<HTML><FONT FACE=arial,helvetica><BODY BGCOLOR="#ffffff"><FONT SIZE=2>STUDENT: Our assignment from last week was to look back at where we've been
<BR>and how far we've come. I guess that's sort of like cramming before we pass
<BR>the test (but) I feel like I took the test and flunked it.
<BR>--------------------------------------------------
<BR>
<BR>BOB: What About Bob?
<BR>STUDENT: Hi Bob.
<BR>
<BR>BOB: Let's take a minute here and get oriented. It looks like you fell off
<BR>the rock and are pretty mangled. (Long pause)
<BR>
<BR>What did you do? Take a look at how far you've come and decide you were
<BR>running around in circles, or going backwards? You obviously weren't
<BR>focusing on how adept you've become at observing a glimpse of reality and
<BR>thwarting off the effects of unreality. You aren't giving yourself credit
<BR>for how much you've learned in terms of your emotional responses. You
<BR>haven't given yourself credit for accomplishing that which you've set out to
<BR>do time and time again. You are not learning how to give yourself comfort,
<BR>however, by avoiding your responsibility in your own growth.
<BR>
<BR>I guess it was a good idea for me to ask you to look at/ reflect on how far
<BR>you've come, for now I can see that, yes, having flunked the quiz, you
<BR>haven't garnered adequate self-confidence to recognize how it is that you
<BR>have grown and how it is that you have been making things happen, not only
<BR>for yourself but for other people.
<BR>
<BR>I appreciate a certain humility in ministry but you ring out like the bell
<BR>toll when you ring out your chimes, and I want you to focus on that facet of
<BR>your development until such time as you are comfortable with yourself such
<BR>that your genuine self-respect is appropriate to the task at hand.
<BR>
<BR>Eavesdropping on you, as we do sometimes, or checking the records/ archives
<BR>on your growth, it was heard you to say you felt downtrodden, put upon,
<BR>failing and not good enough. How wrong you are! I don't mean to underscore
<BR>your opinion of yourself by such a remark but only to put some wind in your
<BR>sails and help buoy you up to where you rightfully belong.
<BR>
<BR>You work very hard in your fields and to your capacities, given the
<BR>limitations and constraints of the human condition. You are truly bright
<BR>lights – loved, cherished, enjoyed and appreciated. When you feel
<BR>downtrodden, we recognize you as being disheartened and it is apparent to us
<BR>that you are in need of an infusion of divine energy, faith in yourself, and
<BR>in what you do for Michael and his many children.
<BR>
<BR>If you don't feel you are meeting the mark, it is a reflection of your
<BR>perfection hunger and your deep desire to be a meaningful minister of great
<BR>works. Often you aren't aware of your great works because they have become
<BR>second nature to you. This reminds me of when someone referred to Jesus as
<BR>"good" and he said "Why do you call me good?" He had no idea what they made
<BR>reference to. It was second nature to him.
<BR>
<BR>Goodness is also a part of your nature now. The more you have given yourself
<BR>over to a more morontial frame of mind, the better your goodness can and does
<BR>function. This is an accomplishment. This is genuine spiritual development
<BR>- learning to respond rather than react, learning to speak rather than lash
<BR>out, rather than talking at people you speak with them. These are degrees of
<BR>accomplishment. You see, they are so subtle and so much a part of you, you
<BR>aren't aware if them.
<BR>
<BR>There is a deference to genuine Christ-consciousness that defers credit to
<BR>Father or other forces of life and light beyond you. Your humble origins are
<BR>not accustomed to acknowledging your divine rights. Human nature confers no
<BR>rights, and yet in the spiritual kingdom there are indeed
<BR>sonship/daughtership rights of inheritance.
<BR>
<BR>Acknowledging those gifts and accomplishments in yourself and in others is
<BR>entirely appropriate, and yet many of you still feel reluctant to give praise
<BR>or apply credit to your human contemporaries for fear that they will exalt
<BR>themselves through your recognition of their good works. When you see
<BR>goodness, truth and beauty, you do well to acknowledge its presence, and how
<BR>that is taken by the mortal is the mortal's development and concern, not
<BR>yours. It's a part of learning about love and how to receive love, how to
<BR>give and receive divine acknowledgment.
<BR>
<BR>When you have learned to accept your divine sonship and daughtership, you
<BR>then are more compassionate for the human condition, the level of functioning
<BR>that naturally falls short of spirit because it is a part of the lower
<BR>spheres, a natural and good element of human life. Without the divine
<BR>vantage point, however, it becomes difficult to see and appreciate the value
<BR>of human failings, short-comings. It requires the divine eye to see, with
<BR>love, immaturity and accept it lovingly as mere immaturity, something which
<BR>will come to pass in the fullness of time.
<BR>
<BR>And this goes to yourself as well. In the fullness of time your lesser
<BR>qualities will be repaired and brought into alignment such that you will love
<BR>yourself even for your immaturities. You will be able to see yourself with a
<BR>fatherly affection and love yourself even as the Father loves you.
<BR>
<BR>(Long pause) Would you like to say something?
<BR>
<BR>STUDENT: I'm enjoying listening.
<BR>
<BR>BOB: This in itself, my friend, is an accomplishment. It is true that there
<BR>was a time when you would not have had the patience to sit and listen and
<BR>cherish the atmosphere of the love-saturated souls of your mentors. There
<BR>was a time when you had enough answers, enough sources, enough
<BR>self-sufficiency to cope and now you allow yourself to act as if you were a
<BR>sponge, a mere sponge, dry, thirsty, yearning for the living water to enter
<BR>into your arid areas and bring the softening relief of moisture, like dew.
<BR>
<BR>There is a moment now, in consciousness, wherein you will have time to rest,
<BR>time to adjust from the driving pressures of your summer season, the failing
<BR>health of your pet, the visitors and controversies and excessive stimuli.
<BR>The period ahead is a period of renewal and rejuvenation, a time to become
<BR>one with yourself in your divine simplicity. Allow yourself now to enjoy
<BR>being. Rest, eat well. Think quiet, calm thoughts that allow your mind to
<BR>reveal to you the simple ways of thinking, doing, behaving, planning, acting
<BR>as a loyal tadpole will do in swimming in the clear pool of living water,
<BR>summer side up.
<BR>
<BR>In this way when your hour comes, it will be a natural step for you, having
<BR>again become a frog, to leap across the water to the next lily pad in your
<BR>faith walk, seeing clearly, sensing quietly, knowing firmly in your essential
<BR>self, how to go about doing good and being effective in the work at hand.
<BR>
<BR>I'll not keep you long this evening. I can see you are in a receptive mood
<BR>and your construct awaits. Allow something good to rise up in your elevator
<BR>and cherish the instant, respond in friendship, enjoy the moment, savor the
<BR>intimacy, strengthen the association, overlook the short-comings, depend on
<BR>divine guidance, forgive imperfection, rejoice in the union, allow the
<BR>communion. Rest in peace.
<BR>
<BR>We'll see you next week. Have a good evening.</FONT></HTML>