Monday 12 August 2019

...And On The Other Hand


And on the other hand, Golden Age of Gaia’s Steve Beckow’s source for AAM has helped him put together a very good statement on ‘The Essence of Individual Sovereignty’.  To give credit where credit is due:

The Essence of Individual Sovereignty

August 11, 2019 By Steve Beckow

Steve: Will you write a document through me, a channeled document, on the essence of individual sovereignty?

Archangel Michael: I will be pleased to do this.

Now I have a need to tell you, that I would have many consultants with me, but, yes, we would be pleased, more than you can imagine. Because this is such a key factor, and it is not adequately addressed. (1)

I make no bones about this being practice at co-writing. Here we go:

The essence of individual sovereignty is the Self.

In the first place, the Self is the individuated God, God within the individual.

In the second place, the sovereignty of the Self comes from its roots in Divinity.

The prime social directive is to build societies that allow the individual or Self the conditions and ability to fulfill the task assigned to everyone in life; that is, to realize its true identity. (2)

Admittedly there are those such as the seraphim who’ve chosen to stay near the Throne, and there are those archangels who’ve never descended into form.

But by far the greatest number of individual beings have agreed to participate in the adventure of forgetting who they are and then going through lifetimes in matter (mater, Mother) to remember or rediscover it.

When the One decided to create apparently-separated beings and a world of experience in which they could discover who they are, the necessity to support individual sovereignty followed. (3)

If the vast majority of beings had not agreed to this task, there’d be much less need for individuality or individual sovereignty.

All would be One and the drama of individuated life would not follow. But the One decreed that an illusory separation take place and a long pilgrimage back to the Father.

Have we any descriptions of the end of the journey, the merger of us with the One?

Yes, we do. Paul describes the last day of individuality when the Self or Christ surrenders all that it has and is to the One and makes God all in all:

“Then cometh the end, when he shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father; when he shall have put down all rule and all authority and power.  … (4)

“And when all things shall be subdued unto him, (5) then shall the Son also himself be subject unto him that put all things under him, that God may be all in all.” (6)

In metaphorical terms, this passage describes what in my 1987 vision would have been the little golden star racing back to the Father and merging with it. (7)

That is the moment at which the created and individuated Self returns to and merges with the Mother/Father One. It surrenders all it is and has to the Father sgain [sic], from whence it all came.

The Self apparently doesn’t cease to be; it re-emerges. But this completes its agreed-upon task in entering the world of form.

Only through the ability to exert individual sovereignty – to exert control over one’s own self and life – can we expect to complete the journey of unfolding awareness.

Thank you, Michael.

Footnotes

(1) Archangel Michael in a personal reading with Steve Beckow through Linda Dillon, March 3, 2011.

(2) For background on this assignment, see “The Purpose of Life is Enlightenment – Ch. 13 – Epilogue,” at http://goldenageofgaia.com/2011/08/13/the-purpose-of-life-is-enlightenment-ch-13-epilogue/

(3) Why would the One go through such an exercise? To know itself, we’re told. See “The Purpose of Life,” ibid.

(4) Putting down “all rule and all authority and power” refers to the time when the individual has transcended the personal will, subjugating it to the Will of the Father. In line with what Bernadette Roberts has said of the “No-Self,” another meaning could be that once all things are surrendered to the Self, then the Self is surrendered to the No-Self.

(5) “When all things shall be subdued unto him” means when all desire for worldly or material objects and pleasures has been overcome, as in Jesus’ assertion, “I have overcome the world.” (Jesus in John 16:33.)

(6) St. Paul in I Corinthians 15:24 and 28.

Finally the Son’s being subjected to God that God may be all in all refers to the plunging of the individual soul into the Sea of Bliss, Tranquillity, and Immortality that is the Father.


(7) See “The Purpose of Life,” ibid.

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