
“The Source, the divine architect of reality, doesn’t whisper; it chooses. It selects vessels, prophets, to wield its power, to manifest its will in the physical realm. Jesus, a master craftsman of the spirit, executed this task flawlessly. Even in his brutal execution, the Source transformed his suffering into a conduit, a path for humanity to emulate, to transcend its limitations.
Consider the Gnostic texts, those suppressed scrolls that hint at a Jesus far removed from the gentle shepherd. They speak of a revealer, a guide into the hidden mysteries of existence, a wielder of divine gnosis. He warned, ‘The kingdom of God is within you.’ (Luke 17:21) Not a distant heaven, but an inner landscape, a realm of profound potential.
Those who dare to study his teachings, not as dogma, but as a map to inner transformation, will find themselves changed. The Holy Spirit, the divine teacher, the cosmic purifier, will guide them. But it is also a punisher, a relentless force that compels confrontation with the shadow self.
Those chosen to walk alongside Jesus, to carry the torch of his mission, will endure a crucible of purification. Their temples, their very sense of self, will be torn down, brick by agonizing brick. They will face the demons that lurk within, the darkness they have denied for so long.
But in the ashes of their former selves, a new temple will rise. A temple built of Christ-like consciousness, of profound understanding, of the gnosis that transcends the limitations of the physical world. They will emerge transformed, reborn, ready to wield the power of the Source, to continue the mission that Jesus began.”
“They claim Jesus spoke only in parables, in simple terms for simple minds. They claim he possessed no hidden wisdom, no esoteric truths. But consider this: why was he killed? Why did the authorities, both Roman and Jewish, see him as such a threat? Because he spoke truths that challenged their power, truths they deemed dangerous, forbidden.
He possessed knowledge that the burgeoning church, hungry for control, dared not include in their sanctioned texts. They feared the implications, the potential for their power to crumble if the full scope of his teachings were revealed. The Jewish authorities, threatened by his challenge to their established order, spent decades trying to extinguish his message, to bury his wisdom beneath a mountain of dogma.
They sought to control the narrative, to sanitize his teachings, to mold him into a figure that served their own agendas. But the truth, like a persistent ember, refuses to be extinguished. It flickers in the margins, in the suppressed texts, in the whispered traditions. And it whispers of a Jesus far more radical, far more profound, than the one they present.”
You must be logged in to post a comment.