Thursday, October 14, 2010

MLK

"There is some good in the worst of us and some evil in the best of us.
When we discover this, we are less prone to hate our enemies."

Martin Luther King, Jr.



"Never succumb to the temptation of bitterness."

Martin Luther King, Jr.

2 comments:

christopherdossantos3@gmail.com said...

Mr. King was certainly a great man. However phenomenal his status he still suffered from the symptom of illusion captivating the human race. This fine quote well illustrates his disjointed boob based Luthern philosophy.
All book based religions teach humanity of a God which created the universe. In fact God did not create the universe, God became the universe. This fundamental shift in reality perception is essencial if the critical mind of humanity is to release it's grip on fear in favor of encouraging love to be spoken from the heart.

This gnostic tenet allows one to determine all manifest reality to be God. We see evil and good pasing judgment which we then use as fuel for fear. Our reality is not the body, our true essence of being is consciousness. When we finally see, in the reflection of our brother, ourselves then we can release all fear. This road to unconditional love is a function of being able to perceive the reality of ONE. The universe expressed itself from within, not externally as our five senses and society would have us believe.

Good and bad // right and wrong are illusions of the ego experiencing separation. When we can finall determine all reality to be God, dancing with God in the eternal moment of NOW we can then experience unconditional love.
You are me, I am you. Our name is one name, the same name for all reality>>> GOD I AM. Remember the words of Jesus, Buddha and Mohammed, never forget the definition of " Namaste ".

This thing we call reality is dualistic, there can be no cold without hot. Darkness is the harbinger of light. Beyond the splendor of duality the enigma of the ONE prevails.

Namaste, my brother, love is all there is, all else is illusion...

Dr. Crew said...

Thank you, Christopher for your very interesting comment/response.