
âBe still, and know that I am Godâ – Psalm 46:10

Introduction
There are questions that never sleep.
They linger in the soul, not because they lack answers, but because they are the answer, lived, breathed, unfolding.
âWhat does it mean to be?â
It sounds simple, almost childish, a question we might expect from a philosopher in a quiet library or a child staring at the stars. Yet itâs the first and final question of existence. Before doing, before believing, before achieving, there is being.
And somehow, thatâs the one thing we keep running from.

The Weight of the Word âBeâ
Few words bear as much mystery, or as much metaphysical weight, as the word be. In every tongue, it hides in plain sight, quietly carrying the burden of all that exists. To utter âto beâ is to touch the hinge between nothing and everything; the pulse of presence itself. From Aristotleâs reflections on ousia to Heideggerâs meditations on Sein, philosophers have wrestled with this smallest yet most expansive verb. What does it mean simply to be, before we act, achieve, or define?
âTo beâ is the smallest verb with the greatest gravity. It carries the full weight of creation, of existence itself.
Aristotle spoke of ousia (being as essence):
ââSubstanceâ, the conventional English rendering of Aristotleâs word ousia, is in fact misleading, suggesting as it does a kind of stuff. The English term âsubstanceâ entered the philosophical vernacular as a translation of the Latin substantia, which was itself an inadequate attempt to translate Aristotle. What âsubstanceâ and substantia both miss is the connection of the word ousia to the verb âto beâ (einai). A better rendition might be ârealityâ or âfundamental beingâ, but âsubstanceâ is deeply entrenched in the philosophical literature and will be used here. A good gloss would be to say that ousiai are the âontologically basic entitiesâ (Loux 1991: 2).âš
Heideggerâs Sein (being as presence) marks his attempt to move beyond traditional metaphysics, seeking to uncover how Being itself discloses all beings within the horizon of time.
âIn Die Grundprobleme der Phänomenologie (1927), Heidegger reenters and âswims throughâ the uncharted waters left by Sein und Zeit, taking up the question of Being from a new direction. These lectures form, as Heidegger notes, a ânew working-outâ of the missing division of Sein und Zeit, in which he seeks to reveal Time as the horizon of all comprehension of Being. As von Herrmann observes, Heideggerâs movementâor âswimââthrough this inquiry marks his effort to overcome the limits of metaphysical language and to retrieve the Seinsfrage from within the Western ontological tradition itself, rather than from existential or merely phenomenological motives.â²
Many thinkers have tried, and still try, to capture the meaning of âbe.â Yet even our language betrays the mystery: we say âbe still,â âbe good,â âbe strong,â âbe yourself.âÂł
But who is this self weâre supposed to be?
We have mastered doing, calendars, plans, productivity apps, but have forgotten being.
Being isnât about survival; itâs about presence. Itâs not the ticking of the clock, but the stillness between its beats.
The word be stands as the threshold of mystery, both utterly ordinary and unfathomably profound. Aristotle sought it in essence, Heidegger in presence, yet its fullness forever escapes capture, flickering between verb and vision. Perhaps that is its gift: being is not a concept to be grasped, but a reality to be entered. In the end, to be is to participate, to dwell, to attend, to open ourselves to the unfolding of existence itself.
If the word be bears the mystery of existence, then in God that mystery finds its source and fulfillment. What philosophers sought through essence and presence, Scripture proclaims in a voice from the fire: âI AM WHO I AM.â

The Ontology of Divine Being
To speak of divine Being is to approach the burning center of reality itself. In every age, philosophers and theologians have sought language vast enough to name the One in whom all being finds its source. When Scripture records the words, âI AM WHO I AM,â it does not merely reveal a title, it unveils the grammar of existence. God names Himself not as an object among others, but as Being itself, the inexhaustible ground from which all else flows.
When God said, âI AM WHO I AM,â He revealed not just His name, but the nature of existence itself.
God is Being, not one being among many, but the ground of all being. All created things are not being itself, but borrowed being. As Thomas Aquinas wrote, God is ipsum esse subsistens, existence existing, writing that:
âGod is not only His own essence but also His own existence. If a thingâs existence differs from its essence, that existence must be caused by another. But since God is the first cause, His essence and existence are identical. For existence makes every form actual; and since there is no potentiality in God, His essence does not differ from existence. Thus, God is His own existence.ââ´
To exist apart from Him is to slowly unravel into non-being, the quiet entropy of meaninglessness. Christ enters this paradox as the Word made flesh, the fusion of divine Being and human becoming. In Him, being and becoming reconcile, eternity kisses time.
Our âto beâ becomes complete only when grafted into His âI AM.â
The mystery of divine Being is not solved by reason but received in revelation. To know God is not to master an idea, but to enter into communion with the One whose is-ness sustains every breath. The ontology of God is thus the ontology of grace, He is that we might be. Every act of existence whispers His name, and every moment of true being is a participation in the eternal I AM.

Modernity and the Loss of Being
If divine Being is the ground of all existence, then modernity marks the tremor of a world that has forgotten that ground. Having unmoored âto beâ from its source in the I AM, humanity drifts between noise and nothingness, full of motion, yet emptied of meaning.
We live in an age where doing has replaced being. Our worth is quantified by productivity, not presence. We say, âI am busy,â as if busy were a form of existence.
We post curated lives, speak fluent hustle, and celebrate burnout as achievement. We donât be anymore; we perform.
Kierkegaard called it âthe sickness unto death,â a self so divided that it forgets its own ground, arguing that:
âThe self is the conscious synthesis of infinitude and finitude which relates itself to itself, whose task is to become itself, a task which can be performed only by means of a relationship to God.[But to become oneself is to become concrete. But to becomeconcrete meansneither to become finite nor infinite, for that which is to become concrete is a synthesis. Accordingly, the development consists in moving away from oneself infinitely by the process of infinitizing oneself, and in returning to oneself infinitely by the process of finitizing. If on the contrary the self does not become itself, it is in despair, whether it knows it or not. However, a self, at every instant it exists, is in process of becoming, for the self κιĎá˝° δĎνιΟΚν does not actually exist; it is only that which it is to become.ââľ
Heidegger called it âfallennessâ: existing only in the noise of the world, forgetting the silence of Being:
âFallennessâ names Daseinâs absorption in the world of its everyday concerns and its being lost in the publicness of the âthey.â In this state, Dasein falls away from itself as an authentic potentiality-for-Being and becomes fascinated by the world and others. Yet this âinauthenticityâ is not a fall from purity, but a mode of Being-in-the-world in which Dasein mostly maintains itself.ââś
Our modern tragedy is not that we have lost God, but that weâve lost ourselves in the process. The self has become a project instead of a presence, an algorithm instead of a soul. Gadamer reminds us that genuine understanding is not achieved by distancing ourselves from the text or the other, but by entering into a dialogical participation with it.
âA person trying to understand a text is prepared for it to tell him something. ⌠A hermeneutically trained consciousness must be sensitive to the textâs alterity. But this kind of sensitivity involves neither neutrality nor the extinction of oneâs self, but the appropriation of oneâs own fore-meanings and prejudices.ââˇ
To recover being in the modern world is not to abandon action but to rediscover presence, to live once more from the still point rather than the scroll. In the silence beneath performance, in the listening that precedes speech, we begin to hear again the faint echo of the I AM within us. For only the one who is, and knows it, is truly alive.

Be Being: The Invitation
To âbe beingâ is not redundancy; itâs revelation.
It is the conscious act of returning to the origin, of choosing to exist from Being rather than busyness. âBe beingâ means to dwell within divine presence, to become aware that existence itself is a participation in grace.
We donât manufacture meaning; we mirror it. We donât build identity; we breathe it. Christ calls us not to performance but to participation, John 15:4 (New International Version): âAbide in Me, and I in you.â
To be being is to live from the inside out, not as a human doing, but as a human becoming. It is to let presence replace pretense, stillness replace striving, and communion replace control.
For the mystery of be is not something to master but to enter. It is the rhythm of creation and the heartbeat of redemption. To be being is to come home, to rest again in the One whose very name is existence.

The Practice of Being
To practice being is to unlearn distraction.
Itâs to choose silence over speed, depth over noise, communion over consumption.
Prayer is the language of being.
Stillness is its grammar; Psalm 46:10 (New King James Version): âBe still, and know that I am God.â
Gratitude is its poetry.
We return to our truest selves not by achievement but by awareness, the holy recognition that existence is a gift, not a performance. When we are fully being, we are closest to the One who never ceases to be.
âWe donât manufacture meaning; we mirror it.
We donât build identity; we breathe it.â


The Stillness of âI AMâ (Prayer)
Lord,
Teach me to be in You, not just to do for You. Let my breath remember its Source. In a world obsessed with production, help me rediscover presence.
Still me until Your stillness speaks.
In the name of the One who simply is, thank You Yahweh, Messiah King Jesus, Holy Spirit,
Amen.

Track To Enjoy


Footnotes
1. S. Marc Cohen, âAristotleâs Metaphysics: The Theory of Substances,â University of Washington, accessed January 17, 2026, https://faculty.washington.edu/smcohen/433/CohenSubstances.pdf.
2. Michael E. Zimmerman, âHeideggerâs âCompletionâ of Sein und Zeit,â Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 39, no. 4 (1979): 537, https://doi.org/10.2307/2106899.
3. Michael Reddan, Heidegger and the Mystery of Being (University of Wollongong, 2009), 44â47, https://ro.uow.edu.au/ndownloader/files/50595195/1; see also A. H. Rosenfeld, ââThe Being of Language and the Language of Beingâ: Heidegger and Modern Poetics,â The Centennial Review 20, no. 4 (1976): 687â703, https://www.jstor.org/stable/302152.
4. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, trans. Fathers of the English Dominican Province (New York: Benziger Brothers, 1947), Pt. I, Q.3, Art.4. â Aquinas identifies God as ipsum esse subsistens (âbeing itself subsistingâ).
5. Søren Kierkegaard, The Sickness Unto Death, trans. Alastair Hannay (London: Penguin Classics, 1989), 41â45 esp. 44. â Kierkegaard defines despair as the selfâs failure to relate properly to itself and to God.
6. Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, trans. John Macquarrie and Edward Robinson (New York: Harper & Row, 1962), 219â224, esp. 220. â Heideggerâs exploration of Dasein (being-there) and fallenness underpins the modern crisis of presence.
7. Hans-Georg Gadamer, Truth and Method, 2nd rev. ed., trans. Joel Weinsheimer and Donald G. Marshall (London: Bloomsbury, 2013), 269â271. â Gadamer reminds us that understanding and meaning emerge through participation, not distance â echoing the relational dynamic of divine being.
