May 21, 2015
Well, this has been a lively morning, looking at
centers, more particularly centering. I think it interesting always when various
things do come to the fore that need to be considered. You can always depend
upon someone to give you something to work with and deal with.
I received a letter this week from a server, and I
have one of his quotes in the letter. It has bearing on what we've been saying
and talking about and considering this morning. By the way, I liked what Dawn
said about a blood clot somewhere—log jams—and a need for something to move to
that, a need for something to move something along. This is the purpose of this
Assembly, by the way. Certain things are brought to the Assembly so that we may
deal with them; this is our body, we are responsible for this body. If there is
a blood clot, we'd better do something. If there's a log jam, it's our
responsibility. Now this particular quote from this server is just the evidence
of a log jam. Very sincere server; certainly completely dedicated. Here's what
he says:
“As it stands now, we have four empty beds. I would
be delighted to have a full house again. It would also help financially as well.”
Full house—that's a good hand! Beats a flush, four of a kind. What happened to
the full house he had? They left. Why did they leave? because he has a center, but
no centering.
One thing we need to do away with is the excuses
that are used for not being able to penetrate. This past Autumn we
were in New York, at Adelphi University. They had a big sign up there: “How can
I soar like an eagle with all these turkeys around me?” That's usually the
excuse, isn't it? It's these turkeys around me that are stopping me from
soaring like an eagle. That's an excuse for not penetrating. Or the excuse that
“there's no responding ones here.” There are responding ones everywhere. I was impressed the other day in a
restaurant in Fort Collins. The girl brought me some garlic bread. I don't go
for garlic bread; makes you strong physically and weak socially So I asked her
if she'd exchange it, and I loved her answer: she said, “Surely.” Surely! Now
here was something going on! Before we left there, there was a wonderful thing
going on between the waitress and us, all over garlic bread. But it was her
answer which showed the response.
When we serve the Lord in truth, the welcome mat is
always out, as was emphasized by those this morning. It includes everybody. In
my own service, I do favor characters, those who do bring something different.
The fact that they are bringing something different reveals that they have some
degree of courage. Everyone is included in our service. But the problem is how
about those in our body who desire to serve the Lord, yet there's a holdup,
there's a block. We know we certainly don't write them off; it is our
responsibility to find the ways and means by which we may open them up. Now if
the spirit of the Lord is almighty, I think it could do even that. That it
could even open up some of those who have been in this quagmire of serving the
Lord for so many years! I've been doing some thinking on it, as to how this
process works out, and what happens if they do get caught along the way—caught
in the eddies so that they find it's an arduous task, serving the Lord. We find
that they sometimes get tired, and you'll find them sometimes with no fire at
all; you always have to build a fire under them to get them going.
I have a little diagram on the board here,
something I came in last night and put on the board that I've been thinking
about. Initially, when a person begins to respond to the Lord, it's
subconscious, as we know. The person's whole attention and response are in the
environment. But something begins to happen underneath, without the conscious
mind knowing what it is that's happening. Something begins to be felt; the
conscious mind doesn't know what's happening, but the conscious mind is
beginning to turn to the Lord. In that initial turning there is an acute angle,
we might say. The person in this particular experience begins to experience
something—things begin to look different than they did before. Actually, it
seems like there's a tremendous amount of light because they've been in such
darkness before. Well, as we know, it really isn't very much light; it just
seems to be. It's twilight, really. But as the subconscious mind continues to
respond and there is the light in what it is that is happening, the person
begins to move in heart towards the Lord, standing up here (it's a
hundred-and-eighty-degree turn, as we know). But coming to a particular point,
probably around 90 degrees or so, the conscious mind begins to come into play,
possibly classes begin to open up so that the person begins to see what it is
that is required.
Now this is a very vital time. The person was
moving at this particular level, unbeknownst to the conscious mind, and this is good: the conscious mind can't interfere
with the movement. Oh, it comes in somewhere along the line—the Son consciousness
must come into the picture if this creative process is to continue—and probably
along the 90-degree mark or so, the conscious mind begins to come into it. “And
I turned to see the voice that spake with me.” Now, I really haven't seen yet,
have I? I think he's like this, or I think he's like that. And I haven't really
seen yet what it is. I've got all kinds of imagination as to what it is, but
I'm still turning. “And I turned to see the voice that spake with me, and being
turned, I saw.” There must be the complete turning, the movement is taking
place, the conscious mind comes into play, and this particular period between
the 90 degree and the 180 degree is the vital time.
This particular server that we're mentioning, guess
where he is? His conscious mind knows certain things that have
transpired here or he wouldn't even have been around us. But he's here, and
that angle completely describes it: obtuse.
It was somewhere along this phase that
Paul got hooked up, didn't he? I've often thought it interesting that when he had
his experience of conversion, it was on the road to Damascus. He never got there, but he
had this experience. I think in Damascus they made some of the finest swords in
the world. Paul never really got to the truth represented by Damascus—he
stopped along the way, and he was honest about it. He said, “And now we see
through a glass darkly, but then we see face-to-face.” Notice the difference
there between the “now” and the “then”? Now
then, we could make it now, couldn't we? Now—then. “And now, we see through a glass darkly.” Well if we're
seeing through a glass darkly, we're dangerous, very dangerous.
It's only when that complete turn is made,
a hundred and eighty degrees, that it's face-to-face, and no longer is our face
the face of some human being, but it is the face of the Lord. When there are
those who come face-to-face with us, it isn't some Lord somewhere that we refer
them to—but it's our own
face. And this happens because there is the lusting after the Lord—this isn't
done without zeal, without enthusiasm. What are those words in the 15th chapter
of the Book of Revelation, about the sea of glass? “And I saw as it were a sea
of glass, mingled with fire, and those who had gotten the victory over the
beast.” That sea of glass was mingled with fire, and nothing is done without
that Fire; that's the purifying Fire, it's the Fire which allows the lustration, the purifying, the cleansing
to take place.
Glass mingled with Fire. Glass is an interesting
substance. It's classified as a solid, but its molecular components are that of
a fluid. It becomes a solid when it's taken out of the furnace—and glass is easily breakable. A little pressure on it, and even the
bulletproof stuff will shatter. Put a little pressure on the glass, and it'll crack;
but that same glass, when it's in the fire—the sea of glass mingled with
fire—when it's in the fire, it's then a fluid, it's then quite movable. It's
the Fire that allows the work to be done, and we don't come to stand in
alignment with the Lord without that Fire. We can see when there is the complete
turning—and thank God that the conscious mind comes into play along the
line. The heart cannot be purified without this coming into play. When it does
come into play, it has the responsibility to allow the purifying Fire of God's love
to be put down there in that receptacle which the Holy Ghost would use. When
it's there, it works out very easily. Then we have the Father, and the Son.
We've considered the fact that there's a very thin layer to the Son consciousness,
but as we can see, it connects that which is above to that which is below. One
thing, all in alignment. Centering. The Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost.
We may not go around as John of old, when he was
offering baptism, but in our own service we know that we baptize with the Holy
Ghost and the Fire. That Holy Ghost is there in our own experience—individually
we've had our day of Pentecost, and we haven't run out like Peter of old but we
stay in there. There's nothing that means more to us than to stay in there. In
that particular outworking with Peter, John, and James, you notice not much is
said of James; you hardly hear of him. The conscious mind didn't come into play
too much in that particular situation. Well, in the outworking which we're
concerned with, we thank God for that conscious mind. There is the Son, and we
will accept nothing that comes up from below that isn't true to the Father.
What needs to be done is done through the expression of the Father, under the
direction of the Son, through the power of the Holy Ghost—because of the
alignment with the Father.
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