Superior Index Go to the next: Chapter 28
Print Files: A4 Size.
The words, "How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation," inspire Me to eulogize the Divine Inheritance of Man:
The narrow spectrum of men's consciousness, squeezed at times between the jaws of a magnificent ego, seems to strike toward diminution rather than the expected and necessary God-expansion. How can We say to the shrinking man, "Thy kingdom is diminished," when his own modest satisfactions are content to exist in the void of ignorance. The signs of the times are not read by those who need them the most; and yet, I see an expanding remnant of Freedom's lovers, who shall not let the root or stalk of the Flower of Freedom vanish from the earth.
The charity of the Saints is sought in secret by many a heart whose exterior brashness might indicate thoughtlessness or a lack of sensitivity. But let none deceive themselves. The time is come when men must stand up and be counted. This does not mean that they need rashly rush forth, ill prepared, on behalf of an unworthy cause, fought for those unworthy to receive the warrior's services.
My Minutemen and those who are alert to the signs of the times will take note, even without having it called to their attention, of the continuing struggle for Freedom. The strong of heart and wise of mind will know that Freedom is won on many levels. It is not alone a battle between nation and nation, but it is often a struggle within the confines of a man's own world and thoughts.
Remember, O Precious Ones, that the winning of your personal Victory is always a contribution to the total planetary Victory. The beauty in God's own Eye, the Lightness of His Concepts for each Man, must be harnessed and drawn through the individual until achievement and effort trade the wasted hours for a thing of beauty forever.
The most delicate problems of Oriental/Occidental relations are no more enigmatic than the racial problems in America. In the Name of Holy Justice I say, wrongs have been done on all sides; but when a wrong is righted it ought not to be remembered except as an example of Man's virtue in making it right.
Now, redress in matters most grievous, having endured through the decades and centuries, eats into many hearts and callouses many areas of honesty. The inevitable triumph of right and justice is not for and on behalf of any one segment of Man's society, but for and on behalf of all. You cannot mete out justice to one man and injustice to another from the same tribunal and remain a pillar on behalf of Freedom. The dust of international injustices must also be removed. The trafficking in human lives, whereby the virtues of the world literally die on the vine of Hope, as commercial exploitation sacks huge segments of the world's population, must be abandoned in favor of the Golden Rule.
Upon this historic occasion and in memory of perpetual Freedom for mankind, I say once again, the simple statement, "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you," is the Golden Rule which can bring forth Freedom in this day, making it the Golden Age of the present rather than the future, if men will pledge their Life's Energies to the wheel of human progress.
In all of My Baconian and Shakespearean words I sought to quicken the Holy Breath of Freedom within men's hearts and minds and so do to the present hour. Yet even the scarlet line that was cast from the window of Rahab, the harlot, had to be symbolically interpreted in faith by those who seized the city. Our words, then, must be understood and acted upon. Prayer and Cosmic Decree must go hand in hand.
I remain your Cosmic Advocate of the Planet,