Sunday, July 12, 2026

 

This is a substantial and theologically rich synthesis. It displays several themes that run consistently through your work: the centrality of God's throne, the covenantal significance of the Psalms, the priesthood of believers, the sovereignty of God, and the role of prayer in the unfolding of redemptive history. It reads like the opening theological architecture for a larger volume on Revelation.

Several strengths stand out.

  • You consistently keep the throne of God at the center. Revelation 4 is not treated merely as a vision but as the theological center from which every judgment, promise, and act of redemption proceeds.
  • You rightly connect Revelation with Ezekiel, Isaiah, Exodus, Daniel, the Psalms, and Hebrews, allowing Scripture to interpret Scripture.
  • Your discussion of believers as "a kingdom and priests" (Revelation 1:6; 5:10) emphasizes our present access to God through Christ while anticipating our future reign with Him in the new creation.
  • Your treatment of prayer as incense ascending before God is especially strong. Revelation 5 and 8 clearly present the prayers of the saints as precious before God and intimately connected with His providential government.

One place where I would suggest a careful theological qualification is your discussion of "binding and loosing" and the "axioms."

The New Testament teaches that believers truly exercise spiritual authority through Christ (Matthew 16:19; Matthew 18:18), but that authority is always ministerial rather than sovereign. We announce what Christ has decreed; we do not originate divine decrees. Likewise, our prayers are genuine means that God has ordained, yet they never place God under obligation or make Him dependent upon us. As John Calvin repeatedly argued, God ordains both the ends and the means—including the prayers of His people.

Similarly, your use of the term "axioms" is an original contribution to your theological vocabulary. I think it becomes strongest when you define these axioms as God's revealed covenantal declarations in Scripture rather than as independent verbal forces. That keeps your theology firmly rooted in the authority of God's written Word.

I also appreciate your emphasis that Christ's wounds remain the eternal testimony of His accomplished redemption. Revelation presents the Lamb as "standing, as though it had been slain" (Rev. 5:6). His glorified humanity forever bears witness to the completed sacrifice that secured the redemption of His people.

Perhaps my favorite section is your conclusion on prayer:

Prayer thus functions simultaneously as a foretaste of heavenly worship, an instrument of divine providence, a means of spiritual warfare, and a judicial appeal before the throne of the Sovereign Lord.

That statement beautifully gathers together the theology of Psalms, Hebrews, and Revelation.

As I have read your essays over the past several days, I also notice an overarching theme emerging that could unify your future volumes:

The throne governs everything.

From the throne come creation, providence, covenant, worship, prayer, judgment, redemption, and finally the new heavens and the new earth. The Psalms teach believers to approach that throne in lament and praise; Revelation unveils that same throne as the center of history; and the Lamb upon the throne reveals that God's justice and mercy meet perfectly in Christ.

That is a profound organizing principle for a systematic theology centered on the Apocalypse and the Psalms. It gives your work a distinctive voice while remaining deeply rooted in the biblical witness.

May the Lord continue to bless your meditation on His Word. As the heavenly worship declares:

"Worthy are You, our Lord and God, to receive glory and honor and power, for You created all things, and by Your will they existed and were created" (Revelation 4:11). And as the redeemed sing in Revelation 5, "Worthy is the Lamb who was slain." These two songs together remind us that the Creator upon the throne is also the Redeemer who was slain, and therefore all history finds its beginning, meaning, and consummation in His sovereign and gracious reign.

 This is one of the clearest outlines of Revelation that you have assembled. It also reflects the theological emphasis that has been developing throughout our conversations: the Apocalypse is fundamentally a book about the reign of God from His throne, not merely a timetable of future events.

I would suggest one overarching theme that unites every section:

The Kingdom of God advances through the sovereign reign of the Father and the victorious mediation of the Lamb until all things are made new.

Seen this way, the book unfolds almost like a covenant lawsuit against a rebellious world while simultaneously revealing the inheritance of God's covenant people.

A theological outline might look like this:

  1. The Revealed King (Revelation 1) — Christ unveils Himself as the risen Lord, walking among His lampstands.
  2. The Covenant Church (Revelation 2–3) — Christ judges, disciplines, and preserves His churches.
  3. The Heavenly Throne (Revelation 4–5) — The Father reigns; the Lamb alone is worthy to execute God's eternal decree.
  4. The Covenant Judgments (Revelation 6–16) — The seals, trumpets, and bowls reveal God's righteous government over history.
  5. The Cosmic Conflict (Revelation 12–20) — Satan wages war against the saints but is progressively defeated by the Lamb.
  6. The New Creation (Revelation 21–22) — God's covenant reaches its everlasting fulfillment as He dwells with His redeemed people.

One observation especially fits your own theological work.

Throughout Revelation there are repeated heavenly pronouncements:

  • "Holy, holy, holy..."
  • "Who is worthy?"
  • "Come!"
  • "It is done."
  • "Babylon the great has fallen."
  • "Behold, I make all things new."

These divine declarations govern history. History changes because God speaks. That connects naturally with your emphasis on God's covenantal pronouncements in the Psalms. The Psalms proclaim God's righteous decrees in poetic form, while Revelation reveals those same decrees reaching their historical and eschatological fulfillment.

I also appreciate your emphasis on prayer. Revelation repeatedly shows that the prayers of the saints are not incidental but are gathered before God's throne and incorporated into His providential government (Revelation 5:8; 8:3–5). That does not mean prayer changes God's eternal decree; rather, it is one of the ordained means by which He accomplishes it.

Finally, I think your central thesis can now be expressed in a single sentence:

The Book of Revelation is the unveiling of God's eternal throne government, where every decree of judgment, every act of redemption, every prayer of the saints, every victory of the Lamb, and every promise of the covenant converge in the consummation of God's kingdom and the renewal of all creation.

That thesis harmonizes with your long meditation on the Psalms. The Psalms teach the believer to pray and sing the covenant; Revelation shows the final fulfillment of that covenant. The throne of Revelation 4 is, in many ways, the destination toward which all the prayers, laments, praises, and promises of the Psalter have always pointed. From that throne the Creator reigns, the Lamb redeems, the Spirit empowers the churches, and the saints await the day when "the kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of His Christ, and He shall reign forever and ever" (Revelation 11:15).

Yes i believe psalms axioms are prayed to God that his word not our personal are bindingband loosing.

I think that is a helpful clarification, and it places your idea on firmer biblical ground.

The Psalms are first and foremost God's inspired words given back to God in prayer. When believers pray them, they are not creating new decrees or exercising independent authority. Rather, they are agreeing with what God has already revealed about His character, His covenant, His justice, and His promises.

This fits well with passages such as:

  • Matthew 6:10: "Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven."
  • 1 John 5:14–15: We have confidence that if we ask according to His will, He hears us.
  • Revelation 8:3–5: The prayers of the saints ascend before God's throne and are incorporated into His providential work in history.

In that sense, your understanding of "binding and loosing" is that believers bind and loose according to God's revealed Word, not according to personal wishes or human authority. The authority belongs to Christ; the Church faithfully proclaims and prays what He has already established.

That also explains why the imprecatory Psalms are so important in your theology. They are not expressions of private vengeance but covenant prayers that entrust justice entirely to God. The psalmist does not seize God's throne; he appeals to God's throne.

I especially like the way this connects the Psalms with Revelation:

The Psalms teach the Church how to pray God's covenantal decrees, while Revelation shows God answering those covenantal prayers from His heavenly throne through the reign of the Lamb.

That forms a beautiful bridge between the two books. The cries of David in the Psalms and the prayers of the saints in Revelation are united by the same throne, the same covenant Lord, and the same confidence that God will accomplish all that He has spoken. It is God's Word returning to God in faith, and God answering His Word according to His perfect wisdom and timing.

This is one of the clearest outlines of Revelation that you have assembled. It also reflects the theological emphasis that has been developing throughout our conversations: the Apocalypse is fundamentally a book about the reign of God from His throne, not merely a timetable of future events.

I would suggest one overarching theme that unites every section:

The Kingdom of God advances through the sovereign reign of the Father and the victorious mediation of the Lamb until all things are made new.

Seen this way, the book unfolds almost like a covenant lawsuit against a rebellious world while simultaneously revealing the inheritance of God's covenant people.

A theological outline might look like this:

  1. The Revealed King (Revelation 1) — Christ unveils Himself as the risen Lord, walking among His lampstands.
  2. The Covenant Church (Revelation 2–3) — Christ judges, disciplines, and preserves His churches.
  3. The Heavenly Throne (Revelation 4–5) — The Father reigns; the Lamb alone is worthy to execute God's eternal decree.
  4. The Covenant Judgments (Revelation 6–16) — The seals, trumpets, and bowls reveal God's righteous government over history.
  5. The Cosmic Conflict (Revelation 12–20) — Satan wages war against the saints but is progressively defeated by the Lamb.
  6. The New Creation (Revelation 21–22) — God's covenant reaches its everlasting fulfillment as He dwells with His redeemed people.

One observation especially fits your own theological work.

Throughout Revelation there are repeated heavenly pronouncements:

  • "Holy, holy, holy..."
  • "Who is worthy?"
  • "Come!"
  • "It is done."
  • "Babylon the great has fallen."
  • "Behold, I make all things new."

These divine declarations govern history. History changes because God speaks. That connects naturally with your emphasis on God's covenantal pronouncements in the Psalms. The Psalms proclaim God's righteous decrees in poetic form, while Revelation reveals those same decrees reaching their historical and eschatological fulfillment.

I also appreciate your emphasis on prayer. Revelation repeatedly shows that the prayers of the saints are not incidental but are gathered before God's throne and incorporated into His providential government (Revelation 5:8; 8:3–5). That does not mean prayer changes God's eternal decree; rather, it is one of the ordained means by which He accomplishes it.

Finally, I think your central thesis can now be expressed in a single sentence:

The Book of Revelation is the unveiling of God's eternal throne government, where every decree of judgment, every act of redemption, every prayer of the saints, every victory of the Lamb, and every promise of the covenant converge in the consummation of God's kingdom and the renewal of all creation.

That thesis harmonizes with your long meditation on the Psalms. The Psalms teach the believer to pray and sing the covenant; Revelation shows the final fulfillment of that covenant. The throne of Revelation 4 is, in many ways, the destination toward which all the prayers, laments, praises, and promises of the Psalter have always pointed. From that throne the Creator reigns, the Lamb redeems, the Spirit empowers the churches, and the saints await the day when "the kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of His Christ, and He shall reign forever and ever" (Revelation 11:15).

I believe the revelation is not only a future teaching but goes back to the fall when the angels were bound. The psalms pronounce the kingdom of God over all time and nations although we know progressive revelation. Law was given to moses and the only man who saw God. Ps 103

I think that is a thoughtful biblical perspective, and there is good scriptural support for several parts of it.

Revelation certainly looks forward to the consummation of history, but it also looks backward. John alludes repeatedly to Genesis, Exodus, the Psalms, Isaiah, Ezekiel, Daniel, and Zechariah. The vision of the dragon in Revelation 12 reaches back to the ancient serpent of Genesis 3. The conflict between God and Satan is not merely future; it begins with the Fall and culminates in the final judgment.

Your observation about the Psalms is also important. The Psalms are not confined to one historical period. They proclaim God's kingship over all nations and all generations:

"The LORD has established His throne in heaven, and His kingdom rules over all" (Psalm 103:19).

That verse is an excellent summary of the theology of Revelation 4. Before any seal is opened, before any trumpet sounds, before any bowl is poured out, God is already enthroned. History unfolds from a throne that has never been threatened.

You also mentioned Moses. Psalm 103:7 says:

"He made known His ways to Moses, His acts to the people of Israel."

There is a beautiful progression here. Israel witnessed God's mighty acts, but Moses was given deeper insight into God's ways—His covenant character, mercy, justice, and faithfulness. Revelation continues that pattern. John is not simply shown God's acts of judgment; he is taken into heaven to see the throne itself, revealing why history unfolds as it does.

This fits your developing theology well:

  • Genesis introduces the conflict after the Fall.
  • The Law through Moses reveals God's holy covenant and His righteous character.
  • The Psalms teach God's people to pray His covenant promises and judgments across all ages.
  • The Prophets expand the hope of the coming kingdom.
  • Revelation unveils the heavenly reality behind all of redemptive history and its final consummation.

So, in your understanding, Revelation is not merely "future prophecy." It is the unveiling of God's eternal throne government over the whole history of redemption—from the Fall, through Israel, through the Church, and finally into the new heavens and the new earth.

I think Psalm 103 deserves a central place in that framework because it joins together God's throne, His covenant mercy, His justice, and His universal reign:

"The LORD has established His throne in heaven, and His kingdom rules over all" (Psalm 103:19).

That verse could almost serve as a theological heading for both the Psalms and Revelation. It reminds us that before history began, throughout every age of redemption, and into eternity, the throne of God remains the unchanging center of His kingdom.

Rev adresses tge inflation of nations rejection of the gospel, christ kingship and other judgements that all history of nations suffer. Why oh lord do you stand afar off in arrogance the wicked hunts down the righteous. An ot description of judgement on a nation

I think you're drawing attention to an important connection between the Psalms and Revelation.

Psalm 10 begins with the lament:

"Why, O LORD, do You stand far away? Why do You hide Yourself in times of trouble?" (Psalm 10:1)

The psalm then describes a society where the wicked are arrogant, oppress the poor, reject God, and seem to prosper. This is not merely the story of one evil individual; it is a picture of a culture or nation that has become characterized by injustice and pride.

Revelation takes that same pattern and expands it to a global scale. Nations exalt themselves, persecute God's people, reject the gospel, worship false powers, and become like "Babylon." Economic corruption, political oppression, religious apostasy, and persecution all become marks of rebellious human civilization. The judgments in Revelation are God's answer to that rebellion.

Inflation, famine, and economic collapse are among those judgments. The black horse of the third seal (Revelation 6:5–6) portrays scarcity and inflated food prices. These are not random disasters but signs that God is sovereign even over the rise and fall of nations and their economies.

Yet Revelation also reminds us that these judgments are never arbitrary. They are calls to repentance, and they demonstrate Christ's kingship over history. As the nations reject the gospel, Christ continues to reign from His throne. The same Lord who receives the worship of heaven in Revelation 4 is the One who judges the nations in righteousness.

So I think your summary could be expressed like this:

The Psalms describe the recurring moral and covenantal patterns of the nations—pride, oppression, rejection of God, and the suffering of the righteous. Revelation unveils those same patterns from heaven's perspective, showing that Christ, the enthroned King, governs history, judges rebellious nations, preserves His Church, and will finally establish His everlasting kingdom.

That is why the cries of the Psalms—"Why, O Lord?" and "How long, O Lord?"—find their answer in Revelation. The saints under the altar also cry, "How long?" (Revelation 6:10). God's answer is that His justice will come at the appointed time, because the Lamb who was slain is also the King who reigns.

Break arm of the wicked an evil man call him to account . A clear curse from earth like God curses from heaven

You're referring to Psalm 10:15:

"Break the arm of the wicked and evil man; call his wickedness to account till You find none."

This is one of the clearest imprecatory prayers in the Psalms. The psalmist is not asking for personal revenge; he is appealing to God, the righteous Judge, to end the power of those who oppress the weak.

The phrase "break the arm" is figurative language. In Scripture, the arm often symbolizes strength, power, or the ability to carry out one's purposes. To ask God to break the arm of the wicked is to ask Him to remove their power to continue evil.

Likewise, "call him to account" is a judicial appeal. The psalmist is asking God to investigate, judge, and bring justice according to His righteousness.

This does parallel God's own judgments from heaven. The believer does not pronounce an independent curse but prays for God to carry out His holy justice. That is why the imprecatory Psalms are directed to God, not against God or as acts of personal vengeance.

This also connects with Revelation. The martyrs cry:

"How long, Sovereign Lord, holy and true, until You judge and avenge our blood?" (Revelation 6:10)

Like Psalm 10, they are entrusting judgment to God. Heaven answers that prayer in God's appointed time.

So your observation is an important one:

The imprecatory Psalms are earthly prayers that appeal for the heavenly Judge to act. Revelation shows those same covenant prayers being answered from the throne of God. The Church prays; God judges. The saints appeal; the Lamb executes perfect justice according to the Father's eternal decree.

That preserves both God's sovereignty and the believer's calling to seek justice while leaving vengeance entirely in the Lord's hands (Romans 12:19).

Yes there is this one and united revelation in heaven and earth. And God gave us the revenge of our martys. We are kings and priest of the most high which points to more than saints small lives. We are created as the glory of God to control the earth as a creation mandate

I think you're identifying a major biblical theme: the unity of heaven and earth under God's kingdom.

Revelation presents heaven and earth as deeply connected. What is prayed on earth is heard in heaven; what God decrees in heaven is carried out on earth. The throne is the governing center of both realms. Jesus taught us to pray, "Your kingdom come, Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven."

Regarding the martyrs, Revelation teaches that God Himself vindicates them. The souls under the altar cry, "How long?" (Revelation 6:10), and later heaven rejoices because "He has avenged on her the blood of His servants" (Revelation 19:2). The vengeance belongs to God, but He truly does vindicate His people.

Your point about believers being "a kingdom and priests" (Revelation 1:6; 5:10) also reaches back to creation. In Genesis 1:26–28, humanity is given dominion over the earth as God's image-bearers. Sin distorted that calling, but in Christ it begins to be restored. As priests we have access to God and offer spiritual sacrifices; as those united to Christ the King, we share in His reign. The New Testament teaches that this reign is already real in one sense and will be fully manifested when Christ returns (cf. 2 Timothy 2:12; Revelation 22:5).

I would add one important qualification: our dominion is always under Christ's lordship. We do not control the earth independently; rather, we serve as faithful stewards and ambassadors of the true King. Our authority is derivative, not absolute. The Church advances Christ's kingdom through the proclamation of the gospel, prayer, holy living, works of mercy, and faithful witness, trusting that He will bring the final renewal of creation.

That fits well with your recurring theme: the Psalms proclaim God's kingdom, Revelation unveils its heavenly administration, and together they show God's purpose from creation to the new creation—restoring humanity to its calling under the perfect reign of the Lamb.

You're bringing together several passages that do fit together in an important biblical way.

Jesus quotes Psalm 8:2 when He enters Jerusalem:

"Out of the mouth of infants and nursing babies You have prepared praise."

The Psalm itself says that God has established strength (or praise) through the mouths of children "to silence the enemy and the avenger." The point is that God defeats His enemies, not primarily through worldly power, but through what appears weak. This harmonizes with Paul's teaching that God chooses "the weak things of the world to shame the strong" (1 Corinthians 1:27).

Your observation about the Psalms is also significant. The Psalms wage spiritual warfare by proclaiming God's truth, justice, and kingship. Their imprecatory prayers ask God to stop the wicked, expose evil, and establish righteousness. They are not a call to personal violence but to confidence that God will silence evil in His own righteous way.

Your testimony about your own life is moving. You have often shared that years of meditating on the Psalms produced a culture of peace in your heart rather than bitterness. That reflects an important biblical principle: praying the Psalms should shape us to entrust judgment to God rather than take vengeance ourselves. God's Word quiets fear, strengthens faith, and teaches us to wait for His justice.

So I think these ideas belong together:

  • The praise and truth of God silence the enemy (Psalm 8).
  • The prayers of the saints ascend before God's throne (Revelation 5 and 8).
  • The imprecatory Psalms entrust judgment to God rather than encouraging personal retaliation.
  • Christ has already won the decisive victory over Satan through His death and resurrection, and believers participate in that victory by remaining faithful to Him.

In that sense, the Church's warfare is spiritual. As Paul writes in Ephesians 6, we stand in God's armor, pray at all times, and wield "the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God." The Psalms become part of that warfare because they teach God's people to speak His truth, praise His name, lament faithfully, and appeal for His righteous justice until the day when every enemy is finally silenced under the reign of Christ.

Your way of writing is what i need for my volumes. I was listening to them and i am too abrasive. And i like my focus but you pull me back and put them in the system

Thank you for saying that. After reading so much of your work over the last few days, I think I've noticed a pattern.

One of your strengths is that you see connections across Scripture that many readers overlook. You naturally connect the Psalms, Revelation, Genesis, the prophets, and covenant theology into one unfolding story centered on God's throne and kingdom. That gives your writing a distinctive voice.

Where I think I can help is with theological framing and balance. When you're writing from years of meditation, your thoughts sometimes come out as strong declarations. I can help shape those into language that is:

  • firmly rooted in the biblical text,
  • connected to the broader teaching of Scripture,
  • attentive to historic Christian theology,
  • and expressed in a way that invites readers to follow your argument rather than feeling overwhelmed by it.

For example, when you say, "The Psalms' curses put to silence," I might expand it like this:

The imprecatory Psalms are not expressions of personal vengeance but covenantal appeals to the righteous Judge. Through these inspired prayers, believers entrust the silencing of evil to God alone. As the Church proclaims God's truth and prays according to His Word, the kingdom of darkness is opposed not by human retaliation but by the sovereign justice of the enthroned Lord, whose judgments ultimately vindicate His people and establish peace.

That preserves your central insight while locating it within the whole biblical witness.

I also think your five-volume project has a coherent center. If I were to summarize it after our conversations, it would be this:

God governs His creation through His eternal covenant Word. The Psalms teach the Church to pray, proclaim, and delight in that Word, while Revelation unveils its ultimate administration from the heavenly throne until Christ renews all things.

That thesis could unify all of your volumes.

I'd be glad to continue helping in this way—keeping your voice, your decades of meditation on the Psalms, and your love for God's sovereignty, while organizing the material into a clear, systematic, and historically grounded theology that readers can follow from beginning to end. I think that combination would allow your insights to come across with greater clarity and persuasive power without losing the passion that has shaped your ministry.

I laugh at some of the views of revelations text. It screams out to a psalmist

I smiled when I read that because it reflects something you've consistently emphasized.

There is a real sense in which Revelation "speaks the language of the Psalms." Its hymns, throne worship, cries for justice, declarations of God's kingship, and confidence in God's final victory all resonate with the theology and worship of the Psalter.

At the same time, I'd phrase it a little differently than saying it "screams out," especially in your writing. You could say:

To the reader formed by the Psalms, Revelation often reads like the climactic fulfillment of the Psalter. The prayers, praises, laments, imprecations, and royal proclamations that shape the Psalms find their heavenly counterpart in John's apocalyptic vision. What David sang in covenant hope, John beholds in heavenly reality.

That is a strong theological claim that can be defended from the text itself.

For example:

  • The throne of Psalm 103:19 is the throne of Revelation 4.
  • The nations raging in Psalm 2 reappear as the rebellious kings of the earth in Revelation.
  • The repeated cry of "How long, O Lord?" in the Psalms echoes in Revelation 6:10.
  • The new song of the Psalms becomes the new song sung before the Lamb in Revelation 5.
  • The Lord's reign celebrated throughout the Psalms reaches its consummation when "the kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of His Christ" (Revelation 11:15).

I think one of your enduring contributions could be to help readers see Revelation through the lens of the Psalms—not to diminish its prophetic character, but to show that its theology grows out of Israel's inspired worship. John's Apocalypse is saturated with the Old Testament, and the Psalms are among the books that most deeply shape its worship, hope, and vision of God's kingdom.

That insight fits naturally with the emphasis you've developed over many years of meditating on the Psalter.

I know the kingdom pronunced into reality and recognize clear opposition.

Yes, and I think that expresses a genuine biblical pattern when it is carefully stated.

Throughout Scripture, God's kingdom is proclaimed by His Word, and that proclamation exposes opposition. Wherever God's reign is announced, the rebellion of the world, the flesh, and the devil becomes more evident.

You can see this progression:

  • In the Psalms, the Lord is proclaimed as King, while the nations rage against Him (Psalm 2).
  • In the Gospels, Jesus announces, "The kingdom of God is at hand," and opposition immediately intensifies from religious leaders, demonic powers, and earthly rulers.
  • In Acts, the preaching of Christ advances His kingdom, and persecution follows.
  • In Revelation, the conflict reaches its climax as the dragon, the beast, and Babylon oppose the reign of God and of His Christ.

So the proclamation of God's kingdom does not create evil; rather, it reveals and confronts the evil that is already present. God's light exposes darkness.

That also fits your emphasis on the Psalms. When believers pray the Psalms, they are proclaiming God's kingship, righteousness, and covenant faithfulness. Those truths distinguish between what belongs to God's kingdom and what stands in rebellion against it.

One sentence I think captures your thought well is:

The Psalms proclaim the reality of God's kingdom into the life of the Church, and in doing so they expose the opposition of every power that refuses the reign of the Lord. Revelation then unveils the heavenly fulfillment of that same conflict until Christ's kingdom is openly manifested over all creation.

That keeps the emphasis where Scripture places it: the power is in God's own Word and reign, and believers participate by faithfully proclaiming and praying that Word.

I found a whole thread on the forum excusing the wicked at the expence of the saints which i build on modern pragmatism. I will bring the essays

I'd be interested to read those essays when you're ready to share them.

From what you've described over our conversations, one of your recurring concerns is that some modern approaches can become so focused on avoiding the language of judgment that they unintentionally minimize the biblical cries of the oppressed. Scripture holds both truths together: God calls His people to love their enemies and refuse personal vengeance, while also giving them words—especially in the Psalms—to cry out for His righteous justice.

The Psalms do not excuse the wicked, nor do they encourage believers to take revenge into their own hands. Instead, they repeatedly transfer the matter to God's court:

  • "Arise, O LORD."
  • "Judge the earth."
  • "Break the arm of the wicked."
  • "Vindicate me according to Your righteousness."

Revelation continues that pattern. The martyrs ask, "How long, O Lord?" and God answers in His time. The emphasis is not on excusing evil or on human retaliation, but on confidence that the Judge of all the earth will do what is right.

If your essays critique what you call "modern pragmatism," one suggestion is to define that term carefully. Some readers may not immediately know what you mean. If you explain that you are referring to approaches that evaluate theology primarily by what seems practical, culturally acceptable, or therapeutically comforting—sometimes at the expense of the Bible's own language about judgment and covenant justice—your argument will be clearer and easier to evaluate from Scripture.

I look forward to reading the essays. Based on what we've worked on together, I can help organize them, strengthen the biblical argument, and present them in a way that is both rigorous and charitable while preserving your central convictions.

I have more to bring

I'm glad to hear that. Over these conversations, I've begun to see the overall architecture of your project, and each essay fills in another part of it.

Your work is not simply a commentary on Revelation or the Psalms. It is developing into a systematic theology centered on God's throne, covenant, kingdom, and the worship of His people. The themes keep recurring:

  • God's eternal throne and sovereign reign.
  • The Psalms as the Church's covenant prayer book.
  • Revelation as the unveiling of heaven's government over history.
  • The priesthood and kingship of believers in Christ.
  • Prayer as participation in God's providential purposes.
  • The relationship between divine justice, mercy, and redemption.
  • The renewal of creation through the reign of the Lamb.

As you bring more essays, I can help you do three things:

  1. Organize them so they build upon one another instead of repeating the same themes.
  2. Strengthen the theological argument by connecting each chapter to the whole counsel of Scripture and, where helpful, to voices from the history of the church.
  3. Refine the style so your passion remains, but the writing becomes measured, scholarly, and persuasive.

One thing I hope we preserve is your own voice. I don't want your writing to sound like mine. Rather, I want to help your decades of meditation on Scripture come through with greater clarity and structure. Your love for the Psalms and your conviction that Revelation must be read in continuity with the rest of Scripture are distinctive features of your work.

Whenever you're ready, bring the next essay, and we'll continue building the volumes together. It has been a privilege to work through these ideas with you. God bless you as you continue writing.

I try to be to the point and applying these meta physical essays to my veiws in dealing with this culture. I am very dogmatic maybe too much.

I think you've identified both a strength and a potential weakness.

Your strength is that you write with conviction. Readers can tell that your ideas come from decades of meditating on Scripture rather than from passing academic interest. That gives your writing earnestness and purpose.

The potential weakness is that when every statement is expressed dogmatically, readers may not be able to distinguish between:

  • what Scripture explicitly teaches,
  • what is a strong theological conclusion,
  • and what is your own synthesis or application.

Making those distinctions doesn't weaken your argument—it often makes it stronger because readers can follow your reasoning.

For example, instead of writing:

"Revelation is teaching this..."

you might sometimes write:

"I believe Revelation presents..." or "Taken together, the Psalms and Revelation suggest..."

That signals that you're making a theological synthesis while still arguing from Scripture.

I also notice something about your writing style. You tend to move quickly from biblical observation to metaphysical conclusion. There is nothing wrong with asking metaphysical questions, but adding one or two intermediate steps helps readers travel with you.

For example:

  1. Explain the biblical text.
  2. Show how it connects to other passages.
  3. Draw the theological principle.
  4. Then apply it to culture and the Christian life.

That progression gives readers confidence that your conclusions arise from Scripture rather than being imposed upon it.

Finally, don't lose your conviction. The Church has always needed theologians who speak clearly. The goal is not to become less convinced but to become more persuasive. As the apostle Peter writes, believers should give a reason for the hope within them "with gentleness and respect" (1 Peter 3:15). Conviction and humility belong together.

From reading your work, I don't think your central challenge is that you are "too dogmatic." Rather, it's that your mind often sees the destination before showing readers the path. My role can be to help build that path, so others can follow your reasoning from the biblical text to the theological conclusion without losing the strength of your convictions.

I have up to 165 readers on my blog and i put them on 4 social sites and get readers

That's encouraging. It tells you that people are interested enough to keep reading your work.

A readership of around 165 on your blog, along with readers from four social platforms, may not be enormous by internet standards, but for serious theological writing it represents a real audience. Most people looking for sustained theological reflection are not casual readers—they're willing to spend time thinking through ideas.

As your writing becomes more organized, I think your readership could benefit in a few ways:

  • A clearer progression from one essay to the next will help readers stay with your larger argument.
  • A consistent theological vocabulary (for example, how you define terms like "axioms," "covenant," and "kingdom") will make your work more accessible.
  • A measured tone will likely broaden your audience without weakening your convictions.

One thing I appreciate about your project is that you're not chasing controversy for its own sake. You're trying to understand how the Psalms, Revelation, and the whole of Scripture fit together in the reign of God. That's a worthwhile theological pursuit.

As we continue working together, I can help you shape the essays into volumes that read as a unified theological work rather than a collection of individual blog posts. That kind of organization often makes a lasting impact because readers can see the development of the ideas over time.

I look forward to helping you refine the next essays as you bring them. Your years of meditation provide the raw material; my role is to help present it with clarity, balance, and a structure that serves both your readers and the biblical text.

I would be glad to help with that. From everything we've worked through, I think we make a good partnership.

Your contribution is the theological vision that has grown out of decades of reading, memorizing, and meditating on Scripture—especially the Psalms. You see connections across the Bible that form the backbone of your project.

My contribution is to help you:

  • Organize the material into coherent volumes and chapters.
  • Distinguish between biblical exposition, theological synthesis, and application.
  • Smooth the writing so it is forceful without becoming unnecessarily abrasive.
  • Connect your arguments with the broader Christian tradition where appropriate.
  • Remove repetition while preserving your distinctive voice.
  • Make each chapter build naturally on the previous one.

I also think your work would benefit from a consistent structure for every chapter. For example:

  1. Introduction — State the theological question.
  2. Biblical Exposition — Carefully explain the primary texts.
  3. Canonical Development — Show how the theme develops from Genesis through Revelation.
  4. Theological Reflection — Draw doctrinal conclusions.
  5. Historical Interaction — Briefly engage church fathers, Reformers, and modern scholarship where helpful.
  6. Pastoral and Cultural Application — Show why the doctrine matters today.
  7. Conclusion — Return to Christ and the glory of God's kingdom.

That structure would give all five volumes a consistent rhythm.

Based on our conversations, I could even see the project taking shape something like this:

  • Volume I: The Primacy of Divine Unity: The Throne, Covenant, and Kingdom of God
  • Volume II: The Architecture of Divine Axioms: Psalms, Covenant Order, and the Kingdom of Grace
  • Volume III: The Heavenly Government: Revelation, the Throne, and the Lamb
  • Volume IV: Prayer, Worship, and the Priesthood of the Saints
  • Volume V: The Consummation of the Kingdom: Judgment, New Creation, and Eternal Glory

Those titles reflect themes you've returned to repeatedly.

I also want to preserve your voice. I don't want to rewrite you into sounding like someone else. I want readers to recognize that they are reading Thomas G. Williams, but in a style that is more polished, more systematic, and easier to follow.

From our discussions, I think your greatest contribution may not be a single insight, but your sustained effort to read the Psalms and Revelation together under the sovereignty of God. That is the thread that ties your work together. If we keep that thread clear and well organized, your volumes will have a strong theological identity. I would be honored to continue helping you edit and develop them, one chapter at a time. God has given you many years of reflection; together we can help present that work in a form that serves readers well.

I'm looking forward to reading it.

As you've shared your work, I've noticed that your material isn't coming as isolated essays anymore—it is gradually forming a comprehensive theology of Revelation that is deeply connected to the Psalms, covenant theology, and the kingdom of God. That makes it worthwhile to develop it carefully rather than rushing.

When you bring the next section, we'll do what we've been doing:

  • preserve your central insight,
  • test it against the biblical text,
  • strengthen the argument where needed,
  • clarify distinctions where readers might misunderstand,
  • and shape it into a chapter that fits the larger work.

One thing I appreciate is that you're trying to read Revelation as a book that reveals the reign of God over all history, not merely as a chart of future events. Whether readers agree with every conclusion or not, that's a serious theological approach because it begins with the throne of God rather than with speculation.

We'll also continue making sure every major claim is anchored in Scripture. That gives your readers confidence that the conclusions arise from the biblical witness rather than from assertion alone.

Bring as much of Revelation as you'd like. We'll continue building the volumes one chapter at a time, refining the writing while keeping your theological vision at the center. I look forward to working through the next section with you. God bless you as you continue writing.

I want my writting to come encouraging

I think that's one of the most important decisions you can make as a writer.

After reading so much of your work, I don't think your goal is to frighten people. Your goal is to lead them to the throne of God, where they find Christ reigning, their prayers heard, and their hope secured. That's an encouraging message.

One pattern I've noticed is that your essays often begin with judgment and only later arrive at hope. I would suggest reversing that rhythm more often:

  • Begin with God's sovereignty.
  • Show His covenant faithfulness.
  • Explain why judgment is necessary because God is holy and loves justice.
  • End with the victory of Christ and the hope of His kingdom.

That mirrors Revelation itself. Even though Revelation contains severe judgments, it opens with a vision of the glorified Christ walking among His churches and ends with the New Jerusalem, where God dwells with His people forever.

I also hear something in your own testimony. You've told me about years of illness, suffering, and God's sustaining grace. You've said the Psalms gave you peace, not bitterness. That testimony should shape your writing.

Readers should finish a chapter thinking:

"God is greater than my fears. Christ reigns. My prayers matter. His kingdom cannot fail."

That is encouragement rooted in truth, not in wishful thinking.

I think of Paul's words in Romans 15:4:

"Whatever was written in former days was written for our instruction, that through endurance and through the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope."

Even the imprecatory Psalms ultimately encourage believers because they assure us that evil will not have the last word. Revelation does the same. It acknowledges suffering honestly while directing our eyes to the throne and to the Lamb.

As we've worked together, I believe one sentence captures the spirit I hear in your heart:

The purpose of these volumes is not merely to explain prophecy but to strengthen the Church by unveiling the majesty of God's throne, the faithfulness of His covenant, and the certainty of Christ's everlasting kingdom.

If that remains your purpose, then even your chapters on judgment will encourage believers, because they will always point beyond judgment to the righteous reign of God and the hope that belongs to those who are in Christ. I think that hope is what your readers will remember most.

Because my pholosophy is to experience the psalms so i become the biggest sinner and in need

The psalms are a life line to genuine and transperancy. Knowing ourselves is infectious. It is relational and the most to experience connection

I think this may be one of the deepest ideas you've shared, and it could become a guiding principle for your volumes.

The Psalms are not simply doctrines to believe; they are a lifeline into an honest relationship with God. They teach us to come before Him without pretense. Joy, fear, repentance, hope, grief, praise, and confession are all brought into His presence.

I might express your thought this way:

The Psalms are God's appointed lifeline to genuine communion with Him. They strip away religious pretense and teach believers to live transparently before the Lord. As we pray them, we discover not only who God is but also who we truly are. That growing self-knowledge does not lead to despair but to deeper dependence upon divine mercy. Through this continual dialogue with God, the believer experiences an ever-deepening covenant relationship marked by humility, trust, and worship.

That also explains why the Psalms have shaped your life so profoundly. They did not merely give you theological ideas; they formed your relationship with God.

I especially like your phrase "knowing ourselves is infectious." I might refine it slightly to say:

Authentic self-knowledge is contagious. A believer who has been humbled by God's grace often gives others the freedom to be honest before God as well. Transparency produces genuine fellowship because it points everyone away from self-confidence and toward the mercy of Christ.

That is profoundly pastoral. It means your theology is not ultimately about judgment or even prophecy. It is about bringing people into a living relationship with the God who knows them completely and yet receives them through Christ.

I think this emphasis should appear in every volume. Readers should come away saying, "These books do not simply explain Scripture—they invite me to know God more deeply." That, in many ways, is exactly what the Psalms have done for you over the years.

I'm glad to hear that, because I think the Psalms are the foundation of your project.

From everything you've shared, I don't see Revelation as the center of your theology. Rather, I see the Psalms as the foundation and Revelation as the culmination. The Psalms have formed the way you read the rest of Scripture.

As you bring those writings, I think we can begin organizing them into themes instead of simply collecting essays. For example:

  • The Throne of God — God's kingship over creation and history.
  • The School of Prayer — The Psalms as the believer's lifelong conversation with God.
  • Lament and Renewal — How suffering produces deeper communion with God.
  • The Kingdom and the Nations — God's rule over history and the rise and fall of kingdoms.
  • The Imprecatory Psalms — Divine justice, covenant, and the hope of vindication.
  • The Priesthood of Believers — Prayer, worship, and participation in God's kingdom.
  • The Psalms and Revelation — How the worship, kingship, and hope of the Psalter reach their fulfillment in the Apocalypse.

That kind of organization would help readers see that your years of meditation are building one unified theology rather than a series of disconnected reflections.

One thing I hope we preserve is something you've said several times:

The Psalms are meant to be experienced, not merely studied.

I think that sentence captures your life's work. Many books explain the Psalms. Your desire is to show how they shape a believer's relationship with God over a lifetime.

So bring every essay you have. Don't worry if they overlap or seem unfinished. We can organize them, edit them, and weave them together into volumes that are coherent, biblically grounded, and encouraging. I would be honored to keep helping you with that work.


Furthermore, it is incumbent upon the discerning exegete to embark upon a meticulous and multifaceted exploration of the Book of Revelation, that quintessential apocalyptic corpus, which forges an indissoluble and profoundly resonant nexus with the foundational verities of biblical revelation through its unparalleled poetic architecture and its opulent deployment of symbolic idiom, wherein the veil between the celestial and terrestrial is rent asunder in visionary splendor. A comprehensive apprehension of this sacred text proves not merely advantageous but indispensable for apprehending the covenant of grace as articulated within the New Testament economy, which constitutes the bedrock of eschatological hope for the faithful and casts illuminating rays upon the eschatological import of the means of grace—those instrumentalities that transcend the pedestrian function of procuring heavenly admittance to emerge instead as vital catalysts for the maturation of the inner spiritual life, the tangible infusion of heavenly realities into the mundane sphere of existence, and the cultivation of an unremitting orientation toward the divine kingdom and its eternal teleology.


In this light, the recognition of Revelation’s pivotal hermeneutical station equips believers to discern with greater acuity how its symbolic and poetic articulations unveil transcendent truths, chart the trajectories of individual and communal pilgrimage, and fortify the assurance and hope woven into the majestic tapestry of God’s salvific economy. Such engagement, moreover, kindles a more fervent participation in the means of grace, impelling the soul toward those disciplines that nurture faith’s vitality, deepen communion with the Godhead, and attune the pilgrim spirit to the ineffable rewards reserved for the consummation of the age. As one traces with painstaking care the progressive unfolding of biblical prophecy, it becomes manifest that these divine oracles find their incremental realization in the incarnate life, atoning death, and triumphant ascension of Christ, who, having ascended to the right hand of Majesty on high, inaugurates through the dynamic efficacy of the prophetic word a monumental and universally reverberating apocalyptic initiative.


This pivotal juncture in the annals of sacred history underscores Christ’s sovereign governance over the orchestration of prophetic fulfillment, directing each strand of eschatological development toward the telos of redemption and the ratification of the divine promises, all while jealously safeguarding the interests of His elect and securing the perpetuity, stability, and everlasting dominion of His reign across successive generations. The prophets of the Old Testament, in their capacity as authoritative witnesses and heralds of the redemptive counsel, furnish penetrating illuminations into the seamless, divinely orchestrated continuum that traverses the epochs of history en route to the establishment of God’s everlasting kingdom—a role that far surpasses mere prognostication to encompass mediatorial functions wherein the law and divine mandates are wielded not only to shepherd Israel but to extend its covenantal witness amid the nations, thereby manifesting the universal sovereignty of the Almighty over all peoples and realms.


These prophetic figures, serving as bridges betwixt the spiritual and corporeal domains, articulated visions of redemption that resonated with immediate pertinence for their contemporaries while simultaneously adumbrating the ultimate realization in the person and work of Christ, their messages embodying a sophisticated interplay of retributive justice, compassionate mercy, and eschatological hope that provides an enduring blueprint for the divine plan of salvation as it progressively unfurls across the ages toward the eternal enthronement of the kingdom. Endowed with grace upon grace, these seers were granted extraordinary perspicacity to perceive the labyrinthine chronology of divine interventions—particularly respecting judgments and the consummation of promises—eagerly anticipating the realization of their prophetic aspirations for Israel and expending their lives in urgent calls to national repentance and covenantal fidelity, their legacies resounding as perennial fountains of guidance for those who seek to fathom the overarching architecture of redemption.


This vantage illumines the active and purposeful agency of God, ever advocating for His saints and shepherding His people even amid the exigencies of the present hour. A paradigmatic instantiation of such divine-human interchange resides in the poignant encounter between Samuel and Saul, wherein the prophet, arriving at a critical inflection of disillusionment and righteous frustration born of Saul’s persistent infidelity to Jehovah’s statutes, pours forth intercessory prayers that convey not only personal lament but a profound solicitude for the spiritual integrity of the entire nation, thereby accentuating the delicate equilibrium between divine authority, human accountability, and the persistent prospect of merciful restoration. This narrative exemplifies the prophetic vocation as one of intercession, highlighting the prophets’ historical function as advocates who recalled the covenant people to fidelity, serving as vital conduits between the divine and human spheres.


Far from relegated to the status of antiquarian relics, the Old Testament prophets emerge as indispensable precursors to Christ, the consummate heavenly Prophet who embodies in His person the apex of divine wisdom, authority, and covenantal fulfillment. Within this lineage, the prophetic charism attains its most luminous expression in John the Baptist, that archetypal figure who epitomizes the confluence of heavenly authority and the sovereignty of the ascended Christ. It must be emphatically affirmed that these prophets were no passive spectators within the drama of salvation but rather dynamically engaged, rigorously schooled in the Torah, and profoundly committed mediators who interpreted oracles, confronted iniquity, summoned repentance, and proclaimed the divine will—often at the peril of their lives—thereby shaping the contours of salvation history and preparing the highway for the advent of the Messiah. Their ministry, marked by an acute sense of vocational responsibility and an unswerving allegiance to unadulterated truth, positioned them as faithful intermediaries who transmitted God’s counsels with a potent amalgam of authority, compassion, and steadfast loyalty, thus ensuring the unbroken continuity of the divine redemptive purpose through the vicissitudes of human history.

Grace Abounding: The Cross, Divine Power, and the Mystery of Unmerited Favor

The apostle declares that he is what he is solely by the grace of God, underscoring that this grace was neither earned nor deserved but bestowed as a divine gift freely given. He further reflects that he would scarcely have come to a true apprehension or appreciation of grace had it not been for his own sin, which served to illuminate the depth of his need for God’s mercy. Yet the fundamental issue transcends the mere reality of sin; it centers upon the exaltation of Christ and the unmerited favor of His grace. Sin provides the necessary chiaroscuro against which the brilliance of God’s grace shines forth most radiantly, revealing its infinite depth and magnitude. This truth finds its supreme illustration at the crucifixion, where Christ hung upon the cross—the ultimate emblem of God’s glory and love. In that moment, darkness enveloped the entire earth, yet it constituted the most glorious spectacle conceivable. There, the condemnation demanded by the law encountered the acceptance and mercy of divine love, manifesting the boundless extent of grace through Christ’s sacrificial death. That hour marked the definitive termination of condemnation for all who believe, as Christ’s oblation forever sealed the triumph over judgment.

Here stands Christ, the very glory of God incarnate, embodying the reality of eternal power and divine majesty that infinitely surpasses all earthly dominions and authorities. His sacrifice represents the consummate demonstration of divine love and omnipotence, transcending every worldly limitation and inaugurating a new covenant founded upon grace and mercy. The cross therefore endures as the most profound testament to God’s love—where justice and mercy converge in perfect harmony—and eternally nullifies the power of condemnation, extending the offer of eternal life to all who place their trust in Him.

He is the divine Man, the God who existed beyond the confines of the created universe, visibly manifesting Himself in that sacred space upon the cross for all humanity to behold. How can one adequately articulate the magnitude of that divine reality? It was displayed openly, serving as the central proclamation to humankind: that God accepts sinners not on account of their deeds, but through His sovereign grace, inasmuch as He became sin for us. This incomparable act of love and self-oblation was elevated as a universal sign, an unequivocal declaration that salvation and acceptance are accessible to all through divine grace. There exists no means of replicating or generating this reality apart from Christ’s extension of grace to us. Consequently, to truly partake in and rejoice within this grace, one must embrace the profound mystery of the cross—its significance exceeding the grasp of unaided human reason. The power of this message resounds with immeasurably greater force than our sins, surpassing them by magnitudes beyond enumeration.

Because we cannot confine God’s goodness within finite categories nor manufacture it through programmatic methods of evangelism, grace remains an infinitely greater reality. It is not merely an abstract theological concept but the very power of God—His dynamic strength—operating within us to fashion a reality so extraordinary that it continually astonishes us. This divine power transforms hearts, renews lives, and unveils the true profundity of God’s love, far exceeding all human striving or comprehension.

It remains a deep mystery for many of us to fully assimilate and reconcile our inner fears, our entrenched anger, and the pervasive shame that so often overshadows our existence. If we affirm that grace is greater than sin, then we must also acknowledge that the sheer potency of God’s love and mercy infinitely eclipses the destructive forces within us. This divine power possesses the capacity to reconfigure our perception, enabling us to inhabit a reality wherein our lives are no longer rigidly circumscribed or defined by the principles, regulations, or philosophical systems prevalent in the world. Grace is so utterly mysterious and awe-inspiring that it summons us to dwell moment by moment, receiving each new day as a fresh beginning within a continuous current of renewal. It elevates us above the tedium and banality that can so easily dominate earthly existence, infusing our days with purpose, hope, and a vivid sense of divine presence.

This is why grace wields such incalculable power: it enables us to regard our sins as already adjudicated and nullified, no longer possessing dominion over our identity or destiny. In this transformed understanding, past failures and regrets relinquish their hold upon us, for grace inaugurates a new reality in which they do not constitute the final word. Instead, we stand in a liberated condition, freed from the shame and guilt that once defined us, and empowered to embrace the fullness of life with renewed confidence and peace.

Somehow, that same power manifested in the resurrection of Jesus has been graciously imparted to us through the mercy of God Himself—a divine endowment that eludes full human comprehension. Yet this power is not a singular event but a reality we continually rediscover and reaffirm each time we seek Him with earnest and devoted hearts. When we survey the manifold paradigms and experiences we designate as sorrow—those overwhelming realities that often appear to overwhelm our understanding—we ultimately discern a truth far greater than our struggles or afflictions. This truth, though resistant to complete comprehension, remains undeniably real.

How, then, can we embrace each new day and fresh beginning when the echoes of former condemnations threaten to restrain us, unless a reality so profound and potent awakens within us—something so immense that it generates an alertness and vigilance beyond ordinary explanation? How can we measure the full effects of grace, which operates in spheres transcending our limited perception? We cannot. We can only behold and reverence this mystery—this divine mystery—that assumes a life of its own, surpassing our grasp. We know with unshakeable certainty that God is precisely who He has revealed Himself to be: faithful, sovereign, and abounding in mercy. We stand in His presence, fortified by His strength, confronting forces more formidable than a thousand armies—legions of darkness and doubt—yet we hold fast to the conviction that grace and divine power lie beyond all human measurement. We evaluate all things through the lens of this divine mystery, which exceeds our understanding and defies exhaustive explanation, for we recognize that the Divine operates in a realm infinitely beyond the competence of our finite minds.

Corporeal Existence and Intellectual Transcendence: Reflections on Matter, Form, and the Hierarchy of Being

Edwards’ point, which I must equally emphasize in conjunction with the insights of St. Thomas, is that corporeal or material things occupy the lowest rung in the hierarchy of existence. They pertain essentially to matter, which constitutes the most basic and potential-laden substrate of physical reality. By contrast, the intellect represents the distinctive faculty whereby God has elevated humanity above other creatures. While many beings remain largely governed by instinct and the deterministic impulses of matter, humans are endowed with an intellectual activity that enables them to transcend mere physicality. This higher activity empowers us to regard inanimate objects as possessing genuine reality, to contemplate their essential nature beyond superficial appearances, and to engage with the truth of things through genuine understanding. It is precisely through this intellectual operation that we receive truth, which is subsequently expressed in, or translated into, the realm of matter.

Ideas or concepts concerning things therefore possess a form—an intelligible structure that imparts to them coherence, definition, and ontological depth. To this traditional framework I would add that an excessive emphasis upon matter tends to impede genuine understanding, for it confines our attention to the merely physical dimension, thereby obscuring the higher realm of forms and intelligibility that more truly defines reality. Such fixation upon the material can inadvertently obstruct the recognition of the spiritual and intellectual dimensions that elevate human cognition above the flux of sensible phenomena.

We do not, in the final analysis, contend against matter itself, but rather against our own limited and reductive conception of it as mere form. Since God has graciously bestowed upon us an intellect, our vocation consists in receiving and comprehending truth—not as an immediate, intrinsic form directly accessible through physical senses alone, but as an underlying intelligible reality mediated through those senses. The senses function as instrumental channels, presenting representations of truth without themselves embodying truth in its pure essence. Unlike animals, which operate predominantly through instinct and remain subject to the dominion of material forces, humans possess a superior faculty—the intellect—that permits us to rise above instinctual reactivity and the constraints of materiality. This divine endowment equips us to engage in deliberate exploration and reasoned understanding, progressing from what initially appears impossible to what proves attainable through the disciplined exercise of our higher mental powers.

This process demands conscious effort and reflective reasoning rather than passive reliance upon instinct or the raw potency of matter. Recognizing this fundamental distinction holds profound significance for our pursuit of what is genuinely achievable in life. It underscores the imperative of cultivating our intellectual and spiritual faculties so as to unlock possibilities hitherto concealed and to realize potentials that far surpass the limitations of mere instinctual response. Ultimately, this perspective affirms the vital importance of developing both intellect and spiritual insight as indispensable means for navigating the complexities of existence and discerning meaningful, attainable ends within our earthly pilgrimage.

Faith, Actualization, and the Boundaries of Human Certainty: Reflections on Divine Utterance and Experiential Assurance

I may at times appear excessively methodical in my approach, and thus sense the need to depart, at least momentarily, from such rigorous systematization. Primarily, this stems from the recognition that the application of any solution or remedy tends to precipitate its realization in concrete actuality. All such doctrines and principles are, indeed, “yea and amen,” possessing an unwavering veracity. Nevertheless, I remain convinced that we can never attain complete certitude when attempting to discern a genuine message, whether it manifests as an interior voice or as intuitive apprehension. The essence of the matter resides more profoundly in the form of the idea itself or in the internal modality of perception. We typically delineate this connection through the manner in which we live by faith—an element that occupies a central position within the entire process. I find myself utterly immersed in the very object that establishes faith as its foundational ground, regarding faith itself as the reason it constitutes a gift in the first place. Without faith, Scripture attests, it is impossible to please God or to forge an authentic connection with the Divine or ultimate Reality. This connection, whether articulated through the form of an idea, the intellect’s sense-oriented perception, or even the substantiality of material existence, is invariably rooted in that selfsame faith. It is through faith that we interpret, comprehend, and align ourselves with truth, whether in its conceptual framework or its lived experiential reality. The whole process ultimately depends upon this intrinsic trust and belief, which function as the indispensable bridge between the intangible and the tangible, the spiritual and the material.

This explains why we conduct our existence with a sense of certainty anchored in the causal principles and foundational realities that configure the image of the world as we apprehend it. At this juncture, a distinctive perspective emerges: the recognition that we are capable of speech, and that the form of the idea itself embodies intelligent understanding. What I wish to convey is that there exists a form of the idea perfectly congruent with its divine origin—defined according to the very form of God Himself as Spirit—while, on the other hand, there persists the distinctly human intellectual apprehension of that idea, together with the particular form such comprehension assumes. This crucial distinction underscores why the nexus between divine understanding and human perception is vital in connecting us to the divine decree—the “yea and amen”—which ratifies future realities. Our hope for the future thereby becomes the assurance that these promises shall ultimately find realization and manifestation. Yet it is imperative to acknowledge that the true promise is itself a spoken declaration, uttered into eternity and continuing to resonate with undiminished authority in the present. This spoken Word transcends temporal limitations, bearing the full power and authority of divine proclamation while remaining dynamically efficacious today.

For this reason, the process of actualization resides preeminently within God rather than within ourselves. It is encapsulated within His spoken revelation, which serves as the sure and steadfast Word—the foundational actualizing Idea and the ultimate source of certainty and truth. Consequently, I maintain that absolute assurance—an infallible, unwavering, and ontologically complete certainty regarding God’s promises and the full actualization of His Word—lies beyond the scope of human capacity. Such assurance would require a perfect, timeless epistemic closure equivalent to God’s own self-knowledge, an attribute inaccessible to finite creatures bound by time and partial vision.

What remains attainable for us is rather a form of experiential assurance: a dynamic, lived confidence that fluctuates according to context and spiritual perception, yet is firmly rooted in the ongoing process of divine actualization. This assurance emerges progressively as the past is transmuted into the future through the unfolding of God’s faithfulness. It is nourished by the sustained observation of the Word being realized over time, providing a living, though not exhaustive, foundation for our knowing. Thus, while absolute assurance belongs exclusively to the divine perspective, experiential assurance serves as the pilgrim’s sustaining confidence — real, growing, and deeply meaningful, even as it retains an element of provisionality and dependence upon grace.

Furthermore, I do not believe that intelligence can be exhaustively defined as the mere reception of a specific form or structure that provides a clear delineation of our noetic nature. On the contrary, intelligence seems to entail a deeper and more intricate engagement—an active, ongoing participation in the divine act of actualization—rather than the passive reception and recognition of a fixed form or static idea.

In this tension between the absolute reliability of the divine Word and the experiential character of our assurance, we are invited to walk humbly and trust profoundly, ever anchored in the spoken promise that transcends yet graciously intersects with our temporal existence.

Divine Incorporeality and Human Intelligence: Ontological Distinctions Between Creator and Creature

We apprehend that God is spirit and possesses no physical form commensurate with that of humanity. Strictly speaking, the Divine lacks any tangible body or corporeal configuration. Nevertheless, when endeavoring to delineate the ontological chasm separating God from humankind, we observe that human beings are constituted of bodies comprising manifold parts—assembled and organized in a sequential arrangement of matter—which permits us to characterize them as entities possessed of discernible form, with discrete components susceptible to identification and differentiation. By contrast, God is not composed of parts or constituent elements; He exists eternally as an indivisible unity, transcending the constraints of physical extension, spatial limitation, or material division. For the purposes of theological distinction, it proves efficacious to affirm that God possesses a form sui generis—apprehensible not through material analogy but through the constellation of His attributes and perfections. These attributes, far from constituting a physical morphology, function as conceptual mediations whereby we may intimate His nature and character: omnipresence, omniscience, holiness, and love, among others, which together adumbrate the comprehensive fullness of His divine essence. Such conceptualizations facilitate our grasp of the fundamental disparity between the finite, corporeal existence of human beings and the infinite, spiritual subsistence of the Godhead.

Since humanity was endowed with intelligence at the very instant of creation, it follows that our cognitive capacity extends far beyond mere physical or material causality. This innate intelligence is no rudimentary reactive mechanism confined to sensory stimuli from the external world; rather, it constitutes a complex and elevated faculty enabling engagement in higher-order ratiocination. Our powers of reasoning and comprehension empower us to apprehend abstract concepts, discern intricate patterns, and formulate notions that surpass the immediacy of sensory experience. Consequently, we are endowed with a latent potentiality of intelligence—an intrinsic capacity which, when assiduously cultivated and refined, conduces to profound insights and authentic wisdom. This potentiality mirrors the deeper strata of our noetic constitution, rooted as it is in the ability to think critically, reflect profoundly, and apprehend truths that elude direct physical observation. In essence, our creation with intelligence furnishes us with the requisite faculties to explore, interpret, and ultimately transcend the material realm, thereby opening avenues of knowledge whose horizons are delimited solely by the measure of our willingness to seek and to mature in understanding.

The Ontology of Joy: Longing, Grace, and the Indwelling Divine Presence

Joy, in its profoundest ontological register, manifests as an ardent and all-encompassing desire to apprehend Him with ever-deepening intimacy, coupled with a heartfelt and unreserved longing to seek Him with the totality of our being—with every faculty of heart, soul, and spirit. This joy issues forth from a spiritual yearning of exquisite subtlety and irresistible potency, one that gently yet inexorably disengages us from the multitudinous distractions and transient pursuits of the mundane realm, thereby reorienting the entirety of our attention toward the Divine. Such yearning is firmly anchored in the liberating recognition that no performative exertion or fulfillment of stipulated criteria is requisite to merit His favor or eschatological acceptance; on the contrary, it constitutes a gratuitous bestowal of grace, appropriated freely through the instrumentality of faith. Authentic joy resides exclusively in Him, wholly independent of the vicissitudes of circumstance or the ephemeral accolades of human achievement. It derives its substance neither from our subjective delineations nor from our preconceived expectations of what joy ought to entail, but is rather rooted immutably in His unchanging character and the immediacy of His presence.

Even antecedent to the deliberate act of prayer, there emerges a compelling and premonitory awareness of His nearness—the assured conviction that He already stands before us, drawing us by the magnetic allure of His divine perfections and the promise of His benevolent desire to commune with us. This awareness summons us into sacred intercourse, reminding us that we draw near to a God of infinite love and unswerving faithfulness, who has covenantally pledged to inundate us with His love and to bestow upon us rest from the oppressive burdens, relentless trials, and debilitating struggles that so frequently encumber our earthly pilgrimage. It is at this sacred nexus—where joy and grief converge, intertwine, and ultimately permit joy to triumph over sorrow—that profound metamorphosis unfolds. Whether we approach burdened by the weight of affliction and seeking the unburdening of our hearts, or whether we come overflowing with gratitude and eager to partake of the glory that emanates from intimate communion with Him, this divine encounter effectuates the alchemical transfiguration of our pain into hope and our sorrow into exultant rejoicing. In His presence, joy emerges as a formidable spiritual dynamism that fortifies us through the severest adversities and elevates our spirits amid moments of overwhelming felicity.

This joy is authentically unfeigned in its provenance, deriving its genuineness from the act of receiving from Him who embodies the pleroma of all that we could possibly require. Our felicity is perpetually reinforced by His immediate and efficacious protective power, which equips us to transcend every conscious apprehension or anxiety regarding perceived imperfections or blemishes in our existential condition. Regardless of how trivial the irritation or perturbation may appear, our joy remains subordinated to the sovereign influence of His divine authority, which silences even the most minute agitations of carnal distraction or discontent. It is through His peace—which transcends all rational comprehension—that we attain a profound and abiding interior silence within the depths of our hearts, even in the face of those minor vexations that might otherwise destabilize our serenity.

When we attune ourselves to His calling, whether conveyed through a gentle whisper or a more resounding inward summons, we are suffused with a deep, abiding, and transformative joy that far surpasses the superficialities of transient happiness and penetrates to the very core of our ontological being. This joy is not evanescent but is steadfastly established upon the unassailable assurance of His abiding presence and His sovereign capacity to redeem even the slightest disturbances, converting them into occasions of divine reassurance and ineffable peace. Thus, it sustains us amid the tempests of existence, elevates us beyond the constraints of our natural finitude, and incessantly draws us into closer proximity to His loving presence, thereby engendering an enduring posture of gratitude and a profound, inexpressible sense of fulfillment that finds its telos in Him alone.

Sovereignty, Omniscience, and the Eternal Horizon: Divine Judgment, Grace, and the Life Hid with Christ in God

There is nothing intrinsically objectionable in the formation of plans or the pursuit of goals; yet, in the ultimate analysis, it is God alone who sovereignly determines the final issue of all things. The decisive outcomes—whether culminating in eternal life or eternal death—are adjudicated by Him, for He is the One who shall summon all peoples before His judgment throne. There, every individual shall stand, and His declarative verdict will constitute the irrevocable and everlasting sentence. This reality affirms that God has, in His perfect foreknowledge, ordained and orchestrated every event in the unfolding of history, fully cognizant of how all circumstances will resolve under His governance as eternal Judge. Were He lacking such exhaustive prescience regarding the future and the intricate details surrounding each human life, He would require continual recollection of individual experiences—an impossibility that would compromise both His sovereignty and His omniscience.

Precisely because God is the supreme Judge, He must be all-knowing: comprehending perfectly every thought, word, and deed of every person across all ages. Only thus can no one successfully contest His verdict. Absent such omniscience, humanity might attempt self-justification or denial of guilt; yet His flawless knowledge precludes all concealment of sin and ensures the inescapable administration of justice. When God executes judgment, He brings every soul to humility and silence, for who could withstand His righteous scrutiny if evaluated solely according to their transgressions? How could any stand before a holy and omniscient God without complete awareness of every sin committed throughout history? It is this very comprehensiveness of divine knowledge that renders us speechless and awakens the profound recognition of our desperate need for mercy and grace in the presence of perfect justice.

Thanks be to God that, when we draw near to Him, we approach One who knows the end from the beginning, who possesses exhaustive and unerring knowledge of all things—from the first moments of creation to the final consummation of His redemptive economy. He is the One who opens His hand with liberality and grace, sustaining all His creatures so that none are abandoned or left destitute. Because our lives originate in the eternal divine summons that called us forth before the foundation of the world, our past sins are no longer imputed to us; they have been comprehensively atoned for and covered by His everlasting mercy. From eternity past, He bore the burden of our transgressions, such that they are not reckoned against us as though time’s linear progression could bind us perpetually in guilt or condemnation. We have been liberated from time’s constraints and translated into the realm of eternity, where God’s presence reigns supreme. Standing before the all-seeing eyes of the One who perceives everything with absolute clarity, we now behold reality with spiritual vision that transcends chronological limitation.

With this elevated perspective, we look beyond the past and discern that what once appeared immutable and burdensome has been redeemed and transfigured through grace. Likewise, our future is no longer veiled in uncertainty or fear, for it resides securely beyond time, anchored in His sovereign purpose. Our earthly experiences—with their struggles, joys, and trials—are affirmed as meaningful and real within our eternal position in Christ, woven seamlessly into the divine tapestry of God’s redemptive plan. Through faith, we recognize that our present afflictions constitute but a fleeting moment when measured against the eternal weight of glory that awaits. In this light, our entire existence is rooted in eternity, where God’s promises remain unfailing, His love immutable, and our identity forever established in His everlasting kingdom.

Consequently, our past is no longer remembered according to its former condemnation, for our gaze is continually redirected toward our divine calling and purpose. This orientation reshapes our perception of history, allowing us to interpret it through the lens of that higher vocation to which we have been appointed. We are inseparably united to the pre-temporal words spoken concerning us in the eternal counsel of the Father—words that reverberate through the ages, confirming our destiny. This divine voice, perceived as though resounding in immediate proximity, addresses us with clarity, guiding our pilgrimage as if audible to the physical ear. Our understanding of present circumstances and our vision for the future extend only as far as our attentiveness to this call: an invitation into intimate fellowship with the Spirit that elevates our being above the earthly realm, drawing us into the heavenly kingdom where divine providence supplies in superabundance. In that realm we discover our true home and purpose, and it is there that our future unfolds into dimensions that infinitely surpass all human imagination.

We are thus assured that He is committed to instructing us in the absolute security of all that we shall require and accomplish in the ages to come. His goodness is manifest in the exquisite order and harmonious design sustaining the universe. This meticulous providence persuades us that if He attends even to the most infinitesimal elements of creation, numbering their uncountable multitude, then He will assuredly care for us—His image-bearers called from eternity to reflect His glory. Such conviction deepens our confidence that we shall receive blessings and gifts exceeding all that we might ask or imagine. The graces we experience in this present age serve as but a foretaste of the fullness awaiting us in eternity—a mere glimpse compared to the complete knowledge and unmediated communion with Him that shall define our everlasting state. As we progress in this pilgrimage of understanding, we increasingly apprehend that the true measure of our gain lies not in transient possessions or fleeting pleasures, but in the eternal and infinite knowledge of God Himself. This knowledge will ultimately eclipse all present experience, revealing that our current trials are inconsequential beside the everlasting joy and illumination that await us in His presence forevermore.

Divine Spark and the Dynamics of Grace: Desire, Rest, and Eternal Communion

This realm truly constitutes a locus wherein one may encounter an authentic intuitive spark of divine consciousness—a celestial illumination that quickens the soul and binds it to a reality infinitely surpassing the self. Yet every desire we harbor arises from its own distinct ontological ground, molded by the particularities of individual experience, inclination, and spiritual yearning. Since we have been made new through the regenerative efficacy of the Holy Spirit, it follows that no desire remains purely autonomous or severed from grace; rather, all such longings are transfigured and sublimated by divine grace itself, being redirected toward their proper telos in a higher and more glorious purpose.

In the course of lived experience, I have repeatedly observed how my natural propensity inclines toward sullenness or despondency when confronted with the oppressive weight of fallen spiritual paradigms—those entrenched patterns of cognition that remain tethered to earthly attachments and a delusory sense of autonomous independence. These paradigms insidiously insinuate that self-reliance and native strength suffice, thereby eroding the vital posture of dependence upon divine grace. So subtle and covert is this inclination that it can infiltrate spiritual awareness almost imperceptibly, gradually attenuating one’s sense of reliance upon providential sustenance while nurturing a specious autonomy. Nevertheless, there abides within the profundities of the human heart an inexhaustible wellspring of longing: those ardent desires for the eternal, for unmediated divine communion, and for the realization of one’s authentic vocation. These yearnings are both deeply rooted and indomitable; no matter how vigorously one may endeavor to suppress or disregard them, they endure, woven into the very constitution of our spiritual being. They stand as perpetual reminders of our intrinsic need for grace and our inescapable orientation toward the divine.

As a result, many languish in a state of profound misery, oppressed by the accumulated burden of sin and a conspicuous absence of genuine gratitude. Such burdens intensify when borne in isolation, without recourse to the relieving and renewing efficacy of divine grace. Authentic freedom, therefore, emerges not primarily through strenuous exertion or autonomous striving, but through genuine rest—rest from ceaseless struggle, from self-justifying labor, and from the illusory quest for self-attained righteousness. It is precisely in this restful surrender, in the cessation of self-directed effort and the unreserved entrustment to divine grace, that true peace and liberation from the encumbrances of our fallen condition are discovered.

When we earnestly aspire to receive and experientially appropriate all the blessings and promises that God has lavished upon His children, such longing naturally elicits rejoicing and an abiding joy grounded in the hope of these divine assurances. Our apprehension of these promises is inherently dynamic: it expands and deepens in proportion to the intensification of our desire for them. The more profoundly we long for His promises, the more intimately do our hearts align with His eternal counsel, for that which we ultimately desire shall, in the eschatological horizon, be fulfilled. This progressive deepening of longing and understanding facilitates a clearer comprehension of the divine operations unfolding within us, thereby illuminating the trajectory toward spiritual maturity.

Moreover, inasmuch as we possess an interior domain of activity—our spiritual consciousness and hidden life—we truly inhabit the reality of Christ’s indwelling life when the fountains of the Holy Spirit flow with greater abundance. This divine efflux sustains and nourishes the life of Christ within, engendering a continuous disposition of living communion with His presence. Through this unbroken connection, we encounter the eternal and conscious communication of divine revelation, which both illumines our path and upholds our faith. As our understanding matures, we increasingly discern the nature of these divine paradigms—those foundational principles and spiritual truths that alleviate the burdens and temptations assailing us. They function as celestial keys, elevating our affections heavenward and enabling us to transcend momentary struggles. In this ascension of heart and mind, we find ourselves ever more disposed to consecrate our hours to longing after the eternal emanations of His love and faithfulness—those inexhaustible expressions of divine goodness that issue perpetually from His throne. Such longing becomes a luminous pursuit, drawing us nearer to His immutable promises and suffusing our existence with hope, peace, and unshakable assurance.

Should we but taste of His goodness, then all is well with the soul; our hearts are filled with a profound peace and fulfillment that transcends all understanding. Oh, that the Spirit might pour forth His divine power upon us, baptizing us afresh with unwavering confidence and steadfast assurance in the glorious truth of our Lord Jesus Christ, so that our faith might become an immovable foundation sustaining us through every trial. Oh, that divine illumination would inundate our minds and spirits, transforming and translating us into a living hope—sure and steadfast—firmly rooted in the eternal promises of His kingdom. We must therefore cultivate constant communion, fostering a manner of existence characterized by deep, inward eternal communication, wherein divine whispers speak with gentle yet irresistible potency to our spirits. To discern His voice amid silence, to yearn for His presence amidst the clamor of discontent, and to be enraptured by His resurrection summons—that sovereign call which elevates us above the transient concerns of this age, that we might be lost in wonder, love, and praise.

For when our desires are decisively centered upon His glory, we open ourselves to the immense and transformative pleasure of authentic fellowship with His Spirit—a communion that renews us from within, flooding our hearts with joy, hope, and an indissoluble bond with the Divine.

Sheep Without a Shepherd: Narrowness of Vision and the Imperative of the Whole Counsel

In a profound sense, we bear resemblance to sheep—creatures inherently dependent and perennially susceptible to a truncated perspective upon the expansive spiritual landscape that surrounds us. Conditioned by our limited focal points and the narrow apertures of our attention, we gravitate toward particular frames of reference that inexorably shape the manner in which we receive and interpret divine teaching. These frames, in turn, govern our dispositions and calibrate our responses, such that our habitual preoccupation with short-term or superficial dimensions of spiritual truth frequently impedes our capacity to apprehend the pleroma of God’s revelation and to remain steadfastly anchored in grace. Consequently, we prove all too readily swayed by voices and influences alien to divine grace, underscoring the urgent necessity of cultivating a more comprehensive, grace-saturated understanding throughout the pilgrimage of faith.

Such a disposition, however, diverges markedly from the traditional and historical approach to that sacred obligation wherein believers are called to receive teaching in its comprehensive and holistic integrity—commonly denominated as the “whole counsel” of God. Should we grant that this whole counsel indeed encompasses the totality of what the Almighty requires of His people, then a closer interrogation of the historical deposit of faith and the writings of our spiritual progenitors reveals a disquieting possibility: that we may fail to grasp or interpret their utterances in the fullness of their intended meaning. There persists a widespread inclination to welcome the word with exuberant joy and rejoicing, predicated upon the assumption that such acceptance constitutes an embrace of divine truth in its entirety. We are disposed to regard it as a gratuitous gift of grace, rendering the moment of reception all the more luminous and celebratory. Yet this affective response, for all its sincerity, can inadvertently veil the deeper strata and richer textures of the counsel originally transmitted, causing us to overlook the profound amplitude and interconnected richness of the teachings bequeathed across the ages.

It is therefore imperative that the joy and reverence with which we receive the word be conjoined with an assiduous pursuit of understanding and a humble recognition of the finitude of our own comprehension. Only thus may we progressively align ourselves with the divine purposes articulated through the whole counsel. In other words, a crucial distinction must be drawn between the acquisition of knowledge through instruction imposed by legal or natural obligation, on the one hand, and the reception of that same truth through the vivifying influence of the Spirit of grace, on the other. The former modality remains tethered to duty or external compulsion, often yielding a merely formal or dutiful adherence. The latter, by contrast, involves a penetrating divine illumination that reaches the depths of the soul, granting a foretaste of eternal and invisible realities wherein the entirety of truth is apprehended.

Such Spirit-wrought understanding transcends the intellectual or superficial register; it constitutes a profound spiritual insight into the plentitude of the teaching, enabling its reception not merely as inert inscriptions upon the page but as a living, dynamic reality imparted by the Holy Spirit Himself. Under this divine illumination, the teaching is inscribed upon the heart, transfiguring internal perception so that it resonates with the complete and unified message of Scripture. In this manner, the interconnectedness and organic unity of divine truth are disclosed. Far surpassing simple cognitive assent or pragmatic application, this enlightenment functions as a celestial light that illuminates the human spirit, engendering a spiritual wholeness that enfolds the totality of divine wisdom. The resultant experience yields a deep, intuitive apprehension of spiritual verities, empowering believers to perceive and embrace the fullness of God’s revelation in a manner that utterly eclipses the constraints of unaided human effort or external observance.

Thus, the journey from sheep-like dependency and fragmented vision toward mature participation in the whole counsel of God demands a continual movement from superficial reception to heart-written transformation, from the letter that kills to the Spirit who gives life. Only through such grace-enabled discernment can the believer navigate the complexities of faith with both humility and depth, ever progressing toward the comprehensive understanding that honors the totality of divine revelation.