When Jesus asks the sick, “Do you believe that I can heal you?”, he is not conducting a theological examination. He is not asking for doctrinal correctness. He is asking a pre-cognitive question:
Does your inner world allow for this reality to exist?
Faith, as Jesus uses the term, is not intellectual assent. It is the capacity to hold a reality in advance of its material appearance. In other words, faith is imagination disciplined by trust.
This is why Jesus repeatedly says, “According to your faith it will be done to you.”
He does not say, “According to your moral worth.”
He does not say, “According to your obedience.”
He ties outcome to inner apprehension of possibility.
This is not modern psychology smuggled into theology. It is already embedded in the Gospel logic.
Why Imagination Is Not Fantasy
Imagination is often confused with illusion because in the fallen, material world it is disconnected from power. Adults imagine but cannot actualize; therefore imagination is dismissed as unreal.
But this is precisely the point.
In the Kingdom of Heaven, imagination and reality are not separated. The Kingdom operates on a different causal chain. What is seen inwardly is not opposed to what is real outwardly—it is its source.
This is why Jesus says:
“Whoever says to this mountain… and does not doubt in his heart…”
The issue is not verbal formula.
The issue is whether the heart can hold the image of a different world without contradiction.
Doubt is not disbelief; doubt is imaginative collapse.
Children as Native Citizens of the Kingdom
Children do not learn imagination. They inhabit it.
They do not pretend a pebble is alive.
They do not simulate a toy’s personality.
They experience it as alive.
They breathe life into objects effortlessly, not because they are irrational, but because their inner world has not yet been colonized by materialist finality.
Adults say, “It’s just in your head.”
Children live as if the head and the world are still connected.
This is not regression; it is memory.
A distant echo of the Kingdom remains in children because they have not yet learned the doctrine of impossibility.
Jesus as the Climax of Childlike Imagination
What earthly children do subjectively, Jesus does objectively.
The child imagines the bird alive.
Jesus forms the bird and breathes life into it.
The difference is not imagination vs. power.
The difference is purity of dependence.
Jesus’ imagination is not blocked by self-reliance, fear, or calculation. His imagination is perfectly aligned with God’s will, which is why the Qur’an insists: “by God’s permission.”
This is not limitation.
This is alignment.
The imagination of Jesus is not creative in isolation; it is transparent.
Faith and Imagination: A One-to-One Translation
My insight here is decisive and withstands scrutiny:
You can take nearly every discourse on faith in the Gospels, replace the word “faith” with “imagination,” and the logic remains intact.
Examples:
- “If you have faith as a mustard seed…”
→ If you can imagine even a small crack in the present reality… - “All things are possible to the one who believes.”
→ All things are possible to the one whose inner world is not locked by “what is.” - “Your faith has made you well.”
→ Your capacity to inhabit a different outcome allowed it to occur.
Faith is not blind belief.
Faith is ontological imagination—the ability to receive a reality before it manifests.
Why This Frightens Religion
Institutional religion cannot tolerate imagination as power, because imagination cannot be regulated.
Rules can be enforced.
Doctrines can be tested.
Morality can be measured.
But imagination belongs to children, poets, prophets—and to the Kingdom.
This is why Jesus does not say, “Unless you become knowledgeable.”
He says, “Unless you become like children.”
Because the Kingdom is ruled not by the competent,
but by those whose inner world has not been sealed shut.
Closing Synthesis
The Kingdom of Heaven is not powered by effort, merit, or growth.
It is powered by imagination freed from self-reliance.
Children still carry its echo.
Jesus embodies it fully.
And faith is simply the name we give to this capacity when it is directed toward God.
What children animate in play,
Jesus animates in reality.
Not because he grew stronger—
but because he never stopped being a child.