All of us know a lot of people who seem so immersed in this life, in their marriages, their families, their jobs, in entertainment, in sports, and in their daily concerns that they don’t seem at all to have God as the center of their conscious attention for any significant portion of their daily lives. Indeed, sometimes, these people do not even attend church and often have very little formal or private prayer in their lives. Their default consciousness focuses on the things of this world, its joys, and its sorrows. A shift in consciousness would need to occur for any explicit notion of God to enter their lives. For these good people, ordinary consciousness is primarily agnostic. Fr. Rolheiser asks, “Are we going to hell in droves because we can’t give God more of our conscious attention and because we can’t be more explicitly religious?” By their fruits you will know them! Jesus said that, and it must be our criterion here. If people live inside an honesty, generosity, goodness, warmth, health, solicitousness, intelligence, and life-giving wit, can they be much out of harmony with God? Moreover, we need to ask ourselves: If we are born into this world with such a powerful, innate gravitation towards the things of this earth if our natural (default) consciousness wants to fix itself more upon matter than spirit, and this seems to be the case for most people, how then do we read the mind of our Creator? What divine intelligence manifests within the natural instinct to give ourselves over to this life, even as we carry a faith that gives us a vision beyond this world? Perhaps God is mature enough not to ask for or want our conscious attention most of the time. Perhaps God wants us to enjoy our time here, the experience of love and friendship, family and friends, eating and drinking, and (at least occasionally) seeing our favorite teams win a championship. Perhaps God wants us, in the famed words of Yogi Berra, to sometimes just sit back and enjoy the game! Perhaps God is like a blessing old grandparent; perhaps we pray rudimentarily when we healthily enjoy the gift of this life; and perhaps there are less-conscious ways in which we can be aware of God.