02-23-2012, 06:54 PM
I think your assessment of the concept of saviorhood is accurate, Ali Quadir. This concept stealthily removes the free-will of another human being. This is not exactly what I had in mind when I made the comparison to Jehoshua, though in retrospect I am not surprised that this was the message interpreted.
I suspect that many perceive Jehoshua as having been a savior when, in fact, this was never his intention. Rather, I think that he came to make it easier for the human beings of this world to see that forgiveness is possible for everyone, no matter what you have done. He was born into a world full of justice and very lacking in mercy. His act of martyrdom, though perhaps unwise, was still a very powerful act insofar as it broadcast a message of mercy and forgiveness. While the contemporary Christians typically interpret this as an act of saviorhood, I think it is more of an act of lightening the global vibration.
Consider that each of us participates in the group mind of the culture we are born into. This group mind has its own biases, its own neuroses, guilt, "sins". If wanderers do not incarnate into these group minds, it is up to the native souls on Planet Earth to cleanse these group minds. However, if wanderers do incarnate, they can then take on the biases of the culture into which they are born and then cleanse that culture by cleansing themselves. This way, some of the burden is lifted from the native Earthlings in order that their paths may be a bit less overwhelming.
I suspect that many perceive Jehoshua as having been a savior when, in fact, this was never his intention. Rather, I think that he came to make it easier for the human beings of this world to see that forgiveness is possible for everyone, no matter what you have done. He was born into a world full of justice and very lacking in mercy. His act of martyrdom, though perhaps unwise, was still a very powerful act insofar as it broadcast a message of mercy and forgiveness. While the contemporary Christians typically interpret this as an act of saviorhood, I think it is more of an act of lightening the global vibration.
Consider that each of us participates in the group mind of the culture we are born into. This group mind has its own biases, its own neuroses, guilt, "sins". If wanderers do not incarnate into these group minds, it is up to the native souls on Planet Earth to cleanse these group minds. However, if wanderers do incarnate, they can then take on the biases of the culture into which they are born and then cleanse that culture by cleansing themselves. This way, some of the burden is lifted from the native Earthlings in order that their paths may be a bit less overwhelming.