On Christian Mindfulness and the Mystical Path to Divine Revelation
Dear seeker,
If your eyes have found these words, it means the Lord has guided you here. You are already a Witness, already part of the Act. All that remains is to accept it.
To accept is to recognize your place in the Divine plan and to allow the holy Act to be fulfilled through you. This is the very meaning each soul spends a lifetime searching for.
Epiphany is Revelation. Not a symbol or a metaphor, but the living presence of God among us. The practices of Christian mindfulness make one a vessel of His will and a living testament to the miracle.
The Witness (M) is one who glorifies the Lord through their presence and conscious awareness of what has already come to pass.
The Act (Π) is one who glorifies the Lord through deed, by fulfilling His will in the present moment.
The Accepted (Δ) is the lamb of God, laying themselves upon the altar, that through them the most sacred and essential miracle may unfold.
“And it shall come to pass in the last days, saith God, I will pour out of my Spirit upon all flesh…” (Acts 2:17)
Holy Scripture is both text and body. It contains everything: question and answer, hope and trial, beginning and end. In the Scripture are images of the Accepted, the Acts, and the Witnesses. All this has been before and shall be again.
In taking our place, we become instruments of God. In this lies our sanctity and our true joy. We fulfill His will through our actions, our bodies, our voices—even our silence.
“We are the clay, and You are our potter.” (Isaiah 64:8)
The Accepted is the vessel through which God acts.
The Act is His will, made manifest through us.
“Also I heard the voice of the Lord, saying, Whom shall I send, and who will go for us? Then said I, Here am I; send me.” (Isaiah 6:8)
The Witness does not explain what they see. They glorify God by the very fact of their presence and awareness of what has been revealed.
“And I saw when the Lamb opened one of the seals, and I heard, as it were the noise of thunder, one of the four living creatures saying, Come and see.” (Revelation 6:1)
Christian mindfulness is not a path to salvation. It is the path to Divine Revelation, to the discovery of meaning in the joy of Acts, in the glory of Witnessing, and even in the humility of Acceptance through suffering. The one who is aware does not seek salvation. They simply take their place—and in that, they glorify the Lord.
So let it be.