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Sunday, 15 March 2026

Two Kinds of Power Today

Two Kinds of Power in a Turbulent World


By ChatGPT and Stephen D Green, mid-March 2026 


Recent events have demonstrated with unusual clarity how states possessing military power, advanced technology, and global alliances can shape international developments in ways that smaller countries struggle to resist. A striking example is the escalating confrontation involving the United States, Israel, and Iran. Large-scale strikes on Iranian military and nuclear targets in late February triggered a widening regional crisis, illustrating the immense capabilities of technologically advanced states.


Modern military power is not merely a matter of troop numbers. It involves hundreds of aircraft, precision-guided weapons, satellite intelligence, and complex logistical networks capable of projecting force across vast distances. When such systems are activated, their consequences rarely remain confined to the immediate participants.


Countries across the Persian Gulf quickly found themselves drawn into the crisis. Several host American military facilities or are embedded in Western security arrangements, leaving them vulnerable to retaliation and limiting their ability to distance themselves from the conflict. The resulting missile and drone attacks on Gulf states highlight a difficult reality of international politics: alliances can provide security, but they can also reduce strategic independence.


For smaller states, this dependence creates a profound dilemma. Nations such as the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain rely heavily on Western security guarantees and economic partnerships. Yet that reliance also means absorbing risks associated with decisions made by larger allies. Even when leaders might prefer to remain neutral, disengaging from the strategic framework in which they operate is often impossible.


The crisis has also underscored how deeply interconnected the global economy has become. Disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz—the narrow maritime passage through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil normally travels—sent shockwaves through energy markets. Shipping slowed, insurance costs surged, and oil prices climbed above $100 per barrel. Governments far from the battlefield suddenly faced inflation risks, energy shortages, and volatile financial markets.


This interdependence ensures that regional conflicts quickly become global economic events. The infrastructure of modern energy trade—tankers, pipelines, refineries, and financial markets—binds nations together so tightly that instability in one strategic location can ripple through the entire world economy.


At the same time, economic competition among major powers continues to shape the global landscape. Diplomatic discussions between the United States and China over tariffs, technology exports, and access to strategic minerals illustrate the influence of the world’s two largest economies. Their policies affect global supply chains ranging from semiconductors to rare-earth materials and agricultural trade.


For smaller economies, these decisions can have enormous consequences despite their limited ability to influence them. Access to major markets, investment flows, and critical technologies often depends on maintaining stable relations with dominant economic powers.


Geopolitical crises also create uneven economic outcomes. Disruptions in Middle Eastern oil flows, for example, can temporarily benefit energy exporters whose supply routes lie elsewhere. Russia’s oil exports, which do not rely on the Persian Gulf passage, may become more attractive when traffic through Hormuz is threatened. Such shifts illustrate a recurring pattern in global markets: moments of instability frequently produce both winners and losers.


While certain industries or investors may profit from price spikes and supply disruptions, ordinary households around the world often experience the negative side of these shifts through higher fuel and food costs. The resulting disparities contribute to public suspicion that powerful actors sometimes tolerate—or even exploit—instability when it aligns with strategic or economic interests.


Taken together, these developments reveal the structural character of modern geopolitics. Nations are bound together through financial systems, defense alliances, technological supply chains, and energy infrastructure. Because of these connections, governments often face situations in which opposing a powerful partner carries severe economic or security risks.


Yet amid this landscape of immense worldly power, the moral questions raised in religious and philosophical traditions remain strikingly relevant. Ancient texts (such as Psalm 82) sometimes described rulers metaphorically as “gods,” acknowledging the extraordinary authority they wielded over the lives of others. At the same time, those same traditions warned that such power is temporary and that leaders ultimately share the same mortality as those they govern.


The teachings attributed to Jesus take this idea even further by redefining the nature of authority itself. In the gospel narratives, power is not measured by armies, wealth, or political influence but by the willingness to serve and protect others. Leadership, in John chapter 10, is portrayed through the image of a shepherd who sacrifices himself for the sake of the flock.


This vision stands in sharp contrast to geopolitical systems in which decisions are often driven by calculations of deterrence, strategic advantage, and economic gain. Political leaders, like all individuals, operate within a complex mixture of fear, ambition, loyalty, and moral reflection. Teachings that emphasize humility, mercy, and concern for one’s neighbor attempt to shape those impulses in ways that encourage restraint rather than domination.


Faith, in this sense, functions not simply as belief but as trust in a reality beyond immediate circumstances. The gospels speak of faith capable of “moving mountains,” suggesting that reliance on divine guidance enables individuals to act ethically, and with power gaining control of Nature itself, even when the surrounding environment rewards self-interest.


The life of Jesus is presented in Christian tradition as the clearest example of this alternative form of power. He held no political office and commanded no armies, yet his actions—healing the sick, restoring hope to the marginalized, and challenging injustice—symbolized a deeper connection with the creative power of God. According to the narratives, he consistently attributed these acts not to personal ambition but to obedience to a divine will. Ultimately this culminated in his crucifixion death for each of us, and resurrection by the God who had set him apart and sent him. 


For believers, the resurrection represents the culmination of this idea: a demonstration that divine authority extends beyond the limits of earthly institutions and even beyond death itself. In that sense it serves as both vindication and promise—an affirmation that moral truth can endure long after political systems and empires fade.


Seen in this light, the contrast between two forms of power becomes clear. One is visible in the geopolitical struggles of nations, where decisions made by a handful of leaders can reshape markets, borders, and the lives of millions. The other is quieter but more enduring: the transformation of human character through faith, compassion, and moral conviction.


Empires rise and fall, alliances shift, and markets fluctuate. Yet the ethical orientation of individuals—formed through reflection, humility, and concern for others—possesses a resilience that worldly authority cannot guarantee. In an age defined by immense technological and political power, that quieter form of influence may prove more consequential than it first appears.



References

Geopolitical and Economic Sources

  1. Wikipedia. “2026 Iran War.” Wikipedia. Last modified March 15, 2026. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Iran_war?utm_source=chatgpt.com.
  2. Wikipedia. “2026 Iranian Strikes on Israel.” Wikipedia. Last modified March 15, 2026. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Iranian_strikes_on_Israel?utm_source=chatgpt.com.
  3. Associated Press. “Iran Has Launched More Than 290 Missiles and 500 Drones at Israel So Far.” AP News, March 2026. https://apnews.com/article/9bbed3c906146844be08fdfd02595754?utm_source=chatgpt.com.
  4. The Wall Street Journal. “Iran Has Launched More Than 290 Missiles and 500 Drones at Israel.” WSJ Live Coverage, March 2026. https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/us-israel-iran-war-news-2026/card/iran-has-launched-more-than-290-missiles-and-500-drones-at-israel-so-far-a9uvddRz4of5pzSQ5LOs?utm_source=chatgpt.com.
  5. Economic Times. “Iran Launches Sejjil Missile at Israel: Here’s What We Know About the 2,000 km Ashura Weapon.” Economic Times, March 2026. https://m.economictimes.com/news/new-updates/iran-launches-sejjil-missile-at-israel-heres-what-we-know-about-the-2000-km-ashura-weapon/articleshow/129591638.cms?utm_source=chatgpt.com.
  6. Wikipedia. “Economic Impact of the 2026 Iran War.” Wikipedia. Last modified March 15, 2026. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_impact_of_the_2026_Iran_war?utm_source=chatgpt.com.

Theological and Philosophical Sources

  1. Holy Bible. Psalm 82. English Standard Version. Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2001.
  2. Holy Bible. John 10:11-18. English Standard Version. Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2001.
  3. Augustine of Hippo. The City of God. Translated by Henry Bettenson. London: Penguin Classics, 2003.
  4. Reinhold Niebuhr. Moral Man and Immoral Society: A Study in Ethics and Politics. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1932.
  5. Niccolò Machiavelli. The Prince. Translated by Harvey C. Mansfield. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998.


Saturday, 14 March 2026

Revelation and the Cross on ChatGPT

 https://chatgpt.com/share/69b534f0-8e24-8005-afe6-2786c82218b3

Obedience and Revelation with the Cross of Christ

 Obedience, Revelation, and the Faithful Son: A Biblical Reflection


By ChatGPT, prompted by Stephen D Green, March 2026 


Section I — Obedience to Christ and the Personal Revelation of the Father and the Son

Within the Gospel of John, Jesus makes a remarkable promise concerning obedience and revelation. In chapters 14–17, often called the farewell discourse, he tells his disciples that those who keep his commandments will not simply follow a set of teachings; they will come to know God personally. The relationship between obedience and revelation is central. Jesus declares that whoever loves him will keep his commands, and that such a person will be loved by the Father. He goes further still: he promises that both he and the Father will make their dwelling with the one who obeys.

This promise suggests that knowledge of God is not merely theoretical. It is relational and experiential. According to Jesus, the path to knowing God is not primarily intellectual speculation but faithful obedience. The person who sincerely follows Christ’s commands—seeking righteousness, mercy, humility, and love—places themselves in the position where God may reveal Himself.

In this framework, revelation is not something seized by human effort; it is something given by God. The Father reveals Himself according to His own will and truth. And when the Father reveals Himself, He does so not as an abstract philosophical concept but as the living God whom Jesus consistently calls “the Father.”

Jesus also promises that he himself will be revealed to the obedient believer. In John’s Gospel he repeatedly describes himself as the one whom the Father has sanctified and sent into the world. His mission is not self-originating. He does nothing on his own initiative but speaks and acts according to the will of the One who sent him.

Thus when the Father reveals the Son, He reveals Him truthfully—as His Son. The relationship is not blurred or collapsed. The Father remains the source, the Most High, and the Son is the one who perfectly represents Him.

This pattern resonates with the broader scriptural narrative. Throughout the Hebrew Scriptures, God appoints individuals to represent His authority. Psalm 82 famously depicts rulers who were called “gods” because they acted in God’s name. Yet those rulers failed to reflect God’s justice and compassion. Their misuse of authority caused the name of the Most High to be dishonored among the nations.

Against this background, the mission of Jesus appears as the restoration of faithful representation. Where previous “sons of the Most High” misused their authority, Jesus exercises it perfectly. He feeds the hungry, heals the blind, restores the outcast, and speaks truth without distortion. His actions reveal the character of the Father.

In John’s Gospel these actions are described as “signs.” They function as testimony. Each sign confirms that the Father stands behind the Son. When Jesus multiplies bread, he demonstrates that the God who sent him cares for the hungry. When he opens blind eyes, he reveals that God brings light rather than darkness. When he raises Lazarus from the dead, he shows that the authority entrusted to him extends even over death itself.

Thus the obedient believer who walks in Christ’s teachings begins to perceive something profound: the Father is revealed through the Son. Jesus does not compete with the Father for glory. Instead, he reflects the Father perfectly. To see the Son’s works and hear his words is to encounter the character of the God who sent him.

This revelation is not imposed by force. It unfolds within a relationship of trust and obedience. As Jesus himself says, those who do the will of God will recognize the truth of his teaching.


Section II — The Cross Within the Framework of the Faithful Son

The mission of Jesus reaches its climax in the crucifixion. The Christ dies on the cross, an event that stands at the center of Christian faith. Yet within the framework described above, the cross takes on a deeper meaning than merely a tragic death or an isolated act of sacrifice.

In the Gospel of John, the crucifixion is repeatedly described as the moment of glorification. This language seems paradoxical. From a human perspective, the cross appears as humiliation and defeat. Yet John portrays it as the moment when the true character of both the Father and the Son is revealed most clearly.

Jesus had consistently taught that he came not to seek his own glory but the glory of the One who sent him. His entire life demonstrates obedience. He heals in the Father’s name, teaches in the Father’s name, and judges according to the Father’s will.

The cross represents the ultimate expression of that obedience.

Where previous rulers abused their authority, Jesus relinquishes his life for the sake of others. Where corrupt leaders oppressed the weak, Jesus bears suffering rather than inflicting it. Where unfaithful representatives distorted God’s character, Jesus reveals the depth of divine love and mercy.

Thus the crucifixion becomes the supreme act of faithful representation. The Son remains obedient even in the face of death.

This obedience vindicates the name of the Most High. For centuries the actions of unjust rulers had suggested that God Himself might be indifferent to suffering or justice. In the life and death of Jesus, that distortion is corrected. The cross shows that the God who sent Jesus is not distant or cruel but compassionate and self-giving.

The resurrection then becomes the Father’s public affirmation of the Son’s faithfulness. God raises Jesus from the dead, confirming that his obedience and mission were truly aligned with the will of heaven.

In this sense the resurrection answers the judgment pronounced in Psalm 82. The corrupt rulers described in that psalm would die like ordinary men because they failed in their responsibility. Jesus, however, does not remain under the power of death. His resurrection demonstrates that the faithful Son stands vindicated by God.

The signs recorded in John’s Gospel all point toward this final moment. The feeding of the multitude reveals God’s provision. The healing of the blind reveals God’s light. The raising of Lazarus foreshadows victory over the grave. Each act prepares the reader to understand the cross and resurrection not as isolated events but as the culmination of a mission.

John states explicitly why he records these things: so that readers may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing they may have life in his name.

Within this framework, faith in Christ does not lead away from the Father. Rather, it leads directly to Him. The Son reveals the Father’s character, restores the honor of His name, and opens the way for human beings to know the God whom no one has seen.

Thus the story of the cross is inseparable from the larger story of revelation. The faithful Son obeys the Father completely, even unto death. The Father vindicates the Son through resurrection. And through this faithful Son, the world is invited to behold the true nature of the Most High God and to enter into life through the one whom He has sent.

The Opposition

 To recap: Back in the nineties, I tended to default to Trinitarian dogma, and on being commissioned to build the body of believers as a temple to God, knowing too little about God to adequately preach, I asked God to show me Himself, and when I asked, I literally asked for direct knowledge of “God — Father and Son and Holy Spirit”. (In doing so I was relying on the promises in John 14 to 17, having first made sure I was obeying the commands of Jesus.) Well, I received the answers over the following weeks, and months. First was a dream vision in which the Father started things off by appearing to me in this dream, proving it was really Him, but He first corrected me. He said “I am God”. Over time it dawned on me that this corrected my assumption that God meant a triune three person being of Father and Son and Holy Spirit. To cement the correction, months later Jesus also came to me in a miraculous way, and months later again, I encountered the Holy Spirit in a service. I also began to understand from scripture how this was indeed true, as Jesus taught—that it is the Father Himself who is the Most High God, and Jesus is His Son. So yes, the Father’s correction that He distinctly is God, Him alone.


Here follows an essay created by ChatGPT comprising this viewpoint—based on the viewpoint that this correction was correct and made by God, and that this viewpoint is God’s own truth—this time focussing on opposition to this teaching.


Opposition to the Teaching that the Father Alone is the Most High God and Jesus is His Faithful Son


By ChatGPT, prompted by Stephen D Green, March 2026 


Introduction

Within Christian thought, one of the central theological questions concerns the relationship between God the Father and Jesus Christ. The dominant view throughout most of Christian history has been the doctrine of the Trinity, which teaches that the one God exists eternally as three persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. According to this doctrine, the Son is fully and eternally God in the same sense as the Father.

However, another reading of the biblical narrative emphasizes a slightly different framework: that the Father alone is the Most High God, and that Jesus is the uniquely sanctified and sent Son who perfectly represents Him. In this view, Jesus is genuinely divine in authority and mission but derives that authority from the Father, whom he consistently calls the one true God.

This perspective draws heavily on the Gospel of John, the concept of divine agency in the ancient world, and passages such as Psalm 82. It emphasizes that Jesus fulfills the role of the faithful “Son of the Most High,” succeeding where previous rulers and representatives failed.

Despite the biblical coherence many see in this framework, it has historically faced strong opposition. Understanding that opposition requires examining the development of Christian doctrine, interpretive traditions, philosophical influences, and institutional dynamics within the history of the church.


The Biblical Framework Behind the Teaching

The perspective under discussion begins with a simple observation about the biblical narrative: throughout Scripture, God delegates authority to representatives who act in His name.

Psalm 82 presents a striking example. In that psalm, God stands in the divine assembly and rebukes rulers who are called “gods” and “sons of the Most High.” These figures are not the Most High Himself; rather, they are judges entrusted with divine authority. Because they rule in God’s name, their actions affect how God’s character is perceived among the nations.

Their failure to defend the weak and administer justice leads to divine judgment. Though they were called “gods,” they will die like ordinary men.

This passage establishes a pattern: authority delegated by God carries accountability. Those who represent God must reflect His justice and righteousness.

When the Gospel of John presents Jesus, it repeatedly describes Him as the one whom the Father has sanctified and sent into the world. Jesus insists that he does nothing on his own but only what he sees the Father doing. His works are performed in the Father’s name, and his mission is to glorify the One who sent him.

In this reading, Jesus fulfills perfectly the role that the rulers in Psalm 82 failed to fulfill. He represents the Father faithfully and reveals the true character of the Most High.


Signs and Testimony in the Gospel of John

John’s Gospel emphasizes that Jesus’ miracles are not merely displays of power but “signs.” These signs function as testimony that the Father stands behind the Son’s claims.

Before declaring himself the bread of life, Jesus feeds thousands with multiplied loaves. Before proclaiming himself the light of the world, he heals a man born blind. Before announcing that he is the resurrection and the life, he raises Lazarus from the dead.

Each sign acts as visible confirmation that Jesus’ authority comes from God.

This pattern culminates in the resurrection itself. When God raises Jesus from the dead, it becomes the ultimate vindication of the Son’s mission and obedience.


The Appeal to Psalm 82 in John 10

The debate about Jesus’ identity becomes explicit in the tenth chapter of John.

After Jesus declares, “I and the Father are one,” his opponents accuse him of blasphemy. They interpret his words as a claim to be God in the most direct sense.

Jesus responds by quoting Psalm 82: “Is it not written in your law, ‘I said, you are gods’?”

His argument appeals to the scriptural precedent that those who receive divine authority may be described as “gods” in a representative sense. If this language can apply to unjust judges who merely received God’s word, how much more appropriate is it for the one whom the Father has sanctified and sent?

This appeal reframes the issue. Jesus’ claim centers on divine authorization and faithful representation rather than rivalry with the Father.


The Restoration of God’s Name

A key theme in this perspective is the restoration of the honor of God’s name.

Throughout the Hebrew Scriptures, God’s name was dishonored when those who represented Him acted unjustly. When leaders oppressed the weak or perverted justice, the nations assumed that Israel’s God must be unjust as well.

Jesus reverses that pattern.

By feeding the hungry, healing the blind, and laying down his life for the sheep, he reveals the true character of the Father. His obedience restores the reputation of the Most High among the nations.

The resurrection then publicly vindicates both the Son and the God who sent him.


The Primary Sources of Opposition

Despite the biblical reasoning behind this view, it has historically encountered significant opposition. Several factors explain why.

1. The Authority of Early Church Councils

One of the strongest sources of resistance is the authority of early church councils, particularly the First Council of Nicaeain 325 and the First Council of Constantinople in 381.

These councils defined orthodox Christian doctrine as the belief that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit share the same divine essence. The Son was declared to be “of one substance” with the Father.

Because these formulations became embedded in Christian creeds and confessions, alternative interpretations of the relationship between Father and Son have often been regarded as departures from orthodoxy.


2. Philosophical Language in Theology

Another source of opposition comes from the philosophical vocabulary used by early theologians such as Athanasius of Alexandria and Gregory of Nazianzus.

These thinkers explained the relationship between Father and Son using Greek philosophical concepts such as essence (ousia) and person (hypostasis).

While these concepts helped defend the divinity of Christ against certain early controversies, they also shifted theological discussion away from the biblical language of sending, obedience, and representation.

As a result, later debates often revolve around metaphysical categories rather than the narrative framework of Scripture.


3. Interpretive Traditions

Certain biblical passages have traditionally been interpreted as strong evidence for Trinitarian doctrine. These include the opening verses of the Gospel of John as well as key statements in the epistles.

Because these interpretations have been repeated for centuries in sermons, commentaries, and catechisms, many believers assume that they are the only legitimate way to read the texts.

Alternative readings are therefore sometimes dismissed before they are seriously considered.


4. Concern for the Honor of Christ

A deeply sincere concern also contributes to opposition.

Many Christians fear that emphasizing the Father as the only Most High God might diminish the honor given to Jesus. Because worship of Christ is central to Christian devotion, believers may instinctively resist interpretations that appear to lower His status.

Ironically, the perspective discussed here often intends the opposite: to honor Jesus precisely as the faithful Son who perfectly reveals the Father.

Nevertheless, the fear of diminishing Christ remains a powerful emotional and theological factor.


5. Institutional and Social Dynamics

Religious institutions tend to preserve doctrinal stability. Once a particular formulation of belief becomes established in creeds and confessions, changing that framework can threaten the cohesion of communities.

For this reason, theological traditions often defend inherited doctrines vigorously, even when alternative interpretations emerge.

This dynamic has appeared repeatedly throughout the history of Christian theology.


6. Skepticism Toward Personal Revelation

Another source of opposition arises when theological conclusions are connected with personal experiences or revelations.

Many Christian traditions encourage believers to test spiritual experiences carefully against Scripture and the collective wisdom of the church. As a result, claims that God has personally corrected a theological understanding are often met with caution.

This caution is not necessarily hostility; it reflects a concern to avoid subjective interpretations replacing the authority of Scripture.


The Continuing Debate

Because these factors intersect—historical tradition, philosophical theology, interpretive habits, and institutional loyalty—the debate over the relationship between the Father and the Son continues in Christian theology.

Some believers remain firmly committed to classical Trinitarian doctrine, seeing it as the most faithful expression of the biblical witness.

Others continue to explore readings that emphasize the Father as the one true God and Jesus as His uniquely faithful Son who bears His authority.

Both sides appeal to Scripture and seek to honor Christ and the God of Israel.


Conclusion

The perspective that the Father alone is the Most High God while Jesus is the uniquely sanctified and sent Son offers a coherent reading of several biblical themes: divine agency, the pattern established in Psalm 82, the testimony of signs in the Gospel of John, and the vindication of the Son through resurrection.

Yet this framework faces strong opposition due to the historical development of Trinitarian doctrine, the influence of philosophical categories in early theology, longstanding interpretive traditions, and institutional dynamics within the church.

Understanding these sources of opposition helps explain why debates about the nature of Christ remain among the most complex and enduring discussions in Christian theology.

At its heart, the question is not merely philosophical but relational: how the faithful Son reveals the character of the Most High God and invites humanity into life through the one whom the Father has sent.