Fire and Enlightenment: The Quest for Truth
Rev. Kat Carroll
About a 4 minute or less read
If you’ve ever become frustrated listening to a congressional hearing on any topic, you’re not alone. They often feel like a witch hunt—less about uncovering truth and more about framing the person being questioned as guilty, evasive, or politically inconvenient. Watching someone like Kash Patel on the stand, for example, it becomes difficult to ignore the sense that the process itself has shifted—from inquiry to performance.

But I don’t care for the spectacle of who can outmaneuver whom in debates. That’s often what these events turn into—verbal chess matches scored by sound bites rather than substance. It’s not so much about finding the truth as it is about winning points. And too often, they devolve into little more than orchestrated chaos.
In this new age, truth and light are what many are yearning for. There’s a palpable sense that information long withheld is pressing against the surface—like something trying to break through old layers of control. Yet those layers remain stubborn. Institutions, long trusted, now appear guarded—holding back details on major historical events, recent investigations, and the deeper motivations behind global actions. There is always another veil, another layer just out of reach.
And perhaps that is where the real shift begins.
Not in choosing a new side, a new voice, or even a new source—but in remembering that the ability to discern truth was never meant to be handed over in the first place.
Somewhere along the way, we were taught—subtly or directly—that truth lives outside of us. That it belongs to institutions, officials, experts, or intermediaries. That we should defer, comply, and trust the system to interpret reality on our behalf.
And yet… here we are.
Watching systems contradict themselves, narratives shift, and confidence erode. It’s no wonder people are beginning to look elsewhere—or perhaps more accurately, within.
Speaking of truth…
I’ve mentioned Promethean Action as a source I’ve found worth listening to—not because I agree with every conclusion, but because of the lens they bring. And sometimes, the lens matters as much as the information itself.
Having studied Greek mythology years ago, the name immediately stood out to me—and not by accident.
Prometheus, the Titan whose name means “forethought” or “fore-thinker,” is remembered as the one who brought fire to humanity. But this wasn’t just physical fire. It was illumination—knowledge, awareness, the spark that allowed civilization to emerge. He gave humanity the ability to see… and in doing so, to choose.
There’s something quietly symbolic about that in our current moment.
The two women behind Promethean Action—Susan Kokinda and Barbara Boyd—have been in the political arena for decades. Their roots trace back to the Lyndon LaRouche movement, which itself traveled a wide ideological arc over time. From early left-leaning positions to later right-leaning ones, it reflects a kind of political pendulum many have observed over the years.

But what I find interesting is not the movement itself—it’s where these women seem to have landed… Somewhere in the middle.
Not in the sense of compromise or indecision, but in the sense of perspective. They appear less interested in defending a side and more focused on identifying patterns—power structures, economic frameworks, and the role of human creativity in shaping society.
And that’s where something shifts.
Because when you step outside the left-versus-right paradigm, even briefly, you begin to see that much of what we are shown is structured to keep us choosing between two incomplete narratives. The real work—the real understanding—often lives just beyond that divide.
Right now, the world doesn’t just need more information. It needs discernment.
It needs that Promethean fire—not as a weapon, but as a light. Something that helps people pause, reflect, and develop forethought in a time when reaction is constantly being provoked. Especially within a media landscape that thrives on urgency, outrage, and division.
Enlightenment, in this sense, is not about having all the answers.
It is the quiet return to one’s own inner guidance—the ability to observe without immediately reacting, and to let that inner spark illuminate what feels true.
It is less about “waking up” in a dramatic sense, and more about becoming aware of how we’ve been led to perceive in the first place.
Perhaps that is the real fire Prometheus gave us.
Not just knowledge—but the capacity to use it wisely.

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