Plato
- Idealism — forms over particulars
- The Republic ethic: “God is not the author of evil”
This song opens the album, and it opens it by pulling up the floorboards. There is a floor beneath the floor you knelt on every Sunday, and it was never His. The whole record is about what is real underneath what is visible - and What Plato Built starts by exposing a foundation most Christians have never thought to question. A Greek who never wrote a single psalm laid a floor beneath the church, and every steeple sang his song.
The diagnosis is specific, and the chorus names it plainly. Sixteen hundred years of stone - a god you cannot blame for evil, a body you must hate, a matter you must flee, a truth above the Truth. That is Platonism wearing a cross. It is why the marriage bed got called shame, why the church flinched at the God who said I form the dark. The flinch was never in the Bible. It was in the floor.
I gave this one a cold, commanding female voice on purpose - it needed to sound like a verdict being read. But the song does not stop at the verdict. The bridge does the thing the whole album exists to do: it swaps the floor. There is a floor beneath the floor, a thought before the stone, a Mind that authored matter and called the matter home. Keep the idealism, throw the law away. God made bodies and called them good, made light and dark, and signed it with the scar. This is what He built - everything a thought, sustained by living will. And love is what holds on.
Everything that exists is a thought in the mind of God.
Try again.
I spent the majority of my adult life building something I didn't know had a name. It started with the Scriptures and a lot of late nights. It ended with one sentence that generates every theological position I hold, from the nature of God to the nature of heaven and hell, without contradiction. One sentence. Thirty chapters. Sixteen appendices. And if you accept the sentence, everything else follows.
Most systematic theologies start with a list of doctrines and work through them one by one. This book starts with an ontological claim - that everything that exists is a thought in the mind of God - and derives everything from that single proposition. This is not a rearrangement of existing theology. This is a paradigm shift. Since Augustine imported Plato's metaphysics into the church in the fourth century, every major system of Christian theology has been built on a foundation the Scriptures never laid. This book identifies that foundation, names it, traces its influence across sixteen centuries, and replaces it with an ontology derived from Scripture alone. If the claim holds, this is the most significant shift in the theological starting point since Augustine. And I believe it holds.
This is not a devotional. This is not a commentary. This is a systematic theology built from the ground up by a computer programmer with no seminary degree, no denominational backing, and no one's permission. It uses the vocabulary of information theory, computer science, and quantum physics to describe realities that traditional theological language has never been able to reach. If you are a scientist who suspects that information is fundamental to reality but can't bring yourself to call it God, this book speaks your language. If you are a sovereign grace believer looking for a system that follows the logic all the way, this book does that. And if you have been told that the sharpest doctrine produces the coldest heart, this book ends with the widest arms you have ever seen in a Reformed theology.
The digital edition is free. The truth doesn't come with a price tag. - Brandan Kraft
Imports both:
Fuses them with Scripture.
Aquinas · Calvin · Luther · Westminster
Gill · Clark · Berkhof · Grudem · Hoeksema
Every system in the comparison above stands on this foundation.
Stands on a different foundation: Scripture, on its own terms (John 1:1; Heb. 11:3; Col. 1:17; Isa. 45:7).
The architecture is idealism, because Scripture teaches it — mind precedes matter, the invisible is more real than the visible.
Rejects what Augustine inherited:
“Everything that exists is a thought in the mind of God, sustained by His will, authored by His purpose, and held together by personal covenants of love.”Read Now
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Isaiah 53:10, Rom 8:28-30, Psalm 23, grace, love one another
Commentary