Beyond the Birth


What Christmas Still Invites Us to Become

As we approach Christmas, millions of people around the world will gather, some in churches, some in living rooms, some simply around a shared table. Candles will be lit. Familiar songs will be sung. For many, this season carries deep spiritual meaning. For others, it holds emotional weight: a pause, a memory, a longing for something gentler than the rest of the year.

At the heart of Christmas is the celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ. A figure revered by Christians as the embodiment of love, humility, sacrifice, and moral courage. Whatever one’s beliefs, it’s difficult to deny the influence of his life and message. Few individuals in history have shaped human values, ethics, and imagination as profoundly.

Christmas matters. Not just religiously…but humanly.

How Christmas Found Its Date

It’s also true that the Christmas we celebrate today took shape within a specific historical context. When Christianity emerged from persecution and became woven into the Roman Empire, it didn’t develop in isolation. December 25th already carried symbolic meaning in the ancient world, closely associated with the return of light after the winter solstice. The darkest days were behind us. The sun was coming back.

Rather than erasing those earlier meanings, early Christianity translated them. Light became a metaphor not just for the sun, but for hope. Renewal became spiritual as well as seasonal. Sunday, the day of the sun, became a day of worship. This wasn’t a trick or a theft; it was a recognition that symbols endure because they speak to something timeless in us.

The calendar mattered less than the meaning.

A Story Humanity Keeps Telling

When you step back far enough, a deeper pattern emerges, one that predates Christianity and extends well beyond it.

Across cultures and centuries, humans have told remarkably similar stories:
– A figure of compassion enters a suffering world.
– Darkness gives way to light.
– Sacrifice leads to renewal.
– Love proves stronger than death.

These stories appear in different forms, with different names and imagery, but they point in the same direction. Long before Christianity, cultures spoke of figures like Attis, associated with death and rebirth; Krishna, a divine embodiment of love and moral order; Dionysus, a teacher of transformation and renewal; Mithras, a symbol of light, truth, and cosmic order; and Horus, the ancient Egyptian god whose story of death, resurrection, and divine sonship symbolized the triumph of order and light over chaos.

The details vary, as they should. Cultures are not carbon copies of one another. But the attributes recur. Again and again, humanity returns to the same intuition: that compassion redeems, that light matters, that transformation is possible.

Those figures don’t diminish Jesus. They contextualize him.

From the Man to the Meaning

Here’s the question Christmas quietly asks us each year, often beneath the noise of shopping lists and social obligations:

What if the enduring power of Christmas isn’t only about who Jesus was, but about what he embodied?

Jesus didn’t invent compassion. He lived it. He modelled a way of being that refused hierarchy, rejected exclusion, and placed love at the center of human life. He didn’t ask people to admire him from a distance; he invited them to follow…to practice what he practiced.

That distinction matters.

When belief becomes more important than behaviour, the message gets lost. But when the focus shifts to embodiment, to how we treat one another, the story comes alive again.

Christ Consciousness, Simply Put

This is where the idea of Christ Consciousness (the non-denominational Christos) enters, not as doctrine, definitely not as dogma, but as orientation.

Christ Consciousness is the practice of radical empathy.
It’s seeing the other not as an opponent, but as an extension of yourself.
It’s choosing love over fear, understanding over certainty, compassion over control.

You don’t need to be Christian to recognize it.
You don’t need to abandon Christianity to live it.
You don’t need to believe anything at all, only to practice something.

In that sense, Christ Consciousness isn’t owned by a religion. It’s expressed through behaviour: forgiveness instead of retaliation, generosity instead of scarcity, presence instead of performance.

Christ Consciousness shows up in how we speak to our partners, how we listen to our children, how we disagree with those who see the world differently.

A Glimpse of the Nous Age

Some thinkers have begun to describe this widening awareness as part of what I’ve called The Nous Age, a shift toward seeing ourselves not as isolated individuals, but as one knowing people.

“Nous” speaks to shared understanding, collective intelligence, and a deeper kind of awareness. In this way of thinking, wisdom doesn’t belong to one tradition or religious tribe. It emerges wherever humans choose connection over division.

The Nous Age doesn’t ask us to discard the past. It asks us to integrate it, to recognize that the truths we’ve been circling for thousands of years may finally be asking us to live them.

How We Might Celebrate Christmas Now

So what does all of this mean for Christmas?

Perhaps it means we celebrate the birth of Jesus and the consciousness he modelled.
Perhaps it means honouring tradition without clinging to exclusivity.
Perhaps it means letting Christmas remind us, at least once a year, of who we are capable of being.

Light still returns after darkness.
Compassion still heals what fear breaks.
Love is still a practice.

If Christmas points to anything enduring, it’s this: the invitation to embody what we claim to believe.

And in a world that feels increasingly fragmented, that invitation has never been more relevant, or more needed.

Seeing Is Believing


“The knowledge of the secrets of the kingdom of God has been given to you, but to others I speak in parables, so that, though seeing, they may not see; though hearing, they may not understand.” – Luke 8:10

THE FURTHER I GO down this rabbit hole the more I see those sometimes archaic images, icons and parables, passed down through time for what they really are. All it takes is a bit of effort to see and hear the story these sometimes grotesquely out of place symbols are trying to tells us…to enlighten us, wake us up.

Wisdom
Case in point: Rockefeller Plaza in New York City. 

In 2009, on a visit to the Big Apple and on our way to Top of the Rock the absolute best way to take in the entire skyline of New York City BTW, we passed through the main entrance at 30 Rockefeller Square, the home of NBC.

As you enter the building peering down at you is a commanding low-relief panel carved into the limestone simply titled “Wisdom”. It was created by German born Lee Lawrie and is meant to represent the creative power of the Universe. The message underneath his spread fingers reads, “Wisdom and knowledge shall be the stability of thy times”…two golden spikes extend his fingers as if to emphasize the potency of those words.

Wisdom

Words of Wisdom

It wasn’t until a couple of years later that I drew a comparison to some of the other work I was doing.

The Baptism of Jesus
One of the more popular posts on my blog was the one where I drew the comparison between the baptism of Jesus and the Mayan 2012 prophecy. Suggesting that the icon of the event could be a visual representation of the alignment of the the Sun with the centre of our Galaxy and that perhaps this alignment is meant to bring forth some kind of “energy burst” from the heart of the Milky Way. (read more)

The Secret of Sion
According to William Henry in his book The Secret of Sion, Sion or Zion is not a hill in Palestine but is indeed the name of the centre of the Galaxy. Without giving away too much of Henry’s brilliant work, the message we have been given through the eons most recently by Jesus, is that we are all Gods trying to ignite our light bodies in order to make the trip back home, to our “promised land” in Sion, that bulge of light at the centre of the Milky Way.

Based on his research he speculates that some sort of Stargate or wormhole will open and let us pass through it to the galactic core once we have successfully attained our light body. (I urge you to order the book to get the full story. It’s available on the Kindle from Amazon.)

That’s when it hit me that maybe those golden spikes shooting out of Wisdom’s fingertips where meant to represent the same wisdom or enlightenment represented above Jesus’ head at his baptism! But it wasn’t until I backed up about 200 feet that I realized what those ‘spikes’ were pointed at…

The Jesus Prometheus Connection
Prometheus seems to be the target of Wisdom’s golden rays.

When you take in the bigger picture (below) on the right you can see the statue of Prometheus directly beneath Wisdom and wouldn’t you know it…Prometheus’ golden, dare I say “light body”, is standing in a man made waterfall! I am confident that the same encoded message of divine wisdom is being played out in both images, if you are willing to see it.

Are these 2 images mirrors of the same sacred event?

Let’s analyze this for a minute: both Jesus and Prometheus are considered champions of mankind. Both were sent by their Fathers to Earth and were subsequently tortured, Jesus at the hands of the Romans attached to a cross…Prometheus tormented by an eagle who pecked away at his liver daily while attached to a rock.

I am not suggesting that Jesus is Prometheus or vice versa. I believe that there is a strong possibility that both of these stories have a much older common beginning and that there is indeed merit to the concept of a return to Sion, Zion or heaven through the attainment of our light body.

Through the Door
It gets better. I went back through my 2009 pictures and discovered to my amazement what had been sitting there all along. Take a look at the picture below:

Click to enlarge

Up in the roof of the lobby, is William Henry’s wormhole, disappearing into the heavens. Men of all sizes struggling in vain to build a scaffolding, trying to make their way up into it. A futile task without your light body.

See and Hear
Meanwhile back outside… if everything I’ve presented here isn’t enough to stir your curiosity, take note of the 2 reliefs that flank both sides of Wisdom.

Meet ‘Light’ and ‘Sound’.

 

As if to ask you: Are you ready to see? Are you willing to hear?

So, are you ready? The Nous Age is here.

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