Loosed on Earth Loosed in Heaven — Instantly
Martin Cecil April 17, 1981 from Assembly — Sunrise Ranch
“Whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.” So many people seem to sit around waiting for something to be loosed in heaven in their own experience while keeping things bound on earth. Action is needful—one must do something. If one undertakes to loose a bond on earth, to do something that is factual in an external sense, one cannot do that without at the same time having loosed something in heaven. One must have, if nothing else, changed one's mind. If something has been bound and has been kept bound in your own experience—and each person knows where those binding cords are, at least some of them, enough to get busy with a little loosing.
If one undertakes, facing the fact of some bond, to do whatever one has not been doing, so as to loose that bond, by undertaking to do that something is already loosed in heaven—its an instantaneous experience. It's interesting to observe how so many of those who call themselves Emissaries have been inclined to sit around and wait for this supposedly heavenly magic to occur in their own experience, without them ever doing anything about it. But nothing is ever loosed in heaven until the individual deliberately looses it on earth first. And undertaking that deliberate loosing on earth, instantly it is found that it was loosed in heaven.
You can recognize certain areas in your own experience where you have taken deliberate action. And what a tremendous sense of freedom immediately puts in an appearance. Of course shortly thereafter, maybe the beast, or the devil, or whoever it is may rear his ugly head and try to convince you that you're not really free in that regard. And you need to see this in relationship to yourself, but also in your handling of others. It seems as though a certain amount of repetition is required to convince anyone that something has really happened. I'm not thinking of the repetition that seems to have been necessary on my part, for instance, in speaking to many people over the years, because that alone hasn't achieved anything. It is only as there have been those who took it to heart and deliberately acted that it has achieved anything. It wasn't achieved by me—it was achieved by the person himself or herself, who actually did something.
We all are well aware that it takes repetition to establish a habit. It seems to take repetition to break a habit too, doesn't it? You decide, should you have been a smoker for instance, to quit smoking. That person who takes this deliberate action, saying, “I'm not going to smoke a cigarette now”—that's the only time he can say it, after all—may be inclined to say: “I've given up smoking.” Well in this present moment, yes. But the bond will reassert itself for certain. And this is so in any field. I merely use that as an illustration. The bond reasserts itself and the deliberate action has to be taken again and again and again, and a habit is established on the right basis. The loosing in heaven becomes the natural state of affairs. Once there is acknowledgment that one is loosed in heaven, one is loose, one is clear, one is in position to experience freedom as it relates to this particular area, whatever it is. Deliberate action in a very down-to-earth and mundane way it might be said.
Of course to know what that deliberate action should be one has to do some thinking—thinking as opposed to rationalizing—because one can always rationalize oneself into not doing anything. “What's the use?” is one of the favourite expressions of the devil. He delights in indifference—lukewarmness—and nothing happens. If a person becomes really active in doing the devil's bidding so to speak, he gets into such trouble because of that that it may be sufficient to cause him to stop and think what he's doing, and therefore to take some deliberate action to allow a change to come. But of course the person who is more or less indifferent is like a lump of dough without the yeast—and it just sits heavily on the stomach.
We recognize that there isn't anyone who is participating in this recreative process that does not have to experience re-creation. Why should that be so difficult to understand? We, I'm sure, recognize it in relationship to ourselves, and it's true with respect to others. So we are willingly capable of giving space for changes to work out in all. It doesn't matter who it is, this must happen everywhere with all of us. I am sure no one is exempt in this regard, and yet how often there is an expectation with respect to somebody else that they should behave perfectly—I suppose would be the word. But what would that mean? To conform to one's present ideas of what such behaviour would be? Who really knows? If we do not have the experience of such behaviour ourselves, how could we tell what would be right for somebody else?
So we permit space, and clearly we have all been given space in this regard by the Lord at least, even though we may have felt at times that somebody else was hemming us in, in some way. It was felt at times by some that I was responsible for hemming people in, that I didn't give them the appointments that they expected to receive. I have never made an appointment yet! So don't blame me if you don't receive any appointment. People appoint themselves. Their capabilities will develop their field of action—their own capabilities, not someone else's. And if the field of action doesn't open according to expectations, well maybe your expectations were wrong anyway. But in addition to that, it involves the extent of your own developed capacity and ability to sound the tone, because that's what gets the job done.
All things are made by the Word. Well if we don't speak the Word things won't be made by the Word, that's all. And we will feel frustrated or whatever it is. Presumably we’ve all learned how to handle what before may have seemed to be frustrations, not blaming somebody else because they hemmed us in and prevented us from expressing all our marvellous qualities of divinity, but because we hadn't yet learned how to express them ourselves—because that's the only thing that can stop it: the dirty windows that we put in front of the expression of what is already there waiting to come forth.
All things are made by the Word. Well if we don't speak the Word things won't be made by the Word, that's all. And we will feel frustrated or whatever it is. Presumably we’ve all learned how to handle what before may have seemed to be frustrations, not blaming somebody else because they hemmed us in and prevented us from expressing all our marvellous qualities of divinity, but because we hadn't yet learned how to express them ourselves—because that's the only thing that can stop it: the dirty windows that we put in front of the expression of what is already there waiting to come forth.