PHILOSOPHY of EDGAR CAYCE
(From “There Is A River”, by Thomas Sugrue)
The
system of metaphysical thought which emerges from the readings of Edgar Cayce
is a Christianized version of the mystery religions of ancient Egypt, Chaldea,
Persia, India, and Greece. It fits the figure of Christ into the tradition of
one God for all people, and places Him in His proper place, at the apex of the
philosophical structure; He is the capstone of the pyramid.
The complex symbology employed by the mystery religions has survived
fragmentarily in Christianity, notably in church architecture and in the sacrifice
of the Mass, with its sacramental cup. But the continuity of the tradition of
the one God has been lost. Paganism is condemned alike by religious authorities,
archaeologists, and historians as an idolatrous fancy devoted to the worship of
false gods.
Such was not the understanding of early Christians. Certainly the
Essenes, who prepared Mary, selected Joseph, and taught Jesus, were initiates
of the mysteries. Jesus said He came to fulfill the law, and part of that law
was the cabala, the secret doctrine of the Jews - their version of the
mysteries. Such converts to Jesus' teachings as Nicodemus and Joseph of
Arimathea were undoubtedly learned in the cabal. So, no doubt, was Paul.
The mysteries were concerned with man's problem of freeing his soul
from the world. In the mystery symbologies the earth was always represented as
the underworld, and the soul was lost in this underworld until freed from it by
wisdom, faith, and understanding. Persephone, for instance, was abducted by
Pluto, Lord of Hades. Persephone is the soul of man, whose true home is in the
heavens.
The mystery religions were, then, a preparation for
the coming of Jesus. He was the fruit of their efforts, and His message was a
fuller revelation to the people at large of the mysteries themselves. In the
scramble which Christianity made to establish itself as the dominant religion
of the decaying Roman Empire, the mysteries were denied their proper place,
since to grant that they had truth in them would justify their further existence.
“The early Christians used every means possible to
conceal the pagan origin of their symbols, doctrines, and rituals," Manly
Hall says. "They either destroyed the sacred hooks of other peoples among
whom they settled, or made them inaccessible to students of comparative
philosophy, apparently believing that in this way they could stamp out all
record of the pre-Christian origin of their doctrines."
It is interesting to speculate on the fact that Edgar
Cayce was raised in strict nineteenth century Bible tradition, and suffered
the greatest mental and emotional shock of his life when he discovered that in
his psychic readings he declared the truth of the mysteries and acclaimed Jesus
as their crowning glory.
Up to that time Mr. Cayce had never heard of the
mystery religions. Yet his readings check with everything about them that is
known to be authentic. Much that he has given is not found in surviving
records. Whether it is new material or was known to initiates of the mysteries
cannot be checked except by the readings themselves. They say that all
initiates, from the beginning of time, have known the full truth.
To describe the system of the readings in full, with
its comparisons and parallels with the mysteries, would require a book in
itself. For readers of this volume the following outline, containing all the
essential points and some of the details, has been prepared.
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Man demands a beginning and
a boundary, so in the beginning there was a sea of spirit, and it filled all
space. It was static, content, aware of itself, a giant resting on the bosom of
its thought,
contemplating that which it was.
Then it moved. It withdrew into itself, until all
space was empty, and that which had filled it was shining from its center, a
restless, seething mind. This was the individuality of the spirit; this was
what it discovered itself to be when it awakened; this was God.
God desired to express Himself, and He desired
companion-ship. Therefore, He projected from Himself the cosmos and souls. The
cosmos was built with the tools which man calls music, arithmetic, and
geometry: harmony, system, and balance. The building blocks were all of the
same material, which man calls the life essence. It was a power sent out from
God, a primary ray, as man thinks of it, which by changing the length of its
wave and the rate of its vibration became a pattern of differing forms,
substance, and movement. This created the law of diversity which supplied
endless designs for the pattern. God played on this law of diversity as a
person plays on a piano, producing melodies and arranging them in a symphony.
Each design carried within it, inherently, the plan
of its evolution, which was to be accomplished by movement, growth, or, as man
calls it, change. This corresponds to the sound of a note struck on a piano.
The sounds of several notes unite to make a chord; chords in turn become
phrases; phrases become melodies; melodies intermingle and move back and
forth, across and between and around each other, to make a symphony. The music
ends as it began, leaving emptiness, but between the beginning and the finish
there has been glorious beauty and a great experience.
(The terms "light," "heat," and
"electricity" with regard to the cosmos are of no use in this type of
discussion, since they are effects observed sensorily, within the earth's
atmosphere. The human senses do not operate outside the earth's atmosphere:
the sun might be, to the surviving individuality, an idea, an influence, or an
angel.)
Everything
moved, changed, and assumed its design in various states of form and
substance. Activity was begun and maintained by the law of attraction and
repulsion: positive and negative, attracting each other and repelling
themselves, maintained the form and action of all things.
All this was a part of God, an expression of His
thought. Mind was the force which propelled and perpetuated it: mind did
everything God imagined; everything that came into being was an aspect, a
posture, of mind.
Souls were created for companionship with God. The
pattern used was that of God Himself: spirit, mind, individuality; cause,
action, effect. First there had been spirit; then there had been the action
which withdrew spirit into itself; then there had been the resulting
individuality of God.
In building the soul there was spirit, with its
knowledge of identity with God; there was the active principle of mind; and
there was the ability to experience the activity of mind separately from God.
Thus a new individual, issuing from and dependent
upon God, but aware of an existence apart from Him, came into being. To the new
individual there was given, necessarily, the power to choose and direct its own
activity; without free will it would remain a part of the individuality of God.
Mind, issuing as a force from God, would naturally fulfill His thoughts,
unless directed otherwise. The power to do this - to direct otherwise the force
of mind - is what man calls his free will. The record of this free will is the
soul. The soul began with the first expression which free will made of its
power, through the force of mind. The first thought which it generated of
itself, the first diversion of mind force from its normal path, was the
beginning of the soul.
The nucleus of the soul was in balance, positive and
negative force in equal power, producing harmonious activity: the positive
initiating, impregnating, thrusting forward; the negative receiving,
nourishing, ejecting. The steps of this action were the stages of thought:
perception, reflection, opinion.
Thus the soul consisted of two states of
consciousness: that of the spirit, bearing a knowledge of its identity with God,
and that of the new individual, bearing a knowledge of everything it
experienced.
The
plan for the soul was a cycle of experience - unlimited in scope and duration -
in which the new individual would come to know creation in all its aspects, at
the discretion of will. The cycle would be completed when the desire of will
was no longer different from the thought of God. The consciousness of the new
individual would then merge with its spiritual consciousness of identity with
God, and the soul would return to its source as the companion it was intended
to be.
In this state the soul would retain its consciousness
of a separate individuality and would be aware that of its own free will it now
acted as a part of God, not diverting mind force because it was in agreement
with the action toward which this force was directed. Until this state was
reached the soul would not be a companion in the true sense of the word.
(The idea that a return to God means a loss of
individuality is paradoxical, since God is aware of everything that happens and
must therefore be aware of the consciousness of each individual. Thus the
return of the soul is the return of the image to that which imagined it, and
the consciousness of an individual - its record, written in mind - would not
be destroyed without destroying part of God Himself. When a soul returns to God
it becomes aware of itself not only as a part of God, but as a part of every
other soul, and everything.
(What is lost is the ego - the desire to do other
than the will of God. When the soul returns to God the ego is voluntarily relinquished;
this is the symbolism of the crucifixion.)
The plan for the soul included experience of all
creation, but it did not necessarily mean identification with and participation
in all forms and substance. Nor did it mean interference in creation by souls.
It did not mean that they were to spin their own little worlds, twisting and
bending laws to make images of their dreams.
But these things could happen. The soul was the
greatest thing that was made; it had free will. Once free will was given, God
did nothing to curb it; however it acted, it had to act within Him; by whatever
route, it had to return to Him.
(The fact that man's body is a speck of dust on a
small planet leads to the illusion that man himself is a small creation. The
measure of the soul is the limitless activity of mind and the grandeur of
imagination.)
At first there was little difference between the
consciousness of the new individual and its consciousness of identity with God.
Free will merely watched the flow of mind, somewhat as man watches his fancy
disport in daydreams, marveling at its power and versatility. Then it began to
exercise itself, imitating and paralleling what mind was doing. Gradually it
acquired experience, becoming a complementary rather than an imitative force.
It helped to extend, modify, and regulate creation. It grew, as did Jesus, in
"wisdom and beauty."
Certain souls became bemused with their own power and
began to experiment with it. They mingled with the dust of the stars and the
winds of the spheres, feeling them, becoming part of them. One result of this
was an unbalancing of the positive-negative force, by accentuating one or the
other; to feel things demanded the negative force; to express through things,
and direct and manage them, required the positive force. Another result was the
gradual weakening of the link between the two states of consciousness - that of
the spirit and that of the individual. The individual became more concerned
with, and aware of, his own creations than God's. This was the fall in spirit,
or the revolt of the angels.
To move into a portion of creation and become part of
it, a soul had to assume a new, or third aspect of consciousness - a method of
experiencing that portion of creation and translating it into the basic
substance of mind by means of thought. Man refers to this aspect of awareness
as his "conscious mind." It is the device by which he experiences
earth: physical body, five senses, glandular and nervous systems. In other
worlds, in other systems, the device differed. Only the range and variation of
man's own thoughts can give an idea of the number of these other worlds and
systems and the aspects of divine mind that they represent.
When a soul took on the consciousness of a portion of
creation it separated itself temporarily from the consciousness of its own
individuality, and became even further removed from the consciousness of its
spirit. Thus, instead of helping to direct the flow of creation and
contributing to it, it found itself in the stream, drifting along with it. The
farther it went from shore, the more it succumbed to the pull of the current
and the more difficult was the task of getting back to land.
Each
of the systems of stars and planets represented, in this manner, a temptation
to the souls. Each had its plan, and moved toward it through the activity of a
constant stream of mind. When a soul leaped into the stream (by immersing
itself in the system through which the stream was flowing) it had the force of
the current to contend with, and its free will was hampered. It was very easy,
under these circumstances, to drift with the current.
(Each system also represented an opportunity for
development, advancement, and growth toward the ideal of complete
companionship with God - the position of co-creator in the vast system of
universal mind.)
The solar system attracted souls, and since each
system is a single expression, with its planets as integral parts, the earth
came into the path of souls.
(The planets of the solar system represent the
dimensions of consciousness of the system - its consciousness as a whole. There
are eight dimensions to the consciousness of the system. The earth is the third
dimension.)
The earth was an expression of divine mind with its
own laws, its own plan, its own evolution. Souls, longing to feel the beauty of
the seas, the winds, the forest, the flowers, mixed with them and expressed
themselves through them. They also mingled with the animals, and made, in
imitation of them, thought forms: they played at creating; they imitated God.
But it was a playing, an imitating, that interfered with what had already been
set in motion, and thus the stream of mind carrying out the plan for earth
gradually drew souls into its current. They had to go along with it, in the
bodies they had themselves created.
They were strange bodies: mixtures of animals, a
patchwork of ideas about what it would be pleasant to enjoy in flesh. Down
through the ages fables of centaurs, Cyclopes, etc., have persisted as a relic
of this beginning of the soul's tenancy of earth.
Sex already existed in the animal kingdom, but the
souls, in their thought forms, were androgynous. To experience sex they created
thought forms for companions, isolating the negative force in a separate
structure, retaining the positive within themselves. This objectification is
what man calls Lilith, the first woman.
This entanglement of souls in what man calls matter
was a probability from the beginning, but God did not know when it would happen
until the souls, of their own choice, had caused it to happen.
(Of the souls which God created - and He created all
souls in the beginning - none has been made since - only a comparative few
have come into the experience of the solar system, though many have gone
through or are going through a similar entanglement in other systems.)
A
way of escape for the souls which were entangled in matter was prepared. A
form was chosen to be a vehicle for the soul on earth, and the way was made for
souls to enter earth and experience it as part of their cycle. Of the forms
already existing on earth one of the anthropoid apes most nearly approached the
necessary pattern. Souls descended on these apes - hovering above and about
them rather than inhabiting them - and influenced them to move toward a different goal
from the simple one they had been pursuing. They came down out of the trees,
built fires, made tools, lived in communities, and began to communicate with
each other. Swiftly, even as man measures time, they lost their animal look,
shed bodily hair, and took on refinements of manner and habit.
All this was done by the souls, working through
glands, until the body of the ape was an objectification - in the third dimension
of the solar system - of the soul that hovered above it. Then the soul
descended into the body and earth had a new inhabitant: man.
He appeared as a consciousness within an animal, a
consciousness which was felt on the earth in five different places at the same
time, as the five races. The white race appeared in the Caucasus, the
Carpathians, and Persia. The yellow race appeared in what is now the Gobi
Desert. The black race appeared in the Sudan and upper west Africa; the red
race appeared in Atlantis; the brown race appeared in the Andes.
(The
Pacific coast of South America was then the western coast of Lemuria. The
Atlantic seaboard of the United States comprised the lowlands of Atlantis.
Persia and the Caucasus were rich lands - the Garden of Eden. The poles of the
earth as we know them today were tropical and semitropical. The Nile emptied
into the Atlantic Ocean. The Sahara was fertile and inhabited. The Mississippi
basin was part of the ocean.)
The problem was to overcome the attractions of earth
to the extent that the soul would be as free in the body as out of it. Only
when the body was no longer a hindrance to the free expression of the soul
would the cycle of earth be finished.
(In a smaller field this was the drama of free will and
creation. In a still smaller field each atom of the physical body, being a
world in itself, is a drama of free will and creation. The soul puts life into
each atom, and each atom is a reflection in flesh of the soul's pattern.)
There were males and females in these new, pure
races, and both had complete souls. Eve replaced Lilith, and became a
complement to Adam - the ideal companion for the threefold life on earth:
physical, mental, and spiritual. In Eve the positive pole was suppressed and
the negative pole expressed; in Adam the negative pole was suppressed, the
positive expressed.
(Which a soul would become - male or female - was a
matter of choice, unless the soul was already entangled and unbalanced.
Eventually the positive and negative forces would have to be brought into
balance, so there was not, basically, more advantage in one than in the other.
For souls in balance it was a device to be employed for the duration of the
earth cycle, and whichever sex would best suit the problems to be attacked was
chosen. It was a voluntary assumption of an attitude, not a fall into error,
and once a sex was assumed it was generally retained through the cycle of earth
lives, though it could be changed from life to life, if the change were considered
advantageous. Awareness of sex was retained between lives, but could only be
expressed on earth.)
Man became aware, with the advent of his
consciousness, that sex meant something more to him than to the animals. It was
the door by which new souls entered the earth, a door unnecessary elsewhere in
the system. It was the only means the trapped souls had of getting out of their
predicament - by being reborn through the bodies of souls that had entered the
earth through choice. These bodies were not entangled with animals or thought
forms. They represented the ideal vehicle for the soul on earth.
Therefore
sex was a creative power that could be used for good or evil. Used rightly, the
race would be kept pure, the earth would be a paradise for souls in perfect
bodies, the trapped souls could be freed of their cycle of rebirth in
monstrous, half-animal forms, and provided with perfect bodies.
(This
is the story of Adam and Eve, the serpent, and the apple. The serpent, wisdom,
offered the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. Eve, the negative,
receptive force took and fostered it. When Adam, the active force, partook it,
the peaceful animal life of man was ended.)
The
plan for the earth cycle of souls was a series of incarnations, interlarded
with periods of dwelling in other dimensions of consciousness in the system -
the planets - until every thought and every action of the physical body, with
its five senses and conscious mind, was in accord with the plan originally laid
out for the soul. When the body was no longer a hindrance to the free
expression of the soul - when the conscious mind had merged with the
subconscious, and the atomic structure of the body could be controlled so that
the soul was as free in it as out of it - the earth cycle was finished and the
soul could go on to new adventures. This conquest of the physical body could
not be attained until there was perfection in the other dimensions of
consciousness in the system, for these made up, with the earth, the total
expression of the sun and its satellites. Whichever state of consciousness the
soul assumed became the focal point of activity. The other states of
consciousness receded to the position of urges and influences.
The
race of man was fostered by a soul that had completed its experience of
creation and returned to God, becoming a companion to Him and a co-creator.
This is the soul man knows as the Christ.
The
Christ soul was interested in the plight of its brother souls trapped in earth, and after
supervising the influx of the pure races, it took form itself, from time to
time, to act as a leader for the people.
Though at first the
souls but lightly inhabited bodies and remembered their identities, gradually -
life after life - they descended into earthiness, into less mentality, less
consciousness of the mind force. They remembered their true selves only in dreams, in stories and
fables handed down from one generation to another. Religion came into being: a
ritual of longing for lost memories. The arts were born: music, numbers, and
geometry. These were brought to earth by the incoming souls; gradually their
heavenly source was forgotten, and they had to be written down, learned, and
taught to each new generation.
Finally man was left with a conscious mind definitely
separated from his own individuality. (He now calls this individuality the
subconscious mind; his awareness of earth is the conscious mind.) The
subconscious mind influenced the conscious mind - gave it, in fact, its
stature, breadth, and quality. It became the body under the suit of clothes.
Only in sleep was it disrobed.
With his conscious mind, man reasoned (for all mind,
left to itself, will work out the plans of God). He built up theories for what
he felt - but no longer knew - to be true. Philosophy and theology resulted. He
began to look around him and discover, in the earth, secrets that he carried
within himself but could no longer reach with his consciousness. The result was
science.
The plan of man went into action. Downward he went
from heavenly knowledge to mystical dreams, revealed religions, philosophy and
theology, until the bottom was reached and he only believed what he could see
and feel and prove in terms of his conscious mind. Then he began to fight his
way upward, using the only tools he had left: suffering, patience, faith, and
the power of mind.
Atlantis and Lemuria sank; civilizations rose and
fell; man was here a little better, there a little worse. He descended to the
depths of earth consciousness, then slowly began to climb back. In earthly
seasons it was a long journey from the moment when the first soul, looking
down through the trees, saw a violet and wanted to pluck it, to the instant
when the last soul should leave its body forever.
The
Christ soul helped man. As Enoch, as Melchizedek, it took on flesh, to teach
and lead. (Since it was to be active it had to be male.) Enoch and Melchizedek
were not born, did not die. The Christ soul realized after these assumptions of
flesh that it was necessary to set a pattern for man, to show him the way back to himself. It assumed
this task, and was born of woman, beginning voluntarily a new individuality, a
new soul record; though behind this new individuality shone the pure Christ
soul. But on this the veil dropped, and the Son of God began His pilgrimage. He
was born as Joseph, again as Joshua, again as Jeshua -the scribe of Enoch who
rewrote the Bible - and finally as Jesus. He, Jesus, triumphant over death and
the body, became the way, laying down the ego of the will, accepting the
crucifixion, returning to God. He is the pattern we are to follow.
(At present man is in a state of great spiritual
darkness - the darkness that precedes dawn. He has carried his skepticism to
the point where it is forcing him to conclusions he knows intuitively are
wrong. At the same time he has carried his investigation of natural phenomena
to the point where it is disproving all it seemed to prove in the beginning.
Free will is finding that all roads lead finally to the same destination.
Science, theology, and philosophy, having no desire to join forces, are
approaching a point of merger. Skepticism faces destruction by its own hand.)
Man is at all times the total of what he has been and
done, what he has fought and defended, what he has hated and loved. In the three-dimensional
consciousness of earth every atom of his physical body is a reflection of his
soul - a crystallization of his individuality. His emotional and nervous
structures, his mental abilities, his aptitudes, his aversions and preferences,
his fears, his follies, his ambitions, his character, are the sum of what he
has done with his free will since it was given to him. So every personality -
the earthly cloak of an individuality - is different from every other
personality.
This has been true from the beginning. The first
independent thought of each soul was a little different from the first
independent thought of every other soul.
So
people are different in their likes and dislikes, in their desires and dreams.
The law of karma - cause and effect - likewise makes them different in their
joys and sorrows, in their handicaps, their strengths, their weaknesses, their
virtues and vices, their appreciation of beauty, and their comprehension of
truth. Debts incurred in the flesh must be met in the flesh: natural law, not
man or God, demands an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.
The same law applies to groups of people, as they act
together. There is karma for families, for tribes, for races, for nations.
When the souls who committed a war return to a nation, a war will be committed
upon that nation. Only when defeat is endured by a nation with humility and
understanding, only when victory is dispensed by a nation with justice and
mercy, will the karma of battle be lifted from them.
Every person's life is shaped to some extent by
karma: his own, that of his associates and loved ones, that of his nation and
race, and that of the world itself. But these, singly or together, are not
greater than free will. It is what the person does about these influences and
urges, how he reacts to them, that makes a difference in his soul development.
Because of karma some things are more probable than others, but so long as
there is free will anything is possible.
Thus free will and predestination coexist in a
person. His past experiences limit him in probability, and incline him in
certain directions, but free will can always draw the sword from the stone.
No soul takes on flesh without a general plan for the
experience ahead. The personality expressed through the body is one of many
that the individuality might have assumed. Its job is to work on one or several
phases of the karma of the individuality. No task is undertaken which is too
much for the personality to which it is assigned - or which chooses it. (Some
souls choose their own entrances and set their own tasks; others, having made
too many mistakes and become dangerously subject to earthly appetites, are
sent back by law, at a time and under circumstances best suited to help them.)
The task is seldom perfectly fulfilled, and sometimes it is badly neglected.
Choice
of incarnation is usually made at conception, when the channel for expression
is opened by the parents. A pattern is made by the mingling of the soul
patterns of the parents. This sets up certain conditions of karma. A soul
whose own karma approximates these conditions will be attracted by the
opportunity presented. Since the pattern will not be exactly his own, he must
consider taking on some of the karma of the parents - relatively - in order to
use the channel. This concerns environment, companionship with the parents, and
certain marks of physiognomy.
Things other than pattern concern the soul in its
selection of a body: coming situations in history, former associations with the
parents, the incarnation - at about the same time - of souls it wishes to be
with and with whom it has problems to work out. In some cases the parents are
the whole cause of a soul's return - the child will be devoted to them and remain close to them
until their death. In other cases the parents are used as a means to an end -
the child will leave home early and be about its business.
The
soul may occupy the body as early as six months before birth, or as late as a
month after birth, though in the latter case it has been hovering over the body
since birth, deciding whether or not to occupy it. Once the decision is made
and the occupation completed, the veil drops between the new personality and
the soul, and the earthly record of the child begins. (The fact that a baby is
born dead does not mean that it was refused as a vehicle for a soul. Just the
opposite is true: the channel is withdrawn from the soul; no occupation is possible.)
The body is formed in the womb according to the
pattern made by the mingling of the life forces of the parents, each with its
respective pattern. This is the metaphysical symbolism of the 47th problem of
Euclid, the Pythagorean theorem: the square of the hypotenuse of a right
triangle is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides. As soon as
occupation by a soul takes place, the pattern of the soul begins to work its
way through the body, and the child's personality begins.
The personality is a high-lighted portion of the
individuality, experiencing three-dimensional consciousness. The rest of the
individuality remains in shadow, giving tone to the personality; urges,
appreciation, tastes, avocations, and what is loosely termed "charm"
- the background to which intuition responds.
The personality is shaped by three or four incarnations, the portions
of the earthly experience on which the individuality wants to work. The
emotions and talents of the person reflect these incarnations. The dreams,
visions, meditations - the deep, closely guarded self-consciousness of the
personality - is the pattern of experience among the other states of
consciousness of the solar system. The intellect is, roughly speaking, from the
stars: it is the mind force of the soul, conditioned by its previous experience
in creation outside the solar system, and dimmed or brightened by its recent
experiences within the solar system.
Thus a personality is only an aspect of an
individuality. A soul, deciding to experience earth again, might assume any of
several personalities, each of which would express a portion of itself. As a
soul approaches completion of the solar cycle the personality becomes more
many-sided, expressing greater portions of the individuality. This is because
each incarnation has less adverse karma, requiring less attention. Finally the
personality is a complete expression of the individuality, and the cycle is
completed.
(As an individuality succumbs to earthiness,
abandoning intellect for emotion and emotion for sensuality, it becomes more and
more one-sided.)
The
incarnations that influence the personality reflect their patterns in the
person's life. Sometimes they intermingle: a child's parents may re-create the
environment of one experience, while his playmates will re-create the environment
of another. Sometimes the influences work in periods: home and childhood may
re-create the conditions of one incarnation, school and college those of
another, marriage those of a third, and a career those of a fourth. Usually the
people and the problems of the incarnations have interlocking relationships, so
that the pattern of the personality's experience is a rational development, and
the problems are presented to him as he is prepared to meet them. Because the
incarnations only reflect their problems (their blessings as well as their
handicaps), usually the karma of more than one can be undertaken in a single
life; if the life is successful, considerable progress is made toward freedom
from flesh.
When
a life is finished the personality vanishes. Its pattern is absorbed into the
individuality. Its record is retained, but it becomes a part of the
individuality, which at all times is the sum total of what it has been: all it
has thought, all it has experienced; all it has eaten, drunk, and felt through
the ages.
(Here is an example of how extremes may meet. Both
the atheist and the Christian seem to be right. The atheist says the
personality does not survive after death; the Christian says the soul is judged
after death and returns to its Creator. Substituting personality for soul,
both are expressing a truth. The personality is judged, returns to its creator
- the individuality - and is absorbed, giving up its own independent
existence.)
The general plan for perfecting the individuality in
its experience of the solar system then proceeds. Another state of consciousness
is assumed, as a trial or as a means of reinforcing the character of a future
personality.
So the problems of individualities, the problems of
groups, the problems of races and nations, are worked upon time and again
until, by free will, they are solved, and the souls go on to other worlds,
other systems, other universes.
The readings say:
"Know that thyself, in its physical state, is a
part of the plan of salvation, of righteousness, of truth, of the Creative
Forces, or God, in the earth.
"Each person is a corpuscle in the body of that
force called God.
"Each person is a manifestation of the Creative
Forces in action in the earth. Each person finds himself with a body that seeks
expression of itself, and a mind capable of becoming aware of what the body
presents, what other men present, and what influences are acting upon the body
and upon the mind itself.
"Each soul enters the material plane not by
chance but through the grace, the mercy, of a loving Father; that the soul may,
through its own choice, work out those faults, those fancies, which prevent its
communion and
at-one-ment with the Creative Forces.
"As to whether a soul is developed or retarded
during a particular life depends on what the person holds as its ideal, and
what it does in its mental and material relationships about that ideal.
"Life is a purposeful experience, and the place
in which a person finds himself is one in which he may use his present
abilities, faults, failures, virtues, in fulfilling the purpose for which the
soul decided to manifest in the three-dimensional plane.
"Know in thyself that there are immutable laws,
and the universe about thyself is directed by laws set in motion from the
beginning.
"So, as ye condemn, so are ye condemned. As ye
forgive, so may ye be forgiven. As ye do unto the least of thy brethren, so ye
do it unto thy Maker. These are laws; these are truths; they are unfailing. And
because He may often appear slow in meting out results does not alter or change
the law. An error, a fault, a failure, must be met. Though the heavens, the
earth, may pass away, His word will not pass away. His word is the way, the truth, the light. Each soul must
pay to the last jot or tittle.
"How can ye do His bidding? - Not in mighty
deeds of valor, not in exaltation of thy knowledge or power; but in the
gentleness of the things of the spirit: love, kindness, longsuffering,
patience; these thy Elder Brother, the Christ, has shown thee . . . that thou,
applying them in thy associations with thy fellow man day by day, here a
little, there a little, may become one with Him as He has destined that thou
shouldst be! Wilt thou separate thyself? For there is nothing in earth, in
heaven, in hell, that may separate thee from the love of thy God, of thy
brother, save thyself.
"Then, be up and doing; knowing that as thou
hast met in life those things that would exalt thy personal self - these ye
must lose in gentleness, in patience. For in patience ye become aware of your
soul; your individuality lost in Him; your personality shining as that which
is motivated by the individuality of thy Lord and Master. Thus does your
destiny lie within yourself, and the destiny of the world.
"Hold fast to that faith exemplified in thy
meditation, in thy counsels, in thy giving out to thy fellow man. For he that
hides himself in the service of his fellow man through the gifts, through the
promises as are in Him, hides many of the faults that have made him afraid
through his experience in the earth.
For it is not what one counts as knowledge that is
important, nor what one would attain in material realms, but what one does
about that which is known as constructive forces and influences in the
experience of thyself and thy fellow man. For, as He has given, 'As ye do it
unto others, ye do it unto Me.' He is the way, the life, the light. He is the
Creator; He is the giver of all good and perfect gifts. Man may sow, man may
act in material manifestations, in matter, of spiritual forces . . . yet the
returns, the increase, must come from and through Him who is the gift of life.
It is not a consideration of where or even how the seed of truth in Him is
sown; for He gives the increase if it is sown in humbleness of spirit, in
sincerity of purpose, with an eye-single that He may be glorified in and among
thy fellow man. This is the way, this is the manner, that He would have thee
follow.
"Let thyself, then, become more and more a
channel through which His manifestations in the earth may arise, through thy
efforts, in the hearts, the minds, of thy fellow man. For mind - in man, to man
- is the builder, ever. That, then, must be directed, given, lost in singleness
of purpose, that there may come the greater awakening within the consciousness of
thy fellow man that He is
in the earth; that His words are as lights to men in dark places, to those that
are weak, to those who stumble. For He will give thy efforts that necessary
force, that necessary power, to quicken even those that are asleep in their
own selfishness, in their own self-indulgences, and bring to their awakening
that which will
make for glorious activities in the earth.
"Keep, then, the faith thou hast had in Him; for
He is thy strength, He is thy bulwark; He is thy Elder Brother. In Him, ye may
find that which will bring to thee and others joy, peace, happiness, and that
which makes men not afraid. For He is peace; not as men count peace, not as men
count happiness, but in that harmonious manner in which life, the expression of
the Father in the earth, is one . . . even as He is one.
"Keep the faith."
Keith and Marnie Elliott’s “REMEDY” Site
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