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Presence and Absence
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03 March 2026

An illuminating journey through five thousand years of thought, in pursuit of the radical Judeo-Christian idea of God as an ineffable mystery that underlies all existence.
Presence and Absence challenges the underlying assumption of both believers and atheists that their arguments depend on proof that God either exists or doesn’t. Instead, Gilbert Márkus demonstrates a rich tradition in Jewish and Christian writings of viewing ‘God’ not as a particular entity, but as the mystery which underlies all that exists.
Márkus identifies this concept in the Bible, in the thought of Augustine, Aquinas, and Eckhart, and in the poetry of R.S. Thomas and Paul Celan. In the end, he encourages the reader to meditate and pray on the notion of “God as Nothing,” of eternity that lies outside the continuum of time.
“Gilbert Markus’s riveting little book on the ‘nothingness’ of God simultaneously allures, teases, and destabilizes the reader...this book will provoke much stimulus for debate in schools, colleges, and churches.” —Sarah Coakley, FBA, Norris-Hulse Professor emerita, University of Cambridge, and author, God, Sexuality and the Self
“Márkus has an engaging way with words and a playful approach to how language works towards God as Nothing…This is analytical theology at its most accessible.”—Rt. Rev. Dr. John Saxbee, Church Times
“Gilbert Markus’s riveting little book on the ‘nothingness’ of God simultaneously allures, teases, and destabilizes the reader into a profoundly ‘apophatic’ understanding of what it means to accept God as creator and source of all being. In the spirit of his revered teacher Herbert McCabe, OP, but as yet further radicalized through Markus’s own particular Wittgensteinian rendition of Aquinas, it is concluded that there is ‘nothing’ whatever that we can know or say about God in Godself. Our job is to live the life enjoined on us by the prophets and Jesus, and leave behind the misguided attempt to establish God’s existence as a riposte to atheism. Intentionally provocative in its creative new exposition of the Christian tradition, this book will provoke much stimulus for debate in schools, colleges, and churches.”