Abrahamic nesting dolls
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are like rectangles, squares, and cubes, representing different dimensional depths and the historical advancement of Abraham's covenant.
Christians: the square oxymorons
Christ was a Jewish Messiah and his followers were Jews; there are no Christians, just Jews who believe in Christ as an advancement of the Covenant and Jews who do not.
Muslims: devout Jews & followers of Jesus
Muslims are both Jews and followers of Christ; they simply honor Mohammad as another prophet and continuation of the Covenant.
Jews: the base rectangle
A Jew is defined solely by being in Covenant with Abraham's God per the Torah; Hachi'im do not accept rabbinic authority.
a mystical melting pot
The Hachi’im recognize that true unity among the Abrahamic branches is found not in doctrine, but in mysticism.
Kabbalah, Hesychasm, and Sufism reflect one another with startling clarity—and their echoes reach further still, into the mystical hearts of Hinduism, Buddhism, Daoism, and countless global traditions.
Once the pursuit of spirit is freed from the political engines that seek to harness it, the sparks of Abraham can be seen everywhere—in ancient texts, in modern culture, in every soul that opens to the Light.
galgol nishmot lehava (flame reincarnation)
Hachi'im study the convergence and divergence of Abrahamic consciousness throughout history, canonized as The Perennial Philosophy by Aldous Huxley and extensively studied by Isaac Newton.
the Covenant cycle
kutzim (sparks) & medurah (bonfire)
Hachi'im separate the Covenant cycle into two main phases: kutzim, which refers to when disparate sparks keep the Light alive in periods of Darkness, and medurah, where the Covenant can commune openly.
pluralist playground
Hachi’im organize achim around specific convictions, but our journey is intersubjective—shaped by all cultures and their experiences, histories, unique perceptions of Truth.
We honor every child of Abraham who walks their path with integrity:
the Jew who denies Christ and Muhammad,
the Christian who sees Jesus as the unrivaled Son,
the Muslim who holds that Islam keeps the Covenant most faithfully.
All are welcome, so long as they honor the dignity of the other Siblings of the Covenant and grant to others the freedom they claim for themselves.
