m-o-o-n

FORWARD. In Stephen King’s The Stand, Tom Cullen, a simple yet deeply faithful character, repeatedly spells words as “M-O-O-N,” regardless of their actual letters. To the world, Tom seems slow, naïve—unfit for leadership in a post-apocalyptic struggle between good and evil. Yet, in the grand scheme of things, he is one of the most divinely guided characters, moving forward not by logic or strategy but by an unseen hand directing his path. His simplicity is his strength. The so-called wise and powerful of the world often fail because they rely on their own intellect, while Tom stumbles into victory because he is surrendered. This paradox is at the heart of what Jesus has been teaching me about Zion. The world assumes that intelligence, planning, and expertise will build the next great civilization, but in reality, Zion will be built by the meek—those “stupid” enough to give up their own will, yield entirely to Jesus, and move forward in faith, not knowing beforehand what they should do.

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The Possessed Builders of Zion: Surrendering to the Spirit

In 2015, when I was born again, Jesus told me that I would build Zion in the open, just as Noah built the ark in the open. Over the past decade, He has spoken to me often about the gathering of Israel and the establishment of Zion. While I do not claim to know everything, Jesus has revealed key truths that He needs me to understand. And among the most mysterious and important of these revelations is this: the establishment of Zion will not be the result of human intellect, planning, or strategic execution. It will come through complete surrender to the Spirit of Jesus Christ.

The anti-Christ Korihor once preached that “every man fare[s] in this life according to the management of the creature” (Alma 30:17). At first glance, life seems to validate this philosophy—empires rise and fall based on human effort, intellect, and management. And yet, all human empires have fallen or will fall. No civilization, no matter how advanced, has been able to sustain itself indefinitely, let alone evolve into a utopia. History proves that human intelligence alone is insufficient to establish a lasting, ever-ascending civilization.

Jesus has taught me that Zion—the true, unshakable Kingdom of God on earth—will not be built by the world’s so-called best and brightest. It will require an unprecedented divine intervention: Jesus Christ and His legions of immortals will come to assist the mortals. Yet, not all mortals will be able to receive this Kingdom. The qualification for entry into Zion will not be intelligence, strategy, or leadership skills, but humility. The meek shall inherit the earth (Matthew 5:5).

The Meek and the Possessed

For years, I have pondered what it means to be “of one heart and one mind, dwelling in righteousness” (Moses 7:18). I used to believe that Zion would be established through reasoned debate, wise governance, and intellectual prescriptions. But now, Jesus is teaching me something deeper: the people of Zion will be unified not because of superior reasoning or careful strategizing, but because they will be possessed by the Spirit of Jesus Christ (Alma 34:34).

These will be people who have surrendered—who have sacrificed their traditional ways of thinking and building. They will not construct Zion through human means. Rather, they will have endured tribulation so great that they emerge wholly yielded to Jesus, no longer relying on their own intellect or logic. From the perspective of the world, they will appear foolish—unthinking drones, simpletons who gave up their own will. Yet, in reality, they will be the only ones wise enough to let go of their own understanding and trust entirely in the orchestration of God.

Nephi demonstrated this principle when he attempted to obtain the brass plates. At first, he and his brothers used logical means: they offered Laban their family’s gold and treasures in exchange for the records. When that failed, Nephi found himself in a state of complete surrender. He did not know beforehand what he would do; he only knew that God had commanded him (1 Nephi 4:6). He moved forward in faith, not as a brilliant strategist, but as one possessed by the will of the Lord. And because he yielded, miracles unfolded before him.

The Purpose of My Jesus-Greg WORLD

Over the past month, Jesus has emphasized to me that one of the primary purposes of My Jesus-Greg WORLD is to help me become possessed by a greater portion of His Spirit. It is a training ground for deeper surrender. The goal is not for me to become smarter or more capable, but to relinquish control, to abandon human strategies, and to trust completely in divine orchestration.

Jesus has been clear: “Greg, I don’t need you to be smart. I need you to do my will. Even when it doesn’t make sense to you or others.” Those who will build Zion must learn to let God prevail in every thought, action, and decision. They must abandon the idea that success comes through human ingenuity. Instead, they must step into the realm of miracles, intuition, and divine flow—moving forward without knowing beforehand what they should do.

This is why Zion will be built by the meek (and the earth will be inherited by the meek). The world sees meekness as weakness, but Jesus defines it as radical submission. The meek are those who have sacrificed their will completely. They are the ones willing to forsake what the world calls wisdom and embrace what appears to be foolishness. They will be called unwise, naive, and even reckless by the so-called intellectual elite. And yet, they will inherit the earth, because they will be the only ones prepared to receive Zion when it comes.

The Laws of Heaven: Obedience and Sacrifice

The first law of heaven is obedience. Those who build Zion will not be the thinkers and planners but the ones who just obey. Zion will not be engineered through human expertise; it will be manifested through absolute submission to God’s will. And obedience cannot exist without sacrifice. The people of Zion will have sacrificed their own will, their best ideas, their attachments to human reasoning. They will have exchanged their carefully laid plans for the wild, unpredictable, paradigm-shifting guidance of God.

The meek shall inherit the earth because they are the ones who will finally let go. They will give up their lives to find them (Matthew 16:25). And when they do, the Kingdom will come. Heaven will touch earth. Zion will emerge—not by the management of the creature, but by the Spirit of Jesus Christ. // This is the path I am on. It is risky by earthly standards, but I am learning to trust. I am learning to yield. I am learning to get used to different.

==============the end…..

// THe end // Greg Notes // Assorted Notes…… // Brad replied to this article: “So Jesus wants me to give up my intelligence, my intellect, planning, strategy, and management, and to sacrifice and obey. Sounds kind of like what comrade Stalin wanted. I wonder why Jesus gave me a thinking capacity, if he hates it so badly.” // I replied to Brad: The top thinkers in society, through all their reasoning and intellectual striving, ultimately arrive at a surprising conclusion: the highest form of intellect is to surrender to intuition, to the flow—to use the Force, Luke. Reasoning seems to lead us right up to the threshold, setting the context by which we interact with that flow, but at some point, it must step aside. The mystery is that even though logic and analysis push us toward this surrender, they don’t fully explain why it works. // It’s as if reason is a tool designed not to be the final authority, but to escort us to a deeper wisdom beyond itself. Jesus embodied this perfectly—He reasoned, debated, and taught with profound clarity, but He also withdrew, acted on divine intuition, and invited people into mysteries that defied pure intellect. Perhaps the highest intellect is knowing when to use reason and when to let go, to trust the unseen currents that guide us beyond what the mind alone can grasp. // ========================== // Greg & Luismi, two friends who have different visions as they journey to a new land, and a new world (inside themselves, and outside themselves): // Two Visions of Zion (Collective Harmony): Surrender and Inner Integration // Zion (Collective Harmony), the prophetic vision of a divinely orchestrated society where peace, unity, and righteousness reign, holds deep significance for many. However, the paths we envision toward its realization diverge significantly, shaped by our personal experiences and spiritual understandings. My friend and I each approach Zion (Collective Harmony) from differing angles—both believing firmly in the need for transformation and humility—but with a deep awareness of our own limitations. We recognize that, as human beings, our perspectives are colored by our experiences, and we must both remain humble in our approach. // In the process of contemplating Zion (Collective Harmony), my friend’s view centers on an internal Christ, the embodiment of divine energy within each individual, rather than relying on an external Savior. For my friend, the key to achieving Zion (Collective Harmony) is not surrendering to an external force, but awakening the Christ energy within. He emphasizes that evolution toward collective harmony requires a shift from external reliance (on Jesus as a Savior) to inner alignment with the divine Christ energy—which, for him, represents the synthesis of masculine and feminine spiritual energies. This Christ energy is not a person outside us, but an archetypal force that we must access, integrate, and embody internally. // The Internal Christ: Transformation Through Integration // According to my friend, the path to Zion (Collective Harmony) lies in the integration of the divine masculine and feminine—Christ and Sophia—within each individual. This inner union creates balance and coherence, allowing individuals to act in alignment with a greater cosmic order. The divine masculine, symbolized by Christ, represents will, clarity, and purposeful action. The divine feminine, symbolized by Sophia, represents wisdom, intuition, and receptivity. Together, they form an internal harmony that guides the individual toward their highest potential. // My friend believes that external structures or saviors will not save humanity, but rather, humanity must learn to embody these energies themselves. It’s through awakening and integrating both Christ and Sophia within, rather than relying on Jesus as an external, distinct figure, that we evolve toward a higher state of collective consciousness. Zion (Collective Harmony), for him, is not an event brought about by the arrival of an external figure, but a process of personal and collective internal alignment. This integration within each individual will ripple outward, creating harmony within communities and eventually manifesting as Zion. // In this framework, human beings are not passive recipients of a salvation from an outside source, but active participants in their own spiritual evolution, capable of tapping into the Christ energy within. Humanity’s evolution, in his view, must move away from dependence on external guides and saviors and instead cultivate their own divine nature. This aligns with his broader view of a world that must be healed not by surrendering to an external Jesus, but by embodying Christ within and uniting these energies into collective harmony. // The Path of Surrender: Zion (Collective Harmony) Through Jesus Christ // In contrast, I see Zion (Collective Harmony) as not a product of human self-sufficiency, but rather, an expression of complete surrender to Jesus Christ. I believe that Zion (Collective Harmony) will emerge not through the integration of masculine and feminine energies within, but through yielding to the will of Jesus Christ. While my friend emphasizes awakening the inner Christ, my perspective aligns more with the idea that Zion will not be achieved through internal balance or self-empowerment alone, but through the divine intervention and orchestration of Jesus. // I believe Zion (Collective Harmony) will come as a result of humanity learning to relinquish its will to Jesus and trust in His direction, even when it doesn’t make sense. In my view, the meek—the ones who surrender their intellect, strategies, and worldly wisdom—will inherit the earth, and they will be the ones who build Zion. This radical submission to God’s will is the foundation of the Zion I envision. // I find the idea of radical surrender exemplified in scriptural accounts such as Nephi’s retrieval of the brass plates, where Nephi abandoned human reason and strategy and simply obeyed, trusting that God would provide the way. Zion will not be constructed by human effort or strategic planning but by surrendering entirely to God’s orchestration. The people of Zion will not build through cleverness but through obedience to a divine plan far beyond human comprehension. // Overlaps and Shared Themes // Though our visions differ, there are significant areas of overlap between our perspectives: // Both emphasize the necessity of inner transformation. My friend believes this occurs through internal integration of divine energies, while I believe it happens through surrender to divine will. In both cases, a shift in consciousness and personal evolution is key. // Both perspectives acknowledge that Zion (Collective Harmony) cannot be built by human effort alone. Whether through surrender or integration, both views affirm that Zion is a divine work that requires alignment with God’s will, whether it be through the external Christ or the internal Christ. // Both perspectives emphasize humility and divine guidance. In either view, the path forward requires surrender to something greater than the individual. The question is not about individual prowess or intellect, but about yielding to a higher, divinely orchestrated plan. // The Need for Humility in Our Beliefs // At the core, both my friend and I understand that our views are not absolute truths but beliefs—guesses about the way forward. We must remain humble, recognizing that the journey toward Zion (Collective Harmony) is complex and that no one perspective holds all the answers. We are fallible humans, shaped by our limited experiences and understandings. If we are to move forward toward Zion, we must do so with humility, accepting that our beliefs may be incomplete or incorrect. // Ultimately, the key to achieving Zion (Collective Harmony) will not lie in our certainty or intellectual frameworks, but in our willingness to yield to divine guidance. Whether through surrender to Jesus Christ or the cultivation of an internal Christ, the essence of Zion lies in our ability to harmonize with God’s will—however that may manifest for each individual. The most important thing is that we stay open to learning, listening, and evolving together.

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