
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This book introduces a work that explores the dual nature of religious doctrine as both a necessary protector of truth and a potential tool for institutional control. The author argues that while theological precision is vital for maintaining worship and communal reality, it frequently degrades into "tribal currency"—a system of passwords used to reward conformity rather than foster genuine faith. Legitimate doctrine must serve "covenantal life," which is defined by a sincere focus on the supremacy of the Creator, moral integrity, and the practice of repentance. The sources emphasize a "source-hierarchical approach," insisting that original revelation must always outrank later human commentary and institutional systems. Ultimately, the text calls for a reformation of religious language to ensure that sacred words function as servants of holy reality rather than as instruments of social gatekeeping.
By Atlas University x Klesia Press x Absurd HealthThis book introduces a work that explores the dual nature of religious doctrine as both a necessary protector of truth and a potential tool for institutional control. The author argues that while theological precision is vital for maintaining worship and communal reality, it frequently degrades into "tribal currency"—a system of passwords used to reward conformity rather than foster genuine faith. Legitimate doctrine must serve "covenantal life," which is defined by a sincere focus on the supremacy of the Creator, moral integrity, and the practice of repentance. The sources emphasize a "source-hierarchical approach," insisting that original revelation must always outrank later human commentary and institutional systems. Ultimately, the text calls for a reformation of religious language to ensure that sacred words function as servants of holy reality rather than as instruments of social gatekeeping.