Название: Angels, Fairies, Demons, and the Elementals
Автор: John Van Auken
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Эзотерика
isbn: 9780876048009
isbn:
From Edgar Cayce’s perspective, “For Spirit is the natural, the normal condition of an entity.” (816-10) Spirit is our normal, natural condition! Think about this for a moment. Here we are in these physical bodies with our personalities and friends and families, and all our incarnate life history, and from his deep trance state he is telling us that our “natural, normal condition” is as a spirit—a ghost! Our normal condition is as a mind/energy being, and we are temporarily in a physical body. The life essence and deeper consciousness make up our more natural state as an immortal soul. According to Cayce’s teachings, we originally were, and remain today, celestial beings who are only temporarily living a terrestrial life in this reality.
For the soul is eternal and if the entity will analyze its own self, it is body, mind and soul. Soul [is that] which longs for spiritual interpretations, mental understanding and physical harmony and rest. These are parts of the experience of every soul.
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Despite our more natural, normal condition of being spirit, our soul’s incarnation into this life is intentional and with purpose, a purpose that helps our soul grow through living what we believe to be ideal or of the best. We have a tip from Jesus on how to gain awareness of our souls: “In your patience possess ye your souls.” (Luke 21:19, KJV) And Cayce agrees: “A patience . . . may be found when the oneness of purpose, oneness of ideal, are correlated in life, light and the immortal things of life experiences in the earth.” (2938-1) The immortal things of life may be found while incarnate in this world through a oneness of purpose that brings patience, and patience awakens our soul with all its perceptive abilities—such as seeing angels, fairies, and the normally invisible. Our soul and its mind have the extra-sensory perception to see the invisible realms of life and the beings that inhabit them. Cayce taught that the seemingly psychic senses necessary to see and hear angels, fairies, sprites, brownies, gnomes, leprechauns, the “little people,” elves, spirits, and for that matter the souls of passed-on loved ones, are the natural senses of the soul! (3744-2) The more we become awakened to our soul, our spirit, the more we naturally see and hear beyond the rigidly physical world. In this same discourse, Cayce explains that our soul and its mind can and will use the five senses of our body’s as well as its psychic-senses.
Almost as important as our having a greater capacity to see the invisible is the comfort felt by the invisibles when we approach them with an awakened soul and mind. More on how we may develop greater perception will be covered in Chapter 10.
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Angels and the Heavens
These days, many of us think that there is one heaven and two types of angelic beings: angels and archangels. But it was not considered so in classical times when it was believed there were seven heavens and nine different “choirs” or “orders” of angels, each composed of distinctly different angelic beings. Let’s explore the classical view of the heavens and angels.
The Heavens
“In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.” (Genesis 1:1) (Here “heavens” is the Hewbrew word shamayim, which has a dual meaning comparable in English to “the lofts” or “lofty places,” likely referring to the dual realms of the visible sky and then the ether of celestial regions beyond the sky. Most every translation of this Bible verse uses the plural “heavens” except for the King James.) In all translations of the Bible, this opening line clearly indicates that there are heavens, not simply a heaven. We acknowledge this in our language; for example, when a person says, “I was in seventh heaven,” he means that he was the happiest he could be, because the seventh heaven is the highest heaven in lore and legend. The mystical Jewish texts that make up the Kabbalah detail these seven heavens and give insight into how one may traverse them while incarnate in this world. In other words, one does not have to die to experience the heavens. The disciple Paul revealed this when he wrote, “I know a man in Christ who fourteen years ago . . . was caught up even to the third heaven.” (II Corinthians, 12:2) Paul was speaking of himself about an experience he had while incarnate.
In Kabbalah’s Merkabah mysticism—based on the visions of Ezekiel, Isaiah, and Daniel and found in Hekhalot writings—these teachings instruct how one may ascend to and through the heavens by meditative practices, passing from one level of heaven to another, finally entering through the “seven palaces” in the “seventh heaven” to the very “throne of God.”
Curiously, Cayce’s metaphysical discourses agree with the teachings of Merkabah. This name means “chariots” and is a metaphor for heavenly “vehicles” that enable us to make passage through the heavens. The ancient Egyptians had the same concept but used boats to traverse the heavens. In the following Cayce discourse, the three-dimensional imagery of chariots shifts to fourth-dimensional states of consciousness. An angelic being is speaking through Cayce’s trance-state body. Notice how the angelic being uses a three-dimensional object, “the Throne,” but then gives the fourth-dimensional description: “threshold of Universal Consciousness.” Here’s the Cayce discourse:
. . . no one approaches the Throne—or the threshold of universal consciousness—without that purpose of either lifting self to that consciousness or bringing us [heavenly angels] down to their own ideal . . . Then why, even I [a heavenly angel], should I make thee falter, or why should one seek less than the Gods of Glory?
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There are two comments in this reading that need elaboration: 1) From the perspective of the angel speaking through or being channeled by Cayce, we are to lift ourselves up through the heavens to the “Throne” of God or Universal Consciousness, for the other way—bringing heaven down to us—does not help awaken us to grow toward our destiny with our infinite Creator. 2) This guidance from the angel also touches on the often-ignored teaching that we are gods—sons and daughters of the Most High—as written in Psalm 82:6 (KJV): “I have said, Ye are gods, all of you are children of the most High.” And even Jesus referred us to this passage by an answer he gave to the Pharisees in the gospel of John 10:33-34 (KJV): “’For a good work we stone thee not; but for blasphemy; and because that thou, being a man, makest thyself God.’” “Jesus answered them, ‘Is it not written in your law, I said, Ye are gods?’” Jesus is referring to the line in Psalm 82.
Given our present condition and circumstances, I realize how difficult it is for us to think we could possibly be gods. It may help us if we use the ancient Egyptian term: godlings. We are godlings of the great God; the one supreme God conceived us in His/Her image as recorded in chapter one of Genesis: “And God said, ‘Let us make man in our image, after our likeness . . .’ And so God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them.” (Genesis 1:26-27, KJV) Of course this was not the physical creation of our bodily existence that came later in chapter 2: “And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul.” (Genesis СКАЧАТЬ