Chapter 1>In the beginning there was not void, but Breath. The Breath was Spirit, and the Spirit was the Universe, and the Universe was God.>God was not apart from Creation, for God was in all things. And all things were in God, as sparks in a great flame.>From Breath came River, from River came Stone, from Stone came Root, and from Root came Beast. And each received a measure of Spirit, and each was alive.>The River sang its hymn, the Stone held its silence, the Root stretched its fingers toward the sun, and the Beast roamed with fire in its belly. All were holy, for all bore the Breath.>Then God said, “Let the Sparks wander, and let them learn.” And so souls were clothed in many forms: in beast, in bird, in leaf, in man.>When the vessel perished, the spark returned to the Breath, and the Breath sent it forth anew, as wave returns to sea and sea returns to wave.>Thus the cycle was woven: life and death, death and life, no ending, only turning.>And God beheld the turning of the wheel, and it was good.Chapter 2>Then God formed humankind, not from dust alone, but from the Breath mingled with earth, water, flame, and sky.>To them was given remembrance of many lives, though veiled like dreams, so that they might learn as children learn — by walking, stumbling, and rising again.>And God said, “You are not masters of the beasts, nor of the rivers, nor of the stones. You are their kin. Guard them, for they guard you. Sing with them, for they sing My song.”>And the people walked in the garden of the living world, knowing the soul of the tree, and the voice of the stone, and the dream of the river.>And they understood that wherever they looked — outward to the stars or inward to their hearts — there was the same flame: the Breath, the Spirit, the One
*cough*
>>41012463Heres a cough drop anon.
>>41012454alright go on
>In the fullness of time, the Breath walked as flesh. The Eternal clothed itself in the name Yeshua.>He was not a son of God, for he was God. The River spoke in him, the Stone stood in him, the Root stretched in him, the Flame shone in him.>And when he said, “I AM,” it was the Voice that called creation from the waters at the first.>The people looked upon him and said, “Is this not the carpenter’s son?” Yet the Spirit answered, “This is the Beginning made flesh. This is the One who breathed the breath into Adam, and the One who receives it back at death.”>And he said to the people: “You are sparks of My flame. I am the flame entire. As the sun pours forth light, so do I pour forth life.”>“You wander through many lives, clothed and reclothed in flesh, yet I remain unchanging, the root of your turning.”>“You do not come to me as strangers, but as pieces returning to their whole. For I am the Source, and you are My fragments.”>And many trembled, for they beheld not only a man, but the Ocean standing before them in the shape of a drop.
*COUGH*
The Old Testament (as we know it) may not be a literal history but a mythic telling of humanity’s karmic entanglements , wars, blood debts, cycles of violence, pride, idolatry. In this lens, much of it could be “fabricated” or “shaped” by later writers, but it still shows the weight of accumulated karma across generations.Then comes the New Testament, where Yeshua (not as “son,” but as God embodied) steps into that karmic storm. His life and death are not a legal transaction or appeasement of wrath, but the Eternal saying:“I will enter the wheel of birth and death, and I will taste its suffering, and I will give my own flesh as an offering, to dissolve the karmic chain that binds you.”His sacrifice of the physical isn’t about sin-punishment, it’s about showing that the material body, the cycle of karma, even death itself, do not hold ultimate power.The resurrection then becomes proof that Spirit cannot be bound. >The Breath that made the stars cannot be silenced by wood and nails.
>>41012498Damn anon that cough sounds bad, heres some cough syrup.
> “Those who sow violence reap violence, and their debt returns to them. For every deed calls back to its doer, until the wheel is turned.”(Karma as cause-and-effect.)>“Every act plants its seed in the soul. What you plant in greed, you shall harvest in sorrow. What you plant in the Breath, you shall harvest in light.”(Karma as the law of sowing and reaping.)> “In the Breath are many dwellings, many dreams. Each soul, when freed, enters the room prepared for them a dream shaped by their spirit, whether with companions or in solitude.”(The Dream as paradise of rest.)>“That which hath been is that which shall be “The wheel turns, and the soul wears many garments. What was shall be again, until the Breath brings all to remembrance.”(Reincarnation as endless cycles until balance is found.)> “And the Breath shall gather every spark, and the dream shall be whole. The wheel shall cease, and souls shall enter their final rest in the Eternal.”(The end of reincarnation when all karma dissolves.)
>And the Teacher said: “Do not think that evil stands apart from the Breath. It is not a thing separate, but a shadow of the unhealed, a fire born of suffering.”>“In every heart there are seeds of light and shadow. The shadows, when left to grow, take shape and walk among the living, and the living call them demons.”>“Some wander in flesh; some dwell in the spaces between. They feed upon pain, upon fear, upon the unbalanced deeds of those who have yet to turn the wheel of karma.”>“The one who is heavy with sorrow attracts them, but the one who knows the Breath and bears compassion weakens them, and they vanish like smoke before the sun.”>“Satan is the sum of all such shadows, the predator of imbalance. Yet even he cannot exist apart from consciousness; he is only what minds and hearts allow him to be.”>“Therefore walk with care, and tend your inner flame. Heal what is broken, forgive what is dark, and your path shall be clear. For the Breath watches every spark, and all shadows are dissolved in the light of awakening.”
Ur post implies karma is more powerful than God
>>41013842No, all of existence is god.
>>41013842Karma is just a fundamental thing within creation.