AB wrote:
Your earlier post about the concept of God was very interesting. A Catholic priest, explaining the trinity, once said that God the Father is essentially the ultimate source of everything that exists and beyond any comprehension within the dimensions of our universe. God the son (Jesus) is the physical representation of God in our universe. The Holy Spirit is God's invisible presence in our universe. And though God is the source of all that exists, all that exists is not God.
Well, that misses my point. Ancient ideas about God see God as I not it, that is, as pure subjectivity. Thus the Upanishads talk about this, and actually the Jewish Bible, 'I am that I am'.
The Abrahamic religions have generally steered clear of this, although some of the mystics did go there, and got punished for it, e.g. the Sufis.
Interestingly, modern gnostic ideas seem to bring it back, although often in a rather naff way.
To be finicky about it, if you search for God, you are doomed, as you have reified God as an object, forever beyond reach, since you are the barrier. In some Eastern religions, the solution is to abandon the dualism of self/other, but this is unpalatable or nonsensical to most Westerners. Of course, Christianity also contains ideas of self-annihilation, but these are not generally popular among the middle classes.