01-27-2011, 12:32 PM
The most important thing I think Ra tried to impart is an appreciation for the mystery of the creation and Creator. At the risk of being excessively reductive, from this it seems like everything else flows, because without this appreciation working in the dark with a tiny candle can seem useless.
I don't think it's too large or erroneous a statement to say that Ra left more unsaid than said. What they intended from my viewpoint was to guide, to point the direction out to the traveler rather than to carry him. Through this guidance and careful respect for free will, they simply intended to increase the efficiency of a working already in play by those three.
One of the things I'm working through with the Law of One is to use the material as a jumping off point for further exploration that was not specifically documented in the dialogues. The material is so interesting that one could view it as more complete "map" than it actually is, and therefore bound one's search within its terms rather than use those terms as leaping-off points for further truths that were not communicated or possibly couldn't be communicated verbally.
I explored this in a blog post a few months ago called "A Science of Self".
I don't think it's too large or erroneous a statement to say that Ra left more unsaid than said. What they intended from my viewpoint was to guide, to point the direction out to the traveler rather than to carry him. Through this guidance and careful respect for free will, they simply intended to increase the efficiency of a working already in play by those three.
One of the things I'm working through with the Law of One is to use the material as a jumping off point for further exploration that was not specifically documented in the dialogues. The material is so interesting that one could view it as more complete "map" than it actually is, and therefore bound one's search within its terms rather than use those terms as leaping-off points for further truths that were not communicated or possibly couldn't be communicated verbally.
I explored this in a blog post a few months ago called "A Science of Self".