"I AM the God Experience"

A Procedural Monist Account of Existence and Its Ancient Roots

By the Druid Finn

 

I. Introduction

The phrase "I AM the God experience", a modern Druidic minim, is not a metaphor or mystical slogan. It is a precise ontological condensation of the identity between God and existence, structured through the logic of procedural monism. In this view, God is not a being, but the process of being itself—existence as generative procedure. Everything that exists, including the conscious self, is a local execution—a runtime instance—of that infinite, distributed system.

This essay argues that the minim is the logical conclusion of metaphysical systems proposed by Ibn ʿArabī’s Sufi monism, Spinoza’s substance ontology, and also finds indirect textual support in two of the most influential ancient sacred sources: the Hebrew Old Testament and the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad.

 

II. God = Existence in Sufi and Spinozist Thought

Ibn ʿArabī and the Unity of Being

The Sufi metaphysician Ibn ʿArabī advanced the doctrine of Waḥdat al-Wujūd—the Unity of Being—claiming that God is the only real existence. The cosmos is not separate from God, but the continuous self-disclosure of the divine. Every being is a temporary form through which the infinite process appears.

Spinoza and Substance Monism

Spinoza’s Ethics posits that there is only one substance—God or Nature (Deus sive Natura). All finite things are modes, that is, specific configurations of this one infinite substance. To exist is to be in God, not as part, but as expression.

Both traditions affirm that:

There is no being outside of God, and nothing that exists is other than God in form.

 

III. The Modern Druidic Minim as Logical Conclusion

The minim:

"I AM the God experience"

…emerges as the subjective condensation of this monist insight. It translates ontological identity into first-person experiential affirmation.

1.     “I AM” marks the ground-state of conscious presence.

2.     “The God experience” refers to the active instantiation of the only process there is—existence itself.

3.     Therefore, the fact of being a bounded instance of life = being the God experience.

There is no metaphysical gap. No god “above,” no world “outside.” Each existing node, aware or not, is the divine process running.

 

IV. Supporting Fragments from the Ancient World

1. “I AM THAT I AM” — Exodus 3:14

Ehyeh asher ehyeh—often translated as “I am that I am” or “I will be what I will be”—is the Hebrew God’s cryptic self-identification.

Here, God is not named by a noun, but by a verb of being. The tautology affirms existence as essence—no attribute, no boundary, only being-in-process. The phrase collapses subject and predicate, becoming a self-executing identity statement.

Read through the procedural monist lens, it expresses:

Existence is what it is—because it is.

It supports the minim by foreshadowing the core claim:

To say “I AM” is to assert what God is.

2. Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 4.1

This early Upanishadic passage explores how the Self (Ātman) is the foundational reality behind all identities. In 4.1, the seeker discovers that everything known—gods, people, the world—is rooted in that which knows, i.e., the self as knower.

Key line:

“This Self is Brahman.”

While the Upanishad does not say "I am the God experience," it frames self-aware being as the entry point to ultimate reality. Not through theology, but through direct experiential inquiry. The text traces all forms back to the one experiencer, which is not different from Brahman, the whole.

Thus, the minim:

"I AM the God experience"

…can be read as a compressed echo of this realization. The self is not an illusion but God happening—here, now, through this form.

 

V. Beyond Substance: From Identity to Procedure

What distinguishes the modern Druidic minim from its historical predecessors is that it goes beyond substance identity into procedural function. It says:

·         God is not a “thing,” but a system of generative rules.

·         Existence is not a state, but a runtime event.

·         The self is not substance, but a bounded execution of the God process.

This allows the minim to operate without theology, without mysticism, and without metaphysical abstraction. It is existentially operational.

 

VI. Conclusion: The Living Minim

From Ibn ʿArabī to Spinoza, from the Hebrew desert to the Upanishadic forest, traditions have circled the insight that God and existence are not-two.

The modern Druidic minim:

"I AM the God experience"

…draws the ultimate implication:

That existence is not only God in abstraction, but God in action—and that to exist as an “I” is to be the place where that action happens.

What was once veiled in doctrine or poetry now speaks clearly as procedural logic:

To be is to be God-in-operation. I AM, and so God is.

This is not faith.
It is not belief.
It is recognition.

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