The Paradox That Refuses to Break

For something to exist, it must appear somewhere. It must occupy a location, unfold across duration, relate to other things. Existence, as we commonly understand it, implies coordinates. A chair exists because it sits in space. A thought exists because it arises in time. Remove both, and what remains?

Many insist that the Divine transcends time and space. Yet transcendence poses a riddle. If something is truly beyond time and space, can it be said to exist at all? Existence, in every familiar sense, depends upon dimension, sequence, and relation. To be entirely outside those would seem to cancel the very idea of being.

Then comes the reversal.

If we claim the Absolute does not exist because it is beyond all coordinates, we still must ask: does nonexistence exist? The mind hesitates here. Nonexistence cannot be located, yet we speak of it. We conceive of absence. We reference nothingness. Somehow, even nothing appears within awareness.

Awareness does not vanish when an object disappears. When a sound fades, silence remains. When a thought dissolves, presence does not dissolve with it. Even the concept of “nothing” shows up as something known.

So what is happening?

Perhaps the difficulty arises from assuming that existence and nonexistence are opposites. That assumption belongs to a world of contrast—light and dark, birth and death, form and formlessness. But what if both poles arise within a deeper continuity?

Consider this possibility: the Divine exists as time and space. Every galaxy, every heartbeat, every passing second is not a creation separate from its source but an expression of it. The ticking clock is not evidence of distance from God; it is God measuring itself through movement. The extension of space is not apart from the Infinite; it is the Infinite stretching.

Yet the same reality is not confined to its expressions. Time unfolds within it, but it is not bound by succession. Space extends within it, but it is not limited by boundary. That which appears as the flow of moments is also the stillness in which moments arise.

From this vantage point, saying “God exists” is true. Saying “God does not exist” is equally true, if by existence we mean a definable object among other objects. The Absolute cannot be reduced to a thing inside the universe. Nor can it be excluded from the universe.

Existence and nonexistence collapse into a single indivisible fact: there is what is.

When the mind tries to categorize this, it fractures the whole into manageable concepts. It invents a creator separate from creation. It imagines a being located somewhere, ruling from a distance. Or it swings to the opposite extreme and denies any sacred dimension at all.

Both moves miss the intimacy of the matter.

The search for a name is the movement of the Infinite through a finite lens. Every label—God, Brahman, Source, Reality, Void—is a gesture. The gesture matters, but it never contains what it points toward.

You are not separate from this paradox. The very awareness reading these words is evidence of it. Thoughts move across your inner sky, yet something remains unmoving. Identity shifts across years, yet something does not age. The body occupies space and time, yet the sense of being here precedes every clock.

Perhaps what we call “God” is existence recognizing itself as both the field and the forms within it. Both the silence and the symphony. Both the presence of things and the apparent absence of them.

Existence does not need to choose between being and non-being. That choice belongs to the intellect.

What remains when even that choice dissolves?

Only this—undivided, immediate, self-knowing.

Call it what you will.

It is already what you are.

Morgan O. Smith

Existence Is Not the Measure

The statement “God exists” sounds reverent, yet it quietly diminishes what it claims to honour. Existence is not a neutral category. It is a condition. To exist is to appear within time, to persist across duration, to occupy a framework where before and after apply. Existence implies location, sequence, and limit.

God, if the word is to mean anything absolute, cannot be confined to such a framework.

To say God exists already places God inside something else. Time becomes the container. Space becomes the stage. Existence becomes the rule God must obey. That framing does not exalt God; it reduces God to an object among other objects, distinguished only by scale or power.

A more precise statement unsettles most theists:
God does not exist.

Not because God is absent, unreal, or lacking. Quite the opposite. God is beyond the category of existence altogether. Existence belongs to the realm of manifestation. God is not a thing that manifests; God is that by which manifestation is possible at all.

Existence requires time. Something exists now, or then, or for a while. God, described as eternal, cannot be stretched across moments. Eternity is not infinite time; it is the absence of time. When time disappears, the verb “to exist” loses its footing.

Yet the paradox deepens further.

Non-existence seems to offer an escape. If God does not exist, perhaps God is non-existent. But non-existence remains a conceptual category. It can be named, contrasted, negated. It operates within the same logical field as existence. Both rely on distinction. Both appear only where something can be opposed to something else.

If non-existence is conceivable, it already participates in being. A possibility that is truly nothing cannot even be held in thought. The moment non-existence is entertained, it has already entered presence.

Here the framework collapses.

God, said to be beyond existence, must also be beyond non-existence. Whatever transcends both cannot be limited by either. Existence and non-existence become expressions rather than boundaries. Time and space arise as localized conditions within something that never enters them.

And this includes belief itself.

To hold a belief about God’s existence, to deny it, or even to question it, must occur within existence. Belief requires a thinker. Thought requires duration. Opinion requires perspective. Every stance taken for or against God is already operating inside the very field it attempts to define or negate. The debate itself belongs to manifestation.

The claim “God exists” is therefore not wrong ; it is partial. It refers only to the aspects of reality that appear within time and space: galaxies, minds, causes, effects, events. These are not separate from God, but they are not the whole either.

God is not an entity within existence. Existence is an activity within God.

Once this is seen, the opposition between theism and atheism dissolves. The atheist rejects a God who exists as an object. The theist defends that object. Both remain bound to the same assumption: that God must exist to be real.

Reality does not require existence as a predicate. Existence is something reality does, not something it is.

Nothing stands outside this. Nothing escapes it. Nothing contradicts it.

Existence is all there is; and what is cannot be reduced to existing.

Morgan O. Smith

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The Universe Within Consciousness

Unveiling the Infinite

The world often feels like a series of separate entities—discrete phenomena with their own rules and boundaries. Yet, what if this apparent fragmentation is only a surface-level illusion? When you step beyond appearances, a profound truth emerges: energy and matter, gravity, time and space, and even the universe itself, are all contained within Consciousness.

This understanding is not a conceptual abstraction but a recognition that transforms how reality is experienced. Consciousness—capital “C”—is not a mere byproduct of the brain, nor is it limited to individual awareness. It is the boundless source within which all forms and phenomena arise and dissolve. Everything, from the smallest particle to the vast expanse of galaxies, is perceived by Consciousness and exists within it.

Energy and matter appear tangible, yet they are patterns within Consciousness, expressions of infinite intelligence that animates existence. Gravity, which binds the cosmos, is bound by the formless, all-encompassing awareness. Even time and space—those dimensions we rely on to orient our lives—are constructs of Consciousness, giving form to the formless, making the eternal appear temporal, and the infinite seem measurable.

This raises a deeply intimate question: if all arises within Consciousness, then who or what are you? Are you merely a transient being navigating a vast universe, or are you the infinite, witnessing its own unfolding through countless forms?

When this realization takes root, the boundaries between self and other dissolve. Life is no longer experienced as a struggle to control external forces but as a harmonious expression of the one, indivisible Consciousness. Challenges are reframed, not as obstacles imposed by an external world, but as waves moving within the ocean of awareness.

Awakening to this truth does not mean retreating from life’s experiences. Instead, it means living them fully, recognizing that they are temporary expressions of the eternal. Consciousness contains it all: the joy and the sorrow, the form and the void, the stillness and the motion. And yet, Consciousness itself remains untouched, vast, and free.

To rest in this understanding is to live without fear, to see all existence as sacred, and to embrace the paradox of being both nothing and everything.

Morgan O. Smith

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The Paradox of Purpose in the Ground of All Being

In philosophical discourse, few concepts are as intriguing and paradoxical as the nature of the “ground of all being.” This term, often used in metaphysical and theological discussions, refers to the fundamental basis or underlying reality of all that exists. At the heart of this concept lies a profound paradox concerning purpose.

#### Purposelessness at the Core


The ground of all being, by its very definition, transcends all known dimensions, including space and time. The ultimate reality underpins everything, yet it stands outside the boundaries of our physical and temporal world. In this sense, the ground of all being is inherently purposeless. It does not pursue goals or objectives because it exists beyond the constructs where purpose holds meaning. In its neutrality and transcendence, it simply ‘is’, unburdened by the need for purpose that characterizes human existence.


#### The Emergence of Purpose

Yet, curiously, from this purposeless ground emerges all purpose. The universe, with its myriad galaxies, stars, and planets, including our own, sprang from this foundational reality. Every atom, every life form, every human thought and endeavour finds its origin in this ground of all being. The very space and time that it transcends are the platforms upon which purpose is built and realized. In human terms, purpose is inextricably linked to our existence within space and time. Our goals, dreams, and aspirations are rooted in our temporal journey through life.

#### A Flourishing of Purpose within Constraints


It is within the confines of space and time that purpose finds its expression and fulfillment. Human endeavours, whether artistic, scientific, or personal, unfold within the physical world and over time. The space-time continuum is not just a physical reality but a canvas for manifesting purpose. The ground of all being, while itself devoid of purpose, is the source from which all purposes derive and the stage upon which they play out.


#### Conclusion: A Profound Duality

The ground of all being presents us with a profound duality. It is a realm devoid of purpose, yet it is the very source from which all purpose in the universe springs. This paradox is a philosophical quandary and a reflection of the profound mystery at the heart of existence. In understanding this, we gain a deeper appreciation of the complexities and wonders of the universe and our place within it.

Morgan O. Smith

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

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The Boundless Horizon of Spiritual Awakening

Beyond the Senses

In the vast expanse of human experience, there lies a realm that defies the conventions of our five senses. This realm, often alluded to in ancient texts, mystic traditions, and modern anecdotes, is the space of spiritual awakening. When one truly steps into this realm, it isn’t just an augmentation of the senses, but a transcendence of them.

**The Limitations of the Five Senses**

Our everyday experiences are shaped by what we can see, hear, touch, taste, and smell. These senses, while fundamental to our existence, are in essence a finite way of interpreting the infinite complexities of the universe. They serve as filters, helping us navigate our immediate environment, but perhaps, at times, limiting our broader understanding.

**The Unifying Experience of Awakening**

A genuine spiritual awakening, as described by mystics and seekers, breaks these sensory barriers. It isn’t about enhancing vision or amplifying sound, but about a deep, profound realization that everything is interconnected. When this awakening takes hold, one doesn’t just feel connected to their immediate surroundings or to the people they know; they feel an intricate bond with all sentient beings, irrespective of the constraints of time, space, and dimension.

Imagine a tapestry, vast and intricate, where every thread represents a life, a consciousness. In our usual state, we might see only the threads closest to us. But amid spiritual awakening, the entire tapestry becomes visible, and we realize every thread is essential, beautifully intertwined with every other, weaving the grand design of existence.

**Beyond Time, Space, and Dimension**

What’s even more profound is the idea that this connection isn’t bound by our linear understanding of time or the three-dimensional space we inhabit. It’s a realization that one’s soul, essence, or consciousness is linked to entities in distant galaxies, past epochs, and even realms we might consider purely fantastical.

Perhaps the ancient mystics, with tales of astral travels and cosmic visions, were hinting at this very concept. They spoke of realms beyond our comprehension, of beings of light and energy, existing outside our dimensional understanding.

**The Implications of This Connection**

If we truly believe in this interconnectedness, it imparts a tremendous responsibility upon us. It means that our actions, thoughts, and feelings reverberate beyond our immediate surroundings. The kindness we show, the love we share, and even the harm we inflict, might have consequences beyond our wildest imaginations.

In conclusion, a genuine spiritual awakening serves as a reminder that we are not solitary beings navigating an indifferent universe. We are, in essence, cosmic entities, profoundly linked to every particle, every being, and every dimension. Such an understanding can lead us towards a life of greater compassion, purpose, and unity, as we recognize the divine tapestry to which we all belong.

Morgan O. Smith

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

https://linktr.ee/morganosmith