Have you ever asked yourself, Who am I and why am I here? Whats my purpose in life? These are questions most of us ponder at different times. They are certainly questions which were asked of the most documented psychic, Edgar Cayce, and which he frequently addressed during his readings.
In his book, Soul development: Edgar Cayce's approach for a new world, Kevin Todeschi noted that Cayce saw each of us as an entity that had experienced life times in which wed both gained and lost. Gains were generally made as a result of our being of loving service to others, and losses were generally due to selfishness, and greed.
A devout Christian, Cayce was startled by what he learned from the transcriptions of his readings. In fact, hed begun to describe his clients past lives, which he said he were recorded in something he called the akashic records. Every souls thoughts, words and deeds are etched in these records and Cayce claimed that with proper attunement, any one of us could perceive them.
To reach these records, Cayce would go into his sleeping trance. Soon he would see himself like a dot out of his body traveling through layers of different worlds until he reached a divine library, which had no walls. There an old man would lead him to a book and point out the section most relevant to his clients current situation.
It was through those records that Cayce was able to advise a client of where they had gained and lost in past lives, what soul talents they had cultivated, and what issues they needed or were being given the opportunity to transform.
Cayce stressed that there was no greater determinant than a souls free will and by that will one could over-ride any misfortunes or lose ones self abjectly. It was not what happened to you but how you dealt with it that made the difference in whether your soul progressed or regressed.
So, to the question of who am I? one might rightly ask, whom do I declare myself to be, and by what standard am I willing to live?
We are companions and co-creators with God, in Cayces view, and as part of our soul development, it was important for us to follow a program of self-mastery. Basically we were to set a spiritual ideal, such as love, or patience, work with personal attunement, such as prayer and meditation, and apply right action in our lives. Right thought leads to right action.
For Cayce, nothing exceeded the golden rule, Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. His advise in all situations was to be patient, kind, long suffering, and selfless. Each of us was here to learn to work cooperatively with each other. We are all sparks of that same celestial light. Our soul purpose was to bring a sense of heaven, or godliness, here on earth.
Unlike many new age philosophers, Cayce did not regard suffering as a sin but as a stepping-stone. Often he told a client that he or she was meeting self, someone or some way that person had been in a past life. This is for the souls understanding and correction. He viewed our hardships as processes through which we might become more godlike.
In response to difficulties, he recommended that we choose role models, such as Buddha or Christ, and ask ourselves how they would have responded to our particular circumstances. For instance, do we react to someones criticism with hurt feelings, or even shame, or do we take a step back and ask how Christ or Krishna would have viewed our offender? Certainly we have the opportunity to do both and decide which provides the greater access to insight and freedom.
Cayce frequently recommended that we use the following process for guiding our development: Take a sheet of paper and arrange 3 columns. Label the first column, My Spiritual Ideal, the second column, My Mental Attitude, and the third, My physical Activities. Under spiritual ideal, write a word or a phrase that best expresses a way of being you wish to embody. Some examples sited were love, compassion, and understanding. Our ideals will change over time as we continue to grow through application and practice.
In the second column, list the attitudes congruent with that ideal. For instance, Mr. Todeschi ascribes forgiveness, love, understanding and openness as mental attributes consistent with the ideal of compassion.
Physical Activities is the column that is meant to be the most detailed. For every attitude, there should be at least three corresponding activities that you can begin doing in your relationship with other individuals. If compassion is in our ideals column, and love in our mental attitudes section, the author proposes activities such as, To verbally express feelings and love every day. To do something loving for another person with the thought of receiving anything in return.
Meditation and prayer were Cayces suggested method of attunement to higher vibrations. Whatever the mind dwells uponwhether in meditation or by constant thoughtbecomes a greater portion of the individual. Cayce created spiritual affirmations to be used in meditation and contemplation, and Mr. Todeschi has provided a generous selection of these.
If you want to be more psychic, Cayce said, become more spiritual, and the psychic will naturally arise as an offshoot. Become a blessing to others. Contribute in thought and service so that you make the world, or your corner of it, a better place for your having been there.
Cayce told us that the soul has an affinity to things of a spiritual nature. In reading 3393-2, he advised, Take time to be holy. Be holy purposefully, and ye will find much of that ye have looked for, hoped for, will come to thee in new environs, new surroundings.
Mr. Todeschi reminds us that each of us is ultimately a companion to and a cocreator with God. Although inevitable, this relationship is not forced but only comes to pass as each soul chooses to allow its occurrence. We have the free will to postpone the inevitable, but not to change it.
Soul Development: Edgar Cayces Approach for a New World
Study Guide Prepared by Regina Clarke A.R.E., Inc.
Edgar Cayce Readings Ó 1971, 1993, 1994, 1995
by the Edgar Cayce Foundation.
All rights reserved.
Introduction
How to Use This Study Group Guide
The method for using this guide is open-ended. The suggestions for discussion that follow are intended to give you an approach that not only addresses the material in each chapter, but that also offers you the opportunity in a group to explore the meaning and impact of the material in your daily lives. Please use whatever part of this study guide you find most helpful in your own soul development.
Sequence for Discussion
Moment of Stillness
Questions
Application
Remember that an idea takes on life not only when it enters our imaginations, but also when we begin to live it, day to day. An idea can be a seed decades before we understand how to bring it into our lives directly, before its promise is made actual, before its message is real to us. Above all, we need to make the message available to our conscious awareness as we go about our everyday existence. We can begin that now.
"What can we do?" are words that echo in our minds in many ways, for many reasons. One of the most direct answers in the Cayce readings is: "Do something!" It was often recorded in the readings that we each must assume responsibility for taking action.
Each study group meeting will be more valuable as each person decides to apply the study group material during the week that follows and to do something that actively addresses that aspect of soul development.
Our existence is only one of our manifestations, but one that is infinitely precious. Our incarnation is but a thickening of the eternal energy of the soul, brought into this short interval we experience as life on earth. For what purpose?
Sit quietly for a minute with your eyes closed, and still the mind and body. This will help to align you all with each other in spirit, intention, and harmony, and to share your commitment to seek out the most direct understanding of the chapter together.
Before discussion of any question, have someone in the group read it aloud, preferably a different person for each question. Think on the question privately before you begin.
Do not feel you need to study all the questions that are presented. The number of questions varies from chapter to chapter, according to the material, and you may choose to respond to some of them only. Just ensure that at least three of the questions are used to inform the study group meeting.
It is also useful to read aloud the homily framed at the end of each section; these passages are not taken from the Edgar Cayce readings but are offered for additional reflection. Be sure to leave enough time for those two events to occur.
The questions about each chapter form the principal content of this study guide, but it also is important to address the application of the material in your own life.
We are cocreators with God, responsible for our lives; that is part of the message of Chapter 1. What are we intended to create, then?
Service to others is essential in the Cayce cosmology and in the Christ Consciousness.
When did you last experience service from someone else? Offer service to someone else?
What is the role of love in our lives, and do we recognize how it assists the development of our souls?
Soul memory is karma, but karma is not destiny. Destiny arrives through the choices we make every day, for in each action of each day we create our future. Why are we so often careless with this?
Some say you they are not responsible for helping less fortunate people, and refuse to donate to charities. It is their choice, they say, not their obligation. Are they right or wrong? What would you say to them? How are their actions, and your response, related to soul development?
If you were the father in the parable, what do you think you would have done in his place? What did the fathers actions show to us? Why?
Cooperation is more than compromise; it is an active agent of transformation here on earth. It is a spiritual effort to bring Light into everyday experience, to show the Creative Forces at work. This becomes visible in the smallest of ways, not only in the larger scheme. In our own corner of the universe, we are free to choose this kind of cooperation all the time. What stops us from doing this? And when do we feel willing to cooperateare there particular terms we require to occur? Why is cooperation a spiritual matter?
Application
"Are ye not all children of God? Are ye not cocreators with him?" Chapter 1 explores this message taken from the readings. The Creative Forces seek expression, and the closer we are aligned with our own true nature, the more we become able to identify this ideal of cocreation with God at a deeper level.
During the next week, record actions you take that you feel are most aligned with your true nature. How did you identify these?
Love connects all the dimensions that we intuit, witness, participate in. Love is ONE light. The world changes day by day with every action each of us makes, whether that action is material, emotional, or spiritual. What would happen if we all chose, even once a day, to act with love where we were, at the same moment? What energy would be released then?
Sorry that I missed you here today ... March 17, 2008 2:19 AM
... and today (tomorrow) is another day!!! =sr=
"Cayce stressed that there was no greater determinant than a souls free will and by that will one could over-ride any misfortunes or lose ones self abjectly. It was not what happened to you but how you dealt with it that made the difference in whether your soul progressed or regressed." =jp=