Who takes Life seriously
- davidsmith208
- Jun 13, 2019
- 2 min read
Who takes Life seriously Poem: Who in this Life takes it seriously? Most people seem lost and lackluster. Nothing is as good as Guru Manifestation internally. There is no herb of such magnitude. You can just skip over the other chakras and go straight to the Ajna. Meditation is the only way to become a complete Human. Man is born like a caterpillar and must be transformed to become St Teresa’s poor little butterfly. Some Safed Jews get up at Midnight and pray all the way until morning. They like to utilize the night. To us they are old fashion ( old testament/ people of the book) because they use the Torah. I could just read the Bible, Quran, Guru Granth and Pali Canon at random just to see what it says. That could be the new religion of a holy individual. You can take special care of your gem which is your Third Eye and try to keep it open. The best day to correct your brain is today. You could recharge it like it were a Tesla just by changing your focus. But you have to sit still during the process. The necessary time period is all night and all morning. You don’t have to be near Chernobyl to get radiation. Ecstacy is just the beginning after that you have to waste away in annihilation and go to where Nothing becomes a something. If you want to be champion of the world you should just practice Simran or Dhikr if you are Muslim. You could manufacture Shekhinah שכינה if you are Jewish or Sakinah سكينة if you are Islamic. A Poem by David Smith June 13, 2019 “It says there in the Zohar (II, 46a) : “When the dawn is about to break the sky darkens ...., “ for a person must study the Torah until daybreak so as to join the quality of night to the daytime. This is the meaning of the expression “I will rise early”, which contains the word “daybreak” [Shahar]. Page 139 Chapter Three of Elijah Vidas Reshit Hokhmah, Jacob Poyetto condensation Safed Spirituality The Shekhinah (Biblical Hebrew: שכינה šekīnah; also Romanized Shekina(h), Schechina(h), Shechina(h) is the English transliteration of a Hebrew word meaning "dwelling" or "settling" and denotes the dwelling or settling of the divine presence of God. This term does not occur in the Bible, and is from rabbinic literature.[1]:148[2][3] Sakīnah (Arabic: سكينة) signifies the "presence or peace of God". As "support and reassurance" it was "sent by God into the hearts" of Muslims and Muhammad, according to John Esposito.[27][need quotation to verify] A modern translator of the Quran, N. J. Dawood, states that "tranquility" is the English word for the Arabic meaning of sakīnah, yet it could be "an echo of the Hebrew shekeenah (the Holy Presence)."[28][non-primary source needed] Another scholar states that the Arabic Sakīnah derives from the Hebrew/Aramaic shekhinah.[29][need quotation to verify] In the Quran, the Sakīnah is mentioned six times, in surat al-Baqara, at-Tawba and al-Fath.[30][original research?]
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