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#religioustrauma Enoch, the seventh from Adam, prophesied about them: "See, the Lord is coming with thousands upon thousands of his holy ones." What Christian Mysticism Accidentally Reveals Here’s the tension Christianity never resolves cleanly: “Christ lives in you” “Put on the mind of Christ” “I no longer live, but Christ lives in me” “The Kingdom of God is within you” Taken seriously, these erode the adoption boundary. So orthodoxy responds by saying: yes, but you are still only a child yes, but never confuse union with identity yes, but never speak it directly This produces linguistic policing, not clarity. A Grounded Reframe (No Ego Inflation, No Nihilism) Here is a model that preserves sanity and humility without dependency theater: Human beings are finite expressions of reality, not its totality. Consciousness is not separate from being, but also not its whole. Saying “I am God” at the ego level is incoherent. Saying “consciousness is not other than its ground” is experiential, not arrogant. Mature realization produces less grandiosity, not more. No divinity cosplay. No childlike dependence. No cosmic inflation. Just coherence. The repeated insistence on the “child of God vs I AM GOD” contrast is not about humility alone. It is about keeping realization interpretively dependent. That doesn’t make Christianity evil. But it does make it structurally incompatible with nondual integration. “I AM GOD” as an ego claim → incoherent. “I am a child of God” as a relational metaphor → psychologically stabilizing. But using that distinction to forbid deep identity inquiry → a containment strategy. Grounded growth does not require: claiming divinity, denying divinity, or adopting divine family roles. It requires: clarity about what the “I” actually is, humility about finitude, and honesty about experience. Anything beyond that—whether exaltation or submission—is narrative.