Please Note: For the sake of discussion, please assume god exists. If assuming god exists for the sake of discussion creates in you an existential crisis of vast and insurmountable proportions such that you just cannot do it, please feel free to start your own thread, rather than take this one off-topic (in violation of the Forum rules). Thank you.
If god exists, then why does god hide from us? That is a question many people from many different religious traditions (or no tradition at all) are familiar with. It is a fair question to ask, and there are at least several different ways of answering it.
Now in this thread, I propose that it is possible god is not hiding from us, but instead we are hiding god. In either case, god is hidden, but in the former case there is not much chance of our discovering god -- because, after all, a god might be presumed to be impossible to discover should a god want to hide -- but in the latter case, if it is we who are hiding god, then it might be presumed we can quit hiding god, assuming we know how to quit.
Yet if we are hiding god from us, then precisely how are we doing it? The short answer is, we might be hiding god from us by means of the very nature of our consciousness.
Now, the longer answer involves these points.
By the way, if anyone is interested, I myself am uncertain whether god exists or whether the world is one.
Comments? Questions?
If god exists, then why does god hide from us? That is a question many people from many different religious traditions (or no tradition at all) are familiar with. It is a fair question to ask, and there are at least several different ways of answering it.
Now in this thread, I propose that it is possible god is not hiding from us, but instead we are hiding god. In either case, god is hidden, but in the former case there is not much chance of our discovering god -- because, after all, a god might be presumed to be impossible to discover should a god want to hide -- but in the latter case, if it is we who are hiding god, then it might be presumed we can quit hiding god, assuming we know how to quit.
Yet if we are hiding god from us, then precisely how are we doing it? The short answer is, we might be hiding god from us by means of the very nature of our consciousness.
Now, the longer answer involves these points.
We need to grasp that consciousness is not a mirror of reality in which we see the world just exactly as it is, as many people naively suppose, but is instead a distorting lens through which we peer at the world to see -- not the world exactly as it is -- but rather world as it appears to us after being distorted by the lens of consciousness.
The lens of consciousness distorts the world in several ways, but among those ways might be this one: It might separate the world (or reality) into separate, discrete things. e.g. My consciousness "says" that the tree in my yard is distinct from the dog in my yard when in reality it might be the case that the tree and the dog are in some mysterious way One Thing.
After all, there is a region of the brain that we know from neuroscientific studies is responsible for dividing our raw perception of the world as one thing into our refined perception of the world as separate things. But who is to say that the former perception is not the truer perception, and that the latter perception is not an illusion?
Now, since oneness is -- according to some people -- a trait of god, it follows that if those folks are right, then it is consciousness's separation of the world into different things that is responsible for hiding god.
To sum, maybe god does not hide from us, but instead, we ourselves hide god from us.The lens of consciousness distorts the world in several ways, but among those ways might be this one: It might separate the world (or reality) into separate, discrete things. e.g. My consciousness "says" that the tree in my yard is distinct from the dog in my yard when in reality it might be the case that the tree and the dog are in some mysterious way One Thing.
After all, there is a region of the brain that we know from neuroscientific studies is responsible for dividing our raw perception of the world as one thing into our refined perception of the world as separate things. But who is to say that the former perception is not the truer perception, and that the latter perception is not an illusion?
Now, since oneness is -- according to some people -- a trait of god, it follows that if those folks are right, then it is consciousness's separation of the world into different things that is responsible for hiding god.
By the way, if anyone is interested, I myself am uncertain whether god exists or whether the world is one.
Comments? Questions?