In All Is God, beloved spiritual teacher Om Joshi gently guides us into the radical truth that nothing is outside the sacred. Drawing from the deep well of Advaita Vedanta and infusing his words with the grounded clarity of contemplatives like Thomas Merton, Joshi reveals a world where God hides in plain sight: in the dog wagging its tail at your door,
in the rude customer at the till, in dirty dishes and supermarket queues, in the body that aches and the thought that won't go away.
Through 58 contemplative chapters-each a meditation in itself-Joshi invites us to pierce the illusion of separation and see through the playful mask of maya. His message is simple yet profound: the Divine is not found by escaping the world, but by seeing it clearly. Not by ascending to distant realms, but by arriving-fully, humbly-into the miracle of now.
This is not a book of high philosophy, but of everyday revelation. In flowing, poetic prose, Joshi strips away the false divide between spiritual and unspiritual, reminding us that even our flaws, doubts, and discomforts are expressions of Brahman in form. The tree, the insect, the beggar, the spouse, the stranger-they are all God in disguise.
Whether you are new to the nondual path or a lifelong seeker, this book offers a quiet, transformative invitation: to stop searching, and start seeing. To return to the breath. To honour the moment. To live as though everything is sacred-because it is.