The Universal Reconciliation of All Things
"Whom the heaven must receive until the times of restitution of all things, which God hath spoken by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the world began."
— Acts 3:21
Apokatastasis (ἀποκατάστασις, apokatastasis) — literally "restoration to the original state" — is the theological and philosophical teaching that all beings will ultimately be reconciled to God. Not some. Not the elect. All.
This is the deepest and most radical teaching of Christian esotericism — and the hidden heart of the Apocalypse.
The Teaching
Apokatastasis holds that:
- Hell is not eternal but purgative — a refining fire, not an everlasting punishment
- All souls, without exception, will eventually return to God
- Even the most fallen beings — even Satan himself — will ultimately be redeemed
- The purpose of all suffering is educational, not retributive
- God's love is infinite and inexorable — it will not rest until every last sheep is brought home
The Lineage
Origen of Alexandria (185–253 CE)
The greatest theologian of early Christianity taught universal restoration explicitly:
"The end is always like the beginning; as therefore there is one end of all things, so we must understand that there is one beginning of all things, and as there is one end of many things, so from one beginning arise many differences and varieties, which in their turn are restored, through God's goodness, through their subjection to Christ, and through the unity of the Holy Spirit, to one end, which is like the beginning."
Origen was posthumously condemned by the Fifth Ecumenical Council (553 CE) — but his teaching never truly died. It went underground, carried by the esoteric stream.
Clement of Alexandria
Origen's teacher also taught that divine punishment is remedial, not vindictive: "God does not take vengeance, for vengeance is a returning of evil for evil. God corrects for the benefit of the corrected."
Gregory of Nyssa (335–395 CE)
One of the Cappadocian Fathers and a saint of the Church, Gregory taught universal salvation openly: "When the evil that is now mingled with and implanted in everything shall have been separated from the good, then the unanimous thanksgiving of the whole creation shall rise up."
Isaac of Nineveh (7th century)
"Those who are punished in Gehenna are scourged by the scourge of love. What is so bitter and vehement as the torment of love?"
The ACIM Teaching
A Course in Miracles teaches apokatastasis in its purest form:
- "Not one soul can be lost"
- The Atonement is complete and inevitable — it cannot fail
- Hell does not exist — it is a projection of the ego
- The "Last Judgment" is not condemnation but the final recognition that all is forgiven
- Time will end when every mind has accepted the Atonement
"The outcome is as certain as God."
The Alchemical Reading
In alchemy, the Great Work does not fail. The nigredo — the blackening, the death — is not the end but the necessary prelude to the gold. Every substance, no matter how base, contains the seed of gold. Every soul, no matter how fallen, contains the divine spark.
The fire of the athanor does not destroy. It purifies. And the purification continues until nothing remains but gold.
The "Lake of Fire" in Revelation is the ultimate athanor — the final alchemical furnace. What is consumed is not the soul but the dross — the ego, the false self, the accumulated illusions of separation.
Why This Matters
Apokatastasis is the philosophical foundation of hope. Without it, the Apocalypse is merely terror. With it, the Apocalypse becomes what the word actually means: a revelation of love.
The entire Royal Art Opus rests on this foundation:
- The Great Story has a happy ending — not for some, but for all
- The exile ends. Every exile. Even the darkest.
- The Father receives every prodigal son
- The Atonement leaves no one behind
"And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto me." (John 12:32)