CHRIST THE COMPLETION: THE UNFLOWING OF GOD’S PLAN AND PURPOSE OF THE AGES!

We pray this Word is a blessing to the body of Christ…. The EBook is a short 7 Chapters long…… A very short read….

Blessings All …..

CHAPTER 1:
CALLED TO RECONCILE THE ENTIRE WORLD

“God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto Himself… and hath committed unto us the ministry of reconciliation” (2 Cor. 5:19).

Before the foundations of the world, God had a purpose — not merely to create, but to reconcile. He foreknew the fall. He foresaw the disruption. And in love, He planned redemption not as a backup plan, but as the heart of His eternal intention. Christ was “the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world” (Rev. 13:8), and from the beginning, reconciliation was the golden thread that would tie all creation back into God.

What does it mean to reconcile? In the Greek, the word is katallassō — to bring back into favor, to restore to divine fellowship. It implies that something has been broken, a relationship severed, and now a supernatural restoration takes place. Not partial. Not postponed. But fully accomplished in Christ, and now unfolding in us and through us.

We must understand this: God was in Christ. Not beside Him. Not watching from afar. He was in Christ — working, wooing, drawing, breaking down every wall. The cross wasn’t about appeasing an angry Father — it was about a Father in the Son, embracing the world in love, even as it rejected Him. “He made peace through the blood of His cross” (Col. 1:20). God’s heart bled for us — and bled through us — until every barrier that sin raised was torn down by love.

This is why Paul said, “The love of Christ constraineth us” — not fear, not duty, not law, but love. Once we see the true reconciliation of the world — that God in Christ included all in His redemptive plan — we cannot remain passive. We are compelled. The ministry of reconciliation is not optional. It is not reserved for apostles and evangelists. It is the commission of every son who hears the heart of the Father.

God didn’t call us to escape the world. He called us to reconcile it. Religion teaches us to separate. To judge. To withdraw from the sinful and the broken. But the Kingdom of God sends us to them. The ministry of reconciliation is the ministry of going into every dark place and saying, “You are loved. You are wanted. You are included. Now be restored.”

This reconciliation is not just positional — it’s transformational. It doesn’t just declare peace; it creates peace. It doesn’t just say we are forgiven — it makes us whole. “If any man be in Christ, he is a new creation.” The world doesn’t need more religion. It needs new creation. New minds. New hearts. New spirits. And God has placed that newness in us so we can carry it to the world.

It begins with vision. Do you see the world through heaven’s eyes? Or do you see it through the lens of human judgment? The Pharisees saw sin and condemned. Jesus saw sin and gave Himself. We must be a people who see what God sees — the potential for reconciliation, the beauty of redemption in every soul.

We are not called to announce judgment, but to unveil Jesus. And when He is unveiled, hearts turn. Minds change. Lives shift. It may not happen in a moment — but it begins when we carry the presence of the Reconciler Himself.

This is our calling. This is our gospel. We are not just saved — we are sent. Sent into our cities. Sent into our families. Sent into broken systems and scattered people groups. With one message: God has reconciled the world to Himself — and now we call you home.

We are ambassadors — not of fear, but of reconciliation. We are agents of the Kingdom — not with swords, but with healing in our hands. We don’t bring condemnation; we bring completion. We speak from the finished work, not toward it. We are sons of God, filled with His Spirit, and commissioned to reveal His heart to a groaning world.

Reconciliation is not the end of the gospel — it’s the beginning of sonship. For the same Father who reconciles you also sends you. And the same love that saves you now flows through you.

Let us rise. Let us go. Let us reconcile the world back to its Source — and glorify the Father in the Son.

**CHAPTER 2:
HE WAS MADE SIN — THAT WE MIGHT BECOME RIGHTEOUS**

“For He hath made Him to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in Him.” — 2 Corinthians 5:21

Christ was not merely a substitute — He became the very embodiment of sin. He didn’t just carry our sins like a burden; He was made sin, the totality of the fallen Adamic man, in order to crucify that entire identity once and for all.

This divine exchange is not theological theory — it is spiritual transformation. Jesus did not just die for us, He died as us. The man of sin was nailed to the cross in the body of Christ, and when He cried, “It is finished,” the old creation came to its end.

So that we might be made — not just considered, not just covered — but made the righteousness of God in Him. This is not our righteousness. It is His. It is not earned. It is gifted. We are no longer sinners trying to be righteous. We are righteous, learning to live in the light of that righteousness.

We are not patching up the old man — we are putting on the new. We are not fixing Adam — we are manifesting Christ. The cross is not a repair shop. It is a death sentence to sin and a birth canal into sonship.

The new creation does not begin with better behavior. It begins with the revelation that the old has passed away. And this revelation does not lead to passivity, but to power. It frees us from guilt-based striving and invites us into grace-empowered living.

Jesus didn’t just carry our punishment. He carried our identity — the fallen, broken, twisted version of humanity — into death. And when He rose, He left that corpse behind. The One who walked out of the grave was a new kind of man — the firstborn among many brethren.

You are not just forgiven — you are re-formed. You are not just cleansed — you are created anew. You are not just a believer — you are a new being in Christ Jesus. And that changes everything.

**CHAPTER 3:
THE MYSTERY HIDDEN FROM AGES — NOW REVEALED**

“Even the mystery which hath been hid from ages and from generations, but now is made manifest to his saints…” — Colossians 1:26

For generations, God concealed something so glorious that not even angels understood it. Prophets searched it. Kings longed for it. But it remained hidden — a divine mystery wrapped in time, waiting to be unveiled.

That mystery is Christ in you.

Not Christ beside you. Not Christ above you. Not Christ as a distant deity. But Christ in you — the hope of glory. This is the heart of the New Covenant, the foundation of sonship, and the secret to victorious living.

The gospel is not an external religion but an internal reality. Christ has taken up residence in you — not as a guest, but as your very life. You are not merely imitating Him. You are participating in Him. You are not trying to become like Christ — you are discovering that He is already in you.

This changes everything.

You no longer strive to get to God — He has come to you. You are not climbing toward holiness — holiness has moved in. You are not hoping for transformation — the Transformer lives in you. This is not about trying harder. This is about believing deeper.

And it was hidden — because the old man couldn’t carry this glory. Only the new creation can house Christ. Only the reborn spirit can know and express this mystery.

This is not for the spiritually elite. It is for every saint. It is not about titles or platforms. It is about union. Christ in you — the hope, the assurance, the guarantee — of glory.

So stop looking out there. Look within. The kingdom is inside you. The treasure is in your earthen vessel. The river flows from your innermost being.

The mystery is no longer hidden. It is revealed.
And that revelation is a Person living inside of you.

**CHAPTER 4:
FROM GLORY TO GLORY — THE JOURNEY OF SONSHIP**

“But as many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God…” — John 1:12

Sonship is not a destination — it’s a journey. It begins with receiving Christ and continues as we grow into the fullness of who He is in us. From glory to glory, faith to faith, revelation to revelation — we are being changed.

We are not just saved from hell. We are being shaped into sons. The Father is not raising orphans — He is revealing offspring. He is not collecting churchgoers — He is forming a family.

This journey is not without challenges. Like Israel in the wilderness, we confront giants, face deserts, and battle lies. But every step is designed to mature us, stretch us, and awaken in us the spirit of sonship.

We learn obedience through what we suffer. We grow in grace through what we walk through. We discover authority through intimacy. We move from milk to meat. From immaturity to maturity. From believing we are forgiven to knowing we are beloved.

Sonship is about identity. It’s not performance. It’s not position. It’s about knowing whose you are and who lives in you. The Spirit within cries, “Abba!” — and that cry is deeper than doctrine. It’s the echo of eternity reminding us that we were born from God.

And sons are led by the Spirit. Sons carry the heart of the Father. Sons walk in both humility and authority. Sons are not just spectators of heaven — they are ambassadors of heaven. They release what they carry. They reveal who formed them.

This journey doesn’t end in religion. It ends in union — mature sons walking in the fullness of Christ, revealing the Father to a broken world.

From glory to glory — we go.
From son to son — the earth shall know.

CHAPTER 5:
THE ALPHA AND OMEGA — REVEALED BY THE SPIRIT OF REVELATION AND TRUTH!

“And he said unto me, It is done. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end. I will give unto him that is athirst of the fountain of the water of life freely” (Rev. 21:6).

Christ is not just at the beginning of the story — He IS the beginning. And He does not simply bring closure — He IS the end. Alpha and Omega. The first letter and the last. The source and the goal. The author and the finisher. He began all things in Himself and will consummate all things back into Himself. This is not theology. This is reality. It is the framework through which all things must be understood: in Him.

Jesus didn’t just create the world. The world was created IN Him. That means it was birthed from within His divine being. And in the same way, all things will be gathered back INTO Him — not just externally, but internally — restored to the very place from which they came: the heart of God.

Think of it: every letter ever written is made of an alphabet. And Jesus says, “I am the alphabet.” The Alpha and the Omega. Every word God has spoken — every revelation, every truth, every prophecy — all of it finds its meaning in Him. He is not just the messenger — He is the message. He is the Word. He is the full language of God made visible, tangible, knowable.

So what does it mean for Christ to be the Omega? It means nothing is lost. Nothing escapes His purpose. Everything He authored, He will finish. Every seed He planted, He will harvest. Every soul that came from Him will return to Him. And that return is not just location — it’s identity. It’s the restoration of all things INTO the fullness of the Christ.

Religion has painted God as One who starts grand plans but abandons the blueprint halfway through. That is not the God revealed in Christ. Jesus is the Alpha and Omega — and everything in between. He doesn’t just start the work and hope it turns out okay. He completes what He begins. “He who began a good work in you will complete it…” (Phil. 1:6).

We are not just returning to a place. We are returning to a Person. And more than that — we are discovering that we never truly left. For in Him, we live and move and have our being. The lie of separation is what Christ came to destroy. The illusion of exile is what grace came to end.

This chapter — this revelation — is not merely doctrinal. It is transformational. When the Spirit of truth reveals to your heart that Christ is your beginning and your end — it awakens something eternal in you. It shows you that your journey is not random. Your pain is not wasted. Your wilderness is not permanent. You are headed somewhere — back into God.

From Him. Through Him. To Him. This is the circle of life in Christ. He is the Alpha — the beginning of your story. He is the Omega — the fulfillment of your destiny. And the Spirit inside you bears witness to that eternal truth, crying out, “Abba — You are my origin and my home.”

So when He says, “It is done,” believe Him. Your redemption is not a maybe — it’s a certainty. Your reconciliation is not a theory — it’s a person. Your salvation is not just an event — it’s a process unfolding inside the eternal Christ.

Let every fear fall. Let every lie be silenced. Let every accusation be swallowed up by this thunderous truth: Christ is the first and the last — and He will have the final word in you, in me, and in the entire cosmos.

The Spirit and the bride say, Come.
The Alpha and Omega says, It is done.

**CHAPTER 6:
INTO HIS IMAGE — THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE INNER MAN**

“But we all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord” (2 Cor. 3:18).

God’s desire is not simply to save us from something — but to transform us into someone. That someone is Christ. He is not only our Savior but our pattern. He is not just the gift — He is the goal. And this transformation doesn’t happen externally through works or religion, but internally through the Spirit of the Lord.

The inner man — the hidden man of the heart — is the real you. This is where God works. This is where Christ is formed. This is where eternity meets humanity, and where the divine image is etched upon our being. Not behavior modification. Not spiritual cosmetics. But an inward metamorphosis — from glory to glory.

Just as a caterpillar becomes a butterfly, the transformation into Christ’s image is radical and irreversible. The DNA of the butterfly was always inside the caterpillar — it just needed the right environment to emerge. So too, Christ is in you. You are a new creation. But that newness is being revealed layer by layer as the old fades and the new is made manifest.

Beholding Him is the key. We are not transformed by striving. We are transformed by seeing. As we look upon Him — not with natural eyes but with the eyes of the Spirit — something holy happens. We begin to reflect what we see. As the mirror of the Word and the Spirit reveals the face of Jesus, our own face begins to shine with the same glory.

This is why intimacy matters. Transformation is born in the secret place. There, in the quiet communion of heart with God, the divine image is restored. There, our soul becomes saturated with His presence. There, we are changed — not by guilt, not by rules, but by glory.

And this transformation is not an optional upgrade for the super-spiritual. It is the destiny of every child of God. “Those He foreknew, He also predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son” (Rom. 8:29). This is your calling. This is your future. To be like Jesus. To walk as He walked. To love as He loved. To live as He lives.

And it’s not just about you — it’s about a new creation. God is building a people, a body, a bride, who reflect His Son. A corporate expression of Christ in the earth. A many-membered man filled with one Spirit — all bearing the image of the heavenly.

This is where we’re going. This is what God is doing. Not just getting people to heaven — but bringing heaven into people. Not just saving us from hell — but shaping us into Him. Christ in you, the hope of glory. Christ AS you — the manifestation of that glory.

So keep looking. Keep beholding. Keep yielding. For the more you gaze, the more you glow. And the more you glow, the more the world will know: Christ is alive — and He is being revealed in a people who bear His image.

We shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is.
And as He is — so are we in this world.

**CHAPTER 7:
GOD ALL IN ALL — THE FINAL VISION OF VICTORY**

“Then comes the end, when He shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father… that God may be all in all” (1 Cor. 15:24,28).

The end is not destruction — it’s consummation. It’s not annihilation — it’s restoration. The final chapter of the story doesn’t close in failure, judgment, or eternal separation — but in divine union. The Alpha and Omega is bringing all things full circle, until God is all and in all.

The cross was never just a rescue mission — it was a restoration plan. Jesus didn’t die to save a few. He came to reconcile everything back to Himself. “For God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto Himself…” (2 Cor. 5:19). Not just a part. Not just a remnant. The whole world — cosmos — creation — restored in Christ.

And what does it mean for God to be all in all? It means no more duality. No more division. No more resistance to love. No more separation between sacred and secular, heaven and earth, God and man. It means everything once lost is found. Everything broken is healed. Everything fragmented is made whole. The many become one.

This is not universalism as man defines it — it is the gospel as God declares it. A victorious gospel. A triumphant Christ. A finished work. From the depths of sin to the heights of glory, Jesus is Lord over it all. And His reign doesn’t end until every enemy is defeated — even death itself.

Every knee shall bow. Every tongue shall confess. But not by coercion — by revelation. When the veil is lifted, when the true nature of Christ is revealed, the heart can’t help but worship. Love wins — not by force, but by truth.

And you — beloved — are a firstfruit of that restoration. You are a witness of the kingdom coming. You are proof that Christ is making all things new. The same Spirit that raised Jesus from the dead now lives in you — transforming you, filling you, revealing the image of God in and through your life.

The end is not a date. It is a Person. The end is not the rapture — it’s the return of all things into Christ. The end is not escape — it’s embrace. Not the end of hope — but the fulfillment of every hope that ever lived in the heart of God.

So let the Spirit say what religion never could: The plan was never to lose the world, but to redeem it. The purpose was never partial victory — but total glory. Not just heaven some day, but heaven on earth, Christ in you, and God all in all.

This is the final vision. This is the completed work. This is the heart of the Father fulfilled.

Amen. Even so, come Lord Jesus — come fully, come finally — in us, through us, and in all creation.

It is done.
Christ the Completion. 

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