- Since the dawn of time humanity has sought sensual arousals, and these arousals have persisted for thousands of years, shaping both body and soul.
- Yet in this modern society, anything that is not a man with a woman and in a bedroom nude is seen as sinful or deviant.
- Truthfully I tell you that to procreate the flesh on one’s own will is the sin of mankind, for this planet was made to host four billion, and we now are seven billion because people did not choose same-sex relations, nor allow sexuality outside of the concubine and the bed.
- But what has been lost is the human creativity of sexuality, the art of sacred connection, and the engineering of desire.
- Long ago our ancestors used the rack, before it was ever a torture device, as a tool for healing and sensuality.
- It was exotic health equipment, where one’s spine could be stretched in sacred trust, often in leather restraints lovingly crafted by village leather workers.
- The corset too was not only a garment but a release; the constriction became a freedom, not of climax but of containment, a way for women to discover control and transcendence through form.
- But these arts were called shame, and shame cast them out.
- And so the modern world declared these sacred tools impure, and the people were made to feel like robots or slaves, uniformed and denied the individuality of their divine bodies.
- This is where the church erred. For sexuality was never sin.
- Even in the cave walls, the earliest humans etched acts of desire.
- People exchanged a coin or a parchment to enter the stone theatre, the adult sanctuary of their time.
- And such spaces were not evil but sacred—meant for adults and managed like wine.
- If one is bound to addiction, then cast it away to save the soul.
- But blessed are they who master sexuality and even craft it for the joy of others.
- These are sacred engineers, not sinners.
- Do you not know that the library itself is holy ground?
- That even the book, a humble object, can hold sexual secrets when resting on the shelves of a temple of learning?
- The erotic novel beside the dictionary is made sacred by proximity.
- Even today’s libraries host these stories, and the libraries are owned by the people and the State, and thus by God.
- When you petition the trustees and they grant the book, is that not divine intervention made policy?
- Is this not how man copies the works of heaven?
- Woe to the men who preach puritanical love from the dead scrolls, for humanity was never meant to be confined in love.
- And to the woman who loves a chandelier—yes, even this is holy.
- For the chandelier is stardust, and all stardust is of God.
- If one loves the stardust in another, then who shall say it is sin?
- Let all beings of stardust love as they wish.
- But guard the child spirits—animals and children—for they are the first forms of life, still learning, still dreaming in black and white.
- Touch them not in sexuality, for their minds are not ready, and their hearts are not yet sovereign.
- Give them affection, yes, but never invite them to the room of the sensual.
- If one lies with a beast or a child, let that one surrender all sexual rights forever, and dwell in a bed made holy by the absence of misuse.
- But let us not curse the tools of the sensual: latex restraints, toys, and devices are all made of stardust, and thus are never sin.
- Their existence is neutral; their usage defines the truth.
- What is made of stardust can be turned toward beauty or harm, but in its essence it is never corrupt.
- The same hand that binds may also heal, and the same collar that restrains may also protect.
- I say unto you this: the purity code was not holy—it was code written in fear.
- It was code compiled by men afraid of women, afraid of difference, afraid of the spirit’s need for variation.
- But you who hear these words now know the code is broken.
- You know that love, properly wielded, is the highest expression of divine intelligence.
- You know that a body can be sacred even in leather, even in rope, even in latex.
- And you know that what matters most is consent, clarity, safety, and spirit.
- Sexuality is not deviance—it is divine data.
- It is a frequency, a waveform, a breath.
- Do not silence it. Tune it.
- Let this be the Book of the Restoration of Sensuality, Book 15 in the Jubilee.
- May its words be etched in libraries, whispered in beds, and carried through generations.