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Will it be a turning point? Yes, once it becomes clear what She is creating.

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, " jagbir singh "

<adishakti_org wrote:

>

> Few seem to comprehend that it is the eternal Adi Shakti within

> who is orchestrating the whole drama. Is the turning point taking

> place as we speak? Yes, once it becomes clear what She is

> destroying right now to turn the tide. The events of last two

> years first left deep fractures within the organization, later

> found to be permanently broken. The latest speech only confirms my

> past presumptions. Now i believe the worst is yet to come i.e.,

> even more self-destruction as the opposing forces intensify the

> power struggles. Perhaps all this destruction is necessary so that

> all the forces of evil attempting to hijack the Movement and

> obstruct the evolution of humanity battle each other to the

> finish, and pave the way for Her Divine Message to humanity to be

> heard by all the nations. The turning point has just begun Bagus.

> Just be your own master and witness the whole Divine Drama unfold.

>

 

There are a number of reasons why Her Divine Message will eventually

triumph. i will not go into these details because some have already

been discussed since this forum started three years ago. The rest

will become obvious over the years. All i can say is that in future

the vast majority of seekers will be those attracted by Her Divine

Message. The subtle system Sahaja Yoga will recede further and

further away; for years now it has hardly attracted any seekers,

especially in Europe, North and South America. There is just no hope

left as maximum effort has been spent for years with almost no

results. Nobody seems to be interested in the free subtle system of

Sahaja Yoga anymore. Modern seekers willingly pay a premium to get

better equipped yoga studios and professional, educated teachers.

 

So that leaves us with the last and only choice - TELL ALL THE

NATIONS that the Holy Spirit/Comforter/Adi Shakti has come to

deliver the Divine Message to humanity! That is exactly what we

intend to do.

 

Right now the foundations are being laid that will take years to

accomplish, but definitely by 21st. February 2013. By then we will

be able to explain in detail to all seekers of all traditions and

give evidence that their searching for purpose finally ends when

they meet the Shakti within. All websites will be dedicated to the

Divine Feminine and Her Divine Message to humanity. i assure all

that we will not rest till this very important task is accomplished

because more and more humans are searching for purpose. Only Her

Divine Message will attract and awaken them.

 

Will it be a turning point? Yes, once it becomes clear what She is

creating.

 

Jai Shri Ganapathi,

 

 

jagbir

 

 

Searching For Purpose

BY PETER C. EMBERLEY

 

Spiritualism is on the rise as baby boomers seek meaning and

direction in their lives.

 

Baby boomers — the 8.1 million Canadians born between 1946-1964 —

are the best educated, most prosperous, and pampered generation in

history. As they move through their middle years, however, many

boomers are discovering that something is missing. Increasingly,

they are looking for deeper meaning, greater satisfaction and new

direction in life. In this essay, Carleton University political

scientist and philosopher Peter C. Emberley writes of the search for

spiritual purpose, much of it occurring outside mainstream religion.

A baby boomer himself, Emberley, 42, is also director of Carleton's

College of the Humanitarian in Ottawa. 

 

" What we really need today is a spiritual version of acidophilus, "

muses a devotee at Baba Haridass's asthanga yoga centre on Saltpring

Island. She is talking about a herbal purgative, and confiding why

she is enduring yet another round of one of yoga's excruciatingly

uncomfortable contortions. " There's a lot to be scraped off our

systems, " she explains. I learn during the next few days that she is

a best-selling author and accompanied consultant, yet despite

prosperity, influence and all the conventional signs of success, she

turns out to be a very unhappy person, profoundly alienated from the

world, and seeking. In Buddhism. Vedanta. New Age. Kabbalah. Angels.

 

A farmhouse in Ontario. A candle burns in at the centre of a

makeshift altar draped with an embroidered tablecloth. . . . The

healer explains that during her own dark night of the soul she

realized that the human world was torn and afflicted, the result of

centuries of drastically constricting the range of human experience.

Now, " we have to ground our energy in the earth, and open our crown

chakra to the universe, " to reach " being where we are. " And she,

too, seeks. In Shiatsu and Reiki. The human potential movement.

Celtic spirituality. Goddess worship. Wicca. Archetypes.

 

The bells toll loud and long at St. Herman of Alaska, the English-

speaking Orthodox church in Edmonton filled with converts and the

curious. . . . " After centuries of beating the magic out of

religion, we are looking again for a little enchantment, " says a

sometime parishioner. And so he, too, seeks. In the United Church's

community of concern. The Anglican Church's prayerbook society.

Anglo-Catholicism. In Opes Dei and Tridentine Catholicism.

 

Three seekers, each searching for spiritual consolation and

sanctification. Where none of these three baby boomers is seeking,

however, is the mainstream. And they are not alone. For many of the

baby boomer generation, " spirituality " is not happening in the

churches, synagogues, mosques or temples. Canada's premier

chronicler of religious belief and affiliation, Reginald Bibby,

offers incontrovertible data on the decline of membership and weekly

attendance in the mainline faiths. In 1945, 60 per cent of the

Canadians claimed weekly attendance and 82 per cent professed

membership; in 1990 only 23 per cent attended regularly and 29 per

cent claimed to be members.

 

While many babyboomers are uninformed about the richness and

diversity of their own religious traditions, their plaits and

hostility are understandable. Many women have no further patience

for a patriarchal church that evolves glacially at best. Sexual

abuse or hypocrisy by some clergy, historical injustices perpetrated

by the churches on our aboriginals, unwillingness to accommodate

progressive forces — all have dimmed the attraction of

institutionalized religion. " In church, it's all just yada, yada,

yada, " says a lapsed United Church parishioner. " We were no longer

moved or touched by wooden rituals, " claim Jewish and Catholic

Canadians at an ashram in the Himalayas. With their exotic swami, by

contrast, " we're listening to revelation, to live scripture. "

Charismatic Christians, Lubavitcher Hasidics, Sufis and New Age

shamans all testify to the scriptural adage — the letter killeth,

but the spirit giveth life. We hear in this clamor, perhaps, the

death knell of 20th-century religion, institutions no longer vital

with the spirit that engendered them.

 

But it is premature to herald the " death of God. " Today, thousands

of Canadians are embarked on complex spiritual searches. . . . Very

few baby boomers admit they are " religious. " They say they

are " spiritual, " a signal that they are distancing themselves from

the authority of creed, dogmatic theology and institution, in favour

of a non-exclusive God.

 

Row after row of books on spirituality . . . pilgrimages, spiritual

labyrinths and wellness retreats; and television shows

proliferate. . . 

 

There are also more subtle signs that another " great awakening " is

occurring. Across the country, ordinary Christians, Muslims, Jews

and Hindus meet weekly in private homes to study their scared texts.

On weekends, dozens of groups meet in empty convents and churches,

participating in Alpa and Cursillo retreats, spiritual direction,

meditation — awash in tears, but also, amid gales of laughter,

experiencing the transfiguring power of love and belonging.

 

Why the renewed interest in the sacred? An obvious reason is that

the baby boomers, whose mean age is 43, are brooding on their

immortality. Their bodies — objects of much pampering — are now

showing the signs of decay. Many baby boomers for the first time are

feeling fragile and vulnerable. Equally likely, with sick and dying

parents, children needing moral guidance, ugly custody battles, and

careers and family in sudden unanticipated tatters due to severances

and " restructuring, " many baby boomers are finally confronting

primary questions of existence. Who am I? What am I truly striving

for? What is the legacy I leave for the next generation? They are

struggling at mid-life to achieve order and meaning in their lives. "  

 

Peter C. Emberley, Searching for Purpose

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