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Edited on Fri Feb-18-05 05:50 AM by Lexingtonian
Mystics (Jacob Boehme, etc.) refer to God as an Abyss, endless and unfathomable; God is All, infinite and eternal, and so you would never get to the end of it and never even "encounter" it that way--that is only your opinion. It would be more like the horizon, and trying to reach it: no matter how much ground you cover and how far you get, you never come closer to the horizon; you will never get there. I believe God is like that.
As I recall, Boehme and Dionysus the Areopagite use the Abyss as a description of the experience of impersonal and incommunicative Presence of God when/where they seek Him out. The better metaphor I think you are looking for is the Ocean Of The Divine- into which the mystic 'drowns' and which s/he can never hope (and never does hope) to encompass, really only hopes to be perfused with and immersed in completely.
Evelyn Underhill says there is another approach to the Presence. That is the conceptualization called The Spiritual Marriage, and it is intensely personal/passionate and starts with a conception of God as an ideal human being.
The two converge in the form of the Mystic Marriage, I think, though I haven't seen that spelled out anywhere- though Underhill uses the term 'imageless vision' to get at some core experience in it. I don't think this is the purpose, to know "the" Face of God; I believe it was by its nature supposed to be limited (and that you were supposed to be aware that this is not All, that God goes beyond, and that I cannot encompass All), because it was your culmination, and was all the meaning that related to you. You can only dwell in those parts of God's presence that are your own deepest existence. It is not abstract.
I think the Face Of God is a suggestion- it is the mystical sense of the intimate, personal, Presence of God, with which a kind of communication takes place. It is God voluntarily limiting Himself, concealing very much of Himself, in order to achieve contact. It contrasts with the overwhelming form that the mystic experiences occasionally, in which the mystic is exposed to more than her/his senses and mental preparations (if any) can bear.
God is both immanent and transcendant, as they put it. Any "Face" you might meet up with would be only, it seems to me, (assuming it was a true ethereal sign), only a further clue to help you along or to answer a question. No individual sign could be the total God. I don't know if that was the kind of answer you were asking for.
Thorvald Boman ('Hebrew Thought Compared to Greek') proposes a third concept- 'transparence' in English translation- to add to immanence and transcendence. Martin Buber proposes an equivalent, that of God as an Ultimate Person. Which are all the same thing as the essential mystic theory- that every human being/consciousness is a channel from the realm of God/Spirit through/into the person of the mystic into the human material World, with some channels more and others less obstructed, along which Spirit flows at times. For some -so far very few-, the channel is cleared so extensively by their efforts at selfpurification that a constant sense of Presence is achieved.
The OP was involved with the question whether mystical experience constituted proof of the existence of (a theistic kind of) God. As far as I know, the mystics' answer to that is (1) God is like a far off mythical place from which nothing concrete can be brought back: the mystic can only attest to having been there, can only be a witness, and her/his proof lies in what skills and understandings resulted from the experience. Those who have Been There need no convincing, those who have never been there cannot be persuaded of what it is really like. It is also (2) that the best of the Christian mystics have always been in trouble with the Church, because they believe that direct experience of the Divine is possible in all places at all times to potentially anyone. That notion cannot be reconciled with theism or any other theory or theology that asserts a strict separation and distinction of Man and God and a conditional relationship (e.g. Sin/Salvation, or Offense/Sacrifice).
Well, the point of the OP was to refute a Christian Right argument for the 'existence' of their kind of God. Whether or not mysticism is objectively true, it can't and doesn't actually provide evidence in support of the theists' God of the Christian Right.
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