Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Paganism & Satanism Are Fake!

 


Paganism, Neo-Paganism, Satanism, and Modern Spiritual Movements:

An Analysis of Authenticity, Continuity, and the Limits of Reconstruction”



Table of Contents

  1. Introduction

  2. Historical Paganism and the Evidence Problem

  3. Neo-Paganism: Reconstruction or Reinvention

  4. Why I Believe Modern Paganism Is “Fake”

  5. Counterarguments and Alternative Views

  6. Christianity, Paganism, and the Charge of Imitation

  7. Modern Satanism and the Question of Continuity

  8. New Age and Modern Spiritualists

  9. Conclusion

  10. Footnotes

  11. Bibliography


1. Introduction

Paganism once referred to the diverse pre-Christian religions spread across Europe and the Mediterranean. Today it operates as a broad label for revived, reconstructed, or reimagined belief systems. When I look at modern paganism and its related movements, I do not see continuity with the ancient world. I see attempts to rebuild religions that left behind too little evidence to recover.

My claim is straightforward. Ancient pagan religions cannot be reconstructed with meaningful accuracy. Too much was lost, and the surviving material is fragmentary. Because of this, I argue that modern paganism is fake in the historical sense. It is a contemporary creation, shaped by modern imagination rather than preserved tradition.

This paper outlines the reasons for that conclusion, considers counterarguments, examines the frequent claim that Christianity copied paganism, and extends my analysis to modern Satanism, New Age spirituality, and contemporary spiritualism.


2. Historical Paganism and the Evidence Problem

Ancient pagan religions were local, oral, and diverse. They did not rely on centralized scriptures or structured theological systems. Most of what we know comes from:

  • archaeological remains

  • inscriptions

  • second-hand Greek, Roman, or Christian accounts

  • myths recorded centuries after the practices they describe

As Ronald Hutton notes, many ancient pagan practices “vanished without record, leaving only the faintest marks in the archaeological record.”¹

This produces a fundamental problem. We have objects and stories, but not the internal structure of the religions that produced them. Without preserved liturgies, priestly traditions, doctrinal systems, or continuous oral transmission, we cannot reconstruct their worldviews.


3. Neo-Paganism: Reconstruction or Reinvention

Modern neo-pagan movements—including Wicca, Druidry, and reconstructionist traditions—claim inspiration from the ancient world. Many describe their systems as revivals of “the old ways.”

Historically, however, most of these movements originated in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Romantic nationalism, occult revival, Theosophy, and modern esoteric literature played far larger roles in shaping them than archaeology or ancient texts. Wicca, for example, was crafted by Gerald Gardner in the twentieth century.

Reconstructionist groups attempt to use scholarly methods, but the available sources are incomplete, contradictory, and often written by Christian scribes long after the pre-Christian period. When evidence runs out, practitioners fill the gaps with subjective interpretation. This does not make their spirituality illegitimate, but it does make it modern rather than continuous with antiquity.


4. Why I Believe Modern Paganism Is “Fake”

My position rests on three main points.

First, ancient pagan religions cannot be accurately reconstructed. The evidence is insufficient.

Second, modern pagan traditions rely heavily on invention. They mix folklore, personal preference, modern spirituality, and selective fragments of ancient material.

Third, claims of continuity lack historical grounding. When someone says they follow “the old religion,” that claim is built on speculation rather than transmission.

This is why I describe modern paganism as fake in the historical sense. I am not attacking individuals. I am addressing the claim that modern practices continue ancient systems. In contrast, Christianity—especially in the Catholic and Orthodox traditions—maintains documented continuity from the first century.


5. Counterarguments and Alternative Views

Several counterarguments deserve fair consideration.

Reconstruction still holds value.
Some argue that religion evolves and that even partial reconstruction can be meaningful.

Authenticity is experiential.
Practitioners often emphasize personal spirituality over historical continuity.

Christianity adopted pagan customs.
Critics assert that Christian celebrations echo older pagan festivals.

Authenticity is a social construct.
Some scholars avoid evaluating authenticity because traditions change over time.

These arguments matter, yet they do not alter my conclusion that continuity requires evidence, and modern paganism lacks that evidence.


6. Christianity, Paganism, and the Charge of Imitation

A recurrent claim is that Christianity copied pagan religions or repackaged pagan festivals such as Christmas, Easter, or Halloween. I reject this argument for the same reason I question neo-pagan reconstruction: the evidence for ancient pagan practices is too fragmentary for such conclusions.

Similarities between cultural practices do not prove imitation. Symbolic overlap is common across civilizations. To demonstrate borrowing, one must show clear lines of transmission, and the evidence does not support such claims.

This is also why I find many neo-pagan accusations ironic. When some claim that Christians “stole” their holidays, I cannot take the claim seriously. In my view, they do not even possess the knowledge needed to make that accusation. They are building modern belief systems while insisting they represent ancient traditions. They claim continuity with pre-Christian pagans despite having no unbroken lineage, no preserved liturgy, and no authoritative doctrinal record.

From my perspective, this is why I often respond with disbelief or even laughter when neo-paganists insist that Christmas, Easter, or Halloween were taken from them. The irony is that they themselves do not know with certainty what historical paganism involved, because no one does. The evidence is too incomplete. So when they accuse Christianity of borrowing, they build an argument on traditions they are inventing in the present while claiming those traditions are ancient.

Christianity, by contrast, possesses written documentation, preserved liturgies, and apostolic continuity. The accusation of imitation rests on assumptions about a pagan past that cannot be reconstructed with confidence.


7. Modern Satanism and the Question of Continuity

My position on modern Satanism follows the same reasoning. These movements claim the mantle of an ancient adversarial tradition, but no such tradition existed. Before Christianity, Judaism portrayed Satan not as a cosmic enemy but as an accuser and tester under divine authority. No ancient cults worshipped Satan, and no rituals or liturgies existed around him.

The concept of Satan as God’s adversary develops within later Christian theology. Modern Satanism therefore cannot claim to continue any ancient religious system. It is a modern ideological creation, not a historical tradition.


8. New Age and Modern Spiritualists

New Age spirituality and modern spiritualism present themselves as carriers of “ancient wisdom,” yet their teachings are modern constructs. They combine elements from Hinduism, Buddhism, Hermeticism, Western esotericism, psychology, and personal intuition. Their references to antiquity are broad and often vague.

Modern spiritualism—channeling, energy healing, and spirit communication—arose in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, not in the ancient world. New Age beliefs often use Eastern concepts detached from the cultural and doctrinal frameworks that give them meaning.

From my perspective, these movements do not continue any ancient tradition. They borrow selectively, reinterpret freely, and then describe the result as timeless truth. They represent modern spirituality framed in archaic language.


9. Conclusion

My argument centers on authenticity and continuity. Ancient pagan religions cannot be reconstructed because the evidence is too fragmentary. Modern paganism—though meaningful for its practitioners—is a recent invention rather than a continuation of pre-Christian religion.

This same evidentiary gap undermines the claim that Christianity copied paganism. If ancient pagan religions cannot be reconstructed, then assertions of borrowing lack a foundation.

Modern Satanism lacks continuity because no ancient cult of Satan existed. New Age and spiritualist movements likewise present modern ideas as ancient teachings without historical support.

For me, continuity supported by evidence is the dividing line. Christianity maintains it. Modern paganism, Satanism, and New Age spirituality do not.


10. Footnotes

  1. Ronald Hutton, The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles (Oxford: Blackwell, 1991).

  2. Henry Chadwick, The Early Church (London: Penguin, 1967).


11. Bibliography

Hutton, Ronald. The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles. Blackwell, 1991.
https://global.oup.com/academic/product/the-pagan-religions-of-the-ancient-british-isles-9780631189466

Chadwick, Henry. The Early Church. Penguin, 1967.
https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/54907/the-early-church-by-chadwick-henry

MacCulloch, J. A. The Religion of the Ancient Celts. Constable, 1911.
https://archive.org/details/religionancient00maccuoft

Ward, Graham. The Christian Tradition. Cambridge University Press.
https://www.cambridge.org

Eliade, Mircea. A History of Religious Ideas. University of Chicago Press.
https://press.uchicago.edu

Monday, December 1, 2025

Author’s Note: Why I Returned to the Catholic Church**

 

Author’s Note:

Why I Returned to the Catholic Church**



I did not return to the Catholic Church because of sentiment, culture, or nostalgia. I returned—and remain—because Catholicism preserves the full, supernatural, cosmic, and historical worldview of ancient Christianity. It retains the worldview the apostles assumed, the Fathers proclaimed, and the early Church worshiped within: a world filled with angels and powers, a divine council surrounding God’s throne, and a destiny far greater than “dying and going to heaven.”

Many Evangelical and modern Protestant traditions tend to reduce salvation to a simple formula: accept Jesus, be forgiven, and go to heaven when you die. But the earliest Christians believed—and taught—something infinitely deeper, richer, and more awe-inspiring. Salvation was not merely rescue; it was participation. It was entry into God’s cosmic family, His heavenly council, and His eternal kingdom.

The Catholic Church never lost this vision.
It preserved it in its liturgy, in its sacraments, in its theology, and in its doctrine.

This is why I came back.


**1. The Ancient Christian Vision:

A Populated Heaven and a Cosmic Destiny**

From Genesis to Revelation, Scripture reveals a universe alive with spiritual beings—angels, thrones, dominions, principalities, powers—assembled around God in a celestial court. Humanity was made to join this council. As the Psalmist writes:

“You have made them a little lower than the angels,
and crowned them with glory and honor.”
— Psalm 8:5

The Fathers understood this as humanity’s intended destiny—to surpass even the angels through union with Christ.

St. Irenaeus taught:

“The Word of God, our Lord Jesus Christ… became what we are, that He might bring us to be even what He is.”
— Against Heresies 5. Preface

This is not “mere heaven.”
This is cosmic elevation.

It is the teaching that we will:

  • Reign with Christ (2 Tim 2:12; Rev 20:4)

  • Judge angels (1 Cor 6:3)

  • Become partakers of the divine nature (2 Pet 1:4)

  • Be “like Him” when we see Him as He is (1 John 3:2)

This is the language of theosis—a doctrine preserved faithfully in both the Catholic and Orthodox Churches.

St. Athanasius famously said:

“God became man so that man might become god.”
— On the Incarnation 54

Not “God by nature,” of course—
but God by grace, glorified and united to Him.

This remains Catholic teaching to this day.


**2. The Divine Council:

The Communion of Saints in Its Original Form**

What modern Christians call “saints,” the biblical authors saw as the “holy ones” of God—the heavenly council around His throne (Dan 7:9–10; Ps 82; Ps 89:6–7).

The Catholic Church preserved this worldview in its doctrine of the Communion of Saints—the belief that the Church on earth is mystically united with the Church in heaven and that the saints participate actively in God’s governance.

St. Cyril of Jerusalem wrote:

“We mention those who have fallen asleep… believing that their souls are alive with God and that they pray for us.”
— Catechetical Lectures 23.9

The early Christians called on martyrs and saints not out of superstition but because they believed—correctly—that the saints were aliveexalted, and already sharing in the life of the divine council.

Heaven, for the early Church, was not a cloudy afterlife but a kingdom, a courtroom, a temple, a family, and a government. And humanity was destined to join it.

Catholicism preserved this mystical, supernatural communion when much of the Christian world forgot it.


**3. Liturgy:

Where Heaven Touches Earth**

One of the greatest reasons I remain Catholic is that the Catholic Mass reveals the supernatural worldview of the early Church in its full power. The liturgy is not a meeting, not a lesson, not a memorial meal—it is participation in the heavenly liturgy described in Revelation 4–5.

St. John Chrysostom wrote:

“The angels surround the priest; the entire sanctuary is filled with the powers of heaven.”
— Homilies on Hebrews 17

During every Mass, Catholics join:

  • angels,

  • archangels,

  • thrones,

  • dominions,

  • saints,

  • martyrs,

  • apostles,

  • and the Mother of God

in a single cosmic act of worship.

Where else in Christianity do we see this vision preserved so clearly?

When the priest says,
With Angels and Archangels, and with all the hosts and powers of heaven,
he is not being poetic—he is stating metaphysical reality.

This is Christianity as the apostles knew it: a seen and unseen unity of heaven and earth.


**4. Christ the King:

Lord of Angels, Nations, and the Cosmos**

Protestantism often centers Jesus as personal Savior—which is essential—but Catholicism adds what Scripture also proclaims: Christ is King of the cosmos, ruler over the angelic powers and the nations (Eph 1:20–23).

The early Christians believed that Christ’s resurrection enthroned Him as head over the entire supernatural order.

St. Gregory of Nyssa writes:

“The dominion of the Lord extends over all rational and spiritual powers.”
— The Great Catechism 26

The Catholic Church, in her liturgical year, feasts, and prayers, continues to proclaim Christ not only as Savior but as cosmic King, enthroned above angels, principalities, and powers.

This is the biblical worldview.
This is the patristic worldview.
This is the Catholic worldview.

And it is breathtaking.


5. Why I Remain Catholic

I remain Catholic because it is the one place where:

  • the supernatural worldview of the apostles is intact,

  • the divine council becomes the Communion of Saints,

  • the heavenly liturgy becomes the Mass,

  • theosis remains the goal of salvation,

  • Christ’s kingship is cosmic,

  • and humanity’s destiny is nothing less than
    union with God and participation in His rule.

Modern Christianity often shrinks salvation down to an escape:
Believe → be forgiven → go to heaven.

Ancient Christianity taught something far grander:

“He has raised us up with Him,
and made us sit with Him in the heavenly places.”
— Ephesians 2:6

Not spectators.
Not passive residents of heaven.
But council members, rulers, glorified sons and daughters of God through Christ.

This is the Christianity of the Bible.
This is the Christianity of the Fathers.
And this is the Christianity the Catholic Church still teaches.

For me, there is nowhere else to go.

I came back because the Catholic Church preserves the beautiful, terrifying, supernatural, cosmic, and eternal vision of salvation that Christ Himself proclaimed.

And I remain because this worldview is not only true—
it is worth giving one’s life to.

Endnotes (Chicago Style)

  1. Michael S. Heiser, The Unseen Realm: Recovering the Supernatural Worldview of the Bible (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2015), 13–18.

  2. Ibid., 25–40.

  3. Catechism of the Catholic Church (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1997), §§328–336.

  4. Kallistos Ware, The Orthodox Way (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1995), 25–33.

  5. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, 3.8.3.

  6. Origen, De Principiis, 3.3.2–3.

  7. Cyril of Jerusalem, Catechetical Lectures, 23.9.

  8. Augustine, Expositions on the Psalms, Ps. 82.

  9. Heiser, Unseen Realm, 121–135.

  10. Catechism, §460 (quoting Athanasius, On the Incarnation).

  11. Ware, The Orthodox Way, 129–144.

  12. Athanasius, On the Incarnation, 54.

  13. Maximus the Confessor, Ambigua, 7.

  14. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, 5.36.1.

  15. Heiser, Unseen Realm, 113–120; 166–179.

  16. Col 1:16; Eph 1:20–23; Eph 6:12.

  17. Gregory of Nyssa, The Great Catechism, 26; Origen, Commentary on John, 1.28; Augustine, City of God, 10.15–19.

  18. Heiser, Unseen Realm, 275–288.

  19. Roman Missal, Preface Dialogue.

  20. The Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom, Anaphora.

  21. John Chrysostom, Homilies on Hebrews, 17.

  22. Cyril of Jerusalem, Catechetical Lectures, 23.10.

  23. Catechism, §§946–962.

  24. “Domine, Petre, ora pro nobis,” inscription in Catacombs of St. Sebastian, 3rd century.

  25. Jerome, Against Vigilantius, 6; Augustine, City of God, 22.10; Chrysostom, Homilies on 2 Corinthians, 26.


Bibliography (Chicago Style)

Primary Sources

Athanasius. On the Incarnation.
Augustine. City of God.
Augustine. Expositions on the Psalms.
Cyril of Jerusalem. Catechetical Lectures.
Gregory of Nyssa. The Great Catechism.
Irenaeus. Against Heresies.
Jerome. Against Vigilantius.
John Chrysostom. Homilies on Hebrews.
John Chrysostom. Homilies on 2 Corinthians.
Maximus the Confessor. Ambigua.
Origen. De Principiis.
Origen. Commentary on John.
The Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom.
The Roman Missal.

Secondary Sources

Catechism of the Catholic Church. Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1997.
Heiser, Michael S. The Unseen Realm: Recovering the Supernatural Worldview of the Bible. Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2015.
Ware, Kallistos. The Orthodox Way. Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1995.

The Divine Council Worldview & The Catholic Church: Critiquing Michael Heiser's Book "The Unseen Realm"

 


The Unseen Realm and the Historic Churches:

A Comparison with Catholic, Orthodox, and Patristic Teaching**

Introduction

Michael S. Heiser’s The Unseen Realm has helped many modern Christians recover a worldview that permeates Scripture but often goes unnoticed in Western Christianity: the divine council, the heavenly assembly of God’s celestial family who participate in His governance of creation. Heiser argues that modern readers, shaped by rationalism and post-Enlightenment assumptions, tend to overlook or downplay these supernatural elements.

But as a Catholic, my own interest in the divine council did not come through Heiser. I discovered this ancient worldview first through Eastern Orthodox apologetics, where the concepts of angelic hierarchy, theosis, and the heavenly liturgy are openly affirmed and richly developed. Only after encountering the divine council through Orthodox teaching did I later come across Heiser while researching the topic further.

This is important to clarify, because Heiser did not give me a supernatural worldview—I already held it through the historic Churches. What Heiser offered was additional scholarly support and biblical-exegetical clarity for ideas that the Catholic and Orthodox traditions have preserved from the beginning.

This article explores that connection. It compares Heiser’s core arguments with:

  • Catholic doctrine

  • Eastern Orthodox theology

  • the teaching of the Early Church Fathers

and it shows that the divine council worldview is not foreign to historic Christianity. On the contrary, it forms the hidden architecture beneath doctrines such as the Communion of Saints, the angelic hierarchy, the heavenly liturgy, and theosis/divinization.


1. The Divine Council and the Populated Heaven

Heiser’s Thesis

The Bible portrays a real and structured heavenly court—“sons of God,” holy ones, angels, watchers—who together form God’s celestial family and administrative council (Ps 82; Job 1; Dan 7; 1 Kings 22).

Catholic & Orthodox Teaching

Both Churches formally affirm:

  • a hierarchy of angels and spiritual powers,

  • a heavenly host that participates in God’s governance,

  • a liturgical assembly surrounding the throne of God,

  • and “angelic princes” over nations (as in Daniel 10).

Though they don’t typically use the term “divine council,” their doctrinal content is the same reality under older Christian vocabulary.

Patristic Echoes

Fathers such as:

  • Irenaeus,

  • Athanasius,

  • Origen,

  • Cyril of Jerusalem,

  • Gregory the Theologian,

  • Augustine

speak of the heavenly assembly as real, populated, and hierarchical. Early liturgies address God “together with the angelic powers” who stand before His throne.

In other words: Heiser “rediscovers,” through modern scholarship, what the historic Churches always taught.


2. Humanity’s Destiny: Ruling With God (Theosis)

Heiser’s Thesis

Humans were created as God’s imagers—meant to rule creation as part of His divine family. Salvation through Christ restores this vocation so that believers will one day judge angels and share Christ’s throne.

Catholic & Orthodox Teaching

This is simply the doctrine of theosis: humanity becoming “partakers of the divine nature” (2 Pet 1:4).

  • Catholics affirm this explicitly in the Catechism.

  • The Orthodox make it the central definition of salvation.

  • Both traditions teach that redeemed humanity will reign with Christ in glory.

Patristic Echoes

The Fathers are unanimous:

  • Athanasius: “God became man so that man might become god.”

  • Irenaeus: Christ restores humanity to its original royal vocation.

  • Maximus: Human destiny is deification by grace.

Heiser’s language of “joining the divine council” and “sharing divine rule” aligns cleanly with the patristic understanding of glorification.


3. Christ’s Victory Over the Powers

Heiser’s Thesis

The nations were allotted to spiritual beings (Deut 32). Many rebelled. Christ conquers these powers through the cross and resurrection, reclaiming the nations.

Catholic & Orthodox Teaching

This is classical Christian cosmology:

  • Real angelic/demonic powers influence earthly affairs.

  • Christ triumphs over them (Col 2:15).

  • Evangelization is a cosmic reclamation project.

  • Baptism, exorcism, and sacraments dethrone these powers in human lives.

Patristic Echoes

The Fathers interpret:

  • Daniel 10,

  • Ephesians 6,

  • Psalm 82,

  • Revelation,

as revealing a real supernatural conflict culminating in Christ’s victory.

Heiser’s work strongly parallels the patristic spiritual-warfare worldview.


4. The Heavenly Liturgy and the Earthly Liturgy

Heiser’s Thesis

Revelation offers a glimpse into the divine council gathered in worship, and earthly liturgy mirrors this heavenly assembly.

Catholic & Orthodox Teaching

This is explicit dogma:

  • The Mass and Divine Liturgy unite heaven and earth.

  • Worshipers join angels and saints in praise.

  • The earthly altar is mystically the heavenly altar.

The preface of the Mass:
“With Angels and Archangels, and with all the hosts and powers of heaven…”

Patristic Echoes

The earliest Christians understood worship as a real intersection of heaven and earth, and the Fathers consistently describe heavenly liturgy using council imagery.

This is one of the most direct points of overlap between Heiser and ancient Christianity.


**5. The Communion of Saints:

The Divine Council Fulfilled in the Church**

This is where Catholic and Orthodox theology goes beyond Heiser.

Heiser’s Thesis

He affirms a populated heaven but does not affirm intercession of departed believers, as he works within an evangelical framework.

Catholic & Orthodox Teaching

The saints are:

  • alive in Christ,

  • active in the heavenly court,

  • reigning and interceding,

  • linked to the Church on earth in a single communion.

Revelation 5 and 8 depict saints offering prayers before God—precisely the activity of a divine council.

Patristic Echoes

From the catacombs forward, Christians asked martyrs and saints to pray for them.
Fathers such as:

  • Cyril,

  • Chrysostom,

  • Jerome,

  • Augustine,

affirm the heavenly intercession of the saints.

Thus the Communion of Saints is the divine council perfected, expanded to include redeemed humanity.


6. Principal Differences

1. Method

Heiser: Scripture + ancient Near Eastern texts
Churches: Scripture within Tradition, liturgy, and conciliar teaching.

2. Terminology

Heiser embraces calling angels “gods.”
The Churches avoid the term for pastoral clarity, while affirming the same metaphysical reality.

3. Sacramental Life

Heiser does not incorporate sacraments into divine-council participation.
Catholic and Orthodox theology places sacraments at the center of our deification and readiness for heavenly participation.

4. Invocation of Saints

Heiser rejects invoking saints.
Catholics and Orthodox insist it is the natural outgrowth of understanding the divine council correctly.

5. Speculative Details

Heiser emphasizes Nephilim, giant clans, etc.
The Churches leave these interpretations open, not foundational.


**Conclusion:

Heiser Reconstructs What the Churches Preserve**

The most fruitful way to understand the relationship between The Unseen Realm and historic Christianity is this:

Heiser recovered—through scholarship—what the Catholic and Orthodox Churches never lost, but often stopped emphasizing.

The Bible’s supernatural worldview:

  • a populated heaven,

  • heavenly rulers over nations,

  • cosmic warfare,

  • angels and saints in liturgical assembly,

  • humanity destined for divine participation

is simply the biblical basis for doctrines like:

  • the Communion of Saints,

  • the angelic hierarchy,

  • the heavenly liturgy,

  • theosis,

  • and Christ’s cosmic kingship.

My own journey reflects this.
I encountered the divine council not through Heiser, but through the theology of the Eastern Orthodox Church. Only later did I discover Heiser, who—without intending to—confirmed much of what the ancient Church had been teaching since the earliest centuries.

In the end, the divine council worldview is not a fringe theory or an evangelical curiosity.
It is the oldest Christian worldview—the supernatural cosmos of the apostles, the Fathers, and the great liturgical traditions.

It is the world of Scripture as they saw it.
And it is the world restored in Christ.

Author’s Note:

Why I Returned to the Catholic Church**



I did not return to the Catholic Church because of sentiment, culture, or nostalgia. I returned—and remain—because Catholicism preserves the full, supernatural, cosmic, and historical worldview of ancient Christianity. It retains the worldview the apostles assumed, the Fathers proclaimed, and the early Church worshiped within: a world filled with angels and powers, a divine council surrounding God’s throne, and a destiny far greater than “dying and going to heaven.”

Many Evangelical and modern Protestant traditions tend to reduce salvation to a simple formula: accept Jesus, be forgiven, and go to heaven when you die. But the earliest Christians believed—and taught—something infinitely deeper, richer, and more awe-inspiring. Salvation was not merely rescue; it was participation. It was entry into God’s cosmic family, His heavenly council, and His eternal kingdom.

The Catholic Church never lost this vision.
It preserved it in its liturgy, in its sacraments, in its theology, and in its doctrine.

This is why I came back.


**1. The Ancient Christian Vision:

A Populated Heaven and a Cosmic Destiny**

From Genesis to Revelation, Scripture reveals a universe alive with spiritual beings—angels, thrones, dominions, principalities, powers—assembled around God in a celestial court. Humanity was made to join this council. As the Psalmist writes:

“You have made them a little lower than the angels,
and crowned them with glory and honor.”
Psalm 8:5

The Fathers understood this as humanity’s intended destiny—to surpass even the angels through union with Christ.

St. Irenaeus taught:

“The Word of God, our Lord Jesus Christ… became what we are, that He might bring us to be even what He is.”
Against Heresies 5. Preface

This is not “mere heaven.”
This is cosmic elevation.

It is the teaching that we will:

  • Reign with Christ (2 Tim 2:12; Rev 20:4)

  • Judge angels (1 Cor 6:3)

  • Become partakers of the divine nature (2 Pet 1:4)

  • Be “like Him” when we see Him as He is (1 John 3:2)

This is the language of theosis—a doctrine preserved faithfully in both the Catholic and Orthodox Churches.

St. Athanasius famously said:

“God became man so that man might become god.”
On the Incarnation 54

Not “God by nature,” of course—
but God by grace, glorified and united to Him.

This remains Catholic teaching to this day.


**2. The Divine Council:

The Communion of Saints in Its Original Form**

What modern Christians call “saints,” the biblical authors saw as the “holy ones” of God—the heavenly council around His throne (Dan 7:9–10; Ps 82; Ps 89:6–7).

The Catholic Church preserved this worldview in its doctrine of the Communion of Saints—the belief that the Church on earth is mystically united with the Church in heaven and that the saints participate actively in God’s governance.

St. Cyril of Jerusalem wrote:

“We mention those who have fallen asleep… believing that their souls are alive with God and that they pray for us.”
Catechetical Lectures 23.9

The early Christians called on martyrs and saints not out of superstition but because they believed—correctly—that the saints were alive, exalted, and already sharing in the life of the divine council.

Heaven, for the early Church, was not a cloudy afterlife but a kingdom, a courtroom, a temple, a family, and a government. And humanity was destined to join it.

Catholicism preserved this mystical, supernatural communion when much of the Christian world forgot it.


**3. Liturgy:

Where Heaven Touches Earth**

One of the greatest reasons I remain Catholic is that the Catholic Mass reveals the supernatural worldview of the early Church in its full power. The liturgy is not a meeting, not a lesson, not a memorial meal—it is participation in the heavenly liturgy described in Revelation 4–5.

St. John Chrysostom wrote:

“The angels surround the priest; the entire sanctuary is filled with the powers of heaven.”
Homilies on Hebrews 17

During every Mass, Catholics join:

  • angels,

  • archangels,

  • thrones,

  • dominions,

  • saints,

  • martyrs,

  • apostles,

  • and the Mother of God

in a single cosmic act of worship.

Where else in Christianity do we see this vision preserved so clearly?

When the priest says,
With Angels and Archangels, and with all the hosts and powers of heaven,
he is not being poetic—he is stating metaphysical reality.

This is Christianity as the apostles knew it: a seen and unseen unity of heaven and earth.


**4. Christ the King:

Lord of Angels, Nations, and the Cosmos**

Protestantism often centers Jesus as personal Savior—which is essential—but Catholicism adds what Scripture also proclaims: Christ is King of the cosmos, ruler over the angelic powers and the nations (Eph 1:20–23).

The early Christians believed that Christ’s resurrection enthroned Him as head over the entire supernatural order.

St. Gregory of Nyssa writes:

“The dominion of the Lord extends over all rational and spiritual powers.”
The Great Catechism 26

The Catholic Church, in her liturgical year, feasts, and prayers, continues to proclaim Christ not only as Savior but as cosmic King, enthroned above angels, principalities, and powers.

This is the biblical worldview.
This is the patristic worldview.
This is the Catholic worldview.

And it is breathtaking.


5. Why I Remain Catholic

I remain Catholic because it is the one place where:

  • the supernatural worldview of the apostles is intact,

  • the divine council becomes the Communion of Saints,

  • the heavenly liturgy becomes the Mass,

  • theosis remains the goal of salvation,

  • Christ’s kingship is cosmic,

  • and humanity’s destiny is nothing less than
    union with God and participation in His rule.

Modern Christianity often shrinks salvation down to an escape:
Believe → be forgiven → go to heaven.

Ancient Christianity taught something far grander:

“He has raised us up with Him,
and made us sit with Him in the heavenly places.”
Ephesians 2:6

Not spectators.
Not passive residents of heaven.
But council members, rulers, glorified sons and daughters of God through Christ.

This is the Christianity of the Bible.
This is the Christianity of the Fathers.
And this is the Christianity the Catholic Church still teaches.

For me, there is nowhere else to go.

I came back because the Catholic Church preserves the beautiful, terrifying, supernatural, cosmic, and eternal vision of salvation that Christ Himself proclaimed.

And I remain because this worldview is not only true—
it is worth giving one’s life to.

Endnotes (Chicago Style)

  1. Michael S. Heiser, The Unseen Realm: Recovering the Supernatural Worldview of the Bible (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2015), 13–18.

  2. Ibid., 25–40.

  3. Catechism of the Catholic Church (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1997), §§328–336.

  4. Kallistos Ware, The Orthodox Way (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1995), 25–33.

  5. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, 3.8.3.

  6. Origen, De Principiis, 3.3.2–3.

  7. Cyril of Jerusalem, Catechetical Lectures, 23.9.

  8. Augustine, Expositions on the Psalms, Ps. 82.

  9. Heiser, Unseen Realm, 121–135.

  10. Catechism, §460 (quoting Athanasius, On the Incarnation).

  11. Ware, The Orthodox Way, 129–144.

  12. Athanasius, On the Incarnation, 54.

  13. Maximus the Confessor, Ambigua, 7.

  14. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, 5.36.1.

  15. Heiser, Unseen Realm, 113–120; 166–179.

  16. Col 1:16; Eph 1:20–23; Eph 6:12.

  17. Gregory of Nyssa, The Great Catechism, 26; Origen, Commentary on John, 1.28; Augustine, City of God, 10.15–19.

  18. Heiser, Unseen Realm, 275–288.

  19. Roman Missal, Preface Dialogue.

  20. The Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom, Anaphora.

  21. John Chrysostom, Homilies on Hebrews, 17.

  22. Cyril of Jerusalem, Catechetical Lectures, 23.10.

  23. Catechism, §§946–962.

  24. “Domine, Petre, ora pro nobis,” inscription in Catacombs of St. Sebastian, 3rd century.

  25. Jerome, Against Vigilantius, 6; Augustine, City of God, 22.10; Chrysostom, Homilies on 2 Corinthians, 26.


Bibliography (Chicago Style)

Primary Sources

Athanasius. On the Incarnation.
Augustine. City of God.
Augustine. Expositions on the Psalms.
Cyril of Jerusalem. Catechetical Lectures.
Gregory of Nyssa. The Great Catechism.
Irenaeus. Against Heresies.
Jerome. Against Vigilantius.
John Chrysostom. Homilies on Hebrews.
John Chrysostom. Homilies on 2 Corinthians.
Maximus the Confessor. Ambigua.
Origen. De Principiis.
Origen. Commentary on John.
The Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom.
The Roman Missal.

Secondary Sources

Catechism of the Catholic Church. Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1997.
Heiser, Michael S. The Unseen Realm: Recovering the Supernatural Worldview of the Bible. Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2015.
Ware, Kallistos. The Orthodox Way. Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1995.

Monday, November 24, 2025

The Lost Gospel

 


Christ the World’s True King: How the Bible Reveals His Mission to Reclaim the Nations and Restore Humanity

Many people know the Christian message only in a narrow form: Jesus forgives sins and opens the way to heaven. This is true, but it is only a small part of a much larger story. The Bible, ancient Judaism, the earliest Christians, and many modern scholars all affirm a deeper and more surprising worldview — one that explains the world’s religions, humanity’s spiritual struggles, and the true meaning of Christ’s mission.

This worldview begins with an ancient biblical idea: God placed the nations under the care of heavenly beings, those beings fell into corruption, and Christ came to reclaim the nations and restore humanity to its original glory. My article "THE DIVINE COUNCIL, THE COMMUNION OF SAINTS, & the Gospel" affirms this clearly: “God placed other heavenly beings over the nations… these ‘sons of God’ became corrupt, leading to idolatry.”

The story is profound, but also simple. And for people curious about the Christian faith — seekers, skeptics, or believers from other traditions — this fuller vision of the Gospel opens doors that the reduced modern version often leaves shut.


The Bible’s Story of the Nations: God’s Plan, Angelic Guardians, Human Confusion

According to Deuteronomy 32:8–9 (in its oldest textual form), God “fixed the borders of the peoples according to the number of the sons of God.” This means that each nation was placed under a guardian from God’s heavenly council. Ancient Jewish texts like Sirach, Jubilees, and the Dead Sea Scrolls confirm this. So do modern scholars such as Mark S. Smith, John J. Collins, and Alan Segal, who show that early Judaism saw the world as spiritually structured, not spiritually empty.

Yet something went wrong.

Psalm 82 shows God standing in judgment over these heavenly rulers, accusing them of ruling unjustly and leading peoples astray. The article I provided in the above link summarizes this well: “These ‘sons of God’ became corrupt — leading to idolatry, injustice, and divine judgment.”

In other words, the “gods of the nations” were not imaginary. They were real beings who failed God, demanded worship, and became the spiritual forces behind the world’s polytheistic religions.

This is why the world’s spiritual map is so diverse — and so confused.


Jesus and the Kingdom of God: The Great Reversal

When Jesus appears in history saying, “The kingdom of God is at hand,” He is not speaking in vague metaphors. He is announcing a change in cosmic government. He is declaring that the time has come for the true God to reclaim the nations from their corrupt spiritual rulers.

This explains many otherwise puzzling details in the Gospels:

  • Why demons panic in Jesus’ presence

  • Why Jesus links His miracles to the arrival of God’s kingdom

  • Why Satan offers Jesus “all the kingdoms of the world”

  • Why Jesus’ resurrection and ascension are described in royal terms

Daniel 7 provides the key: the “Son of Man” is enthroned among the heavenly beings and given authority over all nations. Scholars such as N. T. Wright and Larry Hurtado argue that the early Christians saw Jesus’ ascension as exactly this moment — His enthronement over every spiritual power in heaven and earth.

My article "THE DIVINE COUNCIL, THE COMMUNION OF SAINTS, & the Gospel" mirrors this understanding: “Jesus enters and reorganizes the Divine Council at His ascension.”

According to this biblical worldview, the Gospel is not just forgiveness. It is a rescue mission for the whole world.


Humanity’s Restoration: Our Destiny Is Higher Than We Imagine

The Bible teaches that humans were created not merely to survive, but to rule creation with God. That destiny was derailed — but in Christ, it is restored.

The New Testament says:

  • Believers are seated with Christ in the heavenly places (Eph 2:6).

  • They will judge angels (1 Cor 6:3).

  • They will reign with Christ (2 Tim 2:12).

The early Church Fathers — Irenaeus, Athanasius, and Augustine — all taught that redeemed humanity will replace the fallen angels in God’s heavenly government. My article affirms this explicitly: “Humanity is saved not merely from damnation but into participation in God’s heavenly governance.”

This is not metaphor. It is humanity’s destiny.

To enter this destiny, Christians participate in the New Covenant through:

  • Baptism (the entrance into God’s family, analogous to circumcision),

  • Faith and loyalty to Christ,

  • Sanctification, the lifelong process of becoming more like God,

  • Perseverance, remaining faithful to the King who redeemed us.

This is the ancient Gospel — a transformative journey, not a legal transaction. As my article says: “Salvation is not only forgiveness; it is transformation — divinization.”


Counterarguments and Gentle Responses

This worldview is rich and ancient, but it raises honest questions. Here are simple responses that work well in interfaith dialogue, apologetics, or evangelization.


Objection 1: “This sounds like polytheism.”

Response:
The Bible teaches one Creator and many created heavenly beings. This is the worldview of:

  • the Psalms,

  • the prophets,

  • Jesus,

  • Paul, and

  • ancient Judaism.

It is not polytheism — it is biblical monotheism.


Objection 2: “Why would God put angels over nations?”

Response:
Because God shares His work, as any good king does. This structure explains:

  • different religious traditions,

  • different spiritual experiences,

  • and the sense that nations have “gods” or destinies.

Christ’s mission is the healing of this fractured system.


Objection 3: “Protestants say salvation is only legal. Isn’t this adding too much?”

Response:
A purely legal model cannot explain:

  • judging angels,

  • reigning with Christ,

  • sharing divine nature,

  • or sitting with Christ in heaven.

These are New Testament teachings. A full Gospel includes both forgiveness and transformation.


Objection 4: “Isn’t this mythology?”

Response:
This worldview is:

  • the Bible’s own worldview,

  • the worldview of Jesus and His apostles,

  • the worldview of early Christian theology,

  • and supported by modern biblical scholarship across traditions.

It is not mythology. It is the scriptural story.


Conclusion: The Gospel in One Line

Jesus came to defeat the fallen spiritual powers, win back the nations, restore humanity to God’s family, and raise us into His heavenly council.

This is the Gospel that shaped ancient Israel, the early Church, and the New Testament.
This is the Gospel that explains the world’s spiritual history.
This is the Gospel that invites every person — of any culture or faith — to join God’s kingdom.

Footnotes

  1. The Divine Council, the Communion of Saints, & the Gospel, ch. 3.

  2. Mark S. Smith, The Origins of Biblical Monotheism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001), https://global.oup.com.

  3. John J. Collins, The Apocalyptic Imagination (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1998), https://eerdmans.com.

  4. Alan F. Segal, Two Powers in Heaven (Leiden: Brill, 1977), https://brill.com.

  5. Divine Council, ch. 3.

  6. N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1996), https://fortresspress.com.

  7. Larry Hurtado, Lord Jesus Christ (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2003), https://eerdmans.com.

  8. Divine Council, ch. 2.

  9. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, 5.36; Athanasius, On the Incarnation; Augustine, City of God, Book X–XI.

  10. Divine Council, ch. 1.

  11. Divine Council, citing CCC 1213.

  12. Divine Council, ch. 5.


Chicago-Style Bibliography (With Hyperlinks)

Athanasius. On the Incarnation.
https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/2802.htm

Augustine. City of God.
https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/120110.htm

Collins, John J. The Apocalyptic Imagination. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1998.
https://eerdmans.com

Hurtado, Larry. Lord Jesus Christ: Devotion to Jesus in Earliest Christianity. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2003.
https://eerdmans.com

Irenaeus. Against Heresies.
https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/0103.htm

Segal, Alan F. Two Powers in Heaven. Leiden: Brill, 1977.
https://brill.com

Smith, Mark S. The Origins of Biblical Monotheism. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001.
https://global.oup.com

Wink, Walter. Naming the Powers: The Language of Power in the New Testament. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1984.
https://fortresspress.com

Wright, N. T. Jesus and the Victory of God. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1996.
https://fortresspress.com

The Divine Council, the Communion of Saints, & the Gospel. (Uploaded PDF.)