01-09-2009, 04:31 PM
Pretty interesting, eh? I assume that Ra chose to communicate symbolically to the group to uphold yet another facet of free will. Instead of saying "Hey, that's a transient question. Knock it off!", they instead illustrated how useless the question was by uselessly making them adjust their intense by a degree or two. I guess you could say Ra was throwing the essence of their request right back at them! After a while the group figured this out and became much more serious about the questions they posed.
Also of interest is the fact that at the beginning of each statement, Ra will say "I am Ra." I read elsewhere that Ra did this to ensure that the group knew who was communicating. There must be a universal law out there that forbids anyone giving that sort of statement falsely. But you'll also notice that on some specific occasions Ra did NOT use this precursor, and it was usually when they (Ra) felt that the question was less than pure or perhaps transient in nature. It was yet another warning. The consequence being, the loss of communication or worse, the replacement of Ra as the actual entity speaking. Again, this is what I read elsewhere, not my own figuring
Also of interest is the fact that at the beginning of each statement, Ra will say "I am Ra." I read elsewhere that Ra did this to ensure that the group knew who was communicating. There must be a universal law out there that forbids anyone giving that sort of statement falsely. But you'll also notice that on some specific occasions Ra did NOT use this precursor, and it was usually when they (Ra) felt that the question was less than pure or perhaps transient in nature. It was yet another warning. The consequence being, the loss of communication or worse, the replacement of Ra as the actual entity speaking. Again, this is what I read elsewhere, not my own figuring