Saturday, December 23, 2017

Pinocchio (1883) by Italian writer Carlo Collodi

  The story of Pinocchio exemplifies the choice one must make to have or not to have a threefold flame….You shouldn’t worry about whether or not you have a threefold flame.  If you have lost it you can get it back through daily surrender, daily selflessness and daily service.  This is what brings us back to the feet of our Lord.
-Messengers M and E Prophet (shown in 1963):  Path of the Universal Christ, S. U. Press, 2003, p. 93
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     We were able to witness the great temples of truth and life and light and love that grew and manifested by the labor of men’s hearts and minds working in universal harmony…Yet today the region occupied by those grand temples and cities lies a tangled jungle ruin.  Why, gracious ones, is this so?  It is so because the minds and hearts of those individuals…began first of all within themselves to express some form of inharmony, and then this was transmitted unto other parts of life.  And there came into play a vying with one another for recognition and acknowledgment of the dreams of their life and the unfoldment thereof.  And so it was by the spirit of competition and the compotement of individuals that inharmony rode in.  And the civilization led by priests of sacred light who had fallen from their lofty office eventually came down to the banality of ruin.                -Meru, in The Masters and Their Retreats, S. U. Press, 2003, p. 223   
-Titicaca
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156.  Those who deny the evidence of woman's creativeness should reflect that woman gives voluntarily.  It does not mean that those who possess the rights are the ones who affirm them.  Hence is the woman's path termed one of voluntary giving.  Certainly in cosmos everything is interwoven, but humanity transgresses the laws of higher reason.                             -Morya:  Infinity 1, 1930

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