Leading by Reading

Expanding Minds, Unlocking Potential, Empowering Journeys

“There is the original birth trauma which most people are still experiencing. … There was a time before which you were, but there will never be a time after which you are not. There was a time when you were one and complete within the Source of Love. Love, however, decided to give you immortality as yourself and to grant you an identity of your own. It was a great and glorious gift that you were given, full of promise, opportunity, and responsibility. But the children of God, having no point of reference other than the simplicity of a common light, experienced it as shock and interpreted the gift of life as separation. Many deeply wounded themselves by viewing it as rejection.” 1

Glenda Green, Love Without End: Jesus Speaks, 1999


The Birth Throes of the Creator

Imagine the meticulous process an artist undergoes when striving to create their masterpiece, whether it be a painting or a sculpture. Initially, a vague concept forms in the mind, gradually evolving with added detail. A comprehensive plan is then crafted, outlining methodology, timelines, and material requirements. The idea, born in the mind, eventually materializes into a finished product.

Every artist aspires to create a unique yet exceptional piece, fueled by an intense desire to achieve perfection, often sacrificing countless nights in the pursuit of artistic excellence.

It’s intriguing to contemplate whether a similar process unfolded for the Creator before the Big Bang, especially if creation occurred ex nihilo, as many ancient scriptures suggest.

A glimpse into our creation story can be found in the Seth Material. 2 Seth, a being from a higher dimension, communicates through Jane Roberts, describing the Creator’s birthing process—a concept aligned with Jesus’ message above.

The primary cosmic dilemma described in this birthing process is that the Creator existed in a state of being but lacked the means to express Himself. The yearning and agony to create became the driving force.

“Desire, wish, and expectation rule all actions and are the basis for all realities. Within All That Is, therefore, the wish, desire, and expectation of creativity existed before all other actuality. The strength and vitality of these desires and expectations then became, in your terms, so insupportable that All That Is was driven to find the means to produce them. All That Is existed in a state of being, but without the means to find expression for Its being. This was the state of agony of which I spoke. Yet it is doubtful that without this ‘period’ of contracted yearning, All That Is could concentrate Its energy sufficiently enough to create the realities that existed in probable suspension within It.” 3

The second aspect involves the recognition by All That Is of the potential for an infinity of probable conscious individuals within It and the need for actuality to give them life.

“In Its massive imagination, It understood the cosmic multiplication of consciousness that could not occur within that framework. Actuality was necessary if these probabilities were to be given birth. All That Is saw, then, an infinity of probable, conscious individuals, and foresaw all possible developments, but they were locked within It until It found the means.” 4

The third aspect revolves around the pressure faced by All That Is and the need to release it. Pressure originated from both the conscious, yet probable individual selves alive in God’s dream, and from God’s yearning to release them. Releasing them meant losing a portion of Itself that had created them.

“To let them go was to ‘lose’ that position of Itself that had created them. Already It could scarcely keep up with the myriad probabilities that began to emerge from each separate consciousness. With love and longing, It let go of that portion of Itself, and they were free. The psychic energy exploded in a flash of creation.” 5

This process underscores the immense power of a primary pyramid (energy) gestalt, such as All That Is, in creating reality.

“On the other hand, you could say that the pressure existed simply on the part of the God since the creation existed within Its dream, but such tremendous power resides in such a primary pyramid gestalt that even their dreams are endowed with vitality and reality. This is the dilemma of any primary pyramid gestalt: It creates reality. …” 6

This powerful creation story strikingly parallels the creative processes in our reality. The Creator’s birth pangs mirror the depth of love for the creations, of which the Creator became a part.

Contemplating our relation to God, born into this world with much of our knowingness veiled and forgotten, we, as Jesus noted, appear to experience a birth trauma akin to that of the Creator. However, one thing remains clear—we possess inherent potential as part of the Creator. This unseverable connection to God or All That Is grants us enduring strength and purpose, a profound reflection worth pondering.

Jay 


Note: 

1.

Glenda Green, Love Without End: Jesus Speaks, 1999 

Published by Spirits Publishing

P73, Chapter 4. The Love That You Are

2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

Jane Roberts, The Seth Material, 1970 

Published by New Awareness Network Inc. 

P241-243, Chapter 18. The God Concept – The Creation – The Three Christs


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