Student: Is there a technique to gain
knowledge of God?
Teacher: What God do you speak of?
Student: The one and only source of all.
Teacher: No.
Student: Why then are there some who
seem blessed with the knowledge of God,
and some that seem completely ignorant of
his presence and value? Surely those who
are enlightened discovered a technique to
secure their knowledge.
Teacher: There are no techniques. This
is the great fallacy that has swept across
the universe of sentient beings. We persist
in our belief that there is a formula or
ritual or teacher that can bring us enlightenment
– or the knowledge of God.
Student: If there is no technique or
teacher, then why does all of this exist?
Why do you, my teacher, sit before me? Or
why are there books and learned masters
here, in this instructional setting? Are
you telling me they’re all worthless?
Teacher: When there are questions there
are answers waiting to be heard. All of
this exists for the questions of people
such as you. If these questions did not
exist, this would not exist.
Student: But what’s the point if the
answers are not bringing me closer to the
knowledge of God?
Teacher: Why doesn’t the knowledge of
destruction lay in the hands of the many
instead of the hands of the few?
Student: What do you mean?
Teacher: Why is the knowledge of how
to destroy humankind – on a mass level –
so carefully safeguarded?
Student: You’re talking about weapons
of mass destruction?
Teacher: Yes.
Student: Naturally the technology is
so destructive it needs to be managed and
controlled by responsible governments.
Teacher: Why is it controlled?
Student: If it were in the power of any
one person to destroy the lives of many,
he or she might do so if they became sick
of mind.
Teacher: Is the knowledge of mass destruction
the opposite of the knowledge of mass enlightenment?
Student: I don’t know.
Teacher: What if you were given the power
to enlighten the masses of humanity or destroy
humanity? Would you not be the most powerful
person on earth?
Student: I can’t imagine how I could
be more powerful.
Teacher: How would you choose to wield
your power?
Student: I suppose I’d have to have many
advisors helping me to make the right decisions
in order to build a great society that was
rich in culture and learned citizens.
Teacher: What if the citizens that you
ruled rebelled? What if they chose to be
independent of your power? What would you
do then?
Student: But if I had the power to enlighten
them, why would they rebel? They would be
enlightened and, as a result, they would
choose to live harmoniously.
Teacher: But some might not want to be
enlightened. Perhaps they feel that they
know what is best for their development
and would resist an outside source, no matter
how benevolent and wise.
Student: Then I would let them have their
own way.
Teacher: Even if they killed themselves
and behaved in decadence?
Student: I would try to teach them how
to behave properly so they would learn to
live harmoniously.
Teacher: Do you think they would listen?
Student: If they didn’t, I’d place the
good and respectful people separate from
those that were warring and cruel.
Teacher: I see. So you would divide your
citizens into two groups?
Student: It would be the only way to
bring harmony to some, if it couldn’t be
brought to all.
Teacher: And if the warring and cruel
citizens ultimately had children that desired
to live in harmony, what would happen then?
Student: They would only need to ask
and they could rejoin the society.
Teacher: So the citizens of your society
would accept them without any problem and
confer upon them the same social benefits
that they themselves enjoy?
Student: Yes.
Teacher: And if they didn’t?
Student: I would have to order it – make
it a law – I suppose. But again, if I had
the power to enlighten my citizens, they
surely would forgive those that were led
astray by their parents, and let them re-enter
the broader society.
Teacher: And what would be the result
if one of these new citizens murdered someone
within your enlightened society?
Student: They would be expelled and punished.
Teacher: Not enlightened?
Student: I would assume they were not
able to be enlightened.
Teacher: So your power to enlighten was
not perfect.
Student: I guess not.
Teacher: And what if the decadent society
decided that the enlightened society should
be conquered?
Student: Why would they attack if they
knew I had the power to annihilate them?
Teacher: Perhaps they believed you didn’t
actually possess the power, or if you did,
that you would never use it.
Student: We would then have to defend
ourselves and capture the decadent society’s
leaders and lock them up until they changed
their ways of thinking and acting.
Teacher: Then your power to destroy was
not perfect either.
Student: Not in the same way I thought
it was.
Teacher: You have answered these hypothetical
questions wisely. Do you see how power complicates?
Student: Yes.
Teacher: Do you understand that having
the power to enlighten or destroy is a type
of power that most people consign to God?
Student: Yes.
Teacher: So I was asking you to play
God, hypothetically.
Student: I understand, but how does that
answer my question about gaining the knowledge
of God?
Teacher: It may not. I simply wanted
you to have a glimpse of the perspective
of the human-imagined God.
Student: Why?
Teacher: If you want the knowledge of
God, you must have some perspective on the
position of a God.
Student: But I didn’t mean that I wanted
to have the knowledge of the God that humans
have created.
Teacher: It’s the only knowledge you
can have.
Student: Why can’t I obtain the knowledge
of the true God, First Source? Why isn’t
there a technique that I can use to find
and acquire this knowledge?
Teacher: Let’s return to our hypothetical
scenario. Suppose that your power to destroy
was simply a thought away. If you became
angry, your power to destroy would be unleashed
and the recipient of your anger would be
obliterated.
Student: Would it work the same way for
enlightenment? In other words, would I be
able to enlighten with a simple thought?
Teacher: Yes.
Student: Okay.
Teacher: How many times a day do you
have an angry thought and a thought to enlighten
someone?
Student: I don’t know. On a good day,
I don’t have any angry thoughts.
Teacher: On a bad day?
Student: Maybe three or four.
Teacher: Each time you have these thoughts,
if you were angry with a person, your anger
would harm the object of your rage.
Student: What about the other side of
the coin. What if I were loving and kind,
would my thoughts enlighten them as well?
Teacher: Precisely.
Student: So, with nothing but my thoughts,
I can harm or help a person.
Teacher: Yes.
Student: Then wouldn’t it make sense
that if I had the knowledge of God, I would
also have the discipline to control my thoughts
and emotions?
Teacher: No.
Student: Why?
Teacher: Because your dominant reality
is that of a human being with all of its
weaknesses and foibles. You are designed
to have spontaneous thoughts and emotions.
You have instincts that respond to stimuli,
and you cannot control your natural thoughts
or emotions. You can suppress them. You
can ignore them. You can even extinguish
them, but only for a period of time.
Student: And this is why I can’t have
the knowledge of God?
Teacher: Correct.
Student: Then every human is sealed inside
a world of limitation because they have
this inability to control their impulses
– be they thoughts or emotions? It seems
unfair.
Teacher: Perhaps, but this same limitation
is liberating.
Student: In what way?
Teacher: Do you know the will of First
Source?
Student: No, but I think I have an idea
of what is aligned with the will of God
and what is not.
Teacher: If you truly know what is aligned
and what it not, then you would need to
know the will of First Source, would you
not?
Student: I mean that I know the general
direction or intention of God’s will.
Teacher: But not the details?
Student: Correct. I know that what is
of love and light is aligned with the will
of God, and what is of evil and darkness
is not. But I might not be able to distinguish
between the more subtle shades of light
and darkness or good and evil.
Teacher: I see. And how did you arrive
at this conclusion?
Student: It is what I have been taught.
Teacher: And who taught you this?
Student: My teachers, the books I’ve
read. Everyone believes this don’t they?
Teacher: And because you have been taught
that the will of God is knowable, you believe
you can make the judgment that a loving
act is aligned, but an evil act is not.
Student: Basically, yes.
Teacher: What if I suggested to you that
understanding the will of God is one and
the same as possessing the knowledge of
God?
Student: I’m not sure that I understand
what you mean.
Teacher: What do you think I mean? Make
an effort to express your thoughts, no matter
how murky they may be. Sometimes the fog
lifts only when you struggle to see through
it.
Student: I have the sense that you’re
suggesting that if I understand what the
creator desires from his creation, I would
also understand a key component of the knowledge
of God. In other words, in order to have
the knowledge of God, I must know what God
wants from me, what he desired me to become.
Teacher: And what do you think God wants
you to become?
Student: Liberated.
Teacher: From limitation?
Student: Yes. Exactly.
Teacher: First Source desires that you
live without limitation, but creates a soul
carrier and a setting for that soul carrier
to live within that is rooted in limitation.
Why do think it is the will of God that
you shrug off your limitations?
Student: Because if I have no limitations,
I am liberated of the things that reduce
my spiritual awareness.
Teacher: And what will you do then –
when you are free of all limitation?
Student: I’m not exactly sure, but it
will be blissful and likened to what Buddha
called Nirvana – freedom from desire.
Teacher: Why would your Creator create
you, set you in a soul carrier that was
bound to a reality of limitation, construct
an elaborate universe school to educate
you, and commission a vast array of instructors,
only to enable you to pass into Nirvana
or a blissful state?
Student: I don’t know. That’s in part
what I’m trying to understand.
Teacher: Are you sure?
Student: Well it’s certainly one of the
things I’m trying to understand.
Teacher: If you’re trying to understand
this, then answer my question.
Student: But I don’t know the answer.
Teacher: Try to articulate it as best
you can.
Student: I agree it doesn’t make sense
that God would have me educated in the ways
of the universe and then leave me to simply
enjoy it, but I don’t know what else I would
do. No one paints this picture very clearly.
Teacher: The picture, as you put it,
is found in the service to a plan. The plan
is the collective unfolding of souls to
realize the singular nature of universehood
as an undivided process.
We move from neighborhoods to cities,
to states, to nations, to continents, to
hemispheres, to planets, to solar systems,
to galaxies, to local universes, to superuniverses,
to the Grand Multiverse – the all-encompassing
structure of our collective unity.
And every step we emerge the victor of
the lesser state of being in that our lives
increasingly exemplify the presence of our
collective perception of what is best for
the evolutionary course set forth by First
Source for the Grand Multiverse.
Student: Okay, so this is the reason?
To simply be able to hold the perspective
of what is best for the Grand Multiverse?
How can I ever know such a thing?
Teacher: You cannot.
Student: So again, I’m frustrated in
ignorance. This seems to be the theme of
spiritual matters.
Teacher: It is only because you take
the undivided process and leap to its end,
wishing to bring it closer into your reality
of now. Your patience is exceeded by your
vision of what is to be.
Student: I know. But what can I do about
it?
Teacher: Define the knowledge that you
need to accomplish each step of your process.
Don’t profess to need the knowledge of God
before you have the knowledge of your earth
world or the knowledge of your human instrument.
Frame your knowledge in the context of your
design.
Student: How do you mean that?
Teacher: You are a physical body with
complex, emotional impulses and instincts;
you are also a system of nerves and data
collectors that feed your consciousness
and brain. Moreover, you are a collective
of consciousnesses that span your entire
species and time. These elements comprise
your human instrument.
Like most seekers, you try to understand
the mysterious substance of your inmost
spirit – the Wholeness Navigator – before
you understand your human instrument. And
even more to the point, you seek to understand
the Creator and sustainer of the Wholeness
Navigator before you understand your inmost
spirit.
You have intuited the undivided process
because it is stored within you, but if
you stretch the reach of your understanding
it is because you seek to know the stars
before you know the planet upon which you
stand. And I ask you, what good is the knowledge
of the stars when your home is misunderstood?
Student: You’re saying that I need to
study my body and mind before I study the
soul?
Teacher: No, I’m saying the knowledge
of God that you seek is contained in every
step of the undivided process. It is not
realized in some sudden, elusive revelatory
experience at the end of your journey. It
is found in every step along the way.
Student: Yes, I understand this in concept.
I’ve heard this many times before, but I
sense that you’re making a different distinction
here.
Teacher: Perhaps. I’m only recommending
that you understand the soul carrier before
you seek to know the soul, and that you
understand the soul before you seek to understand
its creator. Otherwise, if you first channel
your energy into understanding the Creator,
you will see it marginally, and this partial
knowledge will deform your understanding
of the soul carrier and the soul within
it.
Student: But how will I know that my
understanding of the soul carrier is adequate
so that I can embark on the understanding
of my soul?
Teacher: The human instrument is an amazing
composite of miraculous connections between
the material and non-physical worlds. When
you understand these connections, they will
guide you to your understanding of the soul
within you.
Student: So then I should really be asking
you about how I can gain the knowledge of
these connections. Is that correct?
Teacher: Yes.
Student: So how do I? Is it the chakras
that are key?
Teacher: Much has been said and written
about the energy centers that are revealed
within the human instrument, but these energy
centers are not the connections between
the physical and non-physical realms.
What weaves together the physical body
with the non-physical bodies is what we
refer to as the phantom core.
Student: What is this composed of?
Teacher: The phantom core is not composed
of anything material. It is like a shadow
of soul consciousness that can move between
the realms of the human instrument.
Student: So it can operate equally well
within the mind and body?
Teacher: The phantom core is the consciousness
that moves between the body, emotions, mind,
and genetic mind at speeds greater than
light. Yet it is a point of awareness that
distributes the experiences of the human
instrument to the soul.
Student: Does it embellish the experiences
or simply report them like a recorder?
Teacher: It reports everything in extraordinary
terms.
Student: How do you mean?
Teacher: Even in the quiet moments of
your life when you are staring through a
window or reading a book, there is a great
universe of experience that is perceived
by this phantom core, and every miniature
detail is faithfully recorded and transmitted
to the soul.
The phantom core is the super consciousness
of the human instrument. It is separate
from the soul, and is considered the soul’s
emissary to the natural world in which the
human instrument must interact.
It is through this awareness that soul
experiences the natural world of limitation
and separation, drawing in the experiences
that help it to build appreciation for the
Grand Multiverse that is the garment of
First Source.
Student: Why have I never heard of this
before?
Teacher: Who should tell you?
Student: You, for one.
Teacher: I just did, were you not listening?
Student: Yes, but I’ve been your student
for two years and this is the first I’ve
heard of this phantom core. Why?
Teacher: We teach through association
and metaphor. You have been taught about
the phantom core, you just haven’t heard
its name before now. And now that you have
its name, it crystallizes in your mind a
clearer picture of its design and purpose.
Student: But two years it takes for me
to know its name?
Teacher: For some it is two hours for
some it a lifetime. It depends on the person
and how they arrive at their answers. You
sought the unknowable before you sought
what is to be known in your present life
– where your consciousness resides now.
Student: Okay, we’ve established that
I’m a dreamer –
Teacher: There’s nothing wrong with seeking
the unknowable. I am not suggesting that
you have wasted your time in the pursuit
of a dream.
Student: But it seems that I need to
place more time in understanding this phantom
core. What do you recommend I learn in this
regard?
Teacher: Learn all that you can about
the human body, emotions, and mind. Make
it the focus of your study for a period
of time – perhaps a year or two, depending
on the availability of your time.
As you do this, take notes about the
features of the human instrument that either
seem connected or anomalous. For example,
the brain is dominated by the data received
from the eyes. Why do the eyes not dominate
consciousness?
As you produce your notes, organized
around connections and anomalous phenomenon,
begin to define the structure of the human
instrument as one would if they were making
a map of the interaction between the body,
emotions, mind, and genetic mind. Remember
that the phantom core is the shadow of the
soul and operates seamlessly between the
folds of the human instrument. It is the
first perceiver and transmitter of the experience
that consumes the human instrument of a
specific individuality. It is the continuity
of the undivided process within the material
realms, while the soul is the continuity
of the undivided process within the non-physical
realms.
Student: And what about the Wholeness
Navigator?
Teacher: It is the bridge of continuity
between these two worlds. The Wholeness
Navigator is the interlock between the worlds
of time and the worlds of non-time. It is
the fusion of the soul and the phantom core,
integrating this vast experiential storehouse
of data, and making it coherent as a force
of transformation.
Student: It will take me a long time
to create this picture and understand the
connections.
Teacher: It will take you a lifetime,
if you are fortunate. However, if you set
forth upon the path of First Source without
first understanding the fundamental structures
within which your soul operates, you will
pursue a mirage. God will appear and disappear,
and doubt will shake you every time a new
occurrence crosses your path. It will seem
that all is impermanent, even the face of
God.
Student: You said a moment ago that the
Wholeness Navigator uses the experiences
of the soul carrier and soul as a force
of transformation. Transformation of whom
and for what purpose?
Teacher: The transformation is of the
individual personality – the God-fragment
that sojourns in both the worlds of time
and non-time, and is devoted to the One
Plan that embraces all forms, personalities,
and opinions therein. This personality is
the identity that endures the shape shifting
of forms and the ceaseless churning of time
to become a conscious extension of the One
Plan.
The purpose of this transformation is
to explore the Grand Multiverse as emissaries
of First Source, creating new opportunities
for the expansion and ongoing evolution
of the One Plan.
Student: I suspect you purposely gave
me an abstract answer as a way of reminding
me of the task ahead.
Teacher: I gave you what is available
to be given. Words themselves are an abstraction,
are they not?
Student: If you don’t mind, I want to
return to my task: studying the human instrument.
Is there a model I can use so I can compare
my approach with others?
Teacher: There may be some who would
gladly share their research and findings.
I would encourage you to collaborate with
your fellow students. It is a very useful
practice.
Student: You spoke of connections in
the human instrument and anomalous phenomenon.
Can you please elaborate on these?
Teacher: The connections of the human
instrument are the threads that make up
the fabric of the phantom core. These threads
weave together the pathways between the
physical body, emotions, mind, and genetic
mind. Within each of these are sub-layers,
just as the skin of the human body is different
than the nervous system, which is different
than the skeletal structure.
The body is therefore made up of many
layers and sub-components that comprise
the total structure. This is equally true
for the emotions, mind, and genetic mind.
The connections between these layers
or strata of the human instrument, which
number 24 primary systems, each originate
from the Wholeness Navigator. In other words,
these threads have a common ground and spiral
out touching each of the 24 primary systems,
binding them together in a holistic system.
Student: What are the 24 systems? Do
I know them?
Teacher: It is not important to recognize
each of them individually. Some have not
been discovered in the world of time and
space. I only mention the number so that
you can know the depth of the human instrument
and its impeccable and miraculous structure.
Student: Why is this so important?
Teacher: The human instrument is regarded
by most cultures as a body that is vulnerable
and fragile. It is considered flawed and
imperfect because it degenerates over time
and is susceptible to disease. In some areas,
it is considered nothing more than an animate
object for the sensing of pleasure or pain.
It is held in low regard, and even those
who feel a spiritual imperative, regard
it as the lesser or lower self.
Student: But it is the lower self isn’t
it?
Teacher: It is the vessel of the transcendent
soul. When you see a vessel of beauty, do
you wonder what is inside it?
Student: I guess when I see a beautiful
vessel – like a work of art – I assume the
vessel is for appreciation, not utility.
Teacher: It doesn’t require a utilitarian
function because its beauty is sufficient
a purpose. Correct?
Student: Exactly.
Teacher: The human instrument is the
same way. It is a beautifully conceived
creation; so much so that most believe it
is empty. Its purpose is in itself. They
do not see the 24 strata, they perceive
only the five dominant strata: skin, muscle,
bones, emotions, and mind.
Student: Why? Why do we only see these
five and not the whole 24?
Teacher: You are taught these perceptions
by your educational indoctrination and society
as a whole, and conversely, you are not
taught to appreciate and understand the
other 19 strata. In most cases, these strata
require more vigilance and persistence to
understand and appreciate.
Student: So how do I learn about the
other dimensions of the human instrument?
Teacher: You study the human instrument.
You study the body, emotions, mind, and
genetic mind. You learn to understand this
sacred vessel for what it truly is: the
exploratory, albeit temporary, vehicle of
your inmost, immortal consciousness in the
worlds of time and space.
Student: But if you gave me information
about the 24 strata, wouldn’t it help me
in my studies?
Teacher: Perhaps, but it is not necessary
to understand all of these levels with the
human mind. And here again, you seek to
know the staircase before you understand
the first few steps. It is the function
of time to make the staircase comprehensible
in steps, not singular revelations.
Student: I understand.
Teacher: I have highlighted the universal
path; now tell me what you have learned.
Student: Okay, I’ll do my best. The phantom
core connects the 24 levels of the human
instrument, and is the observing consciousness
of the worlds of time and space for the
human soul. The phantom core has multiple
threads, for lack of a better description,
that weave these 24 levels together, and
it uses these connective threads like pathways
to move – as a consciousness – from one
level to the next at quantum speeds. It
then passes this experiential information
to the soul, which then processes this incoming
data in order to evolve its understanding
of how to align with the One Plan and increasingly
bring light to the darker outposts of the
Grand Multiverse.
Teacher: Take a deep breath. You have
listened well.
Student: Did I get it right?
Teacher: Are you concerned about being
right or are you interested in learning?
Student: Are they so different?
Teacher: They can be polar opposites.
Student: I’m interested in learning and
being right.
Teacher: You asked me at the beginning
of this dialogue, as to whether there is
a technique to gain the knowledge of God.
Do you remember?
Student: Yes.
Teacher: And have you discovered your
answer?
Student: No. I don’t think there is an
answer.
Teacher: Perhaps there’s an answer, but
it is different for every human. All beings
approach their creator in a unique path
that has never been navigated before. If
you stitched together the vast reservoir
of your experience in the worlds of time
and space, do you think it has ever been
replicated?
Student: I don’t know. I’ve never thought
about it before. Perhaps at a basic level
it has.
Teacher: Only if you grossly simplified
it would you see any similarity in the paths
of the ascending souls to their Creator’s
realm. Truthfully, we are each as unique
as the planets that number the Grand Universe,
and it is precisely this uniqueness that
prevents a universal technique from ever
becoming the magical pill of enlightenment.
Student: I understand this. Was this
done as part of the design?
Teacher: Yes.
Student: I guess the real question is
what knowledge is required in order to construct
my own techniques for gaining the awareness
of my own, multi-layered self?
Teacher: You are on your way if it is
your practice to make this inquiry every
morning that you arise, and you feel yourself
a magnet attracting this very knowledge
into your life through every facet of your
experience.
Student: Does it help if I believe that
the phantom core is present within me and
absorbing this knowledge even if my conscious
mind is not?
Teacher: It does and it is.
Student: I am grateful.
Teacher: You are most welcome.
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