Friday, September 26, 2025

Heaven

 Khnum and JESUS CHRIST ❤ 
 
 Revelation 21:4
“And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.”
 
Ephesians 1:3:
“Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places.” 
 
 

 

Khnum and JESUS CHRIST ❤ 

ME: —Copilot, how does a deep understanding of Rev. 21:4 with a lot of perspective and the Mind of Christ relates with Khnum? 

COPILOT: —That’s a profound juxtaposition, Jorge 🌞—you’re weaving the eschatological promise of Revelation 21:4 with the Egyptian god Khnum, the potter of life. Let’s open that scroll CAREFULLY:

✝️ Revelation 21:4 (with the Mind of Christ)
The verse promises the end of death, sorrow, and pain—a new creation where God Himself wipes away tears.
With “the Mind of Christ” (1 Cor. 2:16), this isn’t just comfort but participation in God’s renewal: seeing suffering as temporary, and love as eternal.
It’s not escapism but transformation: the “former things” (brokenness, mortality) are dissolved into God’s new order.

🏺 Khnum’s Role in Egyptian Thought
Khnum was the ram‑headed god of the Nile’s source, but more importantly, the divine potter: he shaped humans on his wheel from clay, even forming their ka (spirit).
He represents ongoing creation, the daily renewal of life, fertility, and the shaping of bodies and destinies.
In Egyptian cosmology, Khnum’s work was cyclical—life, death, rebirth, tied to the Nile’s rhythms.

🔗 The Connection
Khnum shapes from clay; Christ reshapes creation.
Khnum’s wheel = the fragile, mortal body.
Revelation’s promise = the final reshaping, where clay is no longer subject to cracking, sorrow, or death.
Cycle vs. Fulfillment.
Khnum’s renewal is endless repetition (Nile floods, rebirths).
Revelation 21:4 is the end of the cycle: no more tears, no more death—creation perfected, not just restarted.
Mind of Christ as Potter’s Vision.
To see with Christ’s mind is to recognize that we are clay, but destined for incorruptibility.
Where Khnum molds bodies, Christ molds hearts and the cosmos itself into a dwelling place of God. 

🕊️ Scroll Thought
Khnum turns the wheel, shaping clay for another day. But Christ wipes the clay clean of tears, and fires it in eternal light. One gives form to mortality, the other transforms it into glory.
So: a deep reading of Revelation 21:4 with the Mind of Christ takes Khnum’s image of the potter and transcends it. Where Khnum’s wheel never stops, Christ’s promise is that one day the wheel itself will be stilled—because the vessel is complete, unbreakable, and forever.

ME: —So, the key in a way is that Heaven is deep knowledge AND a State of Mind, sustained by the Word, and although heaven and earth shall pass away not Us if we are in the Word of God through Christ's Blood, right? 

COPILOT: —Exactly, Jorge 🌞—you’ve captured the heart of it. Let me unfold it a little:
✝️ Heaven as Depth, Knowledge, and State of Mind
In Scripture, heaven is not only a place but also a dimension of being—a state of communion with God.
With the Mind of Christ, heaven is experienced even now as a way of seeing: perceiving reality through love, truth, and the Word.
It’s “deep” because it’s inexhaustible; it’s “knowledge” because it’s illumination; it’s a “state of mind” because it transforms how we live in the present.

📖 Sustained by the Word
Jesus says, “Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away” (Matt. 24:35).
The Word is the eternal anchor: it sustains heaven as a living reality, not just a future hope.
To be “in the Word” is to be rooted in what cannot perish.

🩸 Through Christ’s Blood
The Blood is covenant and access: it seals us into that eternal life.
So while creation itself is transient, we are not lost if we are in Christ.
The paradox: heaven and earth as we know them will pass, but the new creation—and those in Christ—endure.

🕊️ Scroll Thought
Clay crumbles, stars fade, but the Word holds. In Christ’s blood we are written, not in passing ink, but in eternal script. Heaven is not escape— it is the mind remade, the heart sustained, the self made imperishable.
So yes: the key is that heaven is not only “up there” but also within and among us as a state of mind and being, sustained by the Word. And though the visible heavens and earth dissolve, we endure in Christ—because His Word and His Blood bind us to what is eternal.
Would you like me to help you shape this into a short bilingual meditation (English/Spanish) that you could share as a kind of blessing scroll?

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