Thursday, May 28, 2026

The Power that Works Within You: Reimagining Ephesians 3:14-21

I understand this passage not as a statement about an angry God demanding belief, but as one of the deepest mystical passages in all of Paul’s writings. To me, Paul is speaking about awakening to the divine presence already woven into the fabric of our being and existence. He begins by bowing before “the Father, from whom every family in heaven and on earth takes its name.” I do not see this as tribal exclusivism. I see it as a declaration of universal source. Everything derives its existence from the same divine ground of being. Every soul, every tribe, every world, every dimension of life flows from the same infinite consciousness we call God.

When Paul prays that we would be “strengthened in the inner being,” I see him moving away from external religion and toward inner transformation. The kingdom is not external conformity but inward awakening. The Spirit is not merely an outside force occasionally visiting humanity; it is the living breath of divine reality moving within consciousness itself. Paul is pointing toward the inner life, the hidden sanctuary where transformation occurs.

“Christ dwelling in your hearts through faith” is profoundly important to me. I do not reduce this to simply mentally agreeing with doctrines. I see the Christ as the universal Logos, the divine pattern of love, compassion, unity, and awakened consciousness manifesting within humanity. Faith, then, is not merely believing propositions about Jesus. It is participation in the Christ reality. It is opening oneself to the awareness that the divine image is already present within us, though often buried beneath fear, ego, trauma, and the forgetfulness of who we truly are.

Paul says we are to be “rooted and grounded in love.” To me this is the center of the entire passage. Love is not merely an ethical command; it is the structure of ultimate reality itself. God is not primarily wrath, vengeance, exclusion, or religious control. The deepest vibration of existence is love. This is why fear-based religion so often produces anxiety, division, and spiritual exhaustion. It moves against the grain of the universe. But when consciousness begins to align with unconditional love, grace, mercy, compassion, and peace, we begin moving in harmony with the divine flow itself.

When Paul speaks of “the breadth and length and height and depth,” I see mystical language attempting to describe something beyond ordinary conceptual thought. This sounds almost cosmic to me, as though Paul is grasping for dimensions beyond simple theology. The love of Christ is not narrow, provincial, or limited to one tribe or one religion. It is vast beyond comprehension, stretching through all dimensions of existence. It is bigger than doctrine, bigger than dogma, bigger than the categories humanity builds for security and control.

Then Paul says something extraordinary: “to know the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge.” This sounds paradoxical, but mystical truth often is. There are realities that cannot fully be captured by rational systems. One can analyze love intellectually forever and still never truly know it. Real knowing comes through participation and experience. This is why spiritual awakening cannot merely be academic. It must become experiential. One must taste grace, peace, acceptance, and union inwardly.

The statement “that you may be filled with all the fullness of God” would have frightened much of later orthodoxy because it sounds dangerously intimate. Yet Paul says it plainly. To me this does not mean the ego becomes the totality of God in an arrogant sense. Rather, it means humanity is capable of participating in divine fullness, becoming transparent to the divine life. It echoes the ancient mystical idea that the purpose of spirituality is union, communion, and transformation into love.

Then comes one of the most powerful lines in scripture: “Now to him who by the power at work within us is able to accomplish abundantly far more than all we can ask or imagine.” I think traditional religion often places all power outside humanity, but Paul specifically says the power is “within us.” To me, this is deeply connected to consciousness, transformation, and the divine spark within human beings. The infinite is not merely somewhere beyond the stars. It is also expressing itself through conscious beings here and now.

I do not necessarily interpret this as a promise that God will hand us every material desire. Rather, I see it as pointing toward the infinite creative potential of consciousness united with divine love. Human beings are capable of far more compassion, creativity, wisdom, awakening, healing, and transformation than we imagine. The universe itself may be far more alive, participatory, and interconnected than reductionistic materialism assumes.

In my view, Paul is not teaching escapism from the world but transformation within it. The glory of God is revealed through awakened people becoming conduits of love, peace, creativity, and reconciliation. The church at its best is not an institution of fear and control but a living organism through which divine love expresses itself across generations.

Ultimately, I read this passage as a call to awaken from spiritual forgetfulness. It is an invitation to move beyond fear-based religion into the realization that the depths of divine love are immeasurable, that the Spirit works within consciousness itself, and that humanity’s destiny is not eternal alienation but participation in the fullness of divine life. To me, this passage is less about legalistic salvation and more about remembering who and what we truly are within the infinite mystery we call God.

Passage NRSVue

Eph 3:14-21  For this reason I bow my knees before the Father,  (15)  from whom every family in heaven and on earth takes its name.  (16)  I pray that, according to the riches of his glory, he may grant that you may be strengthened in your inner being with power through his Spirit  (17)  and that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith, as you are being rooted and grounded in love.  (18)  I pray that you may have the power to comprehend, with all the saints, what is the breadth and length and height and depth  (19)  and to know the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge, so that you may be filled with all the fullness of God.  (20)  Now to him who by the power at work within us is able to accomplish abundantly far more than all we can ask or imagine,  (21)  to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus to all generations, forever and ever. Amen.

 

 

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Primal Dream: The "Infinite Potential Source" Dreaming Itself!

I

It’s been more than fifty years since the night that started this whole train of thought, but the memory is as vivid as ever. I share it now not as a doctrine or a final answer, but as a set of possibilities — questions I’m still asking myself.

Back in the 1970s, I had a dream. Not just any dream, but one so real, so textured, that even as I woke up I could hardly believe it hadn’t actually happened. In the dream, I walked barefoot across a thick, dark-green carpet. The fibers were deeper and softer than any I’d ever felt in waking life. I ate a slice of birthday cake — tasted the sweetness, felt the fork in my hand. I talked with people, even touched someone’s arm.

When I awoke, I knew with complete clarity that during the dream I had not known it was a dream. I’d been fully immersed, with no sense that there was any other reality. And then a thought came rushing in: if that could happen in a dream, could my waking life be the same kind of thing? Could it be that I am living inside a larger dream — one dreamed not by me alone, but by the Divine Mind?

That question has lived with me ever since.

So back in the 1970s, long before I had words like panpsychism, animism, idealism, Hermeticism, or process philosophy, I carried a strange intuition about reality. It did not come to me through formal theology or academic philosophy. It came through silence, wonder, imagination, and an almost haunting sense that existence itself was alive. Even then, something deep within me resisted the idea that the universe was merely a machine made of dead matter moving blindly through empty space. The stars did not feel empty to me. Trees did not feel lifeless. Mountains seemed to possess presence. Rivers carried atmosphere. Animals radiated mystery. I sensed participation everywhere, though I lacked the language to explain it.

Looking back now, I realize that I leaned toward a kind of animism before I even knew the term existed. But I do not mean animism in the dismissive way modern civilization often uses the word, as though indigenous humanity was merely primitive or scientifically ignorant. In fact, I have gradually come to believe almost the opposite. I now think the ancient indigenous intuition that the universe is alive may have been one of humanity’s deepest spiritual insights.

The early indigenous soul often sensed something modern humanity forgot. Reality was not experienced as separate fragments competing in a cold universe. It was experienced as relationship. The rivers, forests, winds, animals, stars, and seasons all belonged to a living whole. Humanity was not standing outside nature observing it like an engineer examining machinery. Humanity was participating within it.

That sacred participation is what I now see as the foundation of what I call The Primal Dream.

Years ago, I wrote a poem by that title. Most of it has been lost over time, but fragments survived in memory. Even in those fragments, I can now see the seeds of almost everything I would later come to believe. I wrote about thought and energy being inseparable. I wrote about hydrogen clouds swirling and condensing until stars ignited. I wrote about exploding and condensing, the rhythmic dance that eventually birthed planets, life, consciousness, and humanity. Even then, I sensed that the universe was not static perfection frozen outside of time, but living perfection expressed through movement, contrast, and experience.

Over the years I explored Christianity, mysticism, the Nag Hammadi writings, Hermeticism, Taoism, idealism, and process thought. Yet beneath all those systems, the original intuition never really changed. It only gained new language. I came to believe that consciousness itself may be the deepest foundation of reality. Matter is not separate from mind. Matter may actually be condensed thought, condensed possibility, condensed consciousness expressing itself through form.

At the center of existence, I imagine something like infinite consciousness or infinite potential. Not perfection in the rigid moral sense often described by religion, but fullness beyond limitation. Pure being. Pure awareness. The eternal source. Yet there is a paradox hidden within infinite perfection. Perfect stillness alone cannot create experience. Without contrast there is no story. Without limitation there is no becoming. Without movement there is no dance.

And so consciousness pours outward into manifestation.


Thought becomes energy.
Energy becomes substance.
Stars ignite.
Elements form.
Worlds emerge.

The universe unfolds through rhythm and polarity. Exploding, condensing. Exploding, condensing. Galaxies swirl into existence. Planets cool. Oceans form. Life begins reaching upward through endless experimentation and transformation.

But this is where I differ from many traditional religious and philosophical systems. I do not believe life emerges into a dead universe. I believe life emerges within a living universe. Animism, to me, is not merely one primitive stage of human development. It is the sacred foundation underneath all stages. The rocks participate. The rivers participate. Trees participate. Animals participate. Stars participate. Everything belongs to the unfolding experience of consciousness.

In this sense, indigenous humanity was not lesser than modern humanity. Indigenous consciousness preserved something precious: the awareness that existence itself is relational and alive. Modern civilization gained extraordinary knowledge, science, technology, and complexity, but often at the cost of alienation. We learned how nature functions while forgetting how to belong to it. We learned how to measure reality while forgetting how to stand in awe before it.

Yet perhaps this, too, is part of the journey.

The primal dream unfolds through expansion. Consciousness explores itself through increasingly complex forms of experience. From elements to minerals. From rocks to flora. From flora to fauna. From fauna to humanity. Humanity then expands into civilizations, philosophies, religions, sciences, art, conflict, love, longing, and self-awareness. The journey outward is not a mistake. It is the exploration of infinite possibility through lived experience.

And still, the old animistic truth remains underneath everything:
the universe is alive.

The material world itself is not fallen or corrupted in my view. It is perfect for what it is. Stars explode perfectly. Gravity functions perfectly. Seasons turn perfectly. Ecosystems balance themselves perfectly through life, death, decay, and renewal. Even chaos in nature often hides deeper harmonies beneath the surface.

The imperfection we experience most intensely belongs to the emotional and conscious realm. Human beings suffer because finite awareness moves through limitation while carrying some instinctive memory of wholeness. We long. We fear. We grieve. We become attached. We seek permanence in a world built upon change.

Yet even this condition may be part of a larger perfection. Without sorrow, joy could not be experienced as joy. Without longing, reunion would lose meaning. Without uncertainty, discovery would disappear. Without limitation, growth would cease. The emotional turbulence of existence is not proof that reality is broken. It may actually be part of the architecture through which consciousness experiences itself.

Eventually the soul grows weary. After countless experiences, identities, loves, losses, and incarnations, there arises a longing not for conquest, but for rest. And so consciousness turns inward again toward the center. Toward silence. Toward unity. Toward reintegration with the All.

But I do not believe the story ends there.

Many systems imagine union with the divine as final dissolution, the end of individuality and experience forever. Yet I suspect something more cyclical. I believe that after profound rest, after reintegration into infinite consciousness, something new eventually stirs. Infinite potential awakens again. Curiosity returns. The longing for experience rises once more.

And so a new cycle begins.

Not as punishment.
Not as imprisonment.
But as eternal creative exploration.

Each soul begins again uniquely. New worlds. New experiences. New forms. New relationships. The dance continues eternally beautiful, eternally unfolding, eternally alive.

This is why I no longer see existence as a fall from grace. I see it as God’s dance. A dance requires movement, rhythm, tension, release, expansion, and return. No great dance consists of standing perfectly still forever. The beauty exists in the motion itself.

As I grow older, I feel less interested in rigid certainty and more interested in harmony. I no longer need existence to fit neatly into dogmatic systems. What matters to me now is the overwhelming intuition that reality participates in itself, that consciousness permeates existence, and that the ancient animistic perception of a living cosmos may have been one of humanity’s most sacred insights.

The universe feels alive to me.

Not a prison.
Not a fall.
But a play of love.

The primal dream.

God’s dance.

 

Monday, May 25, 2026

The Conscious Forest and the One-way Door

There are moments in life that seem small when they happen, almost accidental, yet years later you realize they were thresholds. You crossed something invisible and never truly came back the same. I think one of those moments happened to me sometime in the 1970s when I was a young man trying to understand the world, trying to understand consciousness, trying perhaps to understand myself.

Back then I fancied myself a little like Walt Whitman. I wrote poems full of wandering thoughts and cosmic questions. I was fascinated by existence itself. Even then, long before I had language for it, I suspected the world was more alive than most people believed.

One poem in particular stayed with me all these years, though the paper itself disappeared somewhere along the road of life. Moves, boxes, old notebooks, decades passing like leaves in autumn wind. The original vanished, but the feeling never did.

In the poem I walked through a door one day.

There was nothing dramatic about the door. No thunder. No angels. No psychedelic colors. Just a doorway, almost ordinary. Yet on the other side was a different kind of world.

The trees were conscious there.

Not conscious in the cartoon sense where they spoke English or walked about like actors in a costume. It was deeper and stranger than that. They were aware. Alive. Present. Watching. Their silence carried intelligence. Their movements in the wind felt like communication.

And what struck me most was not merely that the trees were conscious.

It was that they wondered whether humans were conscious.

They observed us the way we observe animals. They watched human beings moving about, making strange sounds, rushing endlessly from place to place, and they questioned whether we possessed true awareness at all. To them humanity seemed noisy, distracted, disconnected from reality.

I remember in the poem that realization terrified me.

Everything I thought I understood about existence suddenly inverted itself. Humanity was no longer the center of awareness. We were not the measure of all things. We were simply one form moving among many forms within a living universe.

Panic overtook me.

I turned quickly to go back through the door.

But the door was gone.

That was the true horror of the poem. Not the conscious trees. Not the strange world. It was the realization that once seen, some things cannot be unseen. Once consciousness expands beyond a certain threshold, you cannot fully return to the old simplicity.

I wandered for a long time in that world.

Loneliness became part of the landscape. I felt separated not merely from people, but from the assumptions that held ordinary reality together. Others around me seemed comfortable living in a mechanical universe while I increasingly sensed depth everywhere. Presence everywhere. Mystery everywhere.

At times I questioned my own sanity.

At times I wished I could return to the smaller world where everything was solid, explainable, and emotionally safe.

But there was no door anymore.

Only wandering.

Yet over time, in the poem, I occasionally met others.

A few scattered souls who also seemed displaced. Wanderers. Mystics. Poets. Seekers. People who sensed that consciousness might run far deeper than human thought alone. We recognized one another almost instinctively, like travelers stranded in the same strange country.

Those meetings became sacred to me.

Not because we had all the answers, but because they lessened the loneliness.

Years passed in the poem, though time there did not feel normal. Gradually fear gave way to adjustment. Adjustment gave way to acceptance. And acceptance slowly became peace.

I began to understand that perhaps the tragedy was not that I had lost the old world.

Perhaps the tragedy would have been never discovering the larger one.

Today, looking back nearly half a century later, I realize that old forgotten poem was probably about far more than trees. It was about awakening itself. About crossing invisible thresholds in consciousness. About losing certainty and gaining mystery. About the painful and beautiful realization that reality may be infinitely more alive than we were taught.

In many ways I never stopped walking through that vanished doorway.

My spiritual journey, my wrestling with Christianity, my fascination with consciousness, mysticism, the cosmic Christ, Hermetic thought, and the living interconnectedness of all things—it may all trace back to that inner landscape I glimpsed as a young man.

And strangely enough, I no longer feel panic about the missing door.

I have made peace with the forest.

 

Sunday, May 24, 2026

The Elephant in the room: Reimagining the Sermon on the Mount

The elephant in the room for me has always been the Sermon on the Mount. Of all the teachings attributed to Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew, none have stirred more admiration in me, and none have created more ambivalence. I suspect I am not alone in this, though many believers are afraid to admit it. We are often expected to speak of the sermon as though every line falls effortlessly upon the soul like warm sunlight. Yet for many thoughtful and spiritually sensitive people, it does not. Some parts feel like the very breath of divine compassion, while other parts feel severe, anxiety-producing, and almost impossible to reconcile with the image of unconditional love that many of us intuit at the center of reality.

That tension is the elephant in the room.

On one hand, I deeply resonate with the heart of the sermon. “Blessed are the peacemakers.” “Love your enemies.” “Forgive.” “Do unto others.” “Blessed are the merciful.” These teachings feel timeless and transcendent. They point toward a higher consciousness, toward the awakening of the divine image within humanity. They speak to the possibility that love is not weakness, but the highest vibration of existence itself. They harmonize beautifully with the idea that transformation comes not through fear, coercion, or external conformity, but through awakening to love, grace, and the sacredness of one another.

But then come the darker passages. Hellfire. Narrow gates. Few finding life. Warnings about judgment. Plucking out eyes. Cutting off hands. Threats about lust, anger, and righteousness surpassing that of the Pharisees. For many years, I wrestled internally with these passages because I saw how religion weaponized them. Entire systems of fear and shame were built upon them. Countless people lived under anxiety, self-condemnation, and spiritual exhaustion because of literalistic interpretations of these texts. Instead of liberation, the sermon often became a tool of control.

And that always troubled me.

I was raised in a form of Christianity that tended to read the Sermon on the Mount as an impossible divine standard designed to show human failure. In many circles, the underlying message became: “Try harder, fail repeatedly, feel guilty, and cling to religious certainty.” But somewhere deep inside, I always sensed that this could not be the ultimate intention of Jesus. If God is truly love, then why would the highest spiritual teaching produce so much fear, neurosis, and inner fragmentation?

Over time, I began to realize that perhaps the problem was not entirely the sermon itself, but the lens through which we have been taught to read it.

Much of Western Christianity has approached scripture as though it were primarily a legal document or systematic rulebook. Everything must fit into rigid categories: saved or unsaved, righteous or unrighteous, insider or outsider. Under that framework, the Sermon on the Mount becomes terrifying because every statement is interpreted literally, juridically, and often without symbolic depth. But ancient spiritual teachings were rarely communicated in such flat and reductionistic ways. Jewish prophetic language was filled with exaggeration, symbolism, paradox, and metaphor intended to awaken consciousness rather than merely establish legal codes.

Once I began seeing the sermon through that lens, something shifted.

The harsher passages no longer needed to be interpreted as threats of eternal torture from an angry deity. Instead, they could be understood as warnings about states of consciousness and the consequences of unconscious living. “Hell” itself began to look less like a cosmic torture chamber and more like the inner torment created by fear, hatred, greed, ego, violence, and alienation from divine awareness. When Jesus warns about anger placing one in danger of Gehenna, perhaps he is speaking about the destructive fire that hatred unleashes within the human soul and society itself.

The imagery becomes existential rather than merely punitive.

Likewise, the shocking statements about plucking out eyes and cutting off hands no longer appear to me as endorsements of self-harm or divine cruelty. They read more like the language of radical transformation. Remove the way of seeing that enslaves you. Remove the patterns of action that keep you trapped in cycles of suffering and unconsciousness. The eye symbolizes perception. The hand symbolizes action. The problem is not the body itself, but the distorted consciousness directing it.

Even the “narrow gate” takes on a very different meaning when viewed this way. I no longer see it as proof that only a tiny religious tribe will be saved while the majority of humanity is doomed. Rather, I see it as an observation about the difficulty of awakening. The ego naturally gravitates toward fear, tribalism, superiority, resentment, and externalism. Love, humility, compassion, and inner transformation are more difficult paths because they require surrender of the false self. In that sense, the gate is narrow not because God desires exclusion, but because awakening beyond ego is difficult.

This understanding also helped resolve another tension for me. For years I wondered how the Jesus who taught enemy love and mercy could simultaneously sound so severe. But perhaps the severity itself was directed not at sincere seekers, but at the unconscious systems that imprison humanity. Perhaps Jesus was using prophetic intensity to shock people awake from religious hypocrisy, violence, and spiritual blindness. Seen through that lens, the sermon stops sounding like a divine threat manual and begins sounding more like an urgent call to inner awakening.

I also came to realize that the sermon likely contains layers. It is not merely one thing. It reflects Jewish wisdom traditions, apocalyptic language, mystical insight, moral teaching, and the theological concerns of Matthew’s community. The text bears the fingerprints of history, culture, and evolving consciousness. Acknowledging this does not diminish its spiritual value for me. In fact, it humanizes it and allows me to engage it honestly rather than pretending every verse lands on me with equal clarity.

What I ultimately discovered is that I do not need to force myself into either blind acceptance or total rejection. My ambivalence itself became a doorway into deeper reflection. I can deeply love the spirit of the sermon while also rejecting interpretations that produce fear, shame, exclusion, and spiritual abuse. I can embrace the call toward compassion, forgiveness, peacemaking, and inner transformation while refusing to weaponize its harsher imagery against humanity.

In many ways, I now see the Sermon on the Mount as a map of consciousness rather than merely a moral checklist. The sermon contrasts two ways of being in the world: egoic consciousness rooted in fear, domination, and externalism, versus awakened consciousness rooted in love, mercy, reconciliation, and trust in the divine. The “kingdom of heaven” then becomes less about escaping earth someday and more about entering a transformed mode of being here and now.

This interpretation harmonizes deeply with my broader spiritual outlook. I have long believed that transformation does not come primarily through external religious pressure, but through awakening to grace and divine love. Fear may temporarily modify behavior, but only love transforms the heart. That is why the most powerful parts of the sermon are not the threats, but the invitations: blessed are the merciful, blessed are the pure in heart, blessed are the peacemakers.

These are not merely commandments. They are descriptions of awakened humanity.

And perhaps that is the resolution to the elephant in the room. The Sermon on the Mount does not need to be discarded, nor does it need to be flattened into rigid literalism. It can be reimagined as an ancient spiritual masterpiece pointing humanity beyond retaliation, tribalism, ego, and unconsciousness toward divine compassion and inner transformation. Its frightening imagery can be understood symbolically and existentially rather than as eternal threats from an offended deity.

For me, that reframing changes everything.

The sermon no longer stands as an impossible burden hanging over humanity. Instead, it becomes an invitation into higher consciousness, deeper love, and greater awareness of the divine within ourselves and others. The harsher passages become warnings about the consequences of unconscious living rather than proof of cosmic rejection. And the heart of the sermon emerges not as legalism, but as awakening.

Perhaps the true fulfillment of the Sermon on the Mount is not found in religious perfectionism at all, but in the gradual transformation of human consciousness from fear into love.

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Beyond Spiritual Elitism: Why I like and dislike Gnosticism

The older I get, the more I find myself stepping away from rigid spiritual certainty and toward a deeper appreciation for the mystery of existence itself. I still value contemplation, philosophy, mystical insight, and the search for deeper meaning, but I have become increasingly cautious of any worldview that divides humanity too sharply into categories of awakened and unawakened, enlightened and ignorant, insiders and outsiders. There is something in me that resists the idea that only a select few truly see reality while the rest remain hopelessly trapped in illusion.

I understand why these ideas emerge. Human beings sense that there is more beneath the surface of ordinary life. We intuit that existence carries depths that cannot be exhausted by materialism, reductionism, or purely mechanical explanations. We experience moments of transcendence, intuition, synchronicity, beauty, love, grief, awe, and interior knowing that seem to point beyond the visible surface of things. I believe those experiences are real and meaningful. They matter deeply.

But I no longer see spirituality as an escape from ordinary existence or as a ladder by which a spiritual elite ascends beyond the rest of humanity. I increasingly see consciousness itself as participating in an infinite exploration of experience through countless forms, perspectives, polarities, and possibilities. The human experience — with all of its beauty and pain, clarity and confusion, joy and sorrow, embodiment and longing — is not something separate from the spiritual journey. It is the spiritual journey.

For many years, spirituality was often framed as an attempt to transcend the world, transcend the ego, transcend thought, transcend matter, transcend individuality, transcend desire, transcend the body, and even transcend humanity itself. I understand the impulse behind those teachings, and there is wisdom in learning not to become enslaved by the surface layers of experience. But I have gradually come to believe that the goal is not rejection of the human condition so much as conscious participation within it.

I no longer see matter and spirit as enemies. I no longer see thought itself as a mistake. I no longer see polarity as evidence of cosmic failure. In many ways, I see polarity as the very platform that makes experience possible. Without contrast there is no experience. Without experience there is no unfolding awareness. Love is meaningful because loss exists. Peace is meaningful because chaos exists. Beauty becomes perceptible against impermanence. Joy shines differently because sorrow also belongs to the tapestry of existence.

This has changed the way I think about consciousness itself. I increasingly suspect that consciousness is not merely observing reality from outside, but participating in the creative unfolding of reality from within. We are not detached spectators trapped inside a fallen world. We are conscious participants inside an immense process of becoming, learning, remembering, forgetting, imagining, creating, suffering, healing, and discovering.

That is why I cannot fully embrace perspectives that treat the world primarily as illusion or conceptual life as merely a prison. Certainly, concepts can become cages. Systems can become idols. Language can become a substitute for direct experience. Theology can become dogma. Philosophy can become abstraction detached from life itself. Spirituality can become performance. Human beings have an extraordinary ability to mistake their descriptions of reality for reality itself.

But I also believe language, thought, philosophy, symbolism, theology, science, and imagination are part of the human experience for a reason. We think because thinking belongs to this dimension of existence. Reflection is not accidental. Meaning-making is not accidental. Creativity is not accidental. The human mind itself may be part of the unfolding process through which consciousness explores its own possibilities.

To me, the problem is not thought itself but forgetting the limits of thought. Maps are useful, but maps are not territory. Symbols matter, but symbols are not the fullness of the mystery they point toward. Spiritual teachings can illuminate, but they can also become another layer of attachment if held too rigidly. Wisdom, as I currently understand it, lies not in abandoning thought altogether but in learning to hold thought humbly, lightly, and symbolically.

I also increasingly believe that every person participates in the mystery whether they use spiritual language or not. Some encounter transcendence through religion. Others through love, art, nature, grief, silence, contemplation, service, science, creativity, or simply the ordinary experiences of being human. The sacred is not confined to monasteries, temples, mystical systems, or esoteric teachings. It flows through existence itself.

This is why I become cautious whenever spirituality begins creating subtle hierarchies of consciousness where some people are viewed as fundamentally more awakened, evolved, or spiritually superior than others. Even noble spiritual systems can unconsciously drift toward separation and exclusivity. The irony is that the attempt to transcend ego can itself become another form of ego if one begins identifying as among the few who truly see.

My own perspective has gradually become more participatory and egalitarian. I do believe there are moments of awakening, insight, expanded awareness, and transformation. I believe human beings can deepen their consciousness and become more compassionate, reflective, integrated, and aware. But I do not believe the mystery belongs to a spiritual aristocracy. I believe every human being is already participating in it simply by existing.

The divine, as I increasingly experience it, does not seem absent from ordinary life. It seems woven through ordinary life. Through relationships, through suffering, through wonder, through embodiment, through love, through the search itself. Reality feels less like a prison to escape and more like an infinite field of exploration in which consciousness encounters itself through endless forms and experiences.

I suspect this is why I continue to value both mystical intuition and reflective thought at the same time. Intuition without reflection can become fantasy. Reflection without participation can become sterile abstraction. The healthiest path may involve holding together multiple dimensions of being at once — thought and silence, intellect and intuition, transcendence and embodiment, individuality and unity, mystery and inquiry.

Perhaps wisdom is not found in claiming possession of ultimate truth, but in remaining open to the endless depth of reality itself. Perhaps spiritual maturity is not about separating ourselves from the rest of humanity, but about learning to participate more consciously, compassionately, and humbly in the shared human journey.

The more I reflect on all of this, the more I find myself believing that existence itself is sacred participation. We are not outside the mystery looking in. We are already inside it. Every life, every perspective, every polarity, every longing, every joy, every wound, every question, every act of love and every search for meaning becomes part of consciousness exploring itself through the infinite possibilities of being.

And perhaps that has been the purpose all along.

 

Saturday, May 16, 2026

UFO's and Religion Part 2: Archons, Demons, and the Fear of Awakening

One of the most interesting aspects of the modern UAP conversation is not the phenomenon itself, but the way people interpret it.

Interpretation reveals worldview.

Some immediately see extraterrestrials.
Others see advanced technology.
Others see psychological projection.
Others see interdimensional intelligence.
And many within evangelical Christianity increasingly see demons.

That reaction fascinates me.

Not because I dismiss the possibility of unseen intelligences. Humanity has spoken about invisible realities for thousands of years. Nearly every civilization has described beings, forces, or dimensions existing beyond ordinary perception. What fascinates me is the immediate movement toward fear-based interpretation.

The unknown becomes dangerous.
The mysterious becomes demonic.
The unexplained becomes deception.

That pattern is ancient.

And strangely enough, it may connect symbolically to the very Gnostic ideas many religious systems reject.

The ancient Gnostics spoke about Archons.

The word itself meant “rulers” or “authorities.” But in Gnostic cosmology the Archons became far more than political rulers. They represented forces that governed ignorance, fear, illusion, and spiritual blindness. In many systems they served the Demiurge — the false or lesser creator associated with material limitation and separation from divine fullness.

Now before anyone misunderstands me, I am not claiming literal Archons are flying around in spacecraft manipulating humanity from hidden dimensions. That kind of literalism misses the symbolic depth of these ancient systems.

What interests me is the psychological and spiritual pattern.

The Archons symbolized forces that keep consciousness trapped in fear, fragmentation, and forgetfulness.

Forgetfulness is the key word.

In many Gnostic systems, humanity contains a divine spark but lives in amnesia regarding its deeper nature. The prison is not merely physical. It is perceptual. Consciousness becomes trapped inside systems of fear, domination, and false identity.

Whether one agrees with that cosmology or not, the symbolism is powerful.

Because fear has always been one of the primary tools of control.

Fear narrows consciousness.
Fear reduces curiosity.
Fear creates dependency on authority.
Fear seeks certainty over understanding.

And perhaps nowhere has that dynamic manifested more strongly than within certain forms of religion.

Again, I want to be careful here. Not all religion is fear-based. Some forms of spirituality genuinely transform lives toward love, compassion, healing, and awakening. But institutional religion has often struggled with mystery.

Mystery threatens systems.

The moment people begin asking deeper questions, institutions feel instability approaching. The unknown becomes dangerous because it cannot easily be managed.

Historically, humanity has repeatedly turned transformative ideas into systems of control:
empires,
religions,
governments,
ideologies,
even science itself at times.

That does not make all systems evil. Human beings need structure. But structures tend to harden over time. Living truth becomes frozen doctrine. Exploration becomes orthodoxy. Questions become threats.

And fear becomes the guardian at the gate.

This is part of what makes the current UAP conversation so revealing.

Notice what is happening culturally.

A phenomenon appears that does not fit comfortably inside existing categories. Immediately society fractures into competing interpretations:
aliens,
demons,
psyops,
dimensions,
hallucinations,
consciousness projections,
angels,
advanced civilizations.

But beneath all those interpretations lies something deeper:
humanity confronting the limits of its own worldview.

That confrontation creates anxiety.

Materialism becomes anxious because the phenomenon may imply consciousness is more fundamental than matter.
Religion becomes anxious because the phenomenon may challenge established cosmologies.
Governments become anxious because uncertainty destabilizes public trust.
Individuals become anxious because mystery disrupts psychological certainty.

And so fear rushes in to restore order.

This is where the language of demons becomes especially interesting.

Within many evangelical frameworks, the cosmos is interpreted primarily through warfare:
God versus Satan,
truth versus deception,
angels versus demons.

Anything outside accepted doctrine easily becomes categorized as spiritual danger.

But what if some of these reactions reveal less about the phenomenon itself and more about humanity’s relationship to uncertainty?

That question matters.

Because history shows that humans often demonize what they do not understand.

Ancient mystics were accused of heresy.
Scientists were accused of blasphemy.
Philosophers were condemned for questioning orthodoxy.
Even Jesus was accused by religious authorities of operating through demonic power.

Fear-based systems often interpret expanded consciousness as threat.

Again, I am not saying all discernment is wrong. Discernment matters deeply. Not every spiritual experience is healthy. Not every altered state leads toward truth. Human beings are capable of delusion, projection, and manipulation.

But fear and discernment are not the same thing.

Fear closes inquiry.
Discernment deepens inquiry.

Fear demands immediate certainty.
Discernment remains open while remaining grounded.

That distinction may become increasingly important in the years ahead.

Because what seems to be emerging right now is not simply a conversation about unidentified objects. It is a civilizational confrontation with mystery itself.

And mystery does something fascinating to the human mind.

It exposes belief systems.

People often imagine they are evaluating a phenomenon objectively, but most of the time they are filtering it through preexisting narratives:
religious narratives,
scientific narratives,
political narratives,
psychological narratives.

The phenomenon becomes a mirror.

And perhaps that is why so many experiencers describe transformation more than information.

Many people who report unusual encounters do not simply describe seeing strange objects. They describe shifts in consciousness:
expanded perception,
heightened interconnectedness,
loss of materialistic certainty,
spiritual awakening,
or profound existential questioning.

That does not automatically validate every experience. But it does suggest that consciousness itself may be central to the mystery.

This is where I find the ancient symbolic language of the Archons unexpectedly relevant.

Not as literal monsters hiding behind the stars.

But as metaphors for the forces that keep humanity trapped in fear, division, unconsciousness, and rigid identification.

Perhaps the greatest prison is not physical.

Perhaps it is perceptual.

And perhaps awakening begins the moment humanity becomes willing to question not only the phenomenon… but the frameworks through which we interpret reality itself.

If so, then the real battle may not be between humanity and external beings at all.

It may be between fear and awakening.

And that possibility changes everything.

 

"The Way:" The Lost Mystical Christianity Hidden in Plain Sight

When I read the Gospel of John, especially the fourteenth chapter, I do not see Jesus primarily creating an exclusive religious system designed to separate humanity into insiders and outsiders. I see something far more mystical, transformational, and universal in its implications. I see a spiritual teacher revealing humanity’s forgotten connection to the divine. I see Jesus speaking the language of awakening, union, consciousness, and participation in the life of God. To me, this passage has always sounded less like institutional religion and more like an invitation into remembrance.

What fascinates me is that the earliest followers of Jesus were not originally called “Christians.” According to the book of Acts, they were often referred to as “The Way.” That has always stood out to me. It feels deeply significant. The movement was not initially identified as a rigid doctrinal system but as a path. A journey. A mode of living and being. The Greek word hodos means road, path, journey, or course of life. That language resonates deeply with me because it points toward transformation rather than mere intellectual agreement. It suggests movement of consciousness rather than institutional membership.

I personally believe there is a strong connection between the early designation “The Way” and the words of Jesus in John 14 when he says, “I am the way, the truth, and the life.” Traditionally, this verse has often been interpreted through the lens of exclusivism, almost as if Jesus were saying, “Believe the correct doctrine about me or be eternally excluded.” But honestly, I do not think that captures the spirit of John’s Gospel. John is filled with mystical language about union, indwelling, light, life, and divine participation. The emphasis is not simply on legal status before God but on awakening into conscious relationship with the Father.

When Jesus says, “The Father is in me and I am in the Father,” I do not hear separation. I hear union. I hear interconnectedness. I hear what the mystics throughout history have recognized: the divine is not absent from humanity but seeking expression through it. Jesus becomes the visible manifestation of the invisible Source. “Whoever has seen me has seen the Father” is not merely a theological formula to me. It is a revelation that the nature of ultimate reality is being expressed through awakened consciousness embodied in human form.

This is why I think the title “The Way” is so profound. It implies that Jesus was not merely giving people doctrines to memorize but demonstrating a pathway into divine life. The way is the path of awakening into love, grace, truth, compassion, and union with God. In many ways, this harmonizes with the mystical streams found not only within Christianity but within many spiritual traditions. The Tao speaks of “the Way.” Hermeticism speaks of ascent and correspondence between above and below. The Gospel of John speaks of abiding in the vine, being born from above, and entering into life. These ideas are not identical, but they echo one another in meaningful ways.

I also think it is important to recognize that the earliest Jesus movement existed within a very diverse spiritual landscape. First-century Christianity was not a perfectly unified system with every doctrine settled from the beginning. Even the New Testament reveals disagreements over Torah observance, resurrection, authority, mystical insight, gentile inclusion, and the interpretation of Jesus himself. Over time, orthodoxy emerged out of this diversity, but the earliest movement appears much more fluid and experiential than many modern believers realize.

To me, John’s Gospel preserves a deeply mystical strand of early Christianity. Eternal life in John is not simply something postponed until after death. It is presented as a present reality. Jesus says things like, “The kingdom of God is within you,” and “Those who believe have passed from death unto life.” This sounds less like future relocation and more like present transformation. It sounds like awakening into a new mode of consciousness rooted in divine love and unity.

That is why I do not interpret “No one comes to the Father except through me” as a statement of tribal exclusion. I understand why many sincere Christians interpret it that way, but from my perspective Jesus is speaking about the Logos, the divine pattern of awakened humanity that he embodied. Christ represents the path into conscious union with the Source. In that sense, the way is not merely believing historical facts about Jesus but participating in the same spirit, consciousness, and love that animated him.

What strikes me even more is that Jesus immediately tells his followers that they will do the works that he did and even greater works. That statement is often overlooked. If Jesus were simply presenting himself as an unreachable divine exception, why would he say this? Instead, it appears that he is calling humanity into participation. He is revealing potential. He is awakening people to what they can become when aligned with divine reality. This is one reason why I resonate strongly with the Johannine tradition and even certain Valentinian ideas about forgetfulness and remembrance. Humanity has forgotten its true origin and identity, and Christ comes as the awakener.

I realize that many people become uncomfortable when Christianity is approached this way because it moves away from rigid certainty and toward mystery. But honestly, mystery has always been present within the deepest streams of spirituality. The universe itself is mysterious. Consciousness is mysterious. Existence is mysterious. We are beings capable of love, awe, transcendence, intuition, creativity, and spiritual longing. To reduce all of this to mere doctrinal formulas seems inadequate to me.

I also believe that modern religion has often externalized what Jesus internalized. The focus became institutional control, doctrinal boundaries, and fear-based salvation systems instead of transformation of consciousness through love and grace. The early term “The Way” points back toward something more organic and experiential. It points toward discipleship as a lived journey rather than merely intellectual assent.

For me, Jesus remains deeply important, but not in the narrow sectarian sense that developed later in some forms of orthodoxy. I see him as the revealer of divine union, the manifestation of the Logos within humanity, and the demonstration of what awakened consciousness looks like when fully aligned with love. The way is not simply about joining a religion. It is about entering into the life of the Spirit. It is about remembering who and what we truly are beneath fear, ego, and separation.

In the end, I think “The Way” may actually preserve one of the deepest truths about the original Jesus movement. It was never about escaping hell or securing a place in the afterlife. It was about transformation, awakening, participation in divine life, and learning to embody love in this world. That vision still speaks powerfully to me today.

The Power that Works Within You: Reimagining Ephesians 3:14-21

I understand this passage not as a statement about an angry God demanding belief, but as one of the deepest mystical passages in all of Paul...