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Myrna Ferguson

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RE: IS THERE SUCH A THING AS A COSMIC RELIGION?
7/21/2013 5:44:02 PM
Miguel,

This is a great explanation of the heart. Thanks for the post.

Myrna
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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: IS THERE SUCH A THING AS A COSMIC RELIGION?
7/21/2013 11:53:15 PM

You are welcome, Myrna. So glad you liked it.

Blessings,

Miguel

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: IS THERE SUCH A THING AS A COSMIC RELIGION?
7/21/2013 11:56:53 PM

King David's palace found, says Israeli team


This undated aerial photo released by the Israel Antiquities Authority shows the archeological site in Khirbet Qeiyafa, west of Jerusalem. A team of Israeli archaeologists say they have discovered a palace used by King David at the site, a historic discovery that was quickly disputed by other members of the country’s archaeological community. (AP Photo/SkyView, HOEP)

Associated Press

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JERUSALEM (AP) — A team of Israeli archaeologists believes it has discovered the ruins of a palace belonging to the biblical King David, but other Israeli experts dispute the claim.

Archaeologists from Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Israel's Antiquities Authority said their find, a large fortified complex west of Jerusalem at a site called Khirbet Qeiyafa , is the first palace of the biblical king ever to be discovered.

"Khirbet Qeiyafa is the best example exposed to date of a fortified city from the time of King David," said Yossi Garfinkel, a Hebrew University archaeologist, suggesting that David himself would have used the site. Garfinkel led the seven-year dig with Saar Ganor of Israel's Antiquities Authority.

Garfinkel said his team found cultic objects typically used by Judeans, the subjects of King David, and saw no trace of pig remains. Pork is forbidden under Jewish dietary laws. Clues like these, he said, were "unequivocal evidence" that David and his descendants had ruled at the site.

Critics said the site could have belonged to other kingdoms of the area. The consensus among most scholars is that no definitive physical proof of the existence of King David has been found.

Biblical archaeology itself is contentious. Israelis often use archaeological findings to back up their historic claims to sites that are also claimed by the Palestinians, like the Old City of Jerusalem. Despite extensive archaeological evidence, for example, Palestinians deny that the biblical Jewish Temples dominated the hilltop where the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, Islam's third-holiest site, stands today.

In general, researchers are divided over whether biblical stories can be validated by physical remains.

The current excavators are not the first to claim they found a King David palace. In 2005, Israeli archaeologist Eilat Mazar said she found the remains of King David's palace in Jerusalem dating to the 10th century B.C., when King David would have ruled. Her claim also attracted skepticism, including from Garfinkel himself.

Using carbon dating, the archaeologists traced the site's construction to that same period. Garfinkel said the team also found a storeroom almost 15 meters (50 feet) long, suggesting it was a royal site used to collect taxes from the rest of the kingdom.

Garfinkel believes King David lived permanently in Jerusalem in a yet-undiscovered site, only visiting Khirbet Qeiyafa or other palaces for short periods. He said the site's placement on a hill indicates that the ruler sought a secure site on high ground during a violent era of frequent conflicts between city-states.

"The time of David was the first time that a large portion of this area was united by one monarch," Garfinkel said. "It was not a peaceful era."

Archaeologist Israel Finkelstein of Tel Aviv University agreed that Khirbet Qeiyafa is an "elaborate" and "well-fortified" 10th century B.C. site, but said it could have been built by Philistines, Canaanites or other peoples in the area.

He said there was no way to verify who built the site without finding a monument detailing the accomplishments of the king who built it. Last week, for instance, archaeologists in Israel found pieces of a sphinx bearing the name of the Egyptian pharaoh who reigned when the statue was carved.

Garfinkel insisted that critics like Finkelstein are relying on outdated theories.

"I think other people have a collapsed theory and we have fresh data," he said.

____

Follow Max J. Rosenthal on Twitter at www.twitter.com/abuzilif

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: IS THERE SUCH A THING AS A COSMIC RELIGION?
7/27/2013 5:49:59 PM

Move Without Moving: Be the Stillpoint Flowing

Lao Tzu

Lao Tzu

How many times have you heard a sage describe moving without moving, acting without acting, doing without doing?

I had a conversation with a friend yesterday who described this state perfectly when she spoke of being the stillpoint flowing.

I think flow is the paradigm of the higher dimensions. And the stillpoint is us resting in our centers. When we are the stillpoint flowing, I think we’ll be who these sages are describing.

I personally have once had a brief experience of this state, when I was in a meditation workshop. I described it as spending a half hour in my higher Self. All was activity and much was getting done but all of it was getting done without me moving a muscle. Many times I tried to find a word to describe how I felt in that state and the only one I could ever find was “regal.”

So being the stillpoint flowing, it seems to me, is where we’re going. Why don’t we spend a moment listening to what the sages say about it? We’ll hear them mentioning it in two circumstances: (A) when describing the state of the sage and (B) when describing what the student could do to reach the state of the sage.

Lao- Tzu, who later incarnated as Djhwal Khul, (1) tells us

“The Wise Man
Knows without going,
Sees without seeing,
Does without doing.” (2)

All higher-dimensional beings use telepathy more than they use vocal speech, can read auras, etc., which may be knowing without going and seeing without seeing.

He counselled us to “touch ultimate emptiness.” (3) That ultimate emptiness is of course God and touching it and merging with it is the purpose of life. Lao Tzu further describes “It” here:

“Between the earth and sky
The space is like a bellows,
Empty but unspent.
When moved its gift is copious.” (4)

But one does not move this bellows with desire. I’d imagine one moves it only with love.

Lao Tzu tells us that “in all the world but few can know Accomplishment apart from work, Instruction when no words are used.” (5) These few would be advanced sages, well, just like we’re going to be.

Those who came after Lao Tzu and followed in his footsteps knew the same action without acting, movement without moving. Here are other sages in his line saying much the same thing.

We have to factor in to their descriptions the fact that many sages phrase their observations in ways designed to shock their listeners into awareness. So for instance, Chuang Tzu saying “be blank and soulless” or Lin Chi telling his hearers to do nothing put matters this way, in my opinion, for that reason.

Chuang Tzu

“You have only to rest in inaction and things will transform themselves. Smash your form and body, spit out hearing and eyesight, forget you are a thing among other things, and you may join in great unity with the deep and boundless. Undo the mind, slough off spirit, be blank and soulless, and the ten thousands things one by one will return to the root — return to the root and not know why.” (6)

Bodhidharma

“To transcend motion and stillness is the highest meditation. Mortals keep moving, while arhats [sages enlightened but less so than a buddha] stay still. But the highest meditation surpasses that of both mortals and arhats. People who reach such understanding free themselves from all appearances without effort and cure all illnesses without treatment. Such is the power of great zen.” (7)

Lin Chi (Rinzai)

“Followers of the Way, even if you can understand a hundred sutras and treatises, you’re not as good as one plain monk who does nothing.” (8)

“The way I see it, there’s no call for anything special. Just act ordinary, put on your clothes, eat your rice, pass the time doing nothing.” (9)

This advice is part of the Perennial Philosophy. If we move out of Taoism proper and the lines of Buddhist enquiry that incorporated it, we still find the same advice. In the selections that follow, some are advising the student to be still and some are describing the state of the sage.

Krishna

“He who sees the inaction that is in action, and the action that is in inaction, is wise indeed. Even when he is engaged in action he remains poised in the tranquillity of the Atman.” (10)

Sri Ramana Maharshi

[One should continue practicing] until the mind attains effortlessly its natural state of freedom from concepts, that is till the sense of ‘I’ and ‘mine’ exists no longer. (11)

[Sadhu Arunachala:] “Bhagavan [Ramana] would often tell us to ‘make an effort to be without effort.’” (12)

“Your efforts can extend only thus far. Then the Beyond will take care of itself. You are helpless there. No effort can reach it.” (13)

Krishnamurti

“It would be a better world if each one of us were aware of true inaction, which is not the opposite of action. But that is another matter.” (14)

“The truth frees…. The highest state of inaction is the action of truth.” (15)

“You must be completely denuded, without the weight of the past or the enticement of a hopeful future — which does not mean despair. If you are in despair, there is no emptiness, no nakedness. You cannot ‘do’ anything. You can and must be still, without any hope, longing, or desire; but you cannot determine to be still, suppressing all noise, for in that very effort there is noise. Silence is not the opposite of noise.” (16)

It’s probably only in a dualistic universe, such as this one in Third Dimensionality, that one cannot easily flow. And it’s probably only in spiritual ignorance that we’re unaware that we are that stillpoint. But in the higher dimensions we’ll soon be in, we’ll be the stillpoint flowing and move without moving.

Footnotes

(1) Linda Dillon: “When he was on the Earth as Lao Tzu, that was about 400 BC and that’s a long time ago and he came again as Caspar, who was one of the three wise men, the magi who came to give gifts to Jesus, and he was the bringer of gold. And then he has more recently incarnated as Djwhal Khul, and many of you probably know Djwhal Khul, also known as the Tibetan, who again is a teacher and a Master that works with the Tibetan lamas in spirit and his theme is balance.” And in the same interview, Lao Tzu: “Now sometimes it is also fear and there were times when I would have students, both as Djwhal Khul and in Atlantis, when we would talk and they would say ‘oh I do not dare to tell my parents about this, they will think I am crazy.’” (“Transcript: Lao Tzu on Humility on Heavenly Blessings,” April 26, 2013, at http://goldenageofgaia.com/2013/04/transcript-lao-tzu-on-humility-on-heavenly-blessings/.

(2) Lao Tzu, The Way of Life. The Tao Te Ching. trans. R.B. Blakney. New York, etc.: Avon, 1975, 100.

(3) Ibid., 68.

(4) Ibid., 57.

(5) Ibid., 96.

(6) Chuang Tzu in Burton Watson, trans. The Complete Works of Chuang Tzu. New York and London: Columbia University Press, 1968, 122.

(7) Bodhidharma in Red Pine, trans., The Zen Teachings of Bodhidharma. Port Townsend, WA, Empty Bowl, 1987 , 24. Arhats or arahants have experienced the enlightenment that accompanies the kundalini reaching the seventh chakra, which is often called Brahmajnana, God-realization, or kevalya nirvikalpa samadhi. Buddhas may have experienced the enlightenment when the kundalini reaches the hridayam or spiritual heart, which is higher than the former state, and is usually called a permanent heart opening or sahaja samadhi. Buddhas may also have experienced a higher state than sahaja. I’m not certain.

(8) Master Lin-Chi in Burton Watson, trans. The Zen Teachings of Master Lin-Chi [Rinzai]. A Translation of the Lin-Chi Lu. Boston and London: Shambala, 1993, 76.

(9) Ibid., 53-4.

(10) Sri Krishna in Swami Prabhavananda and Christopher Isherwood, trans., Bhagavad-Gita. The Song of God. New York and Scarborough: New American Library, 1972; c1944, 52.

(11) Sri Ramana Maharshi, Spiritual Instruction of Bhagavan Sri Ramana Maharshi. Eighth Edition. Tiruvannamalai: Sri Ramanasramam, 1974, Chapter 2, Question 18.

(12) Sadhu Arunachala [A.W. Chadwick], A Sadhu’s Reminiscences of Ramana Maharshi.Tiruvannamalai: Sri Ramanasramam, 1961, 54.

(13) Sri Ramana Maharshiin Munagala Venkatramiah, Talks with Sri Ramana Maharshi.Downloaded from http://www.ramana-maharshi.org/books.htm, 31 August 2005, Question 197.

(14) J. Krishnamurti, Commentaries on Living. Second Series. Wheaton, IL: Theosophical Publishing House, 1967; c1958, 2, 99.

(15) Ibid., 37.

(16) Ibid., 115.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: IS THERE SUCH A THING AS A COSMIC RELIGION?
8/3/2013 3:33:06 PM

Iraq Brings Back The Garden Of Eden


JULY 31, 2013, 6:30 PM



What's the Latest Development?

Despite recent clashes in Baghdad, and water disputes between Iraq and other countries in the region, an NGO called Nature Iraq has succeeded in restoring an area long believed to be the Biblical Garden of Eden to its original marshland state. The land, originally the largest wetland system in the Middle East, has now been declared a national park by the government, allowing conservationists to take steps to preserve their work. This includes reserving a share of the Euphrates River at a time when its flow is increasingly being restricted by Syria, Iran and Turkey.

What's the Big Idea?

Ninety-three percent of the marshland disappeared shortly after the first Gulf War, when then-president Saddam Hussein ordered the building of dykes and other projects that resulted in its separation from the Euphrates and Tigris rivers and the expelling of the rebellious Ma'dan people who lived in the area. Surprisingly, all of the animal species who inhabited the wetlands, including all 278 recorded bird species, survived to return to the area upon its restoration. Nature Iraq founder Azzam Alwash says that in order for the marshland to stay intact, international water-sharing treaties must be observed. He also hopes that, eventually, tourists will help fund its management.

Photo Credit: Shutterstock.com

Read it at New Scientist

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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