What if A Divine Visitation Came Today Wearing Jeans?
Are We Really Really Ready?
Let’s be honest—some visitation happened or lets just say Jesus visited today wearing jeans and said, “I’ve got a deal to save everyone,” would the world stop and listen?
Or would he be dismissed as just another street preacher with a podcast, a mid-tier following, and a suspiciously charismatic smile?

Imagine this: it’s a quiet Sunday morning. You’re just about to dive into your avocado toast or snooze one more time before church (online, of course). There’s a knock on the door.
You open it, and standing there is a man in a hoodie, cargo pants, and sneakers—not the “glow in the dark” Jesus you were raised to expect.
No sandals, no beard flowing in the wind, no white robe floating three inches above the ground. Just a simple divine visit that you were not pre-informed about. So standing there, is just a guy. Calm eyes. Maybe a little dusty. Maybe holding a phone with 3% battery. He smiles and says, “Peace be upon you. Can we talk?”
Tell me—how many of us would invite him in?
Odds are, the door would be quietly closed again. Or slammed. (Let’s be real—slam is more likely.) We might even post a tweet about the “weird guy who tried to sell me salvation this morning.” Because the kind of divine visitation most are waiting for involves fireworks, the sky-splitting glory, or at least a harp or trumpet sound effect. Not… a man who looks like he borrowed your cousin’s clothes.
But that’s exactly how Jesus operated in the scriptures. Understated. Low-key. Unimpressive by worldly standards. The kind of guy people ignored until he flipped tables, walked on water, or raised the dead.
Remember the Samaritan woman at the well? He just sat down and started a casual chat. No thunder. No intro music. Just realness. And yet, that simple conversation changed her life—and her whole village.
Now imagine Moses coming back. He sets up a YouTube channel. “PlagueTalks – Episode 1: Why Frogs Fell from the Sky.” Five views. Two likes. One angry comment: “Fake prophet. Clickbait title.”
Or Buddha starts a mindfulness newsletter. Mohammed launches a TikTok series called “Reflections from the Cave.” Most of us would scroll past because they’re not viral enough. Because they didn’t collab with MrBeast.
Meanwhile, some half-naked influencer posts a gym selfie captioned “#blessed” and gets two million likes. That’s what we’ve wired our attention to follow.
Maybe it’s not the messengers who’ve changed. Maybe it’s us.
We want divine signs and visits, but we don’t want to be inconvenienced by them. We want spiritual wisdom, but it better fit in a reel under 30 seconds. We claim we’re awaiting the return of the divine, but we’re so busy watching Netflix documentaries about the apocalypse that we’d miss the real thing if it knocked on our door with a hoodie and a grin.
We love the idea of God as long as He comes in the package we prefer—polished, predictable, preferably glowing. But Jesus wasn’t like that. And the truth is, most of us wouldn’t know what to do with him if he showed up today.
So ask yourself this: If the Messiah returned wearing jeans and a backpack, if he sent you a friend request instead of fire from heaven… Would you hit “accept”?
Or would you block him, report him, and go back to scrolling for memes? This isn’t just satire. It’s the setup of Divine Matrix—a book that explores the real possibility that God is still speaking, still testing, still showing up… just not in the way you expect.
So here’s your wake-up call. Keep your eyes open. Check your heart. And maybe… answer the door next time someone knocks.
You never know who it might be.