the conflict is really with fate itself — an inner discontent that tempts you toward shortcuts and quarrels because your lot seems insufficient. No opponent actually stands in the way; the fight has no object. Progress comes only from turning back: accepting what is, changing the attitude that made war on it, and finding peace in patient perseverance. Acceptance, not conquest, is the victory available here.

Read line 4 in full
Line 5

The Just Arbiter

"To bring the dispute before the just one brings supreme good fortune."

Hexagram 6 line 5 means when a conflict must be resolved, entrust it to an authority that's genuinely impartial — in outer life, a fair arbiter; in inner life, the Sage and the course of fate. Handing the matter over isn't weakness but the deepest confidence: if your cause is right, it will be upheld more completely than your own advocacy could manage. Trusting a higher wisdom brings peace of mind and a resolution that serves the greater good.

Current line
Line 6

The Belt Thrice Snatched

"Even if the prize of victory is awarded, it will be snatched away three times before the morning ends."

Hexagram 6 line 6 means the conflict fought through to the bitter end — and even won. But what contention wins, contention takes back: the honour is contested endlessly, the settlement reopens, the mind returns and returns to the struggle. Rumination breeds only deeper confusion and self-doubt. Release it. Even a solution seized this way is fleeting; trust the natural progression of events rather than a futile, endless fight.

Read line 6 in full
Situation meanings

Read this hexagram in context

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Oracle

Consult the I Ching with Hexagram 6 in mind

If Line 5 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.