πΆ The Waywalker’s Wheel
πΆ The Waywalker’s Wheel
Walking the Way One Season at a Time
πͺΆ After studying the Great Medicine Wheel, something else slowly began standing out to me in the Nemenhah records.
The Way was never presented as a single moment.
It was a walk.
A journey.
A lifelong process of learning balance with the Peacemaker, with creation, and with one another.
That realization eventually became what I now call:
The Waywalker’s Wheel.
Not a ladder.
Not a checklist.
Not a system for proving spiritual superiority.
A path.
A living cycle of growth.
Because the records constantly show people:
- learning,
- failing,
- repenting,
- sacrificing,
- healing,
- and returning again.
Not perfect people.
Walking people.
πΏ One of the biggest misunderstandings in religion is the idea that spiritual growth is always straight upward.
But life rarely works that way.
Most of us move through seasons.
We gain light.
Then we struggle.
Then we sacrifice.
Then we heal.
Then we gain deeper understanding.
Then another season begins.
The Nemenhah teachings often feel more circular than linear because life itself moves in cycles.
And honestly?
That actually gives me hope.
Because it means struggling does not mean failure.
Sometimes it simply means:
you are still walking.
π KNOWLEDGE
Awakening to Light
The journey usually begins with light.
Questions.
Awakening.
Truth breaking into the soul.
This is where a person begins hearing the voice of the Peacemaker more clearly.
Sometimes softly.
Sometimes through suffering.
Sometimes through scripture.
Sometimes through another human being.
But eventually something inside begins waking up.
The records repeatedly emphasize:
- seeking,
- listening,
- learning,
- remembering,
- and opening the eyes.
The Waywalker begins by becoming teachable.
That may actually be one of the hardest steps of all.
π₯ SACRIFICE
Letting the Old Self Die
Sooner or later, every real spiritual journey reaches sacrifice.
Not punishment.
Transformation.
The records repeatedly show that growth requires surrender.
Pride must die.
Control must die.
Fear must die.
Sometimes old identities die too.
The Waywalker learns that sacrifice is not merely “giving things up.”
It is allowing the false self to burn away so something truer can emerge.
And honestly?
Most of us fight this part pretty hard.
I know I have.
π VIRTUE
Becoming Aligned Within
Virtue, in the deeper sense, is not outward perfection.
It is inner alignment.
The soul becoming honest before the Peacemaker.
The inner world and outer world slowly becoming the same.
No masks.
No double life.
No hidden corruption.
Just increasing sincerity.
Increasing peace.
Increasing clarity.
The records seem far more concerned with purity of heart than outward religious performance.
That hits differently once you start seeing it.
πΎ CONSECRATION
Living for Something Greater Than Self
Eventually the Waywalker begins realizing:
life is not about ownership.
It is about stewardship.
Consecration is not forced sameness.
It is learning to use:
- time,
- gifts,
- labor,
- resources,
- relationships,
- and life itself
to bless others and build harmony.
This is where the walk becomes larger than personal spirituality.
Now the person begins helping create Zion around them.
Not perfectly.
But intentionally.
πͺΆ One thing I love about the Waywalker’s Wheel is that it removes the illusion that people suddenly “arrive.”
The walk continues.
Always.
A person may revisit:
- sacrifice,
- healing,
- learning,
- humility,
- repentance,
- and growth
many times throughout life.
But ideally…
each cycle deepens wisdom instead of destroying hope.
The wheel turns.
And hopefully the soul becomes softer, wiser, gentler, and more peaceful with each passing season.
πΏ Honestly, this wheel may have helped me more personally than almost any of the others.
Because it reminded me that Zion is not built by flawless people.
It is built by people willing to keep walking the Way.
Even slowly.
Even imperfectly.
Even wounded sometimes.
The important thing is:
keep walking.
πͺΆ In the next blog, we’ll move into one of the most practical wheels yet:
The Decision Wheel
How does a Zion person actually make decisions?
How do they discern between Babylon and the Way of the Peacemaker?
That wheel surprised me more than almost any other.
π Start here:
π https://thetrueremnantblog.blogspot.com
(Then use the π magnifying glass at the top to search any topic.)
Comments