Death awaits all men but waits on no man. Everything, from
may flies to the stars die. Death is the change that brings renewal.
Sadness at the passing of a loved one is natural; they have left our
sight and are absent from our lives. Difficulty arises though if we
refuse to let go of the departed, to allow them to rest in peace. When
we build shrines and visit them regularly, whether they are of stone or
in our heart, we open ourselves to morbid reflection. Consider the
pyramids. The Pharaohs spent most of their time and energy focused on
death and their “final” resting place. Millions of man hours spent
erecting, countless lives lost, treasuries emptied and for what? None of
them succeeded as inviolate temples to the afterlife, what could the
ancients have accomplished had they channeled that energy and resources
into the living?
There is no death in the sense
of personal finality, for death is just an altering of consciousness, a
change in condition. Living on the Spiritual Basis, in conscious contact
with a Power Greater Than Ourselves, death is part of the wonderful
enfoldment of divine love that marks our spiritual progression. How
could it be anything else?
We do not seek death,
for it will come in due course, nor fear it. We release those who have
gone before with love, sad because they have temporarily left our sight,
but excited for their translation into the miraculous. This flesh is a
temporary conveyance, never conceived or designed to last for eternity.
Our consciousness, the I AM that makes each of us unique in all
existence is eternal, untouched by time, space or physical concerns, has
always been and will always be. Carry the departed in your heart, since
no other structure can truly hold them. When they drift up into the
forefront of your thinking, as they are wont to do from time to time,
smile and say a silent blessing, sending love, and then get on with the
business of living, for the dead will take care of themselves.
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