Dame Sarah Mullally’s appointment as Archbishop of Canterbury invites a deeper question: what truly qualifies a person to lead the Church? The New Testament speaks not of degrees or honours but of love, humility, and the fruits of the Spirit. Jesus himself warned against the illusions of worldly power and status, choosing the wilderness over the throne. In an age of spiritual emptiness, it is not competence but inner transformation that gives authority and life to faith.
For two thousand years, the West has lived inside a sacred dream — the story of divine redemption. Yet the man who inspired it, Jesus of Nazareth, spoke not of metaphysical rescue but of inner change. This essay distinguishes between Jesus the teacher and the Christ of theology, tracing how faith became power and how its original insight can still guide a new awakening.
A reflection on Jesus, Paul, and the problem of dogma. Against original sin and externalised divinity, this essay argues that nurturing human potential and living within mystery are more important than rigid belief.
Jesus and Paul emphasized that the state is temporary and subordinate to a higher, internal moral law rooted in love. Jesus taught that true sovereignty lies within, advocating for love over coercion. Paul affirmed spiritual law in the heart, highlighting that love fulfills the law, making secular authority provisional and ultimately secondary.
Jesus the Teacher and Paul’s Vision of the Transformed Self Jesus and Paul are often set against one another — the teacher of the Kingdom on one side, the apostle of the risen Christ on the other. Yet at heart they were saying the same thing. Jesus spoke of the Kingdom of God within; Paul …