For millennia many have searched for an apparently elusive God. Are atheists actually correct, or is there something real that has captivated mystics throughout the ages?
“The Truth Paradox” reveals the missing piece of the puzzle. Rob Sutherland had an encounter that forced him to rethink much of what he thought he knew.
Rob’s spiritual journey began with progressive Christianity, but his lifelong search for answers took him down a startling new mystical path. This path revealed a simple but profound truth about who we are and why we are here, and led to extraordinarily beautiful experiences that he could never have imagined.
If you … … wonder about the nature of reality … … feel that there must be something more … … despair at the state of the world … … seek more beauty, joy and peace … … long for personal or global transformation … … or reflect on the meaning of life … … then “The Truth Paradox” is for you.
The book is not intended to promote any particular belief or theology, but recognizes that no one has a monopoly on truth, and every one of us is a work in progress. “The Truth Paradox” is about discovering our true identity, a quest which relates not to any belief system but simply to our existence as sentient beings. To quote from the
“While we may not agree on beliefs, most would agree there is always room for more joy, peace and love in our lives and in the world. So let's start in that place, with that recognition. Let's ask ourselves where these feelings come from. Do they have a source? Do we create them? Do they emerge from within? How do we nurture them and allow them to enter the world?”
In an honest search for truth this groundbreaking book asks some big questions and returns some startling
For “Am I really certain that God is a fiction? Is it possible that there is a flaw in my analysis, that the countless mystics throughout the ages, from the Buddha to Jesus, through Hildegard of Bingen, Meister Eckart and more recently Eckart Tolle actually are in touch with something real that my mind cannot grasp? Am I really going to insist that my three-dimensional intellect can encompass all of reality?”
For evangelical “What is the real meaning of belief? Is it the contents of my head or the attitude of my heart that really matter?”
For progressive “Am I really content with the amorphous, intangible God that I am left with after all of my mind-based analysis? Has all of my searching resulted in a meaningful encounter with the Divine?”
For “Am I really comfortable with the idea of dissolving my own negative karma? If forgiveness is a fundamental principle of spirituality, need I be burdened by my past actions?”
“The Truth Paradox” emphasizes that any one of us can tap into the joy, peace, and meaning that lie dormant within us.
The book includes a Foreword by renowned theologian, author and mystic Bruce Sanguin.