Sunday, 13 April 2025

Mystics and their Inner Voices, the Jesus Mystery, Mystic, Myth or Messiah

 

Everyday Mystics: Their Voices Speak of Inner Truths

These are the voices of ordinary people, who through their faith in a “living version” of Jesus, made him the pillar of their strength.

Female Voices of Mystics

  • Marietta Davis – A young visionary who experienced dreams and visions revealing Christ’s eternal love and the afterlife. Her inner journey deeply transformed her understanding of spiritual life and the Kingdom of God within.
  • Helen Roseveare – A missionary in the Congo whose personal encounter with Christ taught her radical forgiveness in the face of suffering. She found the living Christ in the midst of war and hardship, revealing the healing power of God’s presence in the most difficult situations.
  • Corrie Ten Boom – A Holocaust survivor who experienced the Christ of Forgiveness in her most extreme trials, showing how the inner Christ can heal even the deepest wounds. She was a beacon of light and love in the concentration camps, illustrating the power of divine grace in the darkest of times.
  • Ann Voskamp – A simple farmer’s wife who discovered the presence of Christ through gratitude, finding God in everyday moments. Her practice of noticing God’s presence in nature, in family, and in daily life serves as a powerful reminder of the divine presence within everything around us.

Male Voices of Mystics

  • Dallas Willard – A quiet philosopher whose life was a continuous conversation with Christ, demonstrating the inner Christ as a constant companion and teacher. He explored how we can integrate the divine presence in every moment of our lives.
  • Brennan Manning – The author of The Ragamuffin Gospel, who knew firsthand the transformative power of God’s love in his brokenness. His life spoke of finding Christ within despite struggles with addiction and self-worth, always returning to the truth of grace and forgiveness.
  • Rich Mullins – A musician whose connection with God was most alive in nature and simplicity. His songs and life reflect a deep trust in the presence of Christ, seeing Christ as an intimate and constant companion.
  • Henri Nouwen – A spiritual teacher who found Christ in his care for the vulnerable. His life and writings show that the Kingdom of God can be found in our service to others and our compassion for the suffering. Henri’s deep connection with the inner Christ led him to teach that love and humility are at the heart of spiritual life.

 

God is Inside

The call to encounter Jesus is an invitation to experience love and humility within. This intimate relationship with Christ is not reserved for the extraordinary or the elite but is available to anyone who seeks it as shown by the mystics who experienced him.

By listening to the quiet voice of Christ within, we open ourselves to His love, wisdom, and guidance. Jesus the Man offers us a model for living, showing us how to navigate the world with love and humility

Through this deep connection with the inner Christ, we are invited into the Kingdom of God, not as a far-off place but as a reality within. God is inside—alive, present, and waiting to transform us.

The mystics, both male and female, have shown us this truth through their lives, reminding us that the Kingdom of God is available to all who seek and who listen.

Far away from the Clergy and far away from Rome, these individuals were inspired by the Christ awareness within them and lived the humility, love taught over two thousand years ago.

But who is the Jesus that has inspired these mystics?

Few figures in human history have impacted the world as profoundly as Jesus of Nazareth. Whether seen through the lens of faith, scholarship, or spiritual mysticism, his presence has shaped civilizations, stirred revolutions, and inspired countless seekers.

But who was Jesus, really? Was he the Messiah foretold by prophets? A mystic who travelled East to learn ancient spiritual arts? Or a myth crafted by institutions seeking control over hearts and minds?

We explore the three main facets of Jesus: Jesus the Messiah, Jesus the Mystic, and Jesus the Myth, concluding with the transformative power of his legacy and the shifting future of Roman Catholicism.


1. Jesus the Messiah: A Divine Mission of Redemption

The traditional Christian narrative views Jesus as the Messiah, the anointed one sent to redeem humanity from sin. Rooted in Jewish prophetic tradition, this perspective is built on the idea that Jesus fulfilled the messianic prophecies found in the Hebrew scriptures.

Born of a virgin, crucified, and resurrected, he is believed to be the Son of God whose life and death opened the gates of salvation.

This view became the cornerstone of the Church, particularly after the Council of Nicaea in 325 CE, which defined the nature of Christ's divinity. It provided spiritual guidance, moral compass, and a sense of hope to billions.

Jesus the Messiah was introduced as a voice of God, however that voice was “supervised” by a self-appointed clergy who determined or controlled the narrative that came from Jesus.

This version of Jesus has been institutionalized with church dogma. The spirit of his teachings, centered around love, compassion, forgiveness, and selflessness, was sometimes overshadowed by the politics and power of the Church. Still, the Messianic image continues to inspire spiritual devotion worldwide.


2. Jesus the Mystic: The Hidden Years and Eastern Journey

A lesser-known but increasingly explored aspect is Jesus the Mystic — the seeker and teacher who may have journeyed to India, Tibet, and Kashmir during his "lost years." Between the ages of 12 and 30, the canonical Gospels are silent. During this time, many believe he travelled the Silk Road, studying with sages, rishis, and monks, absorbing teachings of kundalini, meditation, healing, and non-duality.

Books like "The Life and Teachings of the Masters of the Far East" by Baird Spalding recount encounters with ascended masters, including Jesus, supposedly still alive in Tibet. While controversial, these accounts emphasize a universal Christ consciousness — a state of awakened divinity within every human being.

This perspective resonates with Eastern teachings: the divine spark within, the path of self-mastery, and union with the Infinite. Jesus becomes not just a saviour, but a mirror reflecting what we ourselves may become. The mystical Jesus taught that the kingdom of God is within, and that miracles are natural expressions of aligned consciousness.


3. Jesus the Myth: Constructing a Savior for Empire

Then there is Jesus the Myth — not to dismiss his historical reality, but to critically examine how his image was shaped by imperial power. From the Roman Empire’s adoption of Christianity under Constantine, to the Vatican's rise as a global force, the mythologizing of Jesus served both spiritual and political agendas.

A quote attributed to Pope Leo X allegedly states, "It has served us well, this myth of Christ." While the authenticity of this quote is debated, it underscores a deeper truth: the story of Jesus was curated and edited by councils of men. Gnostic gospels, feminine voices like Mary Magdalene, and esoteric teachings were suppressed.

Jesus became a symbol of obedience, sacrifice, and passive suffering — useful traits for keeping empires intact. The revolutionary, boundary-breaking aspects of his message were subdued. Myth, in this context, does not mean fiction — but rather a constructed narrative that shaped religious consciousness for centuries for an exclusive patriarchal agenda that suppressed the feminine population.


4. Mary Magdalene and the Divine Feminine

For 2000 years, the Church marginalized the Divine Feminine. Mary Magdalene was miscast as a prostitute rather than a disciple and spiritual equal as written in some gnostic texts. Gnostic and mystical traditions present her as Jesus' close companion, perhaps even a co-teacher.

This feminine archetype is essential for restoring balance. The patriarchal distortion of spiritual truths led to domination, hierarchy, and emotional repression. The resurgence of the feminine — intuitive, nurturing, powerful — is vital. It is not about women replacing men, but about sacred partnership.

The Cathars of Southern France, embraced this balance. They viewed the material world as represented by Rome as corrupt, valued spiritual purity, and held both men and women in equal spiritual authority. They honoured Magdalene as a vessel of hidden knowledge — and were brutally persecuted by the Vatican in what was known as the Albigensian Crusade in the early 13th century.


5. The Influence on Humanity: Myth, Messiah, or Mystic?

No matter the lens — messianic, mystical, or mythological — Jesus has shaped the collective psyche. His teachings of love, forgiveness, and self-transcendence endure. But the institutionalization of his image also brought control, guilt, and division.

Now, humanity is awakening. More and more are seeking the living Christ within, not through dogma, but through direct experience, meditation, service, and compassion. The idea of Jesus as a guide to self-realization, rather than a distant savior, is rising.


6. The Future of Roman Catholicism and Christ Consciousness

The current ailing Pope, Francis, represents a softer, more compassionate and inclusive Church, but also an aging institution under strain.

As scandals, declining attendance, and internal fractures grow, the future of Roman Catholicism may depend on its willingness to return to the essence of Christ’s humble message. They need to forsake all the rich vestments and trappings that symbolise their departure from the simplicity of Jesus who as a fisher of men was also a humble carpenter.

The future lies not in the clerical power and control of the Church doctrine but in spiritual empowerment of the masses. The emergence of Christ consciousness — the awareness of divine presence within all beings — which transcends religion. It echoes in the teachings of mystics, saints, yogis, and even modern channels.

Facing a schism, the Church must choose: Reform or fracture and fade. The Spirit will continue, with or without the institution.


A New Renaissance of Spirit

Jesus was not just one thing. He was a Messiah for the faithful, a Mystic for the seeker, and a Myth shaped by power. But he was also a teacher of divine-human potential, of the sacred union of masculine and feminine, and of heaven made manifest on Earth.

The time has come to reclaim the fullness of his legacy. To go beyond blind belief into living experience. To honour the divine feminine and masculine in Mary Magdalene and Jesus and within themselves. To awaken the same spark that burned in Jesus’s heart — in ours.

His message was quite clear. “The Kingdom of God is within you.”

And it always has been.


Epilogue: The Quiet Revolution

A quiet revolution is underway. The seekers are rising. The veils are thinning. And the real teachings of Jesus — the man, the mystic, the myth breaker — are being rediscovered by those who dare to see beyond the veil.

It is no longer about religion. It is about awakening.