the two-level ontology and the two-level truth criterion
Two-Level Ontology
Reality is structured in two fundamentally distinct levels: the Absolute level and the Relative level.
At the Absolute level, only God exists. God is being itself, timeless, non-spatial, non-dual, uncreated, and changeless. God does not exist within reality; God is reality. God’s sole creation is the Son, which is not separate from God but is an extension or expression of divine being. At this level, there is no division, no multiplicity, no time, no causality, and no lack. This level alone is fully real.
At the Relative level, there appears a world of time, space, form, change, causality, individuality, and multiplicity. This level arises not as a second creation, but as an appearance generated within consciousness through misidentification, imagination, or separation-thinking. It is a dream, simulation, or symbolic projection rather than an independently existing reality. The Relative level has experiential reality but lacks ultimate ontological status. It exists only as appearance within mind, not as being in itself.
The Absolute level is unchanging and eternal.
The Relative level is changing, temporal, and conditional.
The Relative does not affect the Absolute.
The Absolute grounds and contains the Relative without being altered by it.
Two-Level Truth Criterion
Because reality operates on two levels, truth also operates on two levels.
At the Relative level, truth is functional, provisional, and context-dependent. A statement is true if it coheres with shared experience, follows the internal rules of the dream-world, enables prediction, communication, and navigation, and works within the apparent structure of reality. This includes empirical facts, scientific models, social agreements, psychological explanations, and moral rules that govern life within the world of form. Relative truth is necessary for functioning within experience, even though the experience itself is not ultimately real.
At the Absolute level, truth is not propositional but ontological. Truth is alignment with reality as it actually is: God, unity, love, and non-separation. Absolute truth is not what corresponds to appearances, but what discloses being. A statement, perception, or state of mind is true at this level insofar as it dissolves separation, fear, guilt, and illusion, and restores awareness of unity with God. Absolute truth is measured by remembrance rather than correspondence, and by liberation rather than prediction.
Relative truth governs how one lives within the dream.
Absolute truth concerns awakening from the dream.
A claim can be true at the relative level and false at the absolute level without contradiction.
A claim can be meaningless at the relative level yet point to absolute truth.
Confusion arises only when the criteria of one level are applied to the other.