Saturday, May 3, 2025

Liberating the Father and Jesus From Orthodoxy and Evangelicalism

To speak of “liberating” God may sound strange to some ears, even presumptuous. But what we are really talking about is liberating our understanding of God—particularly the Father and Jesus—from the confines of institutionalized religion, especially the rigid frameworks of orthodoxy and modern evangelicalism. These systems, while intending to preserve truth, have often distorted it through the lens of power, fear, and binary thinking. The result is a spiritual landscape where mystery is suppressed, questions are taboo, and God is presented more as a cosmic bureaucrat than a loving Parent.

Orthodoxy, by definition, means “right belief.” But who gets to decide what is right? Throughout Christian history, “heresy” has been nothing more than the name orthodoxy gives to its losing arguments. Jesus himself would have been labeled a heretic by the very standards later enshrined in the institutional church. In fact, he was.

Consider how Jesus was received in his own day. He broke Sabbath laws, consorted with the marginalized, reinterpreted Torah, and directly challenged the religious elite. He said outrageous things like “You have heard it said... but I say unto you...” which undermined legalistic interpretations of Scripture. He claimed unity with the Father in a way that scandalized the religious authorities. These weren’t polite theological differences. They were confrontations with the theological gatekeepers of his time—gatekeepers who believed they were defending orthodoxy. From their perspective, Jesus was the heretic. And for this, they saw him crucified.

Paul, too, was called a heretic. Once a persecutor of Christians in the name of Jewish orthodoxy, Paul underwent a radical transformation and began preaching a gospel of grace that tore down walls between Jew and Gentile, insider and outsider. His letters often pushed against early church expectations and Jewish norms alike. His emphasis on the spirit over the letter of the law—and his claim that faith in the risen Christ abolished the old distinctions—put him in direct tension with the very religious world he once upheld.

And let’s not forget the Reformers. Luther, Calvin, Zwingli—all were considered heretics by the Catholic Church of their time. Each, in their own way, sought to liberate Christianity from what they saw as distortions and legalism. And yet, within a generation, many of their followers turned those new insights into dogmas of their own, excommunicating and persecuting those who dared to diverge. The same spirit that condemned Luther was alive in Luther when he condemned the Anabaptists.

This historical pattern reveals a troubling truth: orthodoxy is not a static container for divine truth. It is a moving target shaped by power dynamics, cultural assumptions, and the psychological need for certainty. It’s not that truth doesn’t exist—it does—but our formulations of it are always partial, always filtered through human lenses.

Which brings us to the tyranny of binary thinking. The theological tradition, especially in the West, has been plagued by either/or categories: saved or damned, in or out, true or false, believer or heretic. This black-and-white framework flattens nuance, ignores mystery, and leaves no room for growth or evolving understanding. When God is confined to the binaries of systematic theology, we lose the relational, dynamic, and often paradoxical nature of the divine.

Jesus did not speak in systematic theology. He spoke in parables, riddles, and paradoxes. He emphasized fruit over doctrine, love over law, and mercy over sacrifice. He rarely answered questions directly, often responding with another question. He challenged the very idea that being “right” was what mattered, shifting the focus instead to being righteous, meaning aligned with the heart of God.

Yet evangelicalism today often reverses this emphasis. Rooted in a post-Reformation desire for doctrinal clarity and a modern need for certainty, it treats the Bible as a rulebook and God as a distant judge. Jesus becomes less a living presence and more a theological formula: a sinless substitute paying a legal penalty to appease an offended deity. In this framework, God the Father is often portrayed as angry and exacting, with Jesus acting as a buffer. But this is not the God Jesus revealed.

Jesus called God Abba—Father, even “Papa.” He spoke of a Father who runs to meet prodigals, who gives good gifts, who knows our needs before we ask. He modeled intimacy, not fear; union, not separation. The Father Jesus reveals is not a divine accountant tallying sins but a lover longing for relationship. To distort this Father into the image of a wrathful judge who demands blood to forgive is to miss the heart of the gospel.

When we liberate Jesus and the Father from the scaffolding of rigid theology, what emerges is something far more compelling than orthodoxy’s caricatures. We see Jesus as an elder brother, showing us what it means to live in union with the divine. We see the Father not as a monarch demanding allegiance but as a Parent drawing all creation into the dance of love. We recognize that truth is not found in perfect propositions but in the transformation of the heart.

And we reclaim the right to think, to question, and to doubt without fear of hellfire. In fact, the very fear of hell—so central to evangelical urgency—is itself a product of later theology and cultural conditioning. Jesus spoke of Gehenna, a real place outside Jerusalem, in the context of prophetic warnings. His use of it was not a cosmic threat but a metaphor for the consequences of choosing death over life, ego over spirit. We were never meant to live in fear of a vindictive afterlife but to awaken here and now to the indwelling Christ.

To call this heresy is, ironically, to repeat the very mistake made by those who called Jesus a blasphemer. It is to privilege the letter over the spirit, the map over the territory. But when we follow Jesus in spirit and truth, we are freed from the need to conform to any doctrinal box. We are invited into a living relationship with the divine—one that transcends dogma, embraces paradox, and leads to radical love.

In the end, the only orthodoxy that matters is love. Not the kind of love that fits neatly into creeds, but the wild, boundary-crossing, life-giving love that Jesus embodied. A love that heals, includes, and liberates. And if that is heresy, may we all be heretics—walking in the way of Christ, not the constructs of religion.

Friday, May 2, 2025

Jesus as Elder Brother: Awakening to Our Divine Family and True Nature

In the total of spiritual history, no figure has stirred the soul and challenged the world’s understanding of divinity quite like Jesus of Nazareth. Though often portrayed through layers of dogma and doctrine, at the heart of Jesus’ life and message was something deeply personal and relational: the introduction of the Divine as a loving Parent and humanity as one spiritual family. In this light, Jesus is not only the Savior or Son of God, but more intimately, our Elder Brother—the one who awakened first, to show us who we truly are.

Before Jesus, the Hebrew tradition revered God as Creator, King, and Judge. Though God was sometimes called “Father,” it was primarily in the collective sense, referring to Israel as a nation. The personal, intimate, and relational aspect was largely missing. Jesus changed this. He spoke of God not with fearful reverence or theological abstraction, but with loving familiarity. His consistent use of the word “Abba”—an Aramaic term meaning “Dad” or “Papa”—was revolutionary. It unveiled a Divine Parent who longs not for sacrifice but for connection, not for legal compliance but for heartfelt trust.

In calling God “Father,” Jesus invited his followers into a familial relationship with the Divine. He urged them to pray, “Our Father, who art in heaven…” not “My Father,” but our—signifying that we all share the same Divine source. This was a spiritual democratization of the highest order. It implied that no priest, prophet, or ruler held exclusive access to God. Rather, every human being stood as a child of the same Divine Parent, and therefore, as brothers and sisters.

Jesus took this idea further. When told that his mother and brothers were looking for him, he gestured to the crowd and declared, “Whoever does the will of my Father in heaven is my brother and sister and mother” (Matthew 12:50). In this redefinition, Jesus moved beyond biology and established a new kind of kinship—one based on spiritual awakening and alignment with divine love.

This familial framework finds a profound echo in the writings of Paul, particularly in Romans 8:29, where he describes Jesus as “the firstborn among many brothers and sisters.” For Paul, Jesus was not only the uniquely anointed one but also the prototype, the forerunner of a great awakening. Jesus embodied the Christ—the divine Logos, the light that was in the beginning with God and that illuminates every person. But Paul dared to say that what was in Jesus could be in all. “Christ in you, the hope of glory,” he wrote in Colossians 1:27. This was no distant salvation plan—it was an invitation to recognize the indwelling Christ in ourselves.

Jesus, therefore, was the first to consciously acknowledge the Christ within himself. He lived out of this realization, not merely as a messenger but as a manifestation of Divine Love in human form. His awareness of being the Son of God was not an egoic claim but a deep spiritual knowing of his origin and essence. In recognizing the Christ within himself, he opened the door for all humanity to discover that same light within. As John’s Gospel begins, “In him was life, and that life was the light of all humanity” (John 1:4).

Yet, this light was not always recognized. Jesus’ ministry took place within a very specific context—first-century Judaism under Roman occupation. His people were burdened by centuries of religious law and the crushing weight of sin-consciousness. The Law of Moses, while once liberating, had become a source of spiritual oppression for many. Guilt and fear had taken root, and the joy of intimacy with God had been buried under rule-keeping and ritual purity.

The angel’s announcement that “He will save his people from their sins” (Matthew 1:21) must be read in this historical context. The sins were not simply moral failings, but the entire system of guilt, shame, and alienation perpetuated by the Law and the temple economy. Jesus came to bring freedom from sin-consciousness, not by ignoring sin, but by transcending it through grace, forgiveness, and divine embrace.

In this sense, Jesus' mission was not merely juridical (paying a penalty), but restorative and awakening. He came to reveal the truth of who we are: not broken, condemned beings, but children of God who had forgotten our origin. This theme finds its deepest resonance in the Gospel of Truth, a second-century text associated with the Valentinian Christian tradition. It states that people suffer not because they are sinful by nature, but because they live in “forgetfulness”—they have forgotten who they are and where they come from. Jesus, in this gospel, is the one who comes to “reveal the Father” and to awaken humanity from ignorance into remembrance and joy.

In this light, Jesus is Savior because he restores awareness, not because he satisfies wrath. He is the light that shows us our own inner light. He is the Son who reveals that we too are sons and daughters. He is the elder brother who returns from awakening to guide his siblings home.

It is also worth noting how Jesus' references to hell (Gehenna) fit within this context. Many of Jesus' strongest warnings—often framed with dramatic language about fire and worms—were not threats of eternal punishment, but hyperbolic critiques of the Pharisaic teaching that some people would be consigned to Gehenna, a metaphor derived from the Valley of Hinnom, for a year of post-death purification. This bears some resemblance to later Catholic ideas of purgatory. Jesus turned this imagery on its head, using it to forewarn of the coming destruction of Jerusalem and the temple—a cataclysm that would occur within a generation, as he predicted. His reference to "where the worm does not die and the fire is not quenched" (Mark 9:48) draws directly from Isaiah 66, which describes the aftermath of divine judgment upon the nation. These were not abstract descriptions of eternal torment, but urgent calls to repent and awaken before societal collapse.

The implications are staggering. If the Christ—the divine nature—dwells in all people, then salvation is not exclusionary but universal. It’s not about being chosen or unchosen, but about becoming aware of what has always been true: that we are one with God and with one another. This doesn't negate Jesus' uniqueness—it amplifies it. He becomes the first to fully live what is potentially true of all humanity.

To walk the path of Jesus, then, is not to worship him, but to follow him into that same awakening. It is to say, as he did, “I and the Father are one”—not in arrogance, but in awe. It is to recognize the Christ not only in ourselves but in each other. It is to live as siblings, with God as our shared source, and love as our common bond.

This is the spiritual family Jesus initiated. This is the good news that transcends religion and time. The Christ is not an external figure to be appeased but an inner reality to be realized. Jesus, our elder brother, awakened to it—and showed us how to awaken too.

 

Saturday, April 26, 2025

The Gospel of Truth, Zen, and Tao

There is a silent thread that weaves through Zen Buddhism, the Gospel of Truth, and the Tao of Lao Tzu — a thread so delicate that it escapes easy detection, and yet so strong that it binds them at the level of spirit. Though these traditions arise from different times and cultures, they seem to speak to one another in a hidden language, one not written in doctrines but whispered in the silences between words.

At the heart of all three is a shared intuition: the real trouble with human existence is not evil in the moralistic sense, nor rebellion against some distant deity, but forgetfulness. In Zen, the seeker is not attempting to become enlightened in the sense of acquiring something new. Rather, the goal is to awaken to what has always been — the original, uncorrupted mind that lies buried under layers of thought, habit, and the illusory separations of the ego. The masters of Zen do not tell their students to build a better self; they ask them to pierce through the illusions that hide their true self. Enlightenment, in this view, is less a journey forward and more a sudden remembrance, a recognition so simple and natural that it often evokes laughter or tears.

The Gospel of Truth, attributed to early Valentinian Christians, echoes this same movement of spirit in a strikingly similar way. In this gospel, the story of humanity is not primarily one of wickedness deserving punishment, but one of souls plunged into ignorance, having forgotten their origin in the divine fullness — the Pleroma. Jesus in the Gospel of Truth is not merely a sacrifice to appease wrath; he is a revealer, a messenger from the hidden Father whose mission is to awaken the sleeping children and guide them back into memory. Sin is reimagined not as moral failure but as the consequence of living in forgetfulness, mistaking illusions for reality. Salvation is not the payment of a debt, but the healing of amnesia.

Lao Tzu, centuries earlier, had spoken of the Tao in ways that align with this understanding. The Tao is the source, the unnameable, the way things are before humans grasp and divide. The tragedy is that as soon as one tries to name the Tao, it slips away. To live wisely, then, is to move in harmony with the Tao, yielding and flowing rather than striving and scheming. Like Zen, Taoism sees direct experience as superior to conceptual understanding, and like the Gospel of Truth, it hints that the problem is not that we are fundamentally broken, but that we have lost touch with the nameless source that cradles all things.

In all three traditions, language itself becomes a kind of veil. Zen masters craft koans — paradoxical riddles meant to short-circuit rational thought and trigger sudden insight. The Gospel of Truth speaks of the "Word" not as dead text, but as a living reality that draws the soul beyond superficial knowing. Lao Tzu warns that words and teachings are like finger pointing to the moon; they are helpful only if one looks past them to the reality they suggest. If one clings to the finger, one misses the moon entirely. Thus, each of these paths distrusts verbal formulations when they become substitutes for direct encounter with the real.

The tie that binds them is more than similarity of metaphor; it is a shared vision of what it means to be human. Human beings are seen not as fundamentally evil creatures in need of beating themselves into submission, but as wandering children who have lost their way in a forest of forgetfulness. The answer is not conquest, not even self-conquest, but remembering, returning, yielding to what has been true all along. Effort does not produce enlightenment, salvation, or union with the Tao; it obscures it. Only surrender, only profound receptivity, allows the truth to dawn naturally, like the rising sun over a misty field.

Jesus, in the Gospel of Truth, becomes very much like the Zen master or the Taoist sage. He does not impose a new law from the outside; he calls the soul back to the memory of its origin. He does not save by force but by illumination, by casting light on the inner truth that had been forgotten. In this way, the Christ is not the founder of a new religion but the revealer of a deeper reality that has always been present but hidden. In the same way, the Tao is not something added to life; it is life itself, once seen clearly. Zen satori is not the acquisition of mystical powers; it is the dropping away of illusions, the naked encounter with what has always been.

When seen in this way, Zen, the Gospel of Truth, and the Tao are not separate systems of belief but different windows into a single mystery. Each approaches the ineffable from a different angle, each speaking to the heart more than the mind, each offering not a new burden but a release. They do not shout commands from on high but whisper invitations to come home, to remember, to rest.

The deeper one listens, the clearer it becomes: the source has never been absent. It is we who have turned away, who have fallen asleep to the miracle of being. Whether one calls it the Tao, the Father, or the Buddha nature, the truth is nearer to us than our own breath. It only waits for our remembrance.

Thursday, April 24, 2025

The Kingdom Within: A Christian’s Awakening to Idealism and Quantum Truth

There comes a point in every spiritual journey where the questions start to deepen, and the safe, comfortable frameworks that once held our beliefs begin to feel a bit too narrow. I’ve been there. I know what it’s like to live decades inside a worldview that values the authority of scripture, the power of prayer, and the life-changing message of Jesus. I was raised in it. I taught it. I built systems and schools to pass it along. But something happened along the way. It wasn’t rebellion. It wasn’t deconstruction. It was more like an expansion—a slow unfolding of something truer, more mysterious, and perhaps even more faithful than what I once believed.

For years I’d hear the phrase “walk by faith, not by sight,” and nod. It was a verse I’d quoted hundreds of times. But then I started wondering—what does that really mean? Isn’t that the very heart of philosophical idealism? That what we see isn’t the ultimate reality? That mind, or spirit, or consciousness—whatever language we choose—is more foundational than the physical world? As strange as it sounds, the teachings of Jesus and the writings of Paul began to feel more real, not less, when I allowed that possibility.

Take Paul’s words in 2 Corinthians 4:18: “We fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen. For what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal.” That sounds like idealism to me. That sounds like a man who’s realized that what we perceive as solid and lasting is actually the fleeting part of existence—and that the invisible, the spiritual, the inner life is where eternity actually dwells. Isn’t that what Jesus meant when he said “the Kingdom of God is within you”?

If you’re an evangelical Christian reading this, I want you to know this isn’t an attempt to pull the rug out from under your faith. I’m not asking you to abandon Jesus or reject the authority of scripture. I’m simply asking you to go deeper. To consider that maybe—just maybe—there’s more than we’ve been taught to see. Maybe the spiritual worldview that the Bible gestures toward is bigger than the systems of theology we’ve inherited.

That’s where quantum mechanics started to blow open the door for me. I’m no physicist, but I don’t have to be to be in awe. Quantum physics teaches that particles behave differently when they’re observed. That what we think of as solid matter is mostly empty space. That what we call "real" is often nothing more than probabilities collapsing into form through interaction with consciousness. If that doesn’t sound like something Jesus would say, I don’t know what does. “As you believe, so it is done unto you.” “According to your faith, be it unto you.” Those weren’t just spiritual affirmations. They were invitations to awaken to our role in shaping the world through awareness, trust, and divine connection.

Some might say, “Sure, but you’re just reading science into scripture.” And maybe I am. But what if the Bible was always pointing to something deeper? What if the truths we call spiritual are truths because they align with the structure of reality itself—whether revealed through mysticism, philosophy, or even science?

That brings me to something I never thought I’d say in public: I’ve found wisdom in the Gospel of Truth. Yes, the one the early church didn’t include in the canon. The one labeled Gnostic. But if you can read it without fear, you’ll find something hauntingly beautiful. It doesn’t deny Jesus—it illuminates him. It doesn’t reject the cross—it reframes it. It suggests that our deepest problem isn’t guilt, but forgetfulness. That we’ve forgotten who we are, and Jesus came to help us remember. Isn’t that what Paul meant when he said, “You have the mind of Christ”? Isn’t that what the Father in the prodigal son story was doing—welcoming someone home who had forgotten his place, not condemning him for his mistakes?

You might be wondering how this all fits together. Idealism. Quantum physics. Non-canonical gospels. Evangelical faith. How can these coexist? For me, the answer is simple: because God is bigger than our categories. The Spirit of Truth didn’t stop moving in the first century. Revelation didn’t end with the last page of the Bible. We are still learning. Still discovering. And every discovery that leads us deeper into love, wonder, connection, and humility—I believe that’s from God.

The world is aching for something more than rigid dogma and surface answers. People are leaving churches, not because they hate God, but because they can no longer pretend that mystery doesn’t matter. We are waking up to the reality that the universe is not just a machine made of dead matter, but a living, pulsing field of consciousness in which we move, breathe, and have our being. That’s not New Age fluff. That’s Acts 17.

When I look back on everything I’ve taught, everything I’ve believed, and everything I’m still discovering, I don’t feel like I’ve lost my faith. I feel like I’ve outgrown the shell of it. What I carry now is something more resilient, more imaginative, more reverent. It’s a faith that lets Jesus be more than just a historical figure or a theological necessity. He becomes what the Gospel of Truth calls him—a remembrance. A revealer of what has always been true: that we come from God, and to God we return, and that the Christ within us is the light of recognition that shines through the illusion.

I know this isn’t the kind of thing that fits neatly into a doctrinal statement. And I’m okay with that. Maybe the new wineskin we need isn’t a revised systematic theology, but a deeper willingness to say: I don’t know, but I trust. I don’t see clearly, but I’m willing to look. I haven’t abandoned the Bible—I’ve just let it breathe.

If this resonates with you, even a little, then I invite you to lean in. Ask the questions you were once afraid to ask. Read what you were told not to read. Wonder about the things you were told to dismiss. Not to destroy your faith, but to let it bloom. There’s a bigger picture, a deeper song, a greater light—and it’s been shining all along.

 

Monday, April 21, 2025

“Reimagining "the Way:" John 14:6 in a World of 8 Billion Souls”

In a world of more than 8.2 billion people, the stark reality that just under 500 million identify as evangelical Christians—many of whom interpret John 14:6 in an exclusive and absolute sense—presents a theological and existential tension that can no longer be ignored. If this verse is to be understood as stating unequivocally that no one can come to the Father except through an explicit belief in the historical Jesus of Nazareth, then we are left with a divine plan that has chosen to allow the vast majority of humanity to be born into religious traditions and cultural settings where that belief is unlikely, if not impossible. Such an understanding turns the path to God into a gated road accessible only to a small, theologically correct minority. This conclusion raises serious questions not only about justice and mercy but about the very character of God.

The verse in question, John 14:6, has been the cornerstone of evangelical doctrine: “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.” For many evangelicals, this is the final word. Jesus is the sole path, the only truth, the exclusive channel through which salvation flows. But with fewer than half a billion people embracing that exact reading—and over 7.7 billion others living outside of it—it becomes incumbent upon those who uphold this verse to reconsider what it truly means. Not to water it down or reject it, but to open its depths, to listen to it again with ears attuned to the broader rhythms of God’s Spirit moving across cultures, religions, and hearts.

When we look across other religious traditions, we find that the yearning for divine intimacy, the instinct to see God as Parent, Guide, or Loving Source, is not the possession of Christianity alone. In Judaism, God is a father to Israel—not in a biological sense, but as covenantal protector and guide. In Islam, though God is never called “Father” to avoid anthropomorphism, Allah’s names of mercy and compassion echo the tender care of a parent, with the root word for mercy—rahm—being the same as that for womb. In Hinduism, the divine appears both as Father and as Mother, protector and nurturer, allowing worshippers to relate to the Absolute in deeply familial ways. Sikhism openly refers to God as both father and mother. Indigenous spiritualities throughout the world speak of Father Sky and Mother Earth, viewing creation as the loving expression of divine source. Even in non-theistic traditions like Buddhism, the bodhisattva ideal mirrors divine parenthood—a cosmic compassion that embraces and waits patiently for all beings to awaken. If the divine is revealing itself as parental love in countless ways across the planet, then the Christian must ask: Could John 14:6 be pointing not to exclusion, but to the universal path of divine encounter embodied in Jesus' life?

One way to reframe the verse is through the lens of inclusion. Perhaps Jesus was not claiming to be the only door, but rather identifying the nature of the door itself. The way he walked, the truth he revealed, the life he lived—self-emptying love, radical forgiveness, deep communion with God—these are not things that belong to one culture or time period. They are the shape of divine life made visible. In this sense, when Jesus says "no one comes to the Father except through me," he may be saying that no one comes into conscious union with the Source except through the kind of path he walked, the kind of truth he embodied, the kind of life he revealed. Whether one is Hindu, Muslim, Buddhist, agnostic, or Christian, if one walks in humility, truth, compassion, and love, they are walking in the way of Christ—even if they do not use his name.

Another interpretive possibility sees Jesus not merely as a man pointing to truth, but as the embodiment of the eternal Logos—the divine Word through whom all things were made, as John’s Gospel opens in chapter one. The Logos is present in all cultures, all times, all hearts. It is the light that enlightens every person coming into the world. Seen this way, John 14:6 becomes a cosmic statement: all true approaches to God are mediated through the divine Logos, whether or not that mediation is named or known as "Jesus." The man Jesus becomes the incarnation of something vast and timeless, something already at work in every sincere seeker, in every act of compassion, in every longing for truth. The verse does not deny the validity of other paths; it reveals the underlying unity of them all.

Mystics have long seen in John 14:6 not a doctrinal boundary, but a mystical affirmation. When Jesus says “I am the way,” he is not making an egotistical claim. He is identifying with the “I AM” presence—divine being itself. He is saying, in essence, “the way to the Father is through the realization of the I AM that I embody, and that you too can awaken to.” The truth he speaks is not a creed to believe but a state of consciousness to awaken into. The life he lives is not one that ends in crucifixion but one that bursts forth in resurrection and is offered to all. To come to the Father, one must come through this deep, interior realization—the same realization the Christ had. It’s not about clinging to his name, but about awakening to his nature.

It is also helpful to recognize the historical and literary context of the Gospel of John. Written at a time of theological tension, perhaps even rivalry between early Christian communities and other Jewish sects, the Gospel presents a high Christology that may reflect the beliefs of John’s community more than a direct quote from the historical Jesus. Understanding this helps us avoid weaponizing John 14:6 as a doctrinal litmus test. Instead, we can read it as the poetic and theological expression of a faith community discovering that in the person of Jesus, they had encountered a living embodiment of divine truth and love.

What then are we to do with this verse, standing as it does in the middle of a pluralistic and suffering world? We must begin by recognizing that insisting on an exclusive reading of John 14:6 is not only theologically limiting—it is spiritually harmful. It erects walls where there should be bridges. It creates insiders and outsiders, chosen and damned, in a universe that, if truly ruled by Love, must transcend such tribal lines. If nearly 500 million people believe that all others are shut out unless they join their particular theological club, the result is not greater holiness—it is greater division, and perhaps, greater blindness to the mystery of God working in all people.

John 14:6, far from being a closing of the door, may be a profound invitation. An invitation to see Christ not as a barrier but as a pattern, a presence, a path that appears in many forms, speaks many languages, and wears many faces. It may be that the only way to the Father is through the life of Christ—but that life can blossom wherever there is love, wherever truth is honored, wherever compassion reigns. And so, in this light, it is not the billions outside of evangelical Christianity who must change course. It is the evangelicals who must deepen their understanding—who must look again and listen closer, not to convert the world to their view, but to allow the Spirit to convert their view to embrace the world.

That, perhaps, is the heart of the matter. When we step back and consider the vastness of humanity—over 8 billion souls, most of whom live and die outside of evangelical Christianity—it becomes increasingly difficult to insist that “God is love” while simultaneously holding to an exclusive interpretation of John 14:6. If divine love is truly unconditional, it cannot be constrained by religious identity, linguistic accident, or historical circumstance. To say that God’s love is real while also asserting that only those within a particular theological framework receive its benefits is to speak in contradictions. Love, by its nature, must be generous, boundless, and universal—or it is not love at all.

If God’s essence is love, then that love must be as vast as creation itself, flowing through every culture, every sincere heart, every longing soul. It cannot be reserved for those fortunate enough to have been born in the right part of the world or introduced to the right doctrine. And so, the exclusive interpretation of John 14:6 begins to collapse under the weight of the very claim it seeks to uphold. It does not magnify God’s love—it diminishes it, makes it small and tribal, conditional and capricious. But if, instead, we see in Jesus not a boundary but a window—an embodiment of divine truth that resonates across all spiritual paths—then the verse opens wide. It becomes not a declaration of exclusion, but an invitation to walk in the way of divine love, truth, and life. And only then does it harmonize with the deeper truth Christians proclaim: that God is love, and that love is for all.


Saturday, April 19, 2025

Ages to Come and the End of the Age

When Peter stood up at Pentecost and quoted the prophet Joel, declaring, “In the last days, I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh,” he was not merely echoing an ancient prophecy. He was naming a seismic shift in the spiritual and cosmic order. Those listening to him may have thought he was referring to the imminent end of the world, but Peter, steeped in Jewish apocalyptic expectation and shaped by the presence of the risen Christ, was bearing witness to something much deeper. He was standing at the end of one age and the dawn of another—the closing moments of the Age of Aries and the birth pangs of the Age of Pisces. Just as the early followers of Jesus were awakening to a new consciousness and entering into a new spiritual reality, many today, particularly among evangelicals, are waking up to another great transition: the slow but steady waning of the Piscean Age and the faint but rising light of a new era.

Paul would later write of these realities with the language of “this present evil age” and “the age to come.” He spoke of the “end of the age” and of “ages to come,” not with a precise calendar in mind, but with a sense of being caught in the middle of a great spiritual unfolding. For him, the old age—bound by law, death, and separation from God—was passing away. A new age, defined by grace, Spirit, and union with the divine, had been inaugurated in Christ. Paul’s cosmos was layered with meaning; the material world was not merely physical but charged with spiritual forces. He saw the crucifixion and resurrection not just as historical events but as the turning point of the cosmos. In Christ, the axis of the ages had shifted. Those who believed were not just adherents of a new religion—they were citizens of a new age.

The term “aion” in the Greek—used by Paul and others—carries this dual meaning of time and world-system. It suggests both the duration of an epoch and the spiritual atmosphere that defines it. When Paul speaks of the “present evil aion,” he isn’t merely referring to bad politics or hard times, but to a spiritual condition under the influence of powers that resist divine transformation. Likewise, his vision of the “ages to come” is not a simplistic heaven-after-death narrative but a vision of ongoing unfolding realities, deeper dimensions of grace, and expanding awareness of the divine.

Now, two thousand years later, we find ourselves again in a liminal space—standing at the threshold of the end of an age. The Age of Pisces, which began around the time of Jesus, is slowly giving way to a new epoch. Many modern astrologers and esoteric thinkers associate the Age of Pisces with themes of faith, sacrifice, martyrdom, and spiritual devotion. It was an age that birthed Christianity, monastic mysticism, institutional religion, and collective faith structures. But its shadow side has also become increasingly visible: hierarchical systems, dogmatic rigidity, and a fixation on vicarious redemption. Evangelicals in particular are beginning to sense that something is amiss. The old certainties no longer comfort; the inherited doctrines no longer breathe life. There is a stirring, a hunger, and for some, a crisis.

And yet, just as Peter’s proclamation of the “last days” was not the end of time but the end of an age, so too might this moment we’re living in be understood. What we are seeing among many today is not merely deconstruction or rebellion—it is awakening. Just as the Spirit was poured out at Pentecost and people spoke in new tongues, so too are people today speaking new spiritual languages—languages of consciousness, of unity, of inner knowing. Many evangelicals, long trained to distrust their intuition and submit to external authority, are now learning to trust the indwelling Christ, the inner witness of the Spirit. They are rediscovering what Paul meant when he spoke of being “crucified with Christ, and yet I live—not I, but Christ lives in me.” They are realizing that faith is not so much belief in dogma, but participation in divine life.

This awakening is not happening outside of time; it is deeply rooted in it. Just as the Age of Aries was symbolized by the ram—linked to sacrifice, courage, and law—and gave way to Pisces, symbolized by the fish—linked to faith, compassion, and mysticism—so too is a new symbol on the horizon. The old forms are breaking down, not because truth has failed, but because truth is transforming. What we thought was the gospel was often a dim shadow of the deeper mystery—that Christ came not to rescue us from an angry God but to awaken us to our shared divine origin, to restore our memory of who we are.

In this way, Peter’s words echo through time. They were true then, and they may be true again: these are the last days—not the end of the world, but the end of an age. And just as the Spirit was poured out before, so it is being poured out again. Not confined to temples or denominations, but rising in yoga studios, in meditation circles, in late-night questions about existence, in whispered prayers and silent realizations. Something holy is stirring. The last days of Pisces are not a time for fear but for awakening. The Spirit has not left; it is brooding once more over the deep, preparing to birth something beautiful again.


Friday, April 18, 2025

My Easter Reflection

I recently watched a replay of a live session on Facebook that stirred something deep within me—something sacred, clarifying, and affirming of what I’ve long sensed to be my purpose on this earth. I’ve been on a journey, not of returning to the church as it stands, but of reaching those still within it who are suffocating beneath the weight of evangelicalism’s contradictions. I speak not as an outsider looking in, but as one who has walked that path, seen both the beauty and the brokenness, and now feels compelled to offer an alternative—a way forward for those who still feel tethered to the old framework but are awakening to something truer, gentler, and more whole.

First, let me state this plainly: I do not believe in penal substitutionary atonement. I never have. I don’t believe in hell as eternal conscious torment, and I certainly don’t believe that anyone needs to be “saved” in the way evangelicalism has defined it. As my friend Aaron often says—and I deeply agree—we are all safe. Whatever God is, whatever Jesus revealed, it is not fear-based. It is not built on appeasing wrath or earning worth.

Still, not everyone is at the same place in their journey. Some no longer need the symbolism of the cross. Some, like myself, have moved beyond it in many ways. But there are still many, especially those wounded by a toxic version of Christianity, who need a language of redemption—one not rooted in fear and shame, but in healing and reorientation. These are the people I’ve always felt called to serve.

Back in 2010, I felt the pull to help evangelicals break free from a double-minded gospel—a gospel that said “grace” but demanded performance. One of the most vital truths I was given to share is that justification before God does not come from our faith in Jesus, but from Jesus’ faithfulness. Romans 3:22 speaks to this when properly translated from the Greek: “the righteousness of God through the faith of Jesus Christ unto all, and upon all them that believe.” It is his faith, not ours, that accomplished what needed to be done—for those who need it. And that’s key. Not everyone does. But some do, and they deserve a liberating alternative to the twisted gospel they were fed.

Paul echoes this again in Galatians 2:16: “knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ.” And later in verse 20: “I live by the faith of the Son of God.” This is not about belief in a transaction. It’s about entering into a way of being that Jesus already embodied. For those traumatized by sin-consciousness and guilt, this reframing is not only helpful—it’s essential.

The traditional gospel taught many that we are broken and must believe rightly to be fixed. But what if the real message was that we were never separated in the first place? What if the cross wasn’t a payment, but a symbol? What if Christus Victor is the true lens—that Jesus overcame the fear of death, the powers of this age, and the systems of oppression that enslave the mind and soul? For those who need redemption—not from God’s wrath, but from trauma, addiction, shame, and despair—the cross can still hold meaning. Not as punishment, but as liberation. A sign that good overcomes evil, and that death—literal or symbolic—is not the end.

Perhaps that’s why the crucifix holds power in exorcisms—not because demons fear torture, but because they fear light, love, and the reclaiming of human dignity. Perhaps the resurrection’s deeper message is that nothing true, nothing beautiful, is ever truly lost. That even in our darkest night, there is a dawn not far behind.

Galatians 3:21–22 asks a question many evangelicals overlook: “Is the law then against the promises of God? God forbid… But the scripture hath concluded all under sin, that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe.” But here’s what I see: the faithfulness of Christ wasn’t reserved only for those who believe—it was extended to all. His act of love, trust, and divine awareness wasn’t dependent on our response; it was a gift to humanity in its entirety. For those who feel fallen, his faith becomes the ladder back to self-worth. But even those who never climb it were never excluded. His faith was a cosmic declaration of unity, not a conditional transaction. The gift is given whether it's received or not. That’s the kind of love that changes everything.

So no, I am not going back to church. But I am going forward into ministry—my own way. Not to deconstruct everything for everyone, but to minister to those still inside the walls of evangelicalism who feel trapped and afraid. They may not be ready to toss out the cross or abandon the Bible. But they are ready for something healthier, more coherent, more kind. And if I can help deliver that—even a little—then I am fulfilling my mission. Not to convince the whole world, but to offer peace to those who still think they need it.


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