Metaphysical Art Explained
"INFINITE SENSITIVITY"
by Allee and Adam Blatner
Posted September 20, 2013
The Divine Source (also known as the Becoming Everything and by
many other names) is able to be present for and participating in
and manifesting through everything at every level. Every atom and
star and person is God and expresses God’s infinite individuation.
Since mind is also a dimension—really, a whole set of dimensions,
some of which we don’t know about at all, some a little, vaguely,
by some mystics; some more familiar, like music—then the Divine
Source is present for and sensitive to every level of all sorts of
hierarchies that humans can create-imagine.
This mandala expresses that, or perhaps it’s a cross-section of a
tiny tendril at the edge of a larger sense organ of the Becoming
Everything that senses in multiple ways, symbolized by the
different kinds of configurations, the potentialities, struggles,
frustrations, triumphs, losses, and so forth for every particle or
wave in our cosmos. Of course that’s a lot, and yes, it quite
transcends anything that humans can conceive of, even if we can
conceive of the general idea. That’s why the “tendril” is so
complex.
The idea of “infinite sensitivity” was put forth as an attribute
of God by the late Brother Wayne Teasdale, a pioneer of interfaith
spirituality. It’s a fun mythic trope to contemplate, taking my
mind far beyond what it can digest.
Imagine in the "cross section of the tendril" pictured above that
each element is a complex three-dimensional structure that is
capable of sensing subtleties undreamed of by ordinary humans,
such as the "taste" of gravity, or the "smell" of different kinds
of weather. Each one-celled animal eats, and it senses what might
"taste" good to eat, and what might taste "bad"---for its own
health and preference. Sensitivity can be directed in so many
ways, and we might even wonder how far beyond our own expectations
it goes.