FaithinQuestion.
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Centuries before the birth of the Christ a vast sect believed that humanity was a fallen creation and so emerged the story of Adam and Eve. As written, our ancestors sinned against God and in response God banished them from the garden to therefore live in hardship. The repercussions of this ancient understanding are filtered through the churches to this day.
Because Jesus’ life and death was viewed through the looking glass of the ancient’s who perceived the world as fallen, it was only natural that Jesus would be understood as the Messiah who reconciles humanity by dying for our sins. However, at a closer look, the message of the Christ reveals so much more. Jesus life was a sacrifice of love. Everyday he lived; he breathed love with every act and with everything that he taught. All that he said and all that he did was always the movement of love. Love is the most powerful force in the universe. Would Jesus revert to anything less mighty? With it, he teaches us to move mountains. Now, he waits for us to move them.
The pages of the “Redemption Key” present a different looking glass for perceiving the creation and the creator. It is not based on a vision painted hundreds of years before the birth of the Christ, but based on the message and vision of the Christ, himself. Opposed to a fallen creation trying to make our way back into the garden or even back into the graces of God, Jesus proposed something extraordinary. However his message was and remains obscured by the looking glass of the ancients. Opposed to finding our way back into the lost paradise, Jesus teaches us to create the kingdom of the Father on earth as it is in heaven. With his every breath, Jesus demonstrates that our purpose is not simply to find our way back home to the Father but to build the Father's home here on earth. That is the biggest miracle of all. “Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.” Jesus says to those who follow him that they will do greater things than he.
Opposed to a fallen creation, the work ahead is an appeal for seeing again through the looking glass of a loving Father who creates with a purpose and for a purpose. Jesus hands this lens to us. But how much easier it was for us to accept the fallen human and an angry father; opposed to accepting the loved human and the loving Father that Jesus unveils. Less apt to be here on a quest to find our way back home because of a mistake, we are here to build and mistakes will be made. All is for a reason and a purpose. Hence, the “Redemption Key” builds on the platform that we are on purpose not trying to find our way back home, but on a mission with and through the Christ to build home on earth as it is in heaven. Although we may never know the Father’s reason in this life, if we could only see the other side of our trials and tribulations, we would say yes to this world again and again. Unfolding the hurts created and perpetuated by ancient perceptions, the "Redemption Key" holds them against the light of twelve promises of the Father’s love as revealed in the Son.







Troubled by the feeling that something was wrong, Rev. Douglas Sweet left behind his obligations as an active Catholic priest in exchange for pursuing the underlying reason for his unrest. Leading him into three years of isolation, his passion drove him to discover that the essential truth of Jesus cross is buried beneath the misperceptions of ancient time and interpretations. In effect,
We have lost sight of the kingdom to which he pointed.
We have misunderstood the gates that he opened and why he died.
Consequently, the underlying strength of the cross has been held to silence. The mission of the Son was to bring love forward; that is what changes the world. However, opposed to living in the solution, for two-thousand years we have lived with our focus set on fixing the problems of sin and evil. As a result, opposed to realizing the full conquest of the Son, our precepts and practices have been the root cause for perpetuating fear and spiritual oppression.
