Quote:
Originally Posted by impaul99 If I want to help people discover their purpose and passion in life, and then follow that passion as the way to make a living, and do it in a way that is creative, not competitive, but at the same time I want to create total financial abundance for myself and my family, does that make me a darkworker by your definition Steve? |
If I may, I'd like to ask you a question that IMO is the litmus test:
You are presented with an opportunity. If you take the opportunity, you will harm others while improving your own situation. Do you take it?
"Lightworker" to me does not mean harming yourself, it means refusing to harm others just to benefit yourself. Everyone in this world is constantly presented with this choice: they perceive two roads. One road seems to hurt others while helping themself. One road doesn't hurt others. If you make the same choice each time for a long time, you are polarizing.
Most people oscillate back and forth when presented with this choice... Polarity is nothing more than coming to understand that one road is preferable to the other and then taking that road again and again.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Algernon That realization is at the heart of what Jesus taught. |
I think you'll agree that "typical Christians" do not practice what Jesus taught.