May 31, 2015
Space for Communion
The realm of communication is vital, but this simply
reemphasizes the necessity of the factor of communion. This relates to the
core. There should be much concern with respect to this core and our right
participation in it, because here is the point of orientation, point of life,
if it is to be anywhere. And the evidence of the core is in the experience of
communion.
I think perhaps we've graduated a little beyond the
family, the need of friendship, to the awareness of the reality of communion; as
it was put, “various facets of one whole,” one core whole—or one conscious mind
of the body of humanity, a mind with many facets. Individually speaking we have
conscious minds with sundry facets, more in some than in others, more brightly
polished in some than in others, but there are various facets. So there is this
greater experience of communion which involves the heart as well as the mind.
In fact the communion is made possible by the pure heart—then we may become
consciously aware of the reality of it. Being consciously aware of something
doesn't mean that we can intellectually dissect it, or intellectually describe
it, but that certainly doesn't prevent an awareness of the fact of communion.
In fact, if one becomes too much engaged in trying to isolate the experience, mentally
speaking, you lose it.
The factor of communion we see as being absolutely
essential, because it isn't a movement of one person. It isn't a movement of some
great leader who puts in an appearance and undertakes to provide all that is
needed. The vital nature of this factor of communion keeps emphasizing and
reemphasizing itself to us. Without it there is no evidence of the essential
conscious core.
Now the conscious core cannot operate merely as a
conscious core any more than your own conscious mind can operate without your subconscious
mind. Insofar as those who specifically compose this core of consciousness which
is taking form are concerned, each individual has a subconscious mind. We can't
sort of strip ourselves of our subconscious minds and become purely a conscious
mind with all the other people who don't have the same consciousness providing
us with a subconscious mind. We have one of our own.
It's because we have one of our own that we have a
basis for connection with other people, particularly in that vast sea of the
subconscious, which includes all people. So there are no lines of division
either within ourselves or between us and other people. If we have set up barriers
in this sense, and no doubt everybody has, they're not real. They're merely a
human invention, something which is sustained in consciousness. The very moment
that it is no longer sustained it isn't there anymore, because it has to be
held in place by the sweat of the brow. So we are in the business of allowing
these apparent divisions to be dissolved.
Some are very reluctant to allow this to happen.
They want to maintain their own little homes which are their castles. Obviously
there is no communion as long as that sort of a state of consciousness exists:
“This is me and mine.” This comes again to the matter of possessions. One trait
of human nature is centered in this matter of possessiveness. It works in many
ways. It may be seen in the miser's state, I suppose, but in lots of areas people
try to possess each other. One thing that was emphasized was the need to let
people be, to love them as they are, not try to enmesh them in your toils, so
to speak. It gets to be uncomfortable and eventually fatal if it's allowed to
happen.
There are those who have an approach toward the
Lord of trying to possess the Lord. This is very, very common in the general
picture of things in the Christian world where there is this seeming desire to
have the Lord all to oneself: “My savior”—all my own—“He's going to come into my heart.” Well what about everybody
else? I suppose He's supposed to be big enough to get in everywhere, but He
would be encased thoroughly then by everyone. No attempt should ever be made to
possess the Lord. That, if it was possible of achievement, would be a very
suffocating experience insofar as the Lord was concerned. There is this tendency
in human nature to try to possess. Love frees up. Now there is a cohesive
quality to love, of course—it holds all things together.
But things are together because they are free to
move. It's not as though everything was being compressed into the ultimate
solid so there's nothing else but this one compressed thing. If we look at the
universal state of affairs, we recognize that things are pretty well freed up,
even in what we are capable of observing. There's lots of space. Fortunately,
the sun doesn't try to possess the planets. There wouldn't be any planets on
that basis. But the sun does hold the planets in their right positions in relationship
to itself. But there's lots of space in between. And the planets—the earth for
instance—don't rightly try to possess the sun; that would be kind of fatal too.
Let the sun be where it belongs. And the evidence of love is the willingness to
allow things the space to be where they belong. If there is an endeavor to
possess something, then there is a constriction placed upon what should truly
be happening. And we realize that the happenings that occur, occur because
there is freedom of movement. One of the evidences of life is freedom of
movement.
There are various levels of life which we
recognize. There is life relative to the mineral kingdom, which is perhaps not generally
recognized but it's a fact, and there's a very little freedom of movement
there, so very little evidence of life insofar as human observation is
concerned. There's more freedom of movement with respect to the vegetable
kingdom, and more still in the animal kingdom. The greatest freedom of movement
relates to man—rightly, man as a whole. That freedom which should appear by
reason of man as a whole appears because there is freedom of movement within
the body of mankind. And no one is possessed into a static state, which is what
would happen if possession was allowed to go to its ultimate extreme.
Space—space for the experience of true
communion. There are those who think of oneness in terms of physical proximity,
and the closer you can press against someone the more one you will be with
them. Were you ever in a crowd? No. It requires that one be in the proper
positioning in the space which is available for that positioning. And one
allows others to be in their own space. The willingness to permit this to
happen is the evidence of love.
We may express love perhaps momentarily by hugging
a person, but it would be a pain in the neck, a pain everywhere in fact, if one
was all day in a state of a hug. How useless everyone would be! No, it is
because we have space around us. And this brings up the matter that was
mentioned with respect to trespassing. There are those who tend to trespass in
the name of love. It becomes an imposition. Let it be free! Where there is real
love there is love of the natural freedom which comes because of the truth, the
truth which relates to the matter of design and control, you may remember.
There is a design, and everybody isn't hooked to
everybody else, physically speaking. We're all part of one thing—that's true! But
that is at a different level of experience, the spiritual level of experience.
If we're so unaware of that spiritual level of experience that we feel it is
necessary somehow to press up against other people to have a sense of oneness,
then we don't have much spiritual experience, because the more one has of that
spiritual experience and spiritual communion the more one is willing that people
should be allowed to be themselves.
There are natural pulsations which move spiritually
speaking and which are translated into the realm of form in various ways. We have
been considering communication in particular. The communication which comes
forth is of a practical nature—in other words there's a reason for it. How much
chatter goes on between people which is utterly meaningless! It doesn't have
any purpose. It's just noise. It's like the radio which is playing in the background
all the time. People feel that they would be lost in oblivion if there wasn't
this constant sound. It's a distraction from themselves. But communication has
purpose—it always has purpose when it springs from the state of communion. It
is indicated that one will have to account for every idle word. My goodness,
some people have long accounts! “By thy words thou shalt be justified, and by thy
words thou shalt be condemned.” The communication which comes forth, when it is
a translation of what is present in the state of communion, then has a purpose.
It's not idle words, which are not communication!
Our communications relate to what the creative
responsibility is, springing forth from the realm of communion, where there is
an understanding of spiritual responsibility. Then something comes forth and
needs to be communicated one to another. We use this particular realm of
communication to advantage in the immediate purpose which is at hand, namely that
of restoration. The communication is designed rightly, seeing that it springs
forth from our communion, to acquaint people with the state of communion. Sometimes
this can be done by the use of words, sometimes by other means: music, drama,
even drama without words. In all kinds of ways we can convey what needs to be conveyed,
which is communication. You shouldn't just think of communication as speaking
in words. There are other ways—but all of them designed at the moment for the
first order of business, which is to acquaint people with the realm of
communion which acquaints them with the fact of oneness—which allows for an awakening
to oneness, in other words. This is, as I say, the first order of business at
the moment. If we, amongst ourselves, communicate with each other, already
aware of the fact of communion between ourselves, then our intercommunications
all relate to what is required for the greater creative movement toward what we
have called the restoration or the resurrection. So there is internal
communication, one might say, and there is communication which relates to what
is beyond the core.
Now the core is not separate from the rest of the
body. It's all a part of one thing. In that sense the sun is not separate from
the planets, because they're all a part of one thing; they're all part of what
might be called the solar state. The planetary state is included in the solar
state, but it's all one thing as a solar state. We're inclined to think of the
sun as being limited to that ball of fire up in the sky, but it certainly
isn't, as we well know. If you ever saw the aurora borealis you know that the
sun comes quite close at times. And it comes quite close when you sit out in
the sun, and it's inclusive of far more. In that sense, I suppose, you could
say that we are a part of the sun. We are possessed by the sun in that sense.
It's all right for possession to occur in that
direction. The true state of possession relates to what is true from the
standpoint of the Lord. We may be possessed by the Lord, and rightly so. But
when the Lord possesses He doesn't cram everybody into a box. He doesn't
restrict or limit. He opens up freedom. If the planets are possessed by the sun
they have freedom to move in their orbits; there's plenty of space there; they
don't run into anything—at least they don't if things are under the right
control.
On this basis the changes come, whatever changes are necessary. If we're
thinking of this from the standpoint of the restoration, there are obviously
changes necessary but everybody must be accepted as they are. How else could
they be accepted? If one sits around waiting for someone to change in a suitable
way so that one will then say, “Well now I'm able to provide what is necessary
for you,” we'd sit around forever. The only thing that can be done is to take
things as they are and allow it to work from there on the basis of the fact
that we are capable of the right communication, which permits the changes to
occur.
And the primary change to occur in the experience
of people is an awakening to oneness—or an awakening to the fact of a level of communion
which before had been excluded from their experience. Now it begins to come
back into experience. It only comes back into the experience of others because
there are those who have the experience and therefore are in position to
provide what is necessary to assist the process of awakening. And it's very
easy, because it's not as though nothing was happening in people. The spirit is
moving in everybody, so it's ready to produce what is required in everybody.
And if there is the provision from the standpoint of communication from those
who are already participating in the state of communion, then everybody is
assailed from both sides, so to speak. The spirit is moving in them and here is
something being provided external that correlates with that, and so it comes
quickly.
There is always that which is resistant,
yes—always! And the objectors are always in the forefront with their signs and slogans,
but even if there is objection that is no objection insofar as we are concerned
because it's a form of response. We don't have to confront it; let the
objectors object. We see that from their standpoint it's rather a foolish thing
to do. It's not going to be helpful to them. And if there is an opportunity for
right communication, well, we may do something about it, but if there are
objectors who insist upon objecting we let them object, and are thankful for
the response that is thereby exhibited. They must be objecting to something, the
something that is happening; therefore they're aware of the happening and they
are reacting to the happening; and that is a form of response. And it facilitates
the job which we're here to do. We may say it is preferable to have the
experience with awakening people to life than to damnation, but either way gets
the job done.
So we are wise as serpents and harmless as doves.
We avoid confrontation because for the most part it's unnecessary. Sometimes it
is what is offered to us and we have to deal with it, but we don't stimulate it
particularly, if we can help it, so that it must be offered to us. We tread
delicately. We are willing to receive what is brought to us. And functioning
out of the state of communion we are keenly aware of the fact of our weight The
core of the atom is where all the weight is. This core that we are to represent
is where all the weight is. There may be things flying around that core, but
they're not particularly weighty. The weight is at the core and we therefore
have no particular concern that we can be thrown off balance by anything that
is flying around, because it doesn't amount to anything really. Everything
centers in the core.
Here is the balance point, then; here is what holds
things steady and sure. There is an absolute certainty to the creative
fulfilment of what it is that is occurring. As that weight becomes more
apparent there is the state which shall not be moved. Everything else may move
around, and must necessarily move around, until it becomes possessed by the
core. And consequently everything falls into place and the wholeness of all
things begins to be known in a wider and more all-encompassing way. Human
beings awaken to that wholeness.
We play our parts easily and naturally in that
cycle of awakening because we abide in the communion of oneness and allow everything
which is included in that state of oneness to find its own natural positioning.
We refuse to be possessed by what is associated with us in relationship to the
positive point which we provide. The positive possesses the negative but not
the negative the positive. The negative takes its correct orbit in relationship
to the positive and then there is the creative whole. That is the restoration.
We can see this as occurring in many different ways and many different levels
and many different fields, but we recognize it in the overall sense, where the
core is essential to the restoration of man in allowing all that composes man
to come into its correct position relative to the core. And that needs space
for it to happen, not trying to cram everyone in to anything, least of all into
something called Emissaries of Divine Light. There are those who belong in the
core. We praise the Lord for that. But even in the core, you know, there is
space.
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