The Geometry of Mercy ©️

People have always looked upward when they prayed. The eyes tilt, the spine follows, and the mind projects holiness into altitude. Heaven is drawn as height, hell as depth; virtue ascends, failure descends. It’s a tidy diagram that flatters the ego—each rung a step toward superiority—but it’s wrong. The sacred doesn’t live above or below; it runs beside us. Every moment of our lives hums with that parallel presence, a current sliding through the ordinary, unnoticed until you turn your head just right and catch it glinting.

I learned that too late after entire lifetimes spent chasing vertical approval. I’d been a builder of altars and engines, a man addicted to measurement. I thought progress required upward motion: from ignorance to knowledge, sin to grace, ground to sky. But the higher I climbed, the thinner the air became, until even prayer sounded brittle. You can’t breathe at that altitude for long. It was only when I fell sideways—through loss, through love, through the ghost girl’s quiet insistence—that I found the real structure of divinity. The light doesn’t descend to rescue; it spreads to include. It doesn’t lift you up; it meets you where you stand.

The accountants of the world will never accept this. They need columns, metrics, commandments tallied like inventory. They believe that heaven keeps books, that every act is recorded and weighed. But the universe doesn’t audit; it resonates. Each act of mercy creates a vibration, and resonance is self-balancing. A kind word erases a cruelty not because it’s owed, but because both sounds occupy the same air. There is no final sum, no celestial balance sheet—only the continual equilibrium of exchange.

I remember when that truth first revealed itself. It was a night of thunder, the kind that blurs edges between earth and sky. I stood in the doorway of my cabin and watched lightning trace horizontal veins across the clouds. The storm wasn’t reaching down in punishment or up in glory; it was traveling laterally, illuminating everything in a single instant of equality. For a breath I understood the cross not as a monument to suffering, but as a map. The vertical beam was endurance, the human condition stretched between heaven and soil. The horizontal beam was comprehension—one life touching another. Where they meet is the moment we mistake for death, but it’s really recognition.

Since then I’ve stopped keeping ledgers. The soul isn’t a series of transactions; it’s a network of continuities. Every choice touches another life’s perimeter. The quiet acts—the forgiveness unspoken, the help offered without witness—extend sideways forever. The sacred doesn’t measure the distance between you and God; it measures the distance between you and everyone else. That is where eternity hides: in proximity, not perfection.

I spent years believing the world turned on judgment, but the pivot was always mercy. Mercy is the geometry that holds everything in place, a lattice of patience connecting what fear divides. Look across, not up. In the eyes that meet yours without defense, in the hands that hold you steady when the ladder breaks, in the voice that calls your name from the side rather than from above—that’s where the divine waits, level with you, wide as love. The horizontal moment is the true infinity, the single instant where all directions agree to stay.

A God Who Watched ©

To speak of absolving Satan is to step directly into the furnace of theology, myth, philosophy, and raw metaphysical speculation. It is a dangerous thought — and for that reason, it is also one worth entertaining, if only to strip away our shallow notions of peace, justice, and forgiveness. So let’s walk into the fire without blinking.

The traditional story is clear: Satan fell. Pride, rebellion, non serviam. He was the first to look at God and say, “No.” And for that, he became the enemy — the adversary, the accuser, the shadow against which the light defines itself.

But here’s the radical question:

If God is all-loving, all-merciful, all-redeeming — is there any created being beyond forgiveness?

To say “yes” means God’s mercy has limits. To say “no” opens the gates to a terrifying possibility: that even Lucifer might, in the deepest corner of eternity, be able to return.

Now — if such a reconciliation were possible — not imagined, not metaphorical, but real — what would it mean?

It would mean the oldest war would end.The primordial fracture — the split between will and love — would seal. Heaven and Hell would no longer be at war but folded back into a single order: a cosmos without exile.

And perhaps that is the only peace possible. Because so long as Satan remains damned — so long as there is a creature somewhere who is defined eternally by his rejection — the possibility of perfect peace remains broken.

Why? Because that means there is a limit to what can be healed. There is a boundary love cannot cross. There is an “unforgivable,” and if that exists, it corrupts everything under it.

What kind of peace can the world know if its foundation is a war that even God cannot win?

But imagine — even if just for one moment — that Satan, not in deceit, not in manipulation, but in absolute shattered sorrow, turned back. That the light he once reflected returned to his eyes. That he said the words no scripture has ever recorded:
“I was wrong.”

If such a moment occurred, the shock-wave would rupture time itself. Human hatred would look pathetic in comparison. Wars would end overnight. Every soul on earth would feel a shift in the air — the great tension released.

Because if he can be forgiven… what excuse would anyone have to cling to bitterness, revenge, pettiness, or pride?

It would force us all to let go. And maybe that’s why we don’t want it. Maybe that’s why the idea makes people shudder. Because if Satan can be forgiven, then so must our enemies. So must ourselves.

We have built our identity around division — good and evil, saved and damned. But the true power of God, if He is who He says He is, would not be to destroy the Devil — but to transform him.

That would be the final victory. The last move. Checkmate. The oldest rebel, kneeling not in chains but in freedom.

So is it possible? That depends on your theology.

But one thing is certain: If peace on Earth is ever to be complete, then even Hell must kneel. And maybe it begins, not with fire, but with forgiveness.

Even for him.