God Without Belief

A curious statement arises: God is an atheist. Not as denial, but as a revelation of what cannot be confined to belief. Belief requires distance; someone who believes, and something believed in. That distance dissolves at the level of the Absolute.

God, understood as the ground of all being, does not stand apart from existence. No position can be taken outside of what already is. Theism proclaims devotion toward a divine presence. Pantheism recognizes divinity within all forms. Panentheism holds both transcendence and immanence. Agnosticism suspends certainty. Atheism rejects the claim altogether. Each appears to oppose the other, yet all emerge from the same source.

A wave arguing with another wave about the existence of the ocean misses the quiet truth beneath the motion. The ocean never needs to assert itself. No defense is required. No belief is necessary. Presence alone is sufficient.

God, in this sense, cannot be a theist, because there is nothing separate to believe in. God cannot be an atheist either, in the conventional sense, because nothing exists outside of that totality to deny. Yet from the human vantage point, the Absolute appears as both belief and disbelief, devotion and rejection, clarity and doubt.

Atheism becomes one expression of the divine refusing to objectify itself. The refusal to project an external deity is not always a rejection of truth; sometimes it is an unconscious recognition that truth cannot be turned into an object at all. What is rejected is often a concept, not the living reality prior to concepts.

The ground of being remains untouched by every conclusion formed about it. Arguments unfold within it, philosophies rise and fall within it, identities shape themselves and dissolve within it. Nothing stands outside to validate or invalidate what already includes everything.

Silence reveals more than assertion here. That silence does not belong to any religion or ideology. It is the same stillness present before belief forms and after it fades.

What, then, is left?

A direct knowing without position. A presence without identity. A reality that does not require agreement to be what it is.

God, as the Absolute, holds space for the believer kneeling in prayer and the skeptic dismantling every claim. Both movements are gestures within the same indivisible whole. Neither completes it. Neither threatens it.

Seeing this does not demand adopting a new belief. It invites the collapse of the need to hold one at all.

And what remains cannot be called belief or disbelief; only what is, prior to both.

Morgan O. Smith

The Theist’s Agnostic Dilemma

On the Quest for Nondual Spiritual Awakening

For as long as humans have looked up to the skies and pondered upon the nature of existence, the question of God’s existence has been a prominent query. Some vehemently assert the presence of divine power, some deny it with equal vigour, while others remain in a state of uncertainty. What’s interesting, however, is the subtle paradox that emerges when one deeply contemplates the nature of belief and knowledge concerning God.

At its core, to be a theist is to believe in the existence of God or gods. This belief often stems from religious teachings, personal experiences, or intuitive convictions. Yet, if we pause and dissect this ‘belief’, we can identify an underlying layer of agnosticism. Agnosticism, in essence, is the state of not being sure about the existence or non-existence of God. While it might seem counterintuitive, the argument can be made that every theist, at some level, is an agnostic.

The reason is simple: to believe is not the same as to know.

Belief is a conviction, a deeply held trust in something, often without empirical evidence. Knowledge, on the other hand, suggests a certainty, a definitive understanding. So, while a theist believes in God, can they truly say they know God exists, in the same way, they know the sun rises in the east?

This uncertainty, this inability to ‘know’ for sure, brings us to the concept of the Nondual spiritual awakening. Nonduality, as a spiritual tenet, postulates that there is no separation between the self and the universe, between man and God. In this awakened state, one doesn’t just believe in God; one realizes or experiences God’s presence in everything. It’s akin to a veil being lifted, revealing a world where the divine isn’t an external entity but is immanent and present in every facet of existence.

Until one reaches this state of Nondual realization, the existence of God remains a matter of faith and belief. The journey from belief to knowledge, in the spiritual sense, is what many spiritual seekers aim for. It’s a transformation from the intellectual to the experiential, from conceptual understanding to living realization.

In conclusion, the theist’s journey, while rooted in belief, inherently contains a quest for certain knowledge. It’s a paradox that every believer grapples with, consciously or unconsciously. While some are content with their faith, others embark on spiritual voyages to seek that elusive Nondual awakening. Whether you’re a believer, an atheist, or an agnostic, the quest for understanding the nature of God and our place in the cosmos is a deeply human endeavour, one that transcends labels and challenges us to think beyond the confines of our current understanding.

Morgan O. Smith

Yinnergy Meditation & My Book, Bodhi in the Brain…Available Now!

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