Sunday, May 10, 2026

Why I Reject Enochian Christianity and Embrace Paul’s Cosmic Christ

What follows is not an attack on Jesus, nor is it a dismissal of first-century Judaism. It is simply my growing conviction that modern Christianity is increasingly moving in a direction that I believe misses the deeper trajectory of the New Testament.

Today there is a growing fascination with Enochian cosmology. More and more Christians are framing the entire biblical narrative through rebellious angels, nephilim, territorial spirits, demonic bloodlines, apocalyptic catastrophe, and cosmic warfare. Much of this comes from renewed interest in the Book of Enoch and Second Temple Jewish thought. Some now seem to believe that the true lens for understanding Jesus is almost entirely Enochian.

I understand why this is happening. Jesus and many first-century Jews clearly operated within an apocalyptic worldview. They spoke of “this age” and “the age to come.” In Hebrew thought this was olam hazeh and olam ha-ba. The present age was viewed as corrupted, unjust, oppressive, and under the shadow of death. The age to come was the coming reign of God, resurrection, restoration, and renewal.

Jesus absolutely spoke in these terms.

But what fascinates me is that Paul appears to expand this framework beyond the simple dualism of “this age” versus “the age to come.” Paul speaks not merely of one coming age, but of “ages to come.”

That changes everything for me.

Instead of a single apocalyptic endpoint, Paul opens the possibility of unfolding ages, progressive revelation, and continuing manifestations of divine grace. He speaks of “the ages to come” in Ephesians. He speaks of mysteries hidden through ages and generations. He speaks of transformation “from glory to glory.” He speaks of Christ in you, the hope of glory. He speaks of a cosmic reconciliation where eventually God becomes “all in all.”

This does not sound like a theology centered primarily on fear of hostile supernatural entities. It sounds like unfolding consciousness, participation in divine reality, and progressive awakening into the fullness of the Logos.

That is why I increasingly find myself drawn toward a nuanced Pauline Christianity rather than an Enochian one.

Now let me be clear. I fully recognize that Paul was a first-century Jew shaped by his culture. I also recognize that some passages attributed to Paul may not even be authentically Pauline. Many scholars today acknowledge serious questions surrounding portions of the pastoral epistles and other disputed letters. I also acknowledge that Paul reflected assumptions of his time regarding slavery, patriarchy, and social order. I do not treat every sentence attributed to Paul as timeless metaphysical truth.

But I also refuse to throw Paul away.

In fact, I believe the deeper mystical stream of Christianity may actually flow most powerfully through Paul.

Modern critics often reduce Paul to legalism, misogyny, or institutional religion. Yet the same Paul became the great hero of Valentinus and Marcion for a reason. The mystical Christians of the second century saw something profound in him. They saw the apostle of mystery, hidden wisdom, transformation, and cosmic Christ consciousness.

When Paul says “Christ in you, the hope of glory,” I do not hear a narrow legal transaction. I hear the revelation that humanity is indwelt by the divine Logos whether aware of it or not. Jesus becomes the original human fully awakened to that union with the Father, revealing what humanity truly is beneath ignorance and fragmentation.

This is one reason I lean far more toward a Platonic cosmology than an Enochian one.

Enochian cosmology often creates a universe dominated by paranoia, cosmic enemies, supernatural contamination, and catastrophic dualism. It tends to externalize evil into armies of hostile entities and frame history as an apocalyptic battlefield.

Platonic and Pauline mystical thought moves differently.

It sees reality as layered participation in divine being. It sees the visible world as a shadow or reflection of deeper realities. It emphasizes ascent, awakening, transformation, and remembrance. It points toward the inner person, the heavenly archetype, the invisible realities behind appearances, and the unfolding participation of consciousness in the divine fullness.

The Gospel of John begins not with rebellious watchers but with the Logos.

Paul centers not on nephilim speculation but on union with Christ.

The deeper current of the New Testament, at least to me, points less toward obsession with demonic hierarchies and more toward awakening into divine participation.

I do not deny that spiritual darkness exists. I simply do not believe the cosmos is fundamentally explained through Enochian dualism. I believe consciousness, divine participation, and progressive transformation are more central than cosmic warfare narratives.

That is why “ages to come” matters so much to me.

The phrase suggests that reality is not frozen into one final static state. Divine revelation unfolds. Consciousness unfolds. Grace unfolds. Creation unfolds. The journey into God is ongoing.

For me, Paul becomes not the enemy of spiritual Christianity but one of its deepest voices when read with nuance, context, and mystical insight rather than through rigid later dogmatism.

Ironically, I suspect that the future of Christianity may depend on rediscovering that mystical Pauline stream once again.

 

Saturday, May 9, 2026

UFO's and Religion Part One: Why the Conversation Has Changed

 

A personal note about this series: I do not share the increasingly popular evangelical attempt to frame the UAP phenomenon primarily as end-times demonic deception. In my view, fear-based interpretations often reveal more about institutional anxiety and rigid theological frameworks than they do about the phenomenon itself. This series approaches the subject from the perspective of consciousness, symbolism, awakening, and humanity’s evolving understanding of reality. My goal is not to promote fear, but to encourage thoughtful inquiry, discernment, and deeper reflection on the mysteries surrounding consciousness, spirituality, and human existence itself.

Something is different this time.

Back in the 1970s and 80s, conversations about UFOs mostly lived at the edges of culture. They were discussed in fringe documentaries, late-night radio broadcasts, prophecy conferences, paperback books with dramatic covers, and among small groups of enthusiasts or pastors warning about end-times deception. Most mainstream institutions kept their distance. Serious people generally avoided the subject publicly because it carried the stigma of ridicule.

But that is no longer the case.

Now we are watching congressional hearings discussing UAPs openly. Military footage has been released and analyzed on major news networks. Intelligence officials speak publicly about “nonhuman intelligence.” Podcasts with millions of listeners discuss interdimensional realities, consciousness, and spiritual implications without embarrassment. Former military personnel, scientists, scholars, and public figures now engage the topic seriously.

At the same time, another interesting shift is taking place.

A growing number of evangelical pastors and commentators are warning that UAP disclosure may involve demonic deception. Public figures and media personalities have hinted that the phenomenon may not simply be extraterrestrial, but spiritual or interdimensional in nature. Conversations that once sounded completely separated from religion are beginning to overlap with ancient spiritual language:
angels,
demons,
principalities,
powers,
dimensions,
consciousness,
and unseen intelligences.

What fascinates me is not merely the possibility of unidentified phenomena. Humanity has always experienced mystery. What fascinates me is the convergence itself.

It feels as though several streams that were once isolated are beginning to merge:
science,
government,
mysticism,
religion,
consciousness studies,
ancient cosmology,
and modern technology.

That convergence is culturally significant whether one believes the phenomenon is physical, psychological, spiritual, symbolic, or some combination of all four.

Ancient civilizations interpreted mysterious encounters through the language available to them. They spoke of gods, angels, spirits, heavenly messengers, or beings from higher realms. Medieval societies interpreted the unknown through theology. Modern culture, shaped by science and technology, naturally interprets the unknown through the language of extraterrestrials, dimensions, simulation theory, quantum realities, and consciousness fields.

But perhaps the language changes more than the underlying human questions.

For centuries humanity has wrestled with the same fundamental mysteries:
What is consciousness?
What is reality?
Are we alone?
Do unseen intelligences exist?
Is the material world all there is?
Why do mystical experiences recur throughout history?
Why do so many cultures describe layered realities and nonhuman encounters?

What if the modern UAP discussion is simply the newest expression of ancient questions humanity has never fully answered?

This is where the conversation begins to become deeply interesting to me.

The ancient Gnostics spoke about Archons, Aeons, emanations, and the Demiurge. The Hermetic traditions spoke of planes of reality and the principle “as above, so below.” Mystics throughout history described luminous encounters, altered states of consciousness, and experiences of profound interconnectedness. Modern experiencers speak of telepathy, missing time, consciousness interaction, symbolic visions, and transformative encounters.

I am not saying these things are identical. I am not claiming that ancient Gnostics were secretly describing UFOs. I am not suggesting every strange light in the sky is spiritual in nature. I am also not claiming that every religious interpretation is automatically correct.

What I am saying is that humanity appears to be circling around something much deeper than spacecraft.

The modern conversation is gradually moving away from simple “nuts-and-bolts” explanations and toward questions of consciousness itself.

That shift matters.

For decades our civilization has been dominated by a rigid materialistic framework that insisted reality was fundamentally mechanical and accidental. Consciousness was often reduced to chemical reactions in the brain. Spiritual experiences were dismissed as primitive or pathological. Mysticism was pushed to the margins.

Yet now even serious scientists and philosophers are questioning whether consciousness may actually be more fundamental than we once believed.

At the same time, UAP discussions increasingly include references to:
interdimensionality,
observer effects,
telepathic interaction,
and realities beyond ordinary sensory perception.

This does not prove anything supernatural. But it does suggest that the old categories may no longer be sufficient.

Meanwhile religion is also being challenged.

Some religious systems immediately interpret the unknown through fear. Anything outside established doctrine becomes “demonic.” Yet history shows that fear-based religion has often resisted expanded understanding. Institutions tend to protect their frameworks because frameworks create stability. But consciousness evolves. Humanity evolves. Understanding evolves.

Perhaps that is part of what makes this moment feel so charged.

Both strict materialism and rigid dogmatism are beginning to crack under the weight of mystery.

And mystery has returned.

Not the mystery of ancient superstition, but the mystery that emerges whenever humanity approaches the edge of its current understanding.

That may be why so many people feel unsettled right now. We are not merely discussing objects in the sky. We are confronting the possibility that reality itself may be stranger, deeper, and more conscious than we have been taught.

The ancient world understood reality symbolically and spiritually. The modern world fragmented reality into isolated categories:
science here,
religion there,
consciousness somewhere else.

Now the walls between those categories are beginning to weaken.

Could it be that humanity is entering another great paradigm shift?

I do not claim certainty. In fact, certainty may be one of the greatest obstacles to genuine understanding. But I do believe we are watching the emergence of a new mythic age — one in which ancient archetypes are returning clothed in technological language.

Perhaps disclosure, if it truly comes, will not simply reveal something “out there.”

Perhaps it will reveal something about us.

Perhaps the greatest disclosure will involve consciousness itself.

And perhaps that is precisely why the conversation has changed.

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

What If Jesus Meant John 14:11–14 Literally? The Greater Works Ministry

The greater works ministry is not about doing bigger miracles than Jesus as if this were a competition. It is about the continuation and expansion of the awareness he walked in. Jesus was not presenting himself as an exception to humanity, but as a revelation of it. He was the original human who fully realized that he was indwelt by the Logos, the living presence of the Father. What he demonstrated, he declared was reproducible.When he said we would do greater works, he was not speaking to an elite class of believers. He was speaking to anyone who would move beyond admiration into realization. The works become greater, not because they surpass Jesus in power, but because they multiply through awakened lives. One man awakened is powerful. A people awakened is transformative.

And yes, this includes what we have called miracles. Not as rare interruptions of natural law, but as expressions of a deeper law—one that flows from union with the Father. Jesus never treated miracles as anomalies. He treated them as natural outcomes of alignment. When the illusion of separation dissolves, what once seemed impossible becomes available. Healing, provision, insight, timing—these are not violations of reality, they are the unveiling of a fuller reality.

The greater works ministry begins where certainty replaces hesitation. As long as Jesus’ words are treated as inspirational rather than actual, the works remain theoretical. But when there is absolute confidence—not blind belief, but settled knowing—that what he said is true, something shifts. The mind aligns, the fear of limitation loosens, and the individual begins to operate from union rather than separation.

This is where “in my name” has been misunderstood. It is not a phrase we attach to a request. It is a state of being. To function in his name is to function in his consciousness, in his awareness of oneness with the Father. It is to know, not hope, that the same indwelling presence is alive within. From that place, asking is no longer begging a distant God. It is the expression of the divine will through a conscious vessel.

If one truly holds absolute confidence in his words, the results are inevitable. Fear loses its grip because the illusion of separation begins to dissolve. Compassion deepens because others are no longer seen as “other,” but as expressions of the same divine life, though often unaware. Healing becomes natural, not as a performance, but as the restoration of alignment. Provision flows, not through striving, but through participation in a reality that is already abundant. And what we have called miracles begin to appear—not because we are striving to produce them, but because we are no longer resisting the flow in which they naturally occur.

The greater works ministry will not look like religious systems trying to prove their authority. It will look like ordinary people carrying an extraordinary awareness. It will move quietly at times, powerfully at others, but always with the same signature: love, peace, and a steady confidence that does not need validation.

Ultimately, the greater works are not just what we do. They are what we become. A humanity that remembers. A people who no longer live as if they are separate from God, but as those in whom God is consciously expressing. And when that awareness spreads, the works increase—not by effort, not by pressure, but by awakening.




Sunday, May 3, 2026

Reflecting on Maslow's Religions Values and Peak Experiences: The Truth Religion Tried to Systemize

There was a time when I thought religion was primarily about beliefs—getting the doctrines right, aligning with the correct interpretation, staying within the boundaries that had been handed down. But the more I’ve reflected, the more I’ve come to see something quite different. What we call religion did not begin as a system of beliefs. It began as experience—raw, unfiltered encounters with something greater, deeper, and more unified than the ordinary sense of self.

This is where the insights of Abraham Maslow resonate deeply with me. Maslow was not a theologian, yet in many ways he uncovered something that theology often obscures. He distinguished between what we might call institutional religion and experiential religion. Institutional religion is what most people think of—structures, doctrines, rituals, and authority. But experiential religion is something entirely different. It is the direct encounter with reality at a higher level of awareness. It is what the mystics were always pointing to before their insights were turned into systems.

Maslow observed that the most psychologically healthy individuals—what he called self-actualizing people—shared certain characteristics. They were not rigid or dogmatic. They were not driven by fear or the need to control others. Instead, they seemed to live from a deeper center, and from that center emerged what he called “Being-values,” or B-values. These were not commandments imposed from the outside. They were qualities that arose naturally from within.

Truth, beauty, goodness, unity, wholeness, aliveness—these were not ideals they were striving to reach. These were realities they were experiencing. It is as if, when a person becomes aligned with their deeper nature, these qualities simply express themselves. This challenges the traditional religious model that says we must be told what is good. Maslow’s work suggests something far more profound: that goodness is not something we are forced into, but something that unfolds when we awaken.

But perhaps his most important contribution is his understanding of what he called “peak experiences.” These are moments when the usual boundaries of the self dissolve. Time seems to fall away. There is a sense of unity with everything. Fear disappears, replaced by peace, joy, or awe. Many would call these moments spiritual or even divine.

What is striking is that Maslow found these experiences were not limited to religious settings. People reported them in nature, in moments of love, in creative work, or simply in quiet reflection. This is a critical point. It suggests that what we have labeled as “spiritual” is not owned by religion. It is a dimension of human consciousness itself.

From my perspective, this aligns closely with the idea that the divine is not something separate from us, but something we participate in. These peak experiences are not intrusions from the outside. They are awakenings from within. They are glimpses of what is always true, but rarely perceived.

Maslow later expanded this idea into what he called “plateau experiences.” Unlike peak experiences, which are intense and temporary, plateau experiences are more stable. They are characterized by a quiet, ongoing sense of appreciation, unity, and presence. It is less about dramatic revelation and more about a steady awareness of the sacred in everyday life.

This, to me, is where the conversation becomes truly meaningful. If peak experiences are glimpses, then plateau experiences are integration. They represent a shift from visiting the mountaintop to living from its perspective. And this is where religion, in its highest sense, could return to its original purpose—not as a system to manage behavior, but as a pathway to awakening.

The tragedy, if we can call it that, is that many religious systems have become more concerned with preserving structure than facilitating experience. The map has replaced the territory. The explanation has replaced the encounter. And in doing so, something essential has been lost.

Yet the door has never closed. What Maslow helps us see is that these experiences are not reserved for a select few. They are part of our human inheritance. They are available in moments of stillness, in love, in creativity, in awareness itself.

In the end, this reframes everything. The question is no longer which system is right. The question becomes: are we awakening? Are we moving toward wholeness, toward unity, toward the direct experience of what is real?

Because if Maslow is right—and I believe he is—then the deepest truths of religion were never meant to be believed. They were meant to be experienced.

 

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Spiritual Scare Tactics: The Hidden Fear Behind ‘Enlightenment

There was something in that video that struck a familiar chord with me—not because it was new, but because it was old. Very old. The language may change from tradition to tradition, but the structure remains the same. In this case, it was a presentation of what Paramahansa Yogananda taught about death and the afterlife. The idea that one must prepare properly or risk entering into a difficult, even catastrophic, post-death experience. And as I listened, I couldn’t help but recognize the pattern. It felt uncomfortably similar to the fear-based frameworks I had encountered in my earlier years in more traditional religious settings—the same subtle pressure, the same underlying message: “You must get this right, or else.”

Now, let me be clear. I have no issue with spiritual teachers, nor with the idea that there are deeper dimensions of reality, levels of consciousness, or even realms beyond this one. I believe there is far more to existence than what we perceive with our physical senses. I also believe that awakening—true awakening—is real and meaningful. But where I begin to draw the line is when awakening is presented as something that must be achieved through one specific path, under one specific teacher, or according to one particular system, in order to avoid some negative outcome after death.

That’s where I see a problem.

Because what often happens, whether intentionally or not, is that spiritual exploration becomes spiritual dependency. The student is no longer simply learning or growing; they are subtly being conditioned to believe that their well-being—both now and in the afterlife—depends on adherence to a particular framework. And that framework, almost inevitably, is tied to a teacher, a lineage, or a set of prescribed practices that are presented as uniquely effective or even exclusively valid.

I’ve seen this before. I lived through versions of it. From Mormonism to Pentecostalism to New Age spirituality, I’ve watched how easily the human mind can be shaped by the idea that there is something at stake that we might lose if we don’t follow the right path. It may not always be called hell. Sometimes it’s poor karma, or a lower astral realm, or a difficult rebirth. But the mechanism is the same: fear becomes the motivator, and compliance becomes the response.

But I no longer see existence that way.

I have come to believe that what we are experiencing here is part of an ongoing, eternal process of conscious awareness exploring itself. We are not fragile beings trying to pass a test with eternal consequences hanging in the balance. We are expressions of a deeper reality—call it consciousness, the divine, the Logos, or simply “The All”—engaged in experience for the sake of expansion, understanding, and ultimately remembrance.

Death, then, is not a trap door into uncertainty or danger. It is a transition. A continuation. A shift in perspective. And in that transition, I do not believe we are abandoned to navigate it alone, nor are we at risk of catastrophic failure because we didn’t follow the correct spiritual formula during our time here.

Rather, I believe there is help.

Call them what you will—Christ, angels, guides, loved ones who have gone before us. I see them not as gatekeepers or judges, but as facilitators of awareness. Their role is not to measure our performance, but to assist in our unfolding understanding. They help us navigate what might feel like separation, always with the underlying truth intact: that we are eternal, that we are connected, and that our divine nature has never been in jeopardy.

That doesn’t mean there aren’t experiences after death that vary. Just as we experience a wide range of emotional and psychological states here, I see no reason to assume that consciousness suddenly becomes uniform on the other side. But variation in experience is not the same as existential danger. Growth does not require threat. Learning does not require fear.

And this brings me to what I feel is important to say to anyone exploring spirituality today.

Be cautious of those who present themselves as having special knowledge that you must receive through them. There is nothing wrong with acknowledging that deeper knowledge—gnosis—exists. In fact, I would affirm that it does. But true gnosis is not owned. It is not dispensed by a select few to the many. It is something that arises within consciousness itself. It is discovered, not granted. Remembered, not controlled.

Any teacher worth listening to will point you inward, not bind you outward. They will open doors, not create dependence. They will affirm your capacity to know, not subtly undermine it.

We are not here to escape a system designed to trap us. We are here to experience, to explore, and ultimately to awaken to the reality that we have never been separate from the source of our being. And that realization, when it comes, does not come through fear. It comes through recognition.

And that recognition belongs to all of us.

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Cosmogony, Theogony, anthropogony: How our stories and beliefs shape our reality

There are three ancient words that, at first glance, feel like they belong to dusty mythologies and long-forgotten cosmologies—cosmogony, theogony, and anthropogony. Yet the more I reflect on them, the more I see that they are not relics of primitive thinking but profound attempts to articulate something we are still trying to understand today: the nature of reality, consciousness, and our place within it. When viewed through a more expansive lens—one that honors both spirituality and the unfolding insights of consciousness studies—these three ideas begin to form a map. Not a map of a distant past, but a map of what is happening now, continuously, within the very fabric of existence.

Cosmogony, traditionally, is the story of the origin of the universe. But I no longer see it as a single moment in time, some distant explosion or divine command that set everything in motion. Rather, cosmogony is the ongoing emergence of experience itself. It is the movement from infinite potential into lived reality. What we often call “creation” is not something that happened—it is something that is happening. Every moment, the unmanifest becomes manifest. Every moment, the invisible becomes visible. This aligns deeply with what I have come to understand: that reality is not divided between spirit and matter, but is a continuum where both are expressions of the same underlying essence, differentiated only by degree.

In this sense, what ancient traditions pointed to as the Logos is not merely a theological concept, but a living principle—the ordering intelligence through which potential becomes form. It is not separate from us, nor is it confined to a distant heaven. It is the very structure of reality expressing itself as coherence, pattern, and meaning. The universe is not random. It is intelligible. And that intelligibility is not imposed from the outside—it arises from within the very nature of being itself. Cosmogony, then, is the story of The All becoming aware through expression, the infinite stepping into finitude so that it might be experienced.

Then comes theogony, the origin of the gods. But here again, I find it helpful to move beyond literalism. The gods of ancient traditions can be seen not as external beings competing for power, but as symbolic representations of deeper realities—archetypal patterns within consciousness itself. Theogony becomes the differentiation of the One into the many, not as fragmentation, but as functional diversity. It is consciousness organizing itself into intelligible forms.

These “gods” are what consciousness looks like when it takes on structure. They are principles, intelligences, patterns of being. In Hermetic thought, in Neoplatonism, and even in some streams of early Christianity, there is this recognition that reality unfolds in layers or emanations. Not separate realms, but gradations of expression. This resonates with my own understanding that what we call the mental, the physical, and the spiritual are not separate worlds but different densities of the same continuum.

But here is something I have come to appreciate more deeply over time: the myths and stories we create to describe these realities are not neutral. They carry power. They take shape in consciousness, and in a very real sense, they begin to live. When a culture tells a story long enough, that story becomes an organizing force. It shapes perception, behavior, expectation—even identity. In that way, myths are not just reflections of reality; they become participants in reality.

Some of these stories elevate. They remind us of our connection to the whole, of our inherent worth, of the presence of the divine within and among us. Others, however, can confine. They can instill fear, separation, unworthiness, and a sense of distance from the very source we are seeking. Over time, these narratives can take on a kind of life of their own—what some might call an egregore, a collective thought-form that influences how people see the world and themselves within it.

So when I read ancient theogonies now, I don’t see mythology in the dismissive sense. I see a symbolic language attempting to describe how the infinite organizes itself into knowable patterns. But I also recognize that the interpretation of those symbols matters. The story we tell about “the gods” can either open us to a deeper awareness of the divine patterns within consciousness, or it can externalize and fragment that awareness into something distant and inaccessible.

And then we arrive at anthropogony, the origin of humanity. This is where it becomes deeply personal. Because here, the story is not just about the universe or the gods—it is about us. But even here, I no longer see humanity as a separate creation, dropped into the world from the outside. Rather, I see human beings as a threshold event within the unfolding of consciousness itself.

Anthropogony is the moment—again, not in time but in process—where consciousness becomes self-aware. Where the universe, through us, begins to reflect upon itself. We are not merely biological organisms. We are localized expressions of the same field that gave rise to the cosmos and the patterns within it. We are the place where the infinite looks back upon itself and asks, “Who am I?”

This is where the idea of “the fall” begins to look very different. Instead of a moral failure that separates us from God, I see something more akin to a necessary descent into limitation. A kind of divine forgetting. Consciousness enters into form, into individuality, into the constraints of space and time—not as a punishment, but as a means of experience. And in that process, it forgets its own depth. It forgets its own source.

But that forgetting is reinforced—or relieved—by the stories we embrace. If we tell ourselves a story of separation, of inherent brokenness, of distance from the divine, that story gains momentum. It shapes our inner world and, by extension, our outer experience. But if we begin to tell a different story—one of union, of indwelling presence, of divine participation—then a different pattern begins to emerge. The narrative itself becomes a vehicle for awakening.

And this, to me, is where the message of Christ takes on a radically different meaning. Not as a transaction to appease a distant deity, but as an awakening. A revealing. A reminder of what has always been true. The Christ becomes the living story that interrupts the old narratives and invites us into a new way of seeing.

When I read the Gospel of John, I hear echoes of this: the light that enlightens every person coming into the world. Not a select few. Every person. That tells me that what we are talking about is universal. The divine is not absent from humanity—it is hidden within it, waiting to be realized. The Christ is not merely an external savior, but the pattern of awakened consciousness, the template of remembrance.

So when I step back and look at these three ideas together—cosmogony, theogony, anthropogony—I no longer see separate doctrines. I see a continuum. The infinite becomes experience. Experience organizes into intelligible patterns. Those patterns become self-aware in us. And then, through awakening, that self-awareness deepens into the realization that the observer and the source are not ultimately separate.

And woven through all of it are the stories we tell. Stories that can either obscure or reveal, divide or unify, imprison or liberate. They are not incidental—they are formative. They shape the lens through which consciousness experiences itself.

This is not a linear story with a beginning and an end. It is a living cycle. Potential becoming expression, expression becoming differentiation, differentiation becoming self-awareness, and self-awareness opening into remembrance. And perhaps even beyond that, into ever-expanding expressions of the same infinite reality.

In my own journey, I have come to see that we are not here to escape this process, nor to condemn it. We are here to participate in it consciously. To live, to experience, to love, to struggle, to awaken—and in doing so, to allow the infinite to know itself more fully through us.

That, to me, is the deeper meaning behind these ancient words. Not myths to be dismissed, but signposts pointing toward a truth that is still unfolding—right here, right now, within each of us. And perhaps even more than that, invitations to become more mindful of the stories we choose to believe, embody, and pass on—because in the end, those stories are part of the very fabric through which reality continues to unfold.

 

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

What If Moses, the Magi, and Paul Tapped the Same Power? And, What about "Us" and “Greater Works?”

When I begin to look at the world of the first century with fresh eyes, I can no longer maintain the neat categories that modern Christianity has handed to us—religion over here, magic over there, miracle somewhere in between. Those distinctions simply did not exist in the ancient world. What we are dealing with instead is a spectrum of interaction with the unseen, a continuum of practices, beliefs, and experiences that all assumed one thing: reality is more than what we see, and human beings can, in some measure, participate in that deeper layer.

The figure of the Magi at the birth of Jesus becomes far more significant to me in that light. These were not cartoonish “wise men” in robes wandering aimlessly under a star. They were members of an ancient priestly tradition, likely rooted in Persian streams of thought, men trained in reading the heavens, interpreting dreams, and engaging the symbolic language of the cosmos. In their world, the sky was not empty—it was alive with meaning. And what strikes me now is not simply that they came, but that they were led. Their own system, which many later traditions would dismiss as pagan or even forbidden, brought them face to face with the Christ. That alone tells me that the Logos is not confined to one stream of revelation.

When I move back further into the Hebrew narrative, I find the same pattern emerging. I am comfortable now seeing the Exodus story as a product of the Babylonian period, shaped and written in a time when Israel was wrestling with identity, exile, and the question of whose God truly reigns. In that context, the story of Moses and the Egyptian magicians takes on a different texture. The text itself does not deny the reality of what the magicians were doing—it acknowledges it. They replicate certain signs. They participate in the same kind of symbolic, power-laden acts. The difference is not that one side is “real” and the other “fake,” but that one is portrayed as ultimately superior.

What I see there is not a dismissal of Egyptian practice, but a theological claim layered onto a shared worldview. Egypt had a long and sophisticated tradition of priesthood, incantation, and ritual. The Hebrew writers, looking back through the lens of exile and identity formation, framed the story to say: whatever power Egypt had, the God of Israel transcends it. But underneath that claim is an assumption both sides would have agreed on—that there is indeed a power to be accessed, engaged, and manifested.

By the time we arrive in the first century, the world is saturated with this understanding. The Greco-Roman environment into which Christianity was born was teeming with healers, exorcists, astrologers, and what we would broadly call magicians. Figures like Simon Magus were not anomalies; they were part of the cultural fabric. People expected that certain individuals could tap into unseen forces, whether through ritual, invocation, or alignment with divine powers. In that sense, when Paul the Apostle and the early Christians began to heal the sick, cast out spirits, and perform signs, they were not introducing something entirely foreign. They were stepping into an already existing arena.

What distinguishes the early Christian movement, at least as I now see it, is not the presence of power but the interpretation of it. The language shifts. The source is identified differently. Instead of technique, there is relationship. Instead of incantation, there is invocation of the name of Jesus. But even that, when stripped down, bears a resemblance to the use of sacred names in other traditions. The structure is familiar; the framing is new. Christianity becomes, in many ways, a reinterpretation of the same underlying reality—a claim that the power being accessed is not merely cosmic or impersonal, but rooted in the Logos, the very essence of divine consciousness expressed in and through humanity.

This is where my own understanding begins to resonate deeply. If the Logos is indeed the underlying fabric of reality, if it is that which was in the beginning and is in all things, then it makes sense that different cultures, traditions, and individuals would encounter it in different ways. The Magi read it in the stars. Egyptian priests enacted it through ritual. Greco-Roman magicians engaged it through symbols and words of power. The early Christians experienced it through the person of Jesus and the awakening of that same presence within themselves.

And then I come to the words in the Gospel of Gospel of John that have always lingered in the background but now seem to step forward with new clarity: “the works that I do, you shall do also, and greater works than these.” That statement becomes almost incomprehensible if we confine it to a closed historical system. But if we understand it within this broader context of human participation in divine reality, it opens up. It is not merely about replicating miracles as isolated events; it is about awakening to the same source from which those works flowed.

What if the “greater works” are not about spectacle, but about a deeper realization of identity? What if they point to a time when humanity begins to more fully recognize its participation in the Logos, not through rigid systems or exclusive claims, but through a lived awareness that transcends those boundaries? In that sense, the trajectory from ancient magi to early Christian miracle workers is not a story of replacement, but of evolution—of understanding deepening over time.

This also brings me to the present moment. If such things were part of the ancient world, if healers and miracle workers existed across cultures and traditions, is it really such a stretch to consider that they might still exist today? Perhaps not in the same outward forms, or perhaps they do and we simply interpret them differently. The modern world, with its emphasis on materialism and skepticism, has narrowed the lens. But even now, stories of healing, intuition, and seemingly inexplicable experiences persist. They may be dismissed, explained away, or relegated to the fringes, but they have not disappeared.

In my own way of seeing, this is not about returning to superstition or abandoning discernment. It is about acknowledging that consciousness itself may be far more participatory than we have been taught. If the Logos truly permeates all things, then the capacity for what we call “miracle” may not be an anomaly but a natural expression of alignment with that deeper reality. The question then shifts from “is this real?” to “what level of awareness is being expressed here?”

And so I find myself circling back to the beginning—the Magi, the magicians, the healers, the apostles—all standing in different places along the same continuum. Some grasping in symbol, some awakening in clarity, all participating in a reality that is ultimately one. The story is not one of exclusion, but of inclusion and unfolding. And perhaps, just perhaps, we are still in the middle of that unfolding, with the invitation of “greater works” still echoing—not as a distant promise, but as a present possibility waiting to be realized.

 

Why I Reject Enochian Christianity and Embrace Paul’s Cosmic Christ

What follows is not an attack on Jesus, nor is it a dismissal of first-century Judaism. It is simply my growing conviction that modern Chris...