Some truths cannot be taught as information. They can only be pointed to, lived, and inwardly recognised. Drawing on Ecclesiastes, Paul, Eckhart, Tolstoy, and the teaching of Jesus, this reflection explores the possibility that the divine is encountered not as doctrine but as experience: a depth within consciousness that upholds, illumines, and transforms. Whether that experience comes from beyond us, from within the brain, or from some mystery joining the two, the practical question remains the same: whether we live in contact with that depth or merely skim the surface of life.
From Augustine to Eckhart, from Teresa to Tolstoy and beyond, the same lesson returns: the deepest truth cannot simply be taught from outside but must be realised inwardly. This essay follows that long mystical trajectory through childhood faith, doubt, animism, Jesus’ inward law of love, and the betrayal of his message by empire and institution.

