|
Received by:James Padgett
Washington D.C.
I am here, Mary Kennedy:
Well, let me try to make the surroundings more pleasant, as the
influence left by the spirit who has just written you is very depressing
and undesirable.
What a difference between the atmosphere of love and that which
is always with the spirits of darkness and evil, such as the one
who last wrote you. His condition is pitiable, and we spirits who
know what the mercy and Love of God means in our sympathy find consolation
in the fact that mercy and Love will be sufficient to redeem even
that dark spirit from his hells of torture and darkness.
But he will have to suffer very much and it will be hard for love
to find its way to his soul. So you can imagine the great chasm
that exists between his condition and the condition of those like
myself, who live and breathe in the possession of the Father's Love.
I am Mary, and while I have so much of this love and happiness
yet I cannot help from feeling sad when I see the utter misery of
spirits such as the one who last wrote you. And this I want to tell
you, it is only when they come to you as this spirit came, do I
realize what such misery means, for my work is not among the spirits
of hell and I never go to their habitations and meet the awful sights
that some of the spirits whose work is with these unhappy ones tell
me of.
I am so thankful that I was not compelled to have such an experience,
and more thankful that my dear soulmate will not have such an experience,
for I know that he has too much of the Love of the Father in his
soul to ever commit any deed that will doom him to such misery.
Well, the Father's Love is for all and the vilest sinner in the
lowest hells can, by earnest prayer, obtain this greatest supreme
joy and happiness that this Love when it enters the soul will give
to him. But oh! the long years some will suffer.
I thank the Father, and want Leslie to thank Him that there came
to him the knowledge and possession of this Great Love in time to
prevent him from doing that which would condemn his soul to such
a condition. Well, let us try to be happier, and for the time forget
this unhappy spirit.
I am glad that I can write tonight, for my sake and for this, because
it gives us both much happiness when I can communicate to him in
this way.
I am with him, as he knows in all my love and trying to influence
him so that his mind and soul will both be happy and feel the greater
love that I have for him, a love that is increasing all the time
and that will never know an ending.
Tonight your wife says that you must not write much as your condition
is not just as it should be, and she does not want you to write
when you are not in perfect accord with the spirits who write. So
I will have to close now, but this I must say, that Leslie must
think of me and love me and believe that I love him and am with
him always at night when he writes me. Tell him to pray to the Father
more and more for the Love and I will come to him.
His own loving,
Mary Kennedy
|