February 07, 2015
When we come together for our services
we should have a keen awareness that we are gathered in the holy place, in the
sense of the very room itself; otherwise each time we have to build again the
consciousness of the truth of the matter, and that always takes time. So I
remind you this morning that we are gathered in the holy place.
The holy place is holy because it
adjoins the Holy of Holies. Between the two, in the symbolical representation
of the tabernacle or the temple of old, there was the veil. One side of the
veil is a part of the holy place; in fact it constitutes one wall of the holy
place. On the earthly side of the veil is contained what we may well describe
as the earthly dimensions. We are familiar with these: the dimensions of the
physical world, the dimensions of the mental world, and the dimensions of the
world of spiritual expression. Here are the earthly dimensions—half of the veil
is a part of the earthly dimensions—visible from the earthly side of the veil.
The veil has been a veil of separation
between the heavenly dimensions and the earthly dimensions. What is the other
side of the veil from the earthly side is also part of the dimensional world.
There are the heavenly dimensions—obscure to those who identify themselves in
the material realm of the earthly dimensions—but the heavenly dimensions are
present nevertheless. We are not concerned with any more earthly dimensions
than those of which we are now aware. Our concern is with an awareness of the
heavenly dimensions. This requires that the veil become transparent, not that
it should be removed.
There is, rightly, the connecting link
of the veil, which itself constitutes a realm of dimension. When it becomes
transparent to us, what is of the heavenly dimensions is found to be present in
our consciousness. We note how this is so from the standpoint of observation
through a window. We're not out there with whatever it is that is being
observed. What is out there is actually present in our own consciousness.
Insofar as we are concerned, that is the only place it is. The same principle
holds true with respect to the realm of heavenly dimension. We don't need to
get through the veil or out the window, so to speak; we stay where we belong,
but what is the other side of the veil is included in our capacity of
consciousness. This is so when the veil is transparent to us and no longer
opaque.
The visible side of the veil is a part
of the holy place; the invisible side is a part of the Holy of Holies; so again
we see the means of connection here. You remember the statement made a number
of times in the Bible with respect to the time, times, and half a time—three
and a half. Three and a half would bring us to the center of the veil. There is
half of the veil in the holy place and there is half of the veil in the Holy of
Holies: half of the veil related to the earthly triune world, and half of the
veil related to the heavenly triune world. In this fashion a connection is made
between the two.
The priesthood properly serve in the
holy place, and rightly they are symbolized by the veil. The priesthood are
visible. If they are the true priesthood they connect heaven and earth; they
connect the heavenly dimensions with the earthly dimensions. They may be seen
and heard by those who are present on the earthly side of the veil, but if they
are the true priesthood they are more than what can be seen and heard.
In this setting I can be seen as
representing the priesthood to you, and as you look at me I am seen as being a
part of the veil. In this particular setting I bring something specifically to
focus in this regard. You see me sitting here, a physical form, obviously with
some sort of mental capacity, and to the extent of your response you have an
awareness of some spiritual expression. So, representing the priesthood in this
setting to you, all of this is to a certain extent visible, perceptible. But
you also know that there must be something more than that; it's not just a
physical form sitting here with its jaw moving and vibrations of air producing
sound; there must be something which generates whatever it is that gives
evidence of life. So there is the visible part and also the invisible part.
The invisible part cannot be located by the
use of the material senses, but you find, to the extent of yielded response,
that something moves into your consciousness which is not of any of the
material levels of your being. In other words, according to your response the
veil becomes transparent and what is the other side of the veil is found to be
emerging into your own consciousness. You're not going through me, so to speak,
to the other side of the veil—but what is the other side of the veil can cross
over in order to be experienced in your consciousness. And this occurs
according to the extent of your response, or the veil becomes opaque according
to the extent of your resistance. The opaque veil is at the same time a mirror.
According to resistance you are reflected back to yourself, and what you see
you may impute to me but it is really you.
We have seen the important necessity of
relinquishing points of resistance, even though they may be unconsciously held,
that we may indeed, as it is put in Revelation, turn to see the voice that
speaks with us. We have to turn away from the state of being embedded in
ignorance and misunderstandings, because if we are ignorant and have
misunderstanding, those will be points of resistance in us and we can't see
anything through the veil. All we see are these things simply reflected back to
us. When they are reflected back we may see the reflection very clearly, mind
you, and we may therefore imagine we are in position to judge most accurately
what we see. Well, we may be able to analyze and discern the reflection, but
when all's said and done, it's what was already in ourselves. Then in that
analysis we will probably impute it to somebody else. But it wasn't; or if it
was, that wasn't the point; it was also in oneself.
Turning to see the voice is, of course, yielding
in response to the veil—turning toward the veil and yielding in response to
what is revealed, by reason of that response, from the other side of the veil.
The priesthood constitute the veil; therefore if someone is to become aware in
his or her own consciousness of what really is in the dimensional heaven the
other side of the veil he must turn toward the veil. There's no other way of
becoming aware; for to become aware, what is the other side of the veil must
come through the veil. If one is not looking at the veil one won't see it, and
even if one is looking at the veil one will not see it unless one is yielded in
response. Anybody can look at the priesthood, but not everybody will become
aware of what is the other side of the veil which the priesthood is. If there
is resistance, all that will be seen is a reflection.
Insofar as the true priesthood are
concerned, they are not the same as human beings who are not participating in
the priesthood, and yet other human beings will see them as being the same
because they themselves will simply be reflected back. This is obviously what
happened insofar as Jesus was concerned. The vast majority of those who looked
at Him merely saw a reflection of themselves. This was particularly true of
those who deliberately resisted Him, spoken of as the scribes and the
Pharisees. They accused Him of being a servant of the devil. Very revealing!
Who were the servants of the devil? The ones who saw their reflection in Him.
So this is the way it works.
If we are to turn toward the veil in a
yielded response to the dimensional heaven beyond the veil, we must come into
the holy place. We must have a consciousness of the sacredness of the place
where we are. There needs to be a deliberate letting go, that we may come into the
holy place. There is that which is on the other side of the veil in the
vibrational sense, and being of a higher vibrational nature, the heavenly
dimensions, there are no problems about it coming through and winding up in
your consciousness. Only as you are in the holy place are you in position to
observe the veil, and only when you observe the veil are you in position to
yield to what is the other side of the veil.
In this setting I represent a particular
focalization of the veil for you; just as you, if you participate in the true
priesthood, represent particular focalizations of the veil to others. In the
collective sense of the true priesthood, human beings anywhere on earth cannot
become aware of what is the other side of the veil, in the heavenly dimensional
sense, without turning to that true priesthood, without turning toward the
veil. Now that turning toward the veil is done unconsciously to start with, and
a person may not realize what's happening, or he may imagine something. He may
imagine that he's turning toward God, for instance. He may imagine that that is
what he is doing, according to his own concept of how he's doing it. But if it
is a true yielding toward God, the fact of the matter is that the person will
have turned unconsciously toward the veil, which is manifest on the earthly
side; in other words, toward the priesthood. He may have no idea about a
priesthood, or a veil, or anything else, but that is what is happening in a
person if there is a genuine turning in yielded response toward God, because no
man cometh unto the Father but by the means provided—the means which was Jesus
when He was on earth but which is now the true priesthood on earth today.
We recognize the need for something more
than just one person, something more than Jesus. There was a need for something
more when He was on earth, something more to appear, which didn't, to any great
extent at least. So it is in the present unfoldment of things; the greater
manifestation needs to appear. Then the veil becomes evident on the earthly
side of it, so that people who were responding unconsciously can become conscious
of it at some point along the way. This was indeed described in the 1st chapter
of the Book of Revelation by these verses: "I was in the Spirit on the
Lord's day..."—yielded to the tone in the present moment. When else is the
Lord's day? Tomorrow? "...and heard behind me a great voice, as of a
trumpet."
To turn toward the Lord requires that we
turn toward the veil, we turn to see the voice that speaks. "And I turned
to see the voice that spake with me..."—turned toward the veil, turned
toward the priesthood. If in turning toward the priesthood you look at the
priesthood and you say, "That's not the veil," and turn away, then
what else is there? Human beings have been looking for some other way for a
long time, but there is no means of becoming aware of what is on the heavenly
side of the veil without turning toward the veil. Turning toward the veil
requires that one turn away from what one was looking at before; and what one
was looking at before was what was impinging upon one from the world around,
stirring one's emotions in various ways—sometimes in pleasing ways, sometimes
in displeasing ways; it makes no difference. As long as one is embedded in that
it is impossible to turn toward the veil; so there must be a relinquishing, at
least in some measure, of those things, before the voice can even be heard.
The initial hearing of the voice is
invariably an unconscious hearing. The individual doesn't realize where the
voice is coming from. But it must be heard if there is to be a turning toward
it. In other words if a person is going to pay attention to the quality of that
tone in his own living he must turn toward it, and to that extent turn away
from the seeming requirements of the material world, which demand that a person
behave thus and so if he is to survive, let alone "get ahead," as
they say. This is the concept that people have. They daren't turn away from
that strident voice that they hear in the world. So the initial turning is subconscious;
but when it becomes a conscious thing the veil must be seen as the veil, and it
will not be seen as the veil unless it is approached with humility, with a
sense of awe, of deep respect, toward what constitutes the veil. If what
constitutes the veil is approached as, "Oh well, it's just a bunch of
people like everybody else," there won't be any sense of sacredness in the
attitude of the person who is approaching the priesthood, and if there's no
sense of sacredness he can't come into the holy place, and if he can't come into
the holy place he can't see the veil as being the veil. Holy, holy, holy.
How much of that feeling of holiness is
in you in this moment in this place? Because that will determine the extent to
which you have come into the holy place. And when you begin to see the veil,
behind which is the Holy of Holies, you would naturally be filled with a deep
sense of awe. Fear God! Fear God and eschew evil!—that is, relinquish your
involvement with all this impinging upon you from the material world and regain
your sense of awe, that you may come into the holy place.
A deep reverence, a deep respect, a deep
and humble love—all these things are part of the experience of coming into the
holy place. If one doesn't have that, one is not in the holy place. If one's
mind is flitting around here and there, and emotions are feeling this and that
in the material sense, the individual is excluded from the holy place by his
own attitude. Holy, holy, holy. That is the way it is in the holy place, and
the veil becomes visible as the veil. When this is so, there is the fulfilment
of these words: "And I turned to see the voice that spake with me. And
being turned, I saw..."
"I saw what is here described as
seven golden candlesticks. I saw with respect to my own being that I am more
than a material person existing in the three-dimensional material world."
We begin to become aware of something greater, that there is something the
other side of the veil, that there is the veil—the veil, another dimension—and
three dimensions, three heavenly dimensions, the other side of the veil,
besides the three earthly dimensions. There are seven; but golden: gold, the
symbol of value, the symbol of love, the symbol of the reality. These golden
candlesticks were represented in the holy place of the tabernacle, the
candlesticks permitting the light to shine in its natural radiance and balance
with respect to each level of dimension. That is what we begin to become aware
of, isn't it? To the extent that we really have turned to see the voice, to the
extent that we have yielded in response toward the veil, this begins to flood
into our consciousness.
"...And being turned, I saw seven
golden candlesticks; And in the midst of the seven candlesticks one like unto
the Son of man." This is really a reverse description, isn't it? We are
familiar with the son of man, with the material state and with human beings in
that material state, so that becoming aware of the spiritual aspect of our own
being, but still identified with the material aspect of our being, what we
begin to see is like unto what we think of ourselves, like unto the present
experience. We do not see that spiritual man is the original, so to speak, and
material man is the reproduction. Looking at things from the material,
self-centered standpoint, spiritual man is seen as being a sort of an adjunct
of material man. "Well I, as material man, am going to become spiritual
now, but I'm still going to be material man. Now I just add spiritual man to
me." Which isn't the way it works at all.
Spiritual man is the original, and
material man is properly like unto the Son of God. It's not that the Son of God
should be like unto the son of man; we recognize there are some changes needed
in the material experience we have known. But here is the awareness of
spiritual man, what is the other side of the veil in the individual sense, in
one's own personal awareness of oneself. Let us consider this passage from the
first verse: "And he sent and signified it by his angel unto his servant
John."
"By his angel"! If this is to
have any significance to you it is still by His angel, the spiritual aspect of
your own being, which in the dimensional world is the angel of the Lord. It
goes on to describe this one that was supposed to be like unto the son of man,
but the description indicates that he wasn't just like unto the son of man.
Then, finally, “And when I saw him, I fell at his feet as dead.
Here is the reaction, one might say,
when there begins to be a true awareness of the real nature of spiritual man.
Material man is utterly corrupt, and there is the sense of being so worthless
that you need to fall down dead. And you do! You need to pass away as material
man, except as material man becomes like unto spiritual man, or the evidence of
spiritual man on earth. "And when I saw him, I fell at his feet as dead.
And he laid his right hand upon me..." Here is the positive expression of
spiritual man. "...saying unto me, Fear not..."
"Don't be afraid of me"; it's
quite all right to have awe and reverence, respect, but not fear in the sense
of being afraid. "...Fear not; I am the first and the last..." I was
before material man, and I am after material man. "I am he that liveth,
and was dead…"—dead insofar as material man was concerned. "I am he
that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am alive for evermore, Amen; and have
the keys of hell and of death..."—the keys by which the absence of heaven
and the absence of life may be dissolved in material man's experience.
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