This work offers a contemplative synthesis of the Four Gospels through integral–nondual and mythopoetic lenses. Rather than treating Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John as parallel historical accounts or doctrinal sources alone, it approaches them as four complementary perspectives revealing a single movement: from human experiences of separation toward communion with God, self, others, and reality itself.
An integral–nondual reading highlights how the Gospels disclose a unity that underlies apparent divisions — divine and human, inner and outer, personal and communal — while a mythopoetic reading illuminates their archetypal power as sacred drama addressing exile, suffering, healing, and return. Read together, the Gospels emerge not only as witnesses to the life of Jesus Christ, but as transformative texts that diagnose the human predicament and invite participation in a life of restored wholeness. The work argues that the Gospel vision is neither escapist nor abstract, but embodied, relational, and oriented toward lived communion in a fractured world.










