|
Rogério
Coelho |
|
The beam
that
lightens
darkness
|
The
Gospel
is the
Code of
Moral
Principles
of the
Universe,
adaptable
to all
homelands,
all
communities,
all
races
and all
creatures.
“Submitted
to his
tender
and
mysterious
authority,
the
souls
found
safety
and the
protection
of the
divine
flock.”-
FRANÇOIS
C. LIRAN
When the
"morning
light
that
awakens"
arrived,
He left
His
Garden
of Stars
to
confine
Himself
in the
"outer
shadows,
where
there is
weeping
and
gnashing
of
teeth"
in order
to show
theSpirits,
bound in
fetters,
the path
to
definitive
spiritual
emancipation,
since
the
earthly
herd was
lost in
the
mazes of
irrationality
of
different
levels...
As John
Evangelist(1)
very
well
said,
"it was
His wish
that men
went to
Him with
the
confidence
of a
child of
halting
steps to
benefit
from His
protection
similar
to the
protection
given by
a hen
guarding
her
chicks
under
her
wings.
After
His
streak
of light
in the
planetary
darkness,
manly
action
was
engaged;
now it
is no
longer a
matter
of
believing
by
instinct,
nor
obeying
mechanically;
it is
necessary
that man
follows
the Law
of Love
passed
by Him."
Followingthe
words of
the
"Beloved
Disciple",
a
Protecting
Spirit
(2)completed
translating
the
meaning
of what
the
Master
wanted
to say
when,
lovingly
looking
at the
children
around
Him,
which
were
kept at
a
distance
by the
angry
Apostles,
He said
(3),
"Let the
little
children
come
unto me,
and
forbid
them
not, for
of such
is the
kingdom
of God.
I have
the milk
that
strengthens
the
weak.
Let come
to me
all that
are
timid
and
weak,
those
who need
support
and
consolation.
Let the
ignorant
come
too, so
that I
will
clarify
them.
Let come
to me
all who
suffer,
the
crowd of
the
afflicted
and
unfortunate:
I will
teach
them the
great
remedy
that
softens
the ills
of life
and
reveal
to them
the
secret
of
healing
their
wounds!
What is,
my
friend,
this
sovereign
balm,
which
has such
great
virtue,
that
when
applied
to all
the
wounds
of the
heart it
heals
them? It
is love,
and it
is
charity!
If you
possess
this
divine
fire,
what
shall
you
fear?"
Andre
Luiz
tells us
(4),
"(...)
since
the
arrival
of the
Exalted
Benefactor
of the
Planet,
there is
asublime
thought
penetrating
the
thought
of
mankind.
One
would
say that
rocks,
bushes,
animals,
and
human
beings
gathered
in the
stable,
representing
the
various
kingdoms
of the
Earth's
evolution
to
receive
His
first
touch of
mental
enhancement
and
beauty.
Pastors'
singlehymns
and love
songs in
the
voices
of
spiritual
messengers,
salute
the One
who came
to
freenations,
not in
the
social
order
that
will
always
represent
the
needs of
collective
order,
but in
the
access
of the
Souls,
depending
on
Eternal
Life...
HIS
APOSTOLATE
STARTED
EARLY
Before
Him,
great
commanders
of the
idea had
trampled
the
ground
of the
world,
influencingcrowds.
Warriors
and
politicians,
philosophers
and
prophets
lined in
the
popular
memory,
wereremembered
as
disciplinarians
and
heroes,
but all
marched
with
armies
and
formulas,statements
and
warnings,
where
righteousness
and
bias,
shadow
and
light
were
mixed.
He
arrives
without
any
prestige
of human
authority;
but with
His
moral
magnitude,
He
prints
anew
direction
to life,
by
influencing
above
all, the
Spirit,
across
the
Earth.
Transmitting
the mind
waves of
Higher
Spheres,
from
where He
came, He
moves
among
creatures
awakeningtheir
energies
to
Greater
Life, as
if
impelling
their
innermost
fibers
to
harmonize
them
with the
universal
symphony
of
Eternal
Wellness.
Aided by
an
amazing
group of
psychics,
He forms
the
Apostolic
College
consisting
of
creaturesnot
only
wonderful
by their
advanced
perceptions,
which
allowed
them to
be in
contact
withthe
Celestial
Emissaries,
but also
due to
their
irreproachable
conduct.
They
gave
rise to
a
circuitof
forces
to which
the
mental
wave of
Christ
was
adjusted,
hence
expanding
to renew
the
world.
Early
starts
the
sublime
apostolate
for the
Divine
Master,
raised
to the
position
of
Medium
of God,
and
responsible
for
establishing
the
notions
of
everlasting
life
regarding
the
existence
on
Earth.
Therefore,
with
only
twelve
years of
age, He
sits
among
the
doctors
of
Israel,
"listening
to them
and
asking
them
questions”
(5),
causing
admiration
by the
concepts
He
explained
and
showing
His
condition
of
intermediary
between
different
cultures.
Starting
the
publican
task
(6), the
externalization
of
sublime
energies,
we find
Him at
Cana in
Galilee
(7); and
we find
Him
multiplying
loaves
and
fishes
too
(8),on
top of
the
mountain,
as well
as
calming
the
raving
Nature
(9),
when the
frightened
disciples
ask Him
for
help,
before
the
storm.
We
identify
Him in
full
levitation,
walking
on water
(10), in
a
miraculous
occurrence
ofmaterialization
or
ectoplasm,
when He
starts
to talk
with two
disembodied
men
(11),
whopositively
appeared
glorified
talking
to Him
about
coming
events,
having
as
witnesses
theastonished
Peter,
John,
and
James.
In
Solomon's
temple
in
Jerusalem,
He
disappears
abruptly,
dematerialized
before
the
generalexpectation
and, in
the same
city,
before
the
crowd,
there is
the
production
of
direct
voice
(12),in
which
divine
blessings
indicate
Him the
route.
APPRECIATION
OF HIS
OWN
ENERGIES
Various
patients
surrounded
Him:
paralytics
held out
their
withered
limbs,
and were
helped
by Him;
the
blind
could
see
again;
the
sores of
the
ulcerated
became
clean;
the
mentally
affected
by
several
types of
obsessions
regained
their
balance...
It is
important
to
consider,
however,
that the
Great
Benefactor
invites
all to
enhance
their
own
energies.
Resetting
the ill
cells of
the
bleeding
woman,
He tells
her
convincingly,
"My
daughter,be
good!
Your
faith
has
healed
you.”
(13)Soon
after,
touching
the eyes
of two
blind
men
whoturned
to Him
for
help, He
says,
"Be done
according
to your
faith."(14)
Nevertheless,
He does
not
consider
belief
as a
simple
ingredient
of
mystical
nature,
but as a
resource
of
adjustment
of the
mental
principles
towards
healing.
Moreover,
He
emphasizes
the need
of a
right
way of
thinking
for the
harmony
of the
binomial
mind-body.
And we
see Him
several
times
guiding
the
relieved
sufferers
to a
noble
life, as
in the
case of
the
paralytic
at
Bethesda
that,
upon
being
healed,
when he
first
met Him
again in
the
temple,
he heard
from Him
the
unforgettable
warning:
"behold
thou art
made
whole."
"Sin no
more,
lest
worse
happens
to you."
At a
distance
from
Jerusalem,
He
predicts
(15) the
bitter
events
that
will
culminate
with His
death on
the
cross.
Using
clairvoyance,
which
was
peculiar
to him,
He
predicts
(16)
Simon
BarJonah
surrounded
by lower
entities
of the
extra-physical
sphere,
and
warns
him of
the
danger
they
represent
because
they
weaken
the
apostle.
In his
last
instructions,
next to
his
friends,
confirming
the
profound
clarity
of His
insights,
which
were one
of His
characteristics,
he
demonstrates
that he
is aware
of the
disruption
of
Judas'
conscious
(17),despite
the
doubtsthat
this
statement
raises
among
the
listeners.
In the
prayers
of
Gethsemane
(18),
clairvoyanceand
clairaudience
combining,
He talks
with a
Spiritual
messenger
who
comforts
Him.
According
to the
famous
Master
from the
city of
Lyons,
all
deeds of
Jesus
are
dimmed
beforethe
undeniable
fact
that His
doctrine
remained
unscathed
from
generation
to
generation,
until
today.
This in
spite of
all the
difficulties
and
obstacles
faced in
its
implementation
on
Earth,
including
maintaining
itself
undamaged
after
the many
mutilations,
tampering
and
grafts
that
itsuffered
at the
hands of
the
infidels,
who
without
shame,
declared
themselves
to be
His
representatives
on
Earth.
THE
GREATEST
“MIRACLE”
PERFORMED
BY JESUS
Says the
Encoder
of
Spiritism
(19)"the
greatest
miracle"
that
Jesus
performed,
which
trulyattests
His
superiority,
was no
more
than the
revolution
that His
teachings
produced
in the
world,
despite
the
scarcity
of His
means of
action.
Indeed,
Jesus,
unknown,
poor,
born in
the
humblest
condition,
from a
wee
folk,
almostunknown,
and
without
political,
artistic,
or
literary
preponderance,
only
preaches
His
doctrine
for a
period
of three
years.
During
this
short
time,
his
fellow
citizens
reject
and
persecute
Him.He
is
forced
to flee
to avoid
being
stoned.
He is
betrayed
by one
of his
Apostles,
denied
byanother,
abandoned
by
everyone
when He
falls
into the
hands of
His
enemies.
He only
did
well,
and this
did not
protect
Him from
malevolence,
which
used His
good
deeds to
accuse
Him.
He was
condemned
to the
torture
that was
inflicted
only on
criminals
and He
dies
ignored
by the
world,
as the
history
of that
time
says
nothing
about
Him. He
wrote
nothing.
However,
helped
by some
as
obscure
men as
He, his
word was
enough
to
regenerate
the
world.
His
doctrine
destroyed
the
omnipotent
paganism
and
became
the
beacon
of
civilization.
He had
against
himself
everything
that
concerned
the
failure
of the
works of
men.
This is
why we
say that
the
success
achieved
by His
doctrine
was the
greatest
of His
miracles,
and His
mission
proves
to be
divine.
If,
instead
of
social
and
regenerating
principles,
based on
the
spiritual
future
of man,
He had
just
bequeathed
to
posterity
some
facts,
maybe
today we
would
hardly
know His
name."
Going in
the
direction
of the
Calvary,
He
fulfilled
His
mission,
bequeathed
to
Mankind
the"Vademecum"
of
enlightenment,
bundled
in His
Gospel
of
Light.
Ending,
Andre
Luiz
(4)says,
"The
Gospel
is not
the only
book of
the
people.
It is
the Code
ofMoral
Principles
of the
Universe,
adaptable
to all
homelands,
all
communities,
all
races,
and all
creatures.
It
represents
above
all, the
letter
of
conduct
for the
rise of
consciousness
toImmortality.
And to
reveal
this,
Our Lord
Jesus
Christ
used the
sublime
mediumship
as
aneternal
light
agent,
praising
life,
and
annihilating
death,
abolishing
evil and
glorifying
the
goodin
order
that
human
laws
purify,
magnify
and
sanctify
themselves
and rise
to their
integrationwith
the Laws
of God."
References:
1.
Kardec,
Allan.
The
Gospel
According
to
Spiritism.
129. Ed.
Rio [de
Janeiro]:
FEB
2009,
Chapter
VIII,
item 18.
2. Ibid,
Chapter
VIII,
item 19.
3. Mark
10:14.
4.
XAVIER,
F.
Candido.
Mechanisms
of
Mediumship.
Fourth
Ed. Rio
[de
Janeiro]:
FEB
1973,
Chapter
XXVI.
5. Luke
2:46.
6. John
2:1 to
12.
7.
Kardec,
Allan.
The
Genesis.
43. ed.
Rio [de
Janeiro]:
FEB
2003,
ChapterXV,
item 47.
8. John
6:1 to
15 (see
also,
Kardec,
Allan
Genesis,
Chapter
XV, item
48).
9. Mark
4:35 to
41.
10. Mark
6:49 50.
11. Luke
9:28 32.
12. John
12:28
30.
13.
Matthew
9:22.
14.
Matthew,
9:29.
15. Luke
22:31
34.
16. Luke
22:31
34.
17. John
13:21
22.
18. Luke
22:43.
19.
Kardec,
Allan.
The
Genesis.
43rd Ed.
Rio [de
Janeiro]:
FEB
2003,
Chapter
XV, item
3.
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