25 December 2016

No 'Empty' Space


This post is in response to a comment from Anonymous posted on Sunday, December 25, 2016 6:23:00 AM in The End?

Anonymous,

Indeed, there is no empty space! The majority of earthly mankind has simply not yet developed or activated the sense organs required to directly observe the activity of higher planes of physical existence taking place all around us. A few who have developed such abilities in past lives manage to bring them into their current incarnations (i.e., clairvoyance, clairaudience, telepathy, etc.). With these 'gifts' they are able to 'see' into the Invisible Worlds and relay their findings to humanity. Madame Blavatsky and many of the Theosophists used their gifts in this manner.

Even so, those gifts only allow man to see the Invisible Worlds that exist on the physical plane, the 7th Cosmic Domain. Very few have the ability to connect with and experience in the 6th Cosmic Domain, the Divine Astral, the realm once-removed from our 7th. By the grace of the Logos, the human-being does possess the sense organs necessary to experience in that Divine Realm, but those sense organs are in a state of latency. They must be awakened by a process. That is the aim of the Gnosis, and that is the Knowledge that pure gnostics of all times have been endeavoring to impart to humanity (those who were/are ready) for long ages of time.

We have now reached a point in space/time where the largest percentage of human souls are at a state bordering upon readiness to take a leap in evolution. Some entities will graduate to experience in the higher realms of the Cosmic Physical (Lesser Harvest), others will succeed in obtaining Liberation, crossing the Divide into the 6th Cosmic Domain, the Divine Realms (Greater Harvest). What Glory awaits an awakened humanity!

As for the written word, it is true that it can be a bit clumsy when used as a tool to communicate grand ideas. However, it is the only mass communication tool that humanity has at this time, so we must work with what we have. In times long past, in the aftermath of the most recent Cleansing of the Earth, mankind communicated via telepathy. The ley lines of the earth were also used to transmit information over great distances. As humanity again began to fall in consciousness, the medium of communication devolved into pictograms (Mayan), then hieroglyphs (Egyptian), then cuneiform (Sumerian), then Sanskrit (Hindu), and was finally alphabetized by the Phoenicians and the Hebrew. The latter developments broke down the written word into its smallest components, atomized it, as it were. However, those who study language and numerology will tell you that all letters contain and convey a meaning. Unfortunately, those who can understand the inner workings of the written word are very few.

Even so, the written word retains usefulness, as it is an extension of Thought. Of this there can be no question. What the writer thinks is transmitted to paper, or parchment, or keyboard, or whatever. Thought itself is a connection with a particular vibration, or energy. If one's thinking is keenly focused upon automobiles, it is possible for that one can form a link with all of the knowledge of automobiles that ever existed. From this reservoir of "car knowledge", the writer can, if sensitive enough, obtain impressions that can be brought down to earth via Thought and then converted into the written word.

The same goes for matters metaphysical, and by extension, matters of the Gnosis. The knowledge of all the gnostic thinkers and teachers of all time still exists "in the aethers", as they say. One has but to form and maintain a link with that Knowledge in order to be able to receive their impressions. This is the key to gnostic understanding. It is also the key to genius in all areas, as some human-beings are born with the ability to form and maintain such links (i.e., Tesla, Einstein, Yogananda, etc.). Tesla told anyone who would listen that he possessed this faculty. They dismissed him as just a 'mad' scientist.

Yes, the written word has its drawbacks. But we must muddle on, despite its limitations. As it is written, it is the duty of those who wish to serve to:

"Start where you are, Use what you have, Do what you can".

~ g
.

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