Many attribute synchronicities to divine intervention, but emerging testimony suggests a different origin. These meaningful coincidences likely stem from the self, interacting with the collective human psychic field or the human egregore. Individuals who perceive this powerful egregore often misinterpret it as God.
The truth is far more nuanced. This “God” is merely a facet of ourselves and others, reacting to our emotions, actions, and thoughts. It can manifest events by influencing the actions of others, creating intricate and seemingly miraculous outcomes. However, complexity does not equate to divinity.
The Illusion of Divine Influence
Many people mistakenly attribute fortunate events to “fate” or “God,” even in mundane situations like finding money. These are merely synchronicities, manifestations of our own selves or others. While fate may exist as an inevitable determinism, our self and the human egregore significantly influence it.
Habits, for instance, create mental pathways. Disrupting these habits causes discomfort as the mind seeks to maintain balance. Acting out of character elicits resistance from others, as the human egregore is shaped by collective perceptions. This resistance originates either from the egregore itself or from our own minds, not from a divine force.
Challenging Divine Attribution
Attributing every unusual phenomenon to God is a folly. When paranormal events occur, they might be the work of the human psychic egregore, dumb luck, or even paranormal forces. To claim these events as direct divine intervention is to diminish the complexity of reality.
The human egregore has specific traits. For example, it favors predictable outcomes. It closely resembles a spirit, but lacks true consciousness, functioning instead as a complex system. Other possibilities include benevolent or malevolent spirits.
Some sources propose that magic, spirits, and the Law of Attraction offer more adequate and sensible explanations than immediate divine intervention. Jumping to conclusions is not the answer.
The Role of God in a Synchronistic Universe
While denying direct divine intervention in synchronicities, it does not mean denying God. All paranormal and physical phenomena could be under God’s will. A telekinetic moving objects is as much God’s will as a fetus developing.
However, to label unusual phenomena as God or attribute them to divine communication is naive. If one believes this, one must also consider mundane events as divine communications, bordering on delusion. It is crucial to critically examine and question such assumptions.
The Darkness and the Light
One perspective suggests that most synchronicities originate from a darker source, akin to the universe being predominantly dark. Divine communication, in contrast, is rare, like the small fraction of light in the universe. The frequency of these experiences depends on one’s proximity to the divine.
A single, powerful synchronicity from God can undo years of negative influence, obliterating strongholds and foundations built by malevolent forces. This highlights the immense power of divine intervention when it occurs.
The Perfect Whole
One can see God in all beings and all beings in God. A self-realized person perceives the Supreme Lord everywhere. One who sees God everywhere will never be lost, nor will God be lost to them.
Ultimately, the interpretation of these synchronicities remains a personal journey, guided by critical thinking, occult knowledge, and an understanding of the complex interplay between the self, the collective consciousness, and the potential forces at play. Those who don’t see God are deliberately ignoring Him.
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