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Showing posts from May, 2025

White Supremacy: A Noose Around Its Own Neck

Whiteness and white supremacy is a feedback loop, a self-replicating system that reflects God’s genius in His reap/sow principle. Let me explain. Throughout history, Jesus’ name, likeness, and purpose were co-opted to promote colonization and domination by white races—even though the man himself was black and preached peace. This distortion is a planet-sized slander, promoting the enslavement and dehumanization of His own bloodline and those who happened to look like them. Even worse, His name was used to justify this inhumanity. Yet when viewed from a spiritual perspective, the response of Yeshuah (Jesus) to this slander is profoundly elegant. Supremacy as a Curse Over the centuries, white races obtained a form of supremacy, interwoven with the name of Jesus, making the lie even more dangerous and widespread. But this supremacy—born of distortion—is itself a curse. It’s a noose around the neck of anyone who actively works within it. This curse is not just moral guilt but a de...

The Portal to Humanity: Why Are Women Treated as Secondary Citizens?

In the grand design of life, women are literally the portal through which humanity enters the world. They bear the burdens of creation, nurture, and sustain life, yet throughout history and across cultures, they have been treated as secondary citizens. Why does society, despite its reverence for the miracle of birth, consistently marginalize the very beings that make existence possible? The Paradox of Power and Subservience It’s a striking paradox: those who hold the power to birth and nurture are systematically stripped of societal power. Historically, patriarchy has positioned itself as the dominant force, subduing and controlling the very essence of human origin. Why is this? What compels mankind to make powerful things subservient? One theory is rooted in the human inclination to dominate what we cannot fully comprehend or control. The power of creation—an inherently mysterious and sacred act—is something men, historically lacking direct participation in, may have feared or ...

Arianism: The Last Stand of Non-Imperial Christianity

When we trace the path of Christian history, it’s easy to assume that the version that won—the Nicene, imperial, hierarchical form—was always destined to dominate. But hidden beneath the grand cathedrals and imperial decrees lies a story of resistance. Not from enemies of the cross, but from those who honored Christ differently. Among the most forgotten? The Arians. And no, they weren’t godless pagans or confused cultists. They were Christians—often devout, often sincere—whose view of Christ and community clashed with the rising tide of imperial theology. What Was Arian Christianity? Arianism, named after the 4th-century priest Arius of Alexandria, held that Jesus Christ, while divine, was not co-eternal with the Father. In simpler terms: the Son was begotten—not made—but still subordinate to God the Father. Arians saw Christ as the first and greatest of God’s creations, a bridge between the divine and the human. Though this view was condemned at the Council of Nicaea in 3...