I have become increasingly convinced that the most profound question we can ask is not whether God exists, but what we actually mean by the word "God." For centuries humanity has argued over names, doctrines, creeds, rituals, and institutions while often overlooking the possibility that all of these are imperfect attempts to describe a reality that ultimately transcends language itself. I have come to love the concept of foundational consciousness because it seems to provide a common thread woven through nearly every enduring spiritual and philosophical tradition. It is not a doctrine to be defended so much as a mystery to be contemplated. It has been called God by the Abrahamic faiths, the Tao by Lao Tzu, Brahman by the Hindu sages, The All by the Hermetic philosophers, the Monad by the Gnostics, and countless other names by cultures separated by oceans and centuries. The labels differ, but I suspect they are all pointing toward the same ineffable reality—the ground of all being, the source from which everything emerges and to which everything ultimately belongs.
The remarkable thing is that this intuition is not confined
to one civilization. Across history there have appeared extraordinary men and
women who seemed less interested in creating exclusive religions than in
awakening humanity to a forgotten truth. Yeshua invited people to discover the
Kingdom of God within. Buddha pointed beyond attachment and illusion toward
direct realization. Lao Tzu encouraged effortless harmony with the Tao.
Zarathustra called humanity to align itself with truth and light. Hermes spoke
of the unity of the cosmos and the correspondence between the seen and unseen.
Their languages, symbols, and cultures were different, yet I hear a common
invitation beneath them all: Wake up. Remember who you are. You are more than
your body, more than your ego, more than the stories you have inherited.
Beneath all of those temporary identities lies a participation in something
immeasurably greater than yourself.
For me, that greater reality is not an old man sitting on a
throne somewhere beyond the clouds. It is foundational consciousness itself—the
infinite awareness from which existence arises. If consciousness is primary
rather than matter, then everything changes. The universe is no longer an
accidental collection of lifeless particles somehow producing awareness as a
fortunate byproduct. Instead, consciousness is the source, and matter is one of
its expressions. Reality becomes fundamentally mental, spiritual, or conscious
rather than merely physical. This is why philosophical idealism resonates so
deeply with me. It offers a framework capable of embracing both scientific
discovery and authentic spiritual experience without reducing one to the other.
Within this foundational consciousness I see what the Gospel
of John calls the Logos. Too often the Logos has been reduced to a theological
label applied exclusively to Jesus. While I certainly believe Yeshua uniquely
embodied the Logos, I do not believe he exhausted it. The Logos is the eternal
creative intelligence through which reality unfolds. It is the bridge between
the unmanifest and the manifest, the invisible becoming visible, the One
expressing itself as the many. The ancient alchemists searched for the process
by which base metals might become gold. I believe the deeper alchemy has always
been spiritual rather than chemical. The Logos is the divine principle of
transformation itself. It is the intelligence through which consciousness
becomes cosmos and through which human beings awaken from ignorance into
wisdom.
If the Logos is the creative principle, then the divine
spark is the created participation in that principle. I believe every human
being carries this spark, whether recognized or not. In fact, I suspect it
extends beyond humanity altogether. The entire material universe participates
in foundational consciousness to varying degrees. Every atom, every mountain,
every river, every tree, every animal, every planet, and every galaxy exists
because it shares in that original reality. The spark is not identical in
expression everywhere, but it is universal in origin. This is why I find it
difficult to embrace a worldview that sees nature as merely mechanical or dead.
A universe born from consciousness bears the imprint of consciousness
throughout its entirety.
That naturally leads me to what I have come to think of as
the ultimate divine trinity: panentheism, pantheism, and animism. I do not see
these as competing philosophies but as complementary perspectives that
illuminate different dimensions of the same mystery. Panentheism reminds us
that everything exists within God while affirming that God infinitely
transcends the universe. The cosmos is immersed in the Divine, yet the Divine
is never limited by the cosmos. Pantheism reminds us that the presence of God permeates
every aspect of existence. Nothing is ultimately outside the sacred because all
things arise within the same foundational consciousness. Animism reminds us
that creation is alive with presence, meaning, and participation rather than
consisting of lifeless objects moving through empty space. Each perspective
contributes something essential, and together they paint a richer picture than
any one of them can alone.
This understanding also changes how I see humanity's
purpose. Salvation, in my view, is not primarily about escaping the earth or
securing admission into another world after death. It is about awakening here
and now. It is remembering what has always been true beneath our forgetfulness.
The ancient Gnostics spoke of gnosis. Eastern traditions speak of
enlightenment. Christian mystics speak of union with God. Hermetic philosophy
speaks of knowing oneself in order to know the All. Different words, same direction.
The journey is not from worthlessness to worthiness but from unconsciousness to
conscious participation in reality itself.
Perhaps this is why the greatest spiritual teachers so often
spoke in paradox. The kingdom is within you, yet it surrounds you. Lose your
life to find it. Die before you die. The first shall be last. The Tao that can
be spoken is not the eternal Tao. Reality itself is paradoxical because
foundational consciousness is simultaneously One and many. Unity is the
essence; diversity is its expression. Nonduality and duality are not enemies
but partners in an eternal dance. The One becomes the many without ceasing to
be One, and the many forever remain rooted in the One from which they arise.
I do not claim certainty about these things. They are not
dogmas that I seek to impose upon anyone else. They are the conclusions I have
reached after decades of exploring Christianity, Gnosticism, Hermeticism, Hindu
philosophy, Buddhism, Taoism, modern idealism, and the growing study of
consciousness itself. Each tradition has contributed a piece of the puzzle.
None possesses the entire picture. Together, however, they point toward a
vision of reality that is more beautiful, more coherent, and more expansive
than the fragmented worldview I once inherited.
In the end, I believe the universe is not an accident but an
expression of consciousness. The Logos continues to create. The divine spark
continues to awaken. Every authentic act of love, compassion, creativity,
wisdom, and wonder is another glimpse of foundational consciousness recognizing
itself through us. Perhaps that has been the message all along. We have never
truly been separated from the Source. We have only forgotten. And every genuine
spiritual tradition, at its highest expression, exists not to create followers,
but to awaken sleepers.






