Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde ValleySedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley
    Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley
    • Home
    • Sedona
      • Arts and Entertainment
      • Bear Howard Chronicles
      • Business Profiles
      • City of Sedona
      • Elections
      • Goodies & Freebies
      • Mind & Body
      • Sedona News
    • Opinion
    • Real Estate
    • About
    • The Sedonan
    • Advertise
    • Sedona’s Best
    Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde ValleySedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley
    Home»Amaya Gayle Gregory»The Radical Message of an Anarchist
    Amaya Gayle Gregory

    The Radical Message of an Anarchist

    April 20, 20251 Comment
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Reddit WhatsApp
    Image: Dreamstime, Mystical Figure Emerges symbolizing the resurrection
    Image: Dreamstime, Mystical Figure Emerges symbolizing the resurrection
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Reddit WhatsApp

    By Amaya Gayle Gregory

    Amaya Gayle GregoryJesus, a brown-skinned man, was arrested by armed men in the middle of the night, put up for auction with Barabbas, and lost. His radical message, the message of anarchy, was simply too much for the establishment to allow as they shouted, ‘Kill him and bury him deep.’

    What was his crime? Living as love, doing what love does, caring for the disenfranchised, speaking with women, dining with tax collectors, being compassionate to the sick, laying his healing hands on his beloveds, beckoning little children, all little children, to come to him.

    He was the original author of DEI. His message was clear. Love all people, black, brown, white, male, female, regardless. Never once did he mention anything about homosexuality. Had it been important, he would have. All were welcome. His words, mostly misunderstood, thirsted for the fairness and justice so lacking in the world. Adamantly inclusive he said. ‘You are all gods.’ He denied no one.

    And yet, or because of it, the people set Barabbas free and chose to crucify Jesus. 

    Religion tells the story that it had to happen, that it was necessary for the gift to unfold, his brutal death required to buy the salvation of those who would believe. They also say he was God’s only begotten son, the One, a God far removed from you and I.

    Sedona Gift Shop

    Those are handy stories. They soften his message until it is nothing but invisible supposition to all but those maniacally intent on finding it. They turn his life into something unreachable, and seemingly unteachable. The take the anarchist, the radical lover of all life and give him a makeover, turning his wondrous love, his absolute compassion, his undying embrace into a symbol of control. Believe or spend eternity in hell. It’s blasphemy to attain to his state of grace for you are not God.

    Were he here, he’d probably smile as he flipped the agreed upon story end over end. He’d hug us all, regardless of how far we had fallen. He’d remind us that we need to learn to love ourselves, that we can’t love others when we can’t even love ourselves. He’d show us his face in the politician, in those who have risen far above. He would invite us to recall his words and find compassion for those we find it hard to love. ‘It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.’

    There is a reason we care for the least of them, the immigrants, those imprisoned whether behind concrete walls, or the prisons of their minds. We are denied love to the exact degree that we deny love to anyone, to anything, not as punishment, not by God, but by the very act of our denial.

    Jesus had only one message, just one. Love. It’s why he is still celebrated today, not lost in the dusty pages of a book, stashed away, rarely to be seen. His message is often lost in twisted minds and egos, dogma and pageantry, misunderstandings both unintentional and with purpose, and yet it will endure through all attempts to water it down, to weaponize his words and meaning, to turn it into something it never was.

    That is the true resurrection, the remembrance of our Holy Name. Love is what we are; it is who we are. That needs no lie, no power to sustain it. It stands on its own regardless of what happens. Love is. It cannot be killed. It cannot be harmed. It cannot be distorted, for under all the fallacies, love still remains.

    There is no appropriate bio for Amaya Gayle. She doesn’t exist other than as an expression of Consciousness Itself. Talking about her in biographical terms is a disservice to the truth and to anyone who might be led to believe in such nonsense. None of us exist, not in the way we think. Ideas spring into words. Words flow onto paper and yet no one writes them. They simply appear fully formed. Looking at her you would swear this is a lie. She’s there after all, but honestly, she’s not. Bios normally wax on about accomplishments and beliefs, happenings in time and space. She has never accomplished anything, has no beliefs and like you was never born and will never die. Engage with Amaya at your own risk.  Amaya Gayle is the author of Actuality; infinity at play, published by New Saram Press. https://amzn.to/3Rd4CTY

    Healing Paws

    This is an advertisement

    1 Comment

    1. styv on April 20, 2025 1:27 pm

      it is unlikely that any human actually has a blanket compassion or love for all, it could be possible, but who knows.

      people are often restricted to loving their own, making excuses for their own and showing compassion on their own.

      for the people in the sunken place, who are totally helpless, maybe of their doing or not, that is where they really find that life can abandon, even at instances where doing may not cost much, to others nearby,

      love could be remote, out in space for many in this world,

    From Protest Signs to Missiles: Why Peace Needs Teeth
    .By Tommy Acosta

    As a child of the ’60s, I grew up hating war—protesting and demonstrating against them, uncovering as a writer the global military-industrial complex, and seeking peace with my pen. Through the years, I saw myself as a herald—someone who could help people, through my writings, liberate themselves from programmed ignorance and institutionalized stupidity. Well, now that I am in the third act of my life, my understanding of how the world works has changed.

    Read more→

    The Sedonan
    Need More Customers?
    Bear Howard Chronicles
    Humankind
    Tlaquepaque
    Verde Valley Wine Trail
    Recent Comments
    • Marv & Liberty Lincoln on Elon Musk: Prince of Power Tools, Pawn of Politics
    • West Sedona Dave on Sedona Memorial Day Ceremony conducted at the Posse Ground Pavilion.
    • Rodger Waters on Sedona Memorial Day Ceremony conducted at the Posse Ground Pavilion.
    • JB on Elon Musk: Prince of Power Tools, Pawn of Politics
    • West Sedona Dave on Elon Musk: Prince of Power Tools, Pawn of Politics
    • JB on Memorial Day: The Measure of Courage, The Cost of Freedom
    • JB on Schaefers Donate Funding for First Roundabout Artwork
    • Dutch on Schaefers Donate Funding for First Roundabout Artwork
    • JB on Lift Your Heads, Democrats—The Soul of the Nation & Sedona Still Beats With You
    • SSuzanne on Memorial Day: The Measure of Courage, The Cost of Freedom
    • JB on Lift Your Heads, Democrats—The Soul of the Nation & Sedona Still Beats With You
    • BG on Lift Your Heads, Democrats—The Soul of the Nation & Sedona Still Beats With You
    • Brenda Redel on Local Businesses Receive Recognition from Humane Society of Sedona
    • Brenda Redel on Local Businesses Receive Recognition from Humane Society of Sedona
    • JB on Lift Your Heads, Democrats—The Soul of the Nation & Sedona Still Beats With You
    Archives
    From Protest Signs to Missiles: Why Peace Needs Teeth
    .By Tommy Acosta

    As a child of the ’60s, I grew up hating war—protesting and demonstrating against them, uncovering as a writer the global military-industrial complex, and seeking peace with my pen. Through the years, I saw myself as a herald—someone who could help people, through my writings, liberate themselves from programmed ignorance and institutionalized stupidity. Well, now that I am in the third act of my life, my understanding of how the world works has changed.

    Read more→

    The Sedonan
    The Sedonan
    From Protest Signs to Missiles: Why Peace Needs Teeth
    .By Tommy Acosta

    As a child of the ’60s, I grew up hating war—protesting and demonstrating against them, uncovering as a writer the global military-industrial complex, and seeking peace with my pen. Through the years, I saw myself as a herald—someone who could help people, through my writings, liberate themselves from programmed ignorance and institutionalized stupidity. Well, now that I am in the third act of my life, my understanding of how the world works has changed.

    Read more→

    From Protest Signs to Missiles: Why Peace Needs Teeth
    .By Tommy Acosta

    As a child of the ’60s, I grew up hating war—protesting and demonstrating against them, uncovering as a writer the global military-industrial complex, and seeking peace with my pen. Through the years, I saw myself as a herald—someone who could help people, through my writings, liberate themselves from programmed ignorance and institutionalized stupidity. Well, now that I am in the third act of my life, my understanding of how the world works has changed.

    Read more→

    From Protest Signs to Missiles: Why Peace Needs Teeth
    .By Tommy Acosta

    As a child of the ’60s, I grew up hating war—protesting and demonstrating against them, uncovering as a writer the global military-industrial complex, and seeking peace with my pen. Through the years, I saw myself as a herald—someone who could help people, through my writings, liberate themselves from programmed ignorance and institutionalized stupidity. Well, now that I am in the third act of my life, my understanding of how the world works has changed.

    Read more→

    From Protest Signs to Missiles: Why Peace Needs Teeth
    .By Tommy Acosta

    As a child of the ’60s, I grew up hating war—protesting and demonstrating against them, uncovering as a writer the global military-industrial complex, and seeking peace with my pen. Through the years, I saw myself as a herald—someone who could help people, through my writings, liberate themselves from programmed ignorance and institutionalized stupidity. Well, now that I am in the third act of my life, my understanding of how the world works has changed.

    Read more→

    From Protest Signs to Missiles: Why Peace Needs Teeth
    .By Tommy Acosta

    As a child of the ’60s, I grew up hating war—protesting and demonstrating against them, uncovering as a writer the global military-industrial complex, and seeking peace with my pen. Through the years, I saw myself as a herald—someone who could help people, through my writings, liberate themselves from programmed ignorance and institutionalized stupidity. Well, now that I am in the third act of my life, my understanding of how the world works has changed.

    Read more→

    © 2025 All rights reserved. Sedona.biz.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.