After beginning to notice this inner confusion more clearly, a different kind of question often starts to form—not just what is happening, but what is this that is happening within me?
There is a sense—sometimes faint at first—that thought itself must have some kind of structure. That it isn’t simply random, not just a stream of ideas appearing and disappearing, but something more ordered than that—something that allows clarity to exist at all.
When things feel clear, we don’t usually stop to question this. Thought moves naturally. One idea leads into another. There is a quiet sense that things fit together, even if everything isn’t fully known. But when that ease is disrupted—when thoughts scatter or disconnect—it suddenly becomes clear: thinking doesn’t just happen. It happens within something—and that “something” has form.We may begin to notice this in very simple ways. There are moments when thoughts feel steady, connected, and meaningful. And there are other moments when they feel scattered, reactive, or unclear. The difference is not always in the situation itself, but in how our thinking is arranged within it.
We may begin to notice this in very simple ways. There are moments when thoughts feel steady, connected, and meaningful. And there are other moments when they feel scattered, reactive, or unclear. The difference is not always in the situation itself, but in how our thinking is arranged within it.The theological writings describe the mind as having different levels, or degrees, each with its own way of seeing and understanding. These are often referred to as the natural, the spiritual, and the celestial. We don’t think in just one way, and we aren’t limited to a single level of awareness.
The theological writings describe the mind as having different levels, or degrees, each with its own way of seeing and understanding. These are often referred to as the natural, the spiritual, and the celestial. We don’t think in just one way, and we aren’t limited to a single level of awareness.There is the level of everyday thinking—the part of the mind that plans, reasons, responds, and works through what is directly in front of us. It is practical and necessary, and it helps us move through daily life. But there are also moments when something deeper begins to enter in—a question about meaning, a sense that something matters beyond the immediate situation, a pause that asks not just what works, but what is right.
There is the level of everyday thinking—the part of the mind that plans, reasons, responds, and works through what is directly in front of us. It is practical and necessary, and it helps us move through daily life. But there are also moments when something deeper begins to enter in—a question about meaning, a sense that something matters beyond the immediate situation, a pause that asks not just what works, but what is right.
And deeper still, there is a level connected to what we love most—what we are drawn toward, what we hold as most important, even when we are not fully aware of it. This deeper level quietly influences everything else, shaping how we see, how we respond, and what we ultimately choose.
These are not separate parts that operate independently. Instead, each supports and shapes the others. When what is higher informs what is lower, things begin to move together with less inner tension and less fragmentation.
Thought begins to feel steadier. Direction becomes clearer. There is a sense that things are not just happening, but holding together. Even if everything isn’t fully resolved, there is less pulling in different directions. There is more coherence.
From a practical point of view, this is where the framework of theistic psychology helps bring clarity. The mind is not self-originating. It receives. It is open—always receiving what we attend to, what we dwell on, what we allow to guide us.
And over time, this forms patterns—ways of thinking that begin to shape how we experience the world. Most deeply, this openness allows us to receive what is higher, even when we are only beginning to become aware of it.
As Dr. Leon James emphasizes, this process becomes more visible as we begin to observe our thinking rather than simply move within it. We begin to notice how thoughts connect, how certain patterns repeat, and how different levels of thinking begin to influence one another.
When these patterns begin to align with what is true, something very quiet begins to happen. Things begin to come into order. Not all at once. But gradually.
Clarity, then, is not simply the result of finding the right idea. It is the result of the mind being in a state where things can come into alignment—where what we think, what we value, and what we follow are no longer pulling in different directions.
The more we begin to recognize this quiet order, the more freedom we feel to participate in it—to notice what we are dwelling on, and to begin choosing what we allow to guide us.
Order is not something we engineer alone. It is a potential always quietly present in us—an ordering that, even when unnoticed, is supported and quietly encouraged by something higher, always at work within us, sometimes even before we can see it.
This is why structure matters. Not as something rigid or imposed, but as something already present, whether we are aware of it or not. The more we begin to recognize it, the more we are able to see what is happening within it.
And when we begin to see that, something shifts. Clarity isn’t something that can be forced, or a problem that must be solved in a single moment. It forms on its own as things come into order—and once order begins to take hold, it almost always grows.
As we become aware of the quiet order already present, we also discover a new kind of freedom—the freedom to lean in, to notice, and to welcome what is higher into what is lower.
You may begin to notice, in small ways, how your thoughts come together—or don’t—and what seems to bring a greater sense of coherence.
If you would like to continue, the next step is to begin seeing how truth itself quietly and steadily brings this deeper order into the mind:
How Truth Brings the Mind into Order
“Let all things be done decently and in order.” — 1 Corinthians 14:40
“Let all things be done decently and in order.” — 1 Corinthians 14:40
“All things are in order when the lower things are subordinate to the higher.” — Arcana Coelestia 5145
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