About

What If Everything You Were Told About God Is Too Small?

What if God didn’t create a perfect world that we ruined?
What if He created a good world — raw clay — and we are in the process of becoming perfect alongside it?

What if religion wasn’t a maze of rules?
What if the only command was this:

“Love God. Love others.”
In other words, practice love — all day, every day.

What if salvation wasn’t reserved for the few?
What if God’s plan was to save everyone, because everyone is His creation —
and creation itself is the training ground preparing us to be eternal souls, companions for God forever as kindred spirits?


The Vision

In the beginning, there was only God — not a distant monarch, but Love itself.

This book retells the Bible as the unfolding story of God’s love, from creation to new creation. Instead of presenting Scripture as a record of divine wrath and human failure, it reveals its true arc: the gradual unveiling of God’s presence, Christ’s universal restoration, and the transformation of creation into perfection.

From Genesis to Revelation, the story is not perfection lost and regained, but goodness evolving into wholeness. This fresh approach integrates Scripture, theology, and philosophy in language accessible to both Christians and seekers, offering a hopeful vision of faith that confronts the crises of our age.


What Makes This Different

  1. Creation as “good,” not perfect. Imperfection is not failure; it is the raw material of divine transformation.
  2. Sin as necessary for free love. Without the possibility of sin, love cannot be chosen.
  3. Resurrection as the true Second Coming. Christ’s return is not a delayed event but an ongoing presence within us.
  4. Incarnational Return & Christic Transfiguration. New theological terms naming the process of Christ rising within creation and transfiguring it into agape.
  5. Jesus as the Second Adam. He inaugurates a new spiritual lineage — a capacity for self-giving love.
  6. Universal restoration, freely chosen. Heaven and hell reframed as relational proximity to divine love, not imposed eternal separation.

The Story Arc

  • Genesis → Revelation: Not perfection lost and restored, but goodness growing into perfection.
  • Cross & Resurrection: Not appeasement of wrath, but the diffusion of God’s life into humanity.
  • The Church: Not an institution of control, but a living body embodying Christ’s ongoing return.
  • The End: Not destruction, but transfiguration — heaven and earth united, God “all in all.”

This is not just another Christian movement. It is a reimagining of the gospel itself: not fear, but love; not exclusion, but restoration; not an angry God, but a God who is Love, drawing all creation into wholeness.