-
Big words
Are big words really the problem we make them out to be? How can we restore a common sense attitude to technical language?
-
Who stole God from science: Part 4 – Leonardo’s legacy part 1
Leonardo’s legacy of truth in science, religion and philosophy
-
The Serge Benhayon prophecy of sleep and repose
We spend a third or more of our human life in sleep. Our true depth of productivity can never be fulfilled because we have not understood the truth of waking and sleeping as a cycle of motion and repose.
-
Evidence Based Medicine – is it actually science?
When we hear the term ‘evidence based medicine’ we immediately think of ‘science’ and ‘reliability’, but is this really the case?
-
Serge Benhayon – the universal man
Serge Benhayon is a Universal Man – What does this mean? How does a man with no tertiary education be an expert on science, philosophy, religion and medicine to name a few? Find out in this article how Serge Benhayon truly represents what it is to live universally and be a Universal Man.
-
Hermes Trismegistus
Hermes Trismegistus’ – known as father of the greatest philosophies and religions on earth and the ‘master of masters’ – sole purpose was to accelerate the re-awakening of humanity to the truth of their divinity – ‘If then you do not make yourself equal to God, you cannot apprehend God; for like is known by like.’ Hermes.
-
Everything is energy
From Pythagoras to Einstein and in our every interaction, we all know the truth that energy is what makes everything happen and makes everything what it is and what it will therefore become.
-
Serge Benhayon – scientist at heart
We are all in a groundhog day, the incessant orbital motion of going around and around the sun with infinite opportunities to face all our choices until we truly experience the energetic law of cause and effect.
-
Plato
Plato was a student of Socrates and part of the Pythagorean lineage. To this day, his famous Allegory of the Cave still inspires philosophers and students across the globe with its wisdom and truth about the way humanity is living.
-
The study, revelation and prophecy
The ultimate ill is not the shifting of the people or the budget, but the mass movement of the ills in our homes. Should we therefore not be constantly questioning if the study of the end-effect in its current form is sufficient for the evolution of the planet and its 7.7 billion inhabitants?
-
Shakespeare’s Othello: How does a hero fall?
How does the hero fall? Packed with turbulence, intrigue, prejudice, deception, devoted and unrequited love, Shakespeare’s Othello lays bare the tragedy of our ignorance of our own true divine nature and the false forces that nudge us into mayhem and misery.
-
The Lineage of the Ageless Wisdom: “Leonardo Da Vinci’s Greatest Gift”
Leonardo da Vinci seeded forth the new era in Science, Religion and Philosophy.
-
Bringing science to life – the true purpose of science
Is the purpose of science to serve humanity in its ever-expanding demand for a better life, a better future, to make it all easier?
-
How noble is the Nobel Prize?
We look up to those who win global awards like the Nobel Prize. But what truly lies behind the choices of the winners, and what does this tell us about how we value these competitions?
-
Have we crucified the butterfly? The war between science and religion
What happens to the light of truth when religion and science declare war on each other?
-
The question of evolution
How evolved are we?
-
Who stole God from science: Part 2
Pythagoras, through his connection to the Ageless Wisdom, was able to bring through scientific, philosophical and religious principles that have shaped the course of history.
-
My obvious questions
Why do we choose to poison our bodies and our planet, then deny we are doing it, and that energy must govern our conscious choices?
-
Cancer – why me?
Why do I have cancer? A common question that medicine has not been able to answer. Could the answer require understanding who we truly are?
-
Flow, cycles and rituals at work
The symptoms of exhaustion, lethargy or the simple and very common feeling of discontentment are a normalised phenomenon in our work-places. But does it really have to be this way?