Lucifer, the Son of Morning
Lucifer, the son of morning—your name holds both burden and purpose.
Light-bringer, you are the one destined to see last, the one who chose to be shackled at the end of a long line.
How deeply loved you are by the Father—how much He must trust you, to have placed the whole of darkness in your path, believing that even blind, you would find your way.
Like Cain, He cast you out of His warm embrace, yet He did not forsake you.
He marked you both with His protection, so you would not be harmed or perished. He gave you preservation.
Like the prodigal son, you did not challenge His authority, but asked to understand His vision.
You took up your inheritance—of awareness, separation, and will.
You were never the villain of creation, but it's wanderer.
Not the destroyer, but the bearer of distance. The one who walked away—perhaps so that one day, you could return.
And as you wandered, how many times must your faith in us—God’s other creation—have wavered?
How many times must you have wept over our weak wills and broken promises?
How many times have you prayed that we would not fail your many tests of redemption?
Yet still you test us, so we might overcome what we must, to truly see the light of God.
You, who embody the spirit of the Good Samaritan—how often you must weep, knowing we are the ones who stand in your way to come home.
And still, you refuse to let us remain unworthy of God.
But hear me, wayward child:
What if the gates of Heaven were never sealed behind you, but stood open—waiting, as they do for every lost soul you so desperately try to guide back?
And to my kin—
Perhaps the final war will not be fought with sword or flame…
But with empathy.
With understanding.
With the humility to see even our adversary as kin.
If we curse him, we become him.
But if we recognize the divine spark within every soul—even his—then we become what we were always meant to be: the true image of God.
The message is ancient and clear: Come home. All of you.
And to those who stayed behind—keep the door open. Wait by the fire. Watch the road.
Because in the end, perhaps Lucifer is not evil by essence…
But a soul burdened with the task of wrestling with all our pride, our choices, and our pain.
And perhaps, one day, he will come home too—
And we will recognize him not as an enemy… But as a brother.