Amun
Supreme god of the occult and the secret breath, Amun is the presence that permeates all but reveals nothing. In him, the invisible becomes silent power. To meditate on his name is to enter the heart of the divine mystery.

Amun is the Divine Breath that moves the world, the Invisible One who sustains all things.
He is the God beyond the Gods, the ineffable principle from which creation takes life and to which all forms return.
Amun, written Imn — “the Hidden One” — is one of the highest and most mysterious deities of ancient Egypt.
Originally a local god of Thebes, Lord of Air and Invisible Breath, he gradually became the transcendent supreme principle of Egyptian religion.
When the Egyptians united Amun with Ra, there was born Amun-Ra, the God who is at once visible and invisible, manifest and spiritual.
He represents the vital breath that permeates all things, the silent presence that does not reveal itself yet makes all life possible.
His very name is an enigma: Amun means “He Who Is Unseen,” but also “He Who Conceals the World Within Himself.”
He is the God who dwells in the heart and in the air, symbol of the Divine Spirit that animates humans, gods, and stars alike.
The theological texts of Thebes describe him as
“King of the Gods, He who was before the first, invisible even to His own face.”
In him the entire pantheon is contained — all other gods are manifestations of his energetic aspects.
Amun has no face, for he is the principle of Being itself, the source of life, the mystery that only silence can comprehend.