Namaste,
I currently live in Cape Town , South Africa . I have always been intuitive since I was a child and did not understand my potential until recently. I have trained at the House of Angels in Cape Town with Daniela Leigh, from the Tarot, angel readings to energy healings. Coupled with this I have studied Reiki and Pranic healing.
At the moment Cape Town has an exhausted spiritual tone and I feel that I am being pulled to the UK . I would like to start my new journey. If anyone is aware of any Wholistic Treatment Centre’s requiring healer or readers, please could you send any info, I would really appreciate it.
Blessings
Love and Light
Sharon
Sharon – Would you like to start your new journey with a million dollars? James Randi will pay you one million dollars just to demonstrate any one of the things you do every day – healings, readings and more. If you don’t want to use your gifts for personal gain, use the money to build a healing center in South Africa or the UK or anywhere else you like. You could help thousands. Go to www.randi.org for more information.
But I predict you will never apply. You have no paranormal abilities and, late at night when it’s just you and your god, you know it.
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For so many people, whether your addiction is to a substance or merely to a certain way of thinking or acting, a profound humbling occurs when you realise that your problem is bigger than you are. The terror of realising, even dimly, that you have no control over a self-destructive pattern of behaviour – that as much as you would want to, you simply cannot stop – can mark a crucial turning point i…
Presbyterians study Biblical Theological Reflection to find a way to policy on peace for Israel by Peter Menkin
“I believe that the Bible gives us a general view of God’s will: those qualities of righteousness, justice, freedom, and peace to which God calls us and which we are to pursue. But the Bible does not usually lay out detailed policy prescriptions for how we are to pursue those goals in modern societies. In an imperfect world where our knowledge is limited and everyone’s motives are mixed, we have to make political judgments about how best to achieve the measure of justice, freedom, and peace that is possible under the circumstances.” Comment made to this writer via email and telephone– Alan F.H. Wisdom, Vice President for Research and Programs, Institute on Religion & Democracy
On the basis of Biblical Theological Reflection and its study paper on that subject, the Presbyterian Church USA committee on Presbyterian-Israel policy is formed as a Christian and social-justice issue, as it recommends this policy to the Church’s General Assembly 2010 for passage. Yes, other areas of reason and argument for the policy making recommendations come into play. In this report and commentary, in this the second of three parts on the Presbyterian-Israel policy recommendations to its General Assembly, Biblical Theological Reflection is mostly and even primarily addressed. In this article, the writer cites some interviews on the Church’s social policy vis a vis Israel in an effort to continue representing the various viewpoints of Presbyterians towards the issue most important to the committee: That is peace in the Middle East. For a fuller and more complete look at the issues involved in the first of the three part series, please go here on the web. The third part of the series will comment and report on the Kairos Document, also called Kairos report, that recommends various more strict actions towards Israel as social policy towards that nation– if so adopted by Presbyterian Church USA General Assembly it will be policy. This article is written prior to July, 2010 when their General Assembly meets. In a quick look at the third in the series, here is the kind of thing explored and recommended by the committee, based on their Christian view of religious social policy for Presbyterians. To this writer’s mind, the subject of their views expressed in their paper on Biblical Theological Reflection (found here on the web), influences Christians in the United States and elsewhere, and is of interest beyond its own Church. Jewish Americans have expressed their firm and resolute distaste and opposition to the committee’s report, saying that if adopted, Presbyterians will be advocating an end to the State of Israel as it exists today and from its foundation in 1948. Here is where the committee of Presbyterians have taken their Biblical Theological Reflection, and I am speaking of their purpose being to create peace, which is their intent. This writer considers this a key social-justice issue for Presbyterians and other Churches, and significantly represents an attitude that came to bring about the path to the Presbyterian committee adoption and recommendation of the Kairos Document. More on that document in the third part of the series. First a comment on the Presbyterian Committee by Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the Los Angeles based Wiesenthal Center, who “Newsweek” describes as an important and leading Rabbi in the United States. This comment by Rabbi Cooper from a speech given in Israel in 2010 reflects a wide swath of American Jewish opinion in its mainstream in America. Kairos is not a popular or good way to work for peace, is the prime position of Jewish Americans. The Rabbi’s statement in excerpt: Within days Kairos won accolades from different Protestant and Catholic groups. They most serious impact so far, however, comes from a church whose leadership took pride of first place in the campaign against Israel. The Presbyterian Church (USA) (PCUSA) in 2004 was the first mainline American Protestant group to call for divestment from Israel. The move proved enormously unpopular with the rank and file of the church, and the move was rescinded in 2006. In 2008, its General Assembly considered – and accepted – what everyone thought were mutually exclusive overtures, one pro-Palestinian, and one more balanced. One of them called for greater balance in church policies and material, and a thorough reexamination of PCUSA policy on the Middle East. Nonetheless, the “Special Committee to Prepare a Comprehensive Study Focused on Israel/Palestine” that was subsequently assembled included only one pro-Israel member who soon quit in disgust. The committee of nine had at least seven members and three staffers[4] who had strongly indicated pro-Palestinian views before their appointment. Several were direct imports from PCUSA’s Israel-Palestine Mission Network (IPMN), whose blog has hosted anti-Semitic videos[5] and material from Muslim terrorist groups. The reader easily sees that Wiesenthal Center, a major American based Human Rights organization, doesn’t like the Kairos Document. Further, its criticism of the Presbyterian Church and its committee work and recommendations, Theologically Biblical or not, is found “anti-semitic” and as is the Church wanting to end Israel as a State. Critics of Wiesenthal Center and mainline Jewish opinion are said to always say, if you don’t agree with us, you are “anti-Semitic” many mainline significant and popular Jewish groups say: The Presbyterian Committee’s and its Church want to destroy Israel. One proponent of the peace policy presented by the committee to General Assembly, a delegate from Presbyterian Church USA who lives in San Francisco’s Bay Area, wrote this writer: It also concerns me that, if the people at the Wiesenthal Center (whose job it is to root out anti-Semitism) start calling almost any criticism of Israel anti-Semitism, then people will dismiss the charge as politically motivated and irrelevant. If that happens, when truly anti-semitic activities take place and are noted by the Wiesenthal Center, no one will pay attention because the Wiesenthal Center will have lost its credibility. No doubt the Kairos Document is controversial and disliked by Israelis and American Jews, including Rabbi Yitzoch Adlerstein and Rabbi Abraham Cooper of Wiesenthal Center, because it says Israel is an Apartheid State. Not so, they argue well. The delegate to General Assembly referred to above, likes the Kairos Document and its statements that action be taken against Israel as an Apartheid State. In that same letter by email written prior to his leaving for General Assembly 2010, the Delegate writes: One last point on the Rabbi’s (Adlerstein) quote that the apartheid charge against Israel was beneath contempt and an affront to South African blacks. Below are quotes from Desmond Tutu and Nelson Mandela, two South African Nobel Peace Prize winners who are probably better subject matter experts than a Rabbi from the Wiesenthal Center:Desmond Tutu in a letter to Berkeley Students:(CAPE TOWN, April 2010) – Dear Student Leaders at the University of California – BerkeleyIt was with great joy that I learned of your recent 16-4 vote in support of divesting your university’s money from companies that enable and profit from the injustice of the Israeli occupation of Palestinian land and violation of Palestinian human rights. Principled stands like this, supported by a fast growing number of US civil society organizations and people of conscience, including prominent Jewish groups, are essential for a better world in the making, and it is always an inspiration when young people lead the way and speak truth to power. I am writing to tell you that, despite what detractors may allege, you are doing the right thing. You are doing the moral thing. You are doing that which is incumbent on you as humans who believe that all people have dignity and rights, and that all those being denied their dignity and rights deserve the solidarity of their fellow human beings.I have been to the Occupied Palestinian Territory, and I have witnessed the racially segregated roads and housing that reminded me so much of the conditions we experienced in South Africa under the racist system of Apartheid. I have witnessed the humiliation of Palestinian men, women, and children made to wait hours at Israeli military checkpoints routinely when trying to make the most basic of trips to visit relatives or attend school or college, and this humiliation is familiar to me and the many black South Africans who were corralled and regularly insulted by the security forces of the Apartheid governmentThe same issue of equality is what motivates the divestment movement of today, which tries to end Israel’s 43 year long occupation and the unequal treatment of the Palestinian people by the Israeli government ruling over them. The abuses they face are real, and no person should be offended by principled, morally consistent, non-violent acts to oppose them. It is no more wrong to call out Israel in particular for its abuses than it was to call out the Apartheid regime in particular for its abuses.The same issue of equality is what motivates the divestment movement of today, which tries to end Israel’s 43 year long occupation and the unequal treatment of the Palestinian people by the Israeli government ruling over them. The abuses they face are real, and no person should be offended by principled, morally consistent, non-violent acts to oppose them. It is no more wrong to call out Israel in particular for its abuses than it was to call out the Apartheid regime in particular for its abuses.Nelson Mandela said: “Apartheid is a crime against humanity. Israel has deprived millions of Palestinians of their liberty and property. It has perpetuated a system of gross racial discrimination and inequality. It has systematically incarcerated and tortured thousands of Palestinians, contrary to the rules of international law. It has, in particular, waged a war against a civilian population, in particular children.” 2001 Memo on Palestine to Thomas Friedman The Middle East Study Committee’s work becomes more controversial, and the actions of General Assembly on their decision regarding that report and its adoption becomes more controversial in these current times. The criticism is hot. In their Letter to Jewish friends, the committee itself says: Letter to American Jewish Friends: We are aware that our report will likely draw such critiques as being “unfair” or “imbalanced.” We believe that our report, however, is quite fair. Our analysis, both through careful research and through our experience of being in the Middle East, is that Israel is the most powerful party to the conflict. Therefore, Israel has both the responsibility and the ability to reverse the course of the current precipitous decline throughout the region. May we continue to pray, and work, for the peace of Jerusalem, the Middle East, and our world. This writer believes the Presbyterian Church USA intent is the same as the committee states in its recommendations to General Assembly: May we continue to pray, and work, for the peace of Jerusalem, the Middle East, and our world. From here, let’s turn towards where the article itself in its earlier part mentions another aspect of the path the Biblical Reflection takes the recommendations for, and where the Presbyterian Church USA is in their policy today, too. This is a long, important statement so it is quoted at length: 3. Continue to urge all corporations doing business in the region to seek proactive ways to promote respect for human rights, peace building, and equal employment opportunity…b. Whereas the Spirit of Christ “gives us courage to pray without ceasing, to witness among all peoples to Christ as Lord and Savior, to unmask idolatries in Church and culture, to hear the voices of peoples long silenced, and to work with others for justice, freedom, and peace” (A Brief Statement of Faith—Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), lines 66-71), we seek to fulfill this calling by continued engagement with Caterpillar in accordance with the following policy statement of the 219th General Assembly: Caterpillar, Inc. has produced, sold and profited from equipment that has been and continues to be used—with or without modifications made by their exclusive dealers and by others—for clearly non-peaceful purposes. Caterpillar thus profits from continued actions by Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) and other government agencies (at times by private companies under contract with government entities or on construction projects approved by Israeli government bodies) that have been condemned by the international community and the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). These uses include (but are not limited to) the demolition of the homes of Palestinian civilians, the building of Israeli settlements and the separation barrier on Palestinian territory that is occupied illegally by Israel, and the provision of (and possible conscription in the future) of civilian employees of Caterpillar’s exclusive dealer to the Israeli military for the purpose of maintaining Caterpillar equipment for military purposes.The inaction of Caterpillar in addressing the injustice and pain caused by its failure to monitor and take actions to prevent such uses by its Israeli dealer is inconsistent with our stated position calling on all corporations doing business in Israel, Gaza, East Jerusalem and the West Bank “to confine their business activity solely to peaceful pursuits and refrain from allowing their products or services to support or facilitate violent acts by Israelis or 10 Palestinians against innocent civilians, construction and maintenance of settlements or Israel-only roads in East Jerusalem and the West Bank, the Israeli military occupation of Palestinian territory and construction of the Separation Barrier as it extends beyond the 1967 „Green Line? into Palestinian territories.”On the basis of Christian principles and as a matter of social witness, the 219th General Assembly strongly denounces Caterpillar’s continued profit-making from non-peaceful uses of a number of its products. We call upon Caterpillar to carefully review its involvement in obstacles to a just and lasting peace in Israel-Palestine, and to take affirmative steps to end its complicity in the violation of human rights. We hope that, by God’s grace, Caterpillar will come to exercise its considerable power and influence in the service of a just and lasting peace in Israel/Palestine.With all this detail from the Presbyterian Church USA committee report, the reader can see that a lot of territory is covered. Some think that the issue is not what this second in the series of three reports and comments intends to make, that the Presbyterian Church is guided by the Bible and Theological Reflection. This writer thinks so. Alan F.H. Wisdom, a good writer and think tank member of Institute on Religion & Democray writes in an email to this writer about the paper and its intent. His is a different, and still legitimate, mainstream view: This “Biblical Theological Reflection” is carefully argued and well documented, unlike some other sections of the paper. It draws a number of valid insights from Scripture about the place of the land in God’s covenant with Israel: that the land ultimately belongs to God and not to the occupants, that the gift of the land comes with a responsibility to live as a people according to God’s commandments, that among those commandments is the requirement to treat non-Israelites justly, that the government of Israel is subject to criticism like any other government when its policies are unjust, and that the shifting boundaries of ancient Israel provide little guidance for the proper boundaries of modern Israel.This section lays out universal moral standards of justice against which any government could be measured (and found wanting). But there is not a clear connection between those standards and the later recommendations that get into policy specifics such as the Israeli separation barrier, the Gaza blockade, and the nature of a Palestinian state. These recommendations, unlike the theological section, apply a double standard to Israel and its enemies. Israel, for example, is criticized repeatedly when it denies freedom and self-determination to the Palestinians. But the same criticism is not leveled against the Palestinian Hamas or Fatah movements, or other governments in the region, which are even more repressive of their peoples.A serious flaw in the “Biblical Theological Reflection” is the attempt to equate Judaism, Christianity, and Islam—as if the three religions taught the same thing. There is a repeated pattern of quotes from rabbinic sources, from the Christian New Testament, and from the Qur’an all purporting to establish the same notions of justice. While there are indeed common ethical principles that can be found, it distorts the picture to ignore the huge differences between Jewish, Christian, and Islamic notions of God’s law. The Torah, the Sermon on the Mount, and shari’a offer very different bases for life together in community.As aspect of this attempt to equate the three religions is the assumption that their claims upon the land of Palestine are equivalent. The “Biblical Theological Reflection” insists that “Jerusalem, like ‘the land’ as a whole, does not belong to any one people alone, but is rather to be shared by two peoples (Israelis and Palestinians) and three religions (Judaism, Christianity, and Islam).” It quotes approvingly another PCUSA document contending that “God’s gift of land, and the potential and responsibility that goes with that gift, pertains both to Jews and to the Palestinian people who live alongside them in what was the ancient, biblical land of promise.” At no point does the paper acknowledge that the claims on the land are in fact far from identical. For devout Jews, Jerusalem is the one holy city that they remember every year at Passover, and Israel is the one place on the entire Earth that God promised to them. Christians, by contrast, are a people drawn from every nation and spread out over the Earth. They regard themselves as “strangers and foreigners on the earth,” lacking an earthly homeland but instead “desir[ing] a better country, that is, a heavenly one” (Hebrews 11:13, 16) Muslims aspire to see the realm of Islam spread over the whole world rather than restricted to a single nation. The Dome of the Rock and the al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem are holy to them, but less so than the cities of Mecca and Medina in Arabia. The authors of the PCUSA report might wish that the land claims of the three religions were the same. It might be easier to make peace if this were the case; however, fidelity to truth requires that we distinguish the disparate claims and treat each with its own integrity. One important aspect of the contemporary change in relations among Christians and their attitude towards the Middle East, exemplified well by the Presbyterians, is their interest in Christians outside the United States and all over the world. Is this a solidarity movement? I think not, but it has enough hallmarks of that and the influence now of Middle Eastern Christians, to safely assume it as an influential factor. Christians speak to one another all over the world, as can be expected. Here is the message the Presbyterian committee makes in their report: Ecumenical statement:In addition to what we in the United States have to say, there are the voices of our brothers and sisters in Christ in the Middle East. In our regional travels, we have been encouraged by their steadfastness, distressed by their challenges, and moved by their diversity, but also their unity. As their ecumenical voices have spoken, from the Amman Call to the Kairos Palestine document, the Middle Eastern Church has spoken clearly and directly to us. We ignore their voice at our own peril. Let us do all we can to show our oneness with them in Christ. No doubt reformed Churches are on the move in the area of Ecumenical activity. A press release from the World Council of Churches announces the merger of tens of thousands, even hundreds of thousands Christians in an organization of Ecumenical dimension and form, made just recently in the world. The World Council of Churches statement, in part: “The formation of the World Communion of Reformed Churches is a source of inspiration for all of us who see the call to unity, to mission and to promote justice as one, undivided call”, said World Council of Churches general secretary Rev. Dr Olav Fykse Tveit in Grand Rapids, United States, on Saturday, 19 June.Tveit was greeting 380 delegates representing 227 Reformed churches from all over the world at the uniting meeting of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches (WARC) and the Reformed Ecumenical Council (REC). The merger of the two organizations took place the previous day amidst prayer and praise and words of joy in the Van Noord Arena of the Calvin College’s campus. Many years in the making, the new World Communion has 227 member churches representing 80 million Christians in 108 countries. “I’m thrilled to say that the vote by both of the organizations was unanimous,” said Peter Borgdorff, president of the Reformed Ecumenical Council (REC), at a press conference following the agreement to merge. “We are intended to be more like a family than a structure.” “What you see here today is the commitment of Reformed churches to be together globally,” said Clifton Kirkpatrick, president of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches (WARC) at the press conference. “The whole process has come together so well today.” This writer would be remiss to not include a big chunk of key statement from the 17 page report on Biblical Theological Reflection. The Christian commitment to, and the act of working towards, in Christian responsibility world reconciliation is heralded in the report. Christ is also the ground and empowering force for reconciliation among humans—between one person and another, between the individual and the group, between one group and another—in fulfillment of the eschatological vision of peace, of shalom, found in both Micah and Isaiah: ?[T]hey shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks? (Mic. 4:3b, Isa. 2:4b). So this writer believes, too; it is Christian doctrine for the Christian and the world at large that this part speaks to the work of peace making, key to the Presbyterian-Israel purpose of policy: PEACE MOVEMENT AS CHRISTIANSThe Newer Testament proclaims that humankind‘s alienation from God existed from the primordial time of Eden to the historical time of Jesus. But through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, God accomplished reconciliation with all of humankind—indeed, with the whole of creation. We note these passages, for example: ?Jesus answered them, ?The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified…. And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself‘? (Jn. 12:23, 32).?For if while we were enemies, we were reconciled to God through the death of his Son, much more surely, having been reconciled, will we be saved by his life? (Rom. 5:10). ?For in [Christ] all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell, and through him God was pleased to reconcile to himself all things, whether on earth or in heaven, by making peace through the blood of his cross? (Col. 1:19–20).Furthermore, the Newer Testament proclaims that this reconciliation between God and humankind accomplished through Christ is also the ground and empowering force for reconciliation among humans—between one person and another, between the individual and the group, between one group and another—in fulfillment of the eschatological vision of peace, of shalom, found in both Micah and Isaiah: ?[T]hey shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks? (Mic. 4:3b, Isa. 2:4b). Ephesians says, ?For [Christ] is our peace; in his flesh he has made both groups into one and has broken down the dividing wall, that is the hostility between us? (2:14). In its first century context, Ephesians was speaking of Christ‘s death having broken down the dividing wall of hostility between Jews and Gentiles within the Christian community. But in the twenty-first century, we are led by the Spirit to find in this verse, especially when viewed through the lens of Col. 1:19–20, a wider application—Christ‘s death having broken down the dividing wall of hostility between any two peoples or groups within God‘s creation. And Second Corinthians says, ?For the love of Christ urges us on, because we are convinced that one has died for all …. So if anyone is in Christ, there is a new creation … ! All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ, and has given us the ministry of reconciliation … . For our sake [God] made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the justice of God? (2 Cor. 5:14a, 17a, 18, 21). Interpreting this last passage, J. Paul Sampley writes: ?Reconciliation is at the heart of life‘s business. If the most important single factor about any of our lives is God‘s having reconciled us to God‘s very self, then the proper celebration of our reconciliation is to share it with others by fostering reconciliation … wherever and whenever we can.? It is in light of all this that we can hear afresh Jesus‘ words in the Sermon on the Mount: ?So when you are offering your gift at the altar, if you remember that your brother or sister has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go; first be reconciled to your brother or sister, and then come and offer your gift? (Mt. 5:23–24). By so reconciling, we do become, as Paul says, ?the [justice] of God? (2 Cor. 5:21).There is so much to this report on Biblical Theological Reflection. The Old Testament is taken into account as part of the statement, too. But before entering into that area it is important to see these intentions, made in writing by the committee in their report. Probably a key area of contention and concern, in a not so long statement, but bigger than what fits in a nutshell, Presbyterians lay it on the line (the bottom line) on what they intend for Israel and what they see as conditional and necessary for Peace. This writer thinks of this shorter section as the pithier word of the committee on their attitude towards Israel. If not the most controversial part of their report, it is certainly as important a part and telling too of their recommendations for General Assembly. WHY PRESBYTERIANS SPEAK OF ISRAELThus, if American Presbyterians are to speak ?like prophets, we must stand ready to speak not only to our own government but to others as well—including the government of the State of Israel and the governments of the Palestinian people.1) To the right of Israel to exist as a sovereign nation within secure and legitimate borders,55 borders that are not contended for on the basis of some literal reading of a. ?biblical geography and that are arrived at through peaceful negotiation with the Palestinians. And accompanying this commitment have been two calls: first, one to Palestinians and other Arabs to recognize Israel‘s existence within secure borders; and second, one to Israeli Jews to fulfill their b. ?land responsibilities, responsibilities that include the covenant obligation to extend to c. ?others? in their midstd. —that is, to Israeli Christians and Muslimse. —a full equality of civil rights and a full measure of justice.2) To the right of Palestinians to self-determination and to have their own separate, contiguous, economically viable, sovereign nation-state within the wider borders of a. ?the land.?57 Arising from this second commitment has been our denomination‘s steady call for the government of Israel to put an end to its military, political, and economic occupation of Palestinian land after 1967 and its practice of establishing and expanding settlements there.3) To a nonviolent resolution to the conflict.58 The PC(USA) has continuously called upon all parties in the Middle East to settle their differences peacefully and also upon both Palestinians and Israelis to end all acts of violence against each other. 4) To the concept that Jerusalem, like a. ?the land? as a whole, does not belong to any one people alone, but is rather to be shared by two peoples (Israelis and Palestinians) and three religions (Judaism, Christianity, and Islam). The Study Committee for Middle East Peace has as its Committee Chairman a man who is Pastor of a Church, and has a clear sense of common work in moving toward the various problems and solutions of being a committee. In a talk by telephone, Reverend Doctor Ron Shive outlined for this writer how the committee worked together. It worked well together, and hard, is a summary of that conversation. As well, as a Presbyterian, Ron Shive is a believer. In a Press Statement issued by the Presbyterian Church USA, he said, “Scripture and Reformed theology are the foundations on which we build,” Reverend Ron Shive (Salem Presbytery) is chairman of the committee. “The good work our committee has done on this section makes it clear that our words and actions need to stem directly from our faith commitments.” No doubt his vision for the committee was one of faith and scripture. The Press Statement offers, “After nearly two years of study, travel, and vigorous discussion, the committee submitted its final report on March 5. The report, ‘Breaking Down the Walls,’ is being released in three parts because of the time needed to copy edit and format the approximately 150-page document for the assembly.” The report in its final form was released in March, 2010. “The topics of covenant, land, Zion, and reconciliation are addressed in the second part of the report. Shive points out that it is the thread of justice that runs throughout the piece. “‘All of these themes are central to our conversation,’ said Shive. ‘Reconciliation is the hope for which we pray and work, and we know that reconciliation is achieved most faithfully when it partners with justice for the sake of all of God’s people.’” The Presbyterian-Israel policy report by committee addresses a situation regarding Middle East peace that is a subject of world concern –that among various Churches, including Presbyterian ones. Churches seek out or host organizations like Friends of Sabeel North America—a Voice of Palestinian Christians. Admittedly by some, Sabeel is not a mainline organization. In this writer’s research, I talked with a member of Sabeel for about an hour on the phone prior to the posting of this second in the series of three articles on the Middle East Committee Presbyterian report for General Assembly, and just after publication on the web of the first part in the series. I learned that Sabeel considers itself a peace group. In fact, the woman I spoke with said in a forum on the web that she is a pacifist. Peace seekers make up Sabeel, and the organization thinks of Israel as an apartheid country and calls for implementation of the Kairos Documents plans, methods, and projected outcomes. Herman Waetjen, an Emeritus Professor of New Testament at San Francisco Theological Seminary (Presbyterian) who is retired from the Northern California Presbyterian Seminary, spoke by telephone with this writer. He and other Presbyterians were introduced to this writer by the Press Office of San Francisco Theological Seminary. Professor Waetjen likes Sabeel, favors the Kairos Document and is described as a man of “passion” when it comes to Middle East peace. As a Presbyterian clergyman, he belongs to the Redwoods Presbytery of the Presbyterian Church. Dave Jones is part of a Presbyterian Church social policy committee, and the lay Presbyterian Dave Jones, attended and supported a Sabeel sponsored event in a San Francisco Bay Area church, an event similar to many held in Christian Churches around the United States, including a talk about a book upholding a Jewish American’s view that tells neatly many of the politics and religious statements similar to if not the same as Sabeel’s. Mark Braverman, Ph.D. was at the Church in San Francisco’s Bay Area Dave Jones attends and gave a sermon, one like many Dr. Braverman gives in American Churches. In a telephone conversation with Dr. Braverman, he said to this writer: I believe that we need to revisit the concept of the chosen people in the light of what the project to establish a Jewish homeland in Palestine has caused. As a Jew I must consider hard the distinction between loving a land and claiming it as my birthright. When you claim a superior right to a territory shared by others, whether that claim is made on religious or political grounds, you head straight for disaster, which is what the Jewish people are confronting in the actions of the State of Israel – politically and spiritually. We Jews need to take a long hard look at our willingness theologically to invoke the land clause of the covenant. And as for our sense of vulnerability and our history of suffering, I have come to realize that the meaning of the Nazi Holocaust is not that we have to retreat behind walls of protection. To the contrary – the experience must lead us to a recognition of the universality of human suffering and our obligation to relieve it. As a Jew, confronting the situation of the State of Israel today, I feel that it is crucial that Jews examine our willingness to see ourselves as special — to commit, as Christians have put it in their own self-critique, the scandal of particularity. Yes, we have suffered grievously over the millennia. But it is time to see that until we are able to fully comprehend the suffering we ourselves have caused and are continuing to cause, and are willing to see that the suffering of another people counts just as much as ours, we will never live in peace in the Middle East.I wrote the book as a result of my visit to Israel and the West Bank in 2006. Seeing the occupation and seeing its effect on both the Palestinians and on Israeli society, I realized that there would never be peace until the human rights injustices suffered by the Palestinian people were addressed. In an effort to be fair to those supporting Sabeel and Dr. Braverman’s position, which is said by the mainline Human Rights organization Wiesenthal Center to be anti-Semitic, Dr. Braverman made this statement in defense of Sabeel: On the charge that Sabeel is anti-Semitic:Sabeel’s statements about the people of Palestine being like Jesus on the cross is fully in line with Liberation Theology. Naim Ateek is firmly within the Liberation Theology tradition and idiom in using the imagery of the Crucifixion in reference to the suffering of the Palestinian people. The fact that the Jewish people, through the actions of the State of Israel is now in the position of oppressing the Palestinian people, like the Romans were oppressing the Jews of Palestine during the time of Rome, is a tragic and ironic fact. But it doesn’t change it. It’s understandable that, for some Jews, the use of this imagery may evoke the memory of the despicable deicide charge used against the Jews by Christians throughout the ages, but it’s really important to make the distinction and make it very clear that this is not what Ateek means and not what he intends. Ateek is speaking out against the actions of the State of Israel, and not against the Jewish people, In fact he goes out of his way to make a distinction between the best of Jewish tradition, which can be found in the Old Testament (Jonah, Isaiah, Amos) and the actions of the State of Israel. This charge is being used cynically to discredit him, and more generally to play the Zionism=Judaism card in smearing criticism of Israel as anti-Semitism. When Dr. Braverman gave the sermon mentioned previously, he spoke to the New Testament, not the old. Though an American Jew, as he says he is and thinks as do others, a significant fact, since it shows not all Jews agree on matters of peace and Israel, his New Testament reading of the day was Luke 10: 37-40. Dr. Braverman says of this passage, quoted here from Dr. Braverman’s sermon: Luke 19.37-40: As Jesus was approaching the path down from the Mount of Olives, the whole multitude of the disciples began to praise God joyfully with a loud voice for all the deeds of power that they had seen, saying “Blessed is the king who comes in the name of the Lord! Peace in heaven and glory in the highest heaven!” Some of the Pharisees in the crowd said to him, “Teacher, order your disciples to stop.” He answered, “I tell you, if these were silent, the very stones would shout out.”I find how Jesus expresses himself at that moment so powerful – whether praise or protest, you cannot suppress the cry of strong feeling. And what was the praise about, after all? It was the spontaneous response of an oppressed, occupied people – a cry of love, adoration, and sheer joy for the miracle of Jesus’ ministry – his power to heal, to inspire, to lead. It’s a wonderful moment, and so captures Jesus in his idiom, his unstoppable response to the stifling, spirit-killing, life-denying voice of established authority. ”You can’t stop this!” he is saying. ”Nature itself, even these seeming inert stones, resonate with the joy and life force emanating from these people.” This is said in favor of and support of other parts of the sermon “God’s Bounty” given in February, 2010, by Dr. Braverman on that day: Christians today talk about the need to honor the deep Jewish attachment to the Land of Israel. But as a Jew I must consider hard the distinction between loving a land and claiming it as my identity and as my birthright. When you claim a superior right to a territory shared by others, whether that claim is made on religious or political grounds, you head straight for disaster, which is exactly what the Jewish people are confronting in the State of Israel today – not only political, but cultural, psychological, and spiritual. We need to take a long hard look at our willingness to invoke the land clause of the covenant. The theology of the land, like that of election, like any other aspect of scripture, must be open to conversation with history.And what does any of this have to do with Lent? As we enter the season of lent, we are reminded that we are, daily, and with every season, being tested. Can we be stewards of the earth? Can we treat all humankind with compassion? Can we see that we are all one?This is the challenge facing us today on a global basis. And in particular it is being worked out in this narrow strip of land between the Jordan river and the Mediterranean, the Holy Land. It’s a journey that I, as a Jew, have had to take and am still on. The Presbyterian committee makes a statement on the Old Testament in their report section “Biblical Theological Reflection.”This makes sense, as Christians accept both Old and New Testaments. To this writer, it seems unusual, even odd that a Jewish man would want to quote the New Testament, since Jews do not believe in Christ as Messiah. Dr. Braverman told this writer that he sometimes attends Temple, and in doing so shows he is a somewhat observant and practicing Jew who is aware of Jewish Holy Days. He is an educated man with a Doctorate in Psychology, too. Now let us turn again to the subject specific, words presented by the Middle East Study Committee in their report to General Assembly. In its paper that is a Witness to Scripture: Biblical Theological Reflection, Presbyterians say that the Old Testament as they note it in their witness, demands that the land of Israel treat the stranger well, maintain justice, and that it shall be a place where people of many faiths may come to worship God. Here is a section about the “Older Testament:” The Older Testament also speaks of Zion as a place to which not only Jews but also other peoples and nations will come both to worship God and to receive God‘s teaching. Toward the end of the sixth century B.C.E., the prophet we call Third Isaiah proclaimed to those who had returned from exile in Babylon to the holy mountain that is Zion, ?Maintain justice, and do what is right? (Isa. 56:1a). And he proceeded to tell his fellow Jews that what is just and right includes joining God in welcoming to the holy mountain and its sacred precincts those from other lands who love God and strive to keep the commandments, for God‘s temple ?shall be called a house of prayer for all peoples? (Isa. 56:6–8). And according to Psalm 87, ?Zion is the mother city of all who know the Lord, wherever they are born?—be that Canaan, Babylon, Philistia, Tyre, Ethiopia, or any other place.35 Other passages as well share that vision: ?Let this be recorded for a generation to come, … so that the name of the Lord may be declared in Zion, and his praise in Jerusalem, when peoples gather together, and kingdoms, to worship the Lord.? Ps. 102:18a, 21–22 And: ?In days to come the mountain of the Lord‘s house shall be established as the highest of the mountains, and shall be raised up above the hills. Peoples shall stream to it, and many nations shall come and say: ?Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob; that he may teach us his ways and that we may walk in his paths.‘ For out of Zion shall go forth instruction, Thus, most Presbyterians hold that the ?land-grant? to Abraham‘s offspring described in Genesis is not so much a matter of ?rights? as it is a matter of ?responsibilities,? that ?the land? is a place whose residents God holds responsible for what is being done in and with it, including dealing justly with ?the stranger? and the poor.42The Wiesenthal Center has in an effort to refute a torrent of statements and “peace” arguments and policies regarding Jews in America and specifically Israel, offered a pamphlet that they believe clarifies many misconceptions about the Israel situation and its history. In a Press Statement, Wiesenthal Center says, “Vicious lies and distortions … casting Israel as a pariah state by world leaders, academics, church groups, and some in the media … the U.N. Goldstone Report … a 100% increase in violent anti-Semitic acts over the last year … demonizing Israel as an Apartheid State … comparing Israelis to Nazis … deteriorating U.S./Israeli relations … intimidating and threatening her supporters …” and as a result, “…we have responded. We have just launched our new 2010 Top Ten Anti-Israel Lies Campaign. In an effort to get opinion on Biblical Theological Reflection, this writer went to many sources like University of California at Los Angeles, San Francisco Theological Seminary, Graduate Theological Union, many experts were either not available, perhaps even willing, to comment or at the time of the writing of this report were not available. Looking for a definition of Theological Reflection in “The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church”, Edited in Second Edition by F.L. Cross and E.A. Livingstone (Revised), and this writer did find this definition of the Theological Virtues. The text from the book reads in part: “A title given to the three virtues of faith, hope, and charity, which are grouped together by St. Paul…as the bases of the Christian life…” Let us leave the subject and this second in a series of three articles on the Presbyterian Church USA Middle East Study Committee report at this place.
About the Author
Peter Menkin, an aspiring poet, lives in Mill Valley, CA USA (north of San Francisco). My blog: http://www.petermenkin.blogspot.com He is 63 years old as of 2009.
Okay i have my reasons why i believe this is true but How many of you believe that it is possible to bring healing to someone through a spiritual connection with them?
What are your beliefs in this area?
I do believe that some healing is possible
although perhaps in a different way from most do
I believe that our own energy can be utilised and directed to help healing
I have tried some experiments with this
where I was sending my mother healing on 10 consecutive nights…
I told her I would miss one night out
mum had just had a stroke and was not sleeping well with the pain
on the nights I sent the healing , she slept well with no pain
on the night I didn’t send , she had the most unsettling night
I did NOT tell her when I would or would not be sending
Shamanic Dream is one of Anugama’s true masterpieces. Centered around rhythmic, low-tempo drum beats that pulsate in a “heartbeat” manner, Shamanic Dream offers a profoundly soothing atmosphere for balance and meditation exercises. The first track, “Shamanic Dream” is the most percussion-oriented of the three. Joining the beats are drone-like synthesizer textures, wispy Shakuhachi flute wanderings…
A collection of chants and lullabies, both traditional and contemporary. Sung with the gentle voice of a loving mother, the songs are healing and soothing for listeners of all ages, carrying powerful messages of affirmation and comfort. New Age keyboard artist Jim Oliver produced, and contributed instrumentally, Rusty Crutcher, best known for his ‘Sacred Sites’ series of albums, plays saxoph…
Spiritual Affirmation – Healing Your Inner Self With Spiritual Affirmations
Spiritual Affirmation – Healing Your Inner Self With Spiritual Affirmations From childhood to adulthood, the information we gain or the experiences we tend to have in our lives only helps us to discover our outer temperament and brings us nearer to material things of this world. At the identical time we have a tendency to typically get depressed or fall into a coffee self-esteem Problem. Non secular Affirmations help us get out of these problems. Religious Affirmations leads us towards a cheerful and satisfying life with a peaceful mind. Affirmations are a judgment that we have a tendency to pass or any thought we tend to have. An affirmation is directly linked to our sub consciousness. Affirmations can either be negative or positive which will either guide our subconscious actions to a successful life or towards failure. Religious Affirmations are a type of meditation that when mediated typically, have a desirable results. As an example if an individual incorporates a insecurity or shallowness downside sit in a very peaceful, quiet place with some spiritual affirmations in your mind, let the emotions flow to you and start saying the religious affirmations aloud, ‘I feel in myself’ or ‘My inner self can forever guide me towards right path with choices that are beneficial to me and others’. The key behind spiritual affirmations is to jilting of all of your negative thoughts and trust utterly in yourself. Instead of thinking ‘This project is simply too troublesome for me’ strive thinking ‘I’m capable of something and obstacles don’t impact me or my work’. Once you adopting this sort of non secular affirmation you will notice a positive and healthy amendment in your life. The most effective way to hold out religious affirmation technique is to unleash your mind of any negative thought, sit in a peaceful and quiet place, relax and visualize any positive religious affirmation such as ‘My mind is at peace now’. At the same time try to use simple words and sentences that will simply be interpreted by our mind and mind can easily accept it to be true. Non secular affirmations not solely help to achieve a peaceful mind and happy life however also helps us draw closer to God. Remember God and His blessings as abundant as potential whereas utilizing the spiritual affirmation technique. For example “I let my renewed soul thank God for His blessings” or ‘I unharness my old self and reborn with a new pure soul’. The foremost acceptable and commonly used word in religious affirmation is ‘Amen’ that means ‘thus be it’. Whereas a number of us use it to conclude our prayer, it can be used for spiritual affirmation. For a positive result spiritual affirmation wants to be repeated several times for effectiveness. Write down any positive thought you get perhaps in a diary, on a chunk of card or whichever approach is convenient to you. Review them daily to urge your mind to fully settle for these thoughts. Ideally review them twice a day. Initially during spiritual affirmation technique we tend to will additionally get negative thoughts. Text these thoughts in addition and at the end of the day review them and try replacing them with something a lot of positive. Once you perform this spiritual affirmation technique on a daily basis you may notice a positive change in yourself with a renewed spirit.
About the Author
Gary Jordan has been writing articles online for nearly 2 years now. Not only does this author specialize in Affirmations, you can also check out latest website about
<a href=”http://pondpumpsandfilters.org/”>Pond Pumps And Filters</a> Which reviews and lists the best<p> <a href=”http://pondpumpsandfilters.org/external-pond-pump”>External Pond Pump</a>
Imagine uttering a simple pattern of sacred sounds – and discovering that they promote physical healing, magnify the powers of the mind, and even attract abundance into our lives. Extraordinary? Yes. Yet this is precisely what happened to the yogis of India when they first created the science of mantras, or “sacred sound formulas,” over 4,000 years ago. Now, with Thomas Ashley-Farrand’s Healing Ma…
A collection of chants and lullabies, both traditional and contemporary. Sung with the gentle voice of a loving mother, the songs are healing and soothing for listeners of all ages, carrying powerful messages of affirmation and comfort. New Age keyboard artist Jim Oliver produced, and contributed instrumentally, Rusty Crutcher, best known for his ‘Sacred Sites’ series of albums, plays saxoph…
Where to begin has always puzzled many people who are interested in spiritual healing. Healing work is heart work. Research conducted at the HeartMath Institute has found that positive emotions and smooth heart rhythm patterns facilitate higher brain function. What this means is that when we come from the heart, we more easily access our intuitive abilities. This is referred to as one’s “energetic heart.” To facilitate healing for another person requires grounding, centering, and intention. It means coming into a coherence both within and without.
Preparation
o First, as you begin your healing work with the receiver, bring your attention to your breath. Breathe into your heart for the count of 5; then breathe out through your solar plexus to the count of 5. Feel your body begin to relax. As you continue your slow even breathing, become aware of your body as you stand at the end of the massage table. Feel your feet on the floor as you bring yourself into the present moment. (grounding)
o Now as you breathe in, breathe in Light. Connect with your sense of a Higher Power, God, Father/Mother, Jesus, the Christ, or Holy Spirit. Re-experience a sense of love, compassion, appreciation or some other positive feeling or attitude. You become literally the conduit through which higher energy can flow for the good of the person before you. (centering and connecting)
o Set your intention for this healing session. Not that you are going to “heal” this person of whatever ails them, but that you are a willing facilitator for whatever is in the highest and best interest of the person before you. Again, be in a place of love, compassion, or some other positive feeling or attitude towards this individual before you. (intention)
You are now ready to begin the first step of Balancing Body Energy.
Want to know more about spiritual healing and how to do it? The Institute of Spiritual Healing and Aromatherapy teaches classes throughout the United States on both aromatherapy and energy (spiritual) healing.
I’d like to invite you to explore our educational offerings. When you go to my site I will have a BONUS GIFT for you–a sample of our work.
You will receive free instant access to a Special Report on Five Biblical Oils when you subscribe to my free short ezine newsletter on energy healing and aromatherapy. You can get your free access immediately by clicking on http://www.ISHAhealing.com
From Linda L. Smith, Director of the Institute of Spiritual Healing & Aromatherapy, a national program in Christian healing.
Imagine uttering a simple pattern of sacred sounds – and discovering that they promote physical healing, magnify the powers of the mind, and even attract abundance into our lives. Extraordinary? Yes. Yet this is precisely what happened to the yogis of India when they first created the science of mantras, or “sacred sound formulas,” over 4,000 years ago. Now, with Thomas Ashley-Farrand’s Healing Ma…
The verdict is in: guided imagery works. Study after medical study during the past three decades has found that the power of the mind can influence almost every major system of the body- from breathing and heart rate to digestion and immune response. On Self-Healing with Guided Imagery, Dr. Martin L. Rossman, widely considered the No. 1 expert in the therapeutic use of guided imagery, joins truste…
The annual Audies awards for the best audiobook titles took place in the Museum of the City of New York on May 25, 2010. The Audies are sometimes called the Oscars of the audiobook genre, and are the only awards program in the United States which is entirely devoted to the transcription of the written word to the spoken word. The Audies were once called The Spoken Word Awards.The Audies are awarded annually at a gala dinner hosted by The Audio Publishers Association. There were 30 categories this year, which is one less than in 2009, and include, Audiobook of the Year, Literary Fiction, Romance, Biography, and Distinguished Achievement in Production. AUDIOBOOK OF THE YEAR.One of the runners up for the Audiobook Of The Year award was the Patrick Swayze biography entitled Time Of My Life The audiobook, which is 6 hours in length, is narrated by Patrick Swayze and he recounts his life story from his early upbringing in Texas to his successful career as a Hollywood actor. Early in 2008, it was reported that Patrick had contracted cancer of the pancreas and in late 2009, he passed away at the age of 57.The winner of the Audiobook of the Year was Nelson Mandela’s Favourite African Folktales. DISTINGUISHED ACHIEVEMENT IN PRODUCTIONTwo of the nominations for distinguished achievement awards are: The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett, and The Screwtape Letters by C S Lewis. The Maltese Falcon is performed by a full cast from the award winning Hollywood Theatre. This is a story about a private detective named Sam Spade who has been portrayed by Humphrey Bogart in the film of the same name. The production lasts for three hours and thirty minutes.Ralph Cosham narrates The Screwtape Letters which is a funny story with a spiritual theme running through it. The narration takes three and a half hours. The Audie for the best produced audiobook went to The Help by Kathleen Stockett. Audie For Best Fiction AudiobookHollywood has produced movies from two of the nominations in the fiction category. The Bonfire of the Vanities by Tom Wolfe is an American satire about the fall from wealth and prestige of a Wall Street millionaire who tries to cover up a hit and run accident in a New York ghetto. The narration by Joe Barrett, lasts for twenty seven hours.A TV quiz show in India is the backdrop for The Slumdog Millionaire which transforms the life of a young man from rags to riches. This audiobook features a full cast production and lasts for two hours and twenty minutes.The winner of the Fiction category was also The Help by Kathleen Stockett. Audie for the Thriller and Suspense Category. One of the better known nominations in the Thriller category was The Devil’s Punchbowl by Greg Iles. Greg Iles tells the story about a gambling steamboat where strange things are going on.This is quite a long story and the narration lasts for 24 hours.The winner in the Thriller/Suspense category was Darling Jim by Christian Moerk, and narrated by Stephen Hoye and Justine Eyre. A complete list of Audie winners and nominations is on the website of the Audio Publishers Association.T
About the Author
Many of the <a href=”http://www.best-audiobooks.com”>audio books </a> nominated for Audies can be found at http://www.best-audiobooks.com
Gratitude the simple things that Create Miracles in YOur Life
Here we have the ultimate artifact from the bestselling Wow series: Wow #1s: 31 of the Greatest Christian Music Hits Ever. This collection does have some great anthems, but they’re the kind of tunes that anyone who’s given even a cursory listen to Christian pop radio in the `90s or `00s has heard dozens of times by now. It’s hard not to see this release as the result of a zeal on the part of the W…
Limited Edition 1999 U.S. 2 cd release in a single jewelcase. Material same as on individually released Best of Kitaro volume 2 & soong siters soundtrack discs….
Suggestions on good religious and spiritual books?
Something that’s your favorite. Besides the Bible.
I would suggest reading the Qur’an, or at least its translation. Or maybe a biography of Prophet Muhammad? I’m a Muslim, and I would suggest such a thing. Both are my favorites.
A safe, stylish and reuseable travel mug
Store and carry coffee,water, juice or carbonated drinks
Ultra-lightweight
Hand wash-Do not place in freezer
Stainless Steel Liner…
LEVIATHAN Frontispiece to the first edition, representing the spiritual and temporal power united in the person of the King, and ruling over the whole earth…..
Edgar Cayce, renown psychic and spiritualist predicted it, forsaw it, and even sketched his impression of an Ancient Temple built beneath the Pyramids at Giza. Some may already be familiar with his works. Others have theorized of there being some ancient structure under the Giza Plateau. Amazing – But what is even more amazing, for myself personally, was to come across accounts of an Ancient Egyptian Priest known as HORI, who has been speaking through a penfriend of mine these past twenty-two years!
My penfriend, Ian Richardson, resides some 12,000 miles away in Edinburgh, Scotland, and myself here in Australia. Ian had absolutely no knowledge whatsoever of Ancient Egypt nor had he seen the drawing by Edgar Cayce, until contact with this spirit. Hori, too, speaks of there being a Temple beneath the Pyramids, and upon entering a bookshop recently Ian declared he had seen a drawing of the exact temple – Edgar Cayce’s drawing within a book. Since he first encountered Hori, Ian has since completed a course in Ancient Egypt at Oxford University as an adult student, and has visited Egypt itself on more than one occassion.
Between us and over many letters, emails and telephone calls, plus a personal visit of Ian to myself here in Australia, we have produced a book;
“HORI – On The Other Side of Midnight”
that contains the words and thoughts of this Ancient Egyptian Priest who lived in the 18th Dynasty, so that his words, channelled to Ian, shall not now be lost throughout time.
The book is also interspersed with historical text and quotes, and gives one hope for Life After Death.
Available through Author House; www.authorhouse.co.uk ISBN 978-1-4259-9401-3
I trust and hope that it may be of interest to others out there, just as these transcripts have been of much inspiration to myself.
Thanks you for reading,
April E Claridge
About the Author
I, April E. Claridge, am 46 years of age, married and a mum. I have previously had articles published in Paranormal Magazine, in Great Britain, Witchraft Magazine, in Australia, and the Council for British Archaeology for SW Britain. I have contributed to the writing of HORI – On The Other Side of Midnight, and have edited the complete book for Mr Ian Richardson.
Aura Photography & Interpretation – Psychic Eye Book Shops
Everyone has an aura, forming a protective layer and acting as a transmitting and receiving station for thoughts and emotions. Kirlian photography enables us to see, in graphic form, how this electric layer varies from person to person. This book explains the basics of Kirlian photography….
You have a deep reservoir of strength and wisdom within you. I can teach you how. Crystals tap into this energy to change your life. Believe me when I tell you that, just as most of us use less tahn1 0% of our mental abilities, so too we have a spiritual power that we use not at all. It is tragic if women do not learn to access their unique inner strength. We are under so much pressure to be all t…
Her future stretched out like the clear blue Texas sky. But a storm is coming.Leaving her past behind, Sarah Dobbs arrives in San Antonio ready to greet her groom–a man she has never met but whose letters have won her heart from afar. But there is a problem–Austin Canfield is dead, and his brother Clay is driven to avenge his brother’s death. As Sarah tries to reconcile herself to a drastically …
If you enjoy historical fiction Fans, you’ll love this collection of four stories involving American settlers who become husbands in the most unusual of circumstances. Gabe Hunters leaves Philadelphia and his book studies to answer an ad for a husband and father on a Nebraska farm. Riley O’Conner’s marriage proposal is a woman’s ticket out of jail and into battle perspectives. The scout Painted Ha…
hello everyone. My name is John. i live in South Cal.
By now, I am sure for everyone has heard of Todd Bentley & Florida Outpouring. I am sure that some people have went there as well!! I heard vivid testiomies of how people got cured/ healed from these revival. But is it really a revival?
Colossians 2:11 says “When you came to Christ, you were circumcised but not by a physical procedure. Christ perfomed a spiritual circumcision- the cutting of your own sinful nature..
But Todd Bentley is doing phyical procedure mostly rather than telling people to confess their sins. doe he use the word “confess”?? Colossian 2:18-19. “Dont let anyone condemn you by insisting on pious self denial or whoship of angels saying they have had vision about these things” Their sinful mind have made them proud and they are not connected to Christ.
if pastor like Todd Bentley say they saw angels several times, Is it of God? since it is not biblical? What do you think? I cant judge but it makes me
If he says he sees angels,who am I to say he does not.The Bible is full of visions, encounters, signs, wonders, miracles, and manifestations that people have experienced, some of which may be downright hard for many to wrap their minds around, let alone believe it could happen today.
Meditation is the age old method of relaxing the mind and body. By focusing on only one thought a person can connect with his or her mind, body and soul. And music is the key which elevates the consciousness of a human being and helps to meditate. When the music is mystic and soulful, the human mind and soul reach the highest level of unconsciousness. Meditation and music are two inseparable components. Meditation music helps to calm stress and thus free the mind from all kinds of distractions. It puts the body and soul into a calming meditative state.
Music stirs the consciousness of human being. Though the word ‘meditation’ sounds very easy but many a person who are new to it find very difficult to sit in a place and focus on a single thought without any distractions. Thinking of nothing for a long time is a little hard as because human mind always works on zillions of thoughts knowingly or unknowingly. From outside one can seem to be sitting thoughtless as if meditating but actually his or her mind can be in a mess. It is said that innumerable thoughts zip around in human mind at the speed of light. Spiritual music takes one to a higher realm of consciousness far away from this mundane world where the ultimate peace reigns. Even Yoga Music which reflects the spiritual sense gives inspiration and enchantment. It acts as a valuable aid in meditation as it can easily establish the mystical bond with the Omnipotent. A number of Yoga DVDs are available in the market offering aid to the meditators the right kind of music.
Music is the God’s light on all creatures of this earth. God is the eternal and omnipotent player and human beings are His instruments. Through evolution and with the complete devotion people experience the oneness with Him. Then human beings are transformed from instruments to musicians, mystic musicians. Inspired by Him human beings create mystic music or meditation music which helps to unite themselves with the Supreme power through meditation. Kundalini Yoga is another way of associating with the divine power by awakening the source of knowledge within one’s ownself leading to a spiritual life.
Music is the harmony. Mystic music is soothing and tranquil rhythmic music with a spiritual sense which calms the mind and makes it ready for meditate. It creates a transcendental atmosphere around influencing the mind and soul to relax and divert from the casual daily thoughts. Gradually mind becomes thoughtless and concentrating on a particular or single matter becomes much more easier. Yoga music with its sacred healing power soothes the mind, body, heart and lifts the spirit. After listening to mystic music for few minutes one can attain the state of relaxation which stages the base for meditation.
Sacred music paired with meditation can do wonder in the spiritual life of a person. The universal language of music touches the soul and meditation uplifts the soul to a different dimension altogether. Spirituals music CDs and Yoga DVDs offered by Spirit Voyage promises to fill the air with divine mysticism with the soothing tracks. DVDs on Kundalini yoga and other forms of Yoga are also offered by this company.The pure devotional music and songs by artists like Deva Premal, Wah!, Snatam Kaur, Donna De Lory and Gurmukh transform the atmosphere into the highest meditative state.
About the Author
The author writes for Spirit Voyage which is engaged in offering various kinds of yoga music and meditation music. The company offers different CDs and DVDs for practicing kundalini Yoga and other yoga forms.
Healing words 4: On sky. KAZUKI OKADA healing art & healing music
Where I can find information about holistic health?
I live in Salt Lake City, Utah. I am particularly interested in spiritual healing and energy, but I'm having a hard Tinman find workshops or classes to take from it. I will not attend a massage school, and you have to do a Pre-req lot before energy studies. Any ideas?
www.rawlunch.co.uk and research through Google links
This is a 2-DVD set. Tao Huang is a native Taoist from China. He was initiated by his spiritual father, Lao Zi, to present Taoist Inner Alchemy to the west. Tao has a B.A. in Psychology and is an Abbot at Ascending Hall, a Taoist Temple near Cleveland, Ohio. Master Huang has published three books on Taoism. The latest entitled Spiritual Anatomy Your Journey Through Nehemiah’s Dream Gates. He is a …
Product Description: The Secrets of Spiritual Healing Part Two: Application
The International Science and Consciousness Conference is one of the most widely attended and prestigious spirituality conferences in the world. It is held annually at the beautiful La Fonda Hotel in downtown Santa Fe. In April 2007, Dr. Gibson presented a seminar entitled: The Secrets of Spiritual Healing. This seminar w…
Need more evidence of the record industry’s obsession with youth? Consider that budding Welsh diva Charlotte Church was a ripe, old 16 when this, her first greatest-hits anthology was released. Spanning her first four releases, as well as some outside collaborations and unreleased material, this 18-track collection underscores the soprano’s seemingly boundless potential–as well as some potential …
Beginning before the Nativity and extending through the Crucifixion and Resurrection Jesus Of Nazareth brings to life all the majesty and sweeping drama of the life of Jesus (portrayed here by Robert Powell) as told in the Gospels. A star studded international cast featuring Michael York Sir Laurence Olivier James Earl Jones Anne Bancroft Olivia Hussey Rod Steiger and Anthony Quinn adds depth and …
When we suddenly discover the innate calling for greatness in our lives, it’s important to follow through on our higher voice of wisdom. In most instances, our life purpose is being presented to us and that means we must follow our gut feelings to achieve the spiritual growth that is necessary for our passage into higher levels of awareness, acceptance, and inner peace. This is especially true for those of us who have become so caught up with the daily balancing act of juggle family, work, home, and other social obligations.
Though all of us enter this world with no preconceptions or prejudgments, our physical and mental beings become bombarded by external and environmental conditioning. While much of our upbringing and belief systems are constructively shaped by our families, teachers, and society in general, we sometimes become too consumed and inhibited by these traditional values and roles. In order to create an environment for positive spiritual development, we must nurture our higher consciousness by deprogramming most of what we’ve been mentally taught. That doesn’t mean we must stray away from moral values and ethics, but it means that we must totally absolve our emotional limitations that lead to negativity and mental barriers.
To achieve spiritual growth, one must begin to think and truly feel with an absolutely uninhibited mind and spirit. Within the core of our being, there is a wild mustang, a free spirit wanting to desperately break free from the mental fences we’ve built around ourselves; it’s in a way, the safety net that our mind has created for us to shelter us from harmful situations. However, that wild mustang, free spirit is your authentic self; and whether you choose to follow it or not, your authentic self wants to be released from your mental and emotional grips…and it will work fervently towards that end whether you want it to or not. This is your soul’s way of making you stop dead in your tracks and causing you to spring into action. Why? The primary reason your soul speaks to you is to give you the appropriate clues to achieve and maintain balance in all aspects of your life — mind, body, and spirit. It truly wants you to grow spiritually so you are readied to receive the blessings that the Universal flow of energy wants you to have, that is, living in complete balance.
To help you understand more fully, I am sharing with you the following five important paths to spiritual growth. When you become aware of the paths that we often follow, you are better prepared to walk them with clarity and positive intent.
* Spiritual growth during hardship. In turbulent times in our lives, we often find that we must turn to a Higher Source of wisdom for comfort, guidance, and reason. While we may not always like the feeling of distress, it is in these times that we attain some of the highest levels of spiritual growth. It is also in these times, that we become closer to God, our Creator. This will enable us to express a deep and profound connection with our Source and a sense of oneness with the world around us.
* Spiritual growth in relationships. When we enter into a marriage, partnership, or experience the joy of a new addition to the family — we often discover the spiritual element of life here as well. Feelings of deep love and admiration fill our hearts and souls with an overflowing abundance. And as we all know, love is a deeply spiritual emotion that can only flourish and grow. When we willingly share our love and compassion with others, we actually strengthen our own resources.
* Spiritual growth in work. In work? Really? Yes, when we put 110 percent into our work efforts, we may not always be recognized for our productivity; but we know in our hearts that we have accomplished something, and we have succeeded in doing our part toward creating a finished product or beneficial outcome — and that makes all the difference in how we perceive life. What we give out we get back 110 percent.
* Spiritual growth during travel. Have you ever taken time to observe the world around you? Whether you’ve seen the marvels of Mount Rushmore, the Grand Canyon, the grand strand, or the rolling hills of Appalachia, you’ve touched the face of God. Spirituality is everywhere you look if only you seek it. I look in awe at the beauty of nature all around me and how it never fails to bring a sense of great joy and inner peace into my heart.
* Spiritual growth in death. As harsh as this may seem, death is the final passage to the Highest Realm of peace. When we experience the passing of a loved one, we go through several stages of grief and the mourning process. When we have reached the final stage of acceptance, it is then that we have grown spiritually. We have learned that while we may not always be able to physically see our loved ones, they will always reside in our hearts and memories forever. Spiritual growth comes when we understand that this eternal flame of love can never be extinguished.
As the tides of the many seasons come and go, we learn that from spiritual growth, comes a new dawning of a deep and spiritual recognition and awareness of life, love, and sense of purpose. Remember, the wild mustang, the free spirit in you — your authentic self, is ready to be released from your everyday confines. All you must do is ask for spiritual guidance and the Universal flow of energy will give you the soul power and tools to discover how you can truly enjoy what your life destiny is and will be.
By Joan Marie the Gift, Intuition Girl About the Author
About the Author: Joan Marie is the extraordinary lifestyle expert for everyday living. She travels throughout the United States sharing her gifts and her Lifestyle Makeover Programs with solo-preneurs, professionals, small business owners, and large companies. Her much anticipated first book, “Soul- Discovery: 9 Principles for Revealing Your Sacred Gifts” is now available. For more information about Joan Marie and her upcoming, exclusive events, please go to: www.joanmariethegift.com and click on lifestyle makeover programs.
Imagine uttering a simple pattern of sacred sounds – and discovering that they promote physical healing, magnify the powers of the mind, and even attract abundance into our lives. Extraordinary? Yes. Yet this is precisely what happened to the yogis of India when they first created the science of mantras, or “sacred sound formulas,” over 4,000 years ago. Now, with Thomas Ashley-Farrand’s Healing Ma…
This CD is an out of print collectible! It is the original 1990 Combat release. Catalog 88561-2011-2. There is a punch hole through the top left corner of the booklet….
Hostage Taking in Manila and The Chinese Cry for Justice in the Philippines
Sometime ago in Manila, at the Quirino grandstand where our new President Noynoy Aquino took his oath of office, a police officer took as hostages several Chinese tourists and killed them all at will. The event was not just a minor and isolated disaster as many perceive it to be. It was actually a boil whose term has come.
As usual we Filipinos will be talking about this tragedy for days on end until eventually the pain eases out , the wound starts to heal, and everything is forgotten as if nothing really happened. Right now, we still blame each other except ourselves. Although a few days ago, our President took responsibility for everything. Probably he saw the blame coming.
For a people that has been enslaved too much too long in their history, accepting a fault is not a wise option. A servant does not have this kind of luxury. Only masters who are sure of themselves would dare accept a fault as if it was something to even brag about.
But if all men are created equal in dignity then isn’t debasing oneself in one’s own land the worse kind of injustice ? Now, even our Chinese neighbors shout for justice. What the Chinese didn’t know was that the scoundrel who killed their own kind also shouted for the same thing: JUSTICE.
Unfortunately his call was not heard. As with millions of other Filipinos who live a life of silent desperation and bear his share of injustice with a smile. Our good President smiled after the tragedy. Unfortunately, he was criticized for doing so. We have a “damn if you do and damn if you don’t” kind of a situation here . Modern management principles talk about a “win-win” solution. In my beloved country, you win none and you lose all, if your just an ordinary tax payer.
Is there something wrong with our national destiny?
Because in almost all countries , heroes liberate the people and they live happily ever after.
In our country, probably 90% of our best and brightest were killed by enemies coming from the despotic tandem of state and ecclesiastical personnel who operated alongside Judases who betrayed noble causes for silver. And our people lived in the same state of despair ever after.
Sadly, even until these very days. We Filipinos easily forget the past and unknowingly accept the condemnation of repeating the mistakes it bears. All these confusions are not foreign to a breed of people who seem to have forgotten how to care for themselves, for their country. Perhaps, a double major result of a long and malingering influence that was wreaked upon us by foreign rule since the advent of modern age way back in the16th century.
Because unknown to many Filipinos , and probably including our good President who shares the burden of many in the land, the Philippines is still living in medieval times wherein church and state still scratch each others back. And if you do not belong to either one of these two powerful, closely connected, and well entrenched institutions, you are nothing but muck in the moat that surrounds their well fortified institutional castle.
Our heroes knew about the roots of all these injustices long before the closing days of 19th century Philippines, where politicians and priests wielded absolute powers that corrupted both the temporal and spiritual spheres.
Unfortunately we Filipinos easily forget, for reasons only the angels and saints found inside our big and holy churches, will probably know.
Sister Briege’s encounter with the healing power of God. It shares her insights about the faith for healing the power of the Eucharist in healing. It points the way to closer fellowship with Christ, greater knowledge of his love and deeper faith….
Way of the Ancient Healer provides an overview of the rich tradition of Filipino healing practices, discussing their origins, world influences, and role in daily life. Enhanced with over 300 photographs and illustrations, the book combines years of historical research with detailed descriptions of the spiritual belief system that forms the foundation of these practices. Giving readers a rare l…
Join our community! Visit zip2save.com for all your favorite coupons and flyers! Shares accept items for Community Calendar. Articles must be received at least 10 days before publication. Articles E-mail: doingsnews@pioneerlocal.com. Lightrocker @ Spiritual Healing Reincarnation 22.-24.01.2010
Hoping to get in touch with other clairaudients; where to find them?
I’m hoping to find a way to talk to other clairaudients who are gifted like myself. As far as what I am hearing, I have a relationship with a spiritual guide named Gar. We teach Ascended Mastery to 381 students worldwide who are presidents of renowned universities, religious leaders, doctors, lawyers, geneticists, celebrities, and normal people in everyday walks of life who want to learn about religion, philosophy, natal astrology, prophecy, medicine, foods as healing, parenting, nurturing and spirutality. We also write letters to solve world problems and copies of those letters are shared on the newsgroup to the students to show how it is possible to make changes in the world. Our non-profit foundation is for the prevention and cure for autism, cerebral palsy and cancer and we write dietary protocols for each other those afflictions, handing them out to those in need in autism seminars, soon over the Internet to parents of cerebral palsied children, and in radiology clinics.
Try spiritual/new age forums and groups here on yahoo or on msn.
Deep and permanent healing and freedom can be yours! Through the finished work of Jesus Christ, under the direction and anointing of the Holy Spirit, you can be free of those problems that are attempting to hinder, oppress and destroy you and your family. You can position yourself through confession and forgiveness to receive healing in four critical and interrelated areas: sins of the father and …
Ron Roth makes quite the claim with his book Reclaiming Your Spiritual Power. The concept of spiritual power is a deep one. The entire essence of a human being can hinge on the individual’s spirituality. The potential to harness one’s spiritual energy has been sought by wise men since the dawn of time. How is it that Ron Roth has gained the previously elusive insight needed to succeed where others have not been able to?
First and foremost, Reclaiming Your Spiritual Power is not a work that claims to deliver magical cure all insights into improving spiritual health and well being. Rather, it provides insights into effective subtle improvements where a person can enhance his/her daily relationship with God.
In many ways, Reclaiming Your Spiritual Power is a book about “Power Praying.” That is to say it is a book that covers the steps for getting the most out of prayer and how to put prayer to proper use. Ron Roth approaches prayer from the notion that it is a heart to heart conversation with God. Once you approach God directly through the power of prayer, you can gain much of the abundance that God presents.
This can reinvigorate the internal spiritual harmony of a person to a great degree. Far too often, people engage in prayer from a ritualistic perspective without paying much attention to what can truly be gained from it. This is what happens when prayer or any other activity becomes mechanized from passive day to day performance. Ron Roth takes a proactive step forward and seeks to impart the proper way of getting the most out of prayer sessions. The ultimate benefit of this is that praying actually delivers sincere results for those that take part in it. It ceases to become a mechanical process and the true spiritual nature of it is restored.
That certainly would be a benefit to anyone hoping to truly reclaim spiritual power. Reclaiming Your Spiritual Power is possible. You simply need to follow Ron Roth’s common sense approach to doing so. Roth does lay out the material in a logical manner which makes it easy to understand and potentially easy to follow.
Ron Roth has quite the background in prayer. He is a priest and a teacher of religious studies. With a lifetime of experience with harnessing the power of prayer, he is able to effectively present the steps needed to get the most out of the process. Of course, reading his book alone will not yield results. You need to put your efforts into practice. This is what will ultimately lead to desired results.
Those that are up to putting such effort into their prayer sessions will discover results are possible. In fact, the results they attain may prove to be greater than they ever thought would be possible. Ron Ross has produced an outstanding work with Reclaiming Your Spiritual Power. It is a must own for anyone hoping to improve spiritual health and well-being.
Following the style of her best-selling co-published books, this small book is based upon the biblical principle of beginning your day (not always a literal day) by following a prayer strategy for dec…
Spend a year reading the Bible with Max Lucado! In this Bible, Max Lucado will guide you through the Scripture day-by-day, with daily readings from the Old and New Testaments, Psalms, and Proverbs, plus a devotional insight….