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from the christ principle
to the christ consciousness and the importance of a
faithful biblical translation
As
Christians we are 'People of the Book' (along
with our Jewish and Islamic brethren). Our theology
and spirituality is founded in the sacred, inspired
texts born out of the soils of the Middle East.
Our relationship to our Heavenly Father and the
Christ is a gift, firstly, of the accounts preserved
in the New Testament, of which the four Gospels
are vital to our spiritual understanding and well
being. It is, therefore, essential to us that
we fully understand the work of Christ as seen
through the eyes of Mark, Luke, Matthew and John.
Yet as we are centuries, lands, and tongues away
from the original event (the incarnation of the
Christ) we must rely on various translations of
the Gospels (unless we are fortunate enough to
speak biblical Hebrew, Greek or Aramaic). A faithful
translation can enhance our comprehension of the
Gospels, while a poor effort threatens to compromise
our understanding.
Greek is a rich language and the
author of John, it is clear, employed Greek with purpose.
Peter, it seems, could not rise to the height to which
the Christ invited him (the spiritual love of agapao),
but could only declare his friendship (phileo). Perhaps
Peter's recent memory of denying Christ on His way to
the cross taught Peter not to extend ungrounded promises.
We remember that Peter had denied his relationship with
Jesus three time - as foretold by Christ - when accused
of associating with Jesus;
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But he denied it, saying,
'Woman, I do not know him.' A little later someone
else, on seeing him, said, 'You also are one of
them.' But Peter said, 'Man, I am not!' Then about
an hour later still another kept insisting, 'Surely
this man also was with him; for he is a Galilean.'
But Peter said, 'Man, I do not know what you are
talking about.' At that moment, while he was still
speaking, the cock crowed. The Lord turned and
looked at Peter. Then Peter remembered the word
of the Lord, how he had said to him, 'Before the
cock crows today, you will deny me three times'
(Luke 22:57-61).
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Peter loved his teacher and his
friend: with his mind and with his heart he would not
abandon Jesus through the trial and crucifixion. But
Peter sought to preserve himself when asked about his
relationship to Jesus. His higher ideals fell to the
wayside, as Peter acted subconsciously (instinctively
and reflexively). Peter, afterwards - after a period
of reflection - realized his shortcoming, and fell into
a state of profound remorse.
Later, when Christ finds Peter on the Galilee, it is
not friendship that is asked of Peter. Christ asked
Peter is he loves (agapao) him 'more than these' (John
21: 15), meaning more than anything the world has to
offer. Jesus was now asking Peter to love the Cosmic
Christ, the Christ Consciousness.
The importance of a full and faithful translation cannot
be overstated. If Peter professes friendship (three
times) to the Christ on the Galilee (and not spiritual
love), and the Christ is seeking spiritual love from
Peter on the first two occasions, and then friendship
on the final query, the implications are manifold.
In a lesser translation we loose...
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...Peter's tremendous honesty
- standing before his teacher and friend - to confess
(three times!) the limits of his love. The Peter
Archetype is a full and vital model with which most
of us can identify; the longing to embrace the Christhood
coupled with a chronically human orientation!
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...a subtle display of the Mercy
of Christ to first seek to life Peter up, but then
(with the third query) to meet Peter at Peter's
level! The Mercy of Christ to accept Peter and us
where we are now, with all our limitations, is born
of the Love of the Godhead.
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...the incredible work of the
Holy Spirit to soften a hard heart (or stone!).
The Holy Spirit is, in part, the feminine and intuitive
aspect of God, and is healing and maternal. We read
in the few pages following John's Gospel (Acts 3:
1-26) that Peter is both teaching and healing in
the name of 'Jesus Christ' (Acts 3:6). The term
'Jesus Christ' signifies that Peter is now aware
of the God-man's dual nature: the Son of Man (Jesus)
and the Son of God (the Christ). Peter, through
the Grace of the Pentecost and the touch of the
Holy Spirit had come into a full understanding of
the Christhood, and had himself entered the Christ
Consciousness!
In the icon below we see an image
of St. Peter reflecting this realization: the two fingers
that Peter has raised symbolize the dual nature of Christ.
This realization is fundamental to Christians and is
possible with the inspiration of the Holy Spirit.
How Does Peter's Trial
Speak To Us?
In
terms of our moral-mystical development (and our
relationship to the teachings of esoteric Christianity)
we can see that Peter (and all of us) relate to
the Christ on three levels. We can serve the Christ
consciousness on the physical level by offering
our allegiance, our time, and our material resources.
When we assuage, comfort, and heal we serve the
Christ on the emotional level. When we offer guidance,
consul and promote spiritual ideals and principals
we stand with the Christ Consciousness on the
mental/noetical level. We are constantly faced
with situations at home, work, and in the society
where we can reflect the healing and uplifting
values of our faith. As I write this article my
two and half week old daughter needs my physical
and emotional care to fall asleep, thus competing
with my attempt to promote the Christ Ideals through
this essay! We need to serve all needs.
The Christ Principle (acting according
to the example of Jesus) is not foisted upon us, rather
we adopt it (each of us according to our paths) as our
model of praxis. As the Christ Principle softens the
inner soil of our personality, the Christ Consciousness
then grows into our mode of consciousness. It is the
movement into the Christ Principle that precedes and
makes possible the emergence of the Christ Consciousness.
This is the basic teaching of Theosis (union with the
Godhead): that the world - because of all its complications
- offers us all the experience we need to spiritually
mature into the Christ Consciousness.
Embracing the Christ Principle is a two-fold engagement:
we dedicate ourselves to 1.) Service (healing, comforting,
advising and teaching), and to 2.) Inner Evolution (a
character free of hypocrisy, rich in awareness, compassion,
tolerance and joy). Both aspects are equally important,
and are reliant on one another: Service needs awareness,
and awareness needs expression. The degree to which
we have embodied the Christ Consciousness, is measured
directly by the degree in which we express its values
in day to day life.
Dem Christus-Prinzip nahe zu kommen
ist ein Engagement in zwei Richtungen. Wir verpflichten
uns:
- dem Dienen (Heilen, Trösten, Beraten und Lehren)
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der inneren Entwicklung (ein
Charakter, der frei ist von Heuchelei, reich an
Achtsamkeit, Mitgefühl, Toleranz und Freude.)
Beide Aspekte sind gleich wichtig und einer beruht
auf dem anderen: Dienen braucht Achtsamkeit, und
Achtsamkeit braucht einen Weg, sich auszudrücken.
Der Grad, mit dem wir das Christus- Bewusstsein
verkörpern, kann direkt daran gemessen werden,
bis zu welchem Grad wir seine Werte im alltäglichen
Leben verwirklichen.
SERVICE
When we Stay with Jesus
on the Way to the Cross (through our care for other
human beings)
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Our Mental/Noetical Resources
serve the
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Our Emotional/Psychic Resources
serve the
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Our Physical/Gross Material
Resources serve the
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INNER DEVELOPMENT
When the Christ comes to
us on the Galilee (the degree to which we have developed
inwardly)
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Our Mental/Noetical Inner development
Meet the
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Our Emotional/Psychic development
Meet the
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Our Physical/Gross Material
development Meet the
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The Path of Peter, or the Peter
Archetype, is powerful, rich, and full: it leads us
from a love for the Son of Man, conducting our lives
according to the Christ Principle, into an increasing
love for the Son of God, where we enter the beauty,
peace, and rest of the Christ Consciousness.
May we all enter this peace.
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