To the Master – I Love You
In the stillness of the soul, when words fall silent, only one remains…
Love.
In the stillness of the soul, when words fall silent, only one remains…
Love.
The text challenges the reader to break away from the illusion that external achievements bring lasting joy. It is not in wealth or comfort that we find our spiritual home, but in union with the Divine. The fleeting joys of the material world are described as “mortal-born,” temporary and destined to fade, while true happiness is described as spiritual, enduring, and born from within.
The Path of Perfection, which characterizes the New Era and is defined by the Second Coming of the Logos within Man, is revealed through the Archetype manifested by the Master John—the Archetype of the Deified Man—who comes to complete, through His Teaching, Work, and Sacrifice, the restoration of the Idea–Man, by uplifting every expression of it to the Perfection of the One Human Self, the Man–Idea within the Infinite Kingdom of the Logos–God.
A luminous map for the soul ready to journey beyond spiritual comfort zones. It is an appeal to embody Love not just in sentiment but in structure, to make your offering not just a gift—but a way of being. Here, the path to Theosis is not found merely through receiving Light but through becoming Light—through guided Love and conscious, sacred Offering.
Chapter 20, titled “Pentecost,” is a deeply spiritual and symbolic exposition of the sacred event known in Christianity as the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles. Dionysis Dorizas reinterprets Pentecost not just as a historical commemoration, but as a universal, ongoing, and initiatory event available to every sincere seeker of divine union.
The twelve Disciples are not just individuals of the past, but symbolic representations of the different aspects of human consciousness that, when awakened, respond to the Divine Call. They represent inner capacities—faith, strength, understanding, will—that are activated by Christ within the soul.
In this pivotal chapter, Dionysis Dorizas explores one of the deepest theological and metaphysical principles of Christian Esotericism: the concept of the Divine Trinity—not simply as dogma, but as the living, breathing structure of existence itself.
Though He was Divine, Jesus frequently turned to the Father in prayer, not out of need, but as an act of sacred offering and perfect union. This detail is pivotal. It presents prayer not just as a human obligation, but as a divine pattern, showing that even the most realized being used prayer as a channel for divine communication and fulfillment of mission.
The chapter describes prayer as a multidimensional act: a dialogue, an offering, a transformation, and a tool of divine alignment. Dorizas elaborates that true prayer is not confined to words or rituals, but it is a deep, conscious movement of the soul toward the Divine. It is a living, breathing connection that sanctifies thought, purifies intention, and transcends the limitations of the mind and body.
The author warns that what many regard as truth may merely be a construct of logic and subjective positioning. Arguments seem sound within their own framework, but are easily refuted by alternate reasoning. The result is not resolution but entrenchment: people become more attached to their views and less willing to consider others.
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