Written by Mathew Naismith
First of all what is infinite wisdom, what is meant by when
we say infinite wisdom? From the Cambridge dictionary; used to show that you do not understand why someone has done something
and that you think it was a stupid action:
In action: The
authorities, in their infinite wisdom, decided to close the advice centre.
Well I’m actually not meaning it exactly in this sense, what
I do mean is that wisdom is limitless and eternal so what wisdom could be this limitless
and eternal? Some people would say God
or the source of all creation and others would say someone who is very knowledgeable
especially about most of everything that there is to know about however in my
mind neither is exactly true.
Because spirituality is about the collective as a whole, how
would we define what is or who is of infinite wisdom and who isn’t? You can’t actually
do that without fragmenting the collective and once you have fragmented the collective
you are no longer spiritually talking about the collective as a whole because
of it’s fragmentation. We could say God
is the representative of infinite wisdom but what about the rest of
consciousness. By stipulating God is the infinite wisdom of everything within
existence, are we still talking about the collective as a whole? No not really
because we don’t see ourselves of being of that infinite wisdom, that is wholly
and solely of God’s domain however by doing this we are no longer talking about
the collective as a whole. The same
would be if we were talking about people who are highly knowledgeable; we are
still fragmenting the collective. So how do we get away from fragmenting the collective
and still pinpoint what is meant by being infinitely wise and in whom is this infinite
wisdom referring too?
Before we answer this question, what first of all makes one
wise, is it knowledge and experience? In a human sense knowledge and experience
would define wisdom, what about in a divine sense, would this be the same?
Actually I don’t think so because I don’t believe infinite wisdom is of time
therefor wisdom doesn’t come about through knowledge and experience because knowledge
and experience are of time, time creates knowledge and experiences. Knowledge
and experience just can’t exist without time to gain such knowledge and
experience.
So if it’s not knowledge and experience that creates wisdom
what could it be? The only thing left is the divine but infinite wisdom can’t
be just of the divine because again we are fragmenting the collective; there is
no collective as a whole in this so what else could infinite wisdom be referring too? Yes the
divine isn’t of time but we are still fragmenting the collective whole.
The infinite wisdom is obviously referring to the whole
collective which means you and me as well. How could this be when most of us
are noticeably not of this infinite wisdom? Ah but we are, we are just ignorant or unaware
of such things that is why anyone who is more knowledgeable than we would seem
to us to be infinite in their wisdom. If
we are all of this infinite wisdom how come we don’t show it?
There are two reasons for this, one is we think infinite wisdom
comes through knowledge and experience and two we are just unaware of our prominence
of being infinitely wise, it is actually our divine right, in other words it’s
natural to us. Because we only think in
time, all wisdom has to come from knowledge and experiences and of course some of
it does however infinite wisdom isn’t of time as is of the divine. The problem
is we just don’t see ourselves as divine beings so we interact with each other
in less than a divine way which is how we created a chaotic reality I feel.
It seems so funny to me we can’t see ourselves as divine
beings living unaware of our infinite divine wisdom, if we actually accepted this
at the collective level to be true, this reality would change quite dramatically
for the betterment of all.
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