Will

Published on 19 November 2025 at 18:31

What We Do in Life Echoes in Eternity

Will is one of the most powerful substances woven into the fabric of creation. It belongs to both the visible and the invisible realms. The will is so powerful that it gives the creature the capacity to reason like the Creator, for it was within the Creator’s own will that His representative was formed in His image and likeness. And so the ancient question arises:

Do we truly live by our own will, or has everything already been predetermined?
Are we sovereign actors, or merely performers on a script written before time?

This debate has stretched across centuries, yet answers remain incomplete. Perhaps the tension exists because the fullness of the matter cannot be contained in reason alone.

Humanity possesses a will. A real one. A powerful one. And yet, not all aspects of life fall under the absolute control of that will. Man (God’s breath in a vessel) was given a domain, a territory with laws embedded into creation itself. These laws were not restrictions but functionalities: guidance given so that man, the extension of Elohim, might rule, protect, and flourish within his sphere.

Creation was set in motion with a principle: every seed produces after its kind. Every breach of law plants a seed. And the womb of creation does not forget. Whatever is sown must deliver its fruit. And that fruit continues through generations until a greater seed is sown that dethrones the former.

This has been the story of man.
Everything in his domain was entrusted to him, and his will governed it as long as that will was guided by the breath of the creator within him.
But when the breath of divine wisdom was withdrawn, man became fully dependent on himself. And a will without divine direction becomes a devourer. Even the best intentions of such a will eventually harm, because it operates under the throne of the old seed: the fall from wisdom.

 

The fall was not merely a moral collapse but a disconnect from the very foundation upon which man’s domain was built. A man wandering in a world he governs, yet disconnected from the wisdom that sustains. This is the true tragedy.

A will can make a man anything he desires to be, yet not all things are within the capacity of that will. Will can determine outcomes, but only within the boundaries of the human vessel. Religion became the system intended to bring clarity to such, but rather than helping, it often strengthens the old seed by adding layers of imposed will traditions that bind rather than liberate. This is not rebellion against the Creator when I speak of this; it is a return to what He intended.

He never gave us a religion. He gave us a kingdom, a domain, and His breath.
When He spoke again, He declared His love not for a tribe, sect, or particular race, country, or system but for the world, for humanity, for Adam. Meaning religion was to be an added part of our kingdom life, not the other way round.

The exercise of our will is dependent on understanding and wisdom. The old seed seeks to dethrone the Creator, and that is what drives the misaligned human will, not God enforcing control. And yet, because misalignment carries destruction, He intervened not out of fear, but out of love. Only the Creator could restore what the creature distorted.

So He came in flesh to show us the path back to alignment.
Not to override human will, but to restore it. He declared a foundation for true worship:
“The Creator is Spirit.”
To worship Him is to function from the part of our being that draws from its Source. “To worship… in spirit is to live from the essence of who we are and in truth, the womb we came from, the language placed in us, the knowing we carry from birth, and the voice of the Creator inside.

When this understanding becomes light within us, we see clearly: we do live by our will, but a will that cannot be whole unless it is aligned with the Source. Everything else in existence that is not rooted in the creator’s divine idea is simply human, and the seeds we sow echo through creation, generation after generation, civilisation after civilisation.

For what we do in life echoes in eternity.

Just as a country gives its citizens freedom but within laws, so our will finds meaning within the laws of the domain we inhabit. A will without righteous law becomes destructive, ruled by the old seed. But the Father’s pleasure has always been to give us the Kingdom, not a religion.
The creator is not Christian, Muslim, Hindu, ancestral, a mystical or cosmic power, some human-carved images, or modern spirituality.
He is Spirit. He breathes Himself into us. And righteousness is the only law the human spirit needs for its will to function as intended.