Thursday, May 21, 2026

Thoughts as Spiritual Acts and Creative Forces

Posted on Facebook by Samoa Lualima

READING 900-65 EXPLAINED
Reading 900-65 presents one of Edgar Cayce’s deepest teachings about thoughts. Cayce explains that thoughts are not merely private mental events happening inside the brain. Rather, thoughts are real spiritual activities that shape the subconscious mind, influence material life, and determine whether a person lives in harmony or conflict with divine law.
The question being asked is practical:
how can a person gain knowledge, success, guidance, and material help through the subconscious mind while still remaining faithful to spiritual ideals?
Cayce’s answer is striking — true success comes only when thoughts, actions, and motives align with divine law.
He begins:
“Gain the first principle and apply same in every connection…”
Cayce repeatedly taught that spiritual truth is not something separated from ordinary life. Divine law applies equally to business, relationships, finances, morality, intuition, and spiritual growth. The subconscious mind functions correctly only when the individual lives in alignment with higher principles.
The reading says:
“The compliance with any law gives or makes the individual the law.”
This means that whatever laws or principles a person consistently obeys gradually become part of their nature. If a person continually aligns with selfishness, greed, manipulation, lust, or pride, those qualities become rooted in consciousness. But if a person continually aligns with truth, love, patience, service, and spiritual integrity, those qualities begin shaping the soul from within.
Cayce then warns that the problem often comes when:
“Carnal forces enter rather than principle.”
This is extremely important in understanding his psychology of thought. “Carnal forces” does not simply mean physical desires. It refers to lower motives dominating consciousness — selfish ambition, emotional cravings, ego-centered thinking, or material obsession. When thoughts are governed by these lower drives, the subconscious becomes distorted.
In contrast, thoughts guided by spiritual principles bring clarity and correct inner guidance.
Then Cayce gives one of the most important lines in the reading:
“Thoughts are deeds and become crimes or miracles.”
This echoes other Cayce readings and reveals that thoughts themselves are creative actions within consciousness. A thought repeatedly entertained becomes an inner deed before it ever appears outwardly.
Hatred entertained inwardly begins shaping the soul toward destruction long before outward harm occurs. Likewise, compassion entertained inwardly begins shaping the soul toward healing before visible actions even appear.
Cayce is essentially saying that the invisible inner world is already active reality.
He then asks:
“What is thought?”
And his answer is fascinating:
“That made up by the suggestion as received from conscious, subconscious, superconscious forces…”
Here Cayce describes thought as arising from multiple levels of consciousness:
The conscious mind — daily awareness and reasoning.
The subconscious mind — memory, emotion, habits, soul impressions.
The superconscious mind — spiritual intuition and divine guidance.
Thoughts therefore come from many influences. Some thoughts arise from fears, memories, habits, and desires. Others arise from spiritual intuition or higher inspiration. Human development involves learning to discern which thoughts come from higher channels and which come from distorted or “deviated channels.”
This is why spiritual discipline matters. Prayer, meditation, ideals, self-examination, and right living help tune the mind toward higher sources of thought.
Cayce then makes an astonishing statement:
“Thought becomes as material in the subconscious forces and actions as a physical act in the material world.”
This means thoughts leave real impressions within the subconscious. Even if no outward act occurs, the thought itself shapes inner consciousness. Repeated thoughts become psychological and spiritual structures within the soul.
In modern language, Cayce is describing something similar to mental conditioning or neural patterning, but on an even deeper spiritual level. Thoughts build the inner world.
Repeated fearful thoughts condition fear.
Repeated lustful thoughts condition lust.
Repeated loving thoughts condition compassion.
Repeated spiritual thoughts condition spiritual awareness.
Thus, the subconscious becomes the storehouse of cultivated thought-patterns.
The reading also explains that thoughts are controlled by:
“Intent and such compliance with such law.”
Intent is central. Two people may outwardly do the same thing, yet inwardly their motives are entirely different. The spiritual value of thought depends greatly upon the intention behind it.
A person may seek success from greed and domination, or from service and stewardship. One path narrows consciousness; the other expands it.
Cayce also strongly warns against allowing outside influences to dominate the soul:
“Do not let self be predominated by conditions set for self by other conditions that would be at an at-variance to divine laws…”
This means society, culture, fear, pressure, materialism, or popular opinion should not replace inner spiritual guidance. The individual must learn to “obtain from within self” — not from ego, but from alignment with divine truth within consciousness.
Importantly, Cayce clarifies this is not selfish individualism:
“This does not give self centered-ism…”
True spiritual guidance does not inflate the ego. Genuine insight produces humility because the person realizes wisdom comes through cooperation with divine forces, not personal superiority.
Finally, Cayce concludes with the realization that all true life and understanding are gifts flowing from God:
“The realization awakens that this information obtained is not of self, though obtained through self-compliance with divine forces.”
This is the heart of the reading.
The mind becomes clearer not merely through intelligence, but through alignment.
The subconscious becomes illuminated not merely through technique, but through spiritual harmony.
Thought becomes powerful when united with divine ideals.
The overall teaching of this reading is that thoughts are living spiritual energies. They shape the subconscious, influence destiny, govern perception, direct action, and determine whether a person becomes inwardly aligned with divine law or separated from it.
For Cayce, spiritual growth is therefore largely the purification, direction, and disciplining of thought itself.
READING 900-65
(Q) ...Explain how in this individual's actions or thoughts he may so regulate the definite mentality or actions of his life so as to secure from his subconscious the projection of the knowledge necessary, physically, materially? Right now, for example, how may he gain that necessary for his greater success, yet retaining and practising according to his faith and ideals?
(A) By making those faiths and ideals one with the same divine law, as has been given. We find we are following along one same channel. Gain the first principle and apply same in every connection, for the compliance with any law gives or makes the individual the law. In gaining any knowledge through subconscious forces of material conditions, whether stocks, bonds, loyalty to person, social conditions, moral conditions, or physical effects in individual body, the compliance to the divine laws gives the correct answer in each and every instance. In this individual reference as given, carnal forces enter rather than principle. Hence the deviation as was pointed out in the beginning. Then to apply to self now, at any time, give to self the understanding of complacency [compliancy?] with all laws concerning the divine forces, forgetting not, "Thoughts are deeds and become crimes or miracles." Then would come in the analysis of such condition, - What is thought? That made up by the suggestion as received from conscious, subconscious, superconscious forces as are directed in proper, improper or deviated channels. Hence thought becomes as material in the subconscious forces and actions as a physical act in the material world. Hence such conditions are controlled, guided, governed, by such intent and such compliance with such law. Then same may be applied to any condition necessary for the individual's success, giving however this: Do not let self be predominated by conditions set for self by other conditions that would be at an at-variance to divine laws, whether of the faith as given or obtained through other individuals, rather that as applied in the first: Obtain from within self. This does not give self centered-ism, or place one individual higher than another in self esteem, for the law of reciprocity and of environment bears in the individual if the individual understands the given condition, for the realization awakens that this information obtained is not of self, though obtained through self-compliance with divine forces. Then the gift of God, such as Life.


Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Thoughts as the Builders of the Soul

Posted on Facebook by Samoa Lualima

READINGS 900-233, 5250-1, 4083-1, 2029-1, 1669-1 EXPLAINED
These readings present thought as one of the most powerful forces in human development. Edgar Cayce does not describe thoughts as temporary mental events only, but as living patterns that gradually shape memory, character, behavior, spiritual awareness, and even destiny. Thoughts become the inner architecture of the soul.
In reading 900-233, Cayce explains that memory and thought continually build one another:
“MEMORY becomes the thought, and thought becomes memory... BUILDING one upon the other.”
This is a profound idea. Every experience leaves an impression within consciousness. Those impressions become memories, and memories influence future thoughts. Over time, a cycle forms. What a person repeatedly thinks about becomes part of their inner nature. The soul is therefore not shaped instantly, but progressively through accumulated experiences, reflections, reactions, and choices.
Cayce explains that this process belongs especially to the deeper levels of consciousness — the subconscious, spiritual entity, and superconscious mind. Thoughts are not isolated mental sparks; they become stored energies within the soul itself. Every thought entertained strengthens certain inner patterns. Fearful thoughts strengthen fear. Loving thoughts strengthen love. Spiritual thoughts strengthen spiritual awareness.
The reading also says:
“Only through experiences does the BUILDING come in MIND.”
This means the soul develops through living, testing, suffering, learning, choosing, and applying ideals in everyday life. Thoughts are shaped by experiences, but thoughts also shape how future experiences are interpreted. Thus, human growth becomes a continual process of inner construction.
Reading 5250-1 expands this further by showing that ideas themselves are neutral potentials:
“Ideas may be merely thoughts... they may become crimes or they become miracles...”
A thought by itself is not yet good or evil. Its direction depends upon the ideal to which it is attached. The same intelligence may heal or destroy. The same imagination may create beauty or corruption. The determining factor is the spiritual ideal guiding the thought.
Cayce repeatedly taught that ideals are central to soul development. Thoughts attached to selfishness, pride, greed, or domination gradually distort consciousness. Thoughts attached to love, service, truth, patience, and God gradually elevate consciousness. Thus, thoughts become creative forces directed either toward harmony or destruction.
Reading 4083-1 emphasizes human responsibility regarding thought:
“A thought enters the mind. You either entertain it or you discard it.”
This reading presents consciousness almost like a doorway. Thoughts constantly enter human awareness, but the soul chooses whether to feed them. A destructive thought entertained repeatedly gains power. A destructive thought rejected loses influence.
Cayce importantly notes that merely having a negative thought arise does not define the soul. The critical issue is whether the thought is welcomed, nourished, and acted upon. This becomes extremely important spiritually, because many people condemn themselves merely for experiencing temptation, fear, anger, or doubt. Cayce instead focuses on what the individual chooses to cultivate.
The reading then connects thought directly to relationship with God:
“For indeed in Him, the Father-God, ye move and have thy being. Act like it!”
The implication is powerful: spiritual development occurs when thoughts increasingly align with divine reality. Human beings already exist within God’s life and consciousness, but they must gradually learn to think and live in harmony with that truth.
Reading 2029-1 introduces another important idea: thoughts gradually become identity itself.
“Just as that you think gradually grows to become YOU...”
This reading explains why symbols, prayers, spiritual objects, sacred associations, and repeated contemplations can influence consciousness. Cayce does not teach that objects possess magical power in themselves. Rather, the meaning attached to them creates mental and spiritual vibrations within the individual.
A symbol repeatedly associated with courage, faith, healing, purity, or Christ-consciousness can gradually condition the mind toward those qualities. In the same way, constant exposure to fear, violence, hatred, lust, bitterness, or selfish ambition also shapes the soul inwardly.
The reading suggests that human beings slowly digest their thoughts spiritually just as the body digests food physically. Whatever is repeatedly absorbed mentally eventually becomes part of consciousness.
Reading 1669-1 balances this teaching carefully:
“Thought itself may not change anything but the activity one takes through thought makes for a change...”
Cayce does not teach passive wishful thinking. Thoughts alone are incomplete unless expressed through action. True thought must become lived conduct. Thoughts influence behavior, behavior influences environment, and environment influences others.
This means thoughts are seeds, but actions are their outward fruit. Loving thoughts expressed through kindness transform relationships. Fearful thoughts expressed through anger or control damage relationships. Spiritual thoughts expressed through service and compassion become channels of blessing.
Cayce even says such actions create “hereditary influence” upon others. In other words, thought-patterns do not affect only the individual. They ripple outward into families, communities, and future generations.
Taken together, these readings present several major principles about thoughts:
Thoughts gradually become memory and character.
Repeated thoughts shape the soul.
Thoughts gain power when entertained.
Thoughts become creative forces through action.
Ideals determine whether thoughts become destructive or transformative.
Spiritual growth depends upon disciplining and directing thought.
Human identity slowly becomes what it continually contemplates.
The deeper spiritual implication is that transformation begins inwardly. Cayce’s teachings consistently suggest that the soul moves toward either harmony or fragmentation according to the thoughts it repeatedly nourishes. This is why prayer, meditation, forgiveness, gratitude, spiritual study, and loving service are so emphasized — they help reorder the inner life.
In Cayce’s view, the mind is not merely reacting to life; it is participating in creation itself. Every entertained thought contributes to the becoming of the soul.
EDGAR CAYCE READINGS 900-233, 5250-1, 4083-1, 2029-1, 1669-1
(Q) Explain what is called "Memory" in terms of subconscious or spiritual development. [See [3744] series.]
(A) As has been given, as is seen, MEMORY becomes the thought, and thought becomes memory - that is, as the various experience of an ENTITY (this in the term of the spiritual, of the physical, of the soul entity, see? not as a physical entity meaning of body and mind and physical being, but of the soul entity, the spiritual entity, which is comprised of the subconscious, the spiritual entity, and the superconscious mind), as is seen, see? as of THIS entity, gains the various experiences; for only through experiences does the BUILDING come in MIND, see? for, as is seen, by comparison does the building take place - that is, as memory is thought, THOUGHT is MEMORY, and BUILDING one upon the other. This is spiritual thought, spiritual memory.
900-233
Ideas may be merely thoughts. As they run the course through those activities and minds of individuals, they may become crimes or they become miracles, dependent upon that with which the individual entity gives the thought or the idea to an ideal, or merely to an experimentation, as ye have in the sojourns in the earth...
5250-1
A thought enters the mind. You either entertain it or you discard it. If you discard it, it has little or no effect and yet because you discard it doesn't make or cause the thought to be less productive had it been entertained.
So, as in the self, whether the individual entity or soul entertains its relationship to the Creative Forces or not, the relationship is still existent or possible. For indeed in Him, the Father-God, ye move and have thy being. Act like it!
4083-1
For the symbols, signs, omens, all have been and are a part of the experience of the entity, - and have at times been a manifested interest.
Hence all such in the present hold an interest, and at times influences, for the entity.
A Maltese cross of teakwood should be worn by the entity at all times, next to the skin, about the neck or waist. It will be seen from experiences in the material plane, as well as the symbols from same, that this would have a helpful influence by creating a VIBRATION. Not that it would within itself have an influence, but the associations of same would become as helpful influences, - just as that you think gradually grows to become YOU - as you digest its influence or force.
2029-1
Thought itself may not change anything but the activity one takes through thought makes for a change in the environments and for the creating of a hereditary influence to those even whom the entity may contact or for whom it may be responsible.
1669-1