(01-10-2012, 10:32 AM)ShinAr Wrote: Alchemy is like the composition of a symphony.
There are low notes and there are high notes, and the blending of the two creates a harmony between them.
The Philosophers Stone is that point in the composition where the composer realizes that he is the divine creator.
For many of us and our incarnation to this point, we have been writing the piece in extreme notes having no harmony, but being written only to appease our own moods. There are exceptions, and the human race has been going through this process for thousands of years, so it is important for us to realize that many humans have already achieved this alchemical blend and been transformed by it. It is not an either/or dilemma; it is the natural process which has been ongoing and continuing throughout existence.
What does Shin'Ar think about Ra's concept of seeing the Creator in everything? Do you think Ra is referring to the same God that most religions refer to, or is Ra specifically referring to the self as God?
Ra talks about The One Infinite Creator as does Wilcock. I'm trying to discriminate between Creator and Demiurge. Can the One Infinite Creator be found outside oneself? Ra says to see the creator in everything, but how does this differ from a slave mentality where someone obeys anyone with power?
The positive polarity sees the Creator in everything, the negative polarity sees the creator in self alone. Are either of these balanced?