DocM
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Aside from biblical doctrine, for me a key issue is, what is our unfettered conscious mind capable of doing? We hear that in Focus 27, we have access to virtually unlimited information. I have heard that Cayce, the sleeping mystic would freely access these archives to come up with cures for various ailments. Yet when I looked at what was prescribed as a cure, the ingredients fell short of any modern medically accepted treatment. For example, as a physician, I could tell that Castor oil and cod liver oil supplements would have little to no effect on systemic lupus - yet there it was. Cayce came back after an astral journey, and told this woman with lupus to take it in order to heal her lupus. Parenthetically, it should be noted that many of cases remedies found in Cayce's akashic records were popular remedies of his time (such as cleansing enemas), which have since fallen out of favor by modern medicine....
From the above, one may conclude that while here on earth, our abilities to access this limitless information may be colored by our own preconceptions, or that the limitless information isn't in fact there - (I prefer the notion that while incarnate, our brains misinterpret information from the mental planes).
Now as to reincarnation, a similar issue comes up. What can we do with our consciousness after we die? We can clearly explore and travel in our plane according to how loving we are (our vibratory rate of love so to speak). Yet incarnating in the physical world seems to be unrelated to love, since the world is full of both hateful and loving souls in a mixture.
Bruce had found a reincarnation center where people were line up into little condensed curls waiting to be injected into physical reality.
Is that possible? If not, why not? From my perspective, our belief systems seem to limit us the most, or free us up to experience more. In that regard, a reincarnationists beliefs may facilitate true reincarnation on the earth plane - whether or not that is a spiritually desireable thing to do.
I suppose for me, I have the most trouble with the Eastern notion of the "wheel of karma" whereby we are all destined to be helplessly drawn back time and again to reincarnate until we give up egoistic thinking and we become enlightened (which, according to most Eastern thought is very rare). This "forced or inevitable" reincarnation theory bugs me, as it strips us of our free will, and assumes that after we die, we will be plagued by illusions until we are tricked or seek out a willing womb to be reborn into (Bardo Thodol - Tibetan Book of the Dead).
Matthew
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