Monday, December 17, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 12/17/12

Leader: Marsha
Reader: Marsha & Greg

Marsha read some excerpts out of the book "The Christmas Story" to get us all in a holiday mood. We went through last week's experiment, and then finished the chapter of "The Open Door." When we formally meet again (on Monday, January 7th), we will start the chapter "In His Presence." Don't forget that on Thursday, January 3rd, we will meet with Sylvia's SFG group at the house next to Unity Church (the house is called the Fillmore Center) at 1965 Mesa Road, at 6:30 pm. I will send a map in the next day or so.

The experiment for the week is voluntary, but if you want one, try this one while thinking of the spirit of Christmas:
To your mind, what are the qualities of the Christ Consciousness? Write them down. Select one from your list to focus on for a week. Then choose and write down one area of your life in which there is special need to manifest that quality. Keep a record of situations in which you are successful in your attempts to express it in that part of your life.


Monday, December 10, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 12/10/12

Leader: Marsha
Reader: Greg

We read two sections of "The Open Door," and stopped at the section titled "The Great Need for Service." That is where we will start next week. We also discussed meeting with Sylvia's Search for God group at a house next to Unity Church (Fillmore Center) on Thursday, January 3rd, at 6:30 pm.

We also talked about inspiring sermons, and I mentioned that my wife likes to watch Joel Osteen on Sunday mornings at 7 am on A&E (Comcast channel 30). Check your listings if you are so inclined.

The experiment for the week is:

Select and write down an area of your life in which you occasionally feel cheated (e.g., not getting the attention, love or money that you desire or think you deserve).

Experience an opening of the door as you begin to replace this attitude with one that affirms your oneness with the whole and your access to infinite supply. Write and use a short affirmation that you can say to yourself when this attitude of feeling cheated by life arises.

Example: I feel cheated by life because I have to do such trivial, boring work each day. Other people have exciting jobs, but I don't.

Affirmation: Wherever I am and whatever I'm doing, God can be glorified.

Monday, December 3, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 12/3/12

Leader: Marsha
Reader: Greg

We started the chapter on "The Open Door," and read two sections. Next week we will begin with the section "How to Open the Door."

The experiment for the week is:
Choose and write down something in your life that seems like a barrier to you (e.g., a problem in a relationship, a difficulty in meditation). Write down a constructive purpose which that barrier is serving (e.g., it is making me work hard on improving that relationship instead of taking it for granted; through this difficulty a particular positive quality is being awakened in me). During the week look for and respond to doorways that may open in that barrier. Do no expect the barrier or difficulty to suddenly disappear, but be attentive to the ways in which the Christ Spirit is speaking to you through this situation. Keep a record of your experiences.
Example:

Barrier: I don't seem to be getting anywhere in meditation.

Purpose the barrier serves: Helps me to awaken the qualities of patience and persistence within myself

Doorways: I became aware that what the Christ asks of me is to let go and let Him do the work in my meditations.

Monday, November 26, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 11/26/12

Reader: Greg (for Cindi)
Reader: None

We opened with a good discussion on the topic of patience and listened to an A.R.E audio lesson on that topic. We decided to stay with that topic this week and begin with the "The Open Door" chapter next week.

The experiment for the week is:
Experience a movement in consciousness from impatience to patience with others. Seek to overcome any sense of self-righteousness within yourself by using a part of your daily prayer and meditation period to affirm the uniqueness of every soul's approach to God. Then work with the technique suggested in the readings in the following two ways:

1. When you feel impatient with someone else say silently to yourself "What have we here?" and allow yourself to draw back, re-examine the situation and experience greater patience.

2. Whenever others become impatient with you and you feel yourself picking up their feelings and becoming impatient yourself, say aloud "What have we here?" Notice any effect it has on others as well as the effect it has on you.


Monday, November 19, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 11/19/12

Leader: Cindi
Reader: Greg

We listened to an A.R.E audio lesson on the topic of Fellowship and then we finished the chapter on "Patience." Next week we can listen to an audio on the topic of "Patience," and possibly start on "The Open Door" chapter.

The experiment for the week is:
Each morning when you arise take a moment to imagine that this is the last day before the coming of the Christ and the fulfillment of His Promises. Try to keep this awareness throughout the day as you experience living in the eternal now. If you find yourself starting to become impatient with any aspect of your daily affairs, re-affirm the importance you have assigned to this day and focus on acting in the highest spirit that you know. Keep a record of what happens with this experiment (e.g., noting the mornings you remind yourself of this exercise, noting daily situations in your life in which this experimental attitude towards the day helped you respond lovingly to others).

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 11/12/12

Leader: Martinaya (for Cindi)
Readers: Nancy, John, and Bob

We started the chapter on "Patience," and read up to the section "Means through which Patience is Gained."

The experiment for the week is:
Select an aspect of your life that involves one of the three points above (overdoing something, feeling rushed, or being impatiently concered about another person). Write down the person's name or the nature of the frequent situation (e.g., I feel rushed every day to get my work done at my job). Work each day for a week on replacing your impatience with a new sense of patience which comes from affirming the continuity of your life as a soul. At the end of the day make notes about how you did with recognizing your timeless nature in this part of your life.

Monday, November 5, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 11/5/12

Leader: Cindi
Reader: Greg

We stayed on the chapter of "Fellowship," by finishing the chapter in the Experiments book. Next week we will start the chapter on "Patience."

The experiment for the week is:
Choose one difficult relationship in your life and work each day to express in that relationship a living kind of love. Through meditation and prayer allow the energy of states of consciousness which are less than your ideal to be transformed. Affirm in your life that you are not stuck with the responses you have been feeling to this person. Because you are alive, you can grow. Record the experiences in which you successfully transform energy associated with old patterns to new, constructive ways of responding.

Monday, October 29, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 10/29/12

Leader: John

Readers: Eric & Greg

We finished the chapter on "Fellowship," so next week we will start the chapter on "Patience."

The experiment for the week is:
Take the initiative in speaking to others (especially strangers) and showing love for all mankind. Do those things that you know will be helpful, risking the possibility that you may not be understood or appreciated. Record your experiences.

Monday, October 22, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 10/22/12

Leader: John
Readers: Marsha & Greg

We started the chapter on "Fellowship" and read up to the section titled "Fellowship with God, the Need of the World." Fellowship is our awareness of our personal relationship to God. Our loving relationship to other people is called brotherhood.

The experiment for the week is:
Before each meditation period have a short prayer time in which to awaken fellowship. In prayer affirm your awareness of being called by God to do His work. Express your desire to answer personally this call in all aspects of your life.

Monday, October 15, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 10/15/12

Leader: John
Reader: Greg

We finished the chapter on "Virtue and Understanding." Next week we will start with the chapter on "Fellowship."

John passed around an affirmation for us to read and recite:
I am a spirtual Being and I am subject to spirtual laws.
I have the freedom to make my own choices and I take responsibility for the consequences.
I choose to align my will with the infinite intelligence and source of all energy called God.
Through meditation, I seek enlightenment.
I clease myself of all negativity and selfish thoughts.
I am listening to God.
The experiment for the week is:

Each day allow a sense of peace to fill your life by being tolerant of others or of inharmonious patterns within yourself. Record situations in which you were understanding and tolerant when your old way of reacting might have been to think unkindly.

Monday, October 1, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 10/1/12

Leader: John
Reader: Greg

We finished the chapter on "Faith." Next week we will start with the chapter "Virtue and Understanding."

The experiment for the week is:

Select and write down an aspect of your life in the material world in which you find yourself desiring an increase (e.g., more free time, more friends, more appreciation from others). Then consider the current conditions and write down the ways in which you are challenged to grow by those conditions.

Example:

Desire: more appreciation from others
Challenges: (1) to know within myself the things that I'm doing that are worthwile
(2) to do things out of love and not for praise from others

Each day for the next week work with meeting the challenges offered by the current conditions. Record experiences in which you were able to accept and grow with what you have right now.

Monday, September 24, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 9/24/12

Leader: Martinaya
Reader: None

We discussed the Echo Bodine seminar in Denver on Saturday and had a heavy discussion on the experiment for the week, so we did not read further in the SFG book. That means we are still at the "How Faith is Developed" section in the Faith chapter.

The experiment for the week is:
As a step towards a deeper awareness of faith, try to awaken the consciousness that you are a timeless being--that all which you desire in spirtual unfoldment and fulfillment will come to you. If you have asked for something in His name and then find yourself doubting or impatient, use this affirmation in your daily life to re-orient your mind to faith: "As a spirtual being, I am forever. All I have asked in His name will be fulfilled." Record the situations in which you are able to use this affirmation in a helpful way.

The Health Tip of the Day (for today) at the ARE website has help for us in this regard:
"Keep optimistic. Pray often; seeing, feeling, asking, desiring, expecting help from Him; who is the way, the truth, the light. He faileth not those who keep His purposes." Edgar Cayce reading 2514-1

Monday, September 17, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 9/17/12

Leader: Martinaya
Reader: Marsha

We read one section in the chapter on "Faith" this week and discussed many personal experiences on the topic. Next week we will start at the section "How Faith is Developed."

The experiment for the week is:
Choose one thing in which you wish to experience greater faith (e.g., faith in God, faith in your own divine nature, faith in another specific person). First consider where your rational, intellectual mind has taken you in this desire. Perhaps you will find that this part of the mind has led you to a paradox or confusion; perhaps you will find that it has provided all the right answers and yet an inner eperience of faith is missing. Write down whatever it is your intellect tells you about this concern. Now allow yourself to move beyond just the intellect. Each day for a week be open for an experience of faith in this part of your life. Pray that you will be given whatever experience is best for you at this time. Listen to the promptings of your intuitive mind through your meditations, through your dreams, and by listening to and feeling your intuitive self in your daily activities. Record any of your experiences that may give you a deeper sense of what it means to live your faith in this specific area of your life.


Monday, September 10, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 9/10/12

Leader: Martinaya

Reader: Eric

We started the chapter on "Faith." We read the first section, and next week we will start at the second section: "Need of Faith."

The experiment for the week is:
Take the personal evaluation chart that was handed out this week that lists positive and negative attributes of the chakras and grade yourself.

As for our discussion on judgement, here is a Cayce quote: “It is well to judge things - it is bad to judge yourself or your fellow man.” Reading 3544-1.

Monday, August 27, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 8/27/12

Leader: Nancy
Reader: Greg

We finished the chapter on Ideals, and the next time we meet, we will begin with the chapter on Faith. (Remember, we don't meet next week because of Labor Day.)

The experiment for the week is:

Choose one of your mental or physical ideals which you have set. Each day be aware of instances in which others are able to manifest that ideal (e.g., if you choose "kindness" you would look for situations where others were expressing kindness). As you are aware of a person expressing the ideal, affirm that this quality is also within you or you would not have noticed him manifesting it. Record the person's name and the situation each time you complete this experiment.

Monday, August 20, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 8/20/12

Leader: Nancy
Reader: None

Only half the group was in attendance, so we discussed the qualities of ideals from our experiment last week, then listened to a recording of Harmon Bro talk about ideals. Following that we listened to a few minutes about ideals from the audio book "Channeling Your Higher Self." There was no reading from our books, so we are at the same point as last week. In the Search For God I book, we are at the section "Attaining the Ideal."

The experiment for the week is:

Be aware each day of the way in which others can influence your decisions. Do you have a tendency to go along with others to keep from having to face discord, even though it may not be consistent with what you know is best?

Each day of this week make a special effort to be sensitive to the opinions or desires of others, but then make you decisions based upon your ideals (even if it means standing alone). Record situations in which you were able to make decisions in this way.

Monday, August 13, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 8/13/12

Leader: Nancy

Reader: Nancy and Greg

In the Search For God I book, we started the chapter on "What is My Ideal?" and read up to the section "Attaining the Ideal."

The experiment for the week is:

Take time each day in prayer and meditation to ask youself this question: "What qualities make up the highest awareness that I would like to have directing my life?" Each day record the answers that come to your mind.

At the end of the week have a special quiet time in which you consider all of the qualities you have listed. Allow a state of awareness to emerge in your consciousness that would combine and integrate all these qualities. When you feel that you are in touch with this state of awareness, choose a word or short phrase to represent this state of consciousness, which is your spiritual ideal (e.g., "God," "oneness with Christ," "love").

Monday, August 6, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 8/6/12

Leader: Nancy
Reader: Greg

In the Search For God I book, we finished the chapter on "Know Thyself" and will start next week with the chapter on "What is My Ideal?"

For the experiment, pick one from the "Know Thyself" chapter.

We had a conversation on the reincarnation of animals. The following is from Reading 268-3, about a dog that was a lion in a previous incarnation:

27. Ready for questions.

28. (Q) In the experience before this present one, whose wife was Amy Armstrong? What nationality was she?

(A) English; and the wife of, or in association with, that one who is the entity's husband in the present [280]. Many were the battles between them for the associations of the entity, with the people of the period and the surroundings.

29. (Q) What was his name, her husband's name then? [Now [280]?]

(A) We haven't him except as in association with the entity here.

30. (Q) Where and how have I been formerly associated with the following: First, my husband [280]?

(A) Jamestown island, as called in the present.

31. (Q) My brother J. I. M.?

(A) In the same surroundings. Hence he is always battling for self!

32. (Q) My niece, [405]?

(A) In the Roman experience, when there were the associations in the household of Pompeathiolus.

33. (Q) My little dog, Mona?

(A) In the same experience.

34. (Q) In the Roman?

(A) The Roman.

35. (Q) Was she a dog then?

(A) A lion!

36. (Q) My sister [5559]?

(A) In the Atlantean experience.

Monday, July 30, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 7/30/12

Leader: Greg
Reader: Not applicable

Due to the extreme weather, we only had four truth seekers show up this week. We watched short ARE videos on "cooperation" and "know thyself," and then Marsha led us in interesting discussions for the rest of the evening. We did not read further in the SFG book. The experiment stays the same as last week, which is:

Each night before falling asleep say a prayer asking that in your dreams you will be guided to experience that which is best for your growth. Try to retain this sense of seeking as you fall asleep. Keep a careful record of your dreams and of your feelings when you awaken in the morning.
The interesting John Van Auken article I mentioned that was on the ARE blog about Will Power, and how to tell if an ambiguous decision is the correct one, is at: http://www.edgarcayce.org/are/blog.aspx?id=7073&blogid=445.

Inner Vision: Will Power Heavenly Gift, Earthly Test

The following is an article by John Van Auken that was posted to the ARE blog on 7/27/12. The part that meant something to me is where he says that we face decisions every day and many of them are amibiguous. So even with an ideal, how do we choose the right path? His answer is that which brings more love to others or to our own hearts.

Will, free will, is God’s gift to us.

According to the Cayce readings, the Book of Job was written by the high priest Melchizedek, the King of Salem (King of Peace, predecessor to the Prince of Peace), as a guide to all incarnate souls concerning Earth life. The Book of Job presents Earth as a realm of testing, of meeting oneself (soul self) and one’s karma, to see if we curse God, as Satan said we would, or seek out God’s companionship to better understand why life is the way it is. In the end, Job did not curse God but sought Him out. The two grew to know each other, and all that Job had lost in the test was restored to him, a hundredfold.

This life is a test of our free will. Set before us are all manner of opportunities and challenges. We are to choose the best course according to our heart’s desire. And that is exactly why the test exists: to determine the true motivation of our hearts. Are we self-centered, self-gratifying, self-glorifying, or cooperative parts of the Whole, God, and all of creation? Through our choices, we reveal our hearts.

Now some appear to be living without making choices. They just roll with the circumstances of life. Whatever comes along, takes them along, with little thought as to the consequences. It is important to set an ideal, a standard by which we guide our decision making. Among the many directives given by Edgar Cayce’s attunement to the Universal Consciousness, setting an ideal was number one. Even with an ideal, the choices are rarely as clear as good or evil. They are often ambiguous. Here the guiding principle for making a choice is love. Whichever choice brings more love to others and to our hearts is most likely the better choice. The greatest commandment, greater than all the laws and prophets, is to love God with all our being and others as ourselves.

Of course, there are laws and realities that can make the loving choice difficult or even impossible. For example, if Jesus so loved us, why did he go away? Wouldn’t the more loving choice have been to follow Judas’ way, to overthrow Rome, liberate Jerusalem, and raise all of us into paradise? From outward appearances it seemed so, but from inner truth it was not. As Jesus explained to Peter when he said those hard words, “Get thee behind me Satan,” we often become stumbling blocks to ourselves and others, because we want to do things the way they appear best to man from a physical, material perspective. But we must learn to see life’s decisions from a godly, spiritual perspective — the way God sees them. This requires more than book knowledge, more than good intentions. It requires a conscious sense of God’s guidance in our lives.

Despite the difficulties, getting in touch with God is key to realizing our full potential and purpose for existence. In order to be a companion, we have to have a relationship. To have a relationship, we have to have communication. Is communication with God the same as communication with others? Is God individual or universal? Is God finite or infinite? Obviously, communicating with a universal, infinite consciousness is not the same as communicating with an individual, finite one. This is evidenced by the way Edgar Cayce got his information. He subdued his individual, finite self and attuned himself to the universal, infinite consciousness, the mind of God. Through his efforts we’ve learned that we can all do this, and we all should do it. God still speaks to those who will listen. It is not a thing of the ancient past and the Old Testament.

Yet, many crimes have been committed in the name of God’s guidance. This is why the laws and commandments were laid out for us, to give us a reference point from which to measure guidance. The Ten Commandments and the “love God and one another” precepts are the best touchstones by which to measure guidance. Jesus told us to judge by the fruits; evil fruits do not come from good sources. If the actions and thoughts resulting from our inner guidance make us better people, then it is of God and fits well with the commandments and laws.

It’s a matter of will; choosing to do so. In the midst of all of life’s activities and options, it takes will power to budget time each day to attune oneself to the Spirit of Truth, the Comforter, the Guide within — God, our spiritual parent, who loves us and seeks our companionship. What is it that keeps us from seeking God’s companionship in our lives? Self. Self’s constant interest in its own things, its own ideas, its own desires. The only power capable of changing this is self’s will. Using self’s will to subdue self’s will in order to attune to God’s will is the great way to heavenly consciousness and eternal life.

As has been given, "There is set before thee life and death, good and evil — choose thou."

Monday, July 23, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 7/23/12

Leader: Greg
Reader: Marsha

We read two sections in the chapter on "Know Thyself," and one section in the Experiments book. Next week we will start with the section in the chapter titled "The Awakening of Self."

The experiment for the following week is:

Each night before falling asleep say a prayer asking that in your dreams you will be guided to experience that which is best for your growth. Try to retain this sense of seeking as you fall asleep. Keep a careful record of your dreams and of your feelings when you awaken in the morning.

Monday, July 16, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 7/16/12

Leader: Greg
Reader: Sylvia

We started the chapter on "Know Thyself." Next week we will pick up with the section "Self in Relation to Others." The experiment for the following week is:
Be aware of your body each day. Take special note of its desires and functions and try to keep an awareness of holiness as these activities are fulfilled (e.g., eating a meal with a sense of holiness.
If that experiment doesn't feel right for you, then try another.

Monday, July 9, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 7/9/12

Leader: Greg
Reader: Nancy & Sylvia

We listened to an ARE recording on the topic of cooperation, and then read almost to the end of the cooperation chapter in the Experiments book. Next week we will start the next chapter on "Know Thyself."

The experiment for the following week is:

Live with the awareness that what you are thinking is actually creating and is very real. At the end of each day, review your thought patterns. Record those that you feel were especially constructive or helpful. Without a sense of self-condemnation, record those you feel were not consistent with your ideals.
If you have the urge to try a different experiment, then please do so.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Coffee with Cream

I know a person who drinks coffee with cream. Whenever the opportunity arises with people who drink coffee this way, I will mention that I have heard this is a problem for your digestion and should be avoided. Since this person knew of Edgar Cayce, I decided to look through the readings to find out more, and to see if I could find the reason it is harmful. According to my search for "coffee," there were 524 places in the readings where this term was mentioned. (Many of the readings had to do with soaking your feet in coffee grounds.) Here are some quotes from the readings that I extracted for coffee and cream:

From Reading 133-4:
5. Mornings - citrus fruit juices (either the juice of one or the other of such fruit), with browned whole wheat toast that may be buttered if so desired, and a little coffee; or preferable to coffee would be Ovaltine or any CEREAL drink, though if coffee is taken it should be without cream or milk.

From Reading 243-22:
9. (Q) Does it hurt me to use sugar in my coffee?
(A) Sugar is not near so harmful as cream. May use sugar in moderation.

From Reading 257-159:
3. And during the whole period keep more of an alkalin diet. No white bread. Principally use fruit juices, and citrus fruit juices at that! A little coffee without cream may be taken as a stimulant, or a little whiskey and soda later in the evening may be taken.

From Reading 257-210:
17. (Q) Does black coffee with sugar have bad effect on body?
(A) No.

From Reading 275-45:
13. (Q) Is the chemical reaction of raw milk in coffee the same as cream in coffee in relation to the digestion in the stomach?
(A) Well, this depends - to be sure - upon the activity of the system at the time. Cream, to be sure, is less hard, or more easily digested and produces LESS of that hard to be assimilated by portions of the system. But in coffee it is PREFERABLE for the body to use neither cream nor milk. Of course, cream is less harmful - and of course carries more food value, of a different nature. But there is a portion in same that becomes gradually hard upon the activity of the juices from the pancreas and spleen to the activities upon the system through the lacteals in their absorbing from digestion.

14. (Q) What about sugar in coffee?
(A) Brown sugar, of course, is preferable. Sugar is NOT as harmful, provided there is of course not too much sugar taken in other sweets.

From Reading 295-10:
16. (Q) Should coffee be entirely eliminated for the better physical functioning of the body?
(A) Coffee without cream is NOT harmful for the body, if taken in moderation.

From Reading 303-2:
40. (Q) Is tea and coffee harmful to the body?
(A) Tea is more harmful than coffee. Any nerve reaction is more susceptible to the character of tea that is usually found in this country, though in some manners in which it is produced it would be well. Coffee, taken properly, is a food; that is, WITHOUT cream or milk.

From Reading 326-6:
12. (Q) Is coffee harmful for this body?
(A) With cream or milk, yes; without same not so harmful - rather a stimulant.

From Reading 349-10:
9. Mornings - citrous fruits, or stewed fruits with cereal, or fresh fruits with cereal - but not both; that is, not the citrous fruit AND the cereal with the fruit in same. Or cereal, OR a citrous fruit may be taken, with a coddled egg - but do not eat other than the YOLK of the egg, with coffee or tea - but no milk in the coffee or tea, and little sugar.

From Reading 379-2:
19. (Q) Are tea and coffee injurious?
(A) An excess is. Do not drink coffee or tea with milk or cream.

From Reading 404-3:
20. (Q) Should I drink coffee and when?
(A) Coffee is not harmful to the body, provided it is FRESH coffee.

From Reading 412-11:
13. In the diet, do not combine great quantities of cheese with macaroni or the like; for these are IRRITATING to the skin. Milk, coffee and tea may be taken in moderation, but do not mix them during the same meal. Use neither milk nor cream in the coffee or tea, but they may be taken separately or on different days.

From Reading 462-2:
10. (Q) Is coffee or tea good for this body?
(A) Coffee is better than tea, though the body may prefer the tea. Coffee without milk and without sugar is preferable; but coffee without cream or milk IS a food value. There is very little food value in tea, though it is a stimulant. Coffee is preferable.

From Reading 462-17:
14. (Q) Would it be best to cut out coffee? If so, what would be a good substitute for me?
(A) Not necessarily cut it out, just so there is not milk or cream taken in same. The quantity may be reduced, but we would not cut same out. There is a good stimulant in same, and some food values.

From Reading 555-8:
Mornings - either citrus fruit juices or cereals dry or cooked. Do not take citrus fruit juices and cereals at the same meal. A little very crisp bacon, coddled egg or the like. Milk OR coffee, but do not mix coffee and milk together before drinking. It's alright to be mixed after it is drunk, by taking them at the same meal but not together; for it's the variation in the activity of the gastric juices of the system causing disturbance. Sugars may be taken in moderation. Toast brown or whole wheat or rye bread. Any of these may be taken.

From Reading 613-1:
26. (Q) Should he take coffee at all? If so, should cream be taken in it?
(A) When coffee is taken, if milk or cream is used in same it is NOT a food. Without milk or cream it IS a food to the body. For this body, LITTLE of coffee; rather a cereal drink is preferable.

From Reading 684-1:
24. (Q) Can she drink coffee?
(A) Coffee, fresh - without cream, is a food. In excess, WITH cream - or with quantity of sugar, it becomes as a poison, or hard for a digestive system - if taken in excess. This may be taken in moderation.

From Reading 816-5:
12. (Q) Can coffee and tea be used by this body without harmful effects?
(A) No one can use them without AFFECTING the body. As to whether they are harmful or not depends upon the extent to which they are used. Use one or the other; don't use them both. Tea is more harmful than coffee. Coffee is a food if it is taken without cream or sugar, and especially without cream; and if taken without the caffeine - as Kaffa Hag, or the like - it's really a food for the body.

From Reading 877-28:
15. (Q) What about coffee and tea?
(A) No milk OR cream in coffee OR tea, this in moderation will not be harmful for the body. A little sugar may be used if desired, but NO cream or milk.

From Reading 942-1:
18. Mornings - citrus fruit juices. Coffee or ten may be taken in moderation, or Sanka coffee or those compounds with the toxic forces removed; such as Kaffa Hag and the like. Do not OVER use cream or milk in the coffee taken, for it forms that which is detrimental to the gastric flow of the stomach itself.

From Reading 975-1:
As to the drinks; drink plenty of water - six to ten glasses full each day. Do not take quantities of tea, but a very small quantity once a day may be taken. Coffee may be taken in moderation provided milk or cream is NOT used in same. Without the cream coffee is a food; WITH milk or cream it is very hard on the system.

From Reading 983-1:
Not great quantities of tea or coffee, but these may be taken in moderation provided they do not carry milk or cream in same when taken. These are as foods without same, and are more nourishing. While the food values in the milk or cream may be considered of an equal value alone, when used together they form a condition in the lactic juices of the stomach itself that does not make for the proper eliminations carried on through the whole of the alimentary canal. Keep rather an alkalin diet, adhering to the one raw vegetable meal each day.

From Reading 1073-1:
Coffee or tea should preferably be without milk or cream, for again we find that the combination of the acids - or the tannic forces, the chickory, or the properties there are the food values to the digestive forces - becomes disturbing, when combined outside of the body. However, if milk and coffee are taken at the same meal - but not combined before they are taken - the gastric juices flowing from even the salivary glands in the mouth so taking these CHANGE the activity so that the food values of both are taken by the system, in the activity through the alimentary canal.
Coffee or tea may be taken then at the same meal, but NOT with the milk IN same. Little sugar, for this - as indicated, of course - makes for an activity upon the pancreas that, unless there is a great deal of physical exertion, creates the tendency for the increase of avoirdupois throughout the whole body itself.

From Reading 1224-3:
Coffee may be used if desired, but NOT with milk or cream in same! for this is hard upon the heart, as well as the digestion. If a little sugar is desired, it is very well, but no milk or cream in the coffee.

From Reading 1236-1:
Coffee, tea, milk - do not combine milk with tea or coffee; these make for an acidity, and especially are hard on the digestive forces where acid is superactive in the system from the general disturbances.

From Reading 1830-2:
11. (Q) Any other advice?
(A) A far as any coffee, tea or the like is concerned, - these in moderation, of course, are not harmful. Much - or too much of either of these would become hard on the digestion. Any cereal drink is preferable. Coffee once a day. Do not take any carbonated drinks.

From Reading 2472-1:
Coffee may be taken, but no sugar or cream or milk in same. If sweetening is desired for this, use either honey or saccharin.

From Reading 2868-2:
15. (Q) Is coffee or tea harmful?
(A) With milk or cream, harmful.

From Reading 5190-1:
19. (Q) Does coffee affect my nervous system?
(A) Not necessarily. If you think so, yes!

From Reading 5211-1:
6. There are conditions surrounding the body, just as there have been those suggestions to the body. There may be, just as is indicated in many an individual consciousness, those who can drink coffee and it never hurts them; there are those whose consciousness is such that this if taken late of an evening would prevent sleep. There are those who would not sleep if they didn't take it, for they would have the headache. For certain properties stimulate certain activities.

Monday, July 2, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 7/2/12

Leader: Greg
Reader: Greg

We read through the entire lesson on "Cooperation" in the SFG book and continued on to read about half the chapter in the Experiments book. We stopped at the top of page 24. Next week I will bring an audio downloaded from the ARE website on the topic of cooperation, and we can finish the chapter in the Experiments book.

The experiment for the following week is:
Work on relating to others with kindness. Expecially focus on speaking kindly. Record those instances where you were able to replace an impulse to speak harshly or thoughlessly with kind words. Record as well, without a sense of self-condemnation, those instances where greater kindness than you expressed would have been helpful.

Monday, June 25, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 6/25/12

Leader: Eric
Reader: Eric

We completed the first chapter in the SFG book on Meditation. Next week we will begin the chapter on Cooperation.

The experiment for the following week is:

Use what we learned from the John Van Auken Meditation Techniques DVD to improve upon our own techniques during the week.

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Who is the Author of your Beliefs?

Throughout the Cayce readings, he tells us that we need to be not only aware of what our beliefs are, but where they came from. It appears that most of the time this question is asked in relation to an ideal.

As we decide what our opinions are on societal issues like the death penalty, abortion, gay marriage, or justifying our religious faith, we are advised to understand whether our beliefs are spiritually-based or ego-based (simply to make us feel good or important). If the basis is spiritual, they are constructive.

 This advice on knowing the source of beliefs is in many of the readings, but here are a few:

Reading 2002-1:
21. Study then thine own self, in relationship to that thou dost set as thine ideal. Know in WHOM as well as in what ye believe. When ye say, when ye give expression as to a belief or a conviction, know WHO is the author of same and as to whether that author has in his own experience made same practical in a material world, - and if it is constructive.
Reading 2995-1:
6. Hence the first injunction to the entity is to analyze self. What does the mind of this entity hold as its ideal in the spiritual world? What is the source of the entity's information? Who is the author of same? Is the author of thy faith, of thy belief, able to keep that ye commit unto it against any experience, be it spiritual, mental or material? Whoever is the author must himself have experienced spiritual, mental and material life. This must of itself, then, be the author of life, it must be the builder of mind as well as of material things.
Reading 254-101:
3. As has been so oft indicated for all, first know in what and in Whom you have believed. When you say you believe this or that, know Who is the author, Who is the finisher of same.
4. And unless its source is of such a nature that it is in keeping with Him that is the Author of Life itself, reject same! For these must be as the principles of Life itself!
Reading 303-39:
5. This does not necessarily mean to become indifferent, but in the physical and in the mental and in the spiritual, there is required first the SURETY within self. Know not only what ye believe but Who is the author of same; not because, merely, this or that may have been said by this or that person, but - according to the true spiritual law - because "My Spirit beareth witness with thy spirit - where two shall agree as concerning anything, they shall ask my Father in heaven and He will do it, that I may be glorified."
Reading 1499-1:
13. Hence all the more there is the necessity that the entity within self find what is its ideal. Not only in what it may believe, as for moral, religious, social or business associations and activities, but as to WHO is the author of such a choice. Is it founded in a growth from within as of a spiritual nature, or is it founded in self-indulgence or self-gratification, or self-glorification?
Reading 1523-1:
12. This does not indicate, then, that the entity is to become long-faced, morose or goody-goody as might be termed. But know in what and in WHOM ye believe; and then act, in thy associations with others, in such a way and manner that thy good purpose, thy desires, thy goodness may not be evilspoken of - or that there is never a question within thy own individuality, thy own conscience, as to whether the choice thou hast taken in thy activities is a thing to be questioned.
13. For if ye know in Whom and in what ye believe, then ye may give - in thy manifested activity - a constructive influence ever.
22. The entity being grounded and founded, though, in that which must be the criterion of the entity - Know in Whom and in what ye have believed, and that it, the belief, is founded in a spiritual import - then the strength of the promises in the Creative Forces, or God, will be able to keep thee in thy disturbing periods.
65. Hence turmoils were caused; and all the more reason why it is necessary in the present to hold to that which has been indicated: Know in what ye believe and WHO is the author of same!

Monday, June 18, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 6/18/12

Leader: Eric
Reader: Greg

In the Search for God Book 1 Meditation chapter, we read from section "C. The Spirtual Body" up to "V. Methods of Meditation." (Page 15 in the old-style books.)

The experiment for the following week is:

"At the beginning of each meditation period take a few moments to become aware that there is consciousness within each cell of your body. Suggest to or ask your body to join the mind and spirit in this period of seeking."

Next week, if everyone is willing, we can watch part of the John Van Auken DVD "Meditation Techniques to Boost Soul Growth." The section where John goes into meditation is 1 hour and 13 minutes long, but we may be able to speed it up during certain parts.

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Asking for Healing

The question comes up occasionally in our study group as to whether we need the approval or the request of someone we wish to send healing energy. Sending healing energy is different than surrounding a person in light and love, which we typically do after a meditation. Here is a conversation that Edgar Cayce had with a member (2112) of the original Glad Helpers on December 3, 1931:

From Reading 281-3:
20. (Q) [2112]: Could Carrie Everett, Colonial Ave., Norfolk, be healed through me? and in what way?

(A) By gaining first that sincere desire on the part OF Carrie Everett TO be, WANT to BE, healed! Then there may be raised within self that that will overcome those destructive forces that are EATING at the vitals of the physical body.

21. (Q) In what way?

(A) By first - there MUST be the DESIRE, that can only come within self.

22. (Q) I have four ways of healing. Which shall I use?

(A) There must first be the DESIRE on the part OF Carrie Everett to be healed! You cannot create them, no matter what thou hast! GOD cannot save a man that would NOT be saved!

Monday, June 11, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 06/11/12

Leader: Eric
Reader: Eric

In the Meditation chapter, we read from section "B. The Mental Body" up to "C. The Spirtual Body."

You have your choice of two experiments this week, depending on which you are drawn to:

Experiment 1 (page 11): As an activity separate from your meditation period, each day have a period of prayer (thanksgiving, confessional, petitionary, or whatever form you find meaningful that day).

Experiment 2 (page 13): For your daily meditation period choose a specific aid for attunement or approach to preparation. Let it be something that you have not used in a regular fashion before (e.g., a specific chant, incense, exercise, music, method of cleansing, or abstinence from a particular activity). Complete this activity each day as part of your meditation period and keep a record of your experience in using it.

Monday, June 4, 2012

A.R.E Meeting for 06/04/12

Leader: Eric
Readers: Eric and Greg

We started at the beginning of the Search for God, Book 1, with the topic of meditation. A definition was given, and we covered how to prepare the physical body. Next week we will start on page 11 (of the small book) with the preparation of the mental body.

The experiment for the week is: "Take time at the end of each day to write down that which you thought, did or experienced during the past 24 hours which you feel was especially valuable."

Welcome to Lawrence who joined the group tonight.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

The Cayce Remedies on Health and Healing

From "Introduction to the Cayce Remedies on Health and Healing" by Mark Thurston, Ph.D.


No matter what illness or ailment concerns us, certain basic principles about health and healing are relevant. These are the premises upon which all of the Cayce health information rests. The first fundamental idea about healing requires that we maintain a creative balance between two principles:


All healing comes from the infinite -- that is, from attunement and harmony with our spiritual source. The infinite is just as accessible and available in the visible, physical world as it is in the invisible realm. At the same time, each person must take responsibility for his or her own healing process. No one can simply sit back and wait passively for healing to occur.


This second principle -- the need for self-responsibility -- can take many forms. For example, healing requires attunement, and no one knows better than ourselves exactly what has gotten us out of attunement in the past. Often, if we'll look closely at our lives, we can see (without needing a gifted medical clairvoyant such as Edgar Cayce) what's causing our illness.


To illustrate self-responsibility further, the human body has a marvelous, innate drive to heal itself, but we've got to do our part to help. A broken bone will naturally try to mend; however, the fracture needs to be set properly for the healing to be complete and effective.


Balance among body, mind, and spirit is another key to Cayce's philosophy of healing. For healing to be complete and lasting, we must recognize and meet the needs of each of these three levels. Virtually no illness or disease can be treated successfully at only one of these three levels.


What's more, Cayce affirms that the human body will naturally stay healthy -- and even rejuvenate itself -- if a kind of internal balance can be maintained. "Dis-ease" starts when one part of the body draws energy from another part. One portion of an organism may become overcharged with the creative life force, while another portion becomes undernourished. The result is a gradual disintegration of the body and the onset of illness.


The opposite of this sort of disintegration is rejuvenation. The readings assert that we are continuously rebuilding our bodies. Within any seven-year period, each cell is replaced. If we'll allow it, our bodies will transform any problem and resuscitate any condition. But our ingrained habits usually block this healing potential -- the habits of action and, even more potent, the habits of mind.


What role do drugs and medicine play in the healing process? Cayce's philosophy clearly sees a place for them, but warns of misunderstanding how they work and of expecting more of them than is possible. Any healing method attempts to create an experience of oneness, in hopes of then stimulating a similar response in the body. For some people in some situations, a drug may be the best way to accomplish this -- just as in other cases, surgery may be the best way to stimulate healing. Medicines can be a practical application of the one life force. Occasionally they must be very potent in their reactions in order to get the patient through an acute illness. But Cayce from time to time encouraged people to consider the herbal formulas he recommended to be tonics and stimulants, rather than medicines.

The dangerous side of medicines is their potential to diminish the body's own healing work. This is what Cayce alluded to when he warned about "palliatives" that deceive the soul with half truths and temporary relief. It's also what he meant when he warned that we shouldn't come to rely on any condition outside of ourselves that could be assimilated by the body inwardly. All of this is to say, take the medications prescribed by the physician you trust. But keep in mind this thought: what those chemicals can do is temporarily -- and somewhat artificially -- give your body an experience of greater oneness. Healing that really takes hold and lasts must come from changing one's inner consciousness and vibration. That happens most effectively from consistent and persistent human effort (i.e., engaging one's desires, purposes, and will) -- something that pills all too easily allow us to skip.


Cayce's healing philosophy includes other insights that can help us avoid misunderstanding. For example, one principle states that the best treatment procedures sometimes cause a temporary worsening of conditions. If we didn't recognize this possibility, we might give up just before the benefits begin to appear. A closely related principle states that when a body is re-establishing its attunement, it tends to be more sensitive. Again, if we misunderstand that heightened sensitivity, we might not see the good that is slowly being effected.


The mind is a focus of other healing principles. The unconscious mind plays a role in many illnesses and diseases. One example of this is the karmic factor in health problems. Memories from previous incarnations, stored in the soul mind, can trigger problems in the body. Of course, we shouldn't go so far as to suppose that every health challenge has past-life roots; nevertheless, the perspective of reincarnation can help us understand what we could possibly be dealing with as we seek healing.


The familiar Cayce axiom, "Mind is the builder," leads us to wonder exactly which attitudes and emotions best foster healing.


The readings emphasize several:


• Self-acceptance. As we rid ourselves of self-condemnation, we make room for healing forces to enter.
• Optimism and hope. We're encouraged to expect healing.
• Patience.


It's much easier and quicker to destroy health than it is to rebuild it. We need to be willing to patiently invest whatever time is require.


Perhaps the most important principle of the mind's relationship to healing concerns purposefulness. A person can experience temporarily an outer healing -- that is, in the physical body only -- yet still be spiritually sick. What cures the soul? A commitment to a purposeful life. Not just any purpose, but instead one that reflects care for other people.


On occasion a reading from Cayce would pose this question to the person who was ill: What would you do with your life if you were healed? The position of Cayce's psychic source was simply this: Why correct the physical condition unless there's also going to be an inner correction? People who are looking for both inner and outer healing are the best candidates for restored health and vitality. In Cayce's philosophy, healing should equip us to be more useful to others.


For, all healing comes from the one source. And whether there is the application of foods, exercise, medicine or even the knife-it is to bring [to] the consciousness of the forces within the body that aid in reproducing themselves-[which is] the awareness of creative or God forces.
Edgar Cayce Reading 2696-1

Monday, May 21, 2012

A.R.E Meeting for 05/21/12

Leader: Sylvia
Readers: All

Hallelujah. We finished the "Edgar Cayce on the Revelation" book. Next week the library is closed, so we will meet on Monday, 7 May, with Eric in charge, and we will start with A Search for God, Book 1.

Monday, May 14, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 05/14/12

Leader: Sylvia

Readers: All

Thanks to Sylvia for bringing her crystal collection to the meeting and showing us that crystals have chakras.

We kept our reading goal in the "Edgar Cayce on the Revelation" book and are ready to move into the real Revelation next week, starting on page 279.

Monday, May 7, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 05/07/12

Leader: Sylvia
Reader: Marsha and Greg

If you ever wanted to see what a chakra looked like, Sylvia showed us Barbara Brennan's book "Hands of Light" before the meeting started. It showed how the chakras went from front to rear, as well as the layers of auras.

We kept our reading goal in the "Edgar Cayce on the Revelation" book by reaching page 268. We will start next week with reading 338-4.

Monday, April 30, 2012

A.R.E Meeting for 04/30/12

Leader: Bob
Reader: Marsha and Greg

Bob kept us to our goal of at least 10 pages, and Sylvia kept us honest by making sure we did not skip over the meaning of what was read. Next week we will start on page 258 with Reading 2879-1 in the "Edgar Cayce on the Revelation" book.

We thank Bob for his leadership during April, and welcome Sylvia as our leader in May. Eric is in the on-deck circle.

Monday, April 23, 2012

A.R.E Meeting for 04/23/12

Leader: Bob
Readers: Marsha and Greg

We finished the 281 (Glad Helpers) readings on the endocrine system, and are in a section of other readings on the Revelation. In the "Edgar Cayce on the Revelation" book, we are up to page 244, and will start next week with Reading 444-2.

Monday, April 16, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 04/16/12

Leader: Bob
Reader: Marsha and Greg

We continued our study of the endocrine system from the Glad Helper readings.

In the "Edgar Cayce on the Revelation" book, we are up to page 229, and will start next week with Reading 281-57.

Monday, April 9, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 04/09/12

Leader: Bob
Reader: Marsha and Greg

We met our reading goal this week by getting through at least 10 pages.

In the "Edgar Cayce on the Revelation" book, we are up to page 216, and will start next week with Reading 281-51.

Monday, April 2, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 04/02/12

Leader: Bob
Reader: Marsha and Greg

In the "Edgar Cayce on the Revelation" book, we are up to page 204, and will start next week with Reading 281-46.

Monday, March 26, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 03/26/12

Leader: Marsha
Reader: Eric, Marsha, and Greg

In the "Edgar Cayce on the Revelation" book, we are up to page 193, and will start next week with Reading 281-36.

Monday, March 19, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 03/19/12

Leader: Marsha
Reader: Greg

In the "Edgar Cayce on the Revelation" book, we finished another one of the Cayce 281 readings (281-32). Next week we will start on page 185, with Reading 281-33.

Monday, March 12, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 03/12/12

Leader: Marsha
Reader: Marsha & Greg

In the "Edgar Cayce on the Revelation" book, we finished another one of the Cayce 281 readings (281-31). Next week we will start on page 180, with Reading 281-32.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Famous Believers in Reincarnation

This was an article by Ann Jaffin from the A.R.E blog
Perhaps like me, you’ve been considered a little strange, if not downright weird, for believing that reincarnation is the way the world works. Surely it was even worse for the Cayce family in 1923, when this seemingly bizarre concept was introduced by the Source of the readings.

Finding both reincarnation and karma expressed as truths in the Bible was a great comfort to Edgar and his family. But the Cayces also visited the Dayton library to see how the past-life information in the readings checked out against known history. As with the Bible, they found the readings usually measured up quite well. Moreover, in general the information in the readings tended to push the dates of historical events back in time, just as we have seen science do since Edgar’s day. Perhaps most interestingly, the readings also frequently fleshed out historical epochs and events in a very rich and satisfying fashion.

Reincarnation permeates the ancient philosophies of the East. Billions of people have embraced these beliefs as central in Hinduism, Buddhism, Taoism, Shintoism, and other faiths. However, one of the most amazing and wonderful discoveries about reincarnation is finding the large number of famous intellectuals and writers in the Western world who have expressed a belief in reincarnation in their writings. This includes Socrates, Pythagoras, Plato, Dante, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Goethe, Albert Schweitzer, and George Patton.

Here are some of my favorite examples:
•Benjamin Franklin wrote and distributed versions of his own epitaph: “The Body of B. Franklin, Printer, like the Cover of an old Book, Its Contents torn out, And stript of its Lettering and Gilding, Lies here, Food for Worms. But the Work shall not be wholly lost; For it will, as he believ'd, appear once more, In a new and more elegant Edition, Revised and Corrected By the Author.”
•Voltaire: “It is not more surprising to be born twice than once; everything in nature is resurrection.”
•George Eliot: “Our deeds still travel with us from afar. And what we have been makes us what we are.”
•Goethe: “I am certain I have been here as I am now a thousand times before, and I hope to return a thousand times.”
•Leo Tolstoy: “...so is our present life only one of many thousands of such lives which we enter from the other, more real life...and then return after death.”
•Henry Ford: “I adopted the theory of Reincarnation when I was 26...Work is futile if we cannot utilize the experience we collect in one life in the next. When I discovered Reincarnation it was as if I had found a universal plan... Time was no longer limited. I was no longer a slave to the hands of the clock... Genius is experience... It is the fruit of long experience in many lives... The discovery of Reincarnation put my mind at ease...”
•Carl Jung: “I could well imagine that I might have lived in former centuries and there encountered questions I was not yet able to answer; that I had to be born again because I had not fulfilled the task that was given to me.”
•Richard Wagner: “In contrast to reincarnation and karma, all other views seem petty and narrow.”
•Walt Whitman: “And as to you, Life, I reckon you are the leaving of many deaths; (no doubt I have died myself 10,000 times before).”
•Mark Twain: “I have been born more times than anybody except Krishna.”
•David Lloyd George: “The conventional heaven with its angels perpetually singing, etc., nearly drove me mad in my youth and made me an atheist for 10 years. My opinion is that we shall be reincarnated.”
•William Wordsworth: “Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting; the Soul that rises with us, our life’s Star, hath had elsewhere its setting, and cometh from afar. Not in entire forgetfulness and not in utter nakedness, but trailing clouds of glory do we come...”
•Rudyard Kipling: “They will come back–come back again–as long as the red earth rolls. He never wasted a leaf or a tree. Do you think He would squander souls?”
•John Masefield: “I hold that when a person dies His soul returns again to earth; arrayed in some new flesh-disguise another mother gives him birth. With sturdier limbs and brighter brain the old soul takes the road again.”
•Thomas Edison: “The only survival I can conceive is to start a new Earth cycle again.”
•Kahlil Gibran: “A little while, a moment of rest upon the wind, and another woman shall bear me.”
•William Butler Yeats: “Many times man lives and dies...”
•And perhaps the most beautiful from Gandhi: “I cannot think of permanent enmity between man and man, believing as I do in the theory of rebirth, I shall live in the hope that if not in this birth, in some other birth I shall be able to hug all humanity in friendly embrace.”

So, it is clear that believing in reincarnation and karma puts us in very good company indeed!

Monday, March 5, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 03/05/12

Leader: Marsha
Reader: Greg, Sylvia, and Marsha

In the "Edgar Cayce on the Revelation" book, we finished one of the Cayce 281 readings (281-30). Next week we will start on page 176 with Reading 281-31.

Monday, February 27, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 02/27/12

Leader: Cindi
Reader: Greg

In the "Edgar Cayce on the Revelation" book, we finished two of the Cayce 281 readings. Next week we will start on page 171, with Reading 281-30.

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Intuition

Assuming we can quiet ourselves to the point of hearing that small, quiet voice within, Cayce says we should depend on our intuition more than outside influences. Doing so will make for more constructive results. We should hold an ideal before ourselves, and let any pleasure, fame, or fortune be a result of our living to an ideal rather than having those be the ideal.

From Reading 239-1:
26. (Q) Please advise the body as to how he may best gain control of himself and utilize his abilities to best advantage.
(A) Depend more upon the intuitive forces from within and not harken so much to that of outside influences - but learn to listen to that still small voice from within, remembering as the lesson as was given, not in the storm, the lightning, nor in any of the loud noises as are made to attract man, but rather in the still small voice from within does the impelling influence come to life in an individual that gives for that which must be the basis of human endeavor; for without the ability to constantly hold before self the ideal as is attempted to be accomplished, man becomes one as adrift, pulled hither and yon by the various calls and cries of those who would give of this world's pleasure in fame, fortune, or what not. Let these be the outcome of a life spent in listening to the divine from within, and not the purpose of the life. We are through.

From Reading 792-2:
The more and more each is impelled by that which is intuitive, or the relying upon the soul force within, the greater, the farther, the deeper, the broader, the more constructive may be the result.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 02/13/12

Leader: Cindi
Reader: Greg

In the "Edgar Cayce on the Revelation" book, we finished "Application," the last section in Chapter 8. We skimmed the illustrations that followed (which were already mentioned in earlier sections), and began Chapter 9. Next week we will start on page 162, at the start of reading 281-28.

Monday, February 6, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 02/06/12

Leader: Cindi
Reader: Marsha

In the "Edgar Cayce on the Revelation" book, we started Chapter 8 (Balance), and made it to page 149, where we will start next time with the section on "Application."

Monday, January 30, 2012

A.R.E. Meeting for 01/30/12

Leader: John
Reader: Greg

In the "Edgar Cayce on the Revelation" book, we struggled through the Cayce readings 5754-2 and 5754-3, but made it to the end of Chapter 7. It might be good homework to go over those readings again for a better understanding of the sixth sense.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Philosophy

The following is the chapter titled "Philosophy" from the book There is a River by Thomas Sugrue.

The system of metaphysical thought which emerges from the readings of Edgar Cayce is a Christianized version of the mystery religions of ancient Egypt, Chaldea, Persia, India, and Greece. It fits the figure of Christ into the tradition of one God for all people, and places Him in His proper place, at the apex of the philosophical structure; He is the capstone of the pyramid.

The complex symbology employed by the mystery religions has survived fragmentarily in Christianity, notably in church architecture and in the sacrifice of the Mass, with its sacra­mental cup. But the continuity of the tradition of the one God has been lost. Paganism is condemned alike by religious au­thorities, archaeologists, and historians as an idolatrous fancy devoted to the worship of false gods.

Such was not the understanding of early Christians. Cer­tainly the Essenes, who prepared Mary, selected Joseph, and taught Jesus, were initiates of the mysteries. Jesus said He came to fulfill the law, and part of that law was the cabala, the secret doctrine of the Jews - their version of the mysteries. Such converts to Jesus' teachings as Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea were undoubtedly learned in the cabal. So, no doubt, was Paul.

The mysteries were concerned with man's problem of free­ing his soul from the world. In the mystery symbologies the earth was always represented as the underworld, and the soul was lost in this underworld until freed from it by wisdom, faith, and understanding. Persephone, for instance, was abducted by Pluto, Lord of Hades. Persephone is the soul of man, whose true home is in the heavens.

The mystery religions were, then, a preparation for the coming of Jesus. He was the fruit of their efforts, and His mes­sage was a fuller revelation to the people at large of the mysteries themselves. In the scramble which Christianity made to es­tablish itself as the dominant religion of the decaying Roman Empire, the mysteries were denied their proper place, since to grant that they had truth in them would justify their further existence.

"The early Christians used every means possible to conceal the pagan origin of their symbols, doctrines, and rituals," Manly Hall says. "They either destroyed the sacred hooks of other peoples among whom they settled, or made them inaccessible to students of comparative philosophy, apparently believing that in this way they could stamp out all record of the pre-­Christian origin of their doctrines."

It is interesting to speculate on the fact that Edgar Cayce was raised in strict nineteenth century Bible tradition, and suf­fered the greatest mental and emotional shock of his life when he discovered that in his psychic readings he declared the truth of the mysteries and acclaimed Jesus as their crowning glory.

Up to that time Mr. Cayce had never heard of the mystery religions. Yet his readings check with everything about them that is known to be authentic. Much that he has given is not found in surviving records. Whether it is new material or was known to initiates of the mysteries cannot be checked except by the readings themselves. They say that all initiates, from the beginning of time, have known the full truth.

To describe the system of the readings in full, with its com­parisons and parallels with the mysteries, would require a book in itself. For readers of this volume the following outline, con­taining all the essential points and some of the details, has been prepared.

Man demands a beginning and a boundary, so in the beginning there was a sea of spirit, and it filled all space. It was static, content, aware of itself, a giant resting on the bosom of its thought, contemplating that which it was.

Then it moved. It withdrew into itself, until all space was empty, and that which had filled it was shining from its center, a restless, seething mind. This was the individuality of the spirit; this was what it discovered itself to be when it awakened; this was God.

God desired to express Himself, and He desired companion-ship. Therefore, He projected from Himself the cosmos and souls. The cosmos was built with the tools which man calls music, arithmetic, and geometry: harmony, system, and bal­ance. The building blocks were all of the same material, which man calls the life essence. It was a power sent out from God, a primary ray, as man thinks of it, which by changing the length of its wave and the rate of its vibration became a pattern of differing forms, substance, and movement. This created the law of diversity which supplied endless designs for the pattern. God played on this law of diversity as a person plays on a piano, producing melodies and arranging them in a symphony.

Each design carried within it, inherently, the plan of its evolution, which was to be accomplished by movement, growth, or, as man calls it, change. This corresponds to the sound of a note struck on a piano. The sounds of several notes unite to make a chord; chords in turn become phrases; phrases become melo­dies; melodies intermingle and move back and forth, across and between and around each other, to make a symphony. The music ends as it began, leaving emptiness, but between the beginning and the finish there has been glorious beauty and a great experience.

(The terms "light," "heat," and "electricity" with regard to the cosmos are of no use in this type of discussion, since they are effects observed sensorily, within the earth's atmosphere. The human senses do not operate outside the earth's atmos­phere: the sun might be, to the surviving individuality, an idea, an influence, or an angel.)

Everything moved, changed, and assumed its design in vari­ous states of form and substance. Activity was begun and main­tained by the law of attraction and repulsion: positive and nega­tive, attracting each other and repelling themselves, maintained the form and action of all things.

All this was a part of God, an expression of His thought. Mind was the force which propelled and perpetuated it: mind did everything God imagined; everything that came into being was an aspect, a posture, of mind.

Souls were created for companionship with God. The pat­tern used was that of God Himself: spirit, mind, individuality; cause, action, effect. First there had been spirit; then there had been the action which withdrew spirit into itself; then there had been the resulting individuality of God.

In building the soul there was spirit, with its knowledge of identity with God; there was the active principle of mind; and there was the ability to experience the activity of mind sepa­rately from God.

Thus a new individual, issuing from and dependent upon God, but aware of an existence apart from Him, came into being. To the new individual there was given, necessarily, the power to choose and direct its own activity; without free will it would remain a part of the individuality of God. Mind, issu­ing as a force from God, would naturally fulfill His thoughts, unless directed otherwise. The power to do this - to direct otherwise the force of mind - is what man calls his free will. The record of this free will is the soul. The soul began with the first expression which free will made of its power, through the force of mind. The first thought which it generated of itself, the first diversion of mind force from its normal path, was the beginning of the soul.

The nucleus of the soul was in balance, positive and negative force in equal power, producing harmonious activity: the posi­tive initiating, impregnating, thrusting forward; the negative receiving, nourishing, ejecting. The steps of this action were the stages of thought: perception, reflection, opinion.

Thus the soul consisted of two states of consciousness: that of the spirit, bearing a knowledge of its identity with God, and that of the new individual, bearing a knowledge of everything it experienced.

The plan for the soul was a cycle of experience - unlimited in scope and duration - in which the new individual would come to know creation in all its aspects, at the discretion of will. The cycle would be completed when the desire of will was no longer different from the thought of God. The consciousness of the new individual would then merge with its spiritual conscious­ness of identity with God, and the soul would return to its source as the companion it was intended to be.

In this state the soul would retain its consciousness of a separate individuality and would be aware that of its own free will it now acted as a part of God, not diverting mind force because it was in agreement with the action toward which this force was directed. Until this state was reached the soul would not be a companion in the true sense of the word.

(The idea that a return to God means a loss of individuality is paradoxical, since God is aware of everything that happens and must therefore be aware of the consciousness of each indi­vidual. Thus the return of the soul is the return of the image to that which imagined it, and the consciousness of an indi­vidual - its record, written in mind - would not be destroyed without destroying part of God Himself. When a soul returns to God it becomes aware of itself not only as a part of God, but as a part of every other soul, and everything.

(What is lost is the ego - the desire to do other than the will of God. When the soul returns to God the ego is voluntarily re­linquished; this is the symbolism of the crucifixion.)

The plan for the soul included experience of all creation, but it did not necessarily mean identification with and partici­pation in all forms and substance. Nor did it mean interference in creation by souls. It did not mean that they were to spin their own little worlds, twisting and bending laws to make im­ages of their dreams.

But these things could happen. The soul was the greatest thing that was made; it had free will. Once free will was given, God did nothing to curb it; however it acted, it had to act within Him; by whatever route, it had to return to Him.

(The fact that man's body is a speck of dust on a small planet leads to the illusion that man himself is a small creation. The measure of the soul is the limitless activity of mind and the grandeur of imagination.)

At first there was little difference between the consciousness of the new individual and its consciousness of identity with God. Free will merely watched the flow of mind, somewhat as man watches his fancy disport in daydreams, marveling at its power and versatility. Then it began to exercise itself, imitating and paralleling what mind was doing. Gradually it acquired experience, becoming a complementary rather than an imita­tive force. It helped to extend, modify, and regulate creation. It grew, as did Jesus, in "wisdom and beauty."

Certain souls became bemused with their own power and began to experiment with it. They mingled with the dust of the stars and the winds of the spheres, feeling them, becoming part of them. One result of this was an unbalancing of the positive-negative force, by accentuating one or the other; to feel things demanded the negative force; to express through things, and direct and manage them, required the positive force. Another result was the gradual weakening of the link between the two states of consciousness - that of the spirit and that of the indi­vidual. The individual became more concerned with, and aware of, his own creations than God's. This was the fall in spirit, or the revolt of the angels.

To move into a portion of creation and become part of it, a soul had to assume a new, or third aspect of consciousness - a method of experiencing that portion of creation and translating it into the basic substance of mind by means of thought. Man refers to this aspect of awareness as his "conscious mind." It is the device by which he experiences earth: physical body, five senses, glandular and nervous systems. In other worlds, in other systems, the device differed. Only the range and variation of man's own thoughts can give an idea of the number of these other worlds and systems and the aspects of divine mind that they represent.

When a soul took on the consciousness of a portion of creation it separated itself temporarily from the consciousness of its own individuality, and became even further removed from the consciousness of its spirit. Thus, instead of helping to direct the flow of creation and contributing to it, it found itself in the stream, drifting along with it. The farther it went from shore, the more it succumbed to the pull of the current and the more difficult was the task of getting back to land.

Each of the systems of stars and planets represented, in this manner, a temptation to the souls. Each had its plan, and moved toward it through the activity of a constant stream of mind. When a soul leaped into the stream (by immersing itself in the system through which the stream was flowing) it had the force of the current to contend with, and its free will was hampered. It was very easy, under these circumstances, to drift with the current.

(Each system also represented an opportunity for develop­ment, advancement, and growth toward the ideal of complete companionship with God - the position of co-creator in the vast system of universal mind.)

The solar system attracted souls, and since each system is a single expression, with its planets as integral parts, the earth came into the path of souls.

(The planets of the solar system represent the dimensions of consciousness of the system - its consciousness as a whole. There are eight dimensions to the consciousness of the system. The earth is the third dimension.)

The earth was an expression of divine mind with its own laws, its own plan, its own evolution. Souls, longing to feel the beauty of the seas, the winds, the forest, the flowers, mixed with them and expressed themselves through them. They also mingled with the animals, and made, in imitation of them, thought forms: they played at creating; they imitated God. But it was a playing, an imitating, that interfered with what had already been set in motion, and thus the stream of mind carrying out the plan for earth gradually drew souls into its current. They had to go along with it, in the bodies they had themselves created.

They were strange bodies: mixtures of animals, a patchwork of ideas about what it would be pleasant to enjoy in flesh. Down through the ages fables of centaurs, Cyclopes, etc., have persisted as a relic of this beginning of the soul's tenancy of earth.

Sex already existed in the animal kingdom, but the souls, in their thought forms, were androgynous. To experience sex they created thought forms for companions, isolating the negative force in a separate structure, retaining the positive within themselves. This objectification is what man calls Lilith, the first woman.

This entanglement of souls in what man calls matter was a probability from the beginning, but God did not know when it would happen until the souls, of their own choice, had caused it to happen.

(Of the souls which God created - and He created all souls in the beginning - none has been made since - only a compara­tive few have come into the experience of the solar system, though many have gone through or are going through a similar entanglement in other systems.)

A way of escape for the souls which were entangled in mat­ter was prepared. A form was chosen to be a vehicle for the soul on earth, and the way was made for souls to enter earth and experience it as part of their cycle. Of the forms already existing on earth one of the anthropoid apes most nearly approached the necessary pattern. Souls descended on these apes - hovering above and about them rather than inhabiting them - and influenced them to move toward a different goal from the simple one they had been pursuing. They came down out of the trees, built fires, made tools, lived in communities, and began to communicate with each other. Swiftly, even as man meas­ures time, they lost their animal look, shed bodily hair, and took on refinements of manner and habit.

All this was done by the souls, working through glands, until the body of the ape was an objectification - in the third dimen­sion of the solar system - of the soul that hovered above it. Then the soul descended into the body and earth had a new inhabitant: man.

He appeared as a consciousness within an animal, a con­sciousness which was felt on the earth in five different places at the same time, as the five races. The white race appeared in the Caucasus, the Carpathians, and Persia. The yellow race appeared in what is now the Gobi Desert. The black race appeared in the Sudan and upper west Africa; the red race appeared in Atlantis; the brown race appeared in the Andes.

(The Pacific coast of South America was then the western coast of Lemuria. The Atlantic seaboard of the United States comprised the lowlands of Atlantis. Persia and the Caucasus were rich lands - the Garden of Eden. The poles of the earth as we know them today were tropical and semitropical. The Nile emptied into the Atlantic Ocean. The Sahara was fertile and inhabited. The Mississippi basin was part of the ocean.)

The problem was to overcome the attractions of earth to the extent that the soul would be as free in the body as out of it. Only when the body was no longer a hindrance to the free expression of the soul would the cycle of earth be finished.

(In a smaller field this was the drama of free will and cre­ation. In a still smaller field each atom of the physical body, being a world in itself, is a drama of free will and creation. The soul puts life into each atom, and each atom is a reflection in flesh of the soul's pattern.)

There were males and females in these new, pure races, and both had complete souls. Eve replaced Lilith, and became a complement to Adam - the ideal companion for the threefold life on earth: physical, mental, and spiritual. In Eve the posi­tive pole was suppressed and the negative pole expressed; in Adam the negative pole was suppressed, the positive expressed.

(Which a soul would become - male or female - was a mat­ter of choice, unless the soul was already entangled and un­balanced. Eventually the positive and negative forces would have to be brought into balance, so there was not, basically, more advantage in one than in the other. For souls in balance it was a device to be employed for the duration of the earth cycle, and whichever sex would best suit the problems to be attacked was chosen. It was a voluntary assumption of an atti­tude, not a fall into error, and once a sex was assumed it was generally retained through the cycle of earth lives, though it could be changed from life to life, if the change were consid­ered advantageous. Awareness of sex was retained between lives, but could only be expressed on earth.)

Man became aware, with the advent of his consciousness, that sex meant something more to him than to the animals. It was the door by which new souls entered the earth, a door un­necessary elsewhere in the system. It was the only means the trapped souls had of getting out of their predicament - by being reborn through the bodies of souls that had entered the earth through choice. These bodies were not entangled with animals or thought forms. They represented the ideal vehicle for the soul on earth.

Therefore sex was a creative power that could be used for good or evil. Used rightly, the race would be kept pure, the earth would be a paradise for souls in perfect bodies, the trapped souls could be freed of their cycle of rebirth in monstrous, half-animal forms, and provided with perfect bodies.

(This is the story of Adam and Eve, the serpent, and the apple. The serpent, wisdom, offered the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. Eve, the negative, receptive force took and fostered it. When Adam, the active force, partook it, the peaceful animal life of man was ended.)

The plan for the earth cycle of souls was a series of incarnations, interlarded with periods of dwelling in other dimensions of consciousness in the system - the planets - until every thought and every action of the physical body, with its five senses and conscious mind, was in accord with the plan originally laid out for the soul. When the body was no longer a hindrance to the free expression of the soul - when the conscious mind had merged with the subconscious, and the atomic structure of the body could be controlled so that the soul was as free in it as out of it - the earth cycle was finished and the soul could go on to new adventures. This conquest of the physical body could not be attained until there was perfection in the other dimensions of consciousness in the system, for these made up, with the earth, the total expression of the sun and its satellites. Whichever state of consciousness the soul assumed became the focal point of activity. The other states of consciousness receded to the position of urges and influences.

The race of man was fostered by a soul that had completed its experience of creation and returned to God, becoming a companion to Him and a co-creator. This is the soul man knows as the Christ.

The Christ soul was interested in the plight of its brother souls trapped in earth, and after supervising the influx of the pure races, it took form itself, from time to time, to act as a leader for the people.

Though at first the souls but lightly inhabited bodies and remembered their identities, gradually - life after life - they descended into earthiness, into less mentality, less consciousness of the mind force. They remembered their true selves only in dreams, in stories and fables handed down from one genera­tion to another. Religion came into being: a ritual of longing for lost memories. The arts were born: music, numbers, and geometry. These were brought to earth by the incoming souls; gradually their heavenly source was forgotten, and they had to be written down, learned, and taught to each new generation.

Finally man was left with a conscious mind definitely sepa­rated from his own individuality. (He now calls this individual­ity the subconscious mind; his awareness of earth is the conscious mind.) The subconscious mind influenced the conscious mind - gave it, in fact, its stature, breadth, and quality. It became the body under the suit of clothes. Only in sleep was it disrobed.

With his conscious mind, man reasoned (for all mind, left to itself, will work out the plans of God). He built up theories for what he felt - but no longer knew - to be true. Philosophy and theology resulted. He began to look around him and dis­cover, in the earth, secrets that he carried within himself but could no longer reach with his consciousness. The result was science.

The plan of man went into action. Downward he went from heavenly knowledge to mystical dreams, revealed religions, philosophy and theology, until the bottom was reached and he only believed what he could see and feel and prove in terms of his conscious mind. Then he began to fight his way upward, using the only tools he had left: suffering, patience, faith, and the power of mind.

Atlantis and Lemuria sank; civilizations rose and fell; man was here a little better, there a little worse. He descended to the depths of earth consciousness, then slowly began to climb back. In earthly seasons it was a long journey from the mo­ment when the first soul, looking down through the trees, saw a violet and wanted to pluck it, to the instant when the last soul should leave its body forever.

The Christ soul helped man. As Enoch, as Melchizedek, it took on flesh, to teach and lead. (Since it was to be active it had to be male.) Enoch and Melchizedek were not born, did not die. The Christ soul realized after these assumptions of flesh that it was necessary to set a pattern for man, to show him the way back to himself. It assumed this task, and was born of woman, beginning voluntarily a new individuality, a new soul record; though behind this new individuality shone the pure Christ soul. But on this the veil dropped, and the Son of God began His pilgrimage. He was born as Joseph, again as Joshua, again as Jeshua -the scribe of Enoch who rewrote the Bible - and finally as Jesus. He, Jesus, triumphant over death and the body, became the way, laying down the ego of the will, accepting the crucifixion, returning to God. He is the pattern we are to follow.

(At present man is in a state of great spiritual darkness - the darkness that precedes dawn. He has carried his skepti­cism to the point where it is forcing him to conclusions he knows intuitively are wrong. At the same time he has carried his investigation of natural phenomena to the point where it is disproving all it seemed to prove in the beginning. Free will is finding that all roads lead finally to the same destination. Science, theology, and philosophy, having no desire to join forces, are approaching a point of merger. Skepticism faces destruction by its own hand.)

Man is at all times the total of what he has been and done, what he has fought and defended, what he has hated and loved. In the three-dimensional consciousness of earth every atom of his physical body is a reflection of his soul - a crystallization of his individuality. His emotional and nervous structures, his mental abilities, his aptitudes, his aversions and preferences, his fears, his follies, his ambitions, his character, are the sum of what he has done with his free will since it was given to him. So every personality - the earthly cloak of an individu­ality - is different from every other personality.

This has been true from the beginning. The first independ­ent thought of each soul was a little different from the first independent thought of every other soul.

So people are different in their likes and dislikes, in their desires and dreams. The law of karma - cause and effect - likewise makes them different in their joys and sorrows, in their handicaps, their strengths, their weaknesses, their vir­tues and vices, their appreciation of beauty, and their compre­hension of truth. Debts incurred in the flesh must be met in the flesh: natural law, not man or God, demands an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.

The same law applies to groups of people, as they act to­gether. There is karma for families, for tribes, for races, for nations. When the souls who committed a war return to a nation, a war will be committed upon that nation. Only when defeat is endured by a nation with humility and understand­ing, only when victory is dispensed by a nation with justice and mercy, will the karma of battle be lifted from them.

Every person's life is shaped to some extent by karma: his own, that of his associates and loved ones, that of his nation and race, and that of the world itself. But these, singly or together, are not greater than free will. It is what the person does about these influences and urges, how he reacts to them, that makes a difference in his soul development. Because of karma some things are more probable than others, but so long as there is free will anything is possible.

Thus free will and predestination coexist in a person. His past experiences limit him in probability, and incline him in certain directions, but free will can always draw the sword from the stone.

No soul takes on flesh without a general plan for the experi­ence ahead. The personality expressed through the body is one of many that the individuality might have assumed. Its job is to work on one or several phases of the karma of the individuality. No task is undertaken which is too much for the personality to which it is assigned - or which chooses it. (Some souls choose their own entrances and set their own tasks; others, having made too many mistakes and become danger­ously subject to earthly appetites, are sent back by law, at a time and under circumstances best suited to help them.) The task is seldom perfectly fulfilled, and sometimes it is badly neglected.

Choice of incarnation is usually made at conception, when the channel for expression is opened by the parents. A pat­tern is made by the mingling of the soul patterns of the par­ents. This sets up certain conditions of karma. A soul whose own karma approximates these conditions will be attracted by the opportunity presented. Since the pattern will not be exactly his own, he must consider taking on some of the karma of the parents - relatively - in order to use the channel. This concerns environment, companionship with the parents, and certain marks of physiognomy.

Things other than pattern concern the soul in its selection of a body: coming situations in history, former associations with the parents, the incarnation - at about the same time - of souls it wishes to be with and with whom it has problems to work out. In some cases the parents are the whole cause of a soul's return - the child will be devoted to them and remain close to them until their death. In other cases the parents are used as a means to an end - the child will leave home early and be about its business.

The soul may occupy the body as early as six months before birth, or as late as a month after birth, though in the latter case it has been hovering over the body since birth, de­ciding whether or not to occupy it. Once the decision is made and the occupation completed, the veil drops between the new personality and the soul, and the earthly record of the child begins. (The fact that a baby is born dead does not mean that it was refused as a vehicle for a soul. Just the opposite is true: the channel is withdrawn from the soul; no occupation is pos­sible.)

The body is formed in the womb according to the pattern made by the mingling of the life forces of the parents, each with its respective pattern. This is the metaphysical symbolism of the 47th problem of Euclid, the Pythagorean theorem: the square of the hypotenuse of a right triangle is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides. As soon as occupa­tion by a soul takes place, the pattern of the soul begins to work its way through the body, and the child's personality be­gins.

The personality is a high-lighted portion of the individuality, experiencing three-dimensional consciousness. The rest of the individuality remains in shadow, giving tone to the personality; urges, appreciation, tastes, avocations, and what is loosely termed "charm" - the background to which intuition responds.

The personality is shaped by three or four incarnations, the portions of the earthly experience on which the individuality wants to work. The emotions and talents of the person reflect these incarnations. The dreams, visions, meditations - the deep, closely guarded self-consciousness of the personality - is the pattern of experience among the other states of consciousness of the solar system. The intellect is, roughly speaking, from the stars: it is the mind force of the soul, conditioned by its previous experience in creation outside the solar system, and dimmed or brightened by its recent experiences within the solar system.

Thus a personality is only an aspect of an individuality. A soul, deciding to experience earth again, might assume any of several personalities, each of which would express a portion of itself. As a soul approaches completion of the solar cycle the personality becomes more many-sided, expressing greater por­tions of the individuality. This is because each incarnation has less adverse karma, requiring less attention. Finally the per­sonality is a complete expression of the individuality, and the cycle is completed.

(As an individuality succumbs to earthiness, abandoning intellect for emotion and emotion for sensuality, it becomes more and more one-sided.)

The incarnations that influence the personality reflect their patterns in the person's life. Sometimes they intermingle: a child's parents may re-create the environment of one experi­ence, while his playmates will re-create the environment of another. Sometimes the influences work in periods: home and childhood may re-create the conditions of one incarnation, school and college those of another, marriage those of a third, and a career those of a fourth. Usually the people and the problems of the incarnations have interlocking relationships, so that the pattern of the personality's experience is a rational development, and the problems are presented to him as he is prepared to meet them. Because the incarnations only reflect their problems (their blessings as well as their handicaps), usu­ally the karma of more than one can be undertaken in a single life; if the life is successful, considerable progress is made toward freedom from flesh.

When a life is finished the personality vanishes. Its pattern is absorbed into the individuality. Its record is retained, but it becomes a part of the individuality, which at all times is the sum total of what it has been: all it has thought, all it has experienced; all it has eaten, drunk, and felt through the ages.

(Here is an example of how extremes may meet. Both the atheist and the Christian seem to be right. The atheist says the personality does not survive after death; the Christian says the soul is judged after death and returns to its Creator. Substi­tuting personality for soul, both are expressing a truth. The personality is judged, returns to its creator - the individuality - and is absorbed, giving up its own independent existence.)

The general plan for perfecting the individuality in its experi­ence of the solar system then proceeds. Another state of con­sciousness is assumed, as a trial or as a means of reinforcing the character of a future personality.

So the problems of individualities, the problems of groups, the problems of races and nations, are worked upon time and again until, by free will, they are solved, and the souls go on to other worlds, other systems, other universes.

The readings say:

"Know that thyself, in its physical state, is a part of the plan of salvation, of righteousness, of truth, of the Creative Forces, or God, in the earth.

"Each person is a corpuscle in the body of that force called God.

"Each person is a manifestation of the Creative Forces in action in the earth. Each person finds himself with a body that seeks expression of itself, and a mind capable of becoming aware of what the body presents, what other men present, and what influences are acting upon the body and upon the mind itself.

"Each soul enters the material plane not by chance but through the grace, the mercy, of a loving Father; that the soul may, through its own choice, work out those faults, those fancies, which prevent its communion and at-one-ment with the Creative Forces.

"As to whether a soul is developed or retarded during a particular life depends on what the person holds as its ideal, and what it does in its mental and material relationships about that ideal.

"Life is a purposeful experience, and the place in which a person finds himself is one in which he may use his present abilities, faults, failures, virtues, in fulfilling the purpose for which the soul decided to manifest in the three-dimensional plane.

"Know in thyself that there are immutable laws, and the universe about thyself is directed by laws set in motion from the beginning.

"So, as ye condemn, so are ye condemned. As ye forgive, so may ye be forgiven. As ye do unto the least of thy brethren, so ye do it unto thy Maker. These are laws; these are truths; they are unfailing. And because He may often appear slow in meting out results does not alter or change the law. An error, a fault, a failure, must be met. Though the heavens, the earth, may pass away, His word will not pass away. His word is the way, the truth, the light. Each soul must pay to the last jot or tittle.

"How can ye do His bidding? - Not in mighty deeds of valor, not in exaltation of thy knowledge or power; but in the gentleness of the things of the spirit: love, kindness, longsuffering, patience; these thy Elder Brother, the Christ, has shown thee . . . that thou, applying them in thy associations with thy fellow man day by day, here a little, there a little, may become one with Him as He has destined that thou shouldst be! Wilt thou separate thyself? For there is nothing in earth, in heaven, in hell, that may separate thee from the love of thy God, of thy brother, save thyself.

"Then, be up and doing; knowing that as thou hast met in life those things that would exalt thy personal self - these ye must lose in gentleness, in patience. For in patience ye become aware of your soul; your individuality lost in Him; your per­sonality shining as that which is motivated by the individuality of thy Lord and Master. Thus does your destiny lie within yourself, and the destiny of the world.

"Hold fast to that faith exemplified in thy meditation, in thy counsels, in thy giving out to thy fellow man. For he that hides himself in the service of his fellow man through the gifts, through the promises as are in Him, hides many of the faults that have made him afraid through his experience in the earth.

For it is not what one counts as knowledge that is important, nor what one would attain in material realms, but what one does about that which is known as constructive forces and in­fluences in the experience of thyself and thy fellow man. For, as He has given, 'As ye do it unto others, ye do it unto Me.' He is the way, the life, the light. He is the Creator; He is the giver of all good and perfect gifts. Man may sow, man may act in mate­rial manifestations, in matter, of spiritual forces . . . yet the returns, the increase, must come from and through Him who is the gift of life. It is not a consideration of where or even how the seed of truth in Him is sown; for He gives the increase if it is sown in humbleness of spirit, in sincerity of purpose, with an eye-single that He may be glorified in and among thy fellow man. This is the way, this is the manner, that He would have thee follow.

"Let thyself, then, become more and more a channel through which His manifestations in the earth may arise, through thy efforts, in the hearts, the minds, of thy fellow man. For mind - in man, to man - is the builder, ever. That, then, must be directed, given, lost in singleness of purpose, that there may come the greater awakening within the consciousness of thy fellow man that He is in the earth; that His words are as lights to men in dark places, to those that are weak, to those who stum­ble. For He will give thy efforts that necessary force, that neces­sary power, to quicken even those that are asleep in their own selfishness, in their own self-indulgences, and bring to their awakening that which will make for glorious activities in the earth.

"Keep, then, the faith thou hast had in Him; for He is thy strength, He is thy bulwark; He is thy Elder Brother. In Him, ye may find that which will bring to thee and others joy, peace, happiness, and that which makes men not afraid. For He is peace; not as men count peace, not as men count happiness, but in that harmonious manner in which life, the expression of the Father in the earth, is one . . . even as He is one.

"Keep the faith."