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Posts Tagged ‘Spiritual’

Peace of Soul

Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you… Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid (John 14:27).

This true, interior soul-peace was known to the mystics as serenity, and they are never tired of telling us that serenity is the grand passport to the Presence of God—the sea as smooth as glass that is round about the Great White Throne. This is not to say that one cannot tackle even the most serious difficulties by prayer without having any serenity at all. But before you can make any true spiritual progress you must achieve serenity; and it is that fundamental tranquility of soul that Jesus refers to by the word peace—the peace that passes all human understanding.

The Peacemakers are those who bring about this peace in their own souls; they surmount limitation and become actually, not merely potentially, the children of God. This condition of mind is the objective at which Jesus aims.

Of course, to be a peacemaker in the usual sense of composing the quarrels of other people is an excellent thing; but, as all practical people know, an excessively difficult role to fill. But once you understand the power of prayer, you will be able to heal many quarrels in the true way; probably without speaking at all. The silent thought of the All-Power of Love and Wisdom will cause trouble to melt away almost imperceptibly. You will become a peacemaker.

Once we truly understand and accept that God’s power and love are always available to all we face each day will yield to that love, then we can experience true serenity. All our doubts, fears and problems will be resolved for our best good when we live according to God’s will. The faith, hope and confidence that flows from our trust in God becomes the foundation for our peace. When we achieve this, we can recognize the Eden around us and are then able to exist there in joy and gladness filled with God’s peace.

In peace,
Z gardener

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Peacemakers

Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God (Matthew 5:9)

To the casual reader this Beatitude might sound like a mere conventional religious generalization, even a sententious platitude. Here we receive an invaluable practical lesson in the art of prayer—and prayer is our only means of returning to communion with God. As a matter of fact, prayer is the only real action in the full sense of the word, because prayer is the only thing that changes one’s character. When such a change takes place, you become a different person and, therefore, for the rest of your life you act in a different way. If you should get a very strong realization of the presence of God with you, it would make a very great and dramatic change in your character, so that, in the twinkling of an eye your outlook, your habits, your whole life would completely change. Many such cases are on record, including cases of what used to be called “conversion.” Because the change is radical, Jesus refers to it as being “born again.”

The great essential for success in obtaining that sense of the Presence of God is that we first attain some degree of true peace of mind.

How do we achieve peace of mind? It begins with prayer. Effective prayer requires that we actively seek God’s presence in the present moment. To do this one must separate one’s self from the material world, address God and invoke God’s presence.
One method that works for the author is this. Breathe deeply and ask God to relax the body, release all tensions and earthly concerns while lifting our spirits, hearts, minds, consciousness and wills (attitude, feelings, thoughts, awareness and desires). Then ask God to enable us to demonstrate God’s Holy Spirit, divine will and universal consciousness and express them (press out) in th e material world through God’s grace. This prepares our body and mind for communion with God.
Next, we should express our gratitude and thanks to God for all our spiritual and material blessings. Then we should confess our sins to God, take personal responsibility for them, forgive those who have hurt us and ask forgiveness for ourselves. CONFESSION IS THE GATEWAY TO FORGIVENESS WHICH IS THE BEGINNING OF PEACE.
Once we have faced our failings, asked forgiveness and forgiven others, our hearts are cleansed and we will attain true peace of mind and are then prepared to be in the presence of God and in communion with mankind. Then we can turn our burdens over to God with a grateful and hopeful heart. Then we can visualize with confidence a day or an eternity in peace. Then we can enter and live in the joy and gladness of the Eden God created for us.

In peace,
Z gardener

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Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life (Proverbs 4:23).

Most people, and learned people especially, have all kinds of knowledge that does not in the least affect or improve their practical lives. Doctors know all about hygiene, but often live in an unhealthy way, notwithstanding; and philosophers, who are acquainted with the accumulated wisdom of the ages, and assent to most of it, continue to do foolish and stupid things in their own personal lives. Now, knowledge such as this is only opinion, or head knowledge, as some people call it. It has to become heart knowledge, or to be incorporated into the subconscious, before it can really change one. The modern psychologists in their efforts to “re-educate the subconscious” have the right idea, though they have not yet discovered the true method of doing so, which is by single-minded prayer, or the Practice of the Presence of God.

Jesus, of course, thoroughly understood all this, and that is why he stresses the fact that we have to be pure in heart.

All the world’s accumulated knowledge has not made our hearts any purer. Nor has it defiled us. Both purity and defilement come from within and both are linked directly to our relationship with God or the lack of it. All that we know and all that we believe consciously have little or no impact on our true selves until we feel it in our core and act on it in our outer lives. First our hearts must be pure so that what we express into the world is pure and undefiled. The only way to a pure heart is through communion with God. Human nature presents barriers and obstacles to purity that alone we can not overcome. In order to “keep our hearts with diligence” we must give them to God. Then we will be living in our Gardens with pure hearts.

Seeking purity within,
Z gardener

Author’s note – The computer is back and so is the Good Morning Garden. Today’s thought picks up The Beatitudes where the last devotional left off. It is good to be back in the Garden.

Z

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Who Shall See God?

…for they shall see God. In this wonderful Beatitude we are told exactly how this supreme task is to be accomplished and who they are who shall do it. They are the pure in heart. Purity, in its full and complete sense, is recognizing God alone as the only real Cause, and the only real Power in existence. It is what is called elsewhere in the Sermon “the single eye.”

Note that Jesus speaks of the pure in heart. The word heart in the Bible usually means that part of man’s mentality that modern psychology knows under the name of the “subconscious mind.” This is exceedingly important because it is not sufficient for us to accept the Truth with the conscious mind only. At that stage it is still a mere opinion. It is not until it is accepted by the subconscious mind, and thus assimilated into the whole mentality, that it can make any difference in one’s character or life.

…as he thinketh in his heart, so is he (Proverbs 23:7).

Are we going to see God? For believers the real question is “do we have the ‘single eye”‘ described above? Do we believe in our hearts and our subconscious that God is the only cause and true power? If so, then we must examine our lives to determine if these beliefs manifest themselves in our behavior. For instance, on matters of faith or doctrine, do we treat those with which we disagree in ways that denote love and respect for them. Or do we criticize and condemn while organizing others to force our beliefs on those with which we disagree. Do we say “I love you, but I must disagree with you”? Or, do we call names, question motives and condemn their actions? As we search our hearts, let us also search our actions to ensure that they make a positive difference in ours’ and other’s lives and character. Then, and only then, shall we live in the Garden and see God.

Hoping we all see God,
Z gardener

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The Pure in Heart

Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see God (Matthew 5:8).

This is one of those wonderful gnomic sayings in which the Bible is so rich. It is a summing up in a few words of a whole philosophy of religion.

Let us begin by considering what the promise in this Beatitude is. It is nothing less than to see God. To “see” in the sense referred to here, signifies spiritual perception, and spiritual perception is just that capacity to apprehend the true nature of Being that we all so sadly lack.

We live in God’s world, but we do not in the least know it as it is. Heaven, lies all about us—but because we are lacking in spiritual perception, we are unable to recognize it, to experience it, and, therefore, so far as we are concerned, we may be said to be shut out of Heaven.

We are very much in the position of a color-blind man in a beautiful flower garden. All around him are glorious colors; but he sees only blacks, whites, and grays. If we suppose him to be also devoid of the sense of smell, we shall see what a very small part of the glory of the garden exists for him. Yet it is all there, if he could but sense it.

Our task is to surmount these limitations as rapidly as may be, until we reach the point where we can know things as they really are—experience Heaven as it really is. That is what is meant by “seeing God.” To see God is to apprehend Truth as it really is, and this is infinite freedom and perfect bliss.

The day we fully understand and accept this truth is the day we can experience being in the Eden God gave us. When we, with God’s help, have overcome our human limitations, we can then live each day in our Gardens.

Seeking understanding,
Stan

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Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness: for they shall be filled (Matthew 5:6).

Righteousness is another of the key words of the Bible, one of those keys that the reader must have in his possession if he is to get at the true meaning of the book. Like earth and meek and comfort, it is used in a special and definite sense. Righteousness means not merely right conduct, but right thinking. In the Sermon on the Mount, every clause reiterates the truth that outer things are but consequences. As within, so without.

When people awaken to a knowledge of these truths, they naturally begin to apply them in their own lives. Realizing at last the vital importance of “righteousness” they begin immediately to try to p ut their house in order. The principle involved is simple, but unfortunately the exemplifying of it is anything but easy. Now, why should this be so? The answer lies in the potency of habit; and habits of thinking are at once the most subtle and the most difficult to break.

Perhaps failure to achieve righteousness is the failure of half-heartedness; you long but not too deeply. Your hunger and thirst do not rise from a sense of total need. Have a mental stocktaking or a review of your life. It could not happen that a wholehearted search for truth and righteousness, if persevered in, should not be crowned with success. God is not mocked, nor does He mock His children.

How can we seek truth and righteousness in the outer world, when we refuse to accept it within us. Of course, we can’t. It is much easier to say what is wrong with the world than to say what is wrong with ourselves. Yet with out that internal accounting of our inner righteousness, there can be no outer peace. Our environments will reflect our inner feelings and motivations more surely than our words and deeds. When we can not live and go forward without truth and righteousness within and without, then God will fill us with it.

In hunger,
Z gardener

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As Meek As Moses

Moses—who overcame the old age belief to the extent of manifesting the physical body of a young man in the prime of life when, according to the calendar, he was one hundred and twenty years old, and then transcended matter altogether, or “dematerialized” without dying—was known preeminently for this quality; “as meek as Moses.” Apart from his own personal demonstration, Moses also did a marvelous work for his whole nation, getting it out of Egyptian bondage in the face of incredible difficulties. Moses had an open mind, ready to be taught new things and new ways of thinking and working. He was not, in the beginning at least, free from serious faults of character, but he gradually rose above these defects as the new truth worked in his soul.

Moses thoroughly understood that to conform oneself rigorously to the will of God, far from involving the loss of any good, could only mean a better and more splendid life. He did not, therefore, think of his task as self-sacrifice, for he knew it to be the highest form of self-glorification—the glorification of God.

…the Father that dwelleth in me, he doeth the works…I am in the Father, and the Father is in me (John 14:10-11).

There is a marvelous Oriental saying that “meekness compels God himself.”

When we empty out our self-centered consciousness and open ourselves to God’s universal consciousness, we are performing the ultimate act of meekness. When we release our human spirit and allow God’s Holy Spirit to fill us we become meek. When we adopt God’s divine will and abandon our human will, God’s power will mani fest itself through our meekness. to paraphrase an old saying, “meekness is next to Godliness”.

Seeking meekness,
Z gardener

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Inheriting the Earth

Let us see how we are to go about inheriting the earth. This Beatitude says that dominion, that is, power over the conditions of our lives, is to be obtained in a certain way, by nothing less than meekness.

The word meek in the Bible connotes a mental attitude for which there is no other single word available. It is a combination of open-mindedness, faith in God, and the realization that the will of God for us is always something joyous and interesting and vital. This state of mind also includes a perfect willingness to allow this will of God to come about in whatever way divine Wisdom considers to be best, rather than in some particular way that we have chosen for ourselves.

This mental attitude of teachableness, willingness to be led, is the key to dominion, or success in demonstration. There is no word for it in common speech, because the thing does not exist except for those who are up on the spiritual basis of the20teaching of Jesus Christ. If we desire to inherit the earth we must absolutely acquire this “meekness.”

The Lord reigneth; let the earth rejoice…(Psalm 97:1).

Another aspect of meekness is acceptance of God’s will and sublimation of self-will. We will only express the full power of God when we fully become attuned to and demonstrate God’s will. When we are open to God and willing to be a vehicle for God’s will, our meekness allows God to manifest through us. This is dominion through obedience. It begins by giving all power to God and finds full expression through God expressing himself through us. It brings new meaning to the term passive aggressive. It really means being passive to our will and active toward God’s will. Although this is exactly contrary to human nature, God gives us dominion through attunement to our divine nature, not through force of our will.

In tune,
Z gardener

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Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth (Matthew 5:5).

On the surface, this Beatitude seems to be contradicted by the facts of everyday life. But either Jesus knew what he was talking about, and is to be taken seriously, or his teaching should be dropped altogether. If he is to be relied upon, then let us pay him the compliment of assuming that he knew best about the art of living.

The fact is that when correctly understood, the teaching of Jesus is found to be the most practicable of all doctrines; and the whole essence of his teaching and of its application is summed up in this text. When you possess the spiritual meaning of this text you have the secret of dominion—the secret of overcoming every kind of difficulty.

We notice that there are two polar words in the text—meek and earth. First of all, the word earth in the Bible really means the whole of your outer experience, and to “inherit the earth” means to have dominion over that outer experience. So we see that when the Bible talks about possessing the earth, governing the earth, making the earth glorious, it is referring to the conditions of our lives, from our bodily health outward to the farthest point in our affairs. So this text undertakes to tell us how we may possess, or govern, or be masters of our environment.

How are we exercising dominion over “our earth”? Are our lives filled with hope, joy and gladness? Do we live in the Eden God gave us, or in a world filled with fear, anxiety and despair? The beatitudes set out the guideposts for life in the garden, even in the midst of the world’s troubles. If we are to govern our world and be masters of our environment, we must do so from within. We must seek and understand God’s will and pleasure within first, and then apply those same principals without. Then we will be following the guideposts and then we will possess, have dominion over all and will be masters of “our individual earths”.

Working from within,
Z gardener

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Comfort for mourning

Blessed are they that mourn: for they shall be comforted (Matthew 5:4).

Mourning or sorrow is not in itself a good thing, for the will of God is that everyone should experience happiness and joyous success. Jesus says:
…I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly (John 10:10).

Nevertheless, trouble and suffering are often extremely useful, because many people will not bother to learn the Truth until driven to do so by sorrow and failure. Sorrow then becomes relatively a good thing. Sooner or later every human being will have to discover the truth about God, and make his own contact with Him at first hand. He will have to acquire the understanding of Truth, which will set him free, once and for all, from our three-dimensional limitations and their concomitants—sin, sickness, and death. There is really n o need for man to have trouble, because if he will only seek God first, the trouble need never come. He always has the choice of learning by spiritual unfoldment or of learning by painful experience. Family troubles, quarrels and estrangements, sin and remorse, need never come at all if we seek first the Kingdom of God and Right Understanding; but if we will not do so, then come they must, and for us this mourning will be a blessing in disguise, for through it we shall be “comforted.” And by comfort the Bible means the experience of the Presence of God, which is the end of all mourning.

The good news is that we have command over sorrow and failure. The bad news is that we have responsibility for sorrow and failure. The reality is that joy, success and peace is really up to us and the responsibility for it is upon us. But take heart, we are not alone in this. When we seek God and become the people we are intended to be, we avoid most sorrow and failure, while finding contentment, happiness and joy. And, even when we do encounter setbacks or loss, we will navigate our way through it in peace and emerge better for it. For it is written “I am come that that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.” We hold the keys that open the gates of Eden…we just have to use them.

Turning the key,
Z gardener

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