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IFISEEUS
Imminent
Fulfillment, Immortality, Safety, Empowerment,
Equality, Unity, Society
"There are a thousand hacking at the branches
of evil
to one who is striking at the root."
Henry David Thoreau
From:
http://www.ifiseeu.com/power-article.htm
The Potential Power of the
Purified Mind
By Michael
Goodspeed and Michael Armstrong
AUTHORS' NOTE: This article has
no copyright. It is intended for duplication and re-distribution, so
long as credit is given, and so long as no alterations are made to
the contents herein including the authors' bylines and all
hyperlinks and cited URL's.
Most spiritual aspirants have
some familiarity with the concept of acceptance. The word permeates
much of the spiritual literature as a corollary to the themes of
"surrender" and "forgiveness." The popular prayer/adage "I must
accept what I cannot change and change what I cannot accept" seems a
noble and reasonable policy in this tumultuous and/or indifferent
Universe. Bad things happen to good people and we accept it because,
we tell ourselves, it's all part of God's great plan, it's "for our
own good," and in any event, we don't have any other choice.
Acceptance is surely a valid
mental exercise insofar as it helps one experience life in a manner
that is more lighthearted and friendly. We can't change other
people, we can't undo the past, and we can't predict every trial and
travail looming over the horizon. But what if man's tacit
"acceptance" of his general helplessness and victim hood in a
dangerous, troubled world is itself a major barrier to doing
something about it?
From the day we are born, we
are taught to accept the unacceptable as a matter of course. We all
learn quickly that illness, disease, injuries, pain, trauma, aging,
loss, and finally death are a fair price to pay for the privilege of
"living." And neither scientific, nor most religious or spiritual
literature ever contradicts these expectations. Mainstream biology
and medicine tell us that we are mechanistic organisms born by
chance and destined to die in a hostile, disconnected universe.
And
both institutional religions and most spiritual philosophies treat
"spirituality" as a mere anesthetic to the unavoidable human
outcomes of suffering and death. If you view suffering and dying as
a problem, you are supposed to be comforted by the promise of an
afterlife in which one will be free from the endless heartaches and
sorrows endemic to an earthly existence. Indeed, many religious and
"spiritual" thought systems glorify suffering as a purifying force
and/or badge of honor that will only increase the rewards one reaps
in the eternal hereafter.
So
where can one turn if one is unable or unwilling to "accept" these
seemingly immutable premises that define and limit the human
condition? Improbable as it may seem, it can be said that NONE of
the institutions, either secular or religious, that exist mainly to
relieve human suffering have ever proposed how man may be uplifted
from his damaged, limited state to one of true empowerment. Although
the word empower is used casually in political discourse, most often
to describe the government's dispensation of "civil rights" to
certain individuals, to be truly empowered means literally to have
absolute authority over one's own destiny. It is commonly accepted
that such a thing is not plausible, possible, nor even desirable for
mere human beings. In fact, both religious and governmental
authorities relentlessly command us to acquiesce personal authority
in favor of submission to some "higher power," be it earthly or
"divine," for our own best interests. And since our helplessness
seems confirmed in every facet of human experience, this call to
submit goes largely unchallenged.
In a
highly religious world, those who aren't satisfied with their
personal reality or the reality of the world frequently turn to God
for an answer. People pray for everything from personal health to
the safety of loved ones to financial prosperity to world peace. But
in a world dominated by warfare, poverty, disease, and every
conceivable form of injustice, it seems that these "prayers" are
rarely if ever answered. The only logical conclusion one can come to
is either A) prayers are never answered because no creator nor
agency exists to hear them; or B) the practice of prayer by most
human beings is misguided, because they are working with incorrect
concepts of "God."
So
far—in the history of the world—the world’s religions have neither
been able to inspire their god to do anything substantive about the
“human condition”, nor have they done much of any significance
themselves -- except to offer “coping” mechanisms! The “positive”
coping mechanisms offered in the English speaking western world
consist of 4 or 5 things: Temporary mystical experience,
quasi-fellowship, quasi-miracles, prayer and meditation, some time
oriented structure to their lives, and finally promises and hope.
One is reminded of the popular axiom, “Hope makes a good breakfast
but a lousy dinner”.
Down
through the ages into our time, religions have also promulgated
every unflattering and insulting concept of god in the spectrum of
the highest human value system. Right along side of being merciful,
loving and gracious, God has been portrayed as inconsistent, mean,
petty, vengeful, violent, vicious, unforgiving, dominating,
demanding, unreasonable, alien (“who can know they ways” and “thy
ways are past understanding), and cruel (he will be burning humans
for ever and ever in some literal fiery hell). Books have been
written to show that this is even an unwarranted interpretation of
New Testament passages. The God of religion has in fact come to
represent everything that could be characterized as anti-God. So
pervasive are these imageries of God that, throughout much of the
world, the phrase "Holy Warrior" goes unrecognized as an oxymoron.
Countless millions of devotees have been willing to burn themselves
and others at the stake in concordance with what they view as
directives from God. Due to this overt and seemingly endless lunacy,
more human beings today than ever before are skeptical of religion.
("Religion has made atheists of many honest men" – David R.
Hawkins).
Yet
many choose not to abandon their inner call to spirit, seeking
instead a spiritual thought system that is more benevolent and
constructive to life. In the United States, countless bestsellers
have been written on spirituality, with authors such as Eckhart
Tolle, Marianne Williams, and Deepak Chopra, et al. preaching a
message of forgiveness, "acceptance," and unconditional love.
Whereas much religion instructs the faithful to bow to an angry God,
most proponents of what might be called "the new age" teach that the
Universe is friendly—if friendliness is consonant with being born
into an insane, troubled, dangerous world under a sentence of
death--, and that happiness is achieved by simply existing in the
present moment and “surrendering” to what is. In this thought
system, the problems of the world and one's life are illusory – they
exist only in our minds due to limited and/or false perception.
Undeniably, this approach seems to be a brighter, better alternative
to the darker and grimmer aspects of religion and religious concepts
of god, and may be helpful to those who seek greater equanimity and
inner peace. But the questions must be asked: Have these new
approaches gone far enough? Are they correct (consonant with
reality) enough? Can they succeed at truly resolving the human
condition, and provide every human being with what they really want
and need?
From
our perspective, the teachings of Jesus, when correctly interpreted
and free from the selective coloring of religious dogmatists,
provide a clear instructive path to a state of empowerment, i.e. a
condition where human beings can change current “reality" for the
benefit of all. Even physical death can be transcended for truly
empowered individuals – on this point Jesus was particularly
explicit. For those who seek a concept of God that is both
benevolently healing, consistently loving and sane, any other point
of view can only be described at best as inadequate, at worst as
destructive.
But
in our purportedly "Christian" nation, the fundamental tenets of
Jesus' teachings are barely discussed and almost never believed,
even by the most devoutly Christian "faithful." In fact, one can
argue that institutional Christian doctrine “reads right around the
best parts” and has over centuries come to preach the precise
OPPOSITE of Jesus' intended message to humanity. In the Gospel of
John, we are told that "God so loved the world, that he gave his
only begotten Son, that whosoever believes in him should not perish,
but have eternal life." But within traditional Christian
denominations, physical death is not viewed as something that lowly
human beings can entirely bypass because there is always a hiatus.
The "everlasting life" promised by Jesus--the destiny of righteous
"souls" that have been judged favorably by God—is only delivered
after death.
The
Father for whom Jesus spoke, however, bore no resemblance to the
capricious, schizophrenic entity of the Old Testament and other
sacred writings. Jesus could not have been more clear that the
Father was not in the business of dispensing judgement and wrath
upon his own creation, nor was it God's will for human beings to
suffer and die: "…as the Father raises the dead and gives them life,
even so the Son also gives life to whom he will….For neither does
the Father judge any man, but he has given all judgment unto the
Son…Truly, truly, I say unto you, He that hears my message,
and believes him that sent me, has eternal life, and comes not into
judgment, but has passed out of death into life…."
A
large part of healing may have to start with spiritual sanity,
conceptual clarity and correctness. It might be stated that Jesus'
primary intention was to change man's concept of God as being both
separate from, and superior to, His creation. To the disciple
Phillip when challenged to “show us the father”, Jesus replied—no
doubt with frustration--, “If you have understood me, you
have understood the father.” In the Gnostic Gospel of Thomas, Jesus
states, "The Kingship of Heaven is within you and without you, and
any man who knows himself shall find it." This instruction and
others by Jesus seem quite explicit – Heaven is not a "place" that
man's "soul" travels to after death, nor is it a realm to which only
a few are granted entrance after a favorable judgment. The Kingship
of Heaven can be accessed IMMINENTLY, and all anyone need do to find
it is "know himself."
The
teachings of Jesus also seem congruent with the revolutionary idea
of a "holographic universe." A hologram is a single entity that is
made of many individual units, and within each unit is the essence
of the whole. In this analogy, where Jesus states that he can
accomplish nothing in the absence of the Father, we might interpret
this to mean that God Himself represents the totality of unfallen
human consciousness. When Jesus performed miracles, he insisted it
was not him doing it, but the Father, yet Jesus told his disciples,
"Greater things than these will you do." The message is clearly that
God is NOT separate from human beings – in a state of perfect unity
and fellowship, all the power in the universe is available to man,
and in this condition of empowerment, nothing that the mind can
imagine is impossible.
The
evidentiary support for these seemingly "unusual" or "extraordinary"
concepts exists for anyone with the inclination and discernment to
see. The feats of the psychic mind have been anecdotally
demonstrated for centuries, and in recent decades, experimentally.
Even a cursory examination of the evidence reveals beyond a
reasonable doubt that we live in a collective consciousness, damaged
and fragmented but still undeniably active. In everyday life, human
beings have regular psychic experiences ranging from the profound to
the seemingly mundane. Since death is the most psychically
traumatizing of all experiences, it's not surprising that many of
the most intense psychic intuitions explicitly forewarn of one's own
expiration. In fact, many people have been able to accurately
predict the precise moment of their deaths, often years in advance.
One of the more jarring demonstrations of this
phenomenon was given by NBA star Pistol Pete Maravich who said in a
1974 interview, "I don't want to play 10 years in the NBA and die
of a heart attack at age 40." Maravich played pro ball for
exactly 10 years and died of a heart attack at age 40 in 1988. In
the article "When Death is Prophesied," over a dozen historical
accounts were presented of similar fulfilled prophecies among
everyday people.
(Full story:
http://www.rense.com/general58/death.htm)
And
the psychic abilities of animals have been demonstrated perhaps even
more forcefully than those of humans. No narrow, materialistic view
of reality can explain the countless reports of lost animals that
traversed hundreds or even thousands of miles to return home to
their families, guided only by intuition. Consider this 1971 report
of a cat whose 1,600 mile journey finally led her -- bruised paws
and all -- to her owners' doorstep:
News Journal, Sunday July 25, 1971, Mansfield, Ohio
From The Family Weekly
The Love Cats Feel For People...The Journeys Their Love Inspires
By Felica Ames
What built-in cat radar led Clementine through endless miles of
unknown country to the one house and one family in the world she was
looking for?
How long would it take to walk from Dunkirk, N. Y., to Denver, Col.?
A cat named Clementine could tell you. It took her four paw-bruising
months to make that 1,600-mile trek. But then, Clementine didn't
know the way.
When Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lundmark moved from Dunkirk to Denver, they
left their pet black cat with neighbors because Clementine was in
the family way. Once the litter was weaned, however, Clementine
abandoned her brood and hit the road. Four months later an exhausted
female cat appeared on the Lundmark's doorstep. There was no doubt
it was Clementine, for this amazing animal was unique in another
way. She had seven toes on each front paw, two white spots on her
stomach and a scar on her left shoulder.
Full story may be read
here
Innumerable such accounts are also supported
by the research of Dr. Rupert Sheldrake, who has demonstrated the
psychic connections between humans and their pets in his book, "Dogs
That Know When Their Owners are Coming Home and Other Unexplained
Powers of Animals" (see
http://www.sheldrake.org).
Many people may accept the existence of
psychic phenomena, but the full implications of these abilities have
seemingly yet to register. Not only is consciousness not locally
limited to the brain, not only is it capable of instantaneous
communication with every other mind, it is capable of affecting
physical reality in ways we can barely imagine. Consider the
research of quantum physicist John Hagelin, Ph.D., who co-authored a
study in Washington D.C., which showed a direct correlation between
a group's practice of transcendental meditation, and a reduction of
crime in their area. (For an overview of this study, see
www.istpp.org/crime_prevention).
We must also consider the tangible physical
affects that our minds have on our own bodies – such affects are far
from merely "theoretical" or "anecdotal." For instance, it is
well-documented that hypnotic suggestion alone can lead directly to
the formation of visible burn-blisters on human flesh. (See
Handbook of Hypnotic Suggestions and Metaphors,
That a human being can mentally burn his own
flesh should surprise no one. According to at least one controlled
study in the 1960's, the human body produces "electromagnetic
radiation phenomena" when consciousness is "in a state of intensed
[sic] psychosensory excitation."
(See
More US Government Psychic Warfare)
At a more profound level, cellular biologist
Dr. Bruce Lipton argues in his book "The
Biology of Belief" that "our
beliefs, true or false, positive or negative, affect genetic
activity and actually alter our genetic code." Rather than viewing
man as a helpless victim of his inherited genetic structure, Lipton
has demonstrated that "genes do not in fact control our behavior,
instead, genes are turned on and off by influences outside the
cell." At a
public presentation in Phoenix, AZ,
Dr. Lipton and author Gregg Braden presented a "rare video" of "a
baseball-sized tumor" visible on a sonogram shrinking and
disappearing as practitioners of a form of Qigong chanted a simple
phrase.
Or
consider the experience of Michael Crichton while at Harvard U.
After a year spent in the coronary wing of the Harvard Medical
Center, he began asking the patients why they had their heart
attack. Expecting the answer to be along the lines of too much
smoking, drinking or bad diet, he was shocked that virtually all of
the answers were couched in personal avoidance terms -- one man
suggested that he had a heart attack because his wife resented his
promotion at work. Another husband said that his wife was going to
leave him. These answers indicate that their minds or mindsets had
triggered the attacks. In fact, Crichton himself concluded, "We
cause our diseases. We are directly responsible for any illness that
happens to us."
The
smattering of anecdotes listed above is only a bare bone glimpse of
the burgeoning and increasingly mainstream fields of psychic,
mind/body, and mind over matter research. And of course, not
everyone is happy with this development. Self-styled "skeptics" of
the so-called paranormal and/or religious/spiritual beliefs insist
that it is DANGEROUS for human beings to entertain abilities and
phenomena that official science does not yet recognize as real. They
can point to endless charlatans and/or self-deceived individuals –
psychic mediums, spoon-benders, dowsers, etc. – who make paranormal
claims unsupported by facts as proof that the public must be
disabused of belief in the “supernatural” for their own good. And
"skeptics" can point to "Christian scientists" and other religious
devotees who endanger their own lives and the lives of their
children by relying on "prayer" (or their interpretation of prayer)
as an antidote to sickness and disease. But any person with a
genuinely skeptical approach must also consider the dangers of NOT
exploring the mind frontier, and all its awesome untapped
potentials. Consider the following warning from Colonel Dolan M.
McKelvy in the 1988 USAF-funded scientific study, "Psychic Warfare:
Exploring the Mind Frontier." In no uncertain terms does the author
espouse the need for human beings to recognize the REALITY of the
psychic mind’s powers and all its potential uses, both helpful and
destructive:
"Man's greatest potential
remains a prisoner of man. Vast untapped mental capabilities create
an entirely new battlefield dimension which, if ignored, pose a
threat to self and country more serious than nuclear weapons. This
threat starts from within. Our fears and cynical attitudes towards
psychic capabilities make us our own worst enemies…. Exploring the
mind frontier is essential and the key to successful exploration is
a greater psychic awareness. The mind is rich in unfathomed
resources ripe for exploration, a limitless source of treasures for
advancing all mankind, and a serious threat to those who ignore its
potential. We must overcome our psychic inhibitions, stop denying
the existence of paranormal events, and start trying instead to
understand the nature of these phenomena….Report
When Jesus implored mankind toward unity and
lovingness, he was speaking not only for unity among all human
beings, but an INTERNAL unity for each individual. "The Kingship of
Heaven is within you and without you, and any man who knows himself
shall find it." For centuries, religious dogmatists have persuaded
man that he is separate from and inferior to the Father,
intrinsically flawed, judged as guilty and sentenced to die. The
"enlightenment" of science -- the purported best alternative to
murderous dogma -- has failed at resolving man's ultimate
helplessness. In order to reach our true psychic, spiritual, human
potential, we must have the courage to challenge our own belief
systems, to abandon those beliefs that debase man's worth, and to
embrace only those that support
"the sustenance and enhancement of life."
The real "good news" conveyed by Jesus is that we need NOT accept
all the tragedies, heartaches, and deprivations that have defined
human experience, that we are entitled to receive what every human
being wants, the
"'IFISEEUS' package of Imminent Fulfillment, Immortality, Safety,
Equality, Empowerment, Unity, and Society."
Bertrand Russell said, "Man is a credulous animal, and must
believe something; in the absence of good grounds for belief, he
will be satisfied with bad ones." According to Jesus, to be
satisfied with bad beliefs is to condemn oneself – and all of
mankind -- to an existence typified by suffering and ending in
death. But Jesus also stated that a way out exists, that "My yoke is
pleasant and my burden light." Very few of us have acquired the
correct beliefs--if we had the world we live in would be transformed
forever. But we can all begin to believe that the truth is friendly
and, when properly understood, will never betray us or leave us
wanting for anything. Was this the choice Jesus offered mankind
during his time on Earth? Roughly 2,000 years later, does all the
Universe still wait for us to finally choose correctly?
For more complete background on the statements
of Jesus concerning life see
Life Verses
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Michael Goodspeed is a freelance journalist who lives in
Portland, Oregon. His e-book "Is the Universe Electric?' is
available from
Mikamar Publishing
(http://www.mikamar.biz/thunderbolts-product.htm)
Michael
Armstrong also living in Portland, Oregon, is a long-time
student of "ancient catastrophism," lecturer on the Electric
Universe, and publisher/producer of video and newsletter material on
the science of catastrophics and the Electric Universe.
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