Ahh but also full of light!

On 20 June, 03:09, rigsy03 <[email protected]> wrote:
> An open mind can be drafty. :-)
>
> On Jun 19, 9:24 am, puppy <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> >                                                Clarification and Being
> >                                             Orlando Lujan Martinez,
> > IWA
>
> >       Jean-Yves Leloup, mystic, theologian and scholar, book The
> > Gospels of Mary Magdalene is a thought provoking.   It is a book with
> > wisdom for believers, skeptics, agnostics and atheists. Jean-Yves
> > Leloup has written a stunning commentary on the ancient Gnostic text.
> >        One of the proverbs from the Gospel of Mary Magdalene.:  The
> > teacher(God) answered:  "All that is born, all that is created, all
> > the elements of nature are inter-woven and united with each other.
> > All that is composed will decompose; everything returns to the roots;
> > matter returns to the order of matter: "
> >    These words, written 2,000 years ago, are not religious dogma,
> > linguistic meanderings or rhetoric, but ancient knowledge which
> > coincides with what science knows to be true today.  Here science and
> > spiritually meet and separate at the same time: because science does
> > not yet fully agree, with the spiritual dimension of the proverbs.
> >       The Gospels of Mary Magdalene say:  'That the teachers (God)
> > words are the beginning of the return to being fully human and
> > discovering the real world and the wisdom of God which are also the
> > words of ancient wisdom."
>
> >    Leloup writes: “Everything returns to its roots; matter returns to
> > the original matter.  All evolution involves a return.  To return is
> > not to go back--rather to go forward.....  It is a return to the place
> > that is our origin and our destiny....We return to the Source and the
> > beginning."
>
> >    The Gospels of Mary Magdalene are about a Kingdom we can know as
> > living beings in this world.  The knowledge is meant to re-interrogate
> > humans with theirselves so they can become fully human and above the
> > illusions, attachments and the suffering brought to life through the
> > seven deadly sins of:  pride, lust, envy anger, covetousness,
> > gluttony, and sloth.  Which are  present, and the motives, in the
> > greater sins of genocide, wars, murder, fraud, violence, pedophilia,
> > rape and the sins of skepticism. pessimism and cynicism which are the
> > final disillusionment.  For God says:  There are no sins.  It is man
> > that makes sin exist.
>
> >        Leloup writes:  “Through the poor use of our senses,
> > intelligence, and emotions, these faculties have become disoriented-
> > they have lost there orient, that is to say, their attunment with the
> > Being that is at the heart of all impermanence, transitory phenomena
> > of the world.  It is only this disorientation that enables us to
> > pervert ourselves, society, and the universal order itself.”  As we
> > have noticed in the turmoil of our senses and in the world.  Leloup writes: 
> > “Furthermore the Kingdom that is spoken of in The
>
> > Gospels of Mary Magdalene  must not be confused with the return to
> > some sort of lost paradise or a state of consciousness.  Rather it is
> > the awakening to this very dimension of Being that is the source of
> > our existence now, and of the mystery of there being something instead
> > of nothing."- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
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