There exists a beautiful paradox in the role of the spiritual teacher: to be a bridge that teaches others they need no bridge. Jesus embodied this contradiction with extraordinary grace—serving as a middleman whose ultimate purpose was to make himself unnecessary.
When we approach an enlightened presence, we encounter not comfort, but conflagration. Jesus did not offer easy answers or distant promises; he brought an immediate, transformative fire that consumed everything false within those who truly drew near.
This fire is indiscriminate and complete: It burns away negative desires—our hatreds, our resentments, and our fears. It burns away positive desires—even our spiritual ambitions and holy longings. It burns away hope itself—that postponement of life into some imagined tomorrow. What remains when everything burns? Only the eternal present, the naked now, stripped of past regrets and future anxieties.
"The kingdom of God is within you" (Luke 17: 25-30), —is perhaps the perhaps the most revolutionary statement ever uttered. In these words, he demolished the entire architecture of external authority and institutional mediation. But here emerges the profound question: If the kingdom is already within, why do we need a middleman at all?
The middleman exists not to create what is absent, but to awaken what has always been present. Jesus functioned as a mirror, reflecting back to humanity their own divine nature, obscured by layers of conditioning and false identity.
The Art of Sacred Self-Negation: Jesus handled his role as middleman through a constant practice of self-erasure. He pointed beyond himself: "Why do you call me good? No one is good except God alone." He promised his departure would benefit his followers: "It is better for you that I go away." He redirected worship: "The Father and I are one"—dissolving the separation between mediator and source. His entire ministry was an exercise in making himself obsolete. Each healing, each teaching, each moment of transmission carried the implicit message: You can do this too—it is the power of consciousness itself, and it dwells in you.
From manger to cross, Jesus lived as a breathing demonstration of awakened consciousness. This was his unique genius as a middleman—he didn't merely teach the path; he was the path made visible. He did say, ‘I am a the way, the truth, and life.’ Every moment became a teaching, every breath a scripture. He transformed the role of middleman from institutional gatekeeper into living proof.
The Middleman Who Disappears: The highest function of a spiritual middleman is to engineer their own irrelevance. Jesus succeeded completely. He awakened Christ consciousness—not as his exclusive possession, but as the birthright of every human being. His message: I am the way, the truth, and the life—but not because I am special and separate from you. I am the way because I show you what you already are beneath your forgetting. I am the truth because I mirror your deepest nature. I am the life because I live from the source that animates you.
The greatest gift of the middleman is not dependence, but liberation. Not followers, but awakened beings. Not worshippers looking upward, but consciousness recognising itself everywhere it looks.

Comments
Post a Comment