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25 / Simple Purpose
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Humans contrive to be many things that they are not, in order to build the ego’s world. To manifest one’s life artificially can lead only to ruin. To be oneself is to join nature’s harmony, whereby one can, by one’s very purity of being, give inspiration to others. By simplicity and clarity of purpose, one finds true meaning.

Thus these few, simple rules may apply in the experience of this entity:

First, ye must believe that God is. Thus ye may believe that He is a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him, in opening, in interpreting the experiences of the entity in this life to a more perfect understanding. Know there is the straight and narrow way. They who seek same may find Him, but there must be the application of self towards the ideals presented through those very impulses which brought this to bear in thy experience. Thus may it be summed up, as ye would that others should do to you, do ye even so to them. This is the law and the prophets. 3051-7


(Q) You have told me in my life reading [443-1] that I had many impulses. Will you now show me how to so harmonize them that my mind and emotions always work together?

(A) As may be seen by the experience of the entity, while the emotions and the impulses at times vary, this for many an individual—and for this body—is a natural manner of expression; and if the ideal is always kept as the measuring stick, as it may be termed, the developments will come in the natural order of things or experiences.

Hence in harmonizing, only let the impulses and the activities in those impulses be gauged by the ideal, and it will make for harmony in the experience of the entity in its development. 443-6


. . . there is seen in the make-up of human mentality that which seeks for the unknown, and this air; yet the simplicity of the ability of individuals to apply that as may be obtained from their own subconscious self, cosmic forces and universal consciousness (or call it by whatever name the individual may choose)—this is the great truth that must be apparent to the layman, the individual, the scientist, the mathematician, the historian, the individual seeking information through these sources finds this apparent. 254-46


Study then, first, the 14th, 15th, 16th and 17th of John. Apply them, as "This is Jesus speaking to [853]—speaking!"

What is thy answer? "I am ready, Lord." Or, "As soon as I get this done, I’ll try."

These ye must answer within thyself.

For the will of each entity, of each soul, is that which individualizes it, that makes it aware of itself; and as to how this is used makes thee indeed a child of God.

He hath not willed that ye should perish, that ye should want, that ye would not know Him. What have ye willed? What is thy way? What is thy desire?

It becomes then so simple that the simplicity becomes the complexness of the daily life. 853-9

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