
John Foster awoke beneath an impossibly vast sky, consciousness returning like the gradual lifting of a veil. The mountain peak on which he found himself was familiar—the same celestial summit where he had faced judgment. But now the ethereal light suffusing the landscape was even more intense, golden and penetrating, yet somehow gentle to his eyes.
Before him stood the throne he remembered, but what had seemed austere during his trial now appeared magnificent beyond comprehension. The throne itself seemed formed of living light, neither solid nor insubstantial, both ancient and eternally new.
Upon it sat Jesus Christ, His human form simultaneously ordinary and transcendent. He wore simple white robes, yet they radiated a brilliance that made the sun seem dim. His face held the same compassionate authority John had witnessed during his judgment, but now revealed in its full glory without the tempering that had made it bearable before.
To Christ's right stood Mary, His mother, clothed in blue and white, her countenance radiating a serene strength that complemented her Son's majesty. Her eyes, when they met John's, contained both infinite tenderness and unfathomable wisdom.
Surrounding the throne in concentric circles that stretched beyond sight stood figures John recognized as the saints—men and women of every era, nation, and race, each distinct yet unified in the same radiant light that emanated from the throne. Some he could identify from artwork or descriptions—Peter with his determined stance, Francis with his joyful simplicity, Teresa with her contemplative intensity—while others were unknown to him yet somehow familiar.
The reality of being in the actual presence of Christ in glory struck John with such force that he fell to his knees without conscious thought, head bowed in instinctive reverence.
"John Foster," came the voice that had judged him—both thunderous and gentle, filling not just the air but his very being. "Lift your eyes."
John raised his head to see Jesus extending a hand toward him. With a deliberate movement that seemed to traverse both physical and spiritual distance, Christ placed His hand upon John's head. The touch was warm, tangible, yet it resonated through John's entire being, vibrating with power that felt simultaneously overwhelming and nurturing.
"You have stood firm in the trials set before you," Jesus said. "Now you are being sent back as My prophet.”
John's mind reeled at the words. "Back, Lord?" he managed to ask, his voice small in the vast presence.
"Back to the world you left," Christ confirmed, His gaze holding John's with unwavering intensity. "To deliver My message to the remnants of My followers as the world sinks deeper into corruption and degeneracy."
John became aware of a gathering darkness at the edges of his perception, as if the celestial mountain stood as the last bastion of light in a world increasingly consumed by shadow.
"The time approaches when many who claim My name will abandon the truth for comfortable lies," Jesus continued. "When love grows cold, justice is perverted, and the innocent are sacrificed to idols of convenience and power." The sadness in His voice was palpable, yet beneath it ran a current of indomitable resolve.
"For this task," Christ said, "you will be given three powers."
Mary stepped forward then, her presence somehow making the overwhelming majesty of the moment bearable for John's limited comprehension.
"First," Jesus said, "the gift of language, that you may speak to all of Christendom without barrier, carrying My words to every nation where believers remain."
John felt a sudden warmth in his throat and mind, like wine being poured into empty vessels. Languages he had never studied flowed through his consciousness—Latin, Greek, Spanish, French, Russian, Arabic, and dozens more, each with its unique cadence and character, yet all now as familiar to him as his native English.
"Second," Christ continued, "the power to heal or to destroy through prayer to the Holy Spirit. Use this gift with discernment, for it is given not for your glory but for the manifestation of divine justice and mercy in a world that has forgotten both."
John's hands tingled with potential energy, and he understood intuitively that when he prayed with specific intent, channeling the Holy Spirit's power, extraordinary things would happen through his touch. The responsibility of such power settled on him like a mantle, both privilege and burden.
"Third," Jesus said, "the ability to pass unnoticed by eyes clouded by evil. Those who have given themselves to darkness will look but not see you, unless I permit it for My purposes."
A subtle shift occurred in John's perception, as if he now existed slightly adjacent to reality, capable of stepping in and out of visibility according to the spiritual state of those around him.
"Remember always," Christ cautioned, "these gifts are not yours but Mine, working through you. They will manifest not according to your will but according to My wisdom and the Father's plan."
"I will send an angel periodically to guide you," Jesus continued, "to reveal the specific messages you must deliver and to instruct you in the use of the gifts you have been given."
As if summoned by these words, a figure stepped forward from among the gathered saints—tall, radiating purpose, with eyes that seemed to contain galaxies. John knew instinctively this was one of the angels who would accompany him.
"Furthermore," Christ said, "faithful servants who still honor Me in truth will be led to assist you. Some will offer shelter, others information, others protection. Trust those whom My Spirit confirms to you."
Mary spoke then, her voice like cool water in desert heat. "You will face opposition beyond mere human resistance, John Foster. The powers that grow in the world now draw strength from ancient darkness. Remember that greater is He who is in you than he who is in the world."
Jesus nodded, His expression both solemn and confident. "You have one year and one day to complete the tasks that will be revealed to you. In that time, you must journey to the major nations where Christianity once flourished, delivering specific messages to those prepared to receive them."
The enormity of the mission settled over John. He, an ordinary businessman from Dallas—a man who had lived a comfortable life of moderate faith—was being commissioned as a divine messenger in what sounded like the world's darkest hour.
"Lord," he said, his voice steady despite his inner trembling, "I am honored beyond words, but I am just a man. How can I—"
"It is precisely because you are 'just a man' that you have been chosen," Christ interrupted gently. "Not for your strength but for your willingness to acknowledge your weakness. Not for your wisdom but for your readiness to be guided. Not for your righteousness but for your humble recognition of your need for mercy."
The gathered saints seemed to nod in unified understanding, many of their faces reflecting similar moments from their own lives—times when they too had been called beyond their capacities and had found God's strength perfected in their weakness.
"I have full confidence in you, John Foster," Jesus said, the words resonating with divine certainty, "not because of who you are, but because of who I am in you."
With those words, Christ stood from His throne, and the entire assembly of saints rose with Him in a single fluid movement. Jesus extended both hands toward John in blessing.
"Go now as My witness to a world that desperately needs to remember what it means to be truly human, truly alive, truly free. Speak truth to deception. Offer healing to brokenness. Stand firm against the tide of compromise. And remember—I am with you always, even to the end of the age."
Light began to intensify around John, not painfully but with increasing brightness that seemed to penetrate his very being. He felt himself being dissolved and reassembled simultaneously, his spirit, soul, and body realigning for his return to the world.
The last thing he saw before consciousness faded was Jesus's face—compassionate, resolute, and filled with a love so profound it transcended human understanding. The last thing he heard was Christ's voice, now seeming to originate from within him as much as from without:
"Awaken, My servant, and begin."
John's awareness dispersed into pure light, the mountain and its heavenly assembly disappearing as his consciousness began the journey back to a world that had already mourned him and moved on, a world that had no category for a dead man returning with divine commission.
As the final threads of heavenly perception faded, John understood with sudden clarity that his death had been more than tragedy—it had been preparation. Everything that had happened, including the suffering and injustice of his end, had been forming him for this moment, this mission.
His last coherent thought before the complete transition was simple acceptance:
I am Yours, Lord. Use me as You will.
Then darkness claimed him once more—not the darkness of evil or death, but the darkness of divine mystery, of being held in God's hand as he was returned to a broken world as a bearer of holy fire.