Let us suppose, for the sake of example, that on a certain Monday, your affairs are in such a condition that, humanly speaking, certain consequences are sure to follow before the end of the week. These may be legal consequences, perhaps of a very unpleasant nature following upon some decision of the courts; or a physician may decide that a perilous operation will be necessary. Now, if someone can raise the consciousness of the harassed individual above the limitations of the physical plane then the conditions on that plane will change, and, in some unforeseen and normally impossible manner, the legal tragedy will melt away, and to the advantage, be it noted, of all parties to the case; or the patient will be healed instead of having to undergo the operation.
In other words, miracles, in the popular sense of the word, can and do happen as the result of a change of consciousness, and a change of consciousness is usually accomplished through prayer. Thus prayer does change things.
For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts (Isaiah 55:9).
So, “how does one raise their consciousness?”, we might ask. It is done through contemplating God. Think of God, recognize God’s presence, declare God’s power and claim all God’s blessings. When we turn our thoughts to God and commune with God, then our consciousness is focused there. Because God exists in the spiritual plane, our consciousness rises to that plane instead of the plane here below. The more we think of God, the more we will express that plane into this one. When we express God’s divine will, universal consciousness and Holy Spirit, then we manifest God’s power here. That alone is a miracle, but in this state, we also become the instrument for God’s miracles of all kinds.
Being the miracle,
Stan
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