Messages 2008
Light and Darkness.
March 5th, 2008
Santa Cruz, California
Received by FAB
I am here, Albert Einstein.
All along, humanity has been getting closer and closer to its goal of harmony.
I know that events seem to contradict this flatly. The point is that the component of humanity that has gone for any form of darkness has simply strengthened the opposite aspect of humanity that has gone toward the light. This is what has been happening these last fifty years, and this process is rapidly accelerating.
At a certain point, the process will come to a head, and then the darkness will be defeated.
So don’t think in terms of the power of the military and the government. Think about what is fueling this - the attraction dark spirits have to greed, lust for power, and spiritual poverty.
Seen in this light, what seemed hopeless becomes an understandable process toward redemption.
Albert Einstein (March 14, 1879 – April 18, 1955) was a German-born theoretical physicist. He is best known for his theory of relativity and specifically mass-energy equivalence, E = mc2. Einstein received the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics “for his services to Theoretical Physics, and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect.”
Einstein’s many contributions to physics include his special theory of relativity, which reconciled mechanics with electromagnetism, and his general theory of relativity, which extended the principle of relativity to non-uniform motion, creating a new theory of gravitation. His other contributions include relativistic cosmology, capillary action, critical opalescence, classical problems of statistical mechanics and their application to quantum theory, an explanation of the Brownian movement of molecules, atomic transition probabilities, the quantum theory of a monatomic gas, thermal properties of light with low radiation density (which laid the foundation for the photon theory), a theory of radiation including stimulated emission, the conception of a unified field theory, and the geometrization of physics.
Works by Albert Einstein include more than fifty scientific papers and also non-scientific books. Einstein is revered by the physics community, and in 1999 Time magazine named him the “Person of the Century”. In popular culture the name “Einstein” has become synonymous with genius. (Source: Wikipedia)