Tag: metaphysics

  • A Journey Into the Infinite: The Call to Awaken to Our True Nature

    A Journey Into the Infinite: The Call to Awaken to Our True Nature

    There is a voice that calls from deep within, faint yet steady, whispering to you through the silence of your heart: “The kingdom of God is within you.” You hear it in the stillness of the dawn, in the quiet moments when the world falls away. This voice is not far from you—it is not hidden in the heavens nor buried beneath the earth. It lives in the very breath you take, in the still center of your being, inviting you to “Be still and know that I am God.”

    How often we search outside ourselves, looking for the divine in places far from our own hearts. But God, the essence of all that is, has always been nearer than we can imagine. “God is the center of my soul,” wrote St. John of the Cross, and in that hidden center, as we approach the divine, we find that it expands within us, like an infinite wellspring of love and truth. And what is this love? As St. Teresa of Avila tells us, “It is love alone that gives worth to all things.”

    You, too, are the bearer of this love, this infinite truth that resides within the deepest chambers of your soul. “At the center of our being is a point of nothingness,” Thomas Merton reminds us, untouched by the noise of the world, pure and sacred, a place where you and the divine are one. In that sacred space, the distractions of life fall away, and we see ourselves as we truly are—not bound by illusion or time, but free, radiant, and eternal.

    Just as this sacred center resides within each of us, the mystics of many traditions remind us that the divine is not something that can be grasped by the mind alone. “The infinite is concealed from all the living,” say the mystics of Kabbalah. It is not something to be dissected, understood, or named. It can only be known through the soul’s journey into the unknown, through the deep, unnameable mystery of existence. It is the same mystery that “wherever you turn, there is the face of God.” The divine pervades all things, from the rising sun to the faces of strangers on the street, from the endless stars to the quiet rustling of leaves in the wind.

    In this profound unity, “man is a microcosm of the universe,” as David Bohm said. What we are, what we become, reflects the very nature of the cosmos itself. We are not separate; we are threads in the vast fabric of existence, each one of us a clue to the whole, each one a reflection of the infinite. “The Supreme Reality is beyond both the unmanifest and the manifest,” the Bhagavad-Gita tells us. It is the eternal and all-pervading essence of life, the unnamable source from which we arise and to which we will one day return.

    To recognize this truth is to realize, as Ramana Maharshi said, that “Your own Self-Realization is the greatest service you can render the world.” Only through the shedding of the ego, the dissolution of the false self, can we see the formless reality of who we truly are—nameless, timeless, and infinite. This formless reality is the space between thoughts, the silence in which everything arises and fades—eternal, yet present within every moment, like the quiet breath of the universe itself. “There is only one truth—God,” Swami Sivananda wrote, reminding us that everything else, all the fleeting shadows of the world, are but temporary.

    This realization of our true nature, this casting off of the little self, allows us to “recognize yourself as the vast Spirit,” in the words of Swami Paramahansa Yogananda. Beyond all limitations of form and thought, we are the boundless Spirit, free and ever-expansive. What is this freedom but the awakening to the truth of what has always been? The Buddha tells us, “What we think, we become.” Our thoughts shape our world, but beyond thought lies the ultimate realization of unity—of the one truth that binds all.

    We are not separate. We have never been. “We are here to awaken from the illusion of our separateness,” Thich Nhat Hanh gently reminds us. Our divisions, our dualities, are but veils that obscure the deeper truth of our oneness. Beyond the illusions of duality—right and wrong, self and other—lies a greater reality. As Rumi said, “Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing and rightdoing, there is a field. I’ll meet you there.” In that field, where duality dissolves, we awaken to the truth of who we really are—expressions of the infinite, woven together in the fabric of existence.

    This journey into the infinite is not a process of adding to ourselves, but of shedding the illusions that have kept us from recognizing the divine within. It is a return to the essence of our being, where we find, as Lao Tzu so profoundly reminds us, “The Tao that can be told is not the eternal Tao.” The eternal truth, the infinite source, cannot be grasped by the mind; it can only be realized in the stillness of the heart.

    In this awakening, we are free. Free from the illusions of separation, free to live in the truth of our unity with all that is. As we return to this realization, we find, as St. John of the Cross said, “To reach satisfaction in all, desire its possession in nothing.” The journey is one of surrender, of letting go of all that is not real, to rest in the infinite, eternal love that is our true nature.

    This is the call that has always been with us, whispering through the silence of our hearts. It is not just a call—it is the very essence of life, the truth that lies at the core of all existence, waiting for us to embrace it. To awaken to the infinite is to recognize ourselves as the vast, boundless Spirit, and to live in the truth of our oneness with all that exists.

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  • The Infinite Dance: Uniting God, Spirituality, and the Mystery of Existence

    The Infinite Dance: Uniting God, Spirituality, and the Mystery of Existence

    “In the twilight of life, God will not judge us on our earthly possessions and human successes, but rather on how much we have loved.”


    — St. John of the Cross

    There is a current of truth that runs beneath all the fragmented voices of humanity. From the sacred texts of ancient traditions to the discoveries of modern science, we find ourselves drawn again and again toward the same mystery, a nameless and formless reality that underlies all things. It is the silent presence in which every being, every atom, and every thought is held. We have called it by many names: God, Hashem, YHVH, Allah, Brahman, Ein Sof, Tao, the Implicate Order, and the Field to name just a few. Yet, no name can truly capture the infinite, formless source from which all that is arises.

    In the stillness of Jewish mysticism, Ein Sof—the ungraspable, infinite One—calls to mind the same ineffability as the Tao in the East, the “way” that is beyond words, yet ever-present. In the traditions of the Vedas, Brahman echoes this eternal truth, a limitless ocean of being from which all forms emerge and into which they dissolve. It is a truth that cannot be contained by the human mind, but which the heart longs to know, to touch, and to become one with.

    Modern science, too, peers into the depths of this mystery, sometimes not even realizing it. The discovery of the Higgs boson, the so-called God particle, though a triumph of physics, is only a step closer to understanding the field that makes existence possible. And what of the dark matter and dark energy that account for most of the universe’s substance, yet remain unseen? These forces remind us that what we know is but a glimmer of the vast, unmanifest reality that lies just beyond the limits of our senses.

    There is a profound resonance here, a common ground where mysticism and science converge. In the hidden recesses of the quantum field, in the Implicate Order that David Bohm spoke of, we begin to glimpse the same boundless reality that the sages and poets have spoken of for millennia. The Pristine Mind of Buddhist thought, the Buddha Nature that resides in each of us, reveals this same underlying truth: that beneath the flux of the manifest world, there is a stillness, a wholeness, from which all arises.

    We are all connected to this vast, unknowable field, whether we call it God, Brahman, or simply the mystery. The words and symbols we use are mere pointers, trying to evoke something beyond form and beyond thought. It is the source of all that was, is, and ever will be—the field from which life unfurls like a blossom and into which it returns.

    And here is where our deepest unity lies. Whether you stand in the cool silence of a temple, gazing at the stars, or contemplating the equations of quantum physics, you are connected to this same reality. It binds all faiths and traditions, all discoveries and philosophies, not in opposition, but in harmony. The Tetra­grammaton of Jewish mysticism—the ineffable name of God—is no different from the Brahman of Vedanta, which is no different from the Field in quantum theory. All of them point to the same ineffable mystery that gives rise to all things.

    This is our shared ground, our common truth. We, as human beings, as seekers, as scientists, and as spiritual practitioners, all live in the radiance of this same underlying reality. It is within us, and around us. It is the thread that ties together the Tao of the East, the Ein Sof of Kabbalah, the Great Spirit of indigenous traditions, and the Unified Field that physicists pursue.

    In our hearts, we know this. The boundaries we construct between religions, between science and spirituality, between self and other, are but veils drawn over the face of the infinite. If we could still ourselves for a moment, if we could release the need to name and categorize, we might catch a glimpse of this truth, shimmering just beneath the surface.

    We are all made of the same cosmic dust, woven from the same quantum fabric, and bathed in the same mystery. Beneath the dualities that define our everyday lives, there is a oneness that holds us all—Brahman, Ein Sof, the Implicate Order, the Field. We need not divide ourselves over the different names we use for this reality. The divine is beyond name, beyond form, beyond comprehension, yet it permeates every aspect of existence. It is the space in which we unfold, and it is the silence that calls us home.

    In recognizing this, we can come together—not just in tolerance, but in celebration. We can acknowledge the beauty and depth of every tradition, every path that points to the same infinite source. Whether you come from a place of prayer or from the study of the stars, whether you seek through silence or through science, we are all reaching toward the same truth. This truth is not distant. It is as close as your breath, as intimate as your own heartbeat. It is, in fact, what you are.

    So, let us stand in awe of this great mystery. Let us honor the many ways it reveals itself to us—through science, through scripture, through silence. And let us know, deep in our hearts, that we are all bound together in this great unfolding. In this realization, we find the possibility for true interfaith harmony, for an enduring sense of unity, not just with one another, but with the entire fabric of existence.

    For in the end, what is all this but a dance of the formless into form, of the infinite into the finite, of Brahman into the world—and back again? We are the expressions of this great mystery, each one of us a note in the song of creation, a ripple in the vast, timeless ocean. And in recognizing this, we are free.

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    “The kingdom of God is within you.”
    — Luke 17:21

    “Be still and know that I am God.”
    — Psalm 46:10

    “God is the center of my soul. He is so profoundly hidden that I can neither see Him nor touch Him. But the closer we approach Him, the more He expands in us.”
    — St. John of the Cross

    “It is love alone that gives worth to all things.”
    — St. Teresa of Avila

    “At the center of our being is a point of nothingness which is untouched by sin and by illusion, a point of pure truth. This little point is the pure glory of God in us.”
    — Thomas Merton

    “The infinite is concealed from all the living. It is not attained by the intellect, nor by any created thing, but only by the soul’s journey into the unknown.”
    — Kabbalistic Saying

    “Wherever you turn, there is the face of God.”
    — Quran 2:115

    “In some sense, man is a microcosm of the universe; therefore, what man is, is a clue to the universe. We are all in this together.”
    — David Bohm

    “The Supreme Reality is beyond both the unmanifest and the manifest. It is eternal and all-pervading. Knowing this, the wise understand their true nature as the same.”
    — Bhagavad-Gita 8:20

    “Your own Self-Realization is the greatest service you can render the world. The deeper you go into the Self, the more the world and the ego disappear, leaving only the formless reality.”
    — Ramana Maharshi

    “There is only one truth—God. All the rest is a fleeting shadow. Fix your mind on the highest, and let the world go.”
    — Swami Sivananda

    “You realize your true nature by casting off the little self and recognizing yourself as the vast Spirit, free from all limitations of form, thought, and time.”
    — Swami Paramahansa Yogananda

    “What we think, we become. All that we are arises with our thoughts. With our thoughts, we make the world.”
    — The Buddha

    “We are here to awaken from the illusion of our separateness.”
    — Thich Nhat Hanh

    “Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing and rightdoing, there is a field. I’ll meet you there. When the soul lies down in that grass, the world is too full to talk about.”
    — Rumi

    “The Tao that can be told is not the eternal Tao; the name that can be named is not the eternal name.”
    — Lao Tzu, Tao Te Ching

    “The Great Spirit is in all things: he is in the air we breathe. The Great Spirit is our Father, but the Earth is our Mother. She nourishes us; that which we put into the ground, she returns to us.”
    — Big Thunder (Bedagi), Wabanaki Algonquin

    These quotes bring together voices from various traditions, adding depth to the contemplation of unity and the infinite mystery that runs through the heart of existence.

    🙏🕊️🙏