The spiritual journey is often described as a search for God, truth, or enlightenment. We tend to look outward, through books, teachings, traditions, and experiences, hoping to find the peace and understanding we long for. Yet the great wisdom traditions consistently point in another direction: inward.
Jesus expressed this beautifully when he said, “The Kingdom of Heaven is within you.” The meaning is clear: what we seek is not far away, in another place. The Divine is not hidden somewhere outside us, but present at the very centre of our being.
Meditation is the practice of entering that sacred inner space. Beneath the mind’s constant activity lies a deeper dimension of consciousness, a place of stillness, wisdom, love, and unity.
Meditation is often equated with creating peace, attaining enlightenment, or reaching a higher state of consciousness. These are terrific outcomes. In a deeper sense, however, meditation is not about becoming something new. It is about recognising what is already here.
Beneath every thought, feeling, sensation, and experience is a simple awareness that does not come and go. It remains steady amid life’s changing circumstances. Meditation invites us to rest in that awareness and discover that it is not separate from the Divine Presence we seek.
Christian mystics have described this reality as the indwelling Christ, the Divine spark, or the ground of the soul. Eastern traditions speak of the True Self, Buddha Nature, or pure awareness.
Though the language differs, the experience points to the same truth: a deeper consciousness within us that transcends the restless ego and connects us with the source of all life. Beneath the labels, beliefs, and identities that distinguish us lies a shared essence, a common ground of being that unites us with all life and with the Divine itself.
Meditation is not about visions or special powers. Rather, it can lead us to a deeper way of seeing, a perception that recognises the sacred in all of life and sees beyond the limitations of the ordinary senses. The capacity to perceive the Divine Presence within ourselves, within others, and throughout creation.
The journey inward reveals that the Kingdom is not elsewhere; it is here. The light we seek is already shining within us. What we have longed for has never been absent. Meditation simply helps us remember. The journey inward is, in the end, the journey home.
With regular meditation practice, something begins to shift. We become less identified with our thoughts and more grounded in presence. We discover a still point within ourselves that remains untouched by fear, anxiety, or circumstance.
In that stillness, words, desires and preferred outcomes lose their urgency. Beyond stillness lies presence, and beyond presence lies the discovery that what we seek has always been within us.
As Jesus assured us, “Seek the Kingdom of God, and all will be added unto you.”
This is an invitation to surrender our striving and trust the wisdom of life itself. We begin to taste the consciousness described by mystics throughout the ages: the awareness that we live, move, and have our being in the Divine.
(In Chapter 16 of The Bowerbird Collection, I offer a couple of simple meditation practices that have been helpful for me.)