Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Divine order entails growth or evolving, not evolution



The whole order of nature evinces a progressive march towards a higher life. H. P. Blavatsky








Mankind has been bestowed with freedom to think and act, but not the freedom to
override or thwart the Great Will which moves to the good. Both mythology and
history tell us that evil has never ultimately triumphed, and therefore,
mankind's aberrations at any point of time, like those we observe in the world
today, are only like flitting clouds in a vast sky; even like whirlpools, froth
and foam on the surface of a large river which continues to flow on inexorably
towards its destination - to be one with the great ocean of bliss, from which it
had risen originally as vaporous clouds
This onward march of individual growth with noted exceptions as "aberrations " moves mankind forward to the goal,elusive as it seems , to spiritual and moral perfection. The aberrations seem as a necessity to spur further growth not possible in the absence of these. The flow is inexorable and unstoppable and the ocean is bliss. Archaic truths and immutable laws testify to our spiritual growth notwithstanding the aberrations which do serve their purpose in a very obvious way.




The sciences never approach the occult or hidden explanations already manifest to the circumspect among us and her "Secret Doctrines' details" these insights.




The failure of Darwinism in explaining true evolution is contained in "knowledge", the knowledge of the sages as explained below:




Diane Sawyer and children in Applachia and poverty


From My google bookmarks

This is quoted from her article bookmarked in my Google. The frightening aspect of this poverty is it's close to home and silently around us. This is quoted twice but I do not want to expunge one part lest I over expunge.


I think that urban poverty, while often crushing and inestimable, doesn't
have the isolation," she said.Friday's special shows how a lack of
transportation deepens the effects of deprivation:
one of the women in the
piece, Angel, trudges eight miles down the mountain every day to reach her GED
class.Sawyer's producing team worked on the project for two years, traveling
more than 14,000 miles in the process. The anchor herself made one "very
intense" trip to the region. She interviewed children like 11-year-old Erica,
who desperately wants her mother to kick her drug habit. When Sawyer asks her
why she believes her mother keeps using, the young girl replies world-wearily:
"Pain. Misery."
Equally compelling are the stories of Shawn Grim, an 18-year-old
football phenom who lives in his truck to escape the dysfunction at home, and
Courtney, 12, whose family often runs out of food.I think that urban poverty,
while often crushing and inestimable, doesn't have the isolation," she
said.Friday's special shows how a lack of transportation deepens the effects of
deprivation: one of the women in the piece, Angel, trudges eight miles down the
mountain every day to reach her GED class.
Sawyer's producing team worked on the
project for two years, traveling more than 14,000 miles in the process. The
anchor herself made one "very intense" trip to the region. She interviewed
children like 11-year-old Erica, who desperately wants her mother to kick her
drug habit. When Sawyer asks her why she believes her mother keeps using, the
young girl replies world-wearily: "Pain. Misery." Equally compelling are the
stories of Shawn Grim, an 18-year-old football phenom who lives in his truck to
escape the dysfunction at home, and Courtney, 12, whose family often runs out of
food.