Who was Jeshua? The Messenger of Light and Christ Consciousness.
Who was Jeshua of Nazareth? Question of the history... Lets see some options...
5/1/20264 min read


Jeshua: The Messenger of Light and Christ Consciousness
In our series on creating from the inside out, invisible realms, and higher vibrations, we cannot overlook one of the most powerful figures to have ever influenced human consciousness. Jeshua of Nazareth, known as Jesus Christ. To billions, he is the Son of God, God incarnate, the Savior who died for the sins of humanity and rose from the dead. To others, he is a great teacher, a master, an enlightened being similar to the Buddha or other sages. And to many in today’s spiritual world, he is a messenger of light, a being who brought Christ Consciousness—the consciousness of unity and love—into the dense matter of our planet. Who was he, really? And why does it matter right now, as we learn to create reality from the inside out? I will attempt to look at Jesus from several perspectives.
From a historical lens, Jeshua was a first-century Jewish rabbi, preacher, and healer in Galilee. He lived during the Roman occupation, spoke Aramaic, taught in parables, and had a circle of close disciples. He performed acts that people perceived as miracles—healing the sick, casting out demons, feeding the multitudes. Scholars, historians, and biblical experts agree that a real man named Jesus existed and was crucified under the Roman prefect Pontius Pilate. His teachings were deeply rooted in Jewish tradition, speaking of the Kingdom of God, love for one's neighbor, forgiveness, and justice for the poor. (Perhaps one day we will look at how much of what he taught and said was poorly translated and extremely curtailed or simplified.)
Here, however, the paths diverge. According to the Gospels and Christian faith, Jeshua was not just an enlightened man. He was the incarnate Son of God, the second person of the Trinity. “I and the Father are one. Whoever has seen me has seen the Father.” His miracles were not merely manifestations of high vibrations, but proof of divine power. His death on the cross was not the tragedy of an enlightened master, but a voluntary sacrifice for the sins of humanity. And his resurrection is the center of faith—not a symbol, but a literal event that overcame death. This view holds that Jeshua was not just one of many enlightened ones; he was unique. (Exorcism is not performed "In the name of Buddha or Krishna," but "In the name of Jesus Christ!") The path to God goes through him: “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.”
Many people today perceive Jeshua differently—as a being who reached the highest level of consciousness: Christ Consciousness. (I recommend the book by David R. Hawkins: Discovery of the Presence of God: Devotional Nonduality). Not as God in the traditional sense, but as a human who fully awakened and became a channel for universal divine energy. He was a messenger of light who came to show that divinity is not "out there," but within each of us. “The Kingdom of God is within you.” His miracles were expressions of perfect vibration and connection with the Divine Source—something we can also approach. He did not come to establish a religion full of dogma and fear of sin, but to show the path of love, forgiveness, and unity. He did not want us to worship him, but to follow him in life and action. To be like him.
The name Jeshua, Hebrew for "God saves," captures his role as a universal teacher better than the Greek-Latin "Jesus." Some place him on the same level as Buddha, Krishna, or other masters. Others say he was one of the highest avatars, a being who voluntarily descended into matter to help humanity transition to a higher vibrational level.
Here is my personal perception, based on the principles I write about in this series: Jeshua was both, and even more. He was fully human and fully divine. Not in an "either-or" sense, but in a paradox that transcends our linear thinking. As a man, he walked the path of awakening in the desert, through baptism, through temptation. He reached a state where his human mind merged completely with his heart and the Divine Source. The vibrations of his being were so pure that the infinite love and power of the Creator could manifest through him.
Yet, he was not just an enlightened man like the Buddha. His mission was unique. To show that love can be stronger than death, that forgiveness can break the heaviest chains, and that each of us is invited to live as a child of God, not as a slave to fear and guilt. When he said, "I am the way," he didn't just mean through his external persona. He meant the path he demonstrated. The path from the inside out. To love God with all one's heart, to love one's neighbor as oneself, to forgive seventy-seven times, to seek first the Kingdom of God—meaning inner peace and connection.
In this sense, Jeshua is a messenger of light of the highest order. He showed that divinity is not something we achieve only through great effort, as in some Eastern traditions, but something that is already within us and awakens through love, trust, faith, and surrender. In a time when we are learning to create reality through thought, heart, and vibrations, Jeshua offers a key. It is not about worshipping him as an idol, nor about reducing him to just one of many masters. It is about following his vibration—the vibration of unconditional love that transcends ego, fear, and separation.
When you look into your heart and ask for a connection with Christ Consciousness—which is not exclusively Christian, but a universal consciousness of love—you may feel that Jeshua is not a distant historical figure. He is a living presence that can help you raise your own vibration. Some see him as an older brother, others as a Savior. Both views have their place, as long as they lead to greater love, not division. In my opinion, the Church "appropriated" him, which discourages people who are on his beautiful path but feel "resistance" toward organized religion due to historical facts and the cruelties committed in its name throughout history.
Was Jeshua just an awakened man? Yes, in the most beautiful sense of the word. Was he the Son of God and God himself? Yes, in the deepest paradox of unity. Was he a messenger of light? Undoubtedly. However, the most important thing is not which box we put him in. The most important thing is whether his message awakens in us greater love, greater freedom, and greater unity with all that is. Because ultimately, as we discussed in previous articles, everything we see outside is a reflection of our interior. When we awaken Christ Consciousness within ourselves, we stop arguing about who Jeshua was. We simply feel him as a living presence of love, leading us home.
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