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Blessings and love, impartial love, God as love, and the Buddha *** |
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To unite the opposites of spirit and flesh is to link the subject and object, the in and the out, and so to integrate all aspects of the One- in, and of, and as yourself- and so to become a Buddha, a greater vehicle of the all.
…I came to send blessings out into this entire realm.[2]
While attaining to the crystal clear, laser-sharp Buddha consciousness, we can also maintain connection to the God and Goddess energy which is involved in this world, remaining in union with these forces, and therefore continue to do the work of a Bodhisattva. This requires faith, not fear.
Love is the space within in which another can grow.
The new union has happened, the Kingdom has come to earth. This is Love. Impartial Love. One. Now the earth is Christ.
People become your perspective of them. That is what love can do. To love is to create love.
This is because there is no force greater in the universe than love.
To feel the oneness is easier by feeling the space which permeates all existence. Considering the fact that even the densest of matter is composed almost entirely of space it is easier to feel the space that is all.[3]
Love is the only force that will keep a spirit on earth. Even gravity is powerless to hold an unloved spirit in life, in the flesh. For love is life.
Because without love we are dead, deader than death itself; no one is deader than a living person with no love inside of them.
By loving myself I have been healed back to God, for God is love.
To give up all expectations and desires, is to become characterless, and so to enter the formless so as to pour forth love onto the form. There is no greater emptiness than Love, for Love contains everything, and therefore is the limitless, formless substratum upholding the limited, evolving form.
[2] “The true Samana, he who is seeking the way to the Brahma World, lets his mind pervade all quarters of the world with thoughts of Love…” Buddha (quoted in A Buddhist Bible, p71)
[3] It is stated in physics that if we imagine a common housefly- representing the nucleus of an atom, and contains by far the greatest portion of the mass of an atom- to be sitting in the middle of a giant stadium, while the electrons orbit the outside periphery of that stadium, we will understand the proper space/matter ratio composing all atoms, and thus all things; we and our world, like the cosmos we call 'space', are compose for the most part of emptiness.
*** These fragments and quotes are taken from the unpublished writings of Jack Haas, selected from the notebooks 1990-2005. |
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