
In the 90s I went into severe depression. It may have been a case of dark nights of the soul. But I have awakened. I have no ambition to liken myself to Van Gogh not to Albert Camus.
Ever Lent I have chosen to view the Passion and the Resurrection from a different perspective. According to M. Tamura:
“Every time a soul is born into the earth, God dies giving that life, entering the material world to give that soul a body. Spirit must relinquish infinity for the finite, eternity for the terminal and immortality for the mortal.”
Like Rabbi Darfour, I don’t like anthropomorphizing God but I can’t help imagining how suffocating it must be for expansive Spirit to be contained within the confines of a body. For a lifetime, spirit must be limited to mundane thoughts; Spirit must be imprisoned in time and space; Spirit must contend with separation when it naturally thrives in oneness.
On oneness Esther Hicks has this to say:
“…Before your physical birth, you were vibrationally intertwined with Source, or with what humans oten call God but the full integration of you with God was such that there was no relationship between the two – because you wer all one.”
“Zero Limits” says :
“… you are created in the image of the divine. That means you were created void on one side of the coin and infinite. As soon as you are willing o let go of trash and be empty, then immediately what happens is inspiration fills your being and now you are born free.”
M. Tamura says:
“As we awaken our consciousness and grow in this field, so too our God-seed grows until we finally harvest the totality of divinity from this field.”
“In a sense, we resurrect God with our expanding awareness and love, little by little from our unconscious.”