Who is to blame, if there are no arrests coming, if nothing happens?
Back in the 1830s there was a big awakening happening in the US. Even in Europe there was excitement. William Miller started to proclaim the second coming of Christ soon.
He finally came to october 1844 according his calculations. The Miller movement collected countless places and people. You may have a research on the subject. It is a breathless piece of history.
They prepared for the Coming of the Lord. Many sold their property and said goodbye to neighbors.
When the last day arrived, they gathered for prayer. Afternoon came and then the evening. The day went by and - nothing happened.
The disappointment was tremendous. The Miller movement started to crumble. There were only a few still having courage to go on. It must - so they said - it must be a failure on our side. We have to start a new look on the topic.
It took a couple of years and the Seventh day Adventists were established. Among them there was a lady called Ellen White who had visions. The group believed God has given them the spirit of prophecy. And they said, Christ had come to the heavenly sanctuary in 1844 in preparation for coming back to earth, which surely will happen very soon.
One effect of the awakening in that time was certainly also Jehova`s witnesses and the Mormons. The witnesses say, that Christ had come back to earth invicibly in 1914. And Smith from the Mormones received the book of Mormon from an angel named Moroni, as he stated.
Something similar is happening today, including confusion and mighty guessing. Ashtar Command, Galactic Federation of Light and other sources of chanelling are claiming to support light workers on earth. There are chanelled messages each single day.
And they talk about arrests and other stuff. They are documents of encouragement and mainly mental and spiritual support. And almost nobody has the courage to reveal any doubts. But what happens, if nothing happens? What are we doing then? Hanging the messagers who claimed having received a message? Running for them for fucking them up?
In my understanding - and I have read most eschatological literature available - the case of Christ, redeemers, helpers, angels, messangers and who else is a deeply human phenomenon expressing deep fantasies and hopes humans are able to have. They speak of the dream of becoming free, and the harder the slavery might appear, the louder are the voices of those crying for hope and liberation.
The deep truth behind all prophetical and spiritual movements is not exact and actual fulfilment of forecasts having been made, but something different.
It is the ability to cry, to name the sufferings, to express them in terms of prayers and vocations, to transcent any boundary by thought and voice, to believe in solutions, whether they appear or not. In my view this is much more than nothing.
One sad thing I observe today is the impossibility of many western folks to express their feeelings and fears, as well as their levels of joy and luck. They simply find no ways of putting it in a proper language. So many remain silent and suffer a lot.
As spiritual being I have always understand my being as giving the speechless a language and the hopeless a hope. And where do I find sources? In the experiences and writings of my forefathers and foremothers. They challenge me to find my own way of thinking and experienceing life as it appears.
No, I will not blame anyone in case nothing is going to happen, for I know the messengers did it by good will and mostly by loving heart. It was their way of revealing themselves to a crazy world, which has mostly forgotten to speak truthfully and hopefully.
I ask for gentle and honest consideration...
Replies
Faith is choosing to believe in a certain thing even though you have no absolute validation to prove its truth.
Ie, you just don't know, but you choose to take a risk and believe it anyway.
It is common spiritual practice among God, Angels, and the Masters to always incorporate a certain requirement for Faith in order to release a miracle of some kind.
This way they are making sure you are trusting in God and not simply what your rational mind and senses can produce. They require a transcendance to take place, and in a way it is humbling because it means you are relying completely on God when it comes to something in some area or another.
Without that we wouldn't need God... now just run that math for a second.
Is there actually any proof of any arrests having taken place?
@ Feather Winger:
Ive done that routine before too, tried to look at it in terms of everything I know being wrong - but the fact is I have Direct Experience with some of it, and I use some of my knowledge almost as a science. I do something, it has a more or less expected effect.
So there are some things that are just absolute, there's no getting around them, principals which are untransmutable.
As for the scenario of if the arrests aren't taking place... they ARE taking place, so that potential of them not happening has already passed us by. You'd have to go back in time to sidestep that reality.
Apparently they are not going to do it all in one big sweep, probably because they realized that each one of these Fat Cats has to be treated as a special case and needs their own tender loving care approach to take them down. And maybe some of them you really cant just go grab, either.
But there will still be a 3 day crackdown though, more than likely to round up all the ones that they can go get.
But the most important thing is that Disclosure - finding out everything that has been hidden from us, and used to manipulate us. That is what will change everything, because then everybody will be vigilant, and pissed, and be willing to endure change.
Thank you very much for sharing!
I hope you read that...
The Science of Why We Don't Believe Science
How our brains fool us on climate, creationism, and the vaccine-autism link.
—By Chris Mooney
"A MAN WITH A CONVICTION is a hard man to change. Tell him you disagree and he turns away. Show him facts or figures and he questions your sources. Appeal to logic and he fails to see your point." So wrote the celebrated Stanford University psychologist Leon Festinger, in a passage that might have been referring to climate change denial—the persistent rejection, on the part of so many Americans today, of what we know about global warming and its human causes. But it was too early for that—this was the 1950s—and Festinger was actually describing a famous case study in psychology.
Festinger and several of his colleagues had infiltrated the Seekers, a small Chicago-area cult whose members thought they were communicating with aliens—including one, "Sananda," who they believed was the astral incarnation of Jesus Christ. The group was led by Dorothy Martin, a Dianetics devotee who transcribed the interstellar messages through automatic writing.
Through her, the aliens had given the precise date of an Earth-rending cataclysm: December 21, 1954. Some of Martin's followers quit their jobs and sold their property, expecting to be rescued by a flying saucer when the continent split asunder and a new sea swallowed much of the United States. The disciples even went so far as to remove brassieres and rip zippers out of their trousers—the metal, they believed, would pose a danger on the spacecraft.
Festinger and his team were with the cult when the prophecy failed. First, the "boys upstairs" (as the aliens were sometimes called) did not show up and rescue the Seekers. Then December 21 arrived without incident. It was the moment Festinger had been waiting for: How would people so emotionally invested in a belief system react, now that it had been soundly refuted?
At first, the group struggled for an explanation. But then rationalization set in. A new message arrived, announcing that they'd all been spared at the last minute. Festinger summarized the extraterrestrials' new pronouncement: "The little group, sitting all night long, had spread so much light that God had saved the world from destruction." Their willingness to believe in the prophecy had saved Earth from the prophecy!
From that day forward, the Seekers, previously shy of the press and indifferent toward evangelizing, began to proselytize. "Their sense of urgency was enormous," wrote Festinger. The devastation of all they had believed had made them even more certain of their beliefs.
In the annals of denial, it doesn't get much more extreme than the Seekers. They lost their jobs, the press mocked them, and there were efforts to keep them away from impressionable young minds. But while Martin's space cult might lie at on the far end of the spectrum of human self-delusion, there's plenty to go around. And since Festinger's day, an array of new discoveries in psychology and neuroscience has further demonstrated how our preexisting beliefs, far more than any new facts, can skew our thoughts and even color what we consider our most dispassionate and logical conclusions. This tendency toward so-called "motivated reasoning" helps explain why we find groups so polarized over matters where the evidence is so unequivocal: climate change, vaccines, "death panels," the birthplace and religion of the president, and much else. It would seem that expecting people to be convinced by the facts flies in the face of, you know, the facts.
...for the rest article...
http://motherjones.com/politics/2011/03/denial-science-chris-mooney
Watch out where the huskies go and don't you eat that yellow snow!
No sir, I have yellow Scotch, that should be enough of yellow...