It is gratifying when
works by Spiritist
authors with analytical
background are reviewed.
Understanding the
essence of the Spiritist
teachings is fundamental
for our improvement as
human beings, immortal
Spirits.
Gonzales Soriano, quoted
by the late Herculano
Pires, said, “Spiritism
is the essential
synthesis of human
knowledge applied to the
investigation of Truth”.
In the 19th century, the
Spaniard had already
understood the essence
of Spiritism, which is
always good to rescue.
His reflection, that the
Spiritist Doctrine is
the essential synthesis
of human knowledge,
perhaps deserves a
little more attention.
Since the beginning, man
has applied, between
attempts at success and
error, his understanding
of life and the
appropriate
interpretations,
according to his
resources, about the
truth. Starting from
this premise, we are
invited to develop an understanding of
the transience of life
on the plane of the
incarnate, which is to
say that the knowledge
of the truth is
something that improves,
becomes more perfect, as
the potentialities of
the mind expand, a field
awakened by the
conscience, in the words
of the Spirit Emmanuel.
This understanding makes
the understanding of
life broader in the face
of differences in
behavior, social
atrocities, personal
imbalances and diseases
that undermine humanity,
especially those of
mental origin.
Spiritism, said
Herculano Pires, is a
Doctrine about the
world. Spiritism gives
us its interpretation
and shows us how we
should conduct ourselves
in the world. This is
what defines the true
Spiritist: efforts
undertaken in the
practical, daily
application of doctrinal
teachings. It would be,
interpreting the
thinking of the
Spiritist philosopher of
greatest expression in
Brazil, to make a
reading of the world and
of life, applying the
doctrinal teachings
despite the force
present in humanity:
selfishness.
Human beings experience
the paradox of
evolutionary growth,
when they are invited to
adapt to circumstances.
Adapting does not mean
giving in to the desires
of selfishness and
instilling the behavior
that has attacked
society, increasing
social ruptures. It is
about the absorption of
doctrinal knowledge and
its application, as one
puts himself with
supreme will to overcome
himself. This movement,
to paraphrase Umberto
Eco, will “coexist”, for
a while, with other
refractory movements,
contrary to the renewing
impulses. Knowing how to
live with this
coexistence is to
understand the greater
meaning of adapting
oneself.
It sounds complex, maybe
not so simple, but let
us take mediumship as an
example. Allan Kardec
in The Book of
Mediums and Leon
Denis in In the
Invisible are
objective as to the
importance of the medium
developing a routine of
preparation for the
systematic moments of
exchange with the
spiritual world. I would
say, categorically,
under penalty of being
misunderstood, that it
is the medium's
"obligation" to prepare
for the mediumistic
sessions. We
must all prepare
ourselves, especially
the medium.
No matter how well
versed the medium is in
the face of doctrinal
content and no matter
how good his preparation
and conditioning of his
faculty over time, it is
important that the
medium remains in a
constant educational
process of the
mediumistic faculty. The
study of mediumship is
the study of a lifetime.
It is not about reading,
studying and knowing
certain works. It is a
constant study to expand
its scope of action and
become an instrument for
fluid communication
between the material and
spiritual worlds.
Why is the rigor in
relation to the medium
different? Because
administering and
educating the faculty
that allows greater
lucidity in contact with
the spiritual world
requires such
conditioning on the part
of the medium.
Observe the Spiritist
literature on
communication with the
spiritual world, from
the experiments of the
time of Kardec, Leon
Denis and Gabriel
Delanne, to the present
day with the works of
the medium Chico Xavier.
The guidelines are
clear: the preparation
of the medium is a sine
qua non condition
for a reliable exchange.
It seems obvious, but it
is not always: contact
with the spiritual world
means contact with minds
and thoughts that may be
very different from
yours and, therefore,
will require greater
capacity of the medium
to be a faithful
instrument.
A medium who is sure of
his potential, knows the
importance of preparing
himself. The beginner
medium, with a supreme
desire to educate
mediumship, uses
patience to adapt
between the demands of
the material world and a
rigorous preparation. As
for the word "rigor", it
is worth remembering
that rigor is elastic
and therefore varies
according to with the
circumstances and the
reason for which the
medium has prepared
himself as an instrument
of exchange).
However, as much as they
are clear about the
importance of preparing
the medium, it is up to
the student and
hardworking apprentice
to apply common sense
faithfully to the
purposes of seeking
their spiritual
improvement.
The medium who drinks
alcoholic beverages, who
uses tobacco and other
licit and illicit drugs,
when studying the
Spiritist Doctrine
starts to worry about
how to manage such
situations until he
understands that the
transformation of habits
requires education of
the senses in search of
a higher purpose over
time.
As an educational
process, the importance,
in the Spiritist
literature on mediumship,
of creating a routine for self-knowledge is
observed and thus
allowing contact with
their various emotions
and, ipso facto,
with their superior
ideals in a persevering
and patient way. It
is important, and in
many cases, for the
medium to abstain from
such habits for longer
and longer periods
before the meeting. To
do this consciously,
however, it is essential
that he knows how to
understand the origin of
such habits and act on
the causes, concomitantly with
the period of
abstinence, which can be
made easier with changes
in habits, preferably
accompanied by a
professional specialized
in the health area.
Contrary to common
sense, it is not about
comparing what is more
relevant, whether
physical or mental
habits. It is about
understanding the efforts that
everyone uses to tame
their evil
inclinations.
Moreover, we all have
these inclinations in
different degrees and
natures and at different
points from those
mentioned in these
reflections.
We have heard comments
like "it's better to
accept a smoker in the
mediumistic meeting than
a slanderer". Perhaps
the discussion ends
there (despite the
difficulty of
identifying a slanderer,
which can occur with the
observation of behavior
in the coexistence)! Not
eating meat, not
drinking alcohol, not
speaking ill of others,
not wishing ill on
others, are all linked
to the process that we
are invited to review.
What we invite the
reader to reflect on is
that the preparation of
a medium, as well as the
study of the Spiritist
Doctrine, may even begin
with a specific task in
the Spiritist house, but
it should not be limited
to this task, much less
to the Spiritist House.
The Spirits that
manifest themselves in
mediumistic meetings do
not use the “spiritual
files” of a Spiritist
worker to observe him
only during the exercise
of his activities in the
Spiritist House. The
being is integral.
Therefore, if there is
morality to be
developed, it occurs
when the individual
makes an effort in the
face of life's commitments,
with the resources he
has and his choices,
much more than the time
he has in a Spiritist
task. In short, we would
say that, in order to
learn better, we
necessarily go through
an understanding of
circumstances and
contexts. Habits are
actions repeated for a
long time. Changing
these actions requires a
strategy that is
constant over time so
that the individual
makes efforts capable of
providing the transition
between a harmful habit
and other habits more
consistent with what is
desired for the future.
To compare behaviors is
to run the risk of being
unfair to those who make
the effort and volunteer
for a task that is,
perhaps, the change of
habit that you so much
crave; every task in
the Spiritist House -
as well as every voluntary
task in life - is a
legitimate door to
spiritual improvement.
If habits are still
incompatible with a
disobsession mediumistic
meeting, for example
(whatever habits they
are), let's start with other
tasks, gain more
confidence in changing
habits until we are
prepared for mediumistic
meetings (always in
dialogue with the leader
to better understanding
of your case). Even so,
in the face of all
possible care, one
stands out: love.
Do everything with
love! Love
is understanding,
fraternal, patient and
benevolent!
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