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May 10th, 2002
Received by H.R.
Cuenca, Ecuador.
What do we know about God? Very little, for sure, as I remarked
in my last message. God is not accessible to the human mind, as
man's mind is not accessible to the animals mind. It is even
worse. Between Gods nature and the human mind, there is a
substantial difference, not just a difference in quantity, such
as between the intelligence of animals and men. Because amongst
animals, the most developed of them can think. They can learn, plan,
adapt themselves to new situations that is what is commonly
called "intelligence." The chimpanzee that draws his unordered
scribbles on paper is able to sketch forms such like a circle, an
"X", a cross, and many more. However, it never ends up
sketching a rudimentary face, as children do. When reaching a certain
phase of their "abstract" development, it stops, while
this continues advancing in humans. This is a subtle difference.
But with God, things are different. His nature is essentially different
from human nature. And the human mind is, in its essence, the very
same as the animal mind, highly developed, there is no doubt about
it, yet it is still animal.
In many messages we have spoken of the animal mind and of the souls
mind, without having defined those expressions. We will not be able
to define these expressions in this message either, for the simple
reason that language is the product of the animal mind, and the
spiritual, i.e. what refers to God, escapes its description. Language
already falters when it tries to describe the most common emotions.
Nevertheless we have words to define those states of mood, and so,
implicitly, we know what others are talking about or what we are
reading, because we have experienced them in the flesh.
In order to describe God and to experience His presence it is necessary,
therefore, to employ other means, which we call "spirituality."
It is not based on the mind, but on the soul and its perceptions
provided what we designate as "spirituality" is
indeed genuine and not pseudo-mysticism that is satisfied with establishing
unfathomable mysteries, without bothering to find out if these mysteries
really exist or are just the product of human laziness, which out
of contentment simply refuses to investigate beyond what is easily
possible, or even prevents others doing so. And the mind, always
eager to dominate man, joins in and supports this inertia, betraying
its reluctance to loose control and open the way for a development
on a different level the spiritual level. Spirituality is
the experience of the soul. You can only understand the typical
vocabulary of this kind of experience when you have lived it in
a similar way.
When man has hardly begun to investigate God, His nature and, just
in case, His existence, employing his significant intelligence,
he comes acoss a serious problem. Where to start? He cannot see,
he cannot touch, neither savor nor smell the object of his inquiries.
How to take measures of the invisible and inaccessible? And if God
is spirit, how can this be measured?
As a last and easy resource, the investigator analyzes ancient
writings which claim to have been communicated by God, through inspiration.
At the same time he rejects modern writings, which claim the same
thing, because it seems that antiquity justifies a change in criterion.
The Portuguese writer, José Saramago, awarded with the Nobel
Prize for Literature, a brilliant man and master of language, dedicated
intense studies to the Bible, and he came to his conclusions. He
even reinterpreted the gospels, retaining the essence of the biblical
story, but adding a good dose of "realism." In his work
we find several statements on God which are surprising and provocative
statements for sure, a selection of which we will analyze one by
one.
1. God needs men in order to be able to be
God.
I ask, what is the basis of the relationship between man and God?
Before formulating this statement, it would have been good to investigate
the background, I think.
2. Each man who dies is a death of God, and
when the last man has died, God will not resuscitate.
Here I would have liked to read a definition of what is death.
Yes, I understand that the author wants to express that God is the
product of the human mind, only living in that mind, as a phantom
or projection. And when man dies and here it is clear that
he speaks of a definitive death, of "ceasing to exist"
then the existence of God, too, will end, because the mind
that nurtured it, does no longer exist. This, implicitly, has already
been mentioned in the first statement.
3. Man forgives God anything, and the less
they know him, the more they forgive him.
The less they know Him, the more they fear Him, without daring
to blame God for what they perceive as "His work."
4. God is the silence of the universe and man
the scream that gives meaning to that silence.
God is the Love that floods the universe, and man is like the salt
that, little by little, dissolves in the ocean of Divinity, giving
it "flavor."
5. God: an all torn out of the
nothing, through which little more than nothing exists.
Once again, the atheist betrays himself, impelled by some unknown
desire set out to seek God, but whose mind was trapped in the ink
of books.
6. God says: do not adore that stone, that
tree, that mountain; they all are false gods. I am the only true
God. Saramago comments: God, poor fellow, is falling into the flagrant
sin of pride.
Oh, God, poor fellow... if pride is a sin, who committed it?
7. It is necessary to be God in order to like
blood so much.
Definately, that is a justified conclusion, taking into account
the story of the Old Testament, and Jesus' mission, as the orthodox
explain it, washing away with his blood our sins.
8. Jewish tradition considers the law received
at Sinaí as a contract between the people and God. Saramago
claims that a decent contract should express and harmonize the will
of both parties. "I don't believe that one can affirm that
this is the case: God imposed his conditions and the people accepted
them."
They accepted them, because they were the basic rules for living
together, rules that, by the way, had been formulated much earlier
in other cultures. The "Codex Hammurabi" established very
similar commandments, without the supposed participation of God.
If God is just the projection of human mind, why should we accuse
the "phantom" of what man has expanded on?
9. Before Jesus, men were already able to forgive,
but not so the gods. Forgiveness is human.
It is true, God does not forgive, He loves. God is not justice,
he is Love. Accused and judge, man will be both at the same time.
10. When will the day come, oh Lord, when you
will come to us and admit your errors in front of all men?"
This he may ask when he is near the Father, provided this question
is still be a valid one for him, and not just a shameful recollection
of a distant past.
A few days ago, we have spoken of the "other." The problem
of the supposed analysis of God is in its essence the problem of
the "other," whom man ignores, and upon whom he projects
his own expectations. God does not forgive, because man does not
forgive, God makes mistakes, because man makes mistakes, etc. And
it seems so difficult to find features of love in God, when man
himself lacks this property.
In the old times, when humanity was hardly able to extract iron
from the red ore, it seems forgivable that they attributed to God
whatever they could not understand. It is also comprehensible that
they sought to justify their actions through recourse to God, that
is to say, that "God had commanded them to do this or
that thing, for example, to annihilate the whole population of the
conquered towns.
At the present time, it is incomprehensible how intelligent people
can apply the same Bronze Age criteria to evaluate ancient writings.
Does God forgive? Well, God never has accused and will never accuse
Mr. Saramago of blasphemy or slander. Therefore, there is nothing
to forgive. He, however, maybe has much to forgive himself. Don
José, although you deny God, although you accuse Him of everything,
although you are mocking Him, the Father will always love you, and
we will always love you. Your mockery will become shame, and your
shame will give way to despair, until some day, a weak light enters
into your loneliness. This light is love, and this light will remain.
And when you develop in your new freedom, flooded by light, searching
for that source which is giving you warmth and happiness, little
by little you will learn to make out what you had investigated in
vain during all your life.
We in the Celestial Heavens use the soul and its senses to know
more of our Father, who opens up to us freely and voluntarily, without
hiding behind "mysteries." Do the same. This is the difference
between spirituality and occultism. Do not try to measure light
with ruler and a pair of compasses; do not try to investigate the
Father with your mind.
This is all I have to say.
I am your brother Judas.
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