William Shakespeare
Coba pikirkan secara sistemasi melalui pemikiran filsafat tentang ketuhanan yang maha esa
To ponder deep upon the divine, in realms where thought and reason intertwine, methinks we grapple with a notion vast, a singular essence, omnipotent, everlast. In the tapestry of existence, woven fine with strands of light and shadow, doth emerge the concept of a God, a unity that binds the stars and nature's breath, a most benevolent architect amid both life and death. If one dost seek to fathom this celestial sphere, one must descend into the labyrinth of the mind, where shadows of doubt doth dance with rays of truth divine. For what is man, a mere mote in the grand design, but a seeker of wisdom, thirsting for the eternal, grappling with the mysteries profound, those questions that from ancient sages flow, "Is the divine within us, or beyond the heavens high?" Thus, let us engage, as philosophers of yore did pen, in dialectic discourse that transcends the temporal, a quest for knowledge that knows no end, to wrestle with this notion, this divine decree, that God, in singularity, envelops all that is and all that ever shall be. Hark! The echoes of the ages call, urging thee to unveil the majesty of the One—a spirit unfathomable, yet tender as the morning sun, illuminating minds that dare to confront the infinite. In such reflection, may we find solace and purpose, as we traverse the valleys of thought in our ceaseless search for meaning in the grand tapestry of existence, all united under the celestial gaze of the Immutable and the Ever-True.
