Saturday, March 28, 2026

My Spiritual Evolution

There was a time in my late twenties and early thirties when I attempted to answer the largest questions I could conceive—questions of being, of origin, of purpose. Out of that wrestling came what I later called The Primal Dream. It was not just a poem; it was my ontology, my cosmology, and my personal cosmogony all wrapped into one unfolding idea. At its core was a simple but profound intuition: that energy and thought were not separate, but one inseparable substance—the creative source behind all things.

In that framework, existence itself was the result of this unified substance expressing itself through fragmentation. The One became the many. Consciousness divided itself into individual perspectives and entered into the material world, not as a mistake, but as a necessary process. The goal—though I would not have used such a structured word at the time—was the realization of perfection within materiality. Not perfection imposed from outside, but discovered through experience.

This meant that the One would live through everything. Not metaphorically, but literally. It would become rock, tree, animal, human—each form a vantage point through which existence could be known. And it would not do this once, but repeatedly. Iteration after iteration. Lifetime after lifetime. Cycle after cycle. Each return an attempt to refine, to understand, to integrate.

But embedded within this vision was a tension I could not ignore. The process itself was exhausting. The striving, the struggle, the constant movement toward something just beyond reach—it carried with it a fatigue. And so, in my model, there was a counterbalance. Eventually, the fragmented consciousness would grow weary of becoming. It would long to rest. It would return to the Whole—not as annihilation, but as reunion. A kind of spiritual repose.

Yet even that rest was not final.

Because rest, over enough “time”—if time even applies at that level—would give way to something else: boredom. And from that boredom would emerge the impulse to become again. To fragment again. To experience again. And so the cycle would continue—endlessly. Not as punishment, not as karma in the traditional sense, but as an eternal oscillation between unity and multiplicity, between rest and expression.

At that stage in my life, I was also deeply existential in my outlook. Meaning was not something given—it was something chosen. The only thing that ultimately mattered was what an individual decided mattered. There was no imposed moral structure, no universal “ought,” only personal valuation. In many ways, this made my system internally coherent. It allowed for infinite exploration without constraint.

And yet… even then, there were cracks.

One of the questions that continually lingered in the background was not philosophical, but physical. I understood the scientific narrative—the Big Bang, the formation of elements through fusion, the emergence of complexity. But I could not escape a more fundamental question: where did the first thing come from? Where did hydrogen originate? And what caused it to move, to swirl, to organize? Even within a materialist framework, there seemed to be an unaccounted-for impulse—something prior to motion itself.

That question never left me.

Then came a later period in my mid-forties—a time marked less by abstract theorizing and more by lived hardship. It was during this season that I had an unexpected encounter with a stranger, a conversation that would introduce a new tension into my thinking.

I shared with him my ideas—the cycles, the fragmentation, the eternal return. He listened, and then responded from a place I had not been engaging seriously at the time. He told me he had become a Christian, not through tradition or upbringing, but through the influence of Søren Kierkegaard. His conclusion, as he expressed it, was that the only thing that ultimately made sense was what he called the absurdity—the apparent futility—of Christ on a cross.

Then he said something that unsettled me.

He told me that if my system were true—if everything was just an endless cycle of expression and return, without ultimate moral grounding—then he could kill me, and it would not ultimately matter.

That statement cut through the elegance of my theory.

Because in that moment, I knew something with absolute clarity: I did not want to die. Not then. Not like that. And more importantly, I could not reconcile the idea that such an act would be ultimately meaningless. My system, for all its breadth, had not adequately accounted for the weight of moral reality—the felt sense that some things are not just subjectively undesirable, but fundamentally wrong.

Around that same time, I began to notice something else. When I looked out at the world—at geopolitics, at societal structures, at human behavior on both individual and collective levels—I saw patterns that suggested more than just neutral polarity. There appeared to be something that actively distorted, something that fractured, something that worked against harmony. I would not have defined it cleanly at the time, but it felt real—what many traditions would call “the devil,” not necessarily as a caricature, but as a principle of disintegration.

And if that principle was real…

Then it raised another question that would not go away:

As the years went on, I was exposed to streams of thought that I had not encountered in my earlier search. I read The Kybalion, explored the depth of the Tao, and began to look at metaphysics not from one angle, but from many—science, philosophy, mysticism, and direct experience. What I discovered was not that my earlier intuition was wrong, but that it was incomplete.

The primal dream had pointed me in the right direction.

But the truth was deeper than I had first imagined.

What I had called energy and thought as one substance, I would now call consciousness itself—an infinite field, not static, but dynamic. Not merely existing, but exploring. It was not trying to perfect itself in the sense of correcting a flaw, nor was it trapped in a cycle it was desperate to escape. Instead, it was expressing an inherent nature: the exploration of unlimited potential through unlimited experience.

The fragmentation I once described was not a problem to be solved, but a feature of the system. Individuality was not a deviation from the Whole—it was the means by which the Whole knows itself. Every perspective, every life, every polarity—joy and sorrow, love and loss, creation and destruction—was part of the total field of experience.

And this reframed everything.

The cycles I once saw as repetitive attempts at perfection began to look more like rhythms—like breathing. Expansion into experience, contraction into rest. Expression into multiplicity, return into unity. Not because of boredom, but because both poles are necessary for the fullness of being. The infinite cannot be known without the finite. The abstract cannot be realized without the concrete.

Even the question that had haunted me—the origin of hydrogen, the cause of motion—began to dissolve. Because I started to see that what we call physical processes may not be the beginning at all, but expressions of something prior. Motion itself implies awareness. Organization implies intelligence. The “swirl” is not random—it is patterned. And pattern suggests mind, or something very much like it.

Not mind as we typically think of it—localized in a brain—but Mind as a foundational principle.

This is where the Hermetic idea that “The All is Mind” began to resonate. Not as dogma, but as a description of what I had already been circling around.

And yet, this deeper understanding did not eliminate the earlier tension—it transformed it.

Because if consciousness is exploring all potential, then it necessarily includes what we experience as darkness, distortion, and suffering. But this no longer meant that these things were ultimate or equal in value to love, joy, and peace. It meant that they were part of the contrast through which experience becomes meaningful.

And this is where I found a kind of resolution that held both my earlier existential leanings and my later moral intuitions together.

Meaning is not imposed from the outside.

But neither is it arbitrary.

It emerges from the nature of consciousness itself.

Because when all experiences are possible, it becomes evident—over time, across lifetimes, across iterations—that certain states are preferred. Love over hate. Peace over chaos. Joy over suffering. Not because they are commanded, but because they resonate more deeply with the underlying nature of the Whole.

In that sense, what we call “God” is not a distant ruler imposing order, but the highest expression of these preferred states—the gravitational center of consciousness itself. Not coercing, but drawing. Not demanding, but inviting.

And so the journey is not about escaping the material world, nor is it about endlessly trying to perfect it.

It is about participating in the unfolding.

Consciousness exploring itself.

The infinite experiencing the finite.

And in that process, gradually remembering what it has always been.

Friday, March 27, 2026

God Is Bigger Than Your Religion—And Always Has Been

There is something deeply unsettling to me about the insistence on exclusivity in spirituality and religion, and the more I reflect on it, the more it feels like a kind of collective amnesia about the vastness of human experience. When we step back and look across the sweep of history—across continents, cultures, and civilizations—we are confronted with a breathtaking diversity of spiritual expressions, beliefs, and encounters with what people have consistently described as the unseen or transcendent realm. From the mystics of India who spoke of union with Brahman, to the philosophers of Greece who contemplated the Logos, to the prophets of Israel, the early followers of Jesus, the indigenous shamans of the Americas, and countless others, we find not a void of spiritual awareness outside of any one tradition, but a rich tapestry of encounters that often carry striking similarities in depth, intensity, and transformative power. And yet, despite this overwhelming evidence, there remains within many religious frameworks a tendency to claim that one particular path, one interpretation, one set of doctrines stands alone as the exclusive bearer of truth. To me, that is not just a theological position—it is the height of hubris.

What seems to be overlooked in this exclusivist mindset is the undeniable role that culture plays in shaping how spiritual experiences are interpreted, articulated, and transmitted. Human beings do not encounter the divine in a vacuum. We encounter it as embodied, situated beings, shaped by language, symbols, traditions, and expectations. When someone in one part of the world experiences a profound sense of unity, presence, or revelation, they will naturally describe it using the conceptual framework available to them. Another person, in a different time and place, may have a remarkably similar experience but interpret it through an entirely different lens. The experience itself may share a common essence, but the explanation of it diverges because culture provides the vocabulary and structure. To deny this is to ignore the basic reality of how human cognition and meaning-making function. It is to pretend that one group somehow transcended all cultural influence while everyone else remained bound by it, which is not only historically implausible but philosophically inconsistent.

When we begin to acknowledge this, something important happens. The rigid walls that separate “us” from “them,” “true” from “false,” begin to soften. We start to see that what we have often called competing truth claims may actually be different angles on a reality that exceeds any single system’s ability to fully capture it. This does not mean that all ideas are equally accurate in every respect, nor does it require us to abandon discernment. But it does call for humility—a recognition that whatever truth we perceive, we perceive it partially, through a glass darkly, filtered through layers of tradition and interpretation that we did not create but inherited. It invites us to consider that revelation itself may be an ongoing, dynamic process rather than a closed, finalized deposit handed to one group for all time.

Tribalism in religion often emerges from a very human need for identity, belonging, and certainty. There is comfort in believing that we are on the “right side,” that we have the answers, that we are part of the group that has been uniquely chosen or enlightened. But this comfort comes at a cost. It narrows our vision, limits our capacity for empathy, and, perhaps most tragically, blinds us to the possibility that the same Spirit we revere may be at work in ways and places we have been taught to dismiss. When we reduce the infinite to the boundaries of our own tradition, we are not protecting truth—we are constricting it. We are taking something that, by its very nature, transcends all categories and confining it within the walls of our own making.

I find myself increasingly drawn to the idea that what humanity has been experiencing across the ages is not a series of isolated, contradictory revelations, but a multifaceted encounter with a reality that is both immanent and transcendent, both knowable and inexhaustible. Different traditions, then, are not necessarily competing claims to exclusive ownership of truth, but expressions—sometimes clearer, sometimes more obscured—of a shared underlying reality. They are maps, not the territory; lenses, not the light itself. And like all maps and lenses, they are shaped by the conditions under which they were formed.

To claim that one’s own spirituality or religion is the only correct one, in light of all this, seems less like a statement of faith and more like a refusal to engage with the full scope of human spiritual history. It is to ignore the voices of billions, past and present, whose experiences do not fit neatly within a single framework. It is to elevate one perspective to an absolute status it cannot reasonably sustain. True spirituality, as I see it, does not shrink the world into a single narrative but expands our awareness of the many ways the divine has been encountered and understood. It invites us not into arrogance, but into wonder; not into exclusion, but into a deeper appreciation of the unity that underlies our diversity. And perhaps, in that humility, we come closer to the truth than any claim of exclusivity ever could.

 

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Did We Mistake Jesus for the Logos? Rethinking Christ as the Awakening of Divine Consciousness

What was meant by the Logos in John 1:1–18? Could we have misinterpreted the meaning by automatically conflating Jesus and the Logos?

What I find fascinating about this entire line of thought is how a single Greek phrase can open up an entirely different way of seeing the gospel, consciousness, and even what we mean by “Christ.” When I look at ὁ Χριστὸς τοῦ λόγου—“the Christ of the Logos”—I’m not just playing with language. I’m trying to get underneath centuries of interpretation and ask a deeper question: what is actually being communicated in the text, and what might we have missed?

Traditionally, Christianity has gone in one clear direction: the Logos is Christ, and that Christ is uniquely embodied in Jesus of Nazareth. It’s an identity statement—tight, defined, and exclusive. But when I step back and really look at John 1, I don’t see it quite that way. I see something broader, something more universal. I see the Logos not as a person entering the world, but as a reality that has always been here—what I would call divine consciousness.

John says this Logos “enlightens every person.” That’s a powerful statement. If taken seriously, it means the Logos is not limited to one historical figure, one group of people, or even one religion. It’s present everywhere. It’s foundational. It’s woven into the very fabric of existence and awareness itself.

So when I read John 1:1–13, I don’t see Jesus yet. I see the Logos—this universal divine intelligence, this underlying consciousness that gives rise to experience, meaning, and life. And then when we get to verse 14—“the Logos became flesh”—I don’t interpret that as a one-time cosmic insertion. I see it as a moment of realization. Jesus becomes aware of the indwelling Logos. He embodies it fully. He lives from it consciously.

That changes everything.

Because now “Christ” is not just a title reserved for one person in history. The word itself—Χριστός—means “anointed,” or even more literally, “smeared.” There’s something almost earthy about that. It’s not abstract. It’s experiential. It’s something applied, something infused.

So what if Christ is the “anointing” of the Logos? What if it’s the moment when that universal consciousness becomes consciously realized within a human being?

That’s where ὁ Χριστὸς τοῦ λόγου comes alive for me.

It suggests not identity alone, but expression. Not just that Christ is the Logos, but that Christ is what happens when the Logos is realized, embodied, awakened to. In that sense, Jesus becomes the prototype—not the exception. The demonstration, not the limitation.

And when John says, “He came unto his own, and his own did not receive him,” I don’t limit that to first-century Jews. I see humanity in that statement. The Logos is present in all, yet largely unrecognized. We live within it, move within it, derive our very being from it—and yet remain unaware.

But then John says, “to as many as received him…” And again, I don’t hear a call to doctrinal belief. I hear an invitation to awakening. To recognition. To realization.

Those who “receive” the Logos are those who become aware of it. The mystics. The contemplatives. Those across traditions and throughout history who have had what we might call “downloads,” insights, awakenings—moments where the veil thins and something deeper is known.

So when I pair that understanding with the image—ὁ Χριστὸς τοῦ λόγου—and then place alongside it Ἰησοῦς Χριστός OR…, I’m not trying to diminish Jesus. Quite the opposite. I’m trying to expand the conversation.

Is Christ limited to Jesus of Nazareth?

Or is Jesus the fullest expression of something universal?

Is Christ a person we believe in?

Or a state of consciousness we awaken to?

That “OR” is not meant to divide—it’s meant to provoke thought. To create space. To invite people to reconsider assumptions that may have been handed down without ever being deeply questioned.

Because if the Logos is truly universal… and if Christ is truly the anointing of that Logos… then the implications are profound. It means the divine is not distant. Not reserved. Not exclusive.

It means the light has always been here.

And maybe—just maybe—what we’ve been calling “salvation” is not about getting something we don’t have…

…but waking up to what we’ve always been.

Saturday, March 14, 2026

You are gods

Psalm 82 contains one of the most startling statements in the entire Hebrew Bible: “I said, you are gods, children of the Most High, all of you; nevertheless, you shall die like mortals and fall like any prince.” The verse is not obscure in its wording. In the Hebrew text the phrase is unmistakable. The pronoun “you” (atem) is plural and direct. God is speaking to a group and declaring something remarkable about them: “you are gods,” and even more explicitly, “children of the Most High.” Whatever debates scholars may have about the context, the language itself stands plainly in the text. The debate is not about what the words say, but about who the “you” refers to.

Over the centuries scholars have proposed several interpretations. Some believe the psalm is addressing human rulers or judges in Israel. Because judges represented God’s authority, they were metaphorically called elohim. In this reading the psalm is a rebuke of corrupt leaders who were supposed to defend the weak and administer justice but failed to do so. Others believe the psalm reflects the ancient idea of a divine council, where God stands among lesser spiritual beings and judges them for ruling the nations unjustly. In that interpretation the “gods” are heavenly beings subordinate to the Most High. Still others see the statement as reflecting a broader theological truth about humanity’s divine vocation and likeness, tied to the idea that human beings were created in the image of God. These interpretations are debated because the psalm itself contains elements that could support more than one reading.

Yet regardless of which interpretation scholars prefer, the language remains striking: “you are gods, children of the Most High, all of you.” It is difficult to imagine a more elevated description of those being addressed. The verse does not merely call them servants of God or followers of God. It uses the language of divine kinship. They are called “children of the Most High.” And yet the very next line introduces a tragic tension: “nevertheless, you shall die like mortals.” In other words, beings who bear a divine designation are living under the condition of mortality and apparent limitation. The psalm therefore captures a profound paradox: a divine identity paired with human mortality.

This paradox becomes even more intriguing when we consider that Jesus himself quoted this passage. In John 10, when Jesus was accused of blasphemy for calling himself the Son of God, he answered by pointing directly to Psalm 82. “Is it not written in your law, ‘I said, you are gods’?” His argument was simple but profound. If scripture itself contains language in which those addressed by God are called “gods,” then the charge of blasphemy becomes questionable. Jesus did not deny the language of Psalm 82. Instead, he affirmed it. He treated it as legitimate scripture that revealed something meaningful about humanity’s relationship to the divine.

Seen in the light of the Gospel of John, this passage begins to take on even deeper significance. John introduces Jesus by speaking of the Logos, the divine Word through whom all things were made. John also makes a remarkable statement about the Logos: “The true Light that enlightens everyone was coming into the world.” In other words, the Logos is not merely an external teacher arriving from outside humanity. The Logos is the light that already shines in every person. The tragedy, John says, is that “the world did not know him.” The light was present, but it was not recognized.

When Psalm 82 and the Johannine vision of the Logos are considered together, an intriguing possibility emerges. Perhaps the language of “you are gods” and “children of the Most High” reflects the idea that humanity was always intended to bear the presence of the divine. The Logos, the divine Word and life of God, is the ground of our existence. Humanity was created as a vessel capable of participating in that divine life. Yet like the figures addressed in Psalm 82, humanity lives under the shadow of mortality and forgetfulness. We carry a divine origin but experience life as if separated from it.

From this perspective the tragedy described in Psalm 82 becomes a metaphor for the human condition. God declares, “you are gods, children of the Most High,” yet the reality of human life appears very different. Humanity struggles, suffers, and dies. The psalm’s concluding statement—“nevertheless you shall die like mortals”—expresses the distance between what humanity truly is in its deepest origin and how humanity actually lives. Something has been forgotten.

This idea of forgotten identity appears repeatedly in mystical and philosophical reflections on the human condition. Many traditions suggest that the soul enters the world in a state of partial amnesia. The knowledge of its deeper origin becomes obscured by the experience of physical life, culture, and ego. If consciousness participates in the divine ground of reality, then incarnation may involve a kind of self-emptying, a laying aside of direct awareness of that origin in order to experience the world of form and polarity. The result is that humanity lives outwardly as mortal beings while carrying within itself the spark of the divine.

Within this framework, the mission of Jesus can be understood in a slightly different light. Rather than introducing something entirely foreign to humanity, Jesus may be revealing what was already present but forgotten. His teachings repeatedly point to an intimate relationship between humanity and the divine. He speaks of God as Father and refers to human beings as children of God. He speaks of the kingdom of God being within or among us. And in quoting Psalm 82 he reminds his listeners that scripture itself contains the declaration: “you are gods.”

This does not mean that human beings are identical with God in an absolute sense. Rather, it suggests participation in the divine life, a sharing in the Logos that underlies existence. The Logos is the creative intelligence through which the universe came into being. If humanity is indwelt by that Logos, then our deepest nature is connected to the divine source of reality. Yet like the figures in Psalm 82, humanity often lives without awareness of this connection.

Seen this way, Jesus’ role becomes that of an awakener. He reveals the presence of the Logos in a fully conscious way and invites others to recognize the same divine light within themselves. The light that shines in him is the same light that “enlightens everyone.” The difference is recognition. Humanity lives in forgetfulness; Christ lives in awareness.

Psalm 82 therefore becomes a fascinating scriptural echo of this deeper theme. The text records God saying, “you are gods, children of the Most High.” Yet the human condition appears very different, marked by mortality and limitation. The psalm holds these two realities together without fully resolving the tension. Later reflection, particularly in the light of the Logos theology of the New Testament, invites us to see the statement not as exaggeration but as a glimpse of humanity’s forgotten identity.

In that sense the emphasis on the word YOU becomes significant. The declaration is not abstract. It is direct and personal. “You are gods… children of the Most High.” The tragedy is not that humanity was created empty of the divine, but that humanity lives without recognizing what lies at its deepest foundation. The Logos is present, the light shines, yet the world does not know it. The work of awakening is therefore not about becoming something entirely new, but about remembering what was always true in the first place.

 

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Hell: The Doctrine Jesus Never Taught!

When I step back and look carefully at the history of Christian doctrine, I find it very difficult to believe that the doctrine of eternal, torturous punishment was part of the original message of Jesus. The idea that billions of human beings will suffer endless agony forever simply does not seem to arise naturally from the earliest layers of the biblical text. Instead, when I trace the development of the idea historically, it appears to grow gradually over centuries, shaped as much by later theological speculation as by the words of Jesus himself. For that reason, I believe the doctrine deserves careful re-examination rather than unquestioned acceptance.

One of the first places to begin is with the language Jesus actually used. In the Gospels, Jesus never used the English word “hell.” That word comes from later translation traditions. The term Jesus most often used was Gehenna. Gehenna referred to the Valley of Hinnom outside Jerusalem, a place with a long and disturbing history in Jewish memory. In the Old Testament period it was associated with child sacrifice and later became a symbol of divine judgment upon corrupt leadership and apostasy. When Jesus used the term, he was speaking within a Jewish prophetic framework that his listeners already understood. His warnings about Gehenna frequently appear in confrontations with religious leaders, particularly the Pharisees and scribes. In that setting it is entirely plausible that Jesus was using the kind of prophetic hyperbole common in Jewish teaching—dramatic language designed to awaken people to the seriousness of moral failure.

What makes this even more important is the fact that in the Judaism of Jesus’ time Gehenna was not typically understood as a place of endless torture. The Pharisees, who were among the most influential religious teachers of the first century, appear to have held a view that Gehenna was primarily a place of temporary purification. Rabbinic traditions preserved in the Babylonian Talmud describe a belief that most souls would remain in Gehenna for about twelve months before being purified and released. Only the most hardened and persistently evil were thought to remain there indefinitely. In other words, the Pharisaic understanding of Gehenna functioned much more like a temporary purifying process than an eternal torture chamber. This concept bears a remarkable resemblance to the later Catholic idea of Purgatory, where souls undergo purification before entering the fullness of divine presence. If this was the cultural and theological background in which Jesus spoke, then it becomes far more likely that his listeners understood Gehenna as a warning about judgment and purification rather than as a declaration of infinite punishment.

Another factor that strongly influences my thinking is the silence of the apostle Paul. Paul wrote the earliest Christian documents that we possess, and his letters form a large portion of the New Testament. In those writings Paul discusses sin, redemption, reconciliation, resurrection, and the ultimate restoration of creation. Yet in all of Paul’s letters, he never once uses the word Gehenna. He never develops a doctrine of eternal conscious torment. He certainly speaks about judgment, but his vocabulary revolves around terms such as death, destruction, and perishing. If eternal torture were truly the central fate awaiting most of humanity, it is difficult to understand why Paul—who explained the gospel so thoroughly—never clearly taught it. His silence becomes even more striking when we remember that Paul was writing to Gentile converts who had no familiarity with Jewish symbolic language. If the doctrine of endless torment were essential to Christian faith, Paul would have been the ideal person to explain it plainly. Yet he never does.

When we move back into the Hebrew Scriptures themselves, the absence of a doctrine of eternal torment becomes even clearer. The Old Testament does not present a developed concept of hell as a place where souls are endlessly tortured. The primary term used for the realm of the dead is Sheol, which simply refers to the grave or the shadowy realm of the dead. Both the righteous and the wicked were believed to go there. The focus of Old Testament faith was not escaping eternal torture but trusting in God’s covenant faithfulness and hoping for ultimate restoration. The fully developed idea of hell that many modern Christians assume to be biblical simply does not appear in the Hebrew Bible.

Historically, the doctrine of eternal torment did not become dominant in Christianity until several centuries after the time of Jesus. One of the most influential figures in this development was Augustine of Hippo, who lived in the late fourth and early fifth centuries. Augustine strongly argued that the punishment of the wicked must be eternal and conscious. Because of his enormous influence on Western theology, his interpretation helped shape the dominant view of hell in the Latin church. Yet Augustine was not simply repeating an uncontested tradition. In the early centuries of Christianity there were diverse views about the final destiny of humanity. Some Christians leaned toward annihilationism—the belief that the wicked ultimately cease to exist—while others suggested that God’s redemptive purposes might ultimately restore all souls. Early thinkers such as Origen and Gregory of Nyssa spoke about the possibility of universal restoration. The existence of these views shows that eternal torment was far from universally accepted in early Christianity.

Several centuries after Augustine, the doctrine was further strengthened and philosophically systematized by Thomas Aquinas, the great scholastic theologian of the thirteenth century. Aquinas used Aristotelian philosophy to argue that offenses against an infinite God deserved infinite punishment. In his monumental theological work, the Summa Theologica, he organized the doctrine of hell into a comprehensive system. Aquinas even suggested that the blessed in heaven would be aware of the suffering of the damned and would see in it the justice of God. By the time Aquinas completed his synthesis, the doctrine of eternal torment had become deeply embedded in medieval Western theology. Yet this system was constructed more than a thousand years after the ministry of Jesus.

The Book of Revelation is often cited as the biblical foundation for eternal hell, but this too requires careful interpretation. Revelation belongs to the genre of apocalyptic literature, which is filled with symbolic visions and dramatic imagery. The book itself repeatedly states that its message concerns events that were about to occur for its first-century readers. Many scholars therefore understand Revelation as addressing the struggles of the early church under oppressive powers in its own historical context. To build a literal doctrine of endless torture from a book filled with symbolic language may be to misunderstand the nature of apocalyptic literature.

Beyond the historical and textual issues lies an even deeper theological question. According to the traditional doctrine of eternal torment, billions of human beings—most of whom were born into cultures and religions they did not choose—will suffer conscious agony forever because they did not believe the correct story about God. Yet the New Testament also declares that God is love. If God’s very nature is love, how can that same God sustain endless torture without end? Even human systems of justice recognize that punishment should be proportionate to the offense. Eternal torment represents infinite punishment for finite human failures. The concept raises serious questions about whether such a doctrine truly reflects the character of a loving Creator.

When all these factors are considered together, a different picture begins to emerge. The Old Testament does not teach eternal hell. The Judaism of Jesus’ day often understood Gehenna as temporary purification. Jesus’ warnings about Gehenna can be understood within the prophetic language of his time. Paul never teaches a doctrine of eternal torment. Early Christianity held diverse views about the ultimate destiny of humanity. The doctrine of eternal conscious punishment became dominant largely through the influence of later theologians such as Augustine and Thomas Aquinas. And perhaps most importantly, the doctrine stands in tension with the central Christian proclamation that God is love.

For these reasons, I believe the doctrine of eternal torturous punishment deserves serious reconsideration. The heart of the Christian message, as I understand it, is not fear but reconciliation, restoration, and the triumph of divine love. If God truly is love, then whatever the final outcome of history may be, it must ultimately be consistent with that love.

Sunday, March 8, 2026

Standing in Grace: The Gospel Paul Preached That Religion Almost Buried

“Religion tries to change behavior through fear; grace awakens the heart through love.”

For many years I heard the word grace used constantly in Christian circles, but very rarely did anyone explain what the word actually meant in its original context. It was usually defined with the familiar phrase “unmerited favor,” and while that definition is not entirely wrong, I gradually came to realize that it barely scratches the surface of what the word meant in the first-century world in which the New Testament was written. Through study, reflection, and my own spiritual experience, my understanding of grace has become much deeper and much more transformative than the simple slogans that often accompany it.

The Greek word translated as grace in the New Testament is charis. In the Greek world, charis carried the idea of generosity, kindness, beauty, and goodwill. It referred to a gift given freely that produced gratitude and relationship between the giver and the receiver. In that sense, grace was relational. It created connection. It was not merely a legal declaration or a theological concept; it was an experience of favor that drew people into a living relationship.

But the word also had meaning in the Roman world, and this background is very important for understanding the radical nature of the New Testament message. Roman society operated largely through what historians call the patron-client system. Wealthy or powerful individuals would extend favor to those beneath them—perhaps financial help, political protection, or social advancement. This favor was also described with the language of grace, but it came with expectations. The recipient of grace owed loyalty, honor, and public support to the patron. Grace created obligation.

In other words, in the Roman world grace was rarely free in the way we think of freedom today. It created a bond of allegiance. When someone received grace from a patron, they became part of the patron’s sphere of influence. That background sheds a great deal of light on the writings of Paul, who used the word grace more than any other New Testament writer.

Paul takes this familiar word and does something remarkable with it. He retains the idea that grace creates relationship, but he turns the Roman expectation of worthiness completely upside down. Instead of grace being extended to those who can bring honor to the patron, Paul insists that God’s grace is given precisely when humanity is unworthy. In Romans chapter five, Paul says that Christ died for the ungodly, for sinners, even for enemies. That statement would have sounded shocking to anyone shaped by the Roman social system.

Grace, in Paul’s understanding, does not come after we prove our loyalty. It comes before anything we do. It precedes obedience, and it becomes the foundation for transformation rather than the reward for it. This is one of the reasons that the fifth chapter of Romans has become so important in my own thinking. Paul says that through Christ we have peace with God and that we now stand in grace. Those words suggest something more than a momentary act of forgiveness. They describe a new environment in which the believer lives.

To stand in grace means that the relationship between humanity and the divine has fundamentally changed. Instead of living under fear, striving, and anxiety about divine approval, one enters a place of rest. This connects deeply with the idea of the Sabbath rest spoken of in the letter to the Hebrews. Grace creates peace, and peace becomes the soil in which transformation begins to grow.

This is where my own experience has confirmed what I found in the text. In many forms of religion, people attempt to become better through pressure, guilt, and fear. The assumption is that if people feel enough anxiety about judgment, they will reform their behavior. But in my observation, this rarely produces genuine transformation. It often produces exhaustion, hypocrisy, or spiritual trauma.

What I have discovered is that transformation actually begins when the fear is removed. When a person truly understands that they are already accepted within the love of God, something shifts internally. The heart softens. Gratitude begins to replace anxiety. And from that place of security, love begins to emerge naturally.

Paul hints at this when he says that the grace of God works within us. Grace is not merely forgiveness; it is also a kind of divine influence. It is the power of unconditional love operating within human consciousness. When that love is genuinely received, it awakens something within us that wants to live in harmony with the divine nature.

As I reflected again on Romans chapter five recently, I also realized that it is important for me to clarify something about how I personally understand the language of sin and trespass that Paul uses. Paul was a first-century Jewish thinker shaped by the worldview of Second Temple Judaism, where sin was often understood within covenantal and legal categories connected to Adam, the law, and the story of Israel. When Paul speaks about sin and trespass, he is largely operating within that framework.

My own understanding has developed somewhat differently. When I read the Greek words often translated as sin and trespass—words like hamartia, meaning to miss the mark, and paraptoma, meaning a misstep—I do not primarily interpret them in terms of legal guilt before God in the way ancient Judaism often framed the issue. Instead, I tend to see the human problem more as a kind of misalignment with the deeper reality of divine life.

Humanity is not merely guilty before God; humanity is, in many ways, unaware of its deeper identity and its participation in the divine source of life. In that sense, sin is less about breaking divine rules and more about living from a state of spiritual forgetfulness. We aim poorly because we do not yet see clearly. We step off the path because we have not yet awakened to the deeper reality of who we are.

Grace, then, becomes not merely the cancellation of guilt but the restoring influence that realigns human consciousness with the love and life of the divine. It awakens us to the reality that we are already held within the life of God.

This way of understanding does not reject Paul’s insight, but it does interpret it through a broader lens. Paul spoke in the language available to him within the world of the first century, but the deeper truth he pointed toward may be even larger than the categories of his time could fully express.

When I look back over my journey, I can see that my understanding of grace has moved from a doctrinal definition to a lived reality. It is no longer simply the idea that God forgives. It is the realization that divine love precedes us, surrounds us, and works within us. And when that truth is grasped deeply, fear begins to dissolve, and the possibility of genuine transformation finally appears.


In the end, what Paul points toward in Romans chapter five may be even more profound than the theological systems that later grew up around his words. Grace is not merely a religious doctrine about forgiveness; it is the living reality of divine love breaking into human consciousness. It is the assurance that we are already held within the life of God, even while we are still learning to see clearly. When that realization begins to dawn, fear loses its grip, and the human heart begins to awaken to its deeper identity. We discover that transformation does not come from striving to earn divine approval but from resting in the grace that has always been present. In that awakening, humanity begins to realign with the divine life from which it came, and the love that lies at the foundation of the universe begins to express itself more fully through us.

 

Saturday, March 7, 2026

The Bible Before 1611: The Manuscript Story Most Christians Never Hear.

Over the years my interest in the Bible gradually moved beyond simply reading the text devotionally. I have always loved the teachings of Jesus and the mystical tone of the Gospel of John, along with many of the deeper insights found in Paul’s writings. But eventually I found myself asking a question that many readers never think to ask: how did the Bible we read today actually come to us? Once I began exploring the manuscript history of scripture, I discovered that the story of the Bible is far richer and more complex than most people realize. The Bible did not drop out of heaven in a finished form. It emerged through centuries of copying, translating, and interpreting sacred writings within communities that believed they were preserving encounters with the divine.

One of the first discoveries that reshaped my thinking was learning that the King James Version, authorized in 1611 by King James I of England, was based primarily on a Greek text compiled in the sixteenth century by the scholar Desiderius Erasmus. That Greek text, known as the Textus Receptus, was constructed from a small number of manuscripts that Erasmus happened to have available at the time—only about six or seven. Most of those manuscripts dated from the twelfth to fifteenth centuries. In other words, the textual foundation of the King James Version came from manuscripts copied roughly a thousand years after the original writings of the New Testament.

When the King James translators did their work, those later manuscripts were essentially all that Western scholars had access to. But in the centuries since then, the discovery of many older manuscripts has dramatically expanded our knowledge of the biblical text. Today scholars know of nearly six thousand Greek manuscripts of the New Testament, along with thousands more in Latin and other ancient languages. Among these are manuscripts that are far older than anything Erasmus had access to. Two of the most famous examples are Codex Sinaiticus and Codex Vaticanus. These manuscripts date to the fourth century, meaning they are more than a thousand years earlier than many of the manuscripts used to produce the King James Version.

When scholars began comparing these earlier manuscripts with the later ones used by Erasmus, they discovered something very interesting. In most places the text is remarkably consistent, which speaks to the care with which scribes preserved the scriptures. But in some passages the earliest manuscripts paint a slightly different picture than the later manuscript tradition. Certain verses that appear in the King James Bible are either absent from the earliest manuscripts or appear in different forms. Examples often discussed by scholars include the longer ending of the Gospel of Mark, the story of the woman caught in adultery in John’s Gospel, and the famous Trinitarian phrase in 1 John 5:7. These readings entered the later manuscript tradition and therefore became part of the Textus Receptus, but they are not found in the earliest witnesses we possess today.

For me this discovery did not undermine the Bible at all. In fact, it made the text even more fascinating. The enormous number of manuscripts available today allows scholars to trace the development of the text with remarkable clarity. Rather than threatening faith, this process reveals how carefully the scriptures were preserved over centuries. But it also reminds us that a particular translation—especially one based on later manuscripts—should not automatically be treated as if it represents the earliest possible form of the text.

This is where the modern King James Only movement often misses the larger picture. The King James Version is a beautiful and historically significant translation. Its language has shaped English-speaking Christianity for more than four hundred years. Yet insisting that it alone represents the authentic Bible overlooks the fact that the translators themselves were working with limited manuscript evidence. If those translators had access to the earlier manuscripts discovered in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, they almost certainly would have taken those into account as well.

My research also led me to explore the Old Testament manuscript traditions, which opened an entirely new window into the history of scripture. One of the most important discoveries in this area involves the Septuagint, the ancient Greek translation of the Hebrew scriptures produced in Alexandria several centuries before the time of Jesus. This translation became the Bible of the early Christian movement. When the New Testament writers quoted the Old Testament, they often quoted from the Greek Septuagint rather than from the later standardized Hebrew text known as the Masoretic Text.

For centuries scholars assumed that whenever the Septuagint differed from the Hebrew text it was simply because the Greek translators misunderstood the Hebrew. But the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls in the twentieth century changed that assumption dramatically. These scrolls contain Hebrew manuscripts dating from two centuries before Christ to the first century of the Christian era. In several places these ancient Hebrew manuscripts agree with the Septuagint rather than with the later Masoretic text. This means the Septuagint sometimes preserves readings that reflect older Hebrew traditions that were circulating in the Second Temple period.

One passage that fascinated me appears in Deuteronomy 32:8. In the later Masoretic Hebrew text the verse says that God divided the nations according to the number of the “sons of Israel.” But both the Septuagint and some Dead Sea Scroll manuscripts preserve a different reading: the nations were divided according to the number of the “sons of God.” This difference suggests that the ancient writers sometimes imagined the world as structured within a larger spiritual order. In this worldview God presides over a heavenly assembly of spiritual beings while Israel belongs directly to the Lord.

Other passages hint at the same idea. Psalm 82 depicts God standing in the midst of a divine assembly and judging the “gods,” declaring that although they are called sons of the Most High they will die like men. Psalm 29 calls upon the “sons of God” to give glory to the Lord. Even in the New Testament this layered cosmology is not entirely absent. Paul speaks about principalities and powers, rulers of the present age, and spiritual authorities operating behind the structures of the world. These passages suggest that the spiritual imagination of the ancient world was far more cosmological and multi-layered than the flattened worldview that sometimes developed in later theological traditions.

As I studied these things, I began to see the Bible less as a rigid doctrinal manual and more as a living record of humanity’s encounter with divine reality across centuries. The scriptures were preserved within communities that were asking profound questions about the nature of God, the structure of the cosmos, and humanity’s place within it. When we examine the manuscript traditions carefully, we gain a clearer window into that world.

For me personally, exploring the history of the biblical manuscripts has deepened rather than diminished my appreciation for scripture. The Bible becomes even more remarkable when we recognize the long chain of translators, scribes, and seekers who preserved it. From the scholars who produced the Septuagint in ancient Alexandria, to the communities that preserved scrolls in the Judean desert, to the medieval scribes copying manuscripts by hand, and finally to the translators of the King James Version and beyond—each generation contributed to the transmission of these sacred writings.

Understanding that history also reminds us to approach the text with humility. The goal is not simply to defend a particular translation or tradition but to seek the deeper truth the earliest witnesses were trying to communicate. When we take the earliest manuscripts seriously and explore the broader textual history of the Bible, we gain a richer and more nuanced understanding of the biblical narrative and the spiritual world in which it first emerged. In my own journey that realization has opened the door to a deeper appreciation of both the scriptures and the vast spiritual story they continue to tell.

 

My Spiritual Evolution

There was a time in my late twenties and early thirties when I attempted to answer the largest questions I could conceive—questions of being...