Video --- πΏ Women of the Kingdom ---- January 30, 2026
πΏ Women of the Kingdom
πΊ Companion Video — Women of the Kingdom --- January 30, 2026
You can watch the video here:
π https://www.youtube.com/@TheTrueRemnant/videos
If you haven’t watched the video yet, I suggest starting there.
One of the clearest signs that the Kingdom of God is not an institution is this:
Women are central to it.
Not as assistants.
Not as symbolic figures.
Not as exceptions allowed by policy.
But as co-creators, peacemakers, and bearers of spiritual life.
This pattern appears again and again across scripture, history, and lived experience.
And just as consistently, it has been covered over—usually not with malice, but with systems that mistake order for control.
π️ Jesus Trusted Women With What Mattered Most
The resurrection itself begins with a woman.
Mary Magdalene is the first witness of the risen Christ.
Not Peter.
Not the Twelve.
Not an institution.
A woman.
And Jesus does not silence her.
“Go to my brethren, and say unto them…”
(John 20:17)
The Kingdom re-enters the world not through hierarchy, but through relationship.
Not through authority, but through trust.
Not through force, but through love.
That alone tells us something essential about how God works.
π The Book of Mormon: Covenant Strength Comes Through Mothers
The Book of Mormon preserves the same pattern—quietly, but unmistakably.
One verse says more than volumes of commentary ever could:
“They had been taught by their mothers, that if they did not doubt, God would deliver them.”
(Alma 56:47)
An entire army stands—not because of strategy, rank, or command—but because of what mothers planted in the soul.
Faith carried through women becomes the strength of a people.
This is not sentimentality.
This is Kingdom order.
πΏ Masculine and Feminine: Not Rivals, But Complements
A recent video circulating among faithful members makes an important observation:
modern society overwhelmingly rewards masculine traits—competition, efficiency, control—while quietly dismissing feminine ones—nurture, relationship, care, and meaning.
That imbalance has consequences.
When femininity is undervalued, people lose connection.
When relationship is replaced by performance, meaning erodes.
When control replaces stewardship, both people and the earth suffer.
The answer is not to erase masculinity—or to masculinize women—but to restore balance.
Ancient traditions understood this well.
So did Jesus.
πΎ The Nemenhah: Balance Made Visible
The Nemenhah Records make explicit what many sacred traditions only imply.
In this understanding:
Women and men are co-creators with the Creator
Mothers nominate leaders
Councils govern, not solitary hierarchies
Peace flows outward from the home
Authority is recognized, not seized
Power is not enforced.
It is stewarded.
Zion cannot exist where women are diminished—because love itself cannot be governed by domination.
π When Institutions Replace Relationship
History shows a repeating pattern.
Early Christian communities—especially those preserved outside Roman control—remember women as teachers, witnesses, and spiritual equals.
But when faith was absorbed into empire, something shifted.
Power centralized.
Hierarchy hardened.
Relationship gave way to control.
What could not be easily managed was quietly removed.
This pattern did not end in antiquity.
Whenever religion becomes an institution first and a relationship second, women are among the first to be constrained—not because they are weak, but because they are powerful in ways systems struggle to control.
π️ Restoration, Interrupted
The Restoration itself began with promise.
Women exercised spiritual gifts.
The Relief Society was envisioned as a spiritual society.
Authority flowed relationally, not bureaucratically.
But after Joseph Smith’s death, the pattern shifted again.
Under Brigham Young, polygamy was introduced—not as mutual co-creation, but as a male-centered structure justified as commandment.
Regardless of intention, the fruit was visible:
women diminished
families strained
love subordinated to power
That is not Kingdom fruit.
The Kingdom of God does not grow through domination—even when it claims divine sanction.
πΈ A Witness From Outside Religion
Sometimes history teaches without scripture.
Sena, wife of Tokugawa Ieyasu, helped shape the conditions that led to over 260 years of peace in Japan—not through force, but through wisdom, restraint, and influence.
No preaching.
No coercion.
No hierarchy.
Just feminine strength expressed as peace.
That is what the Kingdom looks like when it takes root in real life.
✝️ Why This Matters
If the Kingdom of God is within us…
Then women cannot be erased.
Then love cannot be regulated.
Then authority cannot be hoarded.
Then peace cannot be forced.
Jesus did not come to establish patriarchy.
He came to restore union.
π± A Quiet Remembering
This isn’t about attacking institutions.
It isn’t about assigning blame.
It isn’t about relitigating history.
It’s about remembering the pattern God keeps repeating.
The Kingdom advances through:
mothers
daughters
sisters
women who love deeply and see clearly
Jesus trusted them.
Scripture confirms them.
History echoes them.
The Spirit still moves through them.
And the Kingdom continues to rise—quietly—wherever women are honored.
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