Sunday, August 11, 2013

XXX


21.      To equate this: The Devine Constant or “Here” equals the combined mass of the cosmos times its universal motion. H: Here; T: This; M: Motion. H=TM.

22.      I suspect that there is no greater motion than the universal motion of the cosmos. Why? It would not be possible to achieve greater motion than the cosmos because you sould “arrive” before you got there. You would arrive at a time/place that did not exist. By so doing, you would contradict your own existence.

23.      This, then, implies that the universal motion of the cosmos is a constant by which all else can be measured. The terms of measurement are arbitrarily set.

24.      All life is made of paradoxes. One of the most significant is that while every person is responsible for his or her life, few if any are to blame for it. Thus we may take charge and affect our own environments, but cannot refuse succor to those who for one reason or another do not.

25.      Responsibility may be accepted, but it may not be imputed. It is, then, a position of power and authority.

26.      Guilt is imputed. It is passive. It is a position of weakness.

27.      One is seldom guilty of that for which he or she is responsible.

28.      Innocence is not an antonym to guilt, but rather a synonym for ignorance. Consider the “fall” of Adam. (Adam is non-gendered. “Male and Female created He them and He called their name Adam.”) Adam was promised and received the knowledge of good and evil. In that knowledge Adam lost innocence/ignorance.

29.      Adam was never guilty, for how can guilt be imputed against one who does not know good from evil?

30.  The important thing to remember about the “physical” world as we know it is that it is anything but physical. All the cosmos in its final analysis is a network of relationships—not between things, but among realities.

Editor's Note: Understanding his namesake, John Wesley, Wesley Allen's apparent confusion about what is Biblical and what is spiritual and what is just hogwash seems less contradictive and more a record of his expanding universe. John Wesley was the founder of Methodism back in the 1700s. J. Wesley Allen was named in honor of the religious leader by zealous parents.

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