The Gospel of Power: What They Tried to Erase from the Teachings of Christ


This piece is a deeply provocative, soul-stirring confrontation of orthodoxy. It challenges the foundations of organized religion, calls into question centuries of ecclesiastical power structures, and dares to reframe Christ’s message not as a doctrine of subjugation but a manual for personal sovereignty.

? Detailed Breakdown:


1. Opening Provocation: What If Christ’s True Message Wasn’t Worship at All?

  • The opening premise reframes Jesus not as a figure to be worshipped, but as a mirror reflecting the dormant divine within all of us.
  • This challenges the central tenet of most institutionalized faiths: that humans are inherently sinful and must be saved from themselves by an external, higher power.
  • Instead, this proposes a radical, empowering alternative: “You are the higher power. You’ve simply forgotten.”

2. The Gospel of Thomas: The Buried Blueprint of Inner Divinity

  • One of the most explosive non-canonical texts discovered in the Nag Hammadi library.
  • Not rejected for inconsistency or confusion, but for being too empowering—because it teaches that the divine isn’t mediated by priest or prophet, but accessed through inner knowing.
  • Quotes like “The Kingdom is inside you, and it is outside you” defy the priesthood-centric architecture of organized religion.
  • Jesus isn’t a gatekeeper. He’s a guide. You are the one meant to walk through the door.

3. Esoteric Alchemy vs. Religious Obedience

  • What’s presented is not Christianity in its modern institutional form but a mystical path.
  • This is alchemy of the self:
    • The “Great Work” of transforming base human consciousness into divine awareness.
    • Symbolized in Hermetic and Gnostic traditions as the marriage of spirit and matter, or God realizing itself through human experience.
  • The message: You’re not fallen. You’re forgotten. The journey is remembering.

4. Power Structures and Theological Control

  • The early church couldn’t allow this message to survive—not because it was wrong, but because it was uncontrollable.
  • A God “within” every human being renders kings, popes, priests, and empires obsolete.
  • So they built a God “above,” in the clouds, accessible only through sanctioned rituals, tithes, and hierarchical obedience.
  • Heaven became a dangling carrot. Suffering became sacred. Salvation became paywalled.

5. The Political Nature of Canonization

  • The books selected for the Bible weren’t chosen for spiritual purity but political utility.
  • Gospel of Thomas, Gospel of Mary Magdalene, Gospel of Philip—all cast out because they presented autonomy, not dependence.
  • These texts threatened the centralized control of Rome’s growing church-state apparatus.
  • To protect the empire, they buried the blueprint to individual awakening.

6. Ancient Mystics, Modern Parallels

  • The Gospel of Thomas aligns with the core of multiple esoteric traditions:
    • Hermeticism: “As within, so without.”
    • Taoism: Inner balance and alignment with the flow.
    • Kabbalah: The journey back to the divine spark within.
    • Mystic Sufism: Direct experience of the divine without intercessor.
  • Christ, in this light, becomes not the sole savior—but the prototype, the first fully awakened one showing the rest of us what’s possible.

7. The Psychological Shift: From Obedience to Awakening

  • The traditional Christian doctrine hinges on guilt and shame: original sin, eternal damnation, salvation through obedience.
  • The Gospel of Thomas replaces shame with sovereignty:
    • “If you bring forth what is within you, what you bring forth will save you.”
    • This is not a threat. It’s a promise: your divinity is your birthright.
  • This message heals the soul from the inside out, not through doctrine, but through direct awareness.

8. Reframing Christ: From Messiah to Mirror

  • In this gospel, Jesus isn’t demanding worship. He’s issuing a challenge:
    • “Don’t follow me—become like me.”
    • He offers not salvation, but a spiritual template.
  • He teaches that the Kingdom of God is not a place but a frequency—a state of consciousness.

9. Why It Was Hidden: Control Cannot Coexist With Liberation

  • The most dangerous message to any ruling class is that the people don’t need them.
  • If humans recognized their own divine creative force, institutions built on fear collapse.
  • A free mind is ungovernable.
  • The true threat of the Gospel of Thomas wasn’t theological—it was revolutionary.

10. Closing Revelation: Was Christ Teaching Sovereignty, Not Servitude?

  • What if Christ came not to save, but to awaken?
  • What if God is not in the sky, but behind your eyes?
  • What if heaven is not a destination, but a dimension accessed through consciousness?

If this is true, then the entire structure of religious dependence collapses. And what remains is raw, radiant power: you.


? Final Reflection:

This isn’t just a forgotten gospel—it’s a spiritual mutiny.
It doesn’t ask you to kneel.
It asks you to remember who you are.

Christ, as portrayed in the Gospel of Thomas, is less pastor and more initiator—a shaman of sorts, revealing the sacred fire sleeping in every soul.
The message isn’t obedience. It’s awakening.
The Kingdom isn’t coming. It’s already here—if you know where to look.

The question is no longer: Do you believe?
The question is: Are you ready to awaken what’s already within you?

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