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Archive for January, 2013

Ye have heard that it was said by them of old time, Thou shalt not kill; and whosoever shall kill shall be in danger of the judgment:
But I say unto you, That whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause shall be in danger of the judgment: and whosoever shall say to his brother, Raca, shall be in danger of the council; but whosoever shall say, Thou fool, shall be in danger of hell fire(Matthew 5:21-22).
The Old Law said “Thou shalt not kill,” but Jesus says that even to want to kill, nay, even to be angry with your brother, is sufficient to keep you out of the Kingdom of Heaven. It was a distinct gain when primitive people could be persuaded not to murder but to develop sufficient self-control to master their anger. Spiritual demonstration demands that anger itself be overcome. It is simply not possible to get any experience of God worth talking about, or to exercise spiritual power until you have gotten rid of resentment and condemnation. You can have either your demonstration or your indignation, but you cannot have both.
Let us today release all the thoughts, words and attitudes that separate us from our gardens. Then we will walk in the Kingdom of God each day with joy and gratefulness.
Walking with joy,
Z gardener

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Striving for Perfection

            What of the person who is conscious of considerable moral imperfection, perhaps of the habit of grave sin, and is at the same time sincerely desirous of spiritual growth? Is that person to relinquish the quest for spiritual knowledge until he has first reformed his conduct? By no means. As a matter of fact any attempt to improve himself morally without spiritual aid is foredoomed to failure. The thing to do is to pray regularly and to throw the responsibility for success upon God.
The person must carry on, no matter how many times they may fail. Let them keep affirming that God is helping them, and that their own real nature is spiritual and perfect. In this way moral regeneration and spiritual unfoldment will go hand in hand. The Christian life does not require that we possess perfection of character, or else, which of us would be able to live it? What it does require is honest, genuine striving for that perfection.
…he that is perfect in knowledge is with thee (Job 36:4).
Perfection is an ideal, not a humanly achievable goal. But, we are to strive for perfection, knowing we will fall short in this world. Perfection is a direction toward which we should point our compass, it is not the path we tread on our journey. We will attain our best good if we keep our course pointed in the direction of perfection.
Direction perfection,
Z gardener

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Coming of Age

Coming of Age
            As you grow in spiritual power and understanding you will find that many outer regulations will become unnecessary; but this will be because you have really risen above them. This point in your development, where your understanding of Truth enables you to dispense with certain outer props and regulations, is the spiritual coming of age.
However, this spiritual coming of age cannot be hurried or forced, but must appear when the consciousness is ready, exactly as the flowering of a bulb can only be the result of natural growth. You have to demonstrate where you are. To seek to demonstrate beyond your understanding is not spiritual. Fix your attention upon spiritual things, and without consciously trying to make haste you will be amazed to discover the pace at which your soul has hastened.
To take a simple example: Suppose that in a street accident you find that a man has severed an artery and the blood is spurting out. The normal course is that unless this bleeding is stopped the victim will die. Now, what is the spiritual attitude to take in such a case? Claim the ability of God to heal. If your faith is strong enough the severed artery will immediately be healed. But if your faith fails, you must take the usual steps to save the man’s life by immediately improvising a tourniquet, or whatever the proper procedure may be, still claiming divine aid.
Let us hold fast the profession of our faith without wavering; (for he is faithful that promised) …(Hebrews 10:23).
Let us all pray for divine intervention while we work unceasingly with our hearts and our hands to do our part of the job.
Working unceasingly,
Z gardener

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As A Man Thinketh

Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil.
For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled (Matthew 5:17-18).
A“jot” or yod was the smallest letter in the Hebrew alphabet, like the Greek “iota.” A “tittle” (really “little horn”) is one of those tiny spurs or projections that distinguish certain Hebrew letters.
The scribes and the Pharisees were for the most part worthy men leading strictly moral lives according to appearances. Their faults were the weaknesses of the religious formalist everywhere—spiritual pride and self-righteousness. Of these faults they were unconscious—that is the deadly malice of these diseases of the soul—but they did strive to fulfil the law, as they understood it. Jesus knew this, and he gave them credit for it. Here he warns his followers that unless their practical conduct is better than that of these people, they need not suppose that they are engaged on the spiritual path.
Any religious leader, scholar or believer who follows the law while sacrificing its premises of love, tolerance, forgiveness, grace and mercy has failed to follow God’s will. No matter how pious, devout and upright they appear, their spiritual blindness has led them astray; and they are unaware that they are lost. This fits the old saying of “the blind leading the blind”.
Let nothing lead your astray from love, peace and joy. We must follow in spirit, the intent of God’s law as well as the words. Then we will be on the true course to our gardens.
On course,
Z gardener

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Exceeding Righteousness

Read Matthew 5:17-20.
If anyone were so insane as to suppose that the knowledge of the Truth of Being could put him“above” the moral law, in the sense of authorizing him to break it, he would speedily discover that he had made a tragic mistake. The more spiritual knowledge that one possesses, the more severe is the punishment which one brings upon oneself by any infraction of the moral law. The Christian has to be very much more careful than other people. Indeed, all real spiritual understanding must necessarily be accompanied by definite moral improvement. A theoretical acceptance of the letter of Truth might go with moral carelessness (greatly to the peril of the delinquent), but it is impossible to make any real spiritual progress unless you are trying your very best to live the life. It is impossible to divorce true spiritual knowledge from right conduct.
For I say unto you, That except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven(Matthew 5:20).
Right conduct is the fruit of spiritual knowledge. If our conduct does not match our spirituality then we are only intellectually accepting the truth of being. We must believe in the truth of being as much as we believe in gravity. When we do, our conduct will unerringly produce true righteousness. Just as we would not think of walking off a skyscraper, we would never consider violating the truth of being.
Those who profess faith, yet act without love, charity, tolerance, forgiveness, etc are held to a higher standard than those ignorant of the truth. So beware, if one chooses spirituality, one best be prepared to live it.
The good news is that the truth of being is ever available to all without regard for status, position or power. It will free us from the prison of sensory and intellectual limitation we have imposed on ourselves. Break free today. Accept the truth and live it. Unlock the garden God gave us as a place to live in truth, peace and joy. The key is in our hands.
Doing right,
Z gardener

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Being Lifted Up

And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto me (John 12:32).
Never try to force other people to accept spiritual truth. Instead, see to it that they are so favorably impressed by your own life and conduct, and by the peace and joy that radiate from you, that they will come running to you of their own accord, begging you to give them the wonderful thing that you have. To do this is to make your soul truly the city upon a hill that cannot be hidden because it is the City of God. This is to let your light shine to the glorifying of your Father which is in Heaven.
Each of us have been around someone whose life and conduct radiate peace and joy. In the author’s case, his Mother was such a light. Although she went to her reward yesterday, her light still shines like the city on the hill. Let us each day arise and shine so that peace and joy will light the lives of all those we touch.
“Arise, shine: for your light has come, and the glory of the Lord has risen upon you… Lift up your eyes and look around: they all gather together, they come to you;  your sons shall come from far away, and your daughters shall be carried on their  nurses arms. Then you shall see and be radiant; your heart shall thrill and  rejoice.” Isaiah 60: 1-6.
Rising to shine,
Z gardener

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THE SHINING LIGHT

Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven (Matthew 5:16).
The state of your soul is always expressed in your outer conditions and in the intangible influence that you radiate at large. There is a cosmic law that nothing can permanently deny its own nature. Emerson said: “what you are shouts so loudly that I cannot hear what you say.” The soul that is built upon prayer cannot be hidden, it shines out brightly through the life that it lives. It speaks for itself, but in utter silence, and does much of its best work unconsciously. Its mere presence heals and blesses all around it.
We are told in the Bible to “keep our wicks trimmed and our lamps full of oil”. This means should keep our inner lamp bright and full of  fuel. We do this by following God’s will within, so that our light shines without. Nothing can hide this light when it shines, and nothing can replace it, when it does not.
So today, let us think, speak and act in ways so that our inner light is bright, strong and permanent. Then we will light, not only our own Eden, but also everyone’s garden whom we touch.
Shine one,
Z gardener
Author’s Note: A new family joins us in the Garden today. They live their faith each day and spread true light to all they touch. We are blessed to have them in the Garden.
Best,
Z

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SALT AND LIGHT

            Read Matthew 5:13-16.
In the fifth chapter of Matthew are recorded some of the most powerful pronouncements of Jesus.
Ye are the salt of the earth…Ye are the light of the world (Matthew 5:13-14).
It is possible, and, in fact, only too easy, to accept these vital principles as being true; to love the beauty in them; and yet not to put them consistently into practice in one’s own life; but this is a perilous attitude, for in that case the salt has lost its savor, and is good for nothing but to be cast out and trodden underfoot.
If you make every effort to practice the teachings of Jesus in every department of your own daily life; if you seek systematically to destroy in yourself selfishness, pride, vanity, sensuality, self-righteousness, jealousy, self-pity, resentment, condemnation, and so forth—not feeding or nourishing them by giving in to them; if you extend the right thought loyally to every person within your ken, then you are worthy to be called the salt of the earth.
If you truly live this life, then not only will you make your own demonstration, in the quickest possible time, but you will be, in a very positive sense, a healing and illumining influence on all around you. You will be a blessing to men and women in remote places and times, men and women of whom you have never heard, and who will never hear of you—a light of the world.
Often, we don’t feel like being a light and don’t care if we have lost our salt. These are the times that challenge us to remember who we are. We are not created to be selfish, vain, resentful, etc. We are children of God created to bring illumination and experience peace. When we remember who we really are, then we will want to be a light and to be the salt that flavors our existence.
May we each raise our light and be the children of God.
Lighting up,
Z gardener

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   We often hear the expression “saluting the Christ in him,” or “seeing the Christ in him,” and we may well ask ourselves what that phrase really means. It is simply the practical application of the rule of Jesus Christ.
Judge not according to the appearance, but judge righteous judgment (John 7:24).
Each of us has a divine Self that is spiritual and perfect but that is never seen on this plane. That is the true man, God’s man, and is what we sometimes call “the Christ within.” Now whenever you dwell upon or realize the presence of the Christ within yourself or within anyone else, outer appearances begin at once to improve. If somebody displeases you, silently salute the Christ in him. If someone says something against John Smith’s character, salute the Christ in him, refuse to discuss the matter, and of course do not repeat it.
The more often you salute the Christ in others, the sooner you will find Him in yourself.
When we look for the Christ in others, we manifest the Christ in us. When we treat others as Christ would  we demonstrate Christ in the world. When we create Edens for those we touch, we live in Eden with them.
Seeing and demonstrating Christ in the world,
Z gardener

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            What has your religion done for you? For years probably, you have been attending church, reading spiritual books, studying the Bible. Now I suggest that you have a spiritual stocktaking. Ask yourself what difference religion has made in your life, in                                                your home, in your affairs. How much peace of mind has it given you? How much courage? How much understanding? How much opportunity for service? For, make no mistake, real religion does give all these things.
If your spiritual stocktaking does not turn out to be satisfactory, I believe that you will find the explanation to lie in the following law: What you put into your religion, that you get out of it.
If you put in 5 percent of yourself, you will receive a 5 percent dividend or demonstration. If you put in 20 percent of yourself, you will receive a 20 percent demonstration. Complete returns call for a 100 percent investment.
Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might…(Ecclesiastes 9:10).
The New Year is a perfect time for stock-taking. When it comes to our faith, allow me to paraphrase a great leader. “Ask not what your religion can do for you, ask what you can do for your religion”. If we are only willing to do part of our job for our faith, then we will limit that which our faith will do for us.
May each of us have a year filled with faith, hope, love and peace.
Happy New Year,
Z gardener

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