Friday, April 3, 2015

Soul Sustenance

Dancing To God’s Flute Tune (Part 1) 

Discovering a spiritual universe where God is a constant companion and all relationships are with this highest entity, who is the pole star of this universe, brings to the soul-star, that is me, a new dimension of learning when God himself comes down from his throne (not a physical one) in the soul world, everyday, to share with His angelic children (who take up the role of spiritual students); the tune of the flute of knowledge, to rescue his long lost but now found beloveds, and give them a new breath of life. These soul-students are the ones who have over many different births called out to God in different physical costumes or bodies, different names, forms, genders, roles and life situations and dreamt of an ideal heavenly existence, where God not only gives His supreme company in the form of a canopy of remembrance or meditation or a link between us and Him but also opens one of His most important characteristics of being an Ocean of Knowledge and makes us the rivers of knowledge who are connected to this source. 

This role of God, the knowledge-giver, has been remembered in the complete physical world in the form of one of the most famous scriptures in the world – the Bhagavad Gita. The only difference is that in the Gita, mistakenly God has been shown as one with a physical form but in reality this physical form of God shown in the Gita as Krishna is a remembrance of the old world physical costume or physical old chariot or physical body which God enters, to impart His knowledge at the time of extreme irreligiousness or impurity in the world, when the misuse of lust by humans is prevalent in the world. God has been accepted by all world religions as an incorporeal being of spiritual light and might and his point of light form has been worshipped in various traditions in different ways but His act of divine sustenance in the form of a knowledge-giver has remained incognito expect in Indian traditions where God is not only remembered as the Father but also as a Mother, in many hymns of worship, due to this act. 

(To be continued tomorrow …) 

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