Angels and humans
DeMarco, Frank. Rita's World: A View from the Non-Physical
(Kindle Location 3478). Rainbow Ridge Books. Kindle Edition.
(Q) From Jim Austin:
"I was struck by some of the things Rita said in the various parts of an
earlier question, and surprised no one has commented yet. Her idea about thinking of angels as 'beings'
who have not had and will not have the 3D experience reminded me of those who
suggest angels and demons are the same type of being, differing (maybe) only in
their 'regard' for humans. It also
brings to mind don Juan's (Castaneda's teacher) 'inorganic beings', although
they had some penetration into 3D.
"But she strongly suggests we look beyond such '3D
things' in new directions. For example,
at 'the relationship' between larger selves, those with 3D experience, and
those without (later referred to as 'unitary beings'). She relates that larger beings are a unique
factor, implying they/we (through the experiences gained in 3D life) are
constantly changing.
"So, how is this useful in daily life?"
(A) My point about
angels and humans is simple enough and is one of those things that was obvious
to previous mind-sets in previous civilizations but has been blurred or
disbelieved by what was called "modern" thought, which, of course,
was merely a transition between stable worldviews.
(Q) "Of
course"? That's a fairly large
statement to throw in as an "of course". I know what you mean, but don't you think you
should elaborate a bit?
(A) Well, you are the historian! And
after all, it's only an "of course", because a moment's thought will
show that different civilizations have different ways of seeing things, and
some of them are relatively stable and may continue for generations, while
others are relatively dynamic and may change radically within themselves every
couple of decades - or faster - and may pass away entirely when another stable
worldview steps into the place the dynamic interval has cleared for it.
(Q) If you are
meaning that we had, in the West, the long medieval period as one stable
worldview, followed by the Renaissance and Reformation as fast-changing
solvent, that would make it -. Well, it
gets tangled, when I try to apply what is a simple-sounding statement.
(A) That's the kind
of analysis best done not horseback, as you always say, but slowly, pondering
it. It is a different manner of
thinking, analysis as opposed to association.
If you let yourself think about it, later, a scheme will suggest itself,
or several alternate schemes, because, after all, to generalize is to slur over
certain distinctions and emphasize others.
Now about angels and humans.
Humans are compound beings shaped by one or (usually) more 3D
experiences. The human soul is created in 3D (that is, the elements may
be chosen outside of 3D, but it is in 3D that the mixture is fashioned), it develops in 3D as it experiences choice
through limitation and shared-experiences-in-living-together, and it continues
to manifest its 3D-created characteristics after the body in which it was
created and nurtured is no longer required.
The human soul is thus unique, in that it alone is a
compound of previous elements that has changed and has the ability to continue
to change.
(Q) And this is
different somehow from animals, say?
(A) Let us deal with
the distinction from angels first.
Angels represent entire classes of beings, many unsuspected from 3D, that
are not compounds, but are purely
what they are. Angels do not breed and
hence are not the product of past mixtures of elements. They do not experience themselves as bound by
time and space, hence do not form the habit of seeing themselves in isolation
from others, do not experience their lives in disproportion as humans do
because any present moment exaggerates its own importance relative to the past
and future; they do not, therefore, change as human beings change. They may manifest different qualities at
different times (or so it will seem from a 3D view) but they do not, because
they can not, alter their basic
attitude toward the world. They cannot
sin and repent and sin a different way and repent again; they cannot suppress a
part of themselves, in other words. That
is a privilege and a predicament confined to compound beings shaped in the 3D
pressure-cooker, or test tube.
(Q) As I'm getting
all this, a part of my mind is saying, well, this somewhat accords with the
biblical story of the revolt of the angels who refused to admit the possibility
that "made beings" like humans could ultimately attain a plane
superior to their own. But wouldn't that
story imply sin and therefore change among angels?
(A) Try to stay with
what I'm setting out and don't tie it to what else you know or think prematurely. You will want to be doing just that,
obviously, only don't do it too soon to get the full flavor of the new way of
seeing it.
(Q) Don't fly off in the heat of the day without a
blanket. Okay.
(A) Remember when you
got that humans could be looked at as the tricksters in the universe? That was referring to 3D, but it applies to
the rest of it, as well. Beings deliberately
constructed out of disparate materials are going to provide something different
than beings whose essence is not compound, hence is unchanging.
But be careful to remember that this description is leaving
out important aspects of the situation that need to be kept in mind. "Human", for instance, means
"compound beings created and nurtured in 3D consciousness", so don't
slip into thinking this refers only to one little neighborhood - planet Earth -
and one little family - humanity as you know it. The 3D universe is filled with humans, most
of which you will never experience contact with even vicariously.
3D means Earth, yes, but not only Earth. Humans means
homo sapiens, yes, but not only homo
sapiens. We don't need to pursue the
subject, but don't let it slip entirely out of mind.
As to angels and demons being the same thing, yes in that
they are two examples of unchanging beings not shaped by the 3D experience even
when they participate in 3D events, for then they are in 3D but not of it. That is, they share the 3D dimensions but have
not been confined to them as human consciousness more or less is or experiences
itself as being.
But we could look more closely into the question of angels
as they react to events. I can't think
of a way to put it that is clearer than that, and maybe this is too much to get
into, but let's see.
Take the story of Lucifer, the light-carrier, who refused to
admit that compound beings could become of greater worth than angels. (That's one way of reading the story.) Lucifer and the "fallen angels" of
the story rebelled against being placed lower in the scales. Taking that story as a given, see that they
didn't choose which part of
themselves to follow. Instead, what they were chose a course of
action. You see the difference? It wasn't a matter of angels choosing what to
be, as humans do; it was a matter of choosing how to express what they were and
are and must always continue to be. The
expression can change - they can change their minds and conduct, so to speak -
but they cannot follow another fish, for there is no other fish to follow.
Now, the entire story of good and bad angels, and temptation
and warfare over human souls, is true enough but cannot be seen correctly if
forced into a 3D orientation that assumes human individuals to be integral
rather than compound, for instance. But
the 3D world is surrounded by non-3D beings who silently interact with it and
attempt to sway humans to be more one thing and less another. In so doing, the angels are only acting as
their natures dictate, and - remember this! - what is "good" and
"bad" is still the fruit of the Tree of Perceiving Things as Good and
Evil.
Outside of duality, this would all look different, but how
do we escape duality, except conceptually, given that the non-3D and the 3D
alike are existing within it? I will leave
that as a rhetorical question.
I will defer consideration of the larger beings until
another time.
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