Monday, October 19, 2009

Myrtle Fillmore


Birth: Aug. 6, 1845 Pagetown, Morrow County, Ohio, USA
Death: Oct. 6, 1931, USA
Co-founder of the Unity School of Christianity. She was born Mary Caroline Page. She suffered from chronically poor health. She married Charles Fillmore, and together, they discovered a set of principles regarding healing and prosperity. Through the application of these spiritual principles, Myrtle was miraculously cured. The Fillmores founded the Unity School of Christianity, an organization now more commonly known as Unity. In addition to the many Unity churches worldwide, Unity also operates an internationally acclaimed prayer network known as Silent Unity. Myrtle Fillmore passed away in 1931 at the age of 86.
Here's a synopsis of some of Mama Fillmore's thoughts on Healing
Life is a form of energy and has to be guided and directed by intelligence.
Teach your body by talking to each part, telling it to be full of vigor and energy, full of sweet, pure, wholesome energy of God.
For example, "My legs are active and strong!"
"My eyes are young, clear, bright eyes because the light of God shines through them."
"My heart has the pure love of Jesus Christ flowing in and out with each beat; a joyous pulsation."
Keep on, silent or aloud, declaring the words of truth: My body is free and unlimited Spirit. My organs are centers of life and energy.
And I am watchful of what I say and think.
I think and speak only kind, loving, true words.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Do your life stages stay with you or not?


Egg

caterpillar


Cocoon

Butterfly



My daughter, Sharon, found this question intriguing:
When the Butterfly emerges does the caterpillar cease to exist?

With some thought my answer is: the caterpillar spins a cocoon that gives way to, or becomes, a chrysalis which after the correct amount of time, bursts its tight bound prison to become the butterfly. If you think that you are all of your stages, the child, the young person, and the young adult who grew day by day into the person you are now, then the butterfly is caterpillar, chrysalis, and butterfly all at the same time, simply in one form or another; but if you believe that you have left the child behind and are only what you are right now, then the butterfly may also have replaced the caterpillar, and the chrysalis who have ceased to exist.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

To See The Past


The Isle of Iona in the Inner Hebrides of Scotland is a place where the past and present are not so separate as they seem in other places. The site of a sixth century monastery that was founded here by Saint Columbus, who arrived on the Isle in 563 AD, it seems to be the focus for glimpses of the past.

One incident from the 1960s relates that the artist, John MacMillan saw Vikings attack the ancient abbey as if in the present. He describes that he was walking downhill toward the sea and thought of calling on friends whose cottage was on his way, but looking ahead along the hill, he realized the land was empty. Neither his friends' nor their neighbor's cottage was where they should be.

Disoriented he thought to look out to sea for his bearings. There he saw Viking long ships setting anchor in the bay. He watched as they came ashore, attacked the abbey, set it on fire, plundered the cattle, loading them on board, up-anchored and sailed away. This historical incident is recorded as having taken place in the tenth century, but John MacMillan had seen it in the twentieth as though it were happening in the present.


Apparently, the abbey has a strong presence of the past about it, for a decade later, Tommy Frankland reported another incident. A group of scholars, young and old, were meeting in the library of the Bishop's House. Tommy Frankland and some of the others noticed an elderly clergyman standing by an open window that looks out towards the Sound of Iona. The gentleman stood absolutely still, his whole being focused on the quiet bay.

A little later, Tommy saw the same gentleman outside, walking purposefully toward the ebbing sea. Then without hesitation, he walked straight into the water.

He was waist deep before Tommy reached the shore. "Come back, Reverend! Come back. It's dangerous!"

Finally, the gentleman turned. He seemed only then to realize that he was in the water. Slowly and with some difficulty, he made his way back to shore.

The Reverend told them that he had seen the Columba Abbey from the library window as it must have looked a thousand years ago. He came down to the shore to get a better look and seeing a causeway that led to it he decided to walk out on it.

Though the abbey finished it's restoration in 1967 the causeway is no longer there, so when he heard Tommy calling as if from a distance, the vision left him and he found himself wading in the sea.