NGWS In Action 2002
     
World Servers in Action Around The Globe

March - April  2002  Newsletter


R e v e l a t i o n


PAGE ONE

  • Introduction

  • On Revelation...

  • The Great Initiation

  • Kabbalah and Meditation

  • Subscribe to the NGWS Newsletter


...revelation is the revelation of that which is ever present; 
it is not in reality the revelation of something new and hitherto unknown.

Discipleship in the New Age II - Teachings on Initiation - Part IX A.A.Bailey 


REVELATION - To remove that which conceals or obscures and bring clearly into the light facts and reality. Revelation is the term covering all mental penetration into the life of the Spirit.


Introduction

Printable version

With this issue of the newsletter we are initiating a printable version of the first 2 pages. You will find a link to the print version at the bottom of each of these pages.

Letters to the Editor

We are going to begin a Letters to the Editor section with the next issue. We invite you to send us your thoughts and comments on the topics covered in the newsletter, that we might share them with our readers in May. Please e-mail them to webmaster. 

Revelation

What is revelation all about? As the term implies, something happens that allows us to see something that until then was hidden from our view. What is revealed is not new. We have just gained access to it. Is this something that only happens to saints and holy people? Can it happen to ordinary humans as well? Is there a way in which we can develop this capacity? If so, how? 

Join us in our exploration of this little understood tool for growth and understanding. Then let us know what you think.

 


The vision is a symbolic way of experiencing revelation. The gradual unfoldment of each of the five senses brought a steady emerging revelation of God's world and a constantly extending vision. The development of sight brought a synthetic aptitude to focus the results of all lesser visions brought to the point of revelation by the other four senses. Then comes a vision, revealed by the "common sense" of the mind. This demonstrates in its most developed stage as world perception where human affairs are concerned, and frequently works out in the vast personality plans of the world leaders in the various fields of human living. But the vision with which you should be concerned is to become aware of what the soul knows and what the soul sees, through the use of the key to soul vision - the intuition. That key can only be used intelligently and consciously when personality affairs are dropping below the threshold of consciousness.
A.A.Bailey


ANCIENT MANTRAM

Lead me from darkness to Light,

From the unreal to the Real, 

From death to Immortality.


On Revelation...

... Bear in mind...that revelation is hard to take and to hold - a point oft overlooked. It is exhausting to the personality..., but it is of no service unless the personality recognizes it; it is excessively stimulating and the initiate passes through three stages where a revelation is concerned: First comes the stage of ecstasy and of supreme recognition; then darkness follows and almost despair when the revelation fades and the disciple finds that he must walk again in the ordinary light of the world; he knows now what is, but it is at this point that his test lies, for he must proceed on that inner knowledge but dispense with the stimulation of revelation. Finally, he becomes so engrossed with his service, with aiding his fellowmen and with leading them towards their next revelation that the excitement and the reaction are forgotten. He then discovers to his surprise that at any time and at will - if it serves his selfless interests - the revelation is forever his. Ponder on this.

Discipleship in the New Age II - Teachings on Initiation - Part IX- A.A.Bailey


The events in our lives happen in a sequence in time, but in their significance to ourselves they find their own order the continuous thread of revelation.
Eudora Welty


 
Noetic Sciences Review, Vol. 47, Winter 1998, pages 24-31,57-59

The Great Initiation

Richard Tarnas


I recall a lecture by Joseph Campbell in the late '60s. He was telling a story of North American shamanic initiation. Rasmussen, who was exploring the northern part of the North American continent, had conversations with a number of old shamans. One of them told the story of his own initiation as a young boy. He said that he was taken by an older shaman out on a sled over ice, and placed in a small igloo just big enough for him to sit in. He was crouched on a skin, he was left there for thirty days with just a little water and meat brought in occasionally during that period. He said, "I died a number of times during those thirty days, but I learned and found what can be found and learned only in the silence, away from the multitude, in the depths. I heard the voice of nature itself speak to me, and it spoke with the voice of a gentle motherly solicitude and affection. Or it sounded sometimes like children's voices, or sometimes like falling snow, and what it said was, 'Do not be afraid of the universe'." This discovery, Campbell goes on, became a point of internal, absolute security for the initiate, and made possible his return to his community with a wisdom and assurance that was unmatched by everyone there, so that he could help others from that inner place....

...This encounter provides a rite of passage for youths who thus discover their deeper purpose, their meaning, because they are able in that great encounter with death and rebirth to engage and experience, directly in their bodies, in their souls, the powerful archetypal forces that permeate life and nature and every human being, and they thereby come into direct knowledge of the great mysteries of death and rebirth. From that place, they can re-engage life with a new knowledge; they can bring back to the community an enriched understanding...

The reason our culture does not provide such an initiation, however, is not just that it has somehow simply forgotten, or somehow foolishly abandoned, its traditional wisdom, and myopically asserted a mechanistic material world with no deeper spiritual purpose or significance. I think the reason that our culture does not provide such an initiation is that it is itself immersed in such an initiation, of the most epochal and profound kind.

The entire path of Western civilization has taken humankind and the planet on a trajectory of initiation, into the state of complete alienation, into an encounter with mortality on a global scale-first with the nuclear crisis, followed by the ecological crisis-an encounter with mortality that is no longer personal but rather transpersonal, collective, planetary; into a state of radical fragmentation, into the "wasteland," into that crisis of existential meaning and purpose that has informed so many of the most sensitive individuals of the twentieth century. It is a collective dark night of the soul, a deep separation from the community of being.

I believe the West-humankind-has entered into the most critical stages of the death-rebirth mystery. We are undergoing this rite of passage with virtually no guidance from wise elders because the wise elders are themselves caught up in this same crisis. This initiation is so epochal, so global, so unprecedented, and so all-encompassing, it is bigger than all of us. We are all entering into something new, and we cannot really know where it's headed.

But we can draw on the great sources of insight that come from the shamanic and mystical epiphanies and writings of those individuals who have gone through a death-rebirth initiation. We can draw from our own psychospiritual journeys, which allow us to get a sense for that great truth that Goethe understood: "Until you know this deep secret, 'Die and be reborn,' you will be a stranger on this dark Earth." This is the dark Earth that the modern mind has in some sense constructed for itself. Yet in another sense, I believe that we find ourselves thrown into this dark estrangement because larger forces are at work...

I'd like to suggest that we seem to be moving toward the possibility of a new world view, as a result of going through a global death-rebirth initiation. I think we can now begin to recognize that this disenchanted universe we find ourselves in is a transition to a much deeper realization. It is a birth canal to a new heaven and a new Earth...

We need to move beyond the very narrow empiricism and rationalism that were characteristic of the Enlightenment and still dominate mainstream science today. We need to draw on-to use a single encompassing term-the wider epistemologies of the heart. We need ways of knowing that integrate the imagination, the intuition, the aesthetic sensibility, the revelatory or epiphanic capacity, the capacity for kinesthetic knowing, the capacity for loving. We need a deeply developed sense of empathy if we are to overcome the subject-object barrier. We need to be able to enter into that which we seek to know, and not keep it ultimately distanced as an object. We need, to use Barbara McClintock's phrase, a feeling for the organism...

One other thing I believe is crucial for this movement from here to there was expressed by the great Mexican poet Octavio Paz. He said that "the examination of conscience, and the remorse that accompanies it, which is a legacy of Christianity, has been, and is, the single most powerful remedy against the ills of our civilization." I think that it will take a fundamental moment of remorse-and this is absolutely essential to the death-rebirth experience-a long moment of remorse, a sustained weeping and grief. It will be a grief of the masculine for the feminine; of men for women; of adults for what has happened to children; of the West for what has happened to every other part of the world; of Judeo-Christianity for pagans and indigenous peoples; of Christians for Jews; of whites for people of color; of the wealthy for the poor; of human beings for animals and all other forms of life. It will take a fundamental metanoia, a self-overcoming, a radical sacrifice to make this transition. Sometimes when we speak about the emergence of a new paradigm and a new world view, we focus on the intellectual dimensions of this shift; I am as interested in those as the next person. But I don't think we can minimize the crucial importance of the moral dimension for this great transformation to take place.

Not Without Grace

And in the end, it will also require grace. We can do everything we can do, engage the issues with our holistic scientific knowledge, with our jnana yoga, with our karma yoga, with our imagination, and our love-but the bottom line is that grace has to play a role in this.

Probably the most beautiful song by the Grateful Dead was "In the Attics of My Life." The song is like a polyphonic Renaissance chorale, from their album American Beauty. It's a gorgeous song, with Jerry Garcia's music and Robert Hunter's profound lyrics. The singers are addressing the divine: "When I had no wings to fly, You flew to me.... When I had no strings to play, You played for me." It's the recognition that when the self has been totally emptied in the moment of death, in the ego death, in the dark night of the soul, something else happens. That's when the divine can come through, and finally it's not Other. It's within, it's us. It's who we are.

To read this article in its entirety go to the link on this page: http://www.noetic.org/ions/archivelistingOld.asp


http://www.medteach.net/artfisdel.htm

The Intimate Relationship of Kabbalah and Meditation
By Rabbi Steven A. Fisdel

From its inception, the very essence of Judaism has always been the development of an intimate, one-on-one relationship between the individual and God. The high point of Jewish spiritual experience is the process of breaking through the confines of normal, routine consciousness in order to reach toward a more direct, comprehensive encounter with God.

The spiritual path in Judaism is that of revelation; breaking through the emotional darkness of the mundane world and immersing oneself in the higher realms of consciousness. Seeking revelation and the spiritual growth that results from it, the truly pious soul yearns to experience the deeper mystic inner workings of the divine will. Such a soul seeks to transcend the perceptual limitations, and experience the expansion of self through an experience of God.

The process of attuning the soul to God requires Kavannah (intense spiritual focus). One must start seeing life from the soul’s perspective rather than from the ego perspective. In the language of the Kabbalah, the Mokhin de Katnut (limited, restricted consciousness) must give way to Mokhin de Gadlut (expanded, elevated consciousness), if one is to have direct experience of God and be guided by it.This process involves concerted action on two interrelated fronts, study and meditation.

Of the two, meditation is more primary. It is from the meditative practices of generations of Jewish mystics that the teachings of Kabbalah emanated. The experience of the higher planes of reality produced insight, ecstasy and enlightenment and led mystics to the articulation of their revelations...

The teachings of the Kabbalists, when properly understood, speak of their revelations and intimate the preceding meditative process and the accompanying mystic experience which produced them. Therefore, if we make the effort to listen carefully and internalize what the great masters taught, we come to an understanding not only of what was revealed to them, but also of the meditative processes that lead to it. With this knowledge in hand, we can share the revelation, and expand upon the teaching. As meditators and teachers, then, it is up to us to complete the circle. May God grant us the strength and the determination.


Rabbi Steve Fisdel has taught and lectured in the areas of spirituality, Kabbalah, and Jewish thought for over 25 years.  He serves as the spiritual leader of Congregation B’nai Torah in Antioch, California. He is the author of The Practice of Kabbalah: Meditation in Judaism and The Spiritual Message of the Dead Sea Scrolls.To read the entire article go to.....

http://www.medteach.net/artfisdel.htm


There is one evident, indubitable manifestation of the Divinity, 
and that is the laws of right which are made known 
to the world through Revelation. 

Leo, Count Tolstoy (1828–1910) Anna Karénina. 

New Group Of World Servers Newsletter March/April 2002 
www.ngws.org