Saturday, July 4, 2026

One Reality Many Names: The Nature of the Real Divine Trinity


I have become increasingly convinced that the most profound question we can ask is not whether God exists, but what we actually mean by the word "God." For centuries humanity has argued over names, doctrines, creeds, rituals, and institutions while often overlooking the possibility that all of these are imperfect attempts to describe a reality that ultimately transcends language itself. I have come to love the concept of foundational consciousness because it seems to provide a common thread woven through nearly every enduring spiritual and philosophical tradition. It is not a doctrine to be defended so much as a mystery to be contemplated. It has been called God by the Abrahamic faiths, the Tao by Lao Tzu, Brahman by the Hindu sages, The All by the Hermetic philosophers, the Monad by the Gnostics, and countless other names by cultures separated by oceans and centuries. The labels differ, but I suspect they are all pointing toward the same ineffable reality—the ground of all being, the source from which everything emerges and to which everything ultimately belongs.

The remarkable thing is that this intuition is not confined to one civilization. Across history there have appeared extraordinary men and women who seemed less interested in creating exclusive religions than in awakening humanity to a forgotten truth. Yeshua invited people to discover the Kingdom of God within. Buddha pointed beyond attachment and illusion toward direct realization. Lao Tzu encouraged effortless harmony with the Tao. Zarathustra called humanity to align itself with truth and light. Hermes spoke of the unity of the cosmos and the correspondence between the seen and unseen. Their languages, symbols, and cultures were different, yet I hear a common invitation beneath them all: Wake up. Remember who you are. You are more than your body, more than your ego, more than the stories you have inherited. Beneath all of those temporary identities lies a participation in something immeasurably greater than yourself.

For me, that greater reality is not an old man sitting on a throne somewhere beyond the clouds. It is foundational consciousness itself—the infinite awareness from which existence arises. If consciousness is primary rather than matter, then everything changes. The universe is no longer an accidental collection of lifeless particles somehow producing awareness as a fortunate byproduct. Instead, consciousness is the source, and matter is one of its expressions. Reality becomes fundamentally mental, spiritual, or conscious rather than merely physical. This is why philosophical idealism resonates so deeply with me. It offers a framework capable of embracing both scientific discovery and authentic spiritual experience without reducing one to the other.

Within this foundational consciousness I see what the Gospel of John calls the Logos. Too often the Logos has been reduced to a theological label applied exclusively to Jesus. While I certainly believe Yeshua uniquely embodied the Logos, I do not believe he exhausted it. The Logos is the eternal creative intelligence through which reality unfolds. It is the bridge between the unmanifest and the manifest, the invisible becoming visible, the One expressing itself as the many. The ancient alchemists searched for the process by which base metals might become gold. I believe the deeper alchemy has always been spiritual rather than chemical. The Logos is the divine principle of transformation itself. It is the intelligence through which consciousness becomes cosmos and through which human beings awaken from ignorance into wisdom.

If the Logos is the creative principle, then the divine spark is the created participation in that principle. I believe every human being carries this spark, whether recognized or not. In fact, I suspect it extends beyond humanity altogether. The entire material universe participates in foundational consciousness to varying degrees. Every atom, every mountain, every river, every tree, every animal, every planet, and every galaxy exists because it shares in that original reality. The spark is not identical in expression everywhere, but it is universal in origin. This is why I find it difficult to embrace a worldview that sees nature as merely mechanical or dead. A universe born from consciousness bears the imprint of consciousness throughout its entirety.

That naturally leads me to what I have come to think of as the ultimate divine trinity: panentheism, pantheism, and animism. I do not see these as competing philosophies but as complementary perspectives that illuminate different dimensions of the same mystery. Panentheism reminds us that everything exists within God while affirming that God infinitely transcends the universe. The cosmos is immersed in the Divine, yet the Divine is never limited by the cosmos. Pantheism reminds us that the presence of God permeates every aspect of existence. Nothing is ultimately outside the sacred because all things arise within the same foundational consciousness. Animism reminds us that creation is alive with presence, meaning, and participation rather than consisting of lifeless objects moving through empty space. Each perspective contributes something essential, and together they paint a richer picture than any one of them can alone.

This understanding also changes how I see humanity's purpose. Salvation, in my view, is not primarily about escaping the earth or securing admission into another world after death. It is about awakening here and now. It is remembering what has always been true beneath our forgetfulness. The ancient Gnostics spoke of gnosis. Eastern traditions speak of enlightenment. Christian mystics speak of union with God. Hermetic philosophy speaks of knowing oneself in order to know the All. Different words, same direction. The journey is not from worthlessness to worthiness but from unconsciousness to conscious participation in reality itself.

Perhaps this is why the greatest spiritual teachers so often spoke in paradox. The kingdom is within you, yet it surrounds you. Lose your life to find it. Die before you die. The first shall be last. The Tao that can be spoken is not the eternal Tao. Reality itself is paradoxical because foundational consciousness is simultaneously One and many. Unity is the essence; diversity is its expression. Nonduality and duality are not enemies but partners in an eternal dance. The One becomes the many without ceasing to be One, and the many forever remain rooted in the One from which they arise.

I do not claim certainty about these things. They are not dogmas that I seek to impose upon anyone else. They are the conclusions I have reached after decades of exploring Christianity, Gnosticism, Hermeticism, Hindu philosophy, Buddhism, Taoism, modern idealism, and the growing study of consciousness itself. Each tradition has contributed a piece of the puzzle. None possesses the entire picture. Together, however, they point toward a vision of reality that is more beautiful, more coherent, and more expansive than the fragmented worldview I once inherited.

In the end, I believe the universe is not an accident but an expression of consciousness. The Logos continues to create. The divine spark continues to awaken. Every authentic act of love, compassion, creativity, wisdom, and wonder is another glimpse of foundational consciousness recognizing itself through us. Perhaps that has been the message all along. We have never truly been separated from the Source. We have only forgotten. And every genuine spiritual tradition, at its highest expression, exists not to create followers, but to awaken sleepers.

 

Thursday, July 2, 2026

Historicity of Hermetics: Evidence, Intuition, and the Search for Truth

For much


For most of my life I have valued history. I appreciate careful scholarship, original languages, archaeology, textual criticism, and the painstaking work of historians. We owe a great debt to those who have dedicated their lives to separating fact from fiction. Their work has corrected many long-held assumptions and has helped us understand the historical context of ancient texts in ways previous generations could not. I have no desire to dismiss scholarship or to pretend that evidence does not matter. It does. But I have increasingly come to believe that history is only one way of approaching truth, especially when we venture into the realm of spirituality. There is another faculty that human beings possess which, while often dismissed by modern academia, has guided sages, mystics, prophets, and philosophers throughout history. That faculty is intuition. In my own journey, I have come to trust intuitive resonance as much as, and often more than, historical reconstruction.

The reason is simple. Historical inquiry can only evaluate what is accessible through historical methods. It can examine manuscripts, compare texts, analyze vocabulary, date documents, and excavate ruins. Those are invaluable tools. Yet history cannot measure transcendence. It cannot place mystical experience under a microscope. It cannot determine whether a person genuinely encountered the Divine or merely believed they did. The historian, by necessity, brackets out the supernatural because it lies outside the discipline's methods. That is not a criticism of historians; it is simply a recognition of the limits of historical inquiry. But if history has limits, then we should not expect it to answer questions that extend beyond those limits.

This becomes evident when we examine many of the great spiritual figures of history. Jesus, Pythagoras, Hermes Trismegistus, Laozi, Moses, and countless others all stand beneath the shadow of historical uncertainty. Modern scholarship frequently questions the traditional accounts surrounding them. Miracles become legends. Divine encounters become literary embellishments. Ancient wisdom becomes later invention. The more extraordinary the claim, the greater the skepticism. Sometimes that skepticism is entirely justified. Sometimes it protects us from gullibility. Yet it also raises an important question. If every spiritual tradition is filtered through a methodology that cannot affirm spiritual experience, should we be surprised when the conclusions consistently minimize or reinterpret the mystical?

The discussion surrounding The Kybalion illustrates this perfectly. Many critics dismiss it as nothing more than another New Thought book written by William Walker Atkinson and packaged as "Hermetic" to increase sales. There is certainly evidence that Atkinson was deeply influenced by New Thought. There is also compelling evidence that he was probably the principal author. Those are reasonable historical conclusions. But the leap from authorship to motive is another matter entirely. To claim that he merely adopted the Hermetic label as a marketing strategy is speculation unless evidence can be produced to support that assertion. We know he was a prolific writer who published dozens of books under multiple pseudonyms. We know he earned his living through writing and publishing. What we do not know is what genuinely motivated him when he wrote The Kybalion. History can tell us many things, but it cannot read a man's heart.

Ironically, history itself teaches us humility. Scholars have often revised their conclusions in light of new discoveries. Isaac Casaubon famously argued that the Corpus Hermeticum was not an ancient Egyptian revelation but a product of the early centuries of the Common Era. In many respects he was correct. Yet subsequent discoveries, particularly the Nag Hammadi library, painted a much richer and more complex picture of the spiritual world from which the Hermetic writings emerged. The point is not that scholarship is unreliable. Quite the opposite. Good scholarship continually corrects itself. That should remind us to hold our conclusions with a measure of humility rather than certainty.

There are also instances where popular assumptions obscure the deeper reality. Many people assume that the famous phrase "As above, so below" appears in the Corpus Hermeticum. It does not. It comes from the Emerald Tablet. Yet the principle itself permeates the Hermetic writings. The exact words may be absent, but the underlying idea of correspondence between the divine, the cosmos, and humanity is woven throughout the Hermetic tradition. Sometimes truth is found not merely in isolated quotations but in the pattern that emerges from the whole.

This is where intuition enters the conversation. By intuition, I do not mean emotional preference or wishful thinking. I mean that deep inner recognition that something rings true before one can fully explain why. It is the resonance that has guided philosophers toward discovery, scientists toward hypotheses, artists toward masterpieces, and mystics toward God. Intuition is not the enemy of reason. Rather, reason often follows where intuition first points. Nearly every great intellectual breakthrough began as an insight that could not yet be fully demonstrated.

Throughout history, humanity has recognized this faculty. Plato spoke of recollection. The Hermetists spoke of gnosis. Christians spoke of the witness of the Spirit. Quakers referred to the Inner Light. The Taoists trusted effortless alignment with the Tao. Across cultures and centuries, there has been a remarkable consistency in the belief that truth is not merely accumulated through external evidence but awakened from within. Modern culture has largely forgotten this, placing almost exclusive confidence in analytical reasoning while relegating intuition to the realm of subjectivity. I believe that is an impoverished view of human knowing.

When I read the Corpus Hermeticum, the Kybalion, the teachings of Jesus, the Gospel of Thomas, the Tao Te Ching, or the writings of the Christian mystics, I am certainly interested in what historians have to say. Their insights enrich my understanding. But I also ask another question: Does this resonate with the deepest intuition of reality? Does it illuminate rather than obscure? Does it bring coherence where there was fragmentation? Does it awaken something that feels timeless rather than merely fashionable? These are not historical questions. They are existential ones.

This does not mean intuition is infallible. It must be tempered by reason, humility, dialogue, and experience. It should never become an excuse for believing whatever we wish to believe. But neither should historical scholarship become the sole arbiter of spiritual truth. History can tell us when a text was probably written. It cannot tell us whether the wisdom contained within it is true. It can estimate who likely wrote a book. It cannot determine whether that book carries genuine spiritual insight. Those are different kinds of questions requiring different kinds of knowing.

Ultimately, I have come to believe that the deepest truths are recognized rather than merely proven. Historical evidence is invaluable because it grounds us in reality. Intuitive resonance is indispensable because it opens us to realities that history alone cannot measure. If forced to choose between the two, I would choose intuition—not because I reject evidence, but because I believe consciousness itself is the primary instrument through which truth is encountered. History informs the mind. Intuition awakens the soul. And when the two converge, we stand on the threshold of wisdom.

 

Sunday, June 28, 2026

The Kybalion and the Timeless Voice of the Logos


One of the questions that has occupied my mind for quite some time is the relationship between The Kybalion and the Corpus Hermeticum. I have now read two different translations of the Corpus Hermeticum, along with Freke and Gandy's The Hermetica, and I have compared them with The Kybalion more than once. I understand why historians and scholars generally conclude that The Kybalion is a twentieth-century work deeply influenced by New Thought rather than an authentic document from the ancient Hermetic tradition. The evidence points strongly in that direction, and I have no problem acknowledging it.

I also recognize that the mysterious "Three Initiates" were almost certainly not ancient sages passing down a secret manuscript from antiquity. Whether the book was written primarily by William Walker Atkinson, or whether Paul Foster Case and Michael Whitty played some role, really isn't the question that interests me most. The historical questions are fascinating, but they are secondary to a deeper question that I believe deserves to be asked. What if the issue is not which book is older, but which book more clearly expresses enduring truth?

We often assume that the oldest source must necessarily be the purest source, but history simply doesn't support that assumption. Every generation interprets what it has received. Every culture expresses timeless ideas in the language of its own age. Even the Corpus Hermeticum itself was written centuries after the man we know as Hermes Trismegistus was supposed to have lived. Those writings are already interpretations of something older. They are already a conversation between Greek philosophy, Egyptian spirituality, and the religious climate of Roman Egypt. They are precious, but they are not necessarily the final word.

That realization frees me to ask another question. Could The Kybalion be a reinterpretation that, in some respects, actually captures the essence of Hermetic thought more clearly for the modern world? I believe that is at least possible. I don't claim to know that it is true, but I believe it deserves consideration rather than immediate dismissal.

My own cosmology has gradually developed into a vision in which the All is infinite potential, the Logos is the creative ordering principle, and the material universe is the beautiful expression of that Divine creativity rather than a prison to be escaped. Consciousness is evolving through experience, and the eternal seeks to know itself through finite expression. When I read The Kybalion, its teachings on Mentalism, Correspondence, Polarity, Rhythm, Cause and Effect, and Vibration fit naturally within that framework. They do not feel forced. They feel like principles that describe the architecture of reality itself. They resonate with the words of Jesus, with the Prologue of John's Gospel, with Paul's mystical insights, with Taoism, and even with modern explorations of consciousness. That resonance is meaningful to me.

Now, I fully realize that resonance is not proof. It never has been. But neither is historical priority proof of complete accuracy. If there really was an advanced prehistoric civilization, whether we call it Atlantis or something else, if humanity experienced a dramatic regression following the Younger Dryas, and if fragments of ancient wisdom survived through oral traditions and initiatory schools, then it is conceivable that flashes of that primordial wisdom continue to emerge throughout history. I am not claiming that this happened. I am simply saying that it is philosophically plausible.

More importantly, I believe the Logos is not silent. If the Divine continues to indwell humanity, if inspiration did not cease two thousand years ago, then why should we assume that profound insight cannot emerge in the twentieth century just as it emerged in the first or second? Christianity itself teaches that the Spirit continues to guide into all truth. Why should that principle be confined to one tradition or one era?

Throughout history, revelation has often been progressive. The New Testament reinterprets the Old Testament. Mystics have continually deepened the understanding of the traditions they inherited. Scientific knowledge has unfolded through centuries of discovery. Why should spiritual understanding be any different? Perhaps every age receives the wisdom it is prepared to understand and express.

For me, this is not about replacing the Corpus Hermeticum with The Kybalion. It is about recognizing that truth may continue to unfold as human consciousness unfolds. The older texts remain invaluable because they preserve voices from another age. The newer texts may become valuable because they translate perennial wisdom into concepts that resonate with contemporary minds. That is exactly what I have been trying to do in my own journey.

I am not interested in preserving Christianity as a museum piece. I am interested in rediscovering its living heart. I am not trying to recreate first-century religion in every detail. I am trying to uncover the eternal Logos that breathed life into it and continues to breathe life into humanity today.

Whether I am reading the Gospels, the Nag Hammadi writings, the Corpus Hermeticum, The Kybalion, Taoist texts, or modern consciousness research, I find myself asking the same question over and over again: What is the enduring pattern beneath the different languages? What is the living current that runs through them all? That, to me, is the true Hermetic quest. It is not about defending one book over another or proving one tradition superior. It is about recognizing correspondence wherever it appears and allowing truth to speak through every authentic voice.

In that sense, I see The Kybalion not as an ancient document pretending to be old, but as a sincere attempt to restate timeless principles for a new generation. Whether history ultimately judges it as New Thought, Hermeticism, or something in between matters less to me than whether it points us toward the Logos, awakens us to the unity beneath diversity, and helps us participate more consciously in the unfolding mystery of the Divine.

Friday, June 26, 2026

The Universal Fruit of the Spirit


For much of my life I was taught that the gifts of the Spirit were proof that a person belonged to the "right" church or held the "right" theology. Depending on who was doing the teaching, that meant speaking in tongues, prophecy, healing, words of knowledge, or some other supernatural manifestation. Every tribe seemed to have its own list of qualifications and its own explanation for why everyone else was mistaken. Looking back, I realize that the conversation was rarely about the Spirit itself. It was about tribal identity. We wanted the gifts to validate our beliefs instead of allowing the gifts to point us toward the God who gives them.

My own journey has made that way of thinking impossible for me to maintain. I have lived as an evangelical Christian. I have lived as a Mormon. I have explored New Age spirituality. Through each of those seasons, I encountered experiences that I can only describe as genuine manifestations of the gifts of the Spirit. I witnessed healing. I experienced words of knowledge. I saw prophecy. Those experiences did not suddenly disappear because I crossed the boundaries of one religious system into another. If the gifts were supposed to belong exclusively to one denomination or one theological framework, then my own life became a living contradiction to that claim.

That forced me to ask a different question. Instead of asking, "Which religion owns the Spirit?" I began asking, "What is the source of these experiences?" My conclusion has gradually become that the source is not a particular church, denomination, or religion. The source is the indwelling Logos, the divine presence that enlightens every person who comes into the world. The Logos is God's living presence within humanity. Religions interpret that reality differently, but none of them owns it. Christianity does not own the Logos. Mormonism does not own the Logos. The New Age movement does not own the Logos. The Logos belongs to God alone and is available to every human being.

This understanding has also changed how I evaluate spiritual experiences. I no longer believe that gifts alone prove anything. A person can claim visions, miracles, prophecies, or supernatural power and still completely miss the heart of God. Jesus himself warned about this. On one occasion, when his disciples wanted to call down fire from heaven on those who rejected him, he rebuked them by saying that they did not know what spirit they were of. They were thinking in terms of power, judgment, and victory. Jesus redirected them toward mercy, compassion, and love. That moment has become one of the lenses through which I now understand spirituality. Not every spiritual manifestation reflects the Spirit of Christ.

For me, the true evidence of the Holy Spirit is not found primarily in spectacular gifts but in the fruit of the Spirit. Love. Joy. Peace. Patience. Kindness. Goodness. Faithfulness. Gentleness. Self-control. Those qualities reveal the character of God far more reliably than any miracle ever could. If a person's spirituality consistently produces fear, arrogance, hatred, division, or superiority, then I have to question the spirit behind it, regardless of how impressive the supernatural claims may be. But wherever I find genuine love growing, wherever compassion deepens, wherever mercy triumphs over judgment, wherever humility replaces pride, I believe I am witnessing the work of the Spirit.

This conviction has also changed how I view other religions and spiritual traditions. History is filled with accounts of indigenous shamans who were regarded by their communities as healers, prophets, and people whose prayers affected nature itself. Mystics from many traditions have reported profound encounters with the divine. Contemplatives have experienced extraordinary insight. Spiritual leaders from cultures all over the world have demonstrated remarkable wisdom and compassion. I do not have to accept every claim or every doctrine to recognize that something genuine may be taking place. If their lives increasingly express love, peace, compassion, kindness, and self-giving service, then I see evidence of the divine Logos at work. The fruit matters more than the label.

This does not mean that every spiritual path is identical or that every belief is equally true. Ideas matter. Discernment matters. Jesus himself spoke of discerning spirits. But I think we have often used the wrong test. We have tested people by asking whether they belong to our denomination, affirm our creed, or interpret Scripture exactly as we do. Perhaps the better question is much simpler: What kind of fruit does this produce? Does it make people more loving? Does it make them more patient? Does it deepen compassion? Does it cultivate humility? Does it awaken a greater awareness of God's presence in themselves and in others? If it does, then I believe the divine Logos is present and active.

That realization has been deeply freeing for me. It has allowed me to appreciate truth wherever I find it without feeling threatened by it. It has allowed me to see brothers and sisters where I once saw only outsiders. It has allowed me to recognize that God has always been bigger than our theological systems. We have divided ourselves into countless tribes, each claiming to possess the fullness of truth, yet the Logos has never been confined by our boundaries. Like the wind Jesus spoke of, the Spirit blows where it wills. We may hear its sound, but we cannot control it or claim exclusive ownership of it.

Today I no longer ask, "What denomination are you?" or even, "What religion are you?" Those questions have become far less important to me. Instead, I ask, "What spirit is being revealed through your life?" If I encounter love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control, I recognize something familiar. I recognize the presence of the divine Logos. The gifts may differ. The rituals may differ. The doctrines may differ. The language may differ. But love is universal because the Logos is universal. Wherever divine love is expressed and bears good fruit, there God is present. That has never belonged to one tribe. It has always been the inheritance of humanity.

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Born Into Experience, Awakened Into Awareness: Reimagining Jesus and the New Birth


For most of my life, I read Jesus' conversation with Nicodemus through the lens that I inherited from Christianity. When Jesus said, "You must be born again," I assumed he was speaking primarily about conversion, salvation, or perhaps water baptism. Yet the older I get, and the more I reflect on the mystical and non-dual dimensions of spirituality, the more I find myself reimagining this passage in a very different way.

When Nicodemus approaches Jesus in John 3, he immediately interprets Jesus' words literally. "How can a man be born when he is old? Can he enter a second time into his mother's womb and be born?" That question has always fascinated me because it establishes the context of the entire conversation. Nicodemus is thinking about physical birth. He is thinking about the womb, the body, and the beginning of human life. Jesus responds by speaking of being born of water and Spirit. Traditionally, many Christians have understood the water to refer to baptism. I no longer find that interpretation convincing. In the flow of the conversation, water appears to be a reference to natural birth itself. Nicodemus is asking about being physically born again, and Jesus responds by distinguishing between two different kinds of birth: the birth into physical existence and the awakening into spiritual awareness.

This realization has caused me to rethink not only the passage but the relationship between flesh and spirit altogether. Much of Christian history has interpreted flesh and spirit as opposites. Flesh is often portrayed as lower, corrupt, fallen, or something to be overcome. Spirit is viewed as higher, pure, and closer to God. Yet I no longer see Jesus making that distinction. When he says, "That which is born of flesh is flesh, and that which is born of Spirit is spirit," I hear no condemnation of the flesh. I hear no suggestion that one is superior to the other. Instead, I hear a simple description of two dimensions of human existence.

The flesh is not bad. It is necessary. Without embodiment there is no experience. There is no relationship, no learning, no creativity, no struggle, no growth, no love. Flesh is the arena in which consciousness encounters existence. Spirit, on the other hand, is not an escape from flesh. Spirit is the dimension of awareness that allows us to recognize our relationship with the Divine. Flesh gives us experience. Spirit gives us understanding. Flesh allows us to participate in life. Spirit allows us to perceive the deeper meaning of that participation.

The more I contemplate this, the less interested I become in any theology that seeks to escape the material world. I do not believe Jesus was teaching a dualism between matter and spirit. Nor do I believe he was advocating a rejection of embodiment. From my perspective, flesh and spirit are not enemies. They are two poles of the same reality. They are as inseparable as the two sides of a coin. We can distinguish them conceptually, but they cannot be separated in actual experience. Spirit expresses itself through flesh, and flesh reveals spirit. The visible and the invisible, the material and the transcendent, are intertwined expressions of one sacred reality.

This understanding leads me toward a profoundly non-dual reading of the passage. The goal is not to move from flesh to spirit as though spirit were somehow higher. The goal is awakening. It is becoming conscious of the unity that has always existed. The new birth is not leaving the world behind. It is seeing the world differently. It is recognizing that what we call spirit and what we call matter are not two separate things but two aspects of a single divine process.

This perspective also transforms how I understand the purpose of incarnation itself. I do not believe the soul enters flesh because it has fallen from God. Nor do I believe the material world is a prison from which we must escape. Rather, I see embodiment as part of the great adventure of consciousness. The eternal soul, the divine spark within each of us, enters the realm of form for the sake of experience. Infinite consciousness explores its own infinite possibilities through finite lives.

In this view, every human life becomes a unique expression of divine exploration. Through embodiment we encounter joy and sorrow, success and failure, gain and loss, love and heartbreak. We experience limitation, and through limitation we discover possibilities that could never be known in abstraction alone. Experience becomes sacred because it is one of the ways the Infinite comes to know itself through the finite.

Spirit then becomes not an escape from experience but the awareness of what is experiencing. The new birth is the moment when we begin to recognize that we are more than our temporary identities. We are more than our bodies, our beliefs, our social roles, or our personal histories. Beneath all of those layers resides an eternal reality, a divine spark that has never been separate from God. To be born of Spirit is to awaken to that truth while still fully participating in the world of flesh and experience.

This is why I no longer view the Kingdom of God as a distant place or a future destination. The Kingdom is a transformed perception of reality. It is the realization that spirit and flesh, eternity and time, God and creation, are not locked in opposition. They are participating in a profound unity. The Kingdom emerges when we begin to perceive that unity consciously.

The image of the wind in Jesus' teaching becomes especially meaningful through this lens. The wind moves where it wills. We hear its sound but cannot trace its origin or destination. So it is with spiritual awakening. It cannot be manufactured, controlled, or institutionalized. It arrives as insight, as revelation, as a shift in consciousness. One day we find ourselves looking at the same world we have always inhabited, yet seeing it completely differently. The world has not changed. We have.

For me, the story of Nicodemus is no longer primarily about conversion. It is about awakening. It is about moving from unconscious participation in life to conscious participation in life. It is about recognizing that flesh and spirit are not rivals but partners. It is about understanding that embodiment itself is sacred. Most of all, it is about realizing that the divine spark within us entered this world not to escape experience but to embrace it, learn from it, and express infinite possibilities through it. The new birth is not becoming something we were not before. It is awakening to what we have always been: eternal expressions of the Divine exploring the endless mystery of existence.

Sunday, June 21, 2026

Reimaging Sin: The many Greek words used for sin and their "actual meaning"


For most of my life, I understood sin through the lens that was common in the evangelical world in which I was raised, educated, and eventually taught. Sin was primarily a legal problem. Humanity had broken God's laws, incurred guilt, and stood under divine judgment. The central question of the Gospel was how sinners could be forgiven and restored to a right standing before God. I preached that message for years as a pastor and seminary instructor because I sincerely believed it was what Scripture taught.

Yet over time, as I immersed myself more deeply in the biblical languages, the writings of Christian mystics, the Gospel of John, the Apostle Paul, Valentinian Christianity, Hermetic thought, and contemplative spirituality, I began to notice something that had previously escaped me. The language of Scripture itself often seemed far richer and more nuanced than the theological systems built upon it. The Greek words commonly translated as "sin" frequently carried meanings such as missing the mark, wandering from the path, stumbling, crossing a boundary, living in ignorance, or acting contrary to divine order. While these concepts are certainly serious, they do not always convey the image of humanity as criminals standing before an angry judge. More often, they evoke the image of travelers who have lost their way.

This realization caused me to revisit Paul's writings with fresh eyes. I still believe Paul viewed sin as serious, but I no longer think he primarily viewed it as a legal problem. Rather, I see him describing a condition of alienation, blindness, bondage, and forgetfulness. Humanity lives under illusions. We forget who we are. We become captivated by fear, ego, division, and the false belief that we are separate from one another and separate from God. Sin, in this sense, is not merely what we do. It is a distorted state of consciousness that gives rise to what we do.

When Paul speaks of reconciliation, I now hear something different than I once did. As an evangelical, I believed reconciliation meant that God changed His attitude toward sinners because of Christ's sacrifice. Today, I see reconciliation as God's initiative from beginning to end. Paul says that God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses against them. The order matters. God was already acting. God was already moving toward humanity. God was already reconciling. Reconciliation was not humanity reaching up to God. It was God revealing what had always been true at the deepest level of reality.

This raises a profound question. If God was reconciling the world to Himself, does that mean the world was completely separated from God in the first place? From my current perspective, I would answer both yes and no. Yes, humanity experiences estrangement. We experience fear, confusion, loneliness, hostility, and separation. Those experiences are real. They shape our lives and the lives of those around us. They create suffering both individually and collectively. In that sense, reconciliation is vitally important within a particular lifetime. People need awakening. People need healing. People need transformation. People need to discover peace with God, with themselves, and with one another.

Yet at a deeper level, I no longer believe humanity has ever been ontologically separated from God. How could we be? If God is the source of all being, then every breath, every thought, every moment of existence already occurs within the divine reality. As Paul told the Athenians, "In Him we live and move and have our being." A child may run away from home and feel abandoned, but the child never ceases to be the child of the parent. Likewise, humanity may wander far from the awareness of God, but we never cease to exist within the life of God.

This understanding has transformed how I view universal reconciliation. I no longer see it merely as a future event when God finally succeeds in bringing everyone back. Rather, I see it as the unveiling of a reality that has always been true. God's love has never ceased. God's presence has never withdrawn. God's purpose has never been frustrated. What changes is human awareness. What changes is consciousness. What changes is our willingness to awaken to the truth of our relationship with the Source from which we came.

For that reason, I still believe reconciliation matters profoundly in this lifetime. The consequences of ignorance are real. The consequences of fear are real. The consequences of selfishness, violence, injustice, and hatred are real. We can create heaven or hell within our own experience and within the experience of others. Awakening matters. Transformation matters. Spiritual growth matters. The Gospel matters. But I no longer believe these realities determine whether God ultimately accepts us. Rather, they determine how fully we participate in the life that has already been given to us.

Today, I see Christ not as the one who persuades God to love humanity, but as the revelation that humanity has always been loved. Christ reveals the heart of God and the true nature of humanity. The Cross enters into our alienation. The Resurrection reveals our destiny. The Spirit awakens us to what has always been true. Universal reconciliation is therefore not the story of a distant God finally deciding to forgive. It is the story of humanity gradually awakening to the reality that we were never abandoned, never forgotten, and never outside the embrace of the One in whom we live and move and have our being.

From this perspective, sin is real, reconciliation is necessary, and transformation is essential. Yet beneath it all stands a deeper truth: the eternal union between God and humanity has never been broken. What needs healing is not God's relationship to us, but our awareness of God. What needs reconciliation is not the heart of God, but the human heart. And the good news is that God has been working toward that awakening from the very beginning.

The dominant evangelical model often emphasizes:

  • parabasis (breaking God's law)
  • anomia (lawlessness)

while mystical and contemplative readings often pay more attention to:

  • hamartia (missing the mark)
  • paraptōma (wandering from the path)
  • agnoia (ignorance)
  • planē (being led astray)

This doesn't eliminate moral responsibility, but it shifts the focus from crime and punishment toward healing, awakening, restoration, and transformation.

 

Saturday, June 20, 2026

Beyond Religion: Why the World's Mystics May Be Describing the Same God


One of the biggest spiritual questions I find myself wrestling with these days is whether spirituality is fundamentally individual or corporate. Is the spiritual journey something that unfolds uniquely within each person, or is it something that belongs to a community, tradition, church, lineage, or collective consciousness? The more I think about it, the more I see evidence for both.

What brings this question to mind is the simple observation that sincere seekers often arrive at very different conclusions. Throughout history there have been mystics, visionaries, prophets, shamans, contemplatives, sages, and spiritual explorers who have had profound experiences of reality. Yet when they attempt to describe what they encountered, their descriptions are not always the same. Some speak of God. Others speak of the Tao. Some describe the Logos, Christ Consciousness, the Divine Mind, the Ground of Being, the One, or the Infinite Light. They use different languages, symbols, and cosmologies, yet many seem to be pointing toward something beyond ordinary human awareness.

Then there is another group of people. Rather than having the experience for themselves, they discover the teachings of a mystic and camp there. They become followers of Jesus, Buddha, Lao Tzu, Plotinus, Valentinus, Rumi, or some modern spiritual teacher. There is nothing inherently wrong with that. In fact, it is often how wisdom is preserved and transmitted from generation to generation. But it raises an important question. At what point do we stop seeking direct experience and settle for someone else's description of reality?

It seems to me that much of religious history follows a repeating pattern. First comes an experience. Someone encounters the Divine, the Absolute, the Presence, or some expanded state of consciousness. Then comes interpretation. The individual attempts to explain what happened. After that comes community. Others gather around the teaching because it resonates with something deep inside them. Over time the community becomes an institution. The institution develops doctrines, boundaries, and systems of authority. Eventually the original experience can become overshadowed by the preservation of the interpretation. Then, somewhere down the road, a new mystic appears and reminds everyone that the map is not the territory. The cycle begins again.

This is one reason I have always been drawn to mystical traditions. Mystics tend to emphasize encounter over dogma. They are less concerned with defending a system and more concerned with experiencing reality directly. Whether I am reading the Gospel of John, the Gospel of Truth, the Corpus Hermeticum, Taoist writings, Christian contemplatives, or modern consciousness researchers, I find myself drawn to those voices that point beyond belief toward direct awareness.

Yet I cannot simply conclude that spirituality is entirely individual. If I do that, I eventually arrive at a place where there is only me. My experiences become the final authority. My insights become the measure of truth. That path can easily drift into spiritual narcissism or solipsism. It becomes difficult to distinguish genuine revelation from imagination, wisdom from preference, or insight from self-deception.

On the other hand, if spirituality is entirely corporate, then personal experience loses its value. The institution becomes the final authority. The church, the tradition, the denomination, or the guru determines what is true. History shows that this approach can lead to rigidity, dogmatism, and the suppression of new insights. Many of the great mystics were viewed with suspicion precisely because they dared to speak about experiences that challenged established interpretations.

Perhaps the answer is not either-or but both-and.

I increasingly find myself wondering if spirituality is individually experienced but collectively discovered. A scientist may make a personal discovery, but that discovery gains significance when others examine it, test it, expand it, and compare it with their own observations. Maybe the same is true of spirituality. The experience begins within an individual, but its meaning becomes clearer through dialogue with others who have traveled similar paths.

What fascinates me is that when I compare the testimonies of mystics from different cultures and different centuries, I often find remarkable similarities. They frequently speak of unity behind apparent separation. They describe a deeper dimension of consciousness beyond the ordinary ego. They report overwhelming experiences of love, interconnectedness, compassion, and transcendence. They often suggest that reality is far more mysterious and alive than our materialistic assumptions allow. Their cosmologies may differ, but their experiences often echo one another.

From my own perspective, this suggests that there may be a shared reality being encountered through different lenses. The mystics are not necessarily describing identical truths, but they may be describing different aspects of the same Reality. Just as ten people standing around a mountain will describe it from different angles, so spiritual seekers may perceive the Divine through different cultural, religious, and personal frameworks.

This possibility resonates deeply with my understanding of Christ Consciousness. The Divine is present within each individual, yet it is not confined to any individual. The spark exists within every person, yet the spark originates from something larger than the individual self. The journey is personal, but it is not private. It is individual, but it is also participatory. We awaken as individuals while simultaneously discovering our connection to a greater whole.

So I continue to wrestle with the question. Is spirituality individual or corporate? My answer today is that it is both. The awakening happens within the individual, but wisdom emerges through the collective witness of countless seekers across time and space. The mystic keeps the tradition alive by reminding us that direct experience is possible. The community preserves and transmits what has been learned. Each needs the other.

The question I keep coming back to is this: when mystics separated by centuries, cultures, languages, and religions arrive at similar insights about consciousness, unity, love, and transcendence, are they simply creating personal truths, or are they collectively glimpsing different facets of a deeper Reality? For me, that remains one of the most fascinating spiritual questions of all.

At this point in my journey, I find myself leaning toward the belief that the great mystics of the world are indeed glimpsing different facets of a deeper Reality. Their languages differ. Their symbols differ. Their cosmologies differ. Yet beneath those differences I hear recurring themes of unity, consciousness, love, transcendence, and participation in something greater than the isolated self. I do not believe they are merely inventing personal truths. Rather, I suspect they are standing at different vantage points, looking toward the same mountain, and describing what they see from their unique perspectives.

This does not mean that every mystical claim is equally true or that every interpretation is beyond question. It does mean, however, that I am increasingly hesitant to dismiss the testimony of sincere seekers simply because their language differs from my own. If Spirit is truly universal, then it should not be surprising that glimpses of that Reality emerge across cultures, religions, and centuries.

For now, my answer is yes. I believe the mystics are collectively perceiving different dimensions of a deeper Reality that transcends any single religion, doctrine, or worldview. The individual experience matters, but so does the collective testimony. Together they form a kind of spiritual mosaic. No one person sees the whole picture, but taken together their insights may reveal something far greater than any of them could perceive alone.

 

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