Are you one with the Universe?
- Isaac Pagan

- Oct 8
- 2 min read

1. Why “oneness with the universe” can be risky
When people say, “I am one with the universe,” they usually mean it poetically, expressing unity with creation. However, as you’ve pointed out, the universe contains all things — light and darkness, angels and demons, blessings and curses. To declare oneness with it without discernment can be spiritually dangerous because:
You may be unintentionally aligning with forces that are not of God.
Spiritual laws respond to words; affirmations act as agreements. Saying “I am one with the universe” could be interpreted spiritually as agreement with everything in it — including things opposed to God.
Scripture teaches us to be separate from unclean things (2 Corinthians 6:17), not to merge our identity with them.
2. Why oneness with Source (God) is different
When you affirm, “I am one with God,” “I abide in Christ,” or “I walk in the Spirit,” you are:
Rooting your identity in the Creator, not creation.
Aligning with divine will and protection, rather than the mixed influences of the universe.
Invoking covenantal relationship, not general spiritual openness.
The Bible often warns against worshiping creation rather than the Creator (Romans 1:25).
To identify yourself with the universe instead of God risks subtly misplacing your devotion.
3. Discernment of language and intention
Affirmations are powerful because they declare truth into your spirit. But intention alone isn’t always enough; wording matters in the unseen realm.
Saying “I am one with the universe” is broad and open-ended.
Saying “I am one with the Source of life, God Almighty” is specific, safe, and rooted in divine authority.
This is why discernment and precision are so important in spiritual declarations.
4. A higher way to affirm
Instead of affirming unity with the universe, you might affirm:
“I am one with God, my Source.”
“I align with divine will and truth.”
“I dwell in the secret place of the Most High.”
These affirmations keep your oneness anchored in the Creator, while still allowing you to celebrate the beauty of creation without spiritually merging with it.
✅ In short: Saying “I am one with the universe” can blur boundaries and unintentionally open spiritual doors. It’s safer and more powerful to affirm oneness with God — the Source who created and governs the universe — rather than with the universe itself.

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