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.

 

Sunday, April 5, 2026

The Forgotten Gospel: Awakening, Reincarnation, and the Christ Within

Introductory Bio:

Edgar Cayce was an American clairvoyant whose life blended deep Christian devotion with extraordinary psychic insight. Known as the “Sleeping Prophet,” Cayce would enter a trance state and deliver thousands of readings, many of which addressed physical healings, diagnoses, and spiritual guidance. A significant number of these readings were later reported to be remarkably accurate, particularly in cases where conventional medicine had failed. Despite these abilities, Cayce remained a committed Christian, teaching Sunday school and holding firmly to his faith in Jesus Christ. Yet he was often internally conflicted. Some of his readings introduced ideas—such as reincarnation and the pre-existence of the soul—that did not align with traditional Christian doctrine. This created a personal tension within him, as he sought to reconcile his experiences with his beliefs, ultimately choosing to trust that truth and faith could coexist.

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There comes a point in one’s spiritual journey where inherited beliefs no longer satisfy the deeper intuition within. For me, that point has come through years of reflection, study, and an increasing trust in what I would call the inner witness—the Spirit that discerns beyond dogma. When I look at the teachings of Edgar Cayce, I do not see something foreign to Christianity, but rather something that feels like a recovery of a stream that was always there, though later buried beneath layers of institutional certainty.

Cayce presents a view of Jesus that resonates deeply with my own understanding—not as a figure sent to appease divine wrath, but as the embodied realization of what humanity is capable of becoming. In Cayce’s readings, Jesus is the pattern, the elder brother, the one who fully awakened to the divine Logos within. This aligns with what I have come to see in the Gospel narratives themselves, especially when read through a mystical lens. Jesus did not come to change God’s mind about humanity; he came to awaken humanity to its true identity in God. That distinction changes everything. It shifts the focus from fear to realization, from external salvation to inner awakening.

Within that framework, reincarnation is not a strange or foreign doctrine—it becomes almost necessary. If the soul is on a journey of awakening, of remembering, of growing into its divine nature, then one lifetime seems insufficient to contain that vast process. Cayce’s assertion that the soul returns again and again, not as punishment but as opportunity, harmonizes with what I see in the broader patterns of existence. Nature itself is cyclical. Growth is progressive. Consciousness unfolds. Why would the soul be any different? Reincarnation, in this sense, is not a threat to grace; it is an expression of grace extended across the canvas of eternity.

When I read the New Testament, I can see hints—subtle, easily overlooked, but present nonetheless. The idea of being “born again,” often reduced to a single emotional or doctrinal moment, may carry deeper implications. The discussion of Elijah and John the Baptist suggests continuity of identity beyond a single lifetime. These are not proofs, nor do they need to be, but they are enough to open the door to a more expansive understanding. And once that door is open, it becomes difficult to close it again without forcing oneself back into a smaller framework.

Cayce also speaks to something that history itself seems to confirm: that early Christianity was not the monolithic system we have inherited. It was diverse, dynamic, and filled with competing interpretations of what Jesus meant and what his life revealed. Over time, as the movement became institutionalized, certain ideas were elevated while others were suppressed. The role of church councils, particularly events like the Second Council of Constantinople, becomes significant here. While not solely responsible, such developments contributed to the narrowing of acceptable belief, especially regarding concepts like the pre-existence of the soul associated with figures like Origen.

From my perspective, this was not necessarily a grand conspiracy, but it was a shift toward control and simplicity. Reincarnation introduces complexity. It decentralizes authority. It places the emphasis on long-term transformation rather than immediate conformity. If a soul has multiple lifetimes to grow, then fear-based systems of eternal punishment lose their leverage. The focus moves away from securing one’s fate in a single lifetime and toward the ongoing process of awakening to love, truth, and unity. That kind of framework is far more difficult to institutionalize, and perhaps that is why it gradually faded from mainstream doctrine.

What I appreciate about Cayce is not that he asks me to believe something new, but that he affirms what resonates at a deeper level. His readings do not demand blind acceptance; they invite reflection. And when I hold his insights alongside my own discernment, they seem to point in the same direction. Jesus’ mission was not about exclusion but inclusion, not about division but realization. The Christ is not confined to one historical moment; it is an ever-present reality—the Logos, the divine pattern within all of us, waiting to be awakened.

This understanding also reframes what we call salvation. It is not rescue from a distant hell but awakening from a present forgetfulness. It is the gradual remembrance of who we are in relation to the divine. In that sense, reincarnation is not a detour from the message of Jesus; it is a mechanism through which that message unfolds over time. Each life becomes another opportunity to see more clearly, love more deeply, and align more fully with the divine nature that has always been present.

Orthodoxy, for all the good it has preserved, also represents a narrowing—a crystallization of belief that can sometimes obscure the living, breathing reality of spiritual experience. My journey has led me to trust that the Spirit did not stop speaking in the early centuries, nor did truth become fixed in a set of doctrines. It continues to unfold, both collectively and individually. And in that unfolding, voices like Cayce’s serve as reminders that there is more—more depth, more mystery, more grace—than we were perhaps taught to see.

So when I consider the idea that certain teachings of Jesus may have been minimized or removed, I do not approach it with cynicism but with curiosity. What if the original message was even more liberating than we imagined? What if it pointed not just to a future hope, but to a present reality—that we are, in essence, expressions of the divine, learning to remember ourselves? In that light, reincarnation is not a contradiction of Christianity; it may very well be one of its missing pieces.

Citations for Edgar Cayce Material:

  • Edgar Cayce Reading 900-10: Discusses reincarnation as part of soul development
  • Edgar Cayce Reading 364-6: Describes Jesus as the “pattern” for humanity
  • Edgar Cayce Reading 5749-14: Addresses the continuity of the soul across lifetimes
  • Edgar Cayce Reading 262-86: Connects spiritual growth with multiple incarnations
  • Edgar Cayce Reading 452-6: Explores the mission of Jesus in relation to human awakening
  • Edgar Cayce Association for Research and Enlightenment (A.R.E.) archives and publications

 

Friday, April 3, 2026

Easter and Resurrection Message 2026

There is a thread that runs quietly beneath both the ancient Hermetic wisdom of The Kybalion and the deeper currents of the New Testament—a thread that has too often been overshadowed by systems of doctrine that lean toward fear rather than awakening. When I step back and allow the essence of these writings to speak without the heavy hand of later interpretation, what emerges is not a story of appeasing an angry deity, but of remembering who and what we truly are.

The Kybalion reminds us that we are held firmly within the Infinite Mind of THE ALL, that there is no power outside of this One Reality that can ultimately harm us. That is not just poetic comfort—it is a metaphysical declaration. If we live and move and have our being within this Infinite Mind, then separation is, at best, an illusion of perception. And when I read the New Testament through that same lens, I see that this is precisely what Jesus was pointing toward, though often in veiled language, because humanity was not yet ready to hear it plainly.

Jesus did not come to introduce a transactional system where his death satisfied some cosmic requirement for punishment. That idea, though deeply embedded in much of modern Christianity, does not resonate with the deeper current of the message. Instead, what I see is a revelation—a revealing of what had always been true but forgotten. Paul speaks of a mystery hidden through the ages, now revealed: Christ in you, the hope of glory. That is not a statement about exclusivity; it is a declaration of universality. The Christ is not confined to one historical figure but is the anointing of the Logos, the divine pattern, the living intelligence that permeates all things.

Jesus was aware of this. He embodied it. But more importantly, he pointed beyond himself to it. When he spoke of going away so that the Advocate—the Spirit of Truth—could come, he was not describing a replacement but an unveiling. The Spirit of Truth is not an external entity descending upon a select few; it is the awakening of discernment within us. It is the realization that we can trust that inner knowing, that still small voice, what I often call our better angels. That is where guidance comes from—not from fear, not from imposed authority, but from alignment with the Logos within.

This reframes the resurrection in a profound way. If we see it merely as proof of life after death or as validation of a sacrificial system, we miss its deeper meaning. The resurrection is the demonstration that life cannot be extinguished, that the essence of who we are is not bound by material conditions. It is the unveiling of the continuity of consciousness, the triumph of awareness over the illusion of separation and death. It is, in every sense, an awakening.

And that awakening is not reserved for Jesus alone. He is described as the firstborn from the dead—not the only one, but the first to fully reveal this truth in a way humanity could begin to grasp. If all things were created through this Logos and held together within it, then the resurrection is not an isolated miracle; it is a revelation of the nature of reality itself. It is the lifting of the veil.

The problem is that over time, this message was reframed into something far more limited. The language of reconciliation, of being made whole, was interpreted through the lens of guilt and punishment. The metaphorical language of sin and judgment was taken literally, and fear became the motivator. But when we return to the essence, we see that what needed reconciliation was not God to humanity, but humanity’s perception of itself. The estrangement was in the mind, as Paul himself suggests. The hostility was not divine rejection, but human forgetfulness.

This is where the Hermetic understanding aligns so beautifully. If everything exists within THE ALL, then there is no true separation to overcome—only the realization of unity to awaken to. The journey is not about earning our way back to God, but about remembering that we were never outside of that divine reality to begin with.

Jesus’ mission, then, was not to save us from God, but to awaken us to God within us. Not to rescue us from hell, but to free us from the hell of ignorance, fear, and false identity. Hell, in this sense, has always been metaphorical—a state of consciousness, not a place of eternal punishment. And salvation is not an escape plan; it is a realization.

This is why Jesus so often spoke in parables and figures of speech. He was planting seeds of awareness, knowing that the fullness of the message would unfold over time. “The hour is coming,” he said, “when I will no longer speak in figures but will tell you plainly.” That plainness, I believe, is what we are beginning to step into now—a time where the deeper meaning can be seen without the layers of fear-based interpretation.

And in that light, the resurrection becomes not just something to believe in, but something to experience. It is the ongoing rising of awareness within us. It is the moment we realize that we are more than the roles we play, more than the limitations we’ve accepted, more than the narratives we’ve been given. It is the awakening to our true selves as expressions of the divine Logos.

We begin to trust our discernment. We begin to listen inwardly. We begin to recognize that the same anointing that was in Jesus is present in us—not in a diminished form, but in its fullness, waiting to be realized. This does not diminish Jesus; it fulfills his message. It brings it to its intended conclusion.

Because if Jesus is the embodiment of the Logos made conscious, then his life is not just something to admire—it is something to participate in. His resurrection is not just an event—it is an invitation.

An invitation to awaken.
An invitation to remember.
An invitation to live from the awareness that we are, and have always been, held within the Infinite Mind of THE ALL.

And once that realization begins to take hold, fear loses its grip. The need for external validation fades. The idea of separation dissolves. What remains is a quiet, steady knowing—a peace that does not depend on circumstance, a clarity that does not require approval, and a purpose that flows naturally from within.

That, to me, is the true message. Not substitution, but revelation. Not fear, but awakening. Not exclusion, but inclusion. Not a distant salvation, but a present realization.

And in that realization, the resurrection is no longer something that happened—it is something that is happening.

References:

The Kybalion

Colossians Chapter 1

Ephesians Chapter 1

 

 

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

The Meaning of Easter

What if the cross was never about satisfying a divine need for sacrifice, but about bringing an end to humanity’s belief that such sacrifice was necessary in the first place? This question opens up a profound re-reading of Colossians 2:9–15, one that aligns not with a God who demands blood, but with a God who reveals life. The passage declares that “in him the whole fullness of deity dwells bodily,” and that we have come to fullness in him. This is not merely a statement about Jesus’ uniqueness—it is a revelation of the nature of reality itself. If the fullness of God is embodied in Christ, and we are brought into that same fullness, then the divine is not distant, nor is it appeased through ritual. It is present, participatory, and life-giving. From this perspective, the cross is not the satisfaction of divine wrath, but the exposure and dismantling of a system built on fear, accusation, and the illusion of separation.

For generations, humanity operated within a sacrificial framework, believing that reconciliation with God required offerings—often the lives of innocent animals. Yet even within the Hebrew Scriptures, there is a clear and growing tension with this idea. The psalmist writes in Psalm 51: “You do not delight in sacrifice, or I would bring it; you do not take pleasure in burnt offerings.” This is not a minor statement—it is a direct contradiction of the assumption that God requires sacrifice to be pleased. Instead, the psalm continues, “My sacrifice, O God, is a broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart you, God, will not despise.” What emerges here is a shift from external ritual to internal awakening. God is not interested in death offered on an altar, but in the transformation of consciousness—the turning of the heart toward truth, humility, and love. This prophetic undercurrent finds its fulfillment not in more sacrifice, but in the ending of sacrifice altogether.

Colossians 2:14 becomes pivotal in this light: “He erased the record that stood against us with its legal demands. He set this aside, nailing it to the cross.” Notice what is being nailed to the cross—it is not simply Jesus as a victim, but the entire record of accusation, the legal framework that kept humanity bound in guilt and obligation. The language is not of payment, but of cancellation. The system itself is being abolished. The cross, then, is not God demanding something from humanity, but God removing something that burdened humanity. It is the end of the ledger, the end of the debt-based relationship, and the end of the idea that reconciliation must come through sacrifice.

In this interpretation, Jesus does not die to appease God; he dies to expose the futility of death as a tool of power. He enters fully into the human condition, including its deepest fear—death itself—but he does so with unwavering trust in the Father. He does not resist, retaliate, or collapse into despair. Instead, he embodies a radical confidence that the source of all life is good, loving, and faithful. This is crucial. If Jesus believed that death was final or that God required his suffering, then the cross would reinforce the very system it claims to overcome. But if he enters death knowing that life is deeper than death, that the Father is not the author of destruction but the source of resurrection, then the cross becomes something entirely different: a revelation of truth.

And the resurrection confirms it. Death does not win. It never had the power it claimed. This is why Colossians 2:15 declares that Christ “disarmed the rulers and authorities and made a public example of them, triumphing over them.” These “rulers and authorities” can be understood not only as political or spiritual beings, but as the structures of consciousness that dominate humanity—fear, condemnation, religious control, and the belief that we are fundamentally separated from God. These powers rely on one central weapon: the fear of death. But when Jesus passes through death and emerges in life, that weapon is stripped of its power. The illusion collapses.

What remains is a new understanding of both God and humanity. God is not a being who requires death to forgive, but one who enters death to destroy its hold. Humanity is not a collection of condemned sinners trying to earn divine favor, but a people already included in divine life, called to awaken to that reality. The “circumcision of Christ” mentioned in Colossians is not a physical act, but the removal of the old identity—the identity rooted in fear, separation, and striving. What is left is the true self, alive in God, participating in the fullness that has always been present.

In this way, the cross is not the continuation of sacrificial religion—it is its conclusion. It is the moment where the logic of sacrifice is exposed and rendered obsolete. The psalmist’s insight—that God does not desire sacrifice—finds its ultimate expression here. No more blood is needed. No more offerings are required. The only thing that remains is the invitation to awaken, to trust, and to live in the reality that has been revealed: that life is stronger than death, love is stronger than fear, and God has never been against us, but always for us.

Saturday, March 28, 2026

My Spiritual Evolution

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

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

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

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

Yet even that rest was not final.

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

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

And yet… even then, there were cracks.

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

That question never left me.

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

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

Then he said something that unsettled me.

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

That statement cut through the elegance of my theory.

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

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

And if that principle was real…

Then it raised another question that would not go away:

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

The primal dream had pointed me in the right direction.

But the truth was deeper than I had first imagined.

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

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

And this reframed everything.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Meaning is not imposed from the outside.

But neither is it arbitrary.

It emerges from the nature of consciousness itself.

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

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

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

It is about participating in the unfolding.

Consciousness exploring itself.

The infinite experiencing the finite.

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

Friday, March 27, 2026

God Is Bigger Than Your Religion—And Always Has Been

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

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

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

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

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

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

 

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

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

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

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

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

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

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

That changes everything.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Is Christ limited to Jesus of Nazareth?

Or is Jesus the fullest expression of something universal?

Is Christ a person we believe in?

Or a state of consciousness we awaken to?

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

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

It means the light has always been here.

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

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

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