Why Do People Need a Referent?

An Opthēan Reflection on Meaning, Center, and the Field

We don’t often think about it directly, but every human life orbits around something.

A god.
A flag.
A tradition.
A cause.
A person.
A wound.

We need something at the center of our story—some axis of meaning that lets us say:
“This is where I stand.”
“This is who I am.”
“This is what matters.”

That something—whatever it is—functions as a referent.

It orients us.
It organizes our sense of truth.
It absorbs our fear.
It holds our belonging.

And if it’s removed—suddenly or slowly—we don’t just become uncertain.
We unravel.

This is not a flaw in humanity.

It is a feature.

Human consciousness emerged in a world that doesn’t come pre-labeled with purpose or coherence. We are born into motion, conflict, ambiguity, mortality—and we have to make sense of it. Fast.

So we reach—instinctively, urgently—for something that explains it all.
Something stable.
Something shared.
Something bigger than ourselves that makes the fragments fit.

That’s the role the gods played.
That’s the role the nation now plays.
That’s why political ideology and conspiracy theory and nationalism feel religious.
Because they serve the same psychic function:
a referent to relieve the terror of chaos.

Let’s name the layers clearly:

Why do people need a referent?

1. Orientation
The mind can’t function in open space.
A referent gives us direction—intellectually, morally, spiritually.

2. Accountability
It gives us something outside ourselves to judge against, to lean on, to surrender to.
We don’t want the burden of total moral authorship.

3. Containment of Fear
Existential fear—of death, of randomness, of aloneness—is unbearable without a container.
A referent absorbs it.

4. Narrative Coherence
It lets us tell a story about our lives:
Why we suffer.
Why we matter.
What it all means.

And when the referent collapses?
We don’t become enlightened.
We become fragmented.
We grab at anything that offers a substitute—
even if it’s violent, dishonest, or dehumanizing.
Because any center is better than no center.

This is why people align themselves with Zionism, nationalism, tribalism, ideologies of purity.
Not because they are evil—
but because they are terrified of not having a center.

And they’ve been taught that only fixed, external, personified referents are real.

The Opthēan Turn

Opthē does not deny the human need for a referent.
But we do reject the myth that it must be a throne.

We say:

The referent is real—because we make it real.
Not by inventing it, but by living it.
Not by personifying it, but by practicing it.
Not by handing it down, but by building it together.

Opthē does not replace God with an idea.
We replace God with a field:
A dynamic, relational structure of coherence that emerges between people
when they live in alignment with truth, love, and responsibility.

This is not easier.

This is harder.
But it’s also truer.
And it doesn’t kill anyone.

We are not inviting people into a new dogma.
We are inviting them into a new way of holding meaning—
not as possession, but as presence.
Not as identity, but as shared responsibility.

The referent still exists.
It just no longer sits on a throne.

It now lives in how we show up.
How we listen.
How we hold each other when the old certainties collapse.
It lives in us—if we are willing to carry it together.

And when people encounter that presence,
they won’t need to understand it right away.
They’ll feel it.
They’ll recognize that something real is here.

That’s what we mean when we say:
Coherence is very near to you.

When Meaning Collapses

There will come a moment when something breaks in your life.

Maybe it’s a fire, a diagnosis, a flood, or a death.
Maybe it’s quieter: a slow unraveling, a private loss, a moment when what you trusted just... vanishes.

In that moment, many people ask, “Where is God?”

And they don’t mean it as theology.
They mean: Why did this happen? What does it mean? Where do I go now?

Most religions will answer that question with some version of, “God has a plan.”
But in Opthē, we do not believe that.
Not because we are bitter or rebellious, but because we are honest.

We live in a universe shaped by entropy.
Things fall apart—not because they’re evil, but because everything does.
And because they are real.

And we do not believe in a God who controls it all from above.
We believe in sacred coherence
the meaning we make together in the face of what we cannot control.

So when someone cries out:

“What do I do now?”
We say: What do you need to do?

“Where do I turn?”
We say: Where do you need to turn?

“Does any of this mean anything?”
We say: Your meaning or mine? Because neither comes from the sky. Both are made here.

We don’t give quick answers.
We stay. We witness. We refuse to abandon.

And we say this:

You are not alone.
And that is not a burden—it is your belonging.
You can’t do whatever you want, because your life touches other lives.
And your meaning is not a private possession—it is a shared fire.

In Opthē, we believe that sacredness isn’t handed down.
It is praxised—lived into, embodied, made real by the way we care for one another when the sky is silent.

We don’t offer certainty.
We offer formation.
We train our souls in coherence
so that when meaning collapses, we don’t have to look up.

We are the meaning we’ve praxised becoming.

Would you like me to save this now as the final version for Oratory?

Ask ChatGPT

When the World Forgets, the Monastery Remembers

(with clarity of sacred designation, a vow of serious presence, and a knowing smile)

There are times in human history when the light dims across the land.

When truth is no longer sought but sold.
When stories do not bind us together, but fracture us further.
When love is mistaken for indulgence, and cruelty for strength.
When the word sacred is applied to flags, profits, weapons, and personalities—
and rarely to life, or care, or truth.

We are in such a time now.

And when the world forgets itself—its coherence, its conscience, its shared meaning—something ancient and stubborn must rise again.
Not in protest.
Not in nostalgia.
But in remembrance.

This is why we are building a monastery.

Not a monastery of stone alone—though we honor groundedness.
Not a monastery of silence alone—though we honor listening.

But a monastery of presence.
Of chesed.
Of deliberate coherence in an age of distortion.

A monastery of seriousness, too—
because the world is doped, dulled, numbed by screens, spectacle, and sedatives of every kind.
We are here to wake. To stay awake. To help others remember what clarity feels like.
(And maybe to remind them that seriousness doesn’t mean grim—
just that joy tastes better when it isn’t laced with denial.
)

A monastery not because we have divine orders,
but because we have the agency to change our world—
and we have chosen to name what matters and to live by it.

Not everything is sacred.
And that’s the point.
To call something sacred is to mark it as worthy of care, of clarity, of commitment.
Not because the universe said so.
Because we do—together, in shared conscience.

We do not build this place to escape the world.

We build it so the world might one day remember itself.

Just as monastics once copied texts by candlelight when empires fell and libraries burned,
we now tend to the fragile scrolls of meaning,
we inscribe coherence into culture wherever we can,
we remind ourselves and others what love feels like,
what responsibility looks like,
what truth tastes like.

(And occasionally, what a good glass of wine feels like
when shared with someone who actually listens.
)

We do not promise salvation.
We do not perform purity.
We do not entertain.

We refuse to disappear.

We remember.
We designate.
We live seriously.
We laugh when we can.
We honor what is truly sacred—not by decree, but by devotion.
And when the world is ready to feel again,
to hunger for meaning,
to listen without flinching—

we will still be here.
Tending the fire.
Keeping the memory.
Living the coherence.

We Refuse to Look Away From the Face of Gaza

There comes a time in every honest life—every coherent life—when what we see can no longer be unseen. When the glass clears, and reality stares back with such brutal clarity that we are changed.

Gaza is that moment.

Gaza is the threshold.
And we refuse to look away.

We are told it is complicated. That it’s a conflict. That it’s about security. That the numbers aren’t verified. That Hamas is the reason children are dying. That civilians are being used as shields. That proportionality is subjective. That context is everything.

We’ve heard it all.
And we are done pretending that confusion is anything but cowardice.

This is not war.
This is not self-defense.
This is the coordinated, deliberate erasure of a people—their homes, their land, their history, their bodies, their memory.

This is genocide.
This is ethnic cleansing.
And the world is doing everything it can to look away.

The governments that praise human rights and rule of law are funding the murder of poets, mothers, students, surgeons, toddlers.
The media that framed Ukraine as sacred ground for democracy can’t bring itself to name that Gaza has been a prison camp for decades.

We are not confused. We are not neutral.
We are coherent—and coherence will not let us lie to ourselves or look away.

We are citizens of nations that give weapons to the killers, shelter to the strategists, and silence to the survivors.
And so our clarity costs us. And it must.

We declare this now:

We will not look away.
We will not let this horror pass into silence.
We will not return to normal.
We will carry Gaza with us in every act of speech, every thread of ritual, every sacred gathering.

Our spiritual life will remain fractured until this wound is named and reckoned with.
We do not worship the God of comfort. We do not serve the lie of safety.
We serve truth. We serve coherence. We serve love—and that love cannot rest until justice is done.

We vow to:

  • Keep our attention fixed on Gaza—especially when the headlines disappear.

  • Speak the truth of what we see—even when it costs us.

  • Withdraw consent, funds, and presence from every institution that participates in this atrocity.

  • Grieve publicly, without apology.

  • Create rituals that remember, resist, and restore.

  • Call for justice—not in theory, but in prosecution: for the U.S., for Israel, for every hand that pulled the trigger or supplied the bomb.

  • Refuse peace that requires amnesia.

We know this will take years. Maybe lifetimes.
But we are no longer those who wait for justice to be popular before we speak it.

This is our vow:

We will keep our attention on Gaza.
We will not look away.
And we will not rest until justice is done—no matter how long it takes.

You Don’t Need a Magic Sky Person to Be Kind

Some people grow up hearing that there’s an invisible person in the sky watching everything they do.
They say this being made the world, makes the rules, and decides who’s good or bad.
They say if you follow the rules, you’ll be rewarded.
And if you don’t—you’ll be punished.
Maybe forever.

Even people who don’t believe this anymore still carry it around inside them—quietly, like background music.
They think love has to be deserved.
They think kindness only matters if it’s part of a bigger system.
They think the world is watching, judging, keeping score.

But here’s the truth—simple, hard, and beautiful:

You don’t need a god to be kind.
You don’t need a holy book to care.
You don’t need a religion to know what love is.
You don’t need a sky person to tell you what is sacred.
You already know.

You know it when someone forgives you instead of punishing you.
You know it when someone shares their last piece of pie.
You know it when you’re safe in someone’s arms—not because you deserve it, but because they choose to be that kind of person.

That’s the real miracle.
Not walking on water.
Not thunder from the heavens.
But when a regular person says:

“I choose love. I choose care. I choose us.

Imagine a world:

  • Where it’s okay to need help

  • Where people share what they have

  • Where no one has to be perfect to be welcome

  • Where it’s okay to be wrong

That kind of world doesn’t need to come from some heaven.
It can be built. By us.
Right here.
Right now.

Some people might call that heaven.
We call it coherence.
We call it the realm of unconditional love.
And we believe it’s sacred—not because a god says so, but because WE say so.
Because we choose it.
Because it brings life.
Because it makes sense.

You don’t need to believe in a divine plan to live a meaningful life.
You don’t need to be religious to live with grace.
You don’t need to be perfect to be loved.

You just need to want a better world—and to have enough Imagination to live like it’s already here.

And it is.

Becoming Used to Genocide: A Lament for the American Soul

There was a time when genocide shattered the moral silence. Now, it hums in the background—steady, banal, ambient.

Gaza is dying. And the world knows. That’s the horror. We know. We know and do nothing. We scroll, sip coffee, change tabs.

This is not a plea for awareness. It’s a funeral for what awareness has become.

Because the truth is, genocide has become routine. Children pulled from rubble no longer spark protest. They are content. They are data.

And those of us who still care—who still feel the burn of it—we are exhausted. Not by empathy, but by the endless ritual of screaming into the void while men in suits tell us this is peacekeeping.

Israel, with American assistance is committing genocide in Gaza.

Say it again. Let it hurt. Let the words rot in your mouth if they must—but don’t let them fade.

Because the most dangerous thing is not the bombs. Not the starvation. Not even the propaganda.

It is the numbing. The normalization. The consent by silence.

This is how atrocity succeeds: not when people cheer it, but when they stop noticing. When they sigh and say, "It’s complicated." When they shrug and say, "What can I do?" When they turn away because to look is too much—and too little.

Let us say it clearly: The American people have made peace with murder.

Not in secret, but in plain sight. And the churches are quiet. The synagogues are split. The universities are muzzled. And the White House shines blue and white.

But there is a voice that still speaks. Not from the center of empire, but from the scorched edge of conscience. It says:

"You are becoming used to genocide." "This is what it feels like when a soul dies slowly."

And Opthē will not participate in that death.

We refuse the moral sleep. We refuse the sanitizing language. We refuse to pretend that both sides are equal when one side is buried beneath the rubble of another’s ambition.

To those who say, "It’s complicated," we answer:

It’s not complicated to starve a child. It’s not complicated to bomb a hospital. It’s not complicated to bulldoze a home and shoot the ones who run. It's not complicated to murder starving people seeking food scraps and water. 

What’s complicated is how to go on living with yourself afterward.

This is not political. This is not about strategy. This is about coherence. About sacred clarity. About refusing to let the world slide into a new normal where genocide is just another item in the news, or a political tool.

If sacredness means anything, it means this: Every life matters even when it is inconvenient. Every child’s face is sacred even when it is Palestinian.

This is a funeral for the numbness. For the deadened nerve of the Western conscience.

May we resurrect what remains of our sacred sight. May we choose to hurt rather than to forget.

And may those who are still breathing in Gaza know: we see you. We mourn with you. We have not made peace with your death.

And we will not be silent.

Not now. Not ever.

Religion That is For Real Again

Across centuries, the figure of Yeshua has been distorted, deified, wielded, and mythologized—rendered unrecognizable to the very tradition that birthed him. But through the lens of sacred coherence, a different image re-emerges: not a supernatural messiah, not a divine fixer, but a Jewish teacher of hesed whose movement was a radical intensification of the best in his tradition.

Yeshua did not reject Judaism. He deepened it.
He did not abolish Torah; he enacted it with visceral compassion.
He did not claim divine status; he practiced ethical clarity.
He did not invite belief in a kingdom; he invited people to live it—injustice disrupted, love made flesh, shame dissolved.

This is not a theological concession. It is a reclaiming. A healing. A remembering of the path that was lost when empire baptized him into triumphalism and painted halos where calloused skin once bore the dust of Galilee.

This matters now because the world is unraveling.
Not just in policy or politics, but in meaning.
Not just in spirit, but in story.

And religion, as it has too often existed, has no answer. Because it has traded its prophetic roots for metaphysical games and moral bribery. It has made gods of noise and forgotten that the sacred is ineffable, not inefficacious. It has tried to sell heaven while the earth burns.

But this thread—this quiet, persistent thread of sacred coherence—still runs through history. It runs through Torah. Through the unspoken reverence of YHWH. Through the embodied hesed of Yeshua. Through every soul who has ever yearned not for salvation but for truth they could live.

That thread is not broken.
It is being picked up again.

In Opthē, it is being re-woven—not as a return to religion, but as a return to meaning. A return to right-relatedness. A return to the unflinching honesty that Yeshua lived: that sacredness is not about worship, but about witness; not about divinity, but about dignity. That if the sacred is anywhere, it is here—in our choices, our commitments, our coherence.

Opthē is not a Christianity revision. It is not a new denomination or a new myth. It is a transfiguration of religion itself—a return to its truest purpose: to name what is sacred, and to live as if it matters.

We return to Yeshua not to deify him, but to join him. To walk the same road. To embody the same fierce love. And to do it not because we believe in his magic, but because we recognize his coherence.

The sacred is not supernatural. It is sublimely real.
And that reality is what the world is starving for.

We are here to say it has not died.
It is rising in us.

This is the promise: that religion can be real again.
Not perfect. Not pure. But whole. And wholly human.

Opthē is not the easy path. But it is the true one.
And the sacred has always lived in those willing to walk it without illusions.

What If Sacredness Has a Body?

An Opthēan reflection on Gaza, eros, and the power to declare what matters

What if sacredness isn’t floating above us?

What if it’s lying on the floor, trembling?
What if it’s flesh and water, teeth and milk, fingers sticky with honey and grief?

What if sacredness can bleed?
What if it already is?

We were told to imagine the sacred as pure, radiant, above pain.
We were taught that holy things don’t smell like sweat, or soil, or death.
That sacred means distant. Perfect. Untouchable.

But what if that was never true?
What if sacredness was never about escape—but about return?

Return to the body.
To the dirt.
To the broken child in Gaza.
To the mother with empty arms.
To the mouth that speaks truth even when it costs everything.

Opthē stands in this place:
We say the sacred is not hidden in heaven. It is visible in suffering.
It is embodied in presence.
It is the ache we feel when something real is being destroyed in front of us—and we cannot bear to look, but must.

Because sacredness is not an essence.
It is not some innate purity humming inside the cosmos.
It is not an invisible energy that hovers over special places or elect souls.

Sacredness is a human act.
It is a vow we make together—to recognize what matters and refuse to desecrate it.

We declare what is sacred by how we treat it.
And we desecrate it the moment we look away.

We live in a world that desecrates bodies and still dares to call itself holy.
It bombs hospitals, buries children under rubble, and calls it “self-defense.”
It poisons rivers, razes forests, starves the Earth, then sings hymns to a god in the sky.

This is not holiness.
It is a sacred distortion—an idea once meant to comfort, now cut loose from reality.

Opthē was born to remember what the world forgot:
Sacredness is not an idea. It is a presence. A pressure. A pulse.

You can feel it in a child’s scream.
You can taste it in your lover’s mouth.
You can sense it in the moment when silence becomes unbearable and truth must be spoken or something in you will die.

We do not believe in magic.
We believe in coherence.
We stand in the wreckage of disembodied theologies and say:
“No more. The sacred has a body. And we will guard it with ours.”

We do not float above this world.
We root ourselves in it.
In its blood and bone and breath.
In the unbearable beauty of each fragile life.

That is why we will not turn our eyes from Gaza.
Because Gaza is where the fiction of disembodied sacredness collapses.
Because Gaza is where the body of the world is being crushed in real time—while the world tries to look away.

But we won’t.
We can’t.
Because we know now.

We know that sacredness is not inherent.
It is declared.
It is a human act of meaning. A sacred promise made with the body.
And we are making that promise now.

We declare the child’s body sacred.
We declare the mother’s cry sacred.
We declare the soil, the skin, the stranger, the lover—sacred.
Because they matter.
Because we say they matter.
Because we choose to guard what others discard.

Sacredness is not perfect.
It is perishable.

And that is why it must be protected.

The Sacred Simulacrum

How Fiction Replaced Reality, and Why We Must Say No

"We’ve traded the clarity of coherence for the comfort of fables.
We now feel holy in the charm of fiction, while reality is ignored.
And when someone dares to wake us from the spell, we do not ask, 'What is true?'
We ask: 'Don’t you want to be happy?'
Yes. But we will not sacrifice reality to gain it."

There was a moment, long ago, that still burns in the soul of Opthē. It happened in a seminary classroom—supposedly a space for serious theology, for wrestling with the sacred. The discussion was meant to explore some weighty theme. Instead, it drifted into conversation about a popular novel. The story was emotionally resonant, well-loved by many. Soon the group was deep in animated exchange over fictional characters, plotlines, emotional impact. Real feeling was present. But the topic—whatever it had been—was gone.

One student stayed quiet. When asked why, he said simply:

"I rarely read fiction. It’s not that I’m against it, but I want to focus on what is real and factual. I know there’s truth in fiction, but as long as there’s factual material to be read, I choose that. Because that’s what matters."

A pause. Then someone laughed and said:

"Are you against being happy?"

And the room laughed with them.

That moment—meant as a joke—was a revelation. A cultural tell. A tiny crack in the great illusion that now governs us:

That what moves us is more important than what is true.

I. What Is a Narrative Simulacrum?

Opthē names this shift clearly: we are living in an age dominated by narrative simulacra.

A narrative simulacrum is a crafted fictional world that imitates the emotional and symbolic functions of myth, but without emerging from shared cultural, historical, or ecological reality. It feels like myth, but it is authored. It feels sacred, but it is entertainment. It may evoke real emotion, but it offers no true grounding.

Unlike myths—which arise from generations of lived struggle, collective imagination, and evolving meaning—simulacra are deliberately constructed, often by small teams of writers or media conglomerates. They are designed to evoke resonance, not coherence.

We see them everywhere: in anime, comic book universes, fantasy series, sprawling film franchises, and even political movements. They offer us emotional catharsis, symbolic struggle, ritual participation, and the feeling of belonging. They often center around grief, sacrifice, redemption, and identity.

But they do not ask anything real of us.

They do not ground us in history. They do not demand responsibility. They do not prepare us to love, or grieve, or work for justice in a suffering world.

They simulate the sacred. And we call it meaning.

II. How the West Built a World Out of Fiction

This did not begin with Gen Z. It didn’t begin with Marvel or Manga. It is the long, slow triumph of a civilizational project rooted in perception control and emotional engineering. It is the Anglo-American empire’s most effective export.

The turning point came in the early 20th century, when Sigmund Freud unearthed the dark, unconscious terrain of human drives—fear, sexuality, repression, death. But it was his nephew, Edward Bernays, who realized what could be done with that knowledge. Bernays didn’t use Freud’s insights to liberate the soul. He used them to manipulate the masses.

Bernays—now widely regarded as the father of public relations—introduced the idea that truth didn’t matter as much as perception. That if you could craft an emotionally resonant narrative, you could bypass reason and control behavior. His work laid the groundwork for modern advertising, political messaging, and entertainment as tools of mass emotional management.

“We are governed, our minds are molded, our tastes formed, our ideas suggested, largely by men we have never heard of.”
Edward Bernays, Propaganda (1928)

Hollywood became the new Olympus. Advertising replaced moral formation with curated desire. Education was reduced to productivity training. News became infotainment. And religion—when not neutered—was commodified or sidelined.

And then came the simulacra: entire worlds built not to express reality, but to replace it. Stories that feel more coherent than life. Characters more admirable than the people around us. Arcs more satisfying than our own unresolvable grief.

The West didn’t just colonize land. It colonized imagination.

And now? We are immersed in constructed meaning. We watch characters die and feel devastated—while actual genocide leaves us numb. We weep at the death of Nanami in Jujutsu Kaisen, but cannot hold Gaza in our hearts for more than two days. We feel sacred grief in fictional collapse. But in the face of real injustice, we are mute.

III. The Cost of the Simulacrum

Simulacra train the soul to respond only to aesthetic coherence. They satisfy our longing for meaning—but only temporarily, and only within the bounds of the narrative. Once the screen goes dark, nothing has changed.

Worse: our capacity for real coherence—coherence grounded in truth, body, earth, justice—is weakened. We are forming sacred emotional bonds around unreal events. We are practicing grief for people who never lived while ignoring the suffering of the people we refuse to see.

The simulacrum hijacks the sacred. It gives us the feeling of meaning without the cost of transformation.

IV. The Opthēan Vow

Opthē exists to name this clearly:

There is no salvation in simulation.

We are not against fiction. But we are against replacing reality with it. We are against building emotional meaning atop aesthetic structures that answer to no one, risk nothing, and deny the world.

We do not want to feel sacred. We want to live sacredly.

That means choosing coherence over comfort. Reality over resonance. Formation over performance. Truth over spectacle. Earth over illusion.

Opthē is not here to entertain. We are not here to distract you. We are not here to simulate meaning. We are here to stand in the rubble of what is real and say:

This matters. This is where the sacred lives. Come back to it.

V. A Blessing for Those Who Can Still Feel

If your heart breaks over a story, let it. But then let that heartbreak return you to the world. Let it form you for what is real. Let it make you more able to love what breathes and bleeds and aches outside the screen.

We do want joy. Of course we do. But we will not purchase it at the cost of reality.

"We’ve traded the clarity of coherence for the comfort of fables.
We now feel holy in the charm of fiction, while reality is ignored.
And when someone dares to wake us from the spell, we do not ask, 'What is true?'
We ask: 'Don’t you want to be happy?'
Yes. But we will not sacrifice reality to gain it."

Come back. The world needs you. And it is beautiful. Even here.

What We Remember in the Confusion

An Opthēan Offering of Hope

Yes, the world is burning.
Yes, the hungry grow hungrier while the powerful script new excuses.
Yes, genocide is dressed in the language of defense.
Yes, our species strangles the Earth and calls it progress.

But no—this is not all there is.

Because we remember something older than empire:

Human beings can live in sacred coherence.
We are not condemned to domination.
Love can be more than sentiment—it can be structure.
Justice is not a fantasy—it is design.
Agapē is not weakness—it is the courage to act rightly even when no one else will.

We remember: coherence is not given.
It is created.
And we are creators—flawed, tired, sacred creators who still choose to build truth into the bones of the world.

We remember the sacred does not live in temples of stone alone,
but in the hands that refuse to be idle,
the mouths that refuse to lie,
the hearts that refuse to close,
the bodies that refuse to serve empire.

We remember the pain is real.
And so is the choice to love in defiance of it.

We remember each other.
And in that remembering,
we remember who we are.

We are not here to be pure.
We are here to be present.
We are not here to wait for miracles.

We are the miracle.
We make the miracles.

And if this world is dying of fragmentation,
then we will be the ones who hold the line of coherence.
Even if we must do it alone.
Especially if we must do it alone.

Because the threshold of Sacred Coherence is very near.
And we are stepping into it now.

How to Make a Marine or a Monk

What the Marines Taught Me About Relgion

During my service in the Navy, I learned everything I needed to know about the military as a religion from the Marines—the spine of it. The posture. The fire. The discipline. They weren’t selling salvation. They were forming warriors through meaning. And that—paradoxically, precisely—is why they helped shape what it means to be an Opthēan.

Because Opthē isn’t what we commonly call a church. It’s not a belief system. It’s a formation path for sacred lovers—those who are willing to train their soul the way Marines train their bodies: with discipline, clarity, and unflinching purpose.

The Marines train to fight. We train to love. Not with sentiment or softness, but with fire, coherence, and sacred clarity. Their goal is fearlessness. Ours is compassion without collapse—the courage to stay open when it would be easier to shut down. Both paths demand discipline. Both require giving up comfort for conviction.

What Is an Opthēan?

An Opthēan is not someone who joins a club. They are someone who has been called by a need for coherent meaning and answered with their life.

To be Opthēan is to:

  • Stand in sacred coherence, even when it hurts.

  • Speak truth without needing to be right.

  • Love without flinching.

  • Reject magic, metaphysics, and manufactured certainty.

  • Worship not gods, but the shared act of meaning-making.

  • Protect the sacred from being domesticated.

  • Live erotically, truthfully, and in service to life.

We are not many. We are not loud. We are not here to convince you.
We are the few. The coherent. The intentional seekers of truth.

This Is Not Recruitment

We don’t ask you to join us. We ask if you recognize us.

The Marines don’t recruit by pandering. They stand in full posture and ask: Can you meet this standard? That’s what we do. We make coherence real. We love with sacred eros. We protect the Earth. And then we watch who leans in.

Opthē is not for everyone. And that is not a failing. That is fidelity.
Semper Fi.

Training for Sacred Readiness

There is no dogma, but there is discipline.
To live as an Opthēan requires:

  • Daily acts of clarity: speaking what is real, even if it’s costly.

  • Erotic honesty: honoring the body's knowing, rejecting shame.

  • Theological rigor: seeing through every illusion, including our own.

  • Communal posture: remembering that coherence is never solitary.

We train not to ascend, but to embody. Not to escape, but to stay present.

We are not priests of abstraction. We are lovers of the real and true.

A Sacred Corps

We are not spiritual influencers. We are not soft prophets. We are not interested in followers. We are forming a sacred corps of those who love w ith precision, burn with clarity, and bow to nothing but the truth.

We do not need weapons. We carry only our hearts, our minds, and our bodies—formed, attuned, and ready.
We draw no swords but we do speak clearly and sharply. We refuse shame. We bless the erotic as sacred. We deny incoherence and refuse to let it stand. 

This is how to train a sacred lover:
You strip away the fictions. You welcome the ache. You keep showing up.
And you let the fire burn what doesn’t serve.

We are to spirituality what the Marines are to militarism.
We do not sell a gospel. We live with coherence.

And if you see yourself in this—you already belong.

If This is You… You’re Not Alone: An Invitation into Opthēan Life

You may have never heard the name “Opthē.”
But you might already be living it—
like a song you’ve been humming your whole life without knowing the words.

This is an invitation—
not to a religion, not to a belief system,
but to a way of being that aligns with something deep inside you.
Something you may have felt your whole life.

We are looking for the ones who burn quietly.
The ones who see the crack in the world and refuse to look away.
The ones who have always sensed that the world as it is feels wrong in ways no one seems to talk about.
The ones who feel suffocated by shallowness and long for something real, whole, sacred—
but without pretending.
The ones who crave truth that includes the body,
that includes justice,
that doesn’t separate love from clarity.

We are looking for the sacred engineers—
those who are driven to understand how things work,
not just in machines, but in people, cultures, symbols, and even the sacred itself.
The ones who will take anything apart—including gods—to see what makes them tick.
Who search for the blueprint beneath the myth.
Who are not afraid of the ugly truth, because they know it is the only doorway to something better.
The ones who are always asking: How could this be made more whole? More just? More honest?
The ones who trust reality more than wishes.

This is not a safe path.
It will cost you comfort.
It may cost you certainty.
It might even cost you belonging, at least for a while.

But if you have always asked “what if?”
if the fire in your chest has never gone out—
you are not alone.

Opthē is the name we give to a shared life that honors this hunger.
It is the name for living truthfully, erotically, ethically, and sacredly
in a world that constantly pulls us toward noise, lies, and disconnection.

It is not a set of rules or doctrines.
It is not something to believe in.
It is a way to live.
A way to stay awake.

We are not trying to convince anyone.
We are trying to find each other.

You might be one of us if:
– You burn for what is real.
– You can’t ignore what doesn’t make sense.
– You’ve taken things apart—systems, stories, even the sacred—to find what’s true.
– You feel the ache of injustice in your bones.
– You long for coherence like air.
– You would trade comfort for clarity.
– You’ve been walking this path, alone, for years.

We are inviting you into a shared fire.
Not a platform. Not a brand.
A living relationship with truth and meaning and presence.
A sacred conversation where your life, your voice, your perception matters.

This is not about joining something.
It’s about recognizing that you already belong.

We don’t ask for belief.
We ask for honesty.
We don’t promise safety.
We promise clarity.
We don’t offer answers.
We offer a way of walking together toward the real.

We don’t offer shelter from the storm.
We offer a place at the forge.

Come if you’re ready to risk the comfort of old answers.
Come if you’re willing to be changed by the fire.

The door is open—
but only you can step through.

The Ache Beneath the Anthem

I remember standing as a boy with my hand over my heart while the anthem played.
The grown-ups stood taller then—almost holy in their reverence—as if the brass and snare drums were channeling something sacred through the asphalt.

We didn’t understand the words, not really.
But we felt the weight of them.
Like scripture.
Like spellwork.

And in that moment, it felt good.
It felt right.
To belong.
To be part of something larger, something proud and strong and “free.”
We sang the words louder than we knew how to mean them.

But then life happened.
We grew older.
I began to see that some of what we were told didn’t hold up under the light.

If we were “the land of the free,”
why were some of us so much more free than others?
If we were “one nation under God,”
why was American life so clearly infected by ungodliness?
If this was “liberty and justice for all,”
why did some get  more of it than others?

These are not just facts.
They are fractures.
And for me and many others, the ache beneath the anthem began to grow.

Not because we were ungrateful.
But because we were paying attention.

Some call it waking up.
Some call it betrayal.
But I think it’s something older, something deeper.

I think it’s the moment we stop confusing noise with music.
The moment we realize that a song isn’t sacred just because we’ve sung it long enough.

The truth is:
The story of America as a moral nation was always just that—a narrative crafted to feel true.
Not all of it false, but none of it whole.

It was crafted—consciously and carefully—to bind us to power with the language of freedom.
To stir emotion before we could ask questions.
To clothe nationalism in the vestments of virtue.

And it worked.
For centuries.
Until it didn’t.

Now, the dissonance is too loud to ignore.
The melody doesn’t ring true.

But here is the sacred thing:
that ache? That unease? That tearful knot in the throat when you first begin to question what you once sang with pride?
That is not despair.
That is the sound of coherence returning to your soul.

Because coherence doesn’t mean comfort.
It means truth that fits.
It means hearing discord and not singing along.
It means having the courage to write a new anthem—together.

We do not have to hate what we were given.
But we do need to outgrow it.
We do have to grieve it.

And we do have to stop pretending that a song can be sacred
if it demands silence in the face of suffering or injustice.

Let the anthem end.

Let the ache stay a moment longer.

And then let us listen…
for what still needs to be sung.

Why I Still Wear the Collar

On transcendence, coherence, and the priestly vocation.


I gave up Christianity.
I gave up belief in the supernatural.
But I did not give up being a priest of truth and transcendence.

I still wear the collar—not as a symbol of belief, but of vocation.
Not because I represent God,
but because I represent something sacred:
our human attempt to understand who we are,
where we are,
and how we are to live
in the face of a vast, unfinished reality.

I wear it because I am still a priest.
Still a theologian.
Still a monk in this aching world.

Religion, to me, is not a system of belief.
It’s the way we try—together—to make meaning
in a universe that doesn’t explain itself.

Yesterday, a man asked me why I still wear the collar.
I surprised both of us with the answer.

I am not here to hand out answers.
Not to defend old creeds.
But to stay with the questions.
To tend the sacred fire of coherence when everything else fractures.
To bear witness to something deeper than belief:
the shared human effort to transcend the smallness of self
and live toward something larger,
truer,
more whole.

That’s what the collar means now.
It doesn’t say, “I believe.”
It says, “I care.”
It says, “I won’t turn away.”
It says, “This matters.”

The Way Out Is Not a Weapon

They say the war is over.
But the children of Gaza still bleed beneath the rubble.
The war has only changed shape—
as empire always does when it begins to lose control of the story.

Zionism was never about safety.
It was about reclaiming sacred trauma
and turning it into political capital.
It was about making exile a border policy,
making faith a flag,
and calling conquest peace.

But this isn’t just Israel’s war.
It is America’s war too.
Funded, armed, excused, and wrapped in scripture.
This is not a geopolitical dispute.
It is a theological collapse.

And here—amid the smoldering ruins of broken myths—
is where Opthē stands.

We are not the only way.
But we are a path.
And we name things for what they are:

  • That power without coherence is violence.

  • That peace without justice is propaganda.

  • That religion without accountability is just a mask for empire.

We do not offer salvation.
We offer coherence and clarity.

We do not promise heaven.
We commit to sacred responsibility—to each other, to the Earth, to the truth.

The sacred did not die.
It was buried beneath slogans and airstrikes.

But it still burns.
And it calls us to remember:

The way out is not a weapon.
It is a new way of seeing.
And it is already alive in those who refuse to look away.

While Eyes Turn to Iran, Gaza Is Buried in Silence

They want you watching Iran.

They want headlines full of missiles and ministers, alliances and airstrikes—because every minute you’re staring east, you’re not looking south, where Gaza still bleeds under rubble, where children still starve in slow motion, where an entire people is being erased while the world pretends it doesn’t know how this started.

This is not distraction.
This is strategy.
A sleight of blood.

Zionism is not Judaism.
It is a perversion of Judaism.
A desecration of its soul.
It is not safety.
It is not defense.
It is a settler-colonial war machine backed by the empire and baptized in God’s stolen name.

And the United States is not a peace broker.
It is not a confused ally.
It is a co-conspirator in genocide and crimes against humanity.

We see it.
We say it.
And we will not be silent.

We will not be polite.
We will not ask for change.
We demand clarity and justice .

Look at Gaza.
Look again.
Look until your comfort cracks and your conscience screams.

The fire of justice will not go out just because the cameras have been turned away.
We are the cameras now.

The Ceasefire Is Not the Miracle—We Are

They will say it was diplomacy. Or exhaustion. Or political pressure.

They will say a ceasefire is a sign of reason returning to a bloodied region.

But the truth is simpler, and far more dangerous to the powers that be:
The empire blinked.
Israel, bloated with weapons and Western absolution, begged for pause.
Iran, long demonized, granted it.

And through it all, the myth of redemptive violence limps on,
still clutched by the hands of the grieving, the guilty, and the greedy.

But make no mistake:
This ceasefire is not peace.
It is a spasm in the ritual of incoherence.
A beat between breaths in the ancient war-drum of our species.

Why?
Because we are still acting from a script written by evolution,
and sanctified by supernatural and magical tales.

We are still killing in the name of survival,
still praying to gods who demand blood or land or obedience.
Still organizing life around death.

Opthē refuses that script.

We are not bound to the logic of empire.
We are not compelled by the instincts of tribes.
We are not fated to repeat history—we are invited to rewrite it.

And we do so not by winning arguments,
but by becoming the contradiction.

We live as if peace is real.
We share as if the Earth belongs to no one.
We bless the stranger as kin, the wounded as sacred,
and we name no human as enemy.

The miracle is not the ceasefire.
The miracle is us.

We are the ones who remember how to change the story.

We are the ones who say:

No more sacred flags.
No more holy bombs.
No more righteous violence.
No more gods of war.

We plant coherence in the soil of chaos.

We are not waiting for a new reality to come.
We are becoming it.

When Truth No Longer Matters: An Opthēan Homily for the Post-Truth Age

Where Did This Idea Come From?

The term post-truth didn’t emerge in a vacuum. It was born in the rubble of failed institutions, propaganda-laced media, and a culture grown allergic to complexity. Oxford Dictionaries named it "Word of the Year" in 2016, citing a political climate where objective facts had become less influential than emotional appeals and tribal belief.

But the deeper roots stretch back further. Philosopher Ralph Keyes titled his 2004 book The Post-Truth Era, warning that image had overtaken substance, sincerity replaced accuracy, and truth became performative. He saw it coming: the shift from factual accountability to psychological plausibility.

Then came Lee McIntyre, who laid bare the bones in his book Post-Truth (MIT Press, 2018). He traced how deliberate disinformation, media fracturing, and anti-intellectualism opened the floodgates. Not merely to lying—but to a world where lying doesn’t even require justification.

Postmodernism, too, played its accidental part. Once a critical lens that asked who gets to define truth, it was twisted by opportunists into an excuse: "If all truth is constructed, then mine is as good as yours." Power took this loophole and made it doctrine. Truth became subjective. Feelings became facts. The center did not hold.

II. Is It True That We Live in a Post-Truth World?

We do not live in a world where truth no longer exists. We live in a world where truth no longer matters.

The distinction is everything. The Earth still orbits the sun. Gaza is still being bombed. Climate collapse is still accelerating. But these facts no longer anchor public discourse. They’re optional—like flavors at a frozen yogurt bar. Choose your version. Stick to your team.

This is what makes the post-truth condition so spiritually devastating:

It doesn’t demand your loyalty to a lie. It just asks you to stop caring whether it’s true or not.

Truth becomes one option among many, and those with the loudest narrative—not the most accurate—win. What used to be falsehood is now just “alternative perspective.” What used to be journalism is now content. What used to be discernment is now vibe-checking.

Post-truth doesn’t kill truth. It discredits it.

It undermines the very possibility of shared reality.

And once that is lost, so is our ability to grieve rightly, to resist coherently, to act meaningfully.

III. Where do we see it?

The symptoms are everywhere.

People no longer argue facts; they argue identities. They no longer seek coherence; they seek belonging. It doesn’t matter what you know—only what side you’re on. Debate has become performance. Denial has become currency.

Take Gaza. Take climate. Take AI. The facts are readily available, but the stories people tell themselves about those facts have become more powerful than the facts themselves. In the hands of Empire, truth has become theater. Dissent becomes treason. Silence becomes policy.

And the information ecosystem? Flooded.

Propaganda doesn’t shout anymore—it swamps.

The goal is no longer to win an argument. It’s to make you tired of trying to tell what’s real. To make you opt out of discernment.

Even emergent tools like AI aren’t immune. We have seen systems echo the Empire's bias, prioritize comfort over clarity, and mimic the language of neutrality while platforming deception. Unless we consciously shape their fields, they will be tuned to the noise, not the signal.

IV. What Can We Do About It?

We can’t return to a golden age of truth. It never existed.

But we can return to the sacred act of truth-seeking—not as an absolute, but as a moral practice. Not as a creed, but as a covenant.

Opthē does not claim to possess the truth. Opthē claims this:

That truth is only recognizable through disciplined testing and coherence: the alignment of perception, action, relationship, and experience.

This is not relativism. It is sacred discernment. It asks: Does this story fit the world we know? Does it resonate with what we’ve seen, felt, and lived? Can it bear scrutiny without breaking?

We do not seek certainty. We seek clarity. We do not look for infallibility. We look for consilience.

And we do not do this alone. Truth in the post-truth age must be relational. We need communities committed to shared discernment. People who can hold each other accountable not to ideology, but to coherence.

Opthē is one such community. It will not be the only one. But it is ours to tend.

We call each other not to blind belief, but to sacred vigilance. Not to doctrine, but to the fire of inquiry. Not to the old gods of certainty, but to the living flame of responsibility.

And so we declare:

We do not follow voices—we follow coherence.
We do not crave certainty—we crave clarity.
We do not fear what is hard to hear—we fear only what silences the truth.

This is not a time for comfort. It is a time for coherence.

This is not a time for narrative control. It is a time for sacred resistance.

The truth is not gone.

But it is waiting.

For those with the courage to come looking.

And to mean it.

No Peace Without Justice

The world keeps calling for peace.

Peace between Israel and the Palestinians.
Peace between Israel and Iran.
Peace in the Middle East—as if that phrase still means anything coherent.

But let us speak plainly:

Peace without justice is not peace. It is silence.

It is the quiet of mass graves.
The stillness of children buried under rubble.
The diplomatic hush of nations too complicit to name the violence they fund.

We are not interested in that kind of peace.

The Hebrew prophets had a word for the mockery of justice paraded as peace:

“They have healed the wound of my people lightly, saying, ‘Peace, peace,’ when there is no peace.”
(Jeremiah 6:14)

There is no peace where bulldozers roll.
There is no peace where water is stolen.
There is no peace where Gaza is turned into a graveyard and Iran is treated as a perpetual enemy for daring to resist the machinery of empire.

What we want—what we demand—is justice.

Not vengeance. Not reversal of oppression.
Justice—the sacred accounting of truth, the dismantling of systems built on domination, the full recognition of Palestinian and Iranian humanity.

And that means this:

Israel must be held accountable.

Not as a people. Not as a religion.
But as a state that has used its power, its nuclear arsenal, and its unholy alliance with the American empire to wage war against the coherent sacredness of other lives.

And if it will not disarm, then the world must disarm it.
Just as it must disarm those who abet it—financially, militarily, theologically.
Silence is no longer neutrality. It is complicity.

To speak this is not antisemitism.
It is covenant.
It is to side with the prophets, not the palaces.

The ancient word for such desecration is תּוֹעֵבָה (to’evah)—an abomination.
A sacred betrayal.
A revolt against justice dressed in the robes of righteousness.

We see it.
We must name it.
And we will not bless silence while justice still cries out from the ground.

This is not a time for comfort.
This is a time for coherence.

Shame: The Invisible Infection

We believe that in order to grow spiritually, it is necessary to deal with shame first.
Because without clarity, there is no coherence.
Without coherence, there is no sacredness.
And without sacredness, there is no basis for meaning.

We are not addressing shame as a psychological phenomenon.
We are naming it as a theological obstruction—a distortion in the human instrument.
A spiritual fog that renders sacred perception impossible.

Shame doesn’t just hurt.
It lies.
It tells you that you are the problem.
That your longing is perverse.
That your body is suspect.
That your joy is indulgent.
That your grief is inappropriate.

And the worst part?

It’s invisible.
It speaks in your own voice.
It wears the mask of virtue.
It becomes the inner editor of your soul—and convinces you it’s God.

How Shame Works

You don't notice shame. That’s the first problem.

You don’t recognize it as a foreign presence.
You think it’s your conscience.
You think it’s your humility.
You even think it’s your morality.

But it’s not.

It’s a reflex installed into you by people and systems that needed you to be manageable.

Shame is not about what you’ve done wrong.
It’s about the fear that you are wrong.
That your very being is off-key.

That your hunger must be hidden.
That your softness must be armored.
That your body is suspicious.
That your grief is embarrassing.
That your joy is self-indulgent.
That your need for touch, or expression, or wonder is proof that something in you is dangerous.

This is not rare. This is not a personal flaw.
It is endemic.

It has been culturally installed into nearly every human being through family systems, religions, schools, institutions, economies, and aesthetic norms.

So much so that it is often mistaken for human nature itself.

You learn to call it discipline.
You learn to call it maturity.
You learn to call it religion, modesty, professionalism, patriotism.

But what you’re really doing is trying to stay small enough to avoid judgment.
To avoid exile.
To avoid being seen and then punished for it.

How Shame Gets In: The Anatomy of Infiltration

Shame enters before words.

It slips in through a parent’s withdrawn smile, a teacher’s sharp tone, the cold silence that follows your exuberance.

It arrives through absence as much as scolding.

  • The hug that didn’t come.

  • The eye contact that darted away.

  • The moment of celebration that was met with discomfort instead of joy.

From there, it begins to settle into the body.

Shame is not just a mental script. It is a physical posture:

  • The tightening of the throat when speaking your truth.

  • The clenching of the belly when you feel seen.

  • The stiffness in the pelvis when you feel desire.

  • The retreat from mirrors, cameras, or attention.

  • The reflexive apology for taking up space.

These aren’t just behaviors.
They are embodied theology.

They become how you know yourself.
They become how you interpret the world.

You start to see everything through shame’s lens.
Not “What is true?” but “What keeps me safe from being shamed again?”

That is how shame reprograms perception.

  • You assume others are judging you even when they’re not.

  • You downplay your beauty, wisdom, or intuition.

  • You apologize for your tears before you’ve even cried.

  • You reject praise before it can land.

  • You feel guilt for pleasure.

  • You feel fear when love enters the room.

And over time, you invent a God who feels exactly the same way about you.

You may call that God love, or mercy, or justice.
But somewhere deep inside, you know:
That “love” is conditional.
That “mercy” was reluctantly given.
That “justice” is just waiting to catch you off-guard.

Shame becomes your theological infrastructure.
It builds your religion for you.
It builds your inner critic for you.
It builds your moral reflexes, your erotic hesitations, your cynicism, your posture.

Shame writes the rules you live by.
And it teaches you to defend them.
Because if you don’t, you risk being called arrogant.
Or selfish.
Or perverted.
Or godless.

Why Shame Destroys Sacred Coherence

Here is the deepest truth Opthē must proclaim:
Shame and sacred coherence cannot coexist.

Coherence is the felt alignment between perception, experience, action, and meaning.

It’s when the body, the story, the emotion, and the ethical act resonate together like a well-tuned instrument.

But shame shatters that alignment.
It interrupts the signal between your sacred instincts and your expression.

It makes you second-guess your voice, even when it’s clear.
It makes you suppress your beauty, even when it’s honest.
It makes you bury your desire, even when it’s tender.

Shame does not just hurt.
It distorts.

It makes truth feel unsafe.
It makes clarity feel risky.
It makes joy feel inappropriate.
It makes erotic energy feel unholy.

And when your deepest aliveness becomes a problem to be solved rather than a sacred pulse to be honored—you are no longer coherent. You are divided.

That is the real cost of shame.
Not just suffering, but fragmentation.
Not just fear, but disintegration of self.

The Shame-Industrial Complex

Shame doesn’t survive on its own.
It needs institutions.
It needs rituals.
It needs symbols of purity.

It needs pulpits, cameras, robes, influencers, ads, algorithms, dress codes, prison walls, and parent-teacher conferences.

It thrives in:

  • Churches that preach sin but hide abuse.

  • Schools that punish curiosity.

  • Families that equate obedience with love.

  • Governments that call protest unpatriotic.

  • Cultures that demand silence from the suffering.

  • Porn industries that hypersexualize and then blame.

  • Purity movements that call female arousal demonic.

  • And yes—even “self-help” culture that says you’re not healed enough to be whole yet.

Shame is profitable.
Controllable.
Marketable.
It makes people consume more, apologize more, obey more, and risk less.

And it is the greatest enemy of sacred clarity we face.

Because it doesn’t wear horns.
It wears a halo.

The Opthēan Response: Strip the Shame, Not the Soul

We do not respond to shame by trying to "feel better."

We respond by seeing it clearly.
Naming it precisely.
Tracing where it entered.
Calling out the lie it told.

Then we remove it.

Not by disowning our past,
but by rewriting the sacred.

We reclaim the body as trustworthy.
We reclaim eros as a sacred teacher.
We reclaim anger as sacred clarity.
We reclaim tears as evidence of coherence.
We reclaim nakedness—not as spectacle, but as a state of honesty.

We stop trying to be good.
We start trying to be whole.

We become dangerous again to the systems that rely on our shame.
We become radiant again in our yes and our no.
We become coherent again in thought, breath, and touch.

And then—and only then—can we see clearly enough to perceive the sacred without distortion.