Sunday, April 15, 2007

Personal Harmony - How long is a day?

How long is a day?

The right viewpoint not only makes clear the small size of this world in relation to the whole plan of creation; it shows the unimportance of time.

To inhabitants of earth there is some value in the measure of years. But to a person who lives in harmony with the laws of nature, there can be no such thing as the duration of time measured in increments of a few hundred years. They know that it took 3 billion years to reduce the temperature of a planet to allow life forms to exist; and they know that, after the planet loses warmth, it cannot sustain life; after which it requires 3 billion more years to bring it to a state were the sun will absorb it and start the life making process all over again. No planet can sustain life more than a few million years, and yet billions of years are required to make the brief living period possible. This is a real perspective on life.

Billions of years must pass in the evolution of our planet Natural law encourages you to see things in true viewpoint, in universal time. Then a day is not perceptible, nor a year, as that is merely one revolution of the earth around the sun. Nothing complete happens in the universe in that earthly year. Only the smallest fragment of something occurs. A century of time on this globe is but a fraction of a second in the universal period. This is real, a fact that helps put life in perspective, and now the universal viewpoint in nature begins to mean something.

If a person can be true to this viewpoint, they will see that our planet eventually grows cold and gets drawn into the mass of the sun. So all the hard work we are doing to make this a better place, will, and must eventually become a waste of time. All our efforts will be burnt in the heat of the sun, along with those beings who are still here, worrying about sustainable growth, organic crops and humanitarian expressions. It’ll be the ultimate war to see who can get off the planet before it cooks in the heat of the sun.

A person who really studies Universal Law will acknowledge that this intense heat will destroy the earth, send the dust back out into space (the real meaning of ashes to ashes – dust to dust) and then from this dust new planets will be formed. They will take shape again under different conditions and eventually cool down enough for new worlds to become populated with new beings, and eventually those worlds will cool off once more, lose all the life, get drawn to the sun and so repeat the cycle. This is all part of a days work in universal time.

Can you grasp it? It is written many times in history. The earth was created in 7 days. But these aren’t human days, they are galactic days. Each day in universal time is 3 billion years of earth time. That’s 21 billion years of earth time to create a week in universal time. This is the exact amount of time scientist confirm that it takes for a planet such as ours to form from universal dust.

So your lifespan in universal time is virtually immeasurable. In that fragment of time, you are born pass-through into youth, then arrive at death. Three or four generations of humans still can’t be measured against the huge clock that tics in the universe, natures time line.

This is the essential perspective for personal harmony. With natures perspective you’ll laugh at the idea of people who don’t do what they love or who spend time worrying and struggling for righteousness and superiority. All for a whole single milli-second span in universal time. Yet that is what we have been doing for years here on earth. We think we have cares and that the ultimate aim is to get all bent out of shape trying to grab a piece of the action.

What we worry and care about, when we look at it in the larger scale, is often absolute trivia. And with this awareness you can look in awe and celebrate that beauty. Beauty is free, personal harmony is what life is meant to feel like. Babies laughing, flowers blooming, people competing. You don’t win business by being tired and grumpy, overworking or over trying. Your relationships won’t thrive on taking everything personally, or trying to be someone you are not.

Look for the big picture.

Natures law.

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