TLDR: Eckhart Tolle interprets Jesus's core teachings not as religious doctrine but as pointers to a dimension of consciousness accessible through presence. Faith is not belief or positive thinking, but direct sensing of the power of consciousness that underlies all existence. The Kingdom of Heaven is an inner dimension of spaciousness within you. God's will is alignment with the present moment, not rigid rules or doctrines. Spiritual awakening requires the ego personality to recede so that essence—your true nature—can express itself. By touching the source through stillness, you fulfill the fundamental human task and become a channel for transcendent intelligence into the world.
What Faith Really Means Beyond Belief
Tolle opens by addressing a widespread misinterpretation of faith. He uses the example of a wife who hears a pastor preach that Jesus said you can move mountains if you have faith. Taking this literally, she decides she will believe the small hill blocking her bedroom view will disappear. The next morning it remains. She concludes faith doesn't work.
This anecdote illustrates why faith is not positive thinking or visualization. "Faith is not telling yourself you believe something is going to happen," Tolle explains. Rather, the true meaning of faith is power. Faith is the ability to access something deeper than the personality—the source of life itself, the power of consciousness itself.
"If you have faith means, if you access the power that lies beyond all phenomena, if you access the source of life, if you find access to that, then that means you have faith." Faith is sensing within yourself the power of life that is not of the person—it is the essence of who you are. When you connect with that dimension, you realize it's not that you access something separate; rather, you recognize the source is already your own essence.
The pathway to this realization, Tolle emphasizes, is the entire foundation of his teaching: moving beyond the noisy thinking mind into what he calls "the dimension of alive stillness." This is where you touch the source. To enter this dimension, the personality must surrender.
Why the Personality Blocks Access to Your Essence
Tolle introduces the concept of personality and essence, drawn from the Russian spiritual teacher Gurdjieff. The personality is what most people identify as themselves—the constructed identity, primarily built by the thinking mind, the accumulated beliefs, preferences, and reactions. Essence is who you are beyond that construct, your true nature prior to thought.
Gurdjieff observed that most people in the world have a strongly developed personality but very little essence coming through. "The personality, which includes the thinking mind, or is primarily the thinking mind, stands as the closed door. With a heavy personality, you cannot go any deeper. You're stuck." The personality literally blocks the gateway.
Occasionally, however, there appear rare human beings with "an enormous amount of essence and very little personality." This is the trajectory of spiritual awakening: as the personality recedes, something more vital and more essential shines through. "That then is our life purpose," Tolle says. The personality begins to serve essence rather than dominate it. When this shift happens, you become a vessel for something beyond the limited ego identity—something that can speak, act, and emanate authentic intelligence into the world.
What Jesus Meant by the Kingdom of Heaven
Tolle offers a translation of one of Jesus's most central teachings: "The kingdom of heaven" becomes "the kingdom" (dimension) "of heaven" (spaciousness). Jesus used the metaphor of the sky because it is the most spacious thing the senses perceive. Yet it is also unique: the sky is not a thing you can touch or possess. It has no boundaries you can locate. It simply is the way we perceive vast spaciousness itself.
This analogy points inward. Jesus was gesturing toward "a dimension of spaciousness that is within you, that is consciousness, pure consciousness." This inner spaciousness, this dimension of awareness itself, is what he called the Kingdom of Heaven. And it is, according to Tolle's understanding of Jesus's message, the most important thing you can find: "The most important thing for you to be concerned about. Find that within you. Everything else will fall into place."
When you locate this dimension and rest in it, your task as a human being is essentially complete. That doesn't mean your life ends. Rather, you can then be present in the world "in a much more beneficent capacity, because something else expresses itself through you, no longer the egoic, the limited ego identity." You become an expression of the transcendent dimension itself, a clarity through which consciousness functions.
Why the Word "God" Obscures the Teaching
Tolle avoids using the word "God" because it has been so thoroughly misunderstood and misused. The term itself seems to encapsulate the infinite as if it were a finite entity. "Almost everybody imagines some kind of entity when you say God. Where is he? Oh, 'he'. You see, most people still call him 'he'." The masculine pronoun and the objectified concept encourage us to imagine a controlling patriarch—a being separate from us who either grants or withholds favor.
Better pointers exist. "The divine" is less enclosed, more open. "The force" (as popularized in Star Wars) avoids personification entirely: "May the force be with you" suggests something present everywhere, not a distant entity. "The dimension of the transcendent" is more precise. All these avoid the theological baggage and the tendency of the ego to project its own will onto the concept.
The core insight is this: what Jesus pointed to is not a being outside you. It is the intelligence and consciousness that pervades and underlies all of existence, and it is accessible to you directly, here and now.
Doing God's Will: Alignment with the Present Moment
The phrase "doing God's will" has caused immense suffering throughout history. The ego has routinely claimed that its own desires, agendas, and even atrocities are "God's will." Religious extremists have killed in the name of doing God's will. Even among well-intentioned spiritual seekers, confusion reigns: "How do you know whether a thought that comes into your head is God's will or whether it's just a thought that comes into your head?"
Tolle's answer is radical in its simplicity: being in the present moment is the only way to be certain you are aligned with God's will. God's will (or the will of the transcendent intelligence) is not found in beliefs, rules, or thoughts. It is found in alignment with the consciousness that pervades all of reality. And you can only align with that if you become present in the now.
"The entry point into God's will, the realization of God's will, is always the present moment. Your inner alignment with the present moment, and there you have it."
Rather than claiming "this is God's will" (which invites doubt and misinterpretation), Tolle offers a statement beyond doubt: "It is as it is." This is not resignation or fatalism. It is radical acceptance. The present moment, exactly as it is, is undeniable. No philosophy can contradict it. "I might as well say yes to it because it already is." When you align with what is, you are aligned with the deepest intelligence available to you.
Where to Go From Here
The practical implication of Tolle's teaching is clear: the path to understanding Jesus's teachings is not intellectual study but direct experience. Stop trying to believe the right thing. Stop trying to visualize a desired outcome. Instead, practice returning to the present moment again and again. Feel the aliveness of stillness beneath the stream of thought. Notice the spaciousness of awareness itself. Sense the power of consciousness as your own essence, not something foreign or distant.
This is faith. This is the Kingdom of Heaven. This is alignment with the source of life. And it is available to you right now, in this moment, if you step out of the noise of the mind and into the dimension of presence.




