-
Living religion: a relationship with self, love and God
I used to hate religion and now I love it. Religion for me is fundamentally about love. My religion means taking responsibility for myself, my life and my choices in the knowing that I have within me much more power than I ever realised – and knowing that it starts with my relationship with me.
-
Outpourings from Heaven
Testimonial about The Way of Initiation
-
Mag-fit-icence
Have you tried all types of exercise but struggled to find an exercise routine that works for you? Could it be that we are approaching exercise from the wrong angle?
-
Sweeping sensitivity under the carpet
Do we as men ignore our awareness at the expense of our bodies, our tenderness and connection to our true selves and if so, what are the consequences?
-
Without the science of energy, philosophy is a mere charade
What makes philosophy real, practical, deeply wise and in harmony with universal intelligence? Serge Benhayon presents the key to applying true philosophy in life.
-
Shakespeare’s King Lear: King Liar and the tyranny of ‘elsewhere conscious presence’
Shakespeare’s King Lear exposes the extent of our society’s daily brutality, to which most of us have elected to turn a blind eye. And he honours the presence in those few who consistently live the truth we all know but have largely abandoned. Why do we do it?
-
What is the defining factor in the quality of a relationship?
Given the many relationships we have in life, how mastered are we with the quality of those relationships? And where does God fit in?
-
The why of relationships
We are schooled that we can only have one or a few special relationships. But why accept this when we can instead open up to the possibility of every relationship?
-
The Essenes
Long believed to be a breakaway Jewish sect, there was a deeper purpose to the Essenes’ gathering and formation into community, impulsed by Divinity.
-
Shakespeare’s Richard III and The Winter of Our Discontent – a new take
Glorious summer or an insatiable winter of discontent – what will we choose? What made Shakespeare’s King Richard III a best seller of its time and still the most performed play in the 21st century?
-
John Dee
One of the foremost mathematicians of his age, and also a deeply religious man, John Dee straddled the worlds of Science and Occult Philosophy before they became distinguishable.
-
Shakespeare’s The Tempest, the Great Globe, and The Ageless Wisdom
The Tempest was Shakespeare’s last play, a play full of magic and meaning. Will the characters constellated on this isle keep re-choosing the abuse of power or will they reclaim their universality once more?
-
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.
-
Opening my heart to love again
Your heart can lead the way in life . . . read this man's account of his life and how the way he lived it nearly killed him, and how his heart brought him back home
-
Love expressed on a special Valentine’s Day
The writer shares her experience of her husband’s love on Valentine’s Day.
-
Essence
Our essence is who we truly are
-
Why do we eat what we eat?
What we eat, and why and when we eat, has another dimension than what is presented in the cooking shows and enticing packaging in the supermarket aisle.
-
Gautama Buddha
Demonstrating his dedication to truth, Siddhārtha Gautama, the Buddha, embarked upon discovering the nature of reality. His commitment and dedication to that path offer us much to consider in our daily life and offer a way to arise above the turmoil of everyday existence.
-
Living a religious life – returning to the Essence
Living religiously is the most simple thing on earth – it simply means living in connection with the Divine essence within us all. Divinity never leaves us, and all we need is a reflection from one living from their truth, to show us it is possible.
-
Our Living Way: The Cycle of Life and Death and Reincarnation
Our existence is commonly narrowed down to being only about the human life cycle. What if that represents only a small fraction of what is going on within a much larger context?