THE ANSWER FOR |
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QUESTION |
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TWO |
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RETURN TO |
esus |
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| THE QUESTION: I guess the next logical question would be for you to explain your presence; how can I be assured that you are actually this man called Jesus ? |
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THE ANSWER: I was confident that this question was going to be asked and I'm still not quite sure just how to approach it in a manner that is both understandable and equally acceptable. Perhaps I should begin with simply explaining what this interview is not. There appears to be many individuals in your world today who believe in this psychic phenomenon called channeling and that would necessarily require a bogus reality in which the individual spirit somehow survives death. There is indeed, a logical explanation for man's many and varied concepts of immortality of what is often interpreted or understood as the survival of the individual soul or spirit, but the true explanation isn’t found within some realm of religious belief or spiritualism, which explains why it is just another contrived mythology of both ancient and modern metaphysicians. There does, however, exist within each of us, and most certainly just outside the grasp of the consciousness of most individuals, vast memories that have been passed on to the individual through countless generations of ancestors. Carl Jung had touched upon this very concept and did so rather well even without the knowledge or the benefit of the present-day understanding of genetic materials and realities. This stored genetic memory along with the infinite volumes of recorded history can be combined and justly synthesized in any individual who earnestly seeks the truth without the narrowly dictated confines of some secular or religious moral authority. It was precisely this intellectual and spiritual mindset of Martin Luther that gave rise to his own profound realization that the often-practiced beliefs and moral authority of the Roman Catholic Church was in no way a true and accurate representation of the actual teachings that I had once so simply postulated. Martin Luther had access only to the then religious writings of the Catholic Church, which were in large part the source of his then revolutionary insights, but what he did not have because of the age in which he was born were the additional and vast discoveries of modern-day science. One could easily conclude that Martin Luther accurately identified the oh so many problems with the unrealistic teachings, doctrines and beliefs of his church, but he simply did not have all of the answers due to no fault on his part. This dynamic yet concise concept of "the Age of Reality" has within its intellectual as well as spiritual dimensions the profound need to make certain corrections to the many misconstrued concepts, beliefs and mythologies that have so confined the spiritual growth and intellectual freedom of mankind. Even I had the notion that it was only in the revealing of the truth that one could actually achieve the real and only true salvation of the individual. I had also the intuitive and full realization that the intellectual and spiritual state of mankind at that precise time was still in its infancy, and that is why I could have predicted that after I was long gone, "greater things shall ye do." If I was this divine being that so many believe me to be, then I don't suppose that any man could ever hope to outdo the gods. The revealing of the truth has always appeared to being necessarily painful and especially for those who have so faithfully followed what they have believed to be my actual teachings; I understand that change is simply difficult for most individuals. In many ways nothing has changed even since my own time; I had so often warned those who gathered around me back then that they should be rightfully fearful of the Sadducees and Pharisees of the then Hebrew hierarchy. If I were living today, I would, with even greater conviction, be sounding that same alarm that these modern-day Sadducees and Pharisees are equally dangerous to the actual salvation of one's spiritual being. I had but one commandment when I lived and that was simply to love one another. That one and only stated commandment has been grossly lost in the mix of theological rivalry. When I had then suggested that those who believed in what I was teaching should indeed, "go forth to the entire world and spread this gospel," it was not intended for any other purpose except two have everyone love one another. It was then and still is today a universal concept that can be easily integrated into the belief system of any religion. "By their fruits you shall know them." I would hope that by the end of this interview you will intuitively recognize that I am indeed the full spiritual essence of that man once called Jesus. Do not judge me for who you think I am by any usual standard, as this interview is most certainly outside the usual range of anyone's understanding of reality. In many ways Lamah has been preparing for this interview by simply avoiding the reading of any other materials that might have interfered with the integrity of this interview. At the age of eighteen he wrote in one of his poems, “I’m not here to read what others write, nor to see without a guiding light.” So much of what I hope to say today is totally unknown to the conscious mind of Lamah prior to this unusual interview. |