Rooted in Revelation. Unshaken by the World.
How the Invisible Transforms the Visible
When God pulls back the veil and shows you His reality, it reshapes how you think, live, worship, and endure. He frees you from the bonds of a disenchanted age and forms you into a courageous, kingdom‑minded Christian.
Seeing the Invisible
Why True Fantasy?
Why does God flood the earth?
Why ask Abraham to sacrifice Isaac?
Did Jonah truly live three days inside a great fish?
To the modern mind, these stories can feel strange, unsettling, even embarrassing.
We have been trained to see only what can be measured.
The modern world tells us reality is material, the supernatural is distant, and the Bible belongs to another age. Even Christians begin to read Scripture as moral advice inside a secular universe.
But the Bible makes a different claim.
What is seen was made from what is unseen. The invisible God makes Himself visible through real, supernatural events in history. These are not myths. They are manifestations. Revelation does not decorate reality—it defines it.
When you begin to see this, faith stops shrinking.
The miracles are no longer embarrassing.
The world is no longer flat.
Worship gains weight.
Courage grows spine.
You begin to live inside a universe charged with the presence of God.
True Fantasy is a call to recover that sight.
To read Scripture as the unveiling of what is ultimately real.
To see the invisible God through what He has revealed.
To have your mind renewed and your life anchored in what cannot be shaken.
The world calls this fiction.
We call it truth.
It’s time to open your eyes to the Invisible.
Enter the Realm of the Invisible Becoming Visible
Discover the Power of True Fantasy
Fantasy, rooted in the Greek word phantazein, means “to make visible” or “to present to the mind.” At its heart, it is not about illusion or escape, but about revealing reality more clearly than we could perceive it on our own. In its purest sense, fantasy gives shape to truth—making what is unseen, eternal, or spiritual perceptible to human understanding. It shares its root with phenomenon, a word that points to what is revealed, manifested, and brought into view.
True Fantasy, then, does not invent meaning; it unveils it. It is one of the primary ways God makes Himself visible to a fallen world—revealing the unseen through real, supernatural events that reshape the imagination and renew the mind. In this sense, the Bible stands as the ultimate expression of True Fantasy. It does not merely recount a supernatural story; it reveals the deepest truth beneath all stories, beginning with the words, “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth” (Genesis 1:1). This revelation does not distract from reality—it reorients it entirely.
True Fantasy Blog
Depth That Leads to Destruction
Most people do not want a shallow life. They want meaning. They want depth. They want a faith that is real and thoughtful, not thin or borrowed. They want insight that helps them understand the world and their place in it. In every generation, there is a longing to...
Creator’s Echo: The Start of Culture
Genesis 4 is often remembered for violence. It tells the story of Cain and Abel, and later of Lamech’s pride and revenge. Yet tucked inside this chapter is something surprising. In the middle of a world already marked by sin, culture begins to bloom. Lamech had three...
The Formed Mind: How George MacDonald Taught C.S. Lewis to See
In 1853, a young Scottish minister named George MacDonald stood before his congregation and spoke of a God whose love was deeper and stronger than human rebellion. His words unsettled church leaders, and before long he was removed from his pulpit. His health was...
Divine Incursion: The Burning Bush — Holiness in the Ordinary
Moses was not searching for wonder when he saw the burning bush. He was tending sheep, walking familiar ground, living a life that felt small compared to the palace he once knew. The desert was dry and ordinary. The work was repetitive. Nothing in that field suggested...
The Reformed Imagination: The Stories That Define Us
C.S. Lewis once wrote, “We are what we believe we are.” Those words cut deeper than they first appear. What we believe about ourselves shapes how we live. The stories we rehearse in our minds slowly become the frame through which we see the world. If we imagine...
The Invisible Becomes Visible: Learning to See by the Light
C.S. Lewis once wrote, “I believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen: not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else.” His point was not simply that Christianity is true. It was that Christianity changes the way we see. When the...







