Lisa Johnson
Patterns Of Human Consciousness: Evil has a mind of its own and it's called ego
Patterns Of Human Consciousness: Evil has a mind of its own and it's called ego
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Once Eve turns the Garden of Eden upside down with a reasoning process that allows her to have guilt-free what is not rightfully hers, she turns everything upside down and her natural consciousness of life, growth, truth and wisdom that is at home in the Garden of Eden becomes the "dust of the ground" hell she is forced to inhabit during her stay on this finite, physical plane. We are not meant to survive within illusory, ego-created, hierarchical power structures. We are meant to thrive in this Garden called Earth where there would be more than enough for everyone if we were to have faith in the life-giving nutrients inherent in the human consciousness of life with which we all enter this world but which all too often is destroyed in favor of survival within the structures.
When I began reading the Nuremberg trials and comparing the methods Hitler used against the Jews to the methods used against me because of a whistle-blowing experience in my workplace, the patterns of evil began to come into clear focus. When I then saw that the same methods were used by the Pharisee priests against Jesus and was able to trace these patterns all the way back to the Garden of Eden, I realized that evil, good, sin, Satan, God, forgiveness, judgment and repentance are not what most of us think they are and this ignorance of the truth has led so many of us to act in cruel ways in our ignorance.
Although this book is biblically-based, it takes a radical departure from traditional Judeo-Christian doctrine and beliefs. I followed the truth wherever it took me and that has led to some theories and conclusions that will be uncomfortable for some readers and outrageous to others. Changing the paradigm of how we view human nature is an extremely messy and painful process. I know for myself that I would have lived out my life in ignorance of the true nature of good and evil and the existence of God if I had never undergone an experience that made me question every assumption and belief I ever held about human goodness. Changing those assumptions and beliefs to ones more aligned with truth is what healed me and sent me on a collision course with a religion I had long since given up but with which I came to realize I had never come to terms.
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