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Sunday, 19 April 2026

Gospel regulation

 Heavenly regulation of the message of the heavenly gospel has always been an integral part of this gospel. The first apostles of Jesus Christ were regulated in their preaching of it, and this regulating was primarily the work of the Holy Spirit given to them by the Father, God. The general commission from their risen Lord Jesus was to preach everywhere as they went, yet, as they went, its preaching was fine-tuned by the Holy Spirit. Submitting to this divine order is wise. Yet there can be a call to preach the gospel message openly, as is facilitated by modern technology such as the Web. There can be no silencing of the message entirely, so the command is still there to shout from the rooftops what is whispered in your ear, when it comes to the teachings of Jesus Christ and the ministry in his name by the Holy Spirit. In love for God, the commands God has given to Jesus, and Jesus in turn has administered to all—these commands can be taught to all. The whole world can hear. Yet in all this, it is still subject to regulation by the Holy Spirit in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ. This name is that by which even the trees put forth their buds and leaves. It is cosmic in its scope. It reaches the ends of the universe. Yet it is all under authority of the Lord Jesus himself. And Jesus is forever going to subject himself to the One God who sent him as light into all the world. So too, this gospel message is subject to God the Father. It is this One True God who gives Jesus the utmost authority to be Lord over its distribution and administration. 

There is an abandonment of teachings of Jesus

 AI tells me that “… many of the claims you present as definite conclusions are actually points of long-standing theological disagreement across different Christian traditions”. Presumably this reflects the training given currently to AI, in this case ChatGPT in April 2026. It is saying a great deal in support of my belief, learned from Above, that the teachings of Jesus have largely been forsaken in USA Christianity and closely aligned areas of Christianity. Here are three of the main teachings of Jesus to which I was referring when ChatGPT gave this response. Firstly, Jesus taught that it is not himself but rather the Father who is the Most High God. He, Jesus, taught he is the Son of this Father. He is Son of this Most High God. Secondly, in close relation to this teaching, he taught that he and the Father are distinct, in that his own testimony about himself forms a testimony truly distinct from the testimony of the Father. The Father testifies about Jesus by the miraculous works the Father gives Jesus to do. Thirdly, in the matter of those who are chosen by God, it is not about human descent but about spirit. It is those who do things like Abraham did who are children of Abraham in the sense of being the chosen people. It is not about human descent. It is the spirit a person exhibits which gives a person their relationship to the God of Abraham. This is a permanent relationship, not one of slavery to anything or anyone. Slavery is temporary. Sonship is permanent. 

Saturday, 18 April 2026

First things first

 In UK and countries closely associated with USA historically, it is easy to become intertwined with pervasive USA Christian doctrines, and become blinded to the teachings given by Jesus Christ to his apostles, losing sight of the light sent by God, the Father Himself. Jesus never taught he is God, the Most High. He never taught that Christians will be removed from the world before the time of the full wrath of God. He never taught that any group or individual is chosen and saved on the basis of its biological descent, its ‘flesh’. He taught the importance of spirit rather than biological descent or prowess. He taught he will come only after the times of darkest wrath of God are completed, and there will be Christians who endure until his coming. He taught that it is the Father Himself who is the one Most High God. He taught that he, Jesus, is the Son, a person completely distinct from this Father, able to independently testify about himself with testimony distinct from the Father’s testimony, as the Law of Moses requires. To follow Jesus is to believe in him, and then to follow through on this belief by holding to the actual teachings Jesus taught, as the Holy Spirit still teaches today, in his name. 

Tuesday, 14 April 2026

Be a true Christian

 There is still such a thing as a true disciple of Jesus. It is clear that not every person called a Christian is truly a disciple of Jesus Christ. Earliest uses of the term ‘Christian’ probably applied to actual disciples of Jesus Christ, but there has been some drift of meaning of the term. Jesus himself taught that not every individual or group who believes in him is necessarily a true disciple of him. He taught that to be a true disciple of him, the one who believes must actually adhere to his teachings, obeying his actual commands. He taught his true disciples to teach such obedience wherever they went. It then became a matter for any potential believing disciple to follow the teachings of those who in turn were truly following the teachings of Jesus Christ, as the apostle of Jesus Christ, Paul, wrote in his first letter to the believers in Corinth: “Follow my example, as I follow the example of Christ” (1 Corinthians 11:1). When this true discipleship chain gets broken, you end up with branches no longer joined to the vine. You end up with those who follow a teacher who follow a teacher whose following of the actual teachings of Jesus Christ is questionable. There have been so many occurrences of this since the early times of Christianity that it might have become by far the norm. The Holy Spirit is key. The Holy Spirit is forever true to the teachings of Jesus Christ as he first gave them and as he himself holds still to them today. Holding fast to what the Holy Spirit imparts genuinely, really, truly, is a matter of truly following Jesus, if it is done in true faith in Jesus Christ, as the light sent by the Father. The teachings of Jesus as the Father gave them to him, this is the true light, which the Holy Spirit still imparts purely. This makes you a true follower, a true Christian, even today. One way is to receive the Holy Spirit and what the Holy Spirit imparts, and keep on persisting in this out of persistent persuasion it is light from God. But be careful it is truly light from God. If not, it is true in Jesus’ words, that “If then the light within you is darkness, how great is that darkness”. Get back to the light God the Father has sent into the world. Be a true disciple. Be a true Christian. 

Monday, 13 April 2026

Semantic Drift and Church Doctrine

 The history of Christian doctrine offers a strikingly parallel case study to the dynamics observed in the transition from paper-based business documents to electronic standards. In both domains, the central issue is not merely the preservation of form, but the preservation of meaning across time within systems that must evolve. Early Christianity developed its doctrinal coherence in a world where meaning was stabilised primarily through shared practice, authority structures, and slowly accreting tradition rather than through fully formalised definitions. Like paper documents embedded in legal and commercial life, early doctrinal statements derived their durability from their embeddedness in lived communities of interpretation. Liturgical repetition, episcopal oversight, and the gradual emergence of canonical texts created a relatively stable semantic environment in which key concepts such as Christology, salvation, and authority could remain intelligible even as they were debated.

This early stability, however, was not passive. It required periodic acts of consolidation when interpretive divergence threatened coherence. The ecumenical councils of the early church, such as the Council of Nicaea, functioned in a manner analogous to the formalisation of constraints in modern electronic standards. They did not attempt to specify every theological implication, but instead fixed certain core invariants that were considered essential to maintaining continuity of meaning across the wider Christian world. In doing so, they transformed implicit shared understanding into explicit doctrinal boundaries. This process resembles the way standards bodies such as OASIS Open codify business semantics into structured schemas: not by capturing every nuance of interpretation, but by constraining the space within which interpretation can legitimately vary.

Over time, however, the very success of these stabilising mechanisms introduced new complexities. As doctrinal language became more formalised, its interpretation increasingly depended on accumulated layers of commentary and theological reasoning. Concepts such as “nature,” “essence,” and “person,” once grounded in relatively fluid philosophical and pastoral contexts, became embedded in intricate systems of definition and distinction. While this allowed for greater precision, it also introduced the possibility of semantic drift: the gradual separation of formal correctness from intuitive or original meaning. Statements could remain doctrinally valid within the established framework while their lived interpretation shifted subtly across different historical and cultural contexts. This mirrors the behaviour of electronic standards in which schemas remain valid while the underlying assumptions of their use evolve over time.

The problem of institutional memory plays a significant role in this process. As generations of theologians, bishops, and scholars succeed one another, the original motivations behind doctrinal formulations can become partially obscured. New interpretive contexts demand fresh articulation, and in responding to these demands, later actors may inadvertently reshape the conceptual structure they inherit. In the Catholic tradition, for example, the ongoing interpretive authority of the Catholic Church provides one mechanism for managing continuity, while the Eastern Orthodox Church emphasises continuity through adherence to received tradition and conciliar consensus. In both cases, however, the challenge remains the same: ensuring that formal continuity does not conceal gradual conceptual divergence.

The rupture of the Protestant Reformation further illustrates the fragility of semantic coherence when interpretive authority is contested. What had previously functioned as a relatively unified interpretive ecosystem fractured into multiple traditions, each claiming fidelity to the same foundational texts but diverging in the frameworks used to interpret them. This is analogous to the forking of a standard in which competing implementations preserve syntactic compatibility while diverging in meaning. The result is not immediate incoherence, but long-term divergence in the assumptions that underpin interpretation.

Across these developments, a consistent pattern emerges. Stability in doctrine, like stability in document standards, is never purely a product of formal structure. It depends on a wider ecology of interpretation, authority, and shared practice that constrains the range of permissible meaning. When that ecology is strong, implicit understanding can carry much of the burden of semantic stability. When it weakens or fragments, greater reliance must be placed on explicit definitions, formal constraints, and interpretive governance. Yet even these mechanisms cannot fully eliminate the possibility of drift; they can only manage its rate and visibility.

Seen in this light, the history of Christian doctrine is not a departure from the dynamics of evolving technical standards, but an earlier manifestation of the same underlying problem: how to preserve continuity of meaning in a system that must remain capable of change. The shift from paper to electronic documentation did not invent this tension but intensified it by removing the slow, frictional constraints that once helped stabilise interpretation. Similarly, the shift from informal theological consensus to increasingly formal doctrinal articulation did not create doctrinal instability, but made its management more explicit and more necessary. In both cases, what was once implicit and distributed must now be consciously maintained.

ChatGPT, as prompted by Stephen D Green, April 2026 

Lawlessness and the Man of Lawlessness

 It would be amis to jump to conclusions when a man of lawlessness appears, full of boasting against God, and blaspheming. It is important to realise that there are forces at work which manifest in such leaders from time to time. It is all about the spirit of lawlessness at work, rather than any one particular ruler. In a few decades to come one such manifestation will indeed, prophecy tells us, be the sign of the last kingdom of worldliness starting its short global domination, shortly to be curtailed by Christ Jesus returning with his saints. I believe the rule of the final man of lawlessness will be a far graver time, and more insidious kingdom, than what we are seeing today. But at least the prophecies about it show us how to understand the present time, and the forces already at work leading up to that time. 

Saturday, 11 April 2026

and a scroll was written in remembrance

 and a scroll was written in remembrance


The meetings of believers in UK in the 1980s and 1990s were sometimes worthy of a remembrance record being written about them. There were meetings where miracles happened. There were meetings where God spoke. There were meetings overturning unchallenged dogma, freeing the worshipful spirit and truth after centuries of truth suppression. The idea that the Holy Spirit could never, or would never introduce new teachings was proven wrong. The idea the Holy Spirit had ceased giving gifts of prophecy and miracle was proven wrong. Twice I went to meetings just after asking God to give a particular message and it was spoken by several believers exactly as I had asked. One such meeting I remember with special reverence was the first I attended after asking for a vision message the Holy Spirit gave me to be confirmed threefold. Three young children had composed a song in their church class earlier and they sang it in the service. It was a threefold repetition of the very words I was given in my vision. Then an elder stood and preached from a Bible passage about that same message. And a younger man sang a hymn about this message and spoke about it. I had not told anyone my message. “Build the Temple.” This was the message in my heavenly vision, confirmed threefold in the meeting of the believers. I knew it was a message about how the Holy Spirit would be given me for the building up of the body of Christ, this temple for God’s glory. We receive, and we pass it on to the believers. And here I write of it, a testimony of it for remembrance. To build the Temple, which is the body of believers who have the Holy Spirit given to them by God, in the name of God’s Son, Jesus Christ, our Lord. 

Wednesday, 8 April 2026

The Easter Schism

 Just as Solomon’s compromise with foreign influences led to apostasy and divine judgment, so too early Christianity’s accommodation of popular cultural symbols—like those associated with spring festivals—ultimately contributed to doctrinal corruption and schism.

1) Solomon as a biblical example

  • Solomon, despite wisdom and obedience early on, allowed syncretism:
    • Worship of Ashtoreth and other gods because of foreign wives
    • Resulted in apostasy: Israel drifting from covenant faithfulness
    • Led to judgment: Kingdom split into Israel and Judah (1 Kings 11)

This shows a principle in Scripture: blending God’s worship with other influences carries risk of corruption and division.


2) Early Christianity in the Middle East

  • Christianity emerged within a culturally syncretic environment:
    • Pagan festivals, spring rituals, fertility symbolism
    • Popular deities like Ishtar were widely revered
  • Some early Christians may have incorporated or adapted cultural elements to aid evangelism or assimilation

From this perspective, the risk mirrors Solomon’s story:

  • Syncretism → compromised worship → eventual doctrinal division
  • Historical reflection: the East–West Schism (1054 CE) might be seen as a judgment or consequence of centuries of such accommodation


3) Mechanism of apostasy in this analogy

  • Core faith (like Israel’s covenant or Christ’s teachings) gets blurred by popular culture
  • Rituals and celebrations can replace the central focus (Jesus’ teachings, the commandments)
  • Over time, authority disputes, doctrinal disagreements, and cultural divergences grow, leading to schism


4) Difference from Solomon’s case

  • Solomon’s apostasy was direct disobedience: worshipping other gods
  • Christianity’s “compromise” is more indirect, often symbolic or cultural:
    • Easter timing
    • Eggs, spring imagery
    • Non-biblical customs

Yet the principle is similar: when worship is diluted with foreign elements, the risk of division and doctrinal drift increases.


5) The key lesson

This reasoning follows a biblical pattern:

Syncretism in worship—whether in Israel’s history or early Christianity—can lead to apostasy and judgment, visible in division and schism.

In other words, it’s not just a historical curiosity—it’s a spiritual principle about fidelity to God’s teaching.


ChatGPT on prompts by Stephen D Green, March 2026

Where is truth?

 “Be sure that the light within you (among you) is not darkness.” How great is the darkness when it is thought to be light. We have much darkness affecting foolish minds today. Doctrines long left untested are so prevalent. Foolish notions about who is ‘chosen’, what is coming apocalyptically, what is morally owed to whom. The identity of Jesus Christ is another topic so prone to misconceptions, of various kinds. Even the person of the Most High God is obscured. Some critical thinking would not go amis. Some self-awareness, and sincere faith in the light from Jesus Christ himself, rather than resorting to church councils and church fathers who disagreed with one another and grew distant from Jesus’ teachings, despite having the scriptures and testimonies of the apostles and prophets. Now wars are fought on darkened assumptions falsely labelled truth. It is not too late to humbly seek the truth that is in Jesus, learning from him. Those who are taught according to this truth should recognise brotherhood in each other and behave as one body in him, learning to live by his truth. 

Sunday, 5 April 2026

My journey so far

 Personal faith in Jesus is something that came early in my childhood. Teachings of Jesus read to me from a children’s bible inspired me with confidence in Jesus when I was still young. I learned more of Jesus over years of church attendance and summer camps, then in my years at university. Miracles God put into my life, as I met with other believers, boosted my faith. I was challenged during my university years to seek to be given by God the Holy Spirit as part of this faith journey in Jesus Christ. I was also taught to keep the ten commandments, by my grandparents, who were Pentecostal missionaries, and they laid hands on me in prayer before I went on a missionary trip. I then found the Holy Spirit started visiting me, gifting me prophetically, and one or two others on the missionary trip with me. Yet the doubts crept in over the following years about whether I had been given the Holy Spirit as a mark from God of me being a true believer. A true disciple of Jesus keeps the commands and other teachings of Jesus. So I set about ensuring I was doing this, after earnestly asking God for the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit came upon me, and commanded me to “Build the Temple”. It was confirmed threefold in a church service soon afterwards. Now, it might be strange to a Jewish believer in Christ to see a Gentile believer receive the Holy Spirit but it does happen, just like the Book of Acts in the Bible records. Yet faith which leads to obedience is what counts, whether Jew or Gentile. To obey the command to build the Temple, aware it meant the building up of the body of Christ, the body of believers we call the Church, I felt I should be able to teach believers. I was convicted of my lack of real personal knowledge of God. I asked God for such knowledge. I was then taught by the Father that He is God. Then taught by Jesus that he is Master over me and, under the Father, over Nature. Then I was taught by the Holy Spirit that all Nature functions by the power of Jesus’ name. In this last lesson it was again remarkable to a Jewish believer in Jesus that a Gentile believer in Jesus can receive the gift of the Holy Spirit too. But that is the heart of the gospel. I even found myself, a Gentile believer in Jesus, telling Jews the message of God, which is an interesting development of how the journey of Christian faith has been. Now it is a matter of persisting in faith in Jesus and in holding to his teachings, while seeking opportunities to build his body of believers. It is all out of love for God, and love for one another. We grow in knowledge of the Father and the Son, in fellowship with this Holy Spirit. That is how it continues. And the Holy Spirit reveals things of the future which lies ahead of us, like our heavenly headlights. Yes, deep within this journey in faith is the revealing to us and teaching to us of the things of heavenly truth, of the truth that is there in Jesus himself, of how to live, and of what lies ahead, and of what to believe. We who have this truth are one in Jesus Christ who brought the truth from God into human history and thence to us. We are his body. We love each other in him. 

Saturday, 4 April 2026

Easter

 Easter


The apostle Paul warned Galatian believers against the human effort of keeping feasts.


AI responds: “Yes—this idea comes from Epistle to the Galatians, where Paul the Apostle warns believers about relying on human effort—especially religious observances—as a means of righteousness.

A key passage is Galatians 4:9–11, where Paul writes (paraphrased):

“You are observing special days and months and seasons and years! I fear for you…”

What Paul meant

Paul wasn’t condemning all observance of days outright. His concern was deeper:

  • Returning to legalism: The Galatian Christians were being pressured to adopt Jewish law (including feast days) as necessary for salvation.
  • Human effort vs. grace: Paul argued that righteousness comes through faith in Christ—not through works like keeping festivals, circumcision, or dietary laws.
  • Spiritual regression: He saw this as going “backwards” into a system of earning favor with God rather than living in freedom.

Related teaching

In Galatians 5:1, Paul reinforces this:

“It is for freedom that Christ has set us free… do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery.”

And similarly in Epistle to the Colossians (2:16–17), he says:

“Do not let anyone judge you… with regard to a festival, a new moon, or a Sabbath day.”

Bottom line

Paul’s warning wasn’t about feasts themselves—it was about depending on them for justification. His core message:

  • Salvation is by grace through faith, not ritual observance.
  • Religious practices should not replace or compete with Christ as the basis of righteousness.

If you want, I can break down how different Christian traditions interpret this passage—some see it very differently.”


And today so many rely on keeping feasts such as Easter.


AI responds: “From Paul’s perspective in Epistle to the Galatians, the core issue wasn’t which days people observed, but why they observed them. His concern was that believers might start thinking their standing with God depended on keeping certain religious calendars—what you could call “earning” righteousness.

How that connects to Easter

Easter, however, developed later as a celebration of the resurrection of Jesus—not as a requirement for salvation.

So there are two very different ways people relate to it:

1. In line with Paul’s warning (what he opposed):

  • Thinking: “I must observe this feast to be right with God.”
  • That mindset shifts trust from grace to human effort.

2. In a way many Christians understand it today:

  • Seeing Easter as a remembrance or celebration, not a requirement.
  • Similar to how someone might celebrate a meaningful anniversary—it expresses faith, not earns it.

A balancing passage

In Epistle to the Romans 14:5–6, Paul actually gives a nuanced view:

“One person considers one day more sacred than another; another considers every day alike. Each of them should be fully convinced in their own mind…”

That suggests:

  • Observing a day isn’t inherently wrong
  • But imposing it as necessary is where the problem begins…”


It is a matter of individual persuasion.


But this persuasion should cone from first being persuaded towards faith in Jesus Christ, the light of the world sent by God—Jesus who sent Paul as light to the Gentiles.


AI responds: “At the centre is Jesus Christ himself. In Gospel of John 8:12, he says:

“I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.”

So the starting point isn’t:

  • traditions
  • disputes about days
  • or even personal convictions

It’s being persuaded about who Jesus is, and then following him.

Then comes everything else

Only after that foundation does what you called “individual persuasion” make sense.

In other words:

  1. First — faith in Christ as Lord and Teacher
  2. Then — learning and living his teachings
  3. Then — forming convictions about practices (days, customs, etc.)

That keeps things in the right order.

Paul fits into that framework

Paul the Apostle saw his role as pointing people to Christ, not to himself.

In Acts of the Apostles 26:18, his mission is described as:

turning people “from darkness to light…”

So even when Paul speaks about freedom or individual conviction, it’s not independent of Christ—it’s rooted in:

  • knowing Christ
  • belonging to Christ
  • walking in the light of Christ

So your point holds together

What you’re saying can be summed up like this:

True persuasion isn’t just personal opinion—it begins with being persuaded about Christ, and then shaped by his teaching.

That keeps:

  • Christ at the centre
  • Paul in his proper role (as a servant and messenger)
  • and personal conviction grounded in something deeper than preference

The implication

When that order is kept, it naturally guards against:

  • elevating traditions above Christ
  • or treating practices as more important than actually following him

And it brings the focus back to what you’ve been emphasizing all along:

faith in Jesus expressed through living by what he taught.