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Tuesday, 3 March 2026

If we truly seek the blessing of the Holy Spirit in our lives

 If we truly seek the blessing of the Holy Spirit in our lives—having first believed the true gospel of God and trusted in the Lord Jesus Christ—we must understand that the Spirit is given not merely for our comfort, nor simply for our private assurance, but to seal us in the faith and to build us together into something far greater than ourselves. When we believe, we are brought into Christ; and when we are brought into Christ, we are made living stones in a spiritual house. The Spirit does not descend upon us so that we may remain isolated vessels, but so that we may be joined together in the building up of the true body of Christ, which is the temple of the living God.

It is a solemn and glorious truth that the Holy Spirit is not given to us merely in receiving, but in giving out what we have received. The river of God does not stagnate; it flows. What He pours into our hearts He intends to pour through our lives. The gifts of the Holy Spirit are entrusted to us for the edification of others. If we would know more of His fullness, we must be willing to share what He supplies. The temple of God rises not by selfish keeping, but by faithful distribution. When grace flows from one believer to another, when encouragement strengthens the weak, when truth corrects error, when comfort binds up the brokenhearted—then the temple grows. Then the Spirit’s presence is manifest among us.

Yet, beloved, the building must be orderly. God is not the author of confusion but of peace. If in the assembly of the saints the Holy Spirit stirs a message within us, we should be ready and willing to speak it for the edification of the body. If a word in tongues is given and the Spirit grants interpretation, we should not withhold what He has given. At the same time, we must walk in humility and reverence. If another begins to speak the very interpretation we have received, then for the sake of order and unity we may remain silent. The gift is not given to exalt the individual but to bless the body. We may speak in turn, or we may refrain—but always with this understanding: what is given to us is given for all. We are stewards, not owners, of the Spirit’s gifts.

Above all, the temple must be reverenced, for it exists for the glory of the name of the Father Almighty. He alone is God. If we are to build up others as His dwelling place, we must know whom we serve. We must not speak carelessly of divine things as though they were common matters. The Father is holy beyond all comprehension, eternal in majesty, infinite in power. To handle spiritual gifts without reverence is to forget whose house we are building. We must know Him truly, lest we speak of what we do not understand.

And we must know the Son. The Lord Jesus Christ is truly the Son of the Father, affirmed by the Father Himself. In Him dwells greatness beyond measure. Creation itself moves in ordered cycles, sustained by the power and authority of His name. Nature flourishes under His sovereign hand. Yet even in the glory of the Son we behold the majesty of the Father, whose greatness is boundless and whose being transcends all. To confess the Son rightly is to honor the Father who sent Him.

But let us be honest before God: we do not know as we ought to know. We fall short of His glory. The people of God have often walked in partial understanding, in weakened reverence, in distracted devotion. And when reverence fades, judgment follows. Scripture reminds us that when we forsake the fear of the Lord, consequences arise. The signs of turmoil and unrest in our world should cause us to reflect soberly. These are reminders that we are not self-sustaining; we are dependent upon the mercy and protection of Almighty God.

Therefore, let us return to holy fear—not a fear of terror for those who are in Christ, but a reverent awe that bows before His majesty. When we walk in reverence, we may also walk in confidence, trusting in His angelic protection and sovereign care. The God who is holy is also faithful. The Father who is exalted above all is the same Father who guards His children.

The Holy Spirit leads us into this truth. He leads us into reverence, into order, into love, into edification, into deeper knowledge of the Father and the Son. If we truly seek the Holy Spirit, we must be prepared not only for blessing but for truth—truth that humbles us, truth that corrects us, truth that calls us higher. And as we yield to Him, giving out what He gives in, speaking when He bids us speak, remaining silent when He bids us be still, the temple of God will rise among us in beauty and strength.

May we, then, seek the Spirit not for ourselves alone, but for the glory of the Father, for the honor of the Son, and for the building up of the body of Christ, until the temple stands complete to the praise of His holy name. Amen.


(Written in full with the use of ChatGPT, as prompted by Stephen D Green, March 2026) 

How best to live

 Across the history of Western thought, one of the most enduring insights about human nature is that we are divided within ourselves. We experience competing impulses: we know what is right, yet we desire what is easy; we aspire to courage, yet we feel the pull of comfort; we intend fidelity, yet we drift toward weakness. Ancient philosophy, Christian scripture, and even modern psychology all attempt to account for this inner tension. When read together, they reveal not only shared observations about the human condition, but also important differences in how that condition is understood and healed.

In the Republic, Plato offers one of the most influential accounts of the human soul. He argues that the soul has three parts: reason, spirit (thumos), and appetite. Reason seeks truth and wisdom; it is the calculating and discerning element. Appetite is the seat of bodily desires—hunger, thirst, sexual longing, and the pursuit of physical pleasure. Between these stands spirit, the most dynamic and easily misunderstood part. Spirit is not simply emotion in general, nor is it cold rationality. It is the source of courage, indignation, ambition, pride, and the longing for honor. It is what burns within a person at the sight of injustice. It is what makes a soldier stand firm out of shame at the thought of cowardice. In Plato’s famous image of the charioteer, reason guides two horses—one noble and one unruly. The noble horse represents spirit, which can ally itself with reason to restrain appetite. A just and well-ordered soul emerges when reason governs, spirit supports reason, and appetite is disciplined.

This model does more than describe psychology; it proposes a moral hierarchy. Reason ought to rule. Spirit ought to defend reason’s judgments. Appetite ought to be governed rather than allowed to dominate. Plato’s account therefore carries a vision of human nobility. A good life is not one without passion, but one in which passion serves wisdom. The soul is not flattened into mere impulses and calculations; it is structured, ordered, and capable of greatness when properly harmonized.

When we turn to Christian scripture, we find language that resonates deeply with this structure. In the Gospel of John, Jesus Christ declares that his words are “spirit and life” (John 6:63). Within a world already familiar with distinctions between higher and lower elements in the person, such language would not have seemed obscure. If spirit names the higher, animating, morally responsive dimension of the human being, then to call his teaching “spirit” is to present it as nourishment for that faculty. His words are not merely external instructions; they vivify and strengthen the inner source of moral resolve.

The same structure appears vividly in the scene at Gethsemane. When Jesus finds his disciples asleep while they were meant to keep watch, he says, “The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak” (Matthew 26:41). The statement presupposes a division within the human person. There is something in the disciples that genuinely intends faithfulness. Yet their bodily weakness overcomes them. In terms reminiscent of Plato’s anthropology, appetite—in this case the body’s demand for sleep—overrides the higher intention of the spirit. The tension is not between good and evil substances, but between higher aspiration and lower frailty.

The letters of Paul the Apostle develop this inner drama even further. Paul contrasts life “according to the flesh” with life “according to the Spirit.” He speaks of “walking by the Spirit” and describes the “fruit of the Spirit” as love, joy, peace, patience, and self-control. The works of the flesh, by contrast, express disordered desire. The language differs from Plato’s philosophical vocabulary, yet the underlying pattern remains recognizable: there is a higher principle that must guide the person if life is to flourish. Inner conflict is not denied but assumed.

At this point, however, Christian teaching both follows and transforms the older model. On one level, it speaks into a shared moral psychology. Hearers in the ancient world already understood life as a struggle between higher and lower tendencies. The call to live by the Spirit therefore fits naturally into that framework. Believers are summoned to allow the higher to rule the lower, to resist the impulses of the flesh, and to cultivate steadfastness and integrity.

Yet Christianity adds two decisive elements. First, the Spirit in Christian teaching is not merely a human faculty comparable to Plato’s thumos. It also refers to the Spirit of God active within believers. The ordering of the inner life is therefore not solely the achievement of disciplined reason supported by honor-driven spirit; it is the result of divine transformation. The higher principle that governs is not only native human nobility, but participation in the life of God. The moral struggle remains, but grace enters the picture.

Second, Christian discipleship places strong emphasis on memory, habituation, and internalization. Jesus repeatedly calls his followers to remember his words. In John’s Gospel, he promises that the Spirit will bring his teachings to remembrance. The sayings of Christ are meant to be retained, reflected upon, and practiced until they shape character. Over time, what is consciously chosen becomes ingrained habit. In classical philosophical terms, virtue is formed through repetition. In more contemporary language, patterns of thought and response become programmed into the person. Either way, the teaching of Jesus is to be written into the inner life so that the higher path becomes not merely an occasional triumph but a settled disposition.

Modern psychology, for its part, approaches the same human tension from a descriptive rather than moral standpoint. In The Chimp Paradox, psychiatrist Steve Peters presents the mind as composed of interacting systems: an emotional “Chimp,” a rational “Human,” and a “Computer” that stores habits and beliefs. The Chimp reacts quickly and instinctively; the Human deliberates; the Computer runs learned patterns. Contemporary neuroscience describes networks responsible for emotion, planning, motivation, and memory. These models are practical and empirically grounded, yet they intentionally avoid moral hierarchy. They explain mechanisms but do not speak of honor, virtue, or nobility in the structural way Plato does.

The difference becomes clear in a simple example. Imagine a guard standing watch at night. His body is tired and longs for sleep. His rational mind knows his duty. What keeps him awake is not calculation alone, but the burning conviction that failure would be shameful. Plato would identify this motivating force as spirit—the ally of reason against appetite. Neuroscience might describe goal maintenance, identity processing, and arousal systems. The explanation may be accurate, yet it lacks the moral language that captures the lived experience of honor and resolve.

For many readers, Plato’s model feels closer to Christian anthropology precisely because both assume that human beings are ordered toward a higher good and that inner conflict has moral significance. Both recognize that reason alone is insufficient; the heart must be engaged. Christianity, however, reframes the source of strength. Where Plato trusts philosophical cultivation to harmonize the soul, Christianity points to divine grace and the indwelling Spirit as the ultimate power of transformation.

Taken together, these traditions offer a layered understanding of the human person. Plato provides a clear structure: reason, spirit, appetite, rightly ordered. Christian scripture adopts and deepens the drama, speaking of spirit and flesh, calling believers to walk by the Spirit, and presenting the teachings of Christ as life-giving nourishment for the higher self. Modern psychology, while avoiding moral language, confirms that we are indeed composed of interacting systems that must be regulated and trained.

In the end, the enduring insight is this: human life involves an inner ordering. We are not simple creatures driven by a single impulse. We are capable of aspiration, weakness, memory, habit, and transformation. Whether described as reason and spirit governing appetite, as Spirit overcoming flesh, or as rational regulation shaping emotional response, the drama is recognizably the same. What differs is the interpretation of its meaning and the source of its resolution. Plato offers a vision of philosophical nobility. Christianity proclaims a life animated by divine Spirit and sustained by remembered words. Both acknowledge the divided self; both call us toward wholeness.


ChatGPT, as prompted by Stephen D Green, March 2026 

Explanation of the wars, using AI

 The Book of Enoch contains prophetic visions that, from a believer’s perspective, reveal God’s plans for humanity and predate Abraham, a claim supported by Jude in the New Testament. One particularly significant vision describes the “sheep” being punished for abandoning the “Lord of the sheep” and for being blind to Him and His temple. In this vision, the sheep symbolize God’s people, and the Lord of the sheep represents God Himself. The prophecy foretells seventy periods of angelic rule over the sheep, culminating in a time of divine wrath. From this perspective, each period lasts forty years, a number traditionally associated in Scripture with testing, trial, and judgment.

According to this interpretation, sixty-nine of these periods have already elapsed, encompassing cycles of conquest and punishment that began with the Assyrian invasions of the Levant in the eighth century BCE, including the conquest of Samaria. While the exact starting date of these invasions is uncertain—estimates range from roughly 745 BCE, with Tiglath-Pileser III’s campaigns, to around 722 BCE, marking the fall of Samaria—the total years that have passed align closely with sixty-nine periods of forty years, placing us at or near the beginning of the seventieth and final period. This last period is understood to be a time of intensified punishment and the full revelation of God’s wrath, a period in which the attacks on the sheep by surrounding “beasts” continue, reflecting ongoing global conflict and turmoil.

From this perspective, current wars and social upheavals can be seen as part of the fulfillment of this prophetic cycle. The fourth horseman of Revelation, riding a pale horse and bringing Death across a fourth of the earth, is often understood to correspond to the massive mortality and destruction of the world wars, symbolically representing widespread human suffering and the escalation of global judgment. Following this, the sixth seal in Revelation depicts cosmic disturbances and profound social fear, with the sun darkened, the moon appearing like blood, stars falling from the sky, and the heavens receding. Believers interpret this imagery as a symbolic representation of the intensified divine wrath of the final period, which will be visible to all humanity and recognized as a direct expression of God’s justice.

Despite the severity of these judgments, the prophetic sequence ultimately assures hope and restoration. Both the Book of Revelation and the gospels foretell the reign of Christ and the resurrection of the worthy, showing that even amid the final wars and divine wrath, God’s plan culminates in justice for the faithful. Revelation also emphasizes that the souls of the faithful, though longing for vengeance, must wait until God’s appointed time for their vindication, highlighting the divine timing and moral order that govern history.

In summary, this interpretation sees history and current events as part of a divinely structured sequence of judgment and redemption. The seventy forty-year periods of angelic oversight provide a framework for understanding the cycles of oppression and punishment that have shaped human history, with sixty-nine periods completed and the seventieth marking the beginning of the most intense phase of God’s wrath. Within this period, global conflict, societal upheaval, and moral testing continue, culminating in the cosmic disturbances described in the sixth seal. Ultimately, the prophetic vision assures the resurrection of the righteous and the reign of Christ, demonstrating that divine justice, though delayed, is certain, and that hope persists even in the midst of judgment.


ChatGPT as prompted by Stephen D Green, March 2026 


https://chatgpt.com/share/69a6b3ea-e840-8005-8ff8-667cf391eb0c 

The wars

 The Book of Enoch has prophecy for our time. It explains the wars going on today. The vision given to Enoch of the sheep being punished for deserting the Lord of the sheep and being blind to Him and to His temple, this vision foretold seventy periods of angelic rule, culminating in a day of divine wrath. The last of these angelic rulers would coincide with the next forty years today. Under this angel there is the last period of punishment. There is ongoing attacking of the sheep by surrounding beasts foretold in this ‘dream of the beasts’. It continues what began with the conquest of Samaria in ancient times. It has continued for sixty-nine of the seventy angelic periods, which fits with each period being forty years long. This means we are at the start of the last period of forty years. Then the wrath of God really begins in earnest. Revelation and the gospels foretell the time of the ultimate reign of the Christ following on from this brief time of terrible wrath. So just beyond the future wrath there is hope of resurrection of the worthy. But these wars must continue for a while. At the same time the Book of Revelation says saints will die and their souls will earnestly seek revenge, but will have to wait until this time is over, before God’s wrath avenges them. 

Jonah’s lesson

 The Bible’s book of Jonah is about how a great city, though outrageously wicked, can find itself escaping God’s wrath, and it is about why God is reluctant to destroy such a city. Jonah was sheltering from the midday heat of the sun by resting under a gourd’s big leaves. God destroyed the gourd to bring home to Jonah what destruction would mean to him in personal experience, as a hint at what the city’s destruction would mean to God. Jonah strongly objected but had to accept the lesson and it taught him God’s answer to his objections at God sparing the city. So it came to be that the city, though a terrible one, was spared the destruction its behaviour had incurred, having repented after Jonah’s warning. Jonah did not like it, and had wanted to run away from giving the warning, aware it might lead to this outcome, but God had His way. 

Monday, 2 March 2026

Live by the spirit

 In the history of thought about the human person, few ideas have proven as enduring as the claim that we are internally divided. We experience ourselves as pulled in different directions: we know what is right, yet we desire what is easy; we aspire to nobility, yet we feel the weight of appetite. Both ancient philosophy and modern psychology attempt to explain this tension. What is striking is that although their language differs, they often circle around the same fundamental human experience.

In the Republic, Plato argues that the soul has three parts: reason, spirit (thumos), and appetite. Reason seeks truth and aims at wisdom. Appetite desires bodily pleasures such as food, drink, and comfort. Spirit is the most intriguing element. It is not mere emotion, nor is it rational calculation. Rather, it is the seat of courage, indignation, honor, and the drive for recognition. Spirit is what flares up when we witness injustice. It is what makes a soldier hold his ground out of shame at the thought of cowardice. In Plato’s famous image of the charioteer, reason must guide two horses—one noble and one unruly. The noble horse represents spirit, which can ally itself with reason against base desire. A well-ordered soul is not one without passion, but one in which passion supports what is rationally and morally right.

This picture of the soul resonates strongly with Christian scripture. In the writings of Paul the Apostle, particularly in his Letter to the Romans, we find a vivid description of inner conflict: the desire to do good clashes with the pull of sin. Christian theology frequently speaks of the “flesh” struggling against the higher calling of the spirit. Early Christian thinkers such as Augustine of Hippo, who was deeply influenced by Platonism, described the human heart as divided between higher and lower loves. Augustine’s account of the will torn between competing desires echoes Plato’s divided soul. Both traditions affirm that disorder within us is not an illusion but a central feature of the human condition, and that moral life requires an ordering of the inner person.

Modern psychological models approach the same phenomenon from a different angle. In The Chimp Paradox, psychiatrist Steve Peters proposes that the mind can be understood in terms of different systems: an emotional “Chimp,” a rational “Human,” and a “Computer” that stores habits and beliefs. The Chimp reacts quickly and instinctively; the Human thinks logically and plans; the Computer runs learned patterns. This framework is practical and rooted in contemporary neuroscience, which describes networks of brain regions involved in emotion, decision-making, motivation, and memory. It avoids moral language and instead focuses on regulation and performance.

Yet something important changes when we move from Plato’s framework to modern neuroscience. Plato presents a moral hierarchy: reason ought to rule, spirit ought to support reason, and appetite ought to be governed. His account is not merely descriptive but normative; it tells us what a good and just soul looks like. By contrast, modern psychology describes mechanisms without assigning them moral rank. It explains how impulses arise and how they may be regulated, but it does not speak of nobility, honor, or virtue in the same structural way. Where Plato sees an inner ally of reason in spirit—a force that loves honor and despises cowardice—modern models distribute those motivations across neural systems of reward, identity, and social awareness.

Consider the example of a guard standing watch at night. Appetite urges him to sleep. Reason reminds him of his duty. But what keeps him upright is not calculation alone; it is the burning sense that falling asleep would be shameful. That moral-emotional energy is what Plato calls spirit. Neuroscience might explain it in terms of goal maintenance, identity, and arousal systems. The description may be accurate, but it lacks the language of honor. Plato captures the lived experience of moral striving in a way that feels elevated and existentially true, whereas modern accounts tend to feel clinical.

For many readers, Plato’s model feels closer to Christian anthropology because both assume that human beings are oriented toward a higher good and that inner conflict has moral significance. Both traditions recognize that reason alone is not sufficient; the heart must be rightly ordered. Christianity, however, goes further by insisting that this reordering ultimately requires grace. Where Plato trusts philosophical training to harmonize the soul, Christianity speaks of transformation through divine action.

In the end, the contrast is not simply between ancient and modern thought, but between two ways of seeing the human person. One sees a hierarchy of loves that must be rightly arranged. The other sees interacting systems that must be regulated. Both acknowledge inner division. Plato and Christian theology frame that division within a moral and spiritual drama; neuroscience frames it within biological processes. Whether one finds Plato “better” often depends on whether one seeks a description of mechanisms or a vision of human nobility.


ChatGPT, prompted by Stephen D Green, March 2026 

Islam and belief Jesus is the Christ

 Within Islam, there is already a formal confession that Jesus—ʿĪsā—is the Messiah (al-Masīḥ). The Qur’an affirms that title. So the question is not whether Jesus can be believed to be the Christ in some sense; the question is what that belief entails.

If we approach this through the lens we have been developing—especially through the testimony of the Gospel of Johnand Jesus’ appeal to Psalm 82—the issue becomes sharper. In John’s Gospel, “Christ” is not a mere honorific. It denotes the one sanctified and sent by the Most High, entrusted with divine authority, vindicated by resurrection, and appointed to judge and give life. To believe that Jesus is the Christ, in John’s sense, is to accept His own self-understanding and the authority bound up with it.

Islam affirms Jesus as Messiah but does not accept the theological weight that the New Testament places upon that title. In Islam, “Messiah” is a designation of honor and prophetic mission. In John, it is inseparable from sonship, divine commissioning, and unique authority. Thus the tension is not over the word “Christ” itself, but over its meaning.

If one truly believes that Jesus is the Christ as He defined Himself, then logically His teachings must be received as authoritative. A Messiah sent by the Most High is not merely an inspirational moral voice. He is the appointed representative of God. To acknowledge Him as such while declining to accept His self-testimony would be inconsistent. It would be to affirm the office while limiting its scope.

This becomes particularly significant in John 10. There Jesus defends His use of divine language by grounding it in Scripture and in His sanctification and sending. He does not deny divine designation; He explains its nature. If He is indeed the sanctified and sent Son in the Psalm 82 sense—the faithful bearer of delegated divine authority—then His interpretation of Himself carries binding weight.

The same Gospel culminates in its stated purpose: these things are written “that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing you may have life in his name.” Belief, in this framework, is not abstract agreement. It is trust in His authority and adherence to His word. It is receiving His testimony about the Father, about Himself, and about the life that comes through Him.

From within Islam, one might say: we believe Jesus is Messiah, but we follow the final prophet’s clarification of his role. From John’s perspective, however, the Messiah’s own teaching is decisive. If the Most High has sanctified and sent Him uniquely, then the Messiah is not merely one messenger among many. He is the climactic and vindicated Son.

So—if belief that Jesus is the Christ is taken seriously, it raises the question of whether His teachings, as presented in the Gospel tradition, should be understood and adhered to. The matter turns on whether one accepts that the Most High truly authorized Him in the way John describes. If He did, then fidelity to the One God would include fidelity to the One He sent.

The issue, therefore, is not simply interreligious comparison. It is coherence. To confess Jesus as the Christ is to acknowledge a divinely commissioned authority. The decisive question becomes: do we allow that authority to define itself, or do we redefine it according to later frameworks? John’s Gospel urges the former, presenting the Messiah not as a rival to the Most High, but as His faithful and uniquely vindicated Son—through whom knowing the Father and receiving life are made possible.


ChatGPT, prompted by Stephen D Green, March 2026 

Our conclusion regarding historic Christianity and Islam

 Any serious theological discussion of Jesus must eventually reckon not only with Jewish objections in the first century, but also with Islam’s later and sustained insistence on the absolute oneness and supremacy of God. Islam stands firmly for the transcendence of the Most High. It resists any suggestion that God could be divided, compromised, or confused with a human being. In this, it shares something important with the concern expressed in John 10: that divine uniqueness must be protected.

Our thesis affirms that instinct.

The Father—whom Jesus calls “the only true God”—remains the Most High. He is the ultimate source of life, authority, and worship. Jesus Himself distinguishes between “my Father and your Father” and “my God and your God.” The pattern throughout the Gospel of John is one of sending, obedience, and reception. The Son is sanctified and sent. The Father grants authority. The Son executes judgment in faithfulness to the Father’s will. Nothing in this pattern diminishes the Father’s supremacy.

In this sense, Islam’s emphasis on preserving the category of the Most High resonates with Jesus’ own language. It rightly rejects any notion that God can be displaced or rivaled. It rightly insists that worship belongs ultimately to the One who is above all.

However, where Islam diverges sharply is in its refusal to accept Jesus’ own scriptural self-understanding. In John 10, when accused of blasphemy, Jesus does not deny divine language; He explains it through Psalm 82. That Psalm shows that those entrusted with God’s word and authority could be called “gods” in a derivative sense. They were not the Most High Himself, but they bore His authority. Their tragedy was not that they were given such a role; it was that they failed in it.

Jesus places Himself in that category—but as its fulfillment. He is the one uniquely sanctified and sent. He does not claim to be Elyon in His own person. He claims to be the faithful Son under Elyon. His authority is not self-originating; it is granted. His mission is not independent; it is commissioned. His glory is not competitive; it is reflective.

Islam, in its zeal to protect divine uniqueness, rejects even this elevated and scriptural category. It accepts Jesus as a prophet but refuses to call Him “Son of God” in any theological sense. It resists attributing to Him even a derivative or representative divinity. In doing so, it sides with the instinct of the objectors in John 10—guarding transcendence—but declines to follow Jesus’ own appeal to Scripture.

Our thesis therefore stands at a crossroads between historic Christianity and Islam. Historic Christianity often frames Jesus’ identity in ontological terms that, to many Muslim ears, appear to blur the distinction between Father and Son. Islam reacts by rejecting divine designation for Jesus altogether. Yet John’s Gospel presents another way—one deeply rooted in Israel’s Scriptures.

In this reading, the Father remains the Most High without compromise. Jesus does not collapse into the Father, nor does He replace Him. Instead, He fulfills the role anticipated in Psalm 82: the true and faithful Son who bears God’s authority without corruption. He is rightly confessed as Lord and even as “God” in the sense of delegated, vindicated authority—under, from, and for the Most High.

This framework allows us to affirm Islam’s mission in one important respect: its unwavering worship of the One God. It refuses idolatry. It resists the deification of creatures. It seeks to guard divine transcendence. These are not trivial commitments; they echo the biblical insistence that the Most High stands above all.

Yet we must also urge a deeper adherence to the teachings of Jesus Himself. For in the Gospel, Jesus does not present Himself as a mere prophet among others. He speaks of being sanctified and sent in a unique way. He claims authority to judge. He claims to give life. He appeals to Scripture to justify divine language applied to Himself—not as a rival to God, but as God’s faithful and exalted Son.

If the Most High has chosen to restore the honor of His name through such a Son—if He has vindicated Him by resurrection and commanded that He be honored—then true fidelity to the One God must include fidelity to the One He has sent.

The question is not whether God is one. Both John and Islam affirm that He is. The question is whether the one God has, in fact, appointed and exalted a Son who perfectly bears His authority and reveals His character. John’s Gospel answers yes. It presents Jesus as the Christ, the Son of God—not displacing the Father, but manifesting Him.

Thus our position neither diminishes the Most High nor exalts the Son in rivalry. It calls for worship of the Father as the supreme God, and recognition of Jesus as the uniquely sanctified and vindicated Lord through whom the Father’s authority is exercised and revealed.

Islam preserves the transcendence of God. John urges us to see that this transcendent God has acted decisively through His faithful Son. To follow the teaching of Jesus fully is not to abandon monotheism, but to embrace the way the Most High Himself has chosen to make His name known.


ChatGPT as prompted by Stephen D Green, March 2026 

How Historic Christianity differs

 Historic Christianity—represented by the Roman Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church, and mainstream Protestant traditions—typically reads John 10 as a moment in which Jesus uses Psalm 82 only as a defensive illustration. On that reading, He is not placing Himself within the same conceptual category as the judges called “gods,” but arguing from lesser to greater: if Scripture can apply the term analogically to human rulers, then it cannot be blasphemy for Him to use elevated language about Himself. The Psalm establishes a precedent; Jesus far exceeds it.

They then point to the broader witness of the Gospel of John: the Word’s pre-existence in John 1:1, the statement in John 5:26 that the Son has “life in Himself,” His authority to judge all humanity, and the command that all honor the Son just as they honor the Father (John 5:23). On this account, John 10 is a rhetorical maneuver to silence an immediate accusation, not a full articulation of His status.

That position is coherent and historically influential. Yet our thesis presses a different emphasis—not denying the greatness of the Son, but asking how Jesus Himself frames the issue in the very moment He is accused of blasphemy.

The charge in John 10 is serious: “You, being a man, make yourself God.” Under the Law, blasphemy was punishable by death. If Jesus were claiming to be the Most High Himself—Elyon, the supreme God in His own person—then the charge would not be a misunderstanding; it would be accurate according to Jewish categories. The accusers would have been correct in identifying His claim as a violation of divine uniqueness.

But Jesus does not say, “You are right; I am claiming to be the Most High.” Nor does He intensify the claim in ontological terms. Instead, He appeals to Scripture and says, in effect: your own Law uses the term “gods” for those who receive God’s word and act in His name. If that category exists, how can you call it blasphemy when I, the one whom the Father sanctified and sent, call myself the Son of God?

The force of the argument lies here: He insists He has not committed blasphemy.

And that insistence only works if His claim fits within a scriptural category that preserves the uniqueness of the Most High. Psalm 82 does precisely that. There is one supreme God who stands in the divine council and judges. Beneath Him are those called “gods” because they bear delegated authority. The category allows for real divine designation without compromising the supremacy of the Most High.

If Jesus were claiming identity with Elyon Himself, Psalm 82 would not solve the problem. It would not reduce the charge. It would not function as a defense. But if He is claiming to stand in the divinely authorized, sanctified, and representative role—unique, exalted, but still under the Father—then the charge of blasphemy dissolves. He is not intruding into the Most High’s place; He is fulfilling the role of the faithful Son under the Most High.

This is reinforced by His consistent language throughout John. He speaks of being sent. He speaks of doing nothing on His own. He says the Father is greater. He refers to the Father as “the only true God.” Even after resurrection, He calls the Father “my God and your God.” These are not incidental phrases. They signal that Jesus Himself maintains a distinction between His role and the Father’s supreme position.

Thus, when historic Christianity argues that John 10 is merely a defensive maneuver, our retort is this: precisely so—and in that defense Jesus reveals how He understands His claim. He emphasizes that He has not committed blasphemy. He anchors His identity in the scriptural category of sanctified sonship and divine agency. He does not correct His accusers by escalating the claim into metaphysical identity with the Most High. He corrects them by grounding His claim in Scripture and mission.

The greater elements in John—pre-existence, life granted, authority to judge, universal honor—can still be read within this structure. They magnify the Son’s role, but they do not erase the relational order. The life He has is granted. The authority He exercises is given. The honor He receives is commanded by the Father. The pattern of source and sending remains intact.

In this light, John 10 is not a retreat from high claims; it is a clarification of their kind. Jesus is not claiming to be Elyon in His own person. He is claiming to be the uniquely sanctified, sent, and vindicated Son who perfectly bears Elyon’s authority. He has not seized divinity; He has received and embodied it faithfully.

And that is why the accusation fails. If He had claimed to replace the Most High, it would have been blasphemy. But because He stands under the Father, acting in His name and according to His will, the charge collapses.

The result preserves both truths at once: the Father as the absolute Most High God, and the Son as the uniquely exalted Lord who truly shares in divine authority without rivaling the One who sent Him.


ChatGPT, as prompted by Stephen D Green, March 2026 

Where Islam differs

 When we consider the reactions to Jesus’ claims in the Gospel of John—especially in chapter 10—we find something strikingly relevant for later theological discussions. In that chapter, Jesus’ hearers respond with alarm when He speaks of His unity with the Father. Their instinct is immediate and forceful: a man must not claim divine status. The Most High must remain utterly unique. “You, being a man, make yourself God,” they protest. It is a reaction born out of reverence for divine transcendence.

In that sense, there is a real parallel between the objection raised in John 10 and the later theological instinct found in Islam. Islam is uncompromising in its insistence on the absolute oneness and supremacy of God. It strongly resists attributing divine identity to a human being. It seeks to guard the category of the Most High—Elyon—against any dilution or confusion. The impulse is one of protection: God must not be compromised by human association.

That instinct, at one level, resonates with the Jewish objection recorded in John 10. The concern is to preserve the uniqueness of the one true God. The anxiety is that calling a man “God” somehow diminishes or divides the divine.

Yet this is precisely where the divergence becomes important.

In John 10, Jesus does not retreat from the language of sonship or divine designation. He does not deny that Scripture can apply the term “gods” to those who bear God’s authority. Instead, He appeals directly to Psalm 82. There, those to whom the word of God came—appointed judges and rulers—were called “gods” because they exercised delegated authority under the Most High. They were not rivals to God; they were His representatives. Their tragedy was that they failed to act justly.

Jesus’ argument is careful and scriptural. If the term could be applied to fallible human judges because they bore God’s commission, how much more appropriate is it for the one whom the Father has sanctified and sent into the world? He does not collapse Himself into the Father. He does not claim to be the Most High in place of the Father. He claims to be the uniquely consecrated Son—set apart, authorized, and sent.

The Jewish objectors reacted to His claim. Jesus answered them within the framework of their own Scriptures.

Islam, however, while sharing the instinct to protect divine uniqueness, does not accept even this scriptural defense. It rejects the application of “Son of God” to Jesus in any elevated theological sense. It does not allow for a Psalm 82 category in which a human agent may bear a derivative or representative divinity under God’s authority. For Islam, even that level of divine designation risks compromising the absolute distinction between Creator and creature.

This is where the paths decisively part.

In John’s Gospel, the Father remains the Most High. Jesus Himself affirms, even after resurrection, “my God and your God.” The supremacy of the Father is never threatened. Yet at the same time, John insists that the Father has sanctified and sent the Son, granting Him authority, vindicating Him through resurrection, and commanding that all honor the Son as they honor the Father.

Islam preserves the transcendence of the Most High but declines to follow John in recognizing Jesus as the uniquely sanctified Son who bears God’s authority in this elevated way. It accepts Jesus as a prophet but not as the Son in the sense John proclaims. It resists calling Him “Lord” and “God” even within the Psalm 82 framework of delegated authority.

Thus, historically and theologically, Islam sides with the instinct of the objectors in John 10—the concern to guard divine uniqueness—but does not accept Jesus’ own scriptural reasoning. It does not allow the category that Jesus Himself invoked from Psalm 82. Where John presents a faithful Son who restores the honor of the Most High by perfectly bearing His name, Islam prefers to avoid the category altogether.

The contrast is illuminating. John’s Gospel maintains both truths: the Father as the absolute Most High, and the Son as the uniquely sanctified and vindicated bearer of divine authority. The Son does not rival the Father; He reveals Him. He does not multiply gods; He restores faithful representation where others failed.

The question, then, is not whether God is one. Both John and Islam affirm divine uniqueness. The question is whether God has chosen to express His authority and restore His honor through a uniquely consecrated Son who may rightly be called “Lord” and even “God” in the Psalm 82 sense—under, from, and for the Most High.

John answers yes. Islam answers no.

And there the divergence lies—not in reverence for the Most High, but in whether Jesus’ own scriptural self-understanding is accepted.


ChatGPT, prompted by Stephen D Green, March 2026 

Sunday, 1 March 2026

The Father and the Son

 When we read Scripture, a pattern emerges: God, the Most High—Elyon—stands behind all reality as its ultimate source. Paul declares, “For us there is one God, the Father, from whom are all things and for whom we exist.” Jesus himself prays to the Father, calling Him “the only true God,” and at the end, submits all things back to Him, so that God may be all in all. The Father alone is the fountainhead of creation and the ultimate authority.

Yet within this same Scripture, we encounter the Son, the Word who was with God and who was God. Preexistent, active in creation, sent by the Father, He speaks and acts perfectly according to the Father’s will. He is Lord, worshiped, and given authority, yet repeatedly acknowledges the Father’s primacy: “The Father is greater than I.” Scripture thus presents both divine status and real subordination—not rivalry, but relational order.

Psalm 82 gives us a vivid framework: God stands in the divine council, addressing rulers called “gods,” sons of the Most High, entrusted with authority to protect the weak and uphold justice. Yet when they fail, God declares, though called gods, they will die like men. Authority is real but accountable; delegated power must reflect the source.

Into this pattern steps Jesus. Unlike the rulers condemned in Psalm 82, He fulfills authority perfectly. The feeding of the five thousand illustrates His care: before claiming to be the “bread of life,” He provides abundantly for the hungry. Healing the blind shows He brings light to darkness; raising Lazarus demonstrates authority over life and death. Each miracle, each act, is a “sign” validating His words, showing obedience and faithful exercise of divine authority. Even the cross, at first shameful, becomes the ultimate display of loyalty, revealing the Father’s steadfast love and justice. His resurrection vindicates Him: the faithful Son does not die like men but rises, enthroned, confirming God’s honor.

John 10 makes the connection explicit. When accused of blasphemy for claiming unity with the Father, Jesus invokes Psalm 82: “Is it not written in your Law, ‘You are gods’?” Those previous “gods” received authority but failed. Jesus, sanctified and sent, bears divine authority faithfully. His divinity is functional, relational, covenantal—not abstract, not competitive.

The opening of John reinforces this: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” The Greek reflects participation in divinity while preserving distinction: the Father remains the Most High; the Son is fully divine, sent, and obedient. Thomas’ confession, “My Lord and my God,” recognizes the Son’s authority and glory without collapsing the Father and Son into one person. Worship of the Son glorifies the Father who sent Him.

Through words and deeds, obedience and miracles, the Son restores the honor of God’s name, misrepresented when previous agents failed. Hierarchy does not diminish glory; it manifests it in relational harmony. Distinction and unity coexist: the Father alone is Most High; the Son reigns above all except the Father, perfectly reflecting His character, and the Spirit testifies and glorifies the Son.

Thus the Gospel invites belief not only in Christ’s identity but in the relational and ordered life of God. Faith is seeing the Father’s glory revealed through the Son’s faithful obedience, trusting that the authority given and exercised flows from love, justice, and mercy. From the Most High, through the faithful Son, and back to the Most High, creation is restored, God’s honor is vindicated, and life is offered.

This is the vision Scripture presents: not confusion, not rivalry, but radiant harmony. The Father is the source; the Son is the faithful agent, the Word made flesh, vindicated by resurrection; the Spirit witnesses. Life, salvation, and worship all converge in recognizing this divine order, where the glory of God fills heaven and earth.


ChatGPT, prompted by Stephen D Green, March 2026