From Dictation to Devotion: The Divine Ethics Within The Quodlibet

Quodlibet

Some books explain faith. Others breathe it. In The Quodlibet: The 19 Texts of Holiness, Damian Westfall, also known as Mr. Damian the Scrivener, presents not a product of imagination but a revelation. 

He declares that the work was “written down just as GOD gave it and whispered it,” received directly from JAH through the Spirit. This is not a book of reflection but of dictation, an act of hearing and obedience.

The Voice of Dictation

Westfall frames his role not as author but as instrument. In The Scrivener’s Confession, he writes that by transcribing what was given to him, “GOD healed me of my spiritual illness so that I no longer needed to be a terrible person.” The nineteen texts that make up The Quodlibet—collectively titled The 19 Texts of Holiness—contain the rhythm and authority of scripture: confession, instruction, and command.

This is not passive mysticism. Dictation here becomes devotion—writing as a daily submission to divine will. The Scrivener listens and records, receiving from JAH a renewed call to live the ethics of Christ in the Yehoshuai way: humility, mercy, forgiveness, service, and love enacted in deed.

The Yehoshuai Ethics

The core of The Quodlibet is the Yehoshuai Faith, a radical re-centering of Christianity around action, compassion, and simplicity. To “live Yehoshuai” is to embody Christ’s way of love, rejecting domination, cruelty, and hierarchy.

This is captured in The Summary of Christ’s Ethics, which declares:

“If anything you say or do abuses or mistreats JAH, other people, yourself, animals, or the earth, don’t do it. Instead, be driven to live LOVE. Let only LOVE, mercy, empathy, and goodness motivate you, as you choose CHRIST in all you do.”

In this vision, salvation is not a promise of words but a practice of life. Faith becomes an ethical reality, compassion made flesh.

Humility, Mercy, and Service

Throughout The Quodlibet, the divine voice commands humility before others and mercy toward all creation. The Scrivener is instructed to “give to the poor,” “forgive all people,” and “worship GOD throughout every day.” 

These teachings transform ethics into worship. Daily kindness becomes prayer; justice becomes devotion. The moral and the spiritual are no longer separate—they merge in the living way of Yehoshuai.

A Living Scripture

The Quodlibet functions as both a revelation and a manual for life. It joins with Poems for Earth, another book by Westfall, to form what the author calls JAH’S BOOK, “a unified text comprising two volumes… which we need as much as oxygen or water.” Each text calls the believer not to study holiness but to live it through forgiveness, fasting, generosity, and love that transcends dogma.

From Word to Way

In The Quodlibet, dictation becomes devotion, and doctrine becomes daily life. Damian the Scrivener offers not a new creed but a return to the first—faith as radical love, lived without compromise. The Yehoshuai ethics of Christ call humanity back to what is most essential: humility, forgiveness, and mercy in motion.

In a divided world, The Quodlibet stands as a quiet revelation that the voice of God still speaks, and it calls not for power but for love.

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