Jesus didn’t
move from Jesus to the eternal cosmic Christ except through death and
resurrection to a larger space and time. We don’t move from our independent,
historical body to the Christ consciousness without dying to our false self,
either. As Stephen Levine says, death is the “imaginary loss of an imaginary
self.” Imaginary because it thinks it is separate.
We, like Jesus
Himself, have to let go of who we think we are, and who we think we need to be.
“Dying at 30? I am just getting started!” He must have thought. We have to let
go of the passing names by which we have tried to name ourselves and become the
“naked self before the naked God.” That will always feel like dying, because we
are so attached to our passing names and identities. Your bare, undecorated self
is already and forever the beloved child of God. When you can rest there, you
will begin to share in the universal Christ consciousness, the very “mind of
Christ” (1 Corinthians 2:16).
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