ATLAS NAVIGATION
The Great News is built upon four foundational theological shifts that redefine faith in light of fulfillment. These pillars—Subjective Christianity, Victorious Eschatology, Fulfilled Soteriology, and Zero Ecclesiology—work together to free believers from religious burdens and offer a new way of understanding faith, salvation, and the role of the church.
Each pillar challenges long-held assumptions in Christianity. Instead of a faith bound by fear, hierarchy, or obligation, these principles invite believers into a liberated, fulfilled, and love-driven relationship with God.
Key Pillars of The Great News
This section explores the four core theological pillars that define The Great News and how they shape the lives of modern believers.
Learn more about each pillar by clicking on the title.
1. Subjective Christianity: The Personal Experience of Faith
Traditional Christianity often teaches an objective, institutional faith—defined by doctrines, denominations, and religious authorities. Subjective Christianity offers a different path. It teaches that faith is personal, interpretive, and experiential. No one defines your walk with God but you.
2. Victorious Eschatology: The End Has Already Come
Mainstream Christianity teaches a future Second Coming, final judgment, and ongoing spiritual warfare. Victorious Eschatology sees these events as already fulfilled. Jesus returned in the first century. The old covenant was judged. We now live in the reality of a victorious, completed faith.
3. Fulfilled Soteriology: Salvation Is Complete
Many Christian traditions view salvation as conditional—dependent on behavior, belief, or membership. Fulfilled Soteriology teaches that salvation is already complete. Christ ended punishment and secured eternal peace. There is no need to strive for what has already been given. Faith is a response to love, not a means to avoid hell.
4. Zero Ecclesiology: No More Religious Institutions
Traditional Christianity relies on churches, clergy, and institutional control. Zero Ecclesiology teaches that the church age has ended. Faith no longer requires buildings, hierarchies, or human authority. It now flourishes outside of institutional religion, led by the Spirit and rooted in love.
The Impact of These Pillars
Together, these four shifts offer a radically different understanding of faith. They move us away from guilt, fear, and obligation—and toward a life rooted in assurance, freedom, and spiritual love.
How These Pillars Affect Believers
- No More Religious Obligation: Faith is freely chosen—not demanded or enforced.
- Freedom from Fear: There is no looming judgment or fear of getting theology wrong.
- Love Becomes the Center: No more legalism—faith is expressed through agape love.
- Faith Is Dynamic and Personal: Each believer engages with truth in their own way.
- A Fully Realized Kingdom: We’re not waiting for the future—we live in fulfillment now.
How These Pillars Affect Religious Institutions
- The Church Is No Longer Necessary: Faith no longer depends on buildings, clergy, or church membership.
- Doctrinal Control Is Losing Power: More believers are questioning long-held church dogmas.
- People Are Leaving Institutional Religion: A global shift toward independent faith is underway.
- Religious Fear Tactics No Longer Work: Without threats of punishment, faith becomes a choice rooted in love.
- A New Faith Movement Is Emerging: The Great News is spreading—offering freedom beyond religion.
Living in the Fulfillment of The Great News
The Four Pillars do not require you to conform, obey, or subscribe to religious systems. They invite you to explore, to believe, and to trust—on your own terms, led by love and guided by the Spirit.
This is a new way of seeing faith—free from control, guilt, and fear. It is:
- Freed from religious control
- Rooted in assurance and spiritual fulfillment
- Defined by love and truth—not obligation
- Accessible to anyone, anywhere—without institutional barriers