Moses & Abraham
Every human being is awakening through
a unique curriculum to know God.
Moses is not merely a figure from scriptur he is the archetype of every Soul’s unpredictable pilgrimage toward God. Born amid Pharaoh’s decree to drown every Hebrew boy, he began life adrift upon the Nile, a child of water before he was a child of words. Adopted into Egyptian royalty, he was schooled in opulence and raised beneath a pantheon of gods whose stone faces watched from palace walls. Yet beneath the gold and incense slept a restless ember, waiting to ignite.
That ember flared when Moses discovered that the laboring slaves beneath Egypt’s sun were his own people. The revelation shattered his royal mask. Rage overtook him; he struck down an overseer and fled, exchanging a scepter for a shepherd’s staff, silk for coarse wool, and courtly titles for the nameless wind. In Midian’s wilderness, the noise of the empire fell silent, and a deeper current began to speak.
Years passed beneath uncounted stars until one day the ordinary split open: a bush burned without being consumed. From that flame a Voice called the fugitive by name—Moses, Moses—and time knelt. In a single breath, the polytheist became a pilgrim of the One. Sand turned to sanctuary; trembling flesh, to temple. “I AM,” said the Voice, and sound was light.
The encounter did not erase Moses’ past; it transfigured his future. We’re not here to live in religions toward God; we’re here to live life with God. The murderer became a liberator, the exile envoy. God curved his path into a full circle, sending him back through every shadow he had tried to escape, back to the Pharaoh, back to the palace of masks, back to the cries of his enslaved kin. With his brother Aaron beside him and nothing but divine fire within him, Moses crossed the threshold from fear into obedience.

We’re not here for traditional ideas that began thousands of years ago;
God is a living God with us now.
He walked with God where no other Israelite dared past blood‑red Nile and thunderous plagues, through the cracked night of Passover, and across a sea that split like pages of an unwritten book. On Sinai’s summit, lightning braided with cloud; there, Moses entered the trembling dark where God wrote light into stone. Yet even tablets could not contain the fire: they shattered, waters gushed from rock, manna fell from hidden realms. Every miracle whispered the same secret divine presence travels with the solitary Soul.
For four hundred and thirty years, Israel had toiled godless beneath Egyptian whips. His story reminds us: no stain is too deep, no exile too distant, for the light of “I AM” to find us. One life surrendered can bend history; one Soul awakened can gather a nation.
Moses’ journey outlines the Soul’s universal map: lifted from hidden waters, awakened from illusion, tempered by truth, and summoned through flame to an impossible path—until we see that every wilderness is already alight with God.
There’s a deeper journey with God and it conspires to open doors where none once lived. Only the Soul can trigger what is beyond this world’s eyes. We have to acquire depth and substance to see it. Every opportunity that comes our way is hidden, and every chance encounter with the bigger world gets glossed over for simpler ideas in matter. We miss opportunities for comfort zones and ideas in knowing and not knowing.
We’ve been living in a world for what works for us. When we live with God, everything is the opposite. To see what isn’t known and toil in what doesnt make sense, is with God. When the Soul is stronger than the mind and is walking for light, it’s beyond the world’s placing. Every human being has the same walk as Moses and Abraham. When God chooses us, we live by His will.
Only the individual can carry God. No idolatry builds substance because it keeps us living at matters level. As long as we place self-identity in matter, we live in satan…lower mind.
Abraham: The Depth of the Soul
Abraham’s story centers on a single, startling command: offer your son Isaac as a sacrifice. No logic or ritual prepared him for such a directive. Yet Abraham recognized the voice as God’s, even when every instinct would have denied it. That recognition became the turning point through which God promised descendants as numerous as the stars.
No one knows the sound of God’s voice until the moment it arrives, and no one can predict when that moment will come. Divine instruction can shatter common sense. What seemed catastrophic to Abraham was, in God’s sight, a test already resolved—Isaac would live. The test was never about taking a life; it was about revealing a light.
That day, God saw a certainty greater than thought: Abraham trusted the depth in His Soul beyond all reason. Even though it wasn’t logical, practical, or reasonable, the mind could not prevent him from knowing God. It shows why an atheist can suddenly know it is God speaking, or why a polytheistic raised child such as Moses—or even the Egyptian Pharaoh Akhenaten—can awaken to the reality of one God.
The human mind operates in the temporal world, but the Soul lives in the eternal with God. When the depth of the Soul hears God, it rises above the noisy reasoning of the mind.
Abraham’s obedience reminds us that divine guidance will not always match our expectations. Yet when the Soul recognizes its source, trust becomes the gateway to promise, and what begins as impossible ends in blessing.
Every Human Being Carries the Light of God
Nicodemus was a high-ranking religious leader under the Pharisees during the time Jesus walked the earth. Something in him recognized that Jesus could be the Messiah, yet he would not cross the bridge to claim it. He feared losing status, acceptance, and power. He did not want to be seen as a follower. Had he carried greater faith, he would have walked openly with Christ.
Most of the Apostles, by contrast, were uneducated fishermen. They had no concept that they would walk with God. Those who claim God while building followings, identities, and power structures around themselves are operating in ego, what scripture symbolically calls satan—trying to be something to God rather than living with God. Over time, branding and marketing have shaped every religion into what it is today. Not wisdom. Not enlightenment. Not God.
God does not walk inside religions. He walks with every human being, regardless of belief, identity, or proclamation at this level of consciousness. He does not serve ideologies or group narratives about Himself. He knows us more deeply than we know ourselves and carries a living, intimate relationship with each Soul, independent of the stories we tell about reality.
God does not create hundreds of trillions of human beings for the sake of ideologies.
Moses himself grew up immersed in Egyptian culture, a civilization that worshiped thousands of gods. He was educated in the finest schools of a polytheistic world. Nothing about his upbringing would have suggested the life he would live with God. His transformation was abrupt, unseen, and inward. What changed him was not doctrine, but encounter, a living light that reshaped his entire existence.
The Soul’s light reveals the way into substance and depth, where wisdom lives. Humanity now stands in a different reality, with new language, new knowledge, and new ways of perceiving life. The light of God moves with the level of consciousness of each generation.
In the first century, there were no words for atoms, satellites, computers, electricity, heart transplants, airplanes, or galaxies. We are not living in the same reality as Moses, Abraham, David, or Solomon. To know the living God now, we must set aside inherited stories and rediscover Him in our present existence. If the individual does not rise beyond matter-level identity, beyond ego, we remain trapped in a thought system that cannot know God.
Figures such as Maimonides, Rashi, Philo, and Josephus lived within the agendas of their time, shaping Judaism as a preserved identity after immense cultural loss. The same occurred later under Constantine and the Byzantine Empire with Christianity. None of this emerged from a lived conversation with God or angelic revelation. It emerged from humanity’s repeated attempt to be special to God rather than intimate with God.
Division took root when Judaism, Christianity, and Islam each claimed exclusive access to truth. What followed was not God’s will, but human ambition, power, conquest, and identity disguised as holiness.
After the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE, humanity increasingly defined God through matter, temples, structures, rituals, hierarchies. Without realizing it, we recreated the golden calf. Branding replaced listening. Rank replaced revelation. We continued living inside narratives about God rather than living with Him.
Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and all major religions operate largely at the level of matter because they are built on collective identity rather than the depth of the individual Spirit.
Nothing we do, how we dress, pray, or behave, determines God’s love for us. The idea that we design ourselves for God is ego. No one performs for God. No one dances to earn Him.
When Moses ascended the mountain and the Israelites, unable to sense God, turned to a golden calf, it was not rebellion, it was incapacity. They could not walk by faith alone. God saw this, and the tabernacle was given not as an eternal model, but as a temporary bridge for minds still bound to form.
It was never meant to be permanent.
It was never meant to be a template.
We made it one, and in doing so, we lost the muscle for knowing the unseen world. We lost eyes for light and learned instead how to live inside darker, denser energies of matter.
Without realizing it, we continue to preserve what was born from our distance from God rather than what draws us closer.
The one who walks beyond the world, beyond collective agreement, enters a deeper forest of knowing. The world functions to sustain what is common. The Soul that walks beyond it discovers what few are willing to live.
Every human being carries the light of God within them.
