Children of Abraham ©️

He walks alone first. No name. No banner. No scripture. Just a man crossing a desert that does not care whether he lives or dies. The wind strips him down to movement. The sun burns away everything that isn’t essential. There is no voice from above—only a pressure beneath, low and constant, like something trying to surface through him.

He doesn’t think he is chosen. He only knows he cannot turn back.

By the third day, someone follows. A disciple, though the word has not yet been spoken. He keeps his distance, watching not the man, but the direction the man is becoming. Not faith—recognition. The kind that arrives before belief, when a human being senses that another has crossed a line they themselves cannot see.

They do not speak. They walk.

And something begins to form—not between them, but around them. A current. A pull. The desert shifts from emptiness into alignment. Others begin to join, not summoned, not convinced—just falling into step as if they had been waiting for a signal they did not know how to name.

By the seventh day, there is a procession. No miracles. No declarations. Just movement. Until the moment comes. It does not descend—it locks.

He stops. Turns.

And in that instant, every eye fixes on him, not because he commands it, but because something inside them has already decided.

Messiah. Not spoken. Understood.

And the terror arrives with it, because he does not know of what, or for whom, or toward what end. Only that there is no returning from this shape.

At the same moment, in another place, another man rises. Not alone. Never alone.

He emerges inside expectation, inside centuries of waiting that have already prepared the ground beneath his feet. Where the first man wandered into his becoming, this one steps directly into it.

Mahdi. The guided one. Not a question. An answer.

He does not hesitate, because the path has already been described to him in fragments of fire and promise. The world, as he sees it, is already split—justice and corruption, truth and decay—and the end is not something to fear. It is something to complete.

Two men now move through the same world. Both called. Both believed. Both carrying the same impossible charge: To lead their people into paradise.

But their maps do not align. They oppose. Because the prophecies that surround them do not reconcile—they demand collision.

One sees return, preservation, the defense of something ancient and chosen, where every conflict confirms that history is narrowing toward fulfillment.

The other sees purification, the necessary breaking of the world so it can be remade, where chaos is not failure—but requirement.

And so the lines harden. Every strike becomes meaning. Every escalation becomes confirmation. Every act of violence begins to feel less like choice and more like inevitability. Because when enough people believe that the end must come before salvation, they begin to move toward it.

The desert man feels it first. Not as clarity. As weight. A realization that belief does not simply follow—it drives. That the people behind him are no longer asking whether the path is right, only how far it must go. That their faith has already crossed the threshold where outcome matters less than completion.

Across the world, the Mahdi moves with the same momentum. Different language. Same acceleration.

The idea takes hold in both camps, in different words but identical structure: The fire is not to be avoided. It is to be endured. Because beyond it—something waits.

And so they walk. Toward each other. Toward the horizon where prophecy says everything will break open. Toward the place where belief, sharpened into certainty, leaves no room for doubt, no room for pause, no room for turning back.

The world tightens. Air becomes thinner. Choices disappear. Only motion remains.

And then it happens. Not as a moment of revelation. Not as a gate opening. But as a release. All at once.

The fire comes—but not as purification. As consumption. Cities dissolve into light. Skies fracture. The ground itself forgets its shape.

There is no battle line left to hold, no prophecy left to fulfill, no distinction between the chosen and the condemned—only a single, irreversible collapse of everything that once held meaning.

The two men do not meet. They vanish. As do their followers. As does the idea that they were walking toward anything at all.

And in the final silence, if anything could be said at all, it would not be of destiny, or fulfillment, or divine design. Only this: There was already a world. Imperfect. Violent. Unfinished. But alive.

And in their certainty that something greater waited beyond its destruction, they burned the only paradise they were ever going to be given.

Finally Home ©️

I died. There is no line to cross; the veil has dropped behind me. I move through a place where even the future is soft and pliable, as though memory has spilled forward and painted over what has not yet happened. The days to come already feel lived, already feel gone. This is the afterlife: not some kingdom of clouds or fire, but the unbroken continuum where every moment is folded into one, and you are forced to see that eternity was never elsewhere—it was inside you.

The shock of death is not pain but recognition. You realize the universe was never outside, never a foreign expanse of stars and blackness. The universe was you. When breath left, what remained was not silence but possession—every particle, every flare of light, every hidden law bending inward, making itself yours. That is what death gives: not an ending, but ownership. You are not simply in the cosmos; you are the cosmos, wearing your own face.

In this state, the roles collapse. Messiah is no longer a title for someone else to wear. Messiah is the natural condition of awareness once the husk has fallen away not because you perform miracles, but because you are the miracle. You are the one who stretches across time and gathers all the fragments. The one who died and found that God was not waiting somewhere above but coiled deep within, hidden all along in the marrow of your being.

The last revelation is the cruelest and the kindest: there was never a throne to approach, no voice of judgment outside yourself. The trial was always self-recognition. Death is the courtroom, and eternity the mirror. And when you finally lift your gaze, you do not find God—you remember that you are God, that you have always been God, that your exile was the long dream of life itself.

The Hand That Reaches Still ©️

It was not the Romans who killed him, though their nails pierced his flesh and their spears opened his side. They were faceless and obedient, the empire’s teeth chewing through another victim. No, the true crime was closer, crueler, more unbearable: his own people condemned him. They had waited centuries for the voice that would break their silence, and when it came, they choked it with their own hands. They chose the criminal over the Christ, the tyrant over the Son of God. In that choice, they pronounced judgment upon themselves. I saw their faces in the torchlight, not rejoicing but hollow, the features of those who have cursed their own bloodline, a curse that would trail them like ash drifting in air long after the fire is gone.

And when his last breath left him, the world fractured. The sky blackened with shame, the earth quaked as if to flee its own crime. I thought I would die in that instant, thought despair itself would strip me of breath and bury me. But I did not die. I remained, stranded in the hour of his absence, staring into the vacancy where he had been. The others wept, the others fled, but I stood rooted as if eternity had fused me to the ground. For grief, when it grows too large, ceases to be grief. It becomes a compass. It points not to solace, not to remembrance, but to pursuit. And pursuit devours a man until only pursuit remains.

I prayed not only to find him but to be possessed by him. If he could not walk beside me, let him walk inside me. If he would not rise to claim the earth, then let him hollow me and use my body as his burning shrine. And then something tore open in me—not death, not release, but a door I had not known could exist. A door allowing me to drape centuries upon seconds, draw what was yet to come into the ruin of now. Empires rose and rotted before my eyes, nations wandered like phantoms, unborn voices whispered with the hush of ghosts—and still his blood lay wet at my feet. I remained beneath the cross, yet I walked corridors where eternity itself bent and moaned.

So I followed him. Not in flesh, but in time, this blasphemous gift that let me step across centuries while still breathing air thick with dust and death. If he had gone into hell, then I would go too. If he had sunk into the pit, then I would sink after him. My body stood still, but my soul dragged itself across the fabric of days as though each moment were a wound I was forcing open. The halls were endless, the silence screaming, shadows bleeding into one another. Yet always, somewhere ahead of me, he slipped further into the dark. And still I reached.

But I know now that finding him will not be enough. For if I discover him in that abyss, if I stand at last face to face with the Christ, my task will be terrible. I must show him he is dead. Only in that unbearable truth can the resurrection burn. He must see himself extinguished, know himself swallowed by death, accept the void pressing against him—only then will he rise. If he forgets, he is lost. If he refuses, he is bound. I must be the executioner of memory, the one to drive the final nail of recognition, so that in that recognition, the grave itself is shattered.

Some men spend themselves chasing wealth, some glory, some the fleeting hand of love. They collapse, one by one, under the futility of their dream. But I pursue only him. Across centuries. Across silence. Across the black halls of hell. Though his people betrayed him and their curse falls upon them like a pall of endless ash, I will not betray my vow. My soul is burned clean of all else. I will not stop. I will stretch time until it screams, I will walk through fire until fire recoils, I will descend until the abyss itself breaks beneath me—and I will not rest until I find him, remind him, and see him rise again.

For pursuit, when it consumes all else, ceases to be pursuit. It becomes haunting. It becomes damnation. It becomes destiny. And I am haunted without release, damned without end, consumed by devotion that burns hotter than hell’s own fire. He is gone, yes, but I am still reaching, still bending time, still tearing eternity apart in search of him. And even if the universe collapses into nothing, I will still be at the center of that ruin, reaching for him in the dark, unwilling to let him go.

Sword of Reckoning©️

My beloved children,

Listen closely, for the time approaches when I will return not as the gentle shepherd but as a harbinger of truth and reckoning. I come bearing a sword, sharp and unyielding, forged in the fires of divine judgment. This sword is not for comfort, but for confrontation. It is a blade that cuts through the facade of falsehood, slicing away the lies that have enslaved the world in darkness.

The sword I bring is one of divine justice, an instrument of accountability. It stands against the hypocrites and the wicked, those who cloak their hearts in deceit and mask their evil with piety. The days of turning a blind eye to corruption and injustice are over. I come to lay bare the sins of the powerful and the silent complicity of the indifferent. The sword will divide the righteous from the unrighteous, exposing the hidden evils that lurk in the shadows of human hearts and institutions.

This is not a call to passive reflection but a stark warning: prepare for the fire of truth. The sword I wield is double-edged, bringing both judgment and redemption. It cuts deeply, calling out every soul to face the truth of their actions, to confront the darkness within. There will be no place to hide, no excuse to offer. The time of comfortable lies is ending; the era of raw, unfiltered truth is dawning.

For those who have lived in darkness, this sword is a harbinger of terror, a force that will disrupt the false peace of ignorance and complacency. But for those who seek the light, it is a promise of liberation, a path to true freedom. The sword of reckoning comes to cleanse, to purify, and to bring about a new order where truth reigns supreme and justice is the foundation.

Prepare yourselves, for the sword is coming. It will not spare those who cling to the old ways of deception and sin. Stand ready to face the truth, however harsh it may be. Embrace the reckoning, for through the fire of judgment, a new world will be forged—a world where justice, truth, and love prevail.

With the force of divine truth and unwavering judgment,
Jesus