Re: More On Contemplation
Tue May 13, 2008 11:46 am
Dan asks:
"What is the IDEAL, formless, seedless, objectless meditation DK
refers to here? 'Only when all forms and the field of knowledge
itself are lost sight of, and the knower recognizes himself for what
he essentially is (being lost in contemplation of his own pure
spiritual nature), can ideal, formless, seedless, objectless
meditation be arrived at.' See further quotes below."
JJ:
DK [Djwhal Khul] here is talking about contemplative meditation ("being lost in
contemplation") which I call a positive meditation as opposed to the
negative meditation which is passive where the student just lets go
and empties himself.
He is talking about a state that few have arrived at -- the highest
which the student can aspire in his foreseeable future, but not the
absolute highest.
To arrive at this state the student must first master the art of
contemplation. He starts with focussing his attention using many of
the standard methods taught in the world. Many current students have
mastered the basic attention step in past lives and are ready to
concentrate on seed thoughts. When they have learned to make seed
thoughts expand through contemplation then they are ready to go to
the Buddhic plane and higher where "black-and-white" seed thoughts are
not used but the seeker plunges his contemplative skills into
the formless where he realizes his oneness with God. Here he senses
the Oneness Principle
and the understanding of all principles
are available to him. When he withdraws from the formless his physical
brain will register some of the principles that passed through his
contemplative self and his consciousness and understanding will be
enhanced.
In the formless there is no black-and-white seed thought but there is
still seed and that seed is whatever is there to be experienced and
discovered. Your soul
will bring down to the physical brain that which is needed in the physical reality.
Most of the great discoveries that have been grasped by mankind have
been through formless contemplation. Einstein was sometimes so lost
in thought on his walks that when he came back to the physical he
couldn't remember where he was. He was lost in formless
contemplation and when he came back his physical brain only
registered a small portion of what he experienced, but that small
portion was a large portion for mankind.
Dan:
"So if seedless meditation (as referred to in the DK quotes included
below) 'generally takes you to the astral world,' where else can it
UN-generally take one?"
JJ:
That which was referred by DK is contemplative meditation and does
not take you to the astral world.
That which can open up the astral world is non contemplative negative meditation with no seed. This
type of meditation will take the seeker to his own level. If he is
astral (which most people are) it will take him to the astral level.
However, through contemplation an astral person can reach up to a
higher level than normal.
Dan:
"Where does the concept of this 'further stage of expanded
consciousness' ... 'in which the senses and the mind are superseded'
and 'the formless levels or planes of our solar system are contacted,
seen and known' as outlined by DK below fit (especially see the last
quote), if it does, into the scheme of your teachings?
JJ:
He uses the words "solar system" because he intends his words to be
interpreted on several levels depending on the evolution of the
disciple.
He is pointing toward a goal toward which the disciple should aspire,
but each disciple must realize that he must take a step at a time and
cannot achieve mastery in one flying leap. The one giant step toward
liberation is an astral delusion that sidetracks many seekers for
long periods of time. It varies from the Christian who thinks he has
found the ultimate salvation to the new ager who has found the
ultimate dimension or consciousness.
The last veil of illusion you ask about is withdrawn when the
disciple, through contemplation, realizes his true nature as being
one with God. For most such believers this is an academic thing, but
to the one who knows it is an understanding that cannot be fully
communicated to those who do not have this realization.
"There is nothing worse than a sharp image of a fuzzy concept."
-- Ansel Adams (1902 - 1984)
Word of the Day
Ab Initio -- From the beginning.
-- End Of Article --
Suggested Reading:
Principle 66 -- Contemplation And/Or Seed Thoughts
Re: Contemplation/Seed Thoughts
What Do We Want?
More On Contemplation
Index of Spiritual Principles
Copyright © 2008 by JJ Dewey, All Rights Reserved
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