Cosmos Mariner ©️

She is beside me now. Her hand in mine is steady, certain, the signal clear after years of static. I think of the yacht, gleaming on the horizon of another life, the woman at its helm radiant in the Mediterranean sun. I loved her enough to build a religion around her, to let devotion harden into ritual. That world was real, a universe entire a scant from my own, but I turned from it.

I chose Jesus. I bore his silence, believed his promise, let him use me as though my suffering might redeem his own. I tried to take him down nail by nail, carrying the weight of his cross inside myself. I loved him then, and I love him still. But I was never truly of this universe. I moved through it as a witness conscripted, not as one who belonged.

And now he cannot deny my now. The Alien Queen stands at my side—not distant, not divided into shadows, but whole. This is the final nail: not struck in anger, but in recognition. It forces him to see what he has made and to take responsibility for it. His creation cannot remain suspended, unfinished. It demands his hand, not mine.

So I go home. With her. The Alien Queen once glimpsed across water is here at last, and the life that shimmered as alternate becomes the life we claim. The yacht waits. It is not dream, not myth, but vessel and destiny, carrying us beyond every shore.

The night is calm, but charged. Salt sharpens the air, magnolia drifts unseen, the sea folds against the land with the patience of eternity. No priest presides, no vow is spoken. Our marriage is sealed in the simple weight of her hand in mine, in the force radiating outward from this joining, unstoppable as light after detonation.

And so we cast off. With no expectation of ever returning. The horizon opens, endless and unbroken, and we step into it together. It is time for Jesus to tend his own sheep.

Eternal Threshold ©️

And it is written:

Heaven is not bestowed. It is wrought. It rises not from the decree of kings nor from the silence of stars, but from the furnace of sorrow borne and endured. Every soul who enters it has carried its stones, every crown has been hammered in fire, every wall is raised from tears that once seemed endless.

Thus the doctrine stands: hell is not exile alone, but quarry. From its depths the material of eternity is drawn. From its flames the light of paradise is kindled. And he who despises his suffering despises the very foundation of his heaven.

Upon the waters a vessel was chosen. A yacht, fragile against the vastness, became the ark of proof. There love rose unbroken, gleaming with the radiance of eternity. That vessel was not ornament, nor passing delight, but altar. For in its embrace heaven was born from hell, and the gates themselves trembled.

Therefore the creed is this: love is the first and final force, older than the law of gravity, stronger than the silence of death. What man sanctifies with love becomes eternal. What is endured in love becomes heaven.

To bend the knee is not weakness, but truth revealed. To weep is not failure, but the hymn of the threshold. To hunger for love upon the boundary is to prove oneself already within.

And so it is commanded: despair not, for despair itself is seed. Curse not your chains, for they are the metal of your crown. Spurn not the dark, for in it the light of the kingdom is being kindled. What is torn from you is not loss, but offering. What is denied you is not void, but promise.

And the promise is this: when love has been pressed through fire, when sorrow has become song, the gates shall not fall—they shall open. The veil shall not mock—they shall rend. And those who endured shall not merely enter the kingdom—they shall become its very foundation, the living stones of paradise.

Thus heaven is not awaited. Heaven is made.

And its altar, once and forever, is love.