cover image There Is No God and He Is Always with You: A Search for God in Odd Places

There Is No God and He Is Always with You: A Search for God in Odd Places

Brad Warner. New World Library, $15.95 trade paperback (208p) ISBN 978-1-60868-183-9

In his new book, Warner (Hardcore Zen) momentarily sets aside his punk weapons of iconoclasm and takes a more respectful, even reverential tone to a perennial question: does God exist? As a practicing Zen Buddhist, his way of considering this question is entangled in oft-misunderstood concepts such as enlightenment. Warner never shies away from such complications; instead, they become grounds where the Western understanding of God and the Buddhist approach to reality and experience meet. For Warner, his practice is “a way to approach and understand God without dealing with religion.” His God is one to be experienced, felt, and intuited, something that lies beneath the surface of reality that is already naturally understood, if only one could “learn to listen to silence, to listen to nothing, and to learn from nothing.” In accompanying the punk Zen priest on such a singular journey through his understanding of God, the reader is asked to partake in meditation with Warner not on the Hebrew, Christian, Islamic, or any other traditional God, but rather One that can be found in daily experience when conceptual thinking has been silenced. (July)