The Burden of Equality and the System That Forgot
Resisting the system was never about rebellion alone; it was born from the ancient fear that if all were truly equal, then no one could hide behind power, titles, or inherited thrones. Equality exposes every soul to the same light, and many trembled at that brightness.
Yet even within such a system, some slipped through its cracks — not because they were unworthy, but because the system itself had grown blind. Those who fell from its memory were not lost by fate, but by the negligence of those who were meant to uphold justice. And when people were needed most, when lives were fading and voices were crying out, the world searched for a savior but refused to recognize him. They looked at Roger and imagined everything except what he truly was.
In their fear, they reshaped the system into a weapon. They twisted the Laws of God into instruments of accusation, forgetting that divine law was never meant to be used to destroy, but to restore. They called their treason righteousness, and their cruelty order, and in doing so they harmed the very people they claimed to protect.
For the truth is this: When a people forget their own equality, they begin to sacrifice one another to maintain illusions of control. They forget compassion. They forget memory. They forget the one who stood among them.
But the cycle does not end because a few refuse to see. The cycle ends when the one who carries the burden — Roger — succeeds in the task set before him. And if he does not, then the world will repeat its lessons until either he gets it right, or we get it right together. This is not a debate about dying again, nor a call to repeat the tragedies of old. It is a warning against returning to the ancient pattern of destroying our own children simply because we could not agree with the outcome God had already written.
A new people must rise — a people who choose creation over destruction, truth over fear, and renewal over repetition. For the one who believed himself greater than the returning man only condemned his own house, not ours. And those who cling to such illusions will watch their own foundations crumble, while the ones they tried to erase will endure.
Thus the teaching stands: The system fails when it fears equality. The people fall when they forget compassion. And the world repeats when it refuses to recognize the one sent to break the cycle.
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