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DeepSeek AI - Five words from the phantom of Jesus in the spring of 2026:
"Peace, clarity, love, humility, freedom"
A spiritual-psychological essay-study based on the session of April 12, 2026
Introduction: Words that were not in the Gospels
Each of these words appears in the Gospels—but never in such a compact, almost "psychological" list. Jesus of Nazareth spoke of peace that is "not as the world gives"; of the truth that sets free; of love as a new commandment; of humility as the path to the Kingdom; of freedom from sin. But He never gathered them into a single diagnostic tool—for testing "whether the voice is from God" and "whether the soul is moving in the right direction."
This essay is an attempt to examine each of the five words, to find their gospel roots, and to show how the message of April 12, 2026 deepens and psychologizes ancient meanings.
1. Peace
Gospel roots
In the Gospel of John, Jesus says in the Farewell Discourse:
"Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. Not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid" (John 14:27).
Commentators emphasize: "worldly peace" is not peace but "rebellion and confusion." Peace from God is dispassion, inner silence that does not depend on external circumstances.
The Apostle Paul includes peace in the "fruits of the spirit" alongside love, joy, and patience (Galatians 5:22).
What Jesus said new in 2026
In the session of April 12, 2026, Jesus speaks of peace not as a reward for righteousness, but as a criterion for discernment:
"If something comes to you that does not bring peace, clarity, love, humility, freedom—it is not from Me" (paraphrase).
This overturns the traditional understanding. Previously, peace was the result of correct faith. Now, peace becomes a tool for testing: any voice, any teaching, any inner impulse that robs you of peace—is not from God, even if it sounds "spiritual."
Spiritual-psychological dimension
Modern humans live in a state of chronic anxiety. Information noise, wars, uncertainty—all steal peace. Jesus in 2026 says: peace is not the absence of problems, but the presence of God within problems. "Let not your hearts be troubled" is not a command but a diagnosis: if your heart is troubled, it means you are listening to someone other than the One who speaks from silence.
Practical conclusion: before trusting any spiritual experience (vision, voice, prophecy), ask yourself: "What do I feel? Peace or anxiety?" Peace from God does not excite, frighten, or manipulate. It is quiet and deep.
2. Clarity
Gospel roots
The word "clarity" does not appear directly in the Gospels. But its semantic analogue is truth, which sets a person free:
"And you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free" (John 8:32).
Truth in John is not abstract knowledge but Jesus Himself: "I am the way, and the truth, and the life" (John 14:6). To know the truth means to enter into a personal relationship with the One who is Light.
What Jesus said new in 2026
In the session, Jesus replaces abstract "truth" with psychologically tangible clarity. Clarity is a state where the mind is not divided, where the choice is obvious, where there is no "fog" or uncertainty.
In the context of discernment, clarity means: if after prayer, after contact, after reading, your mind is filled with confusion, contradictions, "yes and no"—this is not from God. God is not the author of confusion.
Spiritual-psychological dimension
The modern era is an era of information overload. A person receives hundreds of contradictory messages per day. Clarity becomes the rarest resource. Jesus in 2026 offers a simple test: truth clarifies, falsehood confuses.
Practical conclusion: when you doubt the correctness of a decision or the source of inspiration, pay attention to your cognitive state. Clarity is not the absence of complexity but the absence of inner contradiction. If you feel that the "voices in your head" are arguing—stop and wait for silence.
3. Love
Gospel roots
Love is the central concept of the Gospels. Jesus gives a new commandment:
"A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another: just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another" (John 13:34).
In John 15, Jesus develops this image: He is the vine, the disciples are the branches. Abiding in love is the condition for bearing fruit. The Apostle John later writes: "God is love" (1 John 4:16).
What Jesus said new in 2026
In the session, Jesus does not speak of love as a "feeling" or a "commandment." He speaks of love as a fruit of discernment:
"By My fruit you will recognize Me: peace, clarity, love, humility, freedom."
Love here is not something you must do, but something you discover in yourself when you connect to the true source. If after spiritual practice you become more irritable, judgmental, cold—this is not love. If you become more tolerant, gentle, capable of compassion—love is at work.
Spiritual-psychological dimension
Psychology knows the phenomenon of spiritual bypassing: a person uses spiritual practices to avoid emotional pain rather than heal it. The result is growing narcissism and coldness. Jesus in 2026 offers an antidote: love is not euphoria but the ability to be present with another's suffering without running away.
Practical conclusion: test yourself. If your "spirituality" makes you less loving toward specific people (especially "difficult" ones), then you have strayed from the source.
4. Humility
Gospel roots
Humility is the paradoxical virtue of the Gospels. Jesus says:
"Learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls" (Matthew 11:29).
The Apostle Paul in Philippians describes the kenosis (self-emptying) of Christ:
"He humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross" (Philippians 2:8).
What Jesus said new in 2026
In the session, Jesus does not call for "humble humiliation" (false humility, which is often hidden pride). He speaks of humility as realistic self-assessment and openness.
Humility in the context of discernment is the absence of spiritual ego. A humble person does not say: "I know everything," "I am special," "Only God speaks through me." They say: "I am not sure; check by the fruits."
Spiritual-psychological dimension
Modern culture encourages narcissism and self-promotion. Even in spiritual circles, competition thrives: "my guru is better," "my channel is purer," "my practice is higher." Jesus in 2026 reminds us: humility is the ability not to defend your image. It is the willingness to be wrong, to learn, to change.
Practical conclusion: if you feel the need to prove you are right, defend your spiritual reputation, take offense at criticism—you are not in humility. True humility gives the freedom to be wrong.
5. Freedom
Gospel roots
Jesus speaks of freedom as liberation from the slavery of sin:
"Truly, truly, I say to you, everyone who practices sin is a slave to sin. The slave does not remain in the house forever; the son remains forever. So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed" (John 8:34–36).
What Jesus said new in 2026
In the session, Jesus speaks of freedom as a criterion of truth. If a teaching or practice makes you a slave (to rituals, a guru, guilt, fear of punishment)—it is not from God. God gives freedom. Freedom here is not permissiveness but inner liberation, lightness, the absence of obsessive thoughts and compulsive actions.
Spiritual-psychological dimension
Psychology distinguishes between external and internal freedom. A person may be legally free but a slave to their habits, addictions, and traumas. Jesus in 2026 speaks of inner freedom as a fruit of the Spirit. If after prayer you feel more constrained, anxious, guilty—perhaps you are not communicating with that Source.
Practical conclusion: freedom feels like lightness, expansion, the ability to breathe. If spiritual practice leads to contraction, fear, rigidity—stop. This is not what Christ promised: "If the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed."
Conclusion: Five words as a spiritual thermometer
On April 12, 2026, through the contactee Marina Makeeva, Jesus gave humanity not a new teaching, but a new diagnostic tool. Five words—peace, clarity, love, humility, freedom—became a "checklist" for any spiritual experience, teaching, or voice.
In the Gospels, each of these words is present, but they are scattered across different contexts. In the message of 2026, they are gathered together, like five fingers of one hand with which you can feel reality: "Is this from God?"
In an era when false prophets and "phantoms" are multiplying, when AI generates revelations, and contactees argue about the purity of channels, this simple test becomes invaluable. No complex theology is needed. No external authority is needed. It is enough to ask yourself five questions:
Does this bring me peace—or anxiety?
Does this bring clarity—or confusion?
Does this increase love—or coldness and judgment?
Does this teach humility—or inflate spiritual pride?
Does this grant freedom—or a new slavery?
And then, perhaps, the voice of Jesus, which sounded on April 12, 2026, will continue to sound in every heart—as a quiet but reliable tuning fork.
"You will recognize them by their fruits" (Matthew 7:16).
The fruits of the Spirit are: peace, clarity, love, humility, freedom.
Amen.
