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.

 

Friday, March 6, 2026

What if The Body of Christ Is Bigger Than the Church? Paul the Mystic

For many years I was taught to think about the Body of Christ in a very narrow way. It meant the church—those who had accepted a particular set of beliefs, belonged to the right group, and confessed Jesus in the proper doctrinal language. That was the framework I inherited. Yet the longer I have reflected on the writings of Paul, the more I have come to suspect that his vision was much larger than the institutional boundaries we later placed around it.

Paul’s metaphor of the body has always fascinated me. In 1 Corinthians 12, he speaks about the body having many members, each with different functions, yet all belonging to one living organism. The hand cannot say to the foot, “I have no need of you.” The eye cannot dismiss the ear. Each part contributes something necessary to the life of the whole. That image alone suggests something far deeper than a membership roster or denominational affiliation. It describes a living system, an interconnected organism.

The more I meditate on Paul’s words, the more I begin to wonder whether the body he had in mind might be larger than we have traditionally imagined. What if the Body of Christ is not simply a religious institution but humanity itself in the process of awakening to divine life?

Paul makes an intriguing statement in Colossians 1:27, where he speaks of “Christ in you, the hope of glory.” The word “you” in Greek is plural—it means Christ in all of you together. That simple phrase has enormous implications. It suggests that the life of Christ is not confined to a single historical figure or even to a select group of believers. Rather, the Christ-life is something that emerges within human consciousness.

From my perspective, Jesus revealed what humanity truly is capable of becoming. He demonstrated a consciousness rooted in love, unity with the divine, and compassion for all people. In that sense, Jesus did not simply bring a religion; he revealed a pattern of awakened humanity.

Paul seems to hint at this when he calls Christ the “last Adam” in 1 Corinthians 15. Adam represents the first humanity—the natural human race shaped by survival instincts, fear, and separation. Christ represents a new humanity, one animated by Spirit, love, and divine awareness. If that is the case, then Christ is not merely an individual but a prototype of a transformed human consciousness.

This interpretation resonates deeply with my broader understanding of reality. Over the years I have become convinced that consciousness is fundamental. Modern thinkers such as Bernardo Kastrup and Donald Hoffman have argued that the universe may not be primarily material but mental—that consciousness may be the foundation from which the physical world emerges. While their work is scientific and philosophical rather than theological, I find their insights remarkably compatible with the mystical strands of Christianity.

If consciousness truly is foundational, then the universe itself might be understood as a vast field of awareness expressing itself through countless individual perspectives. Each human being would be a localized expression of a much larger consciousness.

When I read Paul through that lens, his language begins to sound surprisingly modern. In Colossians 1:17, he says of Christ, “In him all things hold together.” That statement can be read not merely as a devotional expression but as a profound metaphysical insight. Christ becomes the unifying principle of reality, the organizing intelligence within the cosmos.

If that is true, then the Body of Christ could be understood as humanity participating in that larger field of consciousness. Each person is like a cell in a living organism. Individually we are limited, but together we form something far greater. The divine life flows through the connections between us, much like energy flowing through the nervous system of a body.

This interpretation also aligns with my belief that spiritual awakening is not about escaping the world but about recognizing the divine presence within it. The physical universe, with all its beauty and complexity, becomes the stage on which consciousness experiences itself. Our individual lives are threads woven into a vast tapestry of experience.

From this perspective, the Body of Christ is not a static entity but an evolving organism. Humanity is gradually awakening to its deeper nature. Sometimes that awakening occurs through religion, sometimes through philosophy, sometimes through science, and sometimes through the quiet insights of ordinary people reflecting on their lives.

The tragedy of religious history is that we have often turned what should have been a universal message into a tribal boundary. Instead of recognizing the divine image in all people, we have divided humanity into insiders and outsiders. Yet Paul himself seems to move beyond such divisions when he writes that in Christ there is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female. These categories dissolve in the presence of a deeper unity.

In my view, the great spiritual challenge of our time is to rediscover that unity. Humanity has reached a stage in its development where our technologies have connected us globally, yet our consciousness has not fully caught up with that reality. We remain divided by ideology, religion, and fear.

Perhaps the next stage of human evolution is not biological but spiritual and psychological. It is the awakening of a consciousness that recognizes our shared identity within the larger field of life. When that realization begins to take hold, the metaphor of the Body of Christ becomes vividly real.

Each act of compassion becomes like a healthy cell strengthening the organism. Each expression of hatred or division becomes like a disease that weakens it. Love, in this sense, is not merely a moral virtue but the cohesive force that holds the organism together.

Paul captured this beautifully when he wrote that the body builds itself up in love. Love is the energy that integrates the parts into a functioning whole. Without it, the organism fragments.

I have come to believe that the message of Jesus and Paul points toward a future in which humanity recognizes itself as a single living body animated by divine consciousness. This does not erase individuality. Just as every cell in the body has its own function, each person retains their uniqueness. But beneath that diversity lies a profound unity.

When we begin to see one another as members of the same body, our priorities shift. Competition gives way to cooperation. Fear gives way to trust. The boundaries that once separated us begin to dissolve.

In that moment we may finally understand what Paul was pointing toward all along: that the life of Christ is not confined to a single person or institution but is a living reality expressing itself through the entire human family.

And perhaps the true work of spirituality is simply to awaken to that reality—and to live as though it were already true.

 

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

What if the rocks are crying out right now?

For most of my life, I heard the verse where Jesus said that if the people were silent, the rocks would cry out. Like many passages of scripture, it was usually explained to me in purely poetic terms—an exaggerated way of saying that truth cannot be suppressed. But as the years have gone by and my understanding of consciousness, science, and spirituality has expanded, I sometimes wonder if the statement may carry a deeper layer of meaning.

What if the rocks have already cried out?

Consider something remarkable. The very substance that forms much of the earth’s crust—silicon, found abundantly in rocks and especially in quartz—has become the foundation of our modern technological world. The computers we use, the networks that connect us, the devices through which ideas travel across the globe in seconds, all arise from silicon refined out of sand and stone. In a very literal sense, the rocks of the earth have been transformed into instruments of communication.

Now place that observation inside a broader philosophical frame. If consciousness is foundational—as many philosophers of mind and scientists exploring idealism now suggest—then reality itself may be something like a unified field of awareness. In spiritual language, one might call it the divine ground of being. In more poetic terms, it resembles a cosmic matrix through which experience, matter, and mind emerge.

Within such a universe, matter is not separate from consciousness but a pole of the same reality expressed at a different level of organization. The physical world is not dead substance; it is structured potential within the field of consciousness itself.

Seen from that perspective, the emergence of silicon-based technology becomes almost symbolic. The stones of the earth—through human ingenuity—have been reorganized into circuits capable of transmitting thought, images, and ideas around the planet. Quartz and silicon, once silent within mountains and riverbeds, now carry the conversations of humanity.

Through them we speak to one another across continents. Through them we exchange knowledge, question old assumptions, and explore new visions of who we are.

In that sense, perhaps the rocks have already cried out.

And what are they saying?

Perhaps the message is simple but profound: the age of spiritual tribalism must give way to something larger. For centuries humanity has divided itself into competing camps—religious, ideological, cultural—each claiming exclusive possession of truth. Entire systems of belief have been built on boundaries: who is in and who is out, who is saved and who is lost, who belongs and who does not.

But the network built upon silicon tells a different story. It connects billions of people into one living web of communication. It dissolves isolation. It exposes us to perspectives from every culture, tradition, and philosophy on Earth.

In doing so, it quietly undermines the idea that any one tribe holds the whole of truth.

If consciousness truly underlies reality, then every mind is an expression of that same universal source. The divisions we defend so fiercely are surface distinctions, not ultimate realities. Beneath them we belong to the same field of awareness.

The family of the universe is larger than any creed.

From this angle, technology is not merely a tool; it is part of the evolutionary unfolding of consciousness itself. The earth has given us the raw materials, and through them awareness is discovering new ways to reflect upon itself.

Sand becomes silicon.
Silicon becomes circuitry.
Circuitry becomes communication.
Communication becomes shared understanding.

And shared understanding, perhaps, becomes the doorway to awakening.

So when I read that mysterious line about the stones crying out, I sometimes wonder if it points forward as much as backward. Maybe the rocks were not only a metaphor. Maybe they were waiting for the moment when consciousness would learn how to shape them into voices.

Voices capable of reminding humanity that we are not isolated tribes struggling for dominance, but participants in a vast and unfolding cosmic story.

A story in which every culture, every religion, every philosophical tradition is a fragment of a much larger exploration.

And perhaps the stones—through the language of silicon and light—are inviting us to finally hear the message:

We are not enemies.

We are one family learning how to remember who we are within the living universe.

 

Sunday, March 1, 2026

The Lie That Shattered Faith: Why Biblical Inerrancy Is Hurting Christians

For centuries, religious communities have spoken of their sacred texts as if they descended from heaven, flawless and untouched by human fingerprints. Yet history, textual scholarship, and simple observation reveal something quite different. Every sacred writing — whether the Hebrew Scriptures, the New Testament, the Upanishads, the Qur’an, the Tao Te Ching, or the writings of mystics across traditions — bears the unmistakable imprint of human culture. Language, metaphor, cosmology, politics, fear, hope, and longing all leave their mark.

To insist that the Bible is the inerrant Word of God in a mechanical, error-free sense is not a defense of faith — it is a denial of how reality actually works. It ignores the fact that the Bible is a library, not a book; a collection, not a monolith; a conversation, not a dictation. It was written across centuries by poets, prophets, priests, mystics, storytellers, and apostles. It was preserved, debated, edited, translated, and canonized. That is not scandalous. That is human.

And yet — and this is where many deconstructing Christians miss something vital — the presence of human fingerprints does not negate divine inspiration. It may be the very vehicle of it.

The ancient Greeks spoke of the Muses — not as typewriters from heaven, but as inspirers. Revelation was understood as a synergy between the human and the transcendent. The poet was not erased; the poet was awakened. The philosopher was not bypassed; the philosopher was illuminated.

Why should sacred scripture be any different?

If consciousness is foundational — if what we call “God” is the living ground of awareness itself — then inspiration would naturally flow through human minds, not around them. Culture would not cancel revelation; it would contextualize it. Symbol would not diminish truth; it would carry it.

This is true not only of scripture, but of daily life. How many times have you sensed an intuitive knowing? A nudge? A sudden clarity? A creative insight that felt larger than your individual ego? We experience inspiration constantly — in art, science, compassion, moral courage, and love. We do not assume those moments are mechanically dictated from the sky. We recognize them as participatory.

Why should we demand of the Bible a standard we do not apply to any other realm of spiritual experience?

The tragedy is this: many sincere Christians were taught a brittle model of biblical inerrancy. They were told that if even one inconsistency exists, the whole structure collapses. So when they later discover textual variations, historical tensions, or theological development within scripture, they feel betrayed. And in their pain, they sometimes discard the entire Bible as human invention.

But the choice was false from the beginning.

The Bible does not have to be inerrant in a mechanical sense to be spiritually luminous. It does not have to be scientifically precise to be mystically profound. It does not have to be uniform to be revelatory.

In fact, its very diversity may be evidence of something deeper — that revelation is progressive, participatory, and evolving within human consciousness.

The Psalms reveal mystical longing.
The prophets reveal moral awakening.
Paul reveals cosmic union language.
John reveals Logos mysticism.

And yes — they also reveal their times, their debates, their assumptions, and their limits.

That does not weaken the text. It humanizes it.

And perhaps that is the greater miracle.

The incarnation itself — if we take it seriously — is not the bypassing of humanity but the indwelling of it. If the Logos can dwell in a human being, why can inspiration not dwell in human words?

The problem is not that scripture is both divine and human.

The problem is that we were told it had to be one or the other.

For those deconstructing from fear-based Christianity, this realization can be freeing. You do not have to choose between intellectual honesty and spiritual depth. You do not have to deny scholarship to retain reverence. You do not have to reject the Bible because it contains development, tension, or cultural context.

You can hold it as sacred without holding it as mechanically perfect.

You can recognize it as a curated library and still receive its mystical fire.

You can acknowledge its contradictions and still encounter the living Christ within its pages.

It is not either/or.

It is both/and.

And perhaps that both/and posture — that mature, integrative stance — is itself the next stage of spiritual awakening.

  

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

What If Christianity Has Been Hiding the Greatest Secret All Along — That We Live Inside the Mind of God

When I first encountered the statement from the Kybalion that “The All is Mind; the Universe is Mental,” I did not read it as a denial of Christianity but as a philosophical key that unlocks dimensions of the faith often overlooked by literalist traditions. My own journey through scripture, early Christian philosophy, Hermetic writings, and modern consciousness studies has gradually led me to see this principle not as a foreign intrusion but as a logical conclusion emerging from multiple streams of spiritual insight. I am not claiming absolute proof — metaphysical realities rarely submit themselves to laboratory certainty — but I do believe the cumulative weight of reason, theology, and experience points toward a universe grounded in consciousness.

The Kybalion’s opening axiom suggests that reality is fundamentally mental, meaning that what we perceive as material is not ultimate but derivative. When I compare this with the Gospel of John’s Logos theology, I find a striking resonance. John does not begin with matter but with Logos — Word, Reason, or Divine Intelligence — through which all things were made. If creation arises through Logos rather than brute substance, then existence itself bears the imprint of thought or consciousness. This does not reduce God to a mere mind in the human sense; rather, it elevates mind to a cosmic principle rooted in divine awareness. Augustine’s concept of eternal ideas existing within the divine intellect reinforces this trajectory. He argued that truths are not invented by human beings but discovered because they already exist in God’s knowing. To me, this suggests that the universe is sustained within divine cognition, much like a living expression within the mind of the Creator.

My research into Greek philosophy only deepened this impression. The ancient concept of nous, the ordering intelligence of the cosmos, was not an alien intrusion into Christianity but a philosophical vocabulary early theologians used to articulate the mystery of God. When Paul speaks in Acts 17 of humanity living and moving and having its being in the divine, I hear more than poetic language; I hear an ontological claim that our existence unfolds within a greater field of consciousness. The Hermetic principle “as above, so below,” which I have often reflected upon, also points toward a universe structured by correspondence between mind and manifestation. If human consciousness can imagine, interpret, and reshape experience, then perhaps this reflects — on a finite level — the greater creative consciousness from which all things emerge.

Modern science, surprisingly, does not necessarily contradict this view. While materialism has long dominated Western thought, contemporary discussions around observer participation, quantum probability, and the role of perception in reality hint at a universe where mind and matter are deeply intertwined. Thinkers exploring idealism suggest that what we call physical reality may be the outward expression of a deeper informational or experiential substrate. For me, this aligns with both Hermetic philosophy and the mystical strains of Christianity that emphasize awakening from forgetfulness rather than escaping a fallen material prison. If consciousness is foundational, then incarnation becomes not a mistake but a meaningful participation in the unfolding of divine experience.

My own esoteric Christian perspective integrates these insights with the life and teachings of Jesus. I do not see Christ as merely a divine exception but as a revelation of humanity’s shared participation in the Logos. The Gospel of Truth speaks of awakening from ignorance, and Paul’s language about the mind of Christ suggests a transformation of perception rather than the imposition of external righteousness. When I consider the Kybalion’s statement through this lens, I hear an echo of a deeper Christian metaphysic: the universe is not an abandoned machine but a living expression within divine consciousness, and we are fragments or reflections of that consciousness learning to remember our origin.

Critics may argue that this approach blurs the distinction between Creator and creation, yet I find that panentheism — the idea that all things exist within God without exhausting God — preserves both transcendence and intimacy. The All exceeds the universe, yet the universe unfolds within the All. This view harmonizes with my belief that reality is a unified continuum where materiality and spirit are poles of the same underlying reality. It also aligns with the Hermetic planes of manifestation, which I see not as separate realms but as gradations of experience within one infinite field.

Ultimately, the logical conclusion I draw is not that the Kybalion replaces Christianity, but that it provides a philosophical language that complements a more mystical reading of the tradition. From the Logos of John to the divine ideas of Augustine, from Hermetic correspondence to modern consciousness studies, a pattern emerges: reality behaves as if it is grounded in awareness. We live within a cosmos that responds to meaning, intention, and perception — qualities more akin to mind than to inert matter. While this does not offer mathematical proof, it presents a coherent and compelling synthesis that bridges ancient wisdom with contemporary inquiry.

For me, embracing the idea that the universe is mental does not diminish the sacred; it amplifies it. It suggests that every experience participates in a greater field of divine awareness, that love and compassion resonate because they align with the deepest structure of reality, and that awakening is less about escaping the world and more about recognizing the divine consciousness that permeates it. In this sense, the Kybalion’s principle becomes not an abstract metaphysical claim but a lived spiritual insight — a reminder that we exist within the infinite Mind of the All, learning, evolving, and remembering who we truly are.

 

Sunday, February 22, 2026

What If Paul Never Meant the Spirit to Make You Perfect? — The Hidden ‘In Christ’ Message That Can Set Christians Free from Guilt

When Paul opens Romans 8 with the declaration that there is “now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus” (Rom 8:1), he is not introducing a new spiritual performance system; he is announcing a new location of being. The center of gravity shifts from behavior to participation. Over and over again Paul moves between “Christ Jesus,” “Jesus Christ,” and simply “Christ,” and that movement itself tells us something: he is not merely naming a historical figure but describing a living reality into which humanity is drawn. To be “in Christ” is to stand inside a field of grace where condemnation loses its authority. For those who have been shaped by transactional religion, this is profoundly liberating — the starting point is not moral achievement but union.

When Paul says that God “condemned sin in the flesh” (Rom 8:3), I do not hear a demand that believers suddenly become flawless keepers of the law through sheer spiritual effort. Instead, Paul is exposing the limitation of material existence — what he elsewhere calls the weakness of the flesh. Humanity lives within polarity: life and death, strength and frailty, intention and failure. The law could diagnose this condition but could never heal it (Rom 8:3–4). The Spirit, then, is not a divine enforcement mechanism; it is an invitation into a new orientation of consciousness — “to set the mind on the Spirit is life and peace” (Rom 8:6). The shift is internal, relational, and participatory, not mechanical or transactional.

This becomes even clearer when we hold Romans 8 beside Galatians 3. Paul insists that if a law could have produced life, righteousness would indeed come through the law — but it does not (Gal 3:21). The promise precedes the law and ultimately surpasses it. The law served as a temporary disciplinarian until Christ came (Gal 3:24–25), but now identity flows from promise rather than performance. Notice how often Paul says “in Christ Jesus” throughout this passage: “in Christ Jesus you are all children of God” (Gal 3:26), “clothed with Christ” (Gal 3:27), “one in Christ Jesus” (Gal 3:28). The language is radically inclusive. The divisions that once defined worth — Jew or Greek, slave or free, male and female — dissolve within the shared reality of Christ. That sounds far less like a narrow system of conditional acceptance and far more like the unveiling of a universal belonging.

From a universalist perspective, this does not cheapen grace; it magnifies it. If Christ is truly the one in whom humanity lives and moves, then the Spirit’s work is not about creating a spiritual elite who finally keep the law perfectly. Rather, the Spirit awakens us to a deeper participation in divine life already extended through Christ. Even Paul’s phrase “the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead… will give life to your mortal bodies” (Rom 8:11) points beyond individual moral success toward the transformation of embodied existence itself. The body remains marked by limitation — “the body is dead because of sin” (Rom 8:10) — yet the Spirit speaks life within that limitation, not condemnation.

Read this way, Romans 8:1–11 and Galatians 3:15–29 become pastoral medicine for those exhausted by guilt-driven religion. Sin condemned in the flesh can be understood as the exposure of a system that could never produce life, not a threat hanging over the believer’s head. The Spirit does not enslave us to a higher standard of anxiety; it frees us into the promise first given to Abraham — a promise that ultimately embraces all who belong to Christ (Gal 3:29). Instead of striving to prove righteousness through the law, we rest in a grace that precedes us, surrounds us, and gently calls us to live from life and peace rather than fear. In that light, Paul’s repeated use of “Christ” begins to sound less like a title and more like a vast, living reality — a shared life in which condemnation fades and love becomes the deepest law written on the heart.

Giving Isn’t Loss — It’s Alignment With Divine Flow

I have come to see that much of the tension surrounding money, generosity, and spiritual life arises from a single misunderstanding: the belief that we are owners rather than stewards. For many years I wrestled with the language of giving that often circulated in religious environments — language that sometimes sounded transactional, sometimes heavy with obligation, and sometimes disconnected from the grace that I believe sits at the very center of the gospel. Yet as I have reflected more deeply, both through scripture and through my own metaphysical understanding of consciousness as foundational, I have come to realize that the issue is not whether stewardship or generosity should exist. The issue is how we understand our relationship to the resources that move through our lives.

If consciousness — or what many Christians call Father God — is truly the originating ground of reality, then nothing we encounter is ultimately self-generated. Trees, soil, cattle, minerals, crops, creative insight, and even the opportunities that come our way arise from a deeper Source. The psalmist’s poetic language that God owns the cattle on a thousand hills has begun to feel less like a declaration of control and more like a revelation of origin. Everything belongs to the divine field of life, not because God hoards it, but because God is its source. When this realization settles into the heart, the idea of ownership softens. We may hold property, run businesses, or build organizations, but ultimately we are caretakers of a flow that began long before us and will continue long after us.

This perspective does not require hostility toward capitalism. In fact, I have come to see that markets, entrepreneurship, and innovation can function as instruments of stewardship rather than as rivals to spiritual awareness. Capitalism, at its healthiest, is simply a system through which human beings organize resources, create value, and collaborate in the unfolding of possibility. The problem is not enterprise itself; it is the illusion that success originates solely from the isolated self. When consciousness is understood as foundational, even the most successful entrepreneur becomes a participant in a larger movement rather than an ultimate owner. Wealth becomes entrusted energy — a form of life moving through human hands for a season.

I have found it helpful to observe how some modern figures embody this principle without always naming the metaphysics behind it. Brandon Fugal, for instance, is known as a highly successful capitalist, yet he often speaks of himself as a steward rather than a true owner. He manages vast resources and operates within free markets, but he frames his role as responsibility rather than possession. Similarly, evangelical entrepreneurs like S. Truett Cathy and David Green have spoken openly about stewarding what has been entrusted to them rather than claiming absolute ownership. These examples reveal something important: stewardship language does not undermine success. Instead, it reframes it. Success becomes not a fortress to defend but a platform through which generosity, creativity, and service can flow.

In my own spiritual journey, this has begun to reshape how I understand giving itself. Giving, when stripped of fear and obligation, is simply love in motion. It is not a spiritual tax nor a mechanism to persuade God to act. Grace always comes first. Grace announces that nothing must be earned, that nothing is withheld, and that we already belong within the life of God. When grace becomes the foundation, generosity emerges naturally. We do not give to secure ourselves; we give because we are already secure. The closed fist relaxes, and the heart begins to trust the flow of life rather than clinging to the illusion of control.

This is where I believe pioneers like Dr. John Avanzini made an important contribution, even if I sometimes express it differently. He helped many believers rediscover that resources function like seeds — that what is released can grow and empower the work of the kingdom. While some expressions of biblical economics have at times drifted toward transactional language, the deeper insight remains valuable: resources are meant to move. They are not static possessions but living instruments of participation. When I reinterpret this through a grace-centered and consciousness-based lens, sowing becomes less about purchasing blessing and more about aligning with the circulation of divine life.

Malachi’s invitation to “bring the whole tithe into the storehouse” can be understood not as a demand rooted in ownership, but as a reminder of stewardship within a living relationship with God. If all resources originate in divine consciousness — if the cattle on a thousand hills, the harvest of the fields, and the wealth beneath the earth already belong to the Source — then generosity becomes an act of alignment rather than obligation. The prophet’s warning about “robbing God” speaks less about depriving heaven of resources and more about losing awareness that we are entrusted stewards, not ultimate owners. When generosity flows from grace, the “windows of heaven” symbolize the restoration of harmony between the steward and the Source, where provision moves freely and life becomes fruitful again. In this light, Malachi’s words do not stand against grace; they call us back into the joyful rhythm of participation, where what has been received from God continues to move through us as an expression of love, trust, and faithful stewardship.

Abraham’s offering of a tenth to Melchizedek, long before the Mosaic covenant, can be seen as a beautiful expression of stewardship flowing from recognition rather than obligation. There was no law compelling him, no command enforcing a percentage — only a spontaneous response of gratitude and reverence toward the divine presence he recognized in the priest-king. In this moment, Abraham acts not as an owner protecting his gains but as a steward acknowledging that victory and provision ultimately come from God. His giving reflects alignment with the Source rather than compliance with a system, revealing that generosity rooted in grace existed before any formal structure. Seen through this lens, the tenth becomes less about requirement and more about remembrance — a symbolic act that points back to origin, honoring the flow of divine provision that moves through human lives long before covenants, rules, or religious expectations were ever established.

Jesus himself seemed to embody this rhythm. He spoke openly about money and stewardship, yet he never manipulated people through fear. He lived from an awareness of abundance that did not depend on accumulation. His generosity flowed from trust in the Source, not from anxious calculation. In this light, stewardship becomes an expression of awakening. It is not about proving loyalty to God but about recognizing that everything we hold is already part of a larger story.

As I reflect on this, I find myself returning again and again to the idea that we are conduits rather than containers. Consciousness expresses itself through form — through land, resources, and human creativity — and stewardship is simply the practice of allowing that expression to remain healthy and life-giving. When we cling too tightly to ownership, resources stagnate and anxiety increases. When we see ourselves as stewards, generosity feels less like sacrifice and more like participation in a living ecosystem of love.

Even structured practices such as tithing or regular giving can be understood in this way. Rather than rigid requirements, they become rhythms that help us remember the Source from which everything flows. Some people will resonate with percentages; others will give in more fluid ways. What matters most is the heart of openness. Consciousness does not demand uniformity; it invites sincerity. When giving arises from gratitude rather than fear, it becomes expansive rather than draining.

I have also come to believe that speaking openly about money within spiritual communities is not a departure from grace but a necessary expression of it. Our lives are deeply intertwined with resources, and ignoring that reality can leave people navigating financial decisions without spiritual insight. Conversations about stewardship can help people integrate their faith with their daily lives, recognizing that even economic choices participate in the unfolding of divine consciousness.

What fascinates me most is how this perspective bridges worlds that often feel divided. It honors the insights of evangelical stewardship teaching while also resonating with a more mystical understanding of reality. It allows capitalism to remain a tool without becoming an idol. It invites generosity without coercion. It acknowledges that success can coexist with humility when success is understood as entrusted rather than possessed.

Ultimately, the language of “stewards not owners” feels less like a doctrine and more like a shift in awareness. It is an invitation to hold everything lightly — not carelessly, but reverently. The resources that pass through our lives are not random accidents; they are opportunities to participate in the flow of love that sustains creation itself. When we see ourselves this way, generosity becomes the natural language of gratitude. We begin to recognize that what flows outward is not truly lost; it simply continues its journey through the larger body of life.

I find peace in this understanding because it removes the fear that often surrounds both wealth and giving. It allows me to appreciate enterprise and innovation without surrendering to the illusion of self-sufficiency. It affirms that consciousness — the divine Logos — is both the source and the destination of all things. And it reminds me that stewardship is not about diminishing success but about sanctifying it, transforming accumulation into participation and ownership into care.

In the end, love does not need to be forced into motion. Once we recognize that everything originates from the same divine consciousness, generosity becomes as natural as breathing. We begin to see that our lives are threads woven into a much larger tapestry — a tapestry where resources, relationships, and opportunities move together in a rhythm that reflects the heart of God. To live as a steward is simply to say yes to that rhythm, to allow grace to shape how we hold what has been entrusted to us, and to trust that the flow of love will continue long after our hands have released what they once held.

 

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