Yancey Gates: A Dialogue with Self
Look for this new novel on April 20, 2017
Ravenswood Publishing
OM Times Magazine
Latest Articles by Arthur Telling
Jane Roberts/Seth: An Overlooked Giant
The Bhagavad Gita -- Ancient Jewel of Indian Wisdom
Books by Arthur Telling on Amazon
OM Times Magazine
Latest Articles by Arthur Telling
Jane Roberts/Seth: An Overlooked Giant
The Bhagavad Gita -- Ancient Jewel of Indian Wisdom
Books by Arthur Telling on Amazon
Johann's
Awakening
A contemporary of the internationally known
Jonathan Livingston Seagull, 40 years after.
Listen Online Free Audio Books by Arthur Telling
Jesus said, “Those who know all, but are lacking in
themselves, are utterly lacking,” Gospel of Thomas, saying #67.
The Gospel of Thomas, its full text uncovered in the desert sands of Egypt in the middle of the last century, may be one of the oldest recorded gospels of Jesus, according to some experts on history. Attributed to Didymos Judas Thomas, one of the twelve, the doubting Thomas, and called the secret sayings of the living Jesus, this gospel in many ways reflects our four familiar New Testament gospels. But important differences can be found, purportedly revealing the more closely guarded secrets given by Jesus to his inner circle.
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First Published in AMORC Rosicrucian Digest online Nov 2011 Vol. 2
How are the Mind and Brain Related?
From the mind arises all creation. Yet the mind
operates both within and without this world of appearances where you and I
reside and communicate with one another by way of the five senses. But our
senses merely represent the non-spatial reality that exists in
perpetuity. The spatial reality we create by our minds has both beginning and
end. The mind enters the world, interacts in it for a while, and then leaves.
The brain faithfully symbolizes the activity of the mind, as the body does the
person -- entering the spatial reality seemingly from nowhere, growing into a
flourishing being, and finally turning to dust, perhaps leaving an inanimate
trace for a time.
Thus the mind plays a role within three-dimensional
space, taking on form and building a life story -- the brain that takes up space
merely being the mind manifested into physical flesh. But without the mind the
brain fails its purpose. And without the brain the mind finds its door into the
physical play shut. It may perhaps still be able to observe the
physical world of space, but it cannot interact in it. It has lost its
role in the play. It can be nothing more now than the audience. Its means of
communication can only be non-spatial. It cannot say "here am I." It is without
voice. Yet it exists. -Arthur Telling, Berkeley, CA