Bible Lessons
You Don’t Contain Soul (and Why That’s Good News)
It’s about seeing that your body doesn’t hold your identity—Soul does. Jesus flipped tables in the temple to show that real worship isn’t about walls or structure. It’s consciousness awake to God. Moses led people out of bondage when they realized they didn’t belong to Egypt—they belonged to God. And the man at Bethesda found healing when he stopped waiting for material permission to be free.
This isn’t about denial—it’s about remembering that Soul, not body, defines you.
When "Getting Older" Becomes a Spiritual Rebellion
This week isn't your spiritual participation trophy. It's about confronting the biggest lie you've ever believed: that you're a mortal gradually declining toward inevitable death.
How did Jacob see a ladder to heaven while sleeping on rocks? He woke up to a reality that was already there—God present in a place he thought was nowhere special. That core metaphysical truth—that your real identity is immortal, never born, never dying—isn't wishful thinking. It's structural reality.
Caleb knew this at 85, claiming the same strength he had at 40. Jesus proved it when he healed the official's son from miles away, seeing past the fever to the imperishable life that was always present.
This isn't about managing decline gracefully. It's about recognizing you were never mortal to begin with. Paul said it plainly: put on the new self. Not improve the old one. Put on an entirely different identity.
You're not working toward this. You're waking up to it. The question is whether you're willing to stop treating mortality as inevitable and start seeing it as the dream it actually is.
You got this. (You always have.)
You're Not Broken (Even Though the World Keeps Telling You That You Are)
Ever notice how the word "fallen" assumes you started somewhere higher and messed up?
This week, we're sitting with a wild idea: maybe you never actually fell. Maybe "fallen man" isn't describing you—it's describing a belief system, a collective narrative we've all inherited like a hand-me-down coat that doesn't fit.
The Bible has two creation stories. One says you're made in God's image—whole, capable, reflecting divine intelligence. The other says you're dust, you're limited, you're basically struggling against your nature.
Here's what Christian Science does: it doesn't pretend the second story isn't there. It just says you're not living in it anymore.
When you start seeing yourself as God's idea instead of matter's victim, something shifts. You stop managing a flawed self. You start recognizing what was always actually true. That's not spiritual bypassing—it's spiritual seeing.
Explore what happens when you stop accepting "fallen" as your default setting.