The Indelible Point
In every soul, there is a divine point that cannot be canceled.
The feeling of that point
is expressed in the depth where we know we are not judged, or bound, or slaves.
We are free beings by the very essence of our existence in the Image.
When a person connects with their full being
to this understanding...
the door to knowing themself begins to open.
This entire world is nullified before this point in a person.
This point is the foundation of a truly free person.
It is freedom from subjugation to foreign powers, to the ego, to conventions, to fear.
A person who is privileged to feel this point
discovers that the entire world—with all its screens and illusions—”does not exist.”
This knowing opens for a person the gate of “true knowledge,”
that is, the recognition that their existence is rooted in the Creator.
“No one can touch this point; even the person themself cannot cancel it.”
Freedom is revealed not as “doing whatever I want,”
but as a complete state of being.
“The entire world bows before the inner point of truth.”
Every soul carries within it an eternal spark,
an infinite light that cannot be concealed or blemished.
The Zohar calls it a “holy spark” (nitzotz kadishin).
Baal HaSulam calls it “the point in the heart.”
The Tanya calls it “truly a part of God from above.”
This is the true identity of a person.
Not the body,
not the personality,
not the memories,
but their very divine essence.
What makes it impossible to cancel is that the root of the soul is connected directly to the source of life. Everything else (traits, emotions, thoughts, klipot/shells) can change, but the point is a permanent spark. Even if a person denies all spirituality, still, in some deep place, this spark exists, waiting.
True Freedom
False freedom is being subject to one’s impulses.
True freedom is the experience:
“I have no owner but the Creator.”
The moment a person feels the divine point within them, they understand:
I am not a subject of opinions, conventions, ego, or fears.
I am a free being in my very essence,
even before any of my actions.
This is the consciousness of being in the image of God.
When a person connects to this point, they discover that their “true I” is not who they thought.
This “I”
does not need approval from the outside.
It does not try to prove anything.
It simply exists in eternity.
From here, self-knowledge begins—not as a psychological definition, but as the recognition that one is a divine spark in a human shell. All external attainments—money, status, possessions, image—suddenly seem small. They lose their centrality because, before the divine point, they are temporary and fleeting. The person perceives that this entire world is a stage for learning, not their identity itself.
The Broader Context
Mashiach consciousness is the awakening of this point in a critical mass of humanity. As long as only individuals feel it, the world is still full of garments, struggle, and war. But as more and more souls connect to the point, it will be revealed that this divine freedom is the true nature of humankind.
Then will come the coronation of the human race,
not as slaves,
but as free beings connected to the root.
Reflect:
Can you connect with a place deep inside you that feels eternal, unchanging, and whole, regardless of your external circumstances or inner turmoil?
What would it mean to live from the truth that you are inherently a free being, owned by nothing and no one but the Source?
How would your relationship with the “external world” (status, possessions, opinions) change if you truly knew it was all nullified before the divine point within you?
The conversation continues below.

