Meditate In The Silent Temple Of Your Heart.

As we witness the Universal Omnipresent force in All, (our God Self or I Am presence) we connect to the Divine Power of Grace.

As we embody the Will, the Capacity to receive this gift, our finite minds open to greater possibilities, once lost in our limitless awareness. We behold our Infinite Self.

Divine Grace, the sweet surrender that transforms, and inspires humanity to live a virtuous life. Becoming the Light that remains illuminated as we continue our path.

The resurrection of our Eternal Divinity, our Christ Consciousness resides in each of us. Our perfect expression of God. as the human mind acknowledges the Divine within, he awakens his Soul.

Paramahansa Yogananda, (author of The Yoga Of Jesus: Understanding the Hidden Teachings of the Gospels) said “To commune daily with the Divine in deep meditation, to carry His love and guidance with you into all your activities, is the way that leads to permanent Peace and Happiness.”

I exhort you to separate at least 10 minutes daily to connect to the Divine Power of Grace through meditation.

First, sit down into a comfortable crossed legged position. Along your spine, and melt your shoulder blades towards your tailbone.

Second, bring your attention to your breath. Soften your face. Bring your tongue towards the roof of your mouth (behind your front teeth). Begin inhaling through your nose (keeping your mouth closed) and when you exhale, allow yourself to let go (without judgement) of any turbulence within your mind, that doesn’t allow you to be present and in harmony with this inner self connection and exploration moment.

Third, while keeping your eyes closed ask your self the following questions:

Who Am I?

If you don’t know the answer, it’s alright. Remember no judgement. You may help yourself with a journal and write down, your answers.

What do I want? Are my thoughts and actions aligned congruently?

Remember be compassionate with yourself, simply take note regards how can I become happier and live in congruency.

How can I better serve while I am living this life? What is my purpose here?

What is my source of gratitude? Keep in mind that gratitude is a magnet for miracles.

After ending this meditation exercise, release everything, close your eyes again and breathe slowly during three minutes.

When you feel ready come back to your space.

I encourage to practice this short meditation during 21 days and you will feel and see the difference as well as your perspective towards others.

Last but not least;


“He who conquers himself conquers much.” Jesus

Author:
Glenda Lee Santos; Humble Military and Yoga Warrior; Criminal Justice, BA; Holistic Practitioner with Foundation in Yoga and Ayurveda; Reiki Master; Spirit Guide Coach; Master Resilience Trainer.

The Night Before Christmas.

Greetings Beautiful Soul.

Take this gift from a Christmas Star.

A diamond shines no brighter than that lovely Christmas star.

It shines in all its brilliance its seen from near or far.

A symbol of the Christ child as he lays upon the hay.

It tells to all the waiting world a King was born that day.

See Bethlehem star shining like the chamber of your heart, free of pain full of faith, hope, love and new beginnings on your path.

Let us keep our thoughts forever turning to the savior and the light within our heart.

I hope you a beautiful day and wonderful Christmas Eve. With Love

Author:

Glenda Lee Santos; Humble Military and Yoga Warrior; Criminal Justice, BA; Holistic Practitioner with Foundation in Yoga and Ayurveda; Reiki Master; Spirit Guide Coach; Master Resilience Trainer.

How to embrace “The Hero’s Journey” in order to rebirth.

There are moments in life when we feel that we need to step out of something or someone that instead of nurturing our evolution towards a higher self, is dragging us back. Here is the thing, there is a gift we all have which is called discernment. We are energy and there is lots of scientific search and research that sustains it, you just have to navigate on the web in order to find it. So, I will not begin giving a class about that subject.

Being that said, when I took a course about Christ healing I learned about the existence of this precious gift we all have and I would like to share some of that.

Discernment works through our inner voice/intuition, awareness on this because sometimes our ego (representing our inner shadow struggles) https://wp.me/p7G3QF-qv, posted in mindfulness, yoga), begins to operate from our inner vulnerabilities to confuse us within a back and forth loop generating energy of self guilt and drama. That way this hold us back from letting go and move on towards a better version of ourselves finding a state of wellness anywhere else.

When you feel that something or someone brings to your life enlightenment, self-grow, self-love and even encourages any spiritual or religious practice that contributes to your resilience in a positive way; that… is an energy of high vibration which is closer to our “Higher Power” or “God”.

However, if it happens creating you disorientation, anxiety, guilt with self punishment orientation, constant isolation then is an energy that has roots from a low vibration which is obviously dragging you away from your “Higher Power” and source of inner and external love which as result ends up driving you into sorrow and unhappiness.

From my military background I learned about personal courage as an army value, that does not states there is absence of fear, instead teaches us to transmute that fear into a positive energy that will remind us to stay alert if engaged into combat during the darkness (looking forward to survive until dawn) by taking unfamiliar routes in order to succeed until the sun rises.

In summary do not be afraid to take an unfamiliar path. Sometimes they are the ones that take you to the best places. Allow yourself to embrace your inner Hero’s Journey.

Joseph Campbell developed a narratology to guide us into this journey, named “The Hero’s Journey” which is the common template of stories that involve a hero who goes on an adventure, is victorious in a decisive crisis and comes home changed or transformed.

Campbell who was influenced by Carl Jung’s analytical psychology, used the monomyth to deconstruct and compare religions. In his famous book The Hero with a Thousand Faces (1949), he describes the narrative pattern as follows:

“A hero ventures forth from the world of common day into a region of supernatural wonder: fabulous forces are there encountered and a decisive victory is won: the hero comes back from this mysterious adventure with the power to bestow boons on his fellow man.”

Below is an illustration of this template and a breakdown of the steps.

1. Ordinary World:

This is where our Hero’s exists before our present story begins, oblivious of the adventures to come. It’s our comfort zone. Our everyday life where we learn crucial details about our true nature, capabilities and outlook on life. This anchors our Hero as a human, just like you and me, and makes it easier for us to identify with him and hence later, empathize with his plight.

2. Call To Adventure

Our adventure begins when we receive a call to action, such as a direct threat to our safety, our family, our way of life or to the peace of the community in which we live. It may not be as dramatic as a gunshot, but simply a phone call or conversation but whatever the call is, and however it manifests itself, it ultimately disrupts the comfort of our Ordinary World and presents a challenge or quest that must be undertaken.

3. Refusal Of The Call

Although we may be eager to accept the quest, at this stage we will have fears that need overcoming. Second thoughts or even deep personal doubts as to whether or not our Hero is up to the challenge. When this happens, we will refuse the call and as a result may suffer somehow. The problem we face may seem to much to handle and the comfort of home far more attractive than the perilous road ahead. This would also be our own response and once again helps us bond further with our reluctant Hero.

4. Meeting The Mentor “When the student is ready, the teacher will appear”

At this crucial turning point we desperately need guidance and in serendipity the Universe (God) bring us a mentor figure who gives us something we need. Therefore we could be given an object of great importance, insight into the dilemma we face, wise advice, practical training or even self-confidence. Whatever the mentor provides us with it serves to dispel our doubts and fears encouraging the strength and courage we need to begin our quest. This is when our fears begin to transmute into personal courage, as I mentioned during my introduction.

5. Crossing The Threshold (the doorway)

Our Hero is now ready to act upon the call to adventure and truly begin the quest, whether it be physical, spiritual or emotional. We may go willingly or may be pushed, but either way we finally cross the threshold between the comfort zone and the challenge we are not familiar with, but represents the light or fulfillment into this quest. It may be leaving home for the first time in our life or just doing something we have always been scared to do. However the threshold presents itself, this action signifies our commitment to this journey.

6. Tests, Allies, Enemies

Now finally out of our comfort zone our Hero is confronted with an ever more difficult series of challenges that test us in a variety of ways. Obstacles are thrown across our path; whether they be physical hurdles or people sabotaging our progress, our Hero must overcome each challenge is presented along the journey towards the ultimate goal.

We need to find out who can be trusted and who can’t. Our Hero may earn allies and meet enemies who will, each in their own way, help prepare us for the greater ordeals yet to come. They will become our teachers as well. This is the stage where our skills and/or powers are tested and every obstacle that we face helps us gain a deeper insight into our character and ultimately identify with our Hero even more.

7. Approach To The Inmost Cave

The inmost cave may represent many things in our story such as an actual location in which lies a terrible danger or an inner conflict which up until now we have not had to face. As our Hero approaches the cave (solitude) we must make final preparations before taking that final leap into the great unknown.

At the threshold to the inmost cave we may once again face some of the doubts and fears that first surfaced upon the call to adventure. This means that we may need some time to reflect upon our journey and the treacherous road ahead in order to find the courage to continue. This brief respite helps the people around us to understand the magnitude of the ordeal that awaits us and escalates the tension in anticipation of our ultimate test.

8. Ordeal

The Supreme Ordeal may be a dangerous physical test or a deep inner crisis that we must face in order to survive or for the world in which we live to continue to exist. Whether it be facing our greatest fear or most deadly foe, we must draw upon all of our skills and experiences gathered upon the path to the inmost cave in order to overcome our most difficult challenge.

Only through some form of “death” we can be reborn, experiencing a metaphorical resurrection that somehow grants us greater power or insight necessary in order to fulfill our destiny. This is the high-point of our story and where everything we hold dear (emotional baggage) is put on the line. If our Hero fails, he will either die or live as he knows it will never be the same again.

9. Reward (Seizing The Sword)

After defeating the enemy, surviving death and finally overcoming our greatest personal challenge, we are ultimately transformed into a new state, emerging from battle as a stronger person and often with a prize.

The Reward may come in many forms:

An object of great importance or power, a secret, greater knowledge or insight, or even reconciliation with a loved one or ally.

Whatever the treasure, which may well facilitate our return to the Ordinary World, that when we must quickly put celebrations aside and prepare for the last leg of his journey.

10. The Road Back

This stage represents a reverse echo of the Call to Adventure in which we had to cross the first threshold. Now we must return home with our reward but this time the anticipation of danger is replaced with that of acclaim and perhaps vindication, absolution or even exoneration.

But our Hero’s journey is not yet over and we may still need one last push back into the Ordinary World. The moment before we finally commit to the last stage of our journey may be a moment in which we must choose between our own personal objective and that of a Higher Cause.

11. Resurrection

This is the climax in which our Hero must have the final and most dangerous encounter with the metaphorical death. The final battle also represents something far greater than our own existence with its outcome having far-reaching consequences to our Ordinary World and the lives of those we left behind.

If we fail, others will suffer and this not only places more weight upon our shoulders but in a movie, grips the audience so that they too feel part of the conflict and share our Hero’s hopes, fears and trepidation. Ultimately our Hero will succeed, destroy the (inner) enemy and emerge from battle cleansed and reborn.

12. Return With The Elixir

This is the final stage of our journey in which we return home to our Ordinary World a changed human being. We will have grown as a person, learned many things, faced many terrible dangers and even death but now looks forward to the start of a new life.

Our return may bring fresh hope to those we left behind, a direct solution to their problems or perhaps a new perspective for everyone to consider.

The final reward that we obtains may be literal or metaphoric.

It could be a cause for celebration, self-realization or an end to strife, but whatever it is it represents three things:

• Change

• Success

• Proof of our journey.

The return home also signals the need for resolution for the story’s other key players.

Our doubters or enemies will be ostracized, and our allies rewarded.

Ultimately we will return to where we started with a better version of ourselves and things will clearly never be the same again.

Last but not least;

“Hard times don’t create heroes. It is when the “hero” within us is revealed.”

Author:

Glenda Lee Santos; Humble Military and Yoga Warrior; Criminal Justice, BA; RYT-200 hrs; Holistic Practitioner with Foundation in Yoga and Ayurveda; Reiki Master; Spirit Guide Coach; Master Resilience Trainer.

References;

1. https://innerpeaceouterjoy.com/the-heros-journey-an-archetypal-blueprint-for-our-lives/

2. Owning Your Shadow ( Robert A. Johnson) First edition.

Sore Today, Strong Tomorrow.

The COVID-19 and its Invisible Warfare.

How To Pick A Battle Carefully.

It is of global acknowledgement that we are fighting a war against an invisible enemy.

Isolation and Quarantine have been two significant missiles that COVID-19 launched to Earth and the human’s mind, besides the amount of infected victims and casualties as we refer to life’s losses during combat within the military community.

Now let us begin with what isolation and quarantine do to the human’s mind.

Isolation and quarantine are public health practices used to protect the public by preventing exposure to people who have or may have a contagious disease.

• Isolation separates sick people with a contagious disease from people who are not sick.

• Quarantine separates and restricts the movement of people who were exposed to a contagious disease to see if they become sick. These people may have been exposed to a disease and do not know it, or they may have the disease but do not show symptoms.

Both scenarios trigger our sympathetic nervous system which directs the body’s rapid involuntary response to dangerous or stressful situations.

Subsequently all this triggers a flash flood of hormones to boost the body’s alertness and heart rate, sending extra blood to the muscles.

When we are unable to manage those emotions and lack resources to activate our relaxation reflexes; such as breathing mindfully (with focus at the present moment).

As result desolation arises making us vulnerable toward doubt, despair, or narcissism which can make one feel disturbed and even bring darkness to our soul.

As result this combination of emotions trigger reactivity with projections and displacement of verbal, non verbal or even physical aggressive behavior to ourselves and others.

Now as it happens during yoga with counterposes and warfare with counterfeit there is always a strategy to persevere and survive during adversity.

Here is when consolation plays an important role representing our inner light and voice through which the soul becomes inflamed with love of its Creator, Supreme Source or Lord.

Consolation teaches us to be resilient by growing and thriving in the face of challenges in order to bounce back from adversity.

Lastly seeing the life’s event as a learning experience that will make us stronger and closer to a better version of ourselves.

St. Ignatius of Loyola labeled this process as “Spiritual Warfare” mental phase.

St. Ignatius was a former military soldier who became wounded in action and during his convalescence, the Lord opened his eyes to the reality of the spiritual battle around and within him.

St. Ignatius developed a structure with rules of engagement, I would have to write an article to breakdown and explain the fourteen of them. So I will go specific.

Now during this Pandemic event what applies is to become aware and understand to some extent the different movements which are caused in the soul, the good, to receive them, and the bad to reject them.

For instance St. Ignatius said…

“In time of desolation never to make a change; but to be firm and constant in the resolutions and determination in which one was the day preceding such desolation, or in the determination in which he was in the preceding consolation.

Because, as in consolation it is rather the good spirit who guides and counsels us, so in desolation it is the bad, with whose counsels we cannot take a course to decide rightly.”

You have the power to intercept any thoughts that triggers you into anxiety by replacing them with positives thoughts (consolation) resiliency oriented.

An effective resilience skill to embrace this is to “Hunt For The Good Stuff.” This means to counter the negative bias, create positive emotion, and notice and analyze what is good.

It is also an exercise that builds gratitude.

Increased gratitude was found to promote both interpersonal and personal well being (Froh et al., 2010), and being grateful may build and strengthen social bonds and friendships (Frederickson, 2004; Komter, 2004).

When do I Hunt For The Good Stuff (Consolation)?

On a regular basis in order to counteract the Negativity Bias (Desolation)

How do I use this skill?

Write down (daily) three positive experiences from the day and write a reflection about why the good thing happened, what the good thing means to you, what you can do to enable more of the good thing, and/ or what ways you or others contributed to the good thing.

At the end you will see how the good spirit (your light) perseveres over the bad spirit (your shadow).

Last but not least;

“Life is a Journey, enjoy the ride”.

Author:

Glenda Lee Santos; Humble Military and Yoga Warrior; Criminal Justice, BA; RYT-200 hrs; Holistic Practitioner with Foundation in Yoga and Ayurveda; Reiki Master; Master Resilience Trainer; Spirit Guide Coach.

Inspire to Aspire Before You Expire…

For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given🎚

Hey there beautiful Souls. I couldn’t miss such a special date to thank you all, for your support to this blog.

Each day there are more beautiful souls subscribing through their emails and that is sort of a Christmas gift to anyone that is humbly trying to share some light.

Also I wanted to share the following thoughts regards today and its meaning.

Let us begin with how a pregnant woman feels having inside her womb a baby and as such her anxiety to meet someone that gives her the chance to feel two hearts instead of one but she cannot see until child’s birth moment.

It is a long journey of nine months and hilariously yesterday my son’s arrival (to spend the holidays with me) was delayed due to unexpected circumstances. I had not seeing him since his college graduation back in June.

I received a text from him telling “Mom I apologize if you have been waiting longer than expected, but there was a delayed out of my control.”

I replied to him Jean if I waited 9 months nurturing you inside my womb, feeling two hearts instead of one (without seeing your beautiful face) I can assure you, I am able to wait longer today!!

So just imagine what Mother Mary went through when she was expecting the son of God, hence the light of our world and to our hearts.

We celebrate the Advent (Birth) of Christ bringing us the following gifts.

Humility (he was born in a stable) and in order to forgive you need to become humble.

Forgiveness because in order to resurrect from any adversity during life it is required to forgive ourselves and others.

That is exactly what Jesus did after his crucifixion and I understand there will never be any adversity into our lives worst than his unique experience.

Unconditional love,

Actually, once while meditating with my Higher Power… I asked

¿What is the best medicine for a human’s Soul?

The answer was “The best medicine for humans is love…”

I asked ¿What if it doesn’t work? The answer was Increase the dose!

Then I realized that unconditional love one was of the strongest foundations during Christs ministry, which was energetically operating throughout the gifts and ministries of the Holy 🕊Spirit.

As such I will leave you with the following words…

The Advent Journey:

Hope becomes peace.

Peace becomes joy.

Joy becomes love.

Love becomes Christ🎚

Jesus is the gift that perfectly fits the size of every heart.

He is the light of our Christmas, the joy of our hearts and the hope of our world.

Last but not least;

Inspire to aspire before you expire…

Merry Christmas!

Author:

Glenda Lee Santos; Humble Military and Yoga Warrior; RYT-200 hrs; Criminal Justice, BA; Holistic Practitioner with Foundation in Yoga and Ayurveda; Reiki Master; CAI; CAHP; CCR; CCHP; CACR; SGC; MRT.

The Best Journey Within…

Hello there beautiful Souls, have you visualized your physical body thru an imaginary lens?

Well gently close your eyes, and bring your attention to your breath, bring your tongue towards the roof of your mouth behind the front teeth, begin to inhale thru your nose and when you exhale, begin to activate relaxation within. Now bring your attention to your forehead. Visualize your physical vehicle.

See your physical body as a product of this material dimension. It is created on earth using elements like carbon, hydrogen and calcium. It is vulnerable, it has limitations and a finite lifespan.

Your higher self has chosen to inhabit it to have experiences that the Spirit world does not offer. It is not the real you. What you see in the mirror is only a vehicle. The real you is perfect, limitless and eternal. It is connected to everyone and everything you see. The ability to contact your Guides and their knowledge is omnipresent, but you must do your part to access their wisdom.

How do we access their wisdom? Becoming receptive to this guidance which is your birthright, we are delivered to this life guarded by a celestial energetic team of Guides that includes a guardian angel, a departed loved one (some cases two), Archangel Michael is assigned to protect humanity, so we have this energy available to us when we need to connect to it and some people might have 2 archangels assigned for guidance and protection based on their Soul’s contract or life’s purpose.

The higher our calling the larger the team will be. Meditation, sitting in silence, and asking to receive advice during the dream state are all ways to establish contact with your higher self and Guides. Also thru meditation you can find your life’s purpose and Highest Potential.

What is Highest Potential?

Before going to this explanation I want to address something to make you think.

God sends power in humble packages; on the back of fool little children always, there’s no way to conceal it. 

Because they look harmless. 

Think about humbleness, and it’s congruency with power…at least for a minute.

Our highest potential is manifested when we act every moment (we recognize a choice is present), towards the best potential option (available) within the circumstances as an outcome.

Embrace this process, have no fear to sitting in silence enjoy that darkness as is the only way you will be able to see the light. For assistance in how to meditate go to this website menu and click on meditation benefits.

Last but not least;

Don’t be discouraged by the earthy distractions placed between you and your Guides. Practice developing this sacred relationship. You will find that life becomes much easier when you have daily communication with your Guides.

Namaste

Author:

Glenda Lee Santos; Humble Military and Yoga Warrior; RYT-200 hrs; Criminal Justice, BA; Holistic Practitioner with Foundation in Yoga and Ayurveda; CAI; CAHP; CCR; CCHP; CACR; SGC; MRT.

Where ever life plants you… Bloom with grace.

Hello there, beautiful Souls. Sometimes the little things in life are more than enough. You bet they are. Nonetheless, when staring at a sunflower see how bright sunny and positive it spreads seeds of happiness.

What I mean is that you can always choose to rise, shine and hold your head high. Flowers grow back, even after they are stepped on.

If a sunflower chooses to face the sun every single day, you can choose to face the sun as well and instead of holding yourself back in the dark.

Keep in mind that the smallest act of love should begin with self love. Self love is the kindest gift you can shelter your heart with hence someone else’s heart.

Last but not least, darkness is our nature, but the journey for light echoes from our Soul.

Namaste

Author:

Glenda Lee Santos; Humble Military and Yoga Warrior; RYT-200 hrs; Criminal Justice, BA; Holistic Practitioner with Foundation in Yoga and Ayurveda; CAI; CAHP; CCR; CCHP; CACR; SGC; MRT.

OPN “Enduring Energy Cleansing”

Hey there beautiful Souls.

When you are at home and feel like is hard to breath or you don’t want to stay alone during a long period of time, your house might be needing an energy/ spiritual cleansing through smudging process.

Let’s begin with what is smudging?

Smudging is a cultural ceremony practiced by a wide variety of Indigenous peoples in Canada and other parts of the world.

Although practices differ, smudging is used for medicinal and practical purposes as well as for spiritual ceremonies.

As such is a powerful spiritual cleansing technique which calls upon the spirits of various sacred plants to drive away negative energy and to restore balance to an individual, a group, a space, or all three.

Why smudging is important?

Because is performed to remove negative energy as well as for centering and healing.

How does sage clear negative energy?

Scientists have observed that sage can clear up to 94 percent of airborne bacteria in a space and disinfect the air.

When sage is burned, it releases negative ions, which is linked to putting people into a positive mood.

The Latin word for sage salvia stems form the word heal.

Below you can see the difference of the smoke when the place you need to smudge is overwhelmed by negative energies and when is clear.

You can also clean the space with a Chant, like the “Cleansing Chant” below.

I personally like to invoke the presence of Archangel Michael with a short prayer, that I’m also sharing.

Also the psalm 23 is a great tool during smudging.

Prayer to invoke Archangel Michael:

Archangel Michael and my entire team of Guides and Angels, enter into this time and space to cleanse and protect my energy on every level.

I ask this according to divine will, for the highest and greatest good, and so it is.

Psalm 23

Last but not least;

• If your sage or candle smoke rises to the west, you need to clear your body energetically.

• If the smoke rises to the north, you need to clear your mind.

• If the smoke rises to the south, you need to clear your heart embracing forgiveness and letting go.

• If the smoke rises to the east, you need to clear your spirit. Embracing a meditation discipline helps a lot.

Author:

Glenda Lee Santos; Humble Military and Yoga Warrior; RYT-200 hrs; Criminal Justice, BA; Holistic Practitioner with Foundation in Yoga and Ayurveda; CAI; CAHP; CCR; CCHP; CACR; SGC; MRT.

Remember Me…

When you have been swallowed by trouble, I am there. When the waves are breaking over your head and you are gasping for air, I am waiting for you to turn to Me, to reach out to say My name. When you feel as if you cannot escape the current, I am ready to rescue. When you feel the slick seaweed pulling you deeper and deeper, when you think you are entangled to ever escape, when you feel you will never find a foothold, My arms are reaching out, My soles are dug deep, and I am waiting… for you to remember Me. And when you do, I am spurred into action. When you think no one can hear your cry, your voice comes to My ear. And I answer your call. From the deepest, darkest recesses, I bring you into the light. I lift you above the waves, out of the current, up from the seaweed. Your back is covered, just

REMEMBER ME.

-Your Rabbi Jesus

Semperlee Yoga Corp. wishes you a peaceful Easter and Resurrection’s Sunday.

Jesus Also Walked Through The Light Of Yoga…

He was there in the wilderness… and was within the wild beasts, comes to my mind when thinking about Master Jesus.

Actually, where lies the purpose or goal to the science of Yoga, which not only means union it promotes the quest for the true and highest self, hence the activation of the Christ consciousness within a heart cleaned from darkness and sheltered by light.

How do we still the phantom of our mind, from a turbulence of thoughts and a restlessness of our body that prevent from finding what we are, what we are here for?

Through the practice of yoga and meditation you will be able to answer the following questions?

Who I am?

Why am I here?

How do I realize the truth regards my Dharma or Life’s purpose?

To whom am I grateful to?

Meditation Benefits

Let us go back to Christmas Eve.

Are we truly honoring the arrival of the true inner divine light, within the chamber of our hearts?

The birth of the anointed, the Master of unconditional love and forgiveness.

The birth of eternal resilience.

RESILIENCY/ MANIFESTO

When we hear…

“Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God…”

Is not hard to experience a visualization of Jesus serving to humanity, sharing his light through his ministry’s teachings.

Who was Jesus?

One of the most influential human beings of all times?

The founder of Christianity?

A messiah or savior sent by God to redeem humanity of its sins?

What were His teachings?

Is our knowledge of Jesus limited to what is recorded in the Bible?

What has modern historical research to say about what Jesus did and taught?

Have there been other spiritual masters in India whose teachings are similar to those of Jesus?

If so, what light can they shed on the teachings of Jesus? and I personally think this would be an interesting part to analyze.

How To Find The True Kingdom…

With the discovery of many new source documents in the Sinai Desert and near the Dead Sea, and with the advent of modern methods of textual analysis by scholars who are independent of institutional bias, today most Biblical scholars will agree that the books of the Bible’s New Testament are written at several levels of authenticity:

• What were likely the actual words of Jesus, quoted in the gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke, but recorded several decades afterwards.


• What were likely interpolations – words attributed to Jesus by unknown sources.


• What was said about Jesus or about his teachings by others, for example, Paul in his “letters,” which make up most of the rest of the New Testament, and which served as the basis for early Church dogma.

Within Christianity and in the popular understanding of Jesus and his teaching, how much have these interpolations and early Church dogma distorted or obscured the actual words and teachings of Jesus?

What do the actual words of Jesus say about who Jesus was and what his teachings were?

What do the actual words of Jesus not say?

To resolve and clarify these questions are a prerequisite to making comparisons between the teachings of Jesus and the teachings of the Gnostics and other mystics, such as those of the Yoga Siddhas.

Previous attempts by some, including Swami Prabhavananda’s The Sermon on the Mount According to Vedanta, and Paramahansa Yogananda’s The Second Coming of Christ made comparisons with Christianity’s dogma reflected in the King James version of the Bible.

They did not consider the work of biblical historians who have suggested numerous inaccuracies in this English version of the Bible, in comparison with the original Greek.

They do not take into consideration the many findings that modern critical historical research has brought to light.

Yogananda interpreted who Jesus was, by distinguishing “Jesus” the person from “Christ” the state of “consciousness,” which he had attained.

Most of his interpretation was based upon statements allegedly made by Jesus, for example, the “I am” statements, in the Gospel of John, which most critical scholars now consider to be interpolations and words not spoken by Jesus.

This present work presents a comparison between the teachings of the Yoga Siddhas, with those of the teachings that are considered now to be the most authentic teachings of Jesus, based upon the results of modern, critical, historical research.

Others have attempted to compare what Jesus did with what other saints, prophets and sages have done.

Some have speculated that Jesus went to India or Tibet, where he was initiated into their sacred traditions.

Holger Kersten, for example, in his Jesus Lived in India, assembled many arguments, based upon very little evidence that Jesus not only went to India prior to his crucifixion, but returned there and died in Kashmir.

He concluded however, that we really do not know what Jesus did. But this as we will see, modern historical scholars have been able to form a broad consensus about what Jesus taught, but history provides little evidence of what Jesus actually did.

Nothing is recorded about the so called “missing years” of Jesus between the recorded incidents in the temple in Jerusalem, when, at the age of twelve, he spoke authoritatively to the scribes and Pharisees, and his appearance at the age of 30, when he begins his mission, by the Sea of Galilee.

Therefore, we must look elsewhere to understand the influences that transformed Jesus, the carpenter’s son from Nazareth, into the Messiah, or savior of the Jewish people, and the Christ, revered by millions ever since.

But there are other sources, which by comparison with what Jesus said and taught and how he lived, clearly indicate what those influences were.

Examples include the writings of the Gnostics, discovered at Nag Hammadi, in the Sinai, in 1945, the Jewish Essenes, discovered at Qumram in 1948 and thousands of ancient documents which trace the development of early Christianity, and which portray its competing divisions.

Several scholars have studied the Yoga Siddhas of India: Eliade, Briggs, Zvelebil, Ganapathy, White, Govindan, Feuerstein, in particular.

A critical edition of the most important work of the Tamil Yoga Siddhas, the Tirumandiram, by the Siddha Tirumular (written between the 2nd century B.C. and the fourth century C.E.) was produced by the Tamil scholar Suba Annamalai in 2000, from thirteen existing manuscripts.

A new English language translation and commentary of this critical edition of the Tirumandiram is currently being prepared by a team of scholars lead by Dr. T.N. Ganapathy.

Most recently, the research of the Yoga Siddha Research Centre in Chennai, India, lead by Dr. T.N. Ganapathy, has brought out a series of books providing, for the first time, translation and commentary of the Yoga Siddhas, or “perfected” yogis of South India, who were contemporaries of Jesus.

Their teachings and miraculous powers were remarkably similar to those of Jesus.

This makes possible an intriguing comparison between the teachings and miracles of Jesus and those of the Yoga Siddhas.

The writings of the South India Yoga Siddhas have been largely ignored until recently.

They were not well preserved by the orthodox institutions because of the Siddhas’ severe condemnation of the caste system, excessive emphasis on temple worship and scriptures, and the authority of the Brahmins, the priestly caste, which monopolized religious affairs in India.

The writings of the Siddhas were in the vernacular language of the people rather than Sanskrit.

Knowledge of Sanskrit was limited for the most part to the Brahmin caste, whose priests and scholars dominated the religious and educational systems.

The Siddhas condemned this monopoly of the Brahmins, and taught that the Lord could only be known by Jnana Yoga, wisdom born of self-knowledge, meditation and other spiritual practices, particularly through Kundalini Yoga.

Many in the orthodox caste, the Brahmins, reacted by burning the writings of the Siddhas and sought to prejudice popular opinion against the Siddhas by ridiculing them.

The writings of the Siddhas were written in what is referred to as a “twilight language,” which deliberately obscures its deeper meaning to all but Yoga initiates.

This great gap in scholarly understanding of the Siddhas writings, however, has recently begun to be filled by a series of books, produced by a team of leading scholars working for the Yoga Siddha Research Centre in Chennai, India. The Centre has collected, preserved, transcribed and begun to translate thousands of palm leaf manuscripts written by the Yoga Siddhas, which had been all but forgotten in several manuscript libraries of southern India.

 

Remarkable Similarities

Even a cursory comparison of the teachings of Jesus and those of the Siddhas by anyone familiar with the two reveals remarkable similarities:

• Jesus taught in parables, metaphor, paradox, and parody, conveying profound teachings in a way that illiterate listeners could easily understand and remember.

He was an iconoclast, who sought to move His listeners to realize the spirit, not merely the letter of the Jewish law and worship practices.

The Yoga Siddhas taught in the form of poems, in the vernacular language of the illiterate people, in a way that they could easily understand, memorize and recall.

Several layers of meaning could be attributed to both the teachings of Jesus and the Siddhas.

The deepest layers could be understood only by the initiate, who had been taught by a spiritual master how to access the inner reality through such practices as meditation and silence.

• Jesus severely condemned the Pharisees and the merchants in the temple, physically assaulting their shops.

When challenged by the Pharisees on what authority did he speak, he replied: “I shall destroy this temple, and within three days, raise it up!” His resurrection from the cross proved His point, that the real temple is within oneself.

The Yoga Siddhas also condemned emphasis on temple worship and idol worship.

Nowhere in any of their writings do they sing in praise of any of the popular Hindu deities or images of God.

They taught that the human body is the true temple of God and it is only through a process of inner purification that one can come to know the Lord.

• Neither Jesus nor the Siddhas intended to create a new religion.

They taught that God is present in the world. They taught how to realize God through self discipline and self awareness, and through our connection to others.

• Jesus taught forgiveness of sins or transgressions. One of his most important parables, that of the prodigal son, exemplifies this.


The Siddhas taught how to “detach” from the influence of samskaras (subconscious tendencies), which collectively are referred to as karma (the consequences of actions, words and thoughts).

FORGIVENESSES and dispassion are synonymous at a deep level of understanding, and central to both the teachings of Jesus and such Siddhas as Patanjali.

• Jesus repeatedly referred to himself modestly as the “son of man,” but later, the writers of the Gospels, as well as Paul referred to him as “son of God.”

The Siddhas distinguished, the “lower self,” the body-mind-personality, held together by egoism (asmita), from the higher self, pure consciousness, incarnated as an individual soul, but bound by many imperfections.

• In what scholars consider to be the most authentic parts of the New Testament, the three synoptic Gospels, Mark, Matthew and Luke, Jesus says little about himself and when He does, it is always modestly.

The Siddhas also have little to say about themselves in their writings.

They spoke of freeing themselves from ignorance, egoism and delusion.

Consequently, they enjoyed an expanded consciousness and became instruments of the Divine, working “miracles.”

• Jesus taught that the Lord, whom he referred to as the Father, not only existed, but that He loves you.

He also taught that to know Him, one must overcome egoism and attachment to the things of this world.


The Siddhas also taught that by a progressive process of self study, discipline and purification, one can realize the Lord.

They did not fear the Lord. They loved Him.

To them, God was Love and Love was God.

Surrender to the Lord was the means of their progressive transformation. They realized the Lord as Absolute Being, Consciousness and Bliss within themselves.

• Jesus repeatedly emphasized that “the Kingdom of Heaven is within you.”

The theme of Jesus’ teachings in the synoptic gospels as well as the Gospel of St Thomas is “the Kingdom of Heaven.”

But in the Epistles of Paul, as well as the Gospel of John, which are considered by the vast majority of reputable scholars to contain only interpolations (statements put into the mouth of Jesus by unknown sources) the theme is Jesus himself, his mission and his person.

The Siddhas repeatedly taught that the Lord was to be found within oneself, as Absolute Being, Consciousness and Bliss, and that this state could only be realized through the cultivation of samadhi (God consciousness).

This is not a creation of the mind.

It is the realization of the Divine Witness within, and the cultivation of a divine life, from the perspective of this God consciousness.

They taught that the Lord is, unlike our soul, unaffected by desires and karma.

Being one with everything, the Siddhas retained no more inclination to be of special personage.

The Siddhas rarely spoke of their person, and they never encouraged the worship of their person, but rather of that omnipresent Reality within them.

• Jesus used the metaphor of Light to represent consciousness of his true identity; “when thine eye is single, thy whole body shall be full of light.” (Luke 11.34).

The Siddhas referred to the Supreme Being as all pervasive light or as the supreme grace light.

They referred to the Supreme Being as Shiva Shakti (Conscious Energy), and taught that it could be realized within oneself as the sublime, divine kundalini light energy within the subtle body.

• Jesus was reported to have ascended bodily into heaven 40 days after he rose from the dead. During these 40 days he appeared to his disciples. Doubting Thomas verified his corporeal nature by touching his hands.

The body of Jesus was not buried.

The Siddhas sing repeatedly of their total surrender to the Lord, a surrender, which includes the very cells of their physical body, which creates a transformation begetting immortality.

• Jesus was reportedly opposed and crucified by those who ruled the temple founded by David in Jerusalem – the priests and Pharisees.

They saw him as a threat to their privileged position.

Jesus sought to liberate the Jews not from the Romans, but from their spiritual ignorance, fear, and domination by the priests.

He taught them through his parables, and initiated chosen disciples into how to know God by turning within, in esoteric practices.

The Siddhas have been opposed to this day by the vested interests of Hinduism, the Brahmins, who control the temples and serve as intermediaries between the common person and the “gods” of the Hindu pantheon.

The Siddhas are condemned and ridiculed as “miracle workers,” fakirs and worse, by the Brahmins, who fear their popular appeal among the masses.

The Siddhas and other yogic adepts initiate the most qualified students into the esoteric practices of Kundalini Yoga and meditation.

• Jesus emphasized love and the inner experience or communion with God, rather than the law of the Old Testament.


The Siddhas rejected the Vedic scripture’s emphasis on external fire sacrifice and ritual; they emphasized the inner path to the Lord through love and Yoga.

• Jesus performed many miracles as a result of his powers, or siddhis and this is the main reason of this writing.

Jesus was a Yogi!

So did the Siddhas.

The ordinary person dissipates their energy through the senses, attracted by desires.

When one realizes the Presence of the Lord within, one gains access to unlimited power and consciousness.

Unmanifest and potential, it is known as kundalini.

When it is awakened, one becomes an instrument of the Divine, hence the Ceista

• Jesus spent 40 days in the wilderness in meditation and prayer, and as a result acquired great powers.


The Siddhas performed similar tapas (penance) with resulting siddhis (powers).

Even the number 40 is of particular significance with regard to a period of practice of penance in the yogic tradition.

• Both the Siddhas and Jesus exhibited great social concern.

Jesus left John the Baptist, and returned to the urban areas and consorted with tax collectors and other disreputable types.

Are you like the Fisherman?

He encouraged counter-cultural movements against established tradition.

The Siddhas sought to show the path to the Lord to everyone, by teaching what one must do, especially through Yoga and hygienic living standards and medicine, and also what one must avoid.

• Jesus accepted Mary Magdalene as a disciple when he allowed her to wash and to anoint his feet with spikenard oil.

He initiated his most worthy disciples, like Thomas, into esoteric teachings, which enabled them to realize the Supreme Being, beyond the creator God.

The Siddhas showed their surrender to their Gurus by washing, anointing or touching their feet.

They initiated their disciples into advanced techniques of Yoga to expand their consciousness and bring about Self realization.

• Jesus was not merely a teacher or rabbi to his disciples, but a God-man, who remained an enigma to all of his direct disciples.

They struggled to comprehend his teachings, his parables, and referred to him variously as a prophet or the Messiah, the anointed one who would deliver them from the yoke of Roman tyranny.

Their confusion lead to the formation of a multiplicity of sects in early Christianity, until the fourth century C.E., when the Church, in alliance with the Roman emperor, seeking to unify Christianity and the Roman Empire, defined Christian dogma and creeds, and declared as heretics those who did not adhere to its dogma.

The Siddhas were Gurus (dispellers of darkness) who showed the path to the Lord, and were also revered as ones who embodied divinity.

They extolled the authority of one’s own inner spiritual experience, rather than the authority of the Vedas (scriptures).

For this reason, the orthodox condemned them.

The Siddhas continue to be an enigma for most Hindus.

In this work we will explore and compare these and other areas, which will shed great light on the questions:

“Who was Jesus?”

“How can I best understand His teachings?”

 

Why Should Christians Study Yoga?

1. The short answer is that the study and practice of Yoga will make a Christian a better Christian.

2. Also, because it will provide valuable spiritual experience, mental peace, energy and good health, all essential in realizing the goals of both persons of faith and rationalists.

Just as the Buddha was not a Buddhist, Jesus was not a Christian.

The Buddha was certainly a yogi, who undertook to find the cause of human suffering, and the remedy for it, through philosophical enquiry.

Who am I?

Where have I come from and where am I going?

Why is there evil?

What is there after this life?

In that way Yoga can be considered to be the practical side of all religions.

It contains no dogma, no limiting beliefs.

It is not a religion.

It may be considered to be an “open philosophy” for it accepts various approaches to Truth.

It is widely recognized to be one of the six main systems of philosophy in India.

As such it fits perfectly into Pope John Paul II’s recommendation that Christians study philosophy, including the Eastern philosophies, in order to become better Christians.

His Papal Encyclical “On the Relationship between Faith and Reason” (Fides Et Ratio) provides the long answer to the above question.

In it Pope John Paul II argues that:

“In both East and West, we may trace a journey which has led humanity down the centuries to meet and engage truth more and more deeply.

It is a journey which has unfolded—as it must—within the horizon of personal self-consciousness:

“the more human beings know reality and the world, the more they know themselves in their uniqueness, with the question of the meaning of things and of their very existence becoming ever more pressing.”

This is why all that is the object of our knowledge becomes a part of our life.

The admonition “Know yourself” was carved on the temple portal at Delphi, as testimony to a basic truth to be adopted as a minimal norm by those who seek to set themselves apart from the rest of creation as “human beings,” that is, as those who “know themselves.””

Yoga is a means to “know thyself.

“From the grossest to the most subtle levels, Yoga gives us the means to reach the highest and most ethereal subtleties of material substance.

Yoga can take us beyond the grasp of our senses, the thoughts of our mind, and even beyond our most subtle consciousness to the Force-Love beyond it.

Yoga examines the fundamental principles and laws of the cosmos, their purpose and their demand on divine evolution.

It examines how the principle of grace works in life through the physical instrument, through the mind, the physical nervous system and vital organs.

Yoga can teach us how to embrace the suffering of our life and to overcome it.

In other words through Yoga we embrace the activation of resilience’s skills.

When there is resilience, relapsing into darkness and emotional pain becomes history, because we learn to let go without attachment, forgiveness becomes easier and our soul embraces healing.

The Siddhas were neither pessimistic nor illusionist.

They saw the world as a mixture of division, darkness, limitation, desire, struggle, pain and splendor, beauty and truth.

They recognized the mind as an instrument of the soul imprisoned in it.

The view “I am” is a force of creative power possessed by the soul to lift it from this prison.

The profound realization of “I am” is a powerful means to knowing ourselves truly as children of God.

According to the Siddhas, we share consciousness with God. But rare is the person who understands and imbibes this Truth.

God is behind all that exists as the Eternal Witness. But that Supreme Consciousness can perfectly express itself in this manifest world only in one who has integrally harmonized Truth within itself.

What or who is a Siddha?

A Siddha is one who has done so, drawing body and soul into a new identification with absolute perfection.

This occurs only after having discarded all identification with the mind’s imperfect state of physical manifestation and consciousness.

A Siddha has surrendered to the Supreme Consciousness at all levels, from the spiritual to the physical. Jesus could be identified as one such a being.

He stepped out of the imperfect human form to enter a new Consciousness and Being.

Yoga teaches that the imperfect reality of human existence is seen only by the mind, the limited mind of desire, division, darkness, struggle, and pain.

And to overcome it, the mind itself must reach a psychic aspiration towards perfection lying beyond itself.

The mind of a man must seek union with an Ideal of perfection and harmonize itself totally with it.

This process requires complete surrender to the Supreme Being, Consciousness and Bliss.

 

Faith and Reason by Ronald H. Nash is a book that also addresses:

1. Christians who are interested in comparing Eastern spiritual teachings with those of Christianity.

2. Students of spiritual Yoga, otherwise known as Classical Yoga and Tantra, as well students and practitioners of meditation and other spiritual disciplines.

3. Serious Biblical students, including those interested in the question

“What did Jesus really teach, before the formation of Christian dogma?”

The objectives of this book are to:

1. Demonstrate that what Jesus taught, for example through his parables and sayings, was amazingly similar to what the Yoga masters, the Siddhas, taught.

2. To explore the implications of these parallel teachings for those seeking to apply them in their own life, not so much to know about God, as to how to know God through higher states of consciousness.

3. To show how the discoveries of ancient manuscripts, and their analysis by independent critical scholars using scientific methods, provide much insight into the original teachings of Jesus.

4. To demonstrate why the “sayings” of Jesus, circulated orally during the first decades following his crucifixion before being recorded, are probably the most authentic source of his teachings that we have available today.

These are limited to a few dozen parables, aphorisms and sharp retorts, which were repeated in the oral tradition for two or three decades before they were eventually recorded by the anonymous writers of the Gospels.

5. To show how the original teachings of Jesus, as recorded in his “sayings” and parables, became obscured once Christianity was defined in terms of dogmas and creeds.

6. To explore the question “Who was Jesus?” based upon those statements that many modern critical scholars have concluded are the most authentic.

7. To explore the questions “Where is the Kingdom of God?” and “How may I reach it?” based upon those statements that many modern critical scholars have concluded are the most authentic.

8. To explore the question “Why are the teachings of Jesus so contrary to ordinary human nature?”

Last but not least;

“Seek for your inner light and you shall find it…Behold, the kingdom of God is within you.”

Namaste 🙏🏻

Author:

Glenda Lee Santos; Humble Military and Yoga Warrior; RYT-200 hrs; Criminal Justice, BA; Holistic Practitioner with Foundation in Yoga and Ayurveda; CAI; CCR; CACR; SGC.

References;

The Holy Bible ( New and Old Testaments).

The Second Coming of Christ.

The Resurrection of the Christ Within You; Paramahansa Yogananda; (Self Realization Fellowship, 2004).

The Yoga Of Jesus; Understanding the Hidden Teachings of the Gospels;(Self Realization Fellowship, 2007).

http://www.jesusandyoga.net

Faith and Reason; Searching for a Rational Faith; Ronal H. Nash (Harper Collins, 1994).

Find The Best Christmas Gift…

Born at a humble stable…

There was a king who brought us faith towards the unseen.

Who became teacher that taught how to open our hearts for self love and to love humanity.

Who taught lessons of how to defeat the darkness working through the EGO.

Who taught how to transmute pain into healing and resilience.

Who awaken consciousness within the chamber of our hearts about how to align emotions and actions through sound judgement.

Who shared his humility leaving a legacy of wisdom for rising.

Who brought spiritual courage in order to face our shadows and defeat them without judgement.

Who shared the healing power of compassion, forgiveness and unconditional love to ourselves and humanity.

Besides any holiday’s last minute shopping or preparation to an evening of celebration, dedicate at least a minute to think the true meaning of Christmas.

Here is a beautiful prayer to make for Christmas day, if you would like to.

With love and gratitude Semperlee Yoga.org wishes you a blissful Merry Christmas.

Namaste 

Author:

Glenda Lee Santos; Humble Military and Yoga Warrior; RYT-200 hrs; Criminal Justice, BA; Holistic Practitioner with Foundation in Yoga and Ayurveda; CAI; CAHP; CCR; CCHP; CACR; SGC; MRT.

How To Find The True Kingdom…

Have you heard As Above So Below?

We are beginning one of the most beautiful times of the year (not talking about Christmas exorbitant expenses), as such about the celebration of the birth (So Below) and representation of True Love (the son of God, the Messiah, the Prince of Peace) who became stronger after rising (As Above).

We might complain about the horrors we see through the media, however hell or shadows is what we decide to live by through our own thoughts and actions. It is allowing the dormant shadows from our Ego (laying on our subconscious) to overpower our judgement intoxicating our hearts.

Here is the explanation…

Its Father is the Sun. Its Mother is the Moon (to give birth to his Son ) The Wind ( the Holy Spirit) has carried it in his belly. Its nourishment is the Earth. It rises from Earth to Heaven, and then it descends again to the Earth, and receives power from above and from below.

Thus you will have Glory of the whole World. All obscurity will be clear to you. This is the strong Power of all Power. In this way was the World created.

From this there will be amazing applications, because this is the Pattern.

The Trinity becoming one. The three parts of the wisdom of the whole World. Our Universe.

The Kingdom is here, now.

We have been walking this path of revolution as if the Kingdom would be born in flames and blood.

And if you are already asking to yourself, how come is there a God when there is no justice for the poor for the suffering?

I will ask you…

How does it feel to carry that anger around your heart?

Does it lessen as the days go by?

We have the power to relieve that suffering.

It is up to us.

We are responsible for the rise or fall of this kingdom. The Kingdom that we can’t see it with our eyes, because is within us…It is within the chamber of our hearts.

All we have to do is let go of our anguish, our resentment and become like children, just as Jesus said.

The Kingdom can’t be built through conflict, not by opposition, not by destruction.

The Kingdom grows with us with every act of love and care, with our forgiveness.

For example:

Every farmer knows that whatever he plants, that is what he will reap. If he plants seeds of wheat, he will harvest wheat. As such the more seeds a farmer sow, the bigger his crop. These are both spiritual laws.

If you sow seeds of discord, you will not reap strawberries. It is the same with seeds of discontent, dishonor and disappointment.

Always remember that once a seed is sown, it cannot help but be reaped. And the more of something you sow, the more of that you will harvest.

Ask yourself, what are you planting in your life?

The new life, the new World, the new Kingdom will only change as we change.

We have the power to lift the people just as Jesus did.

Do not lose hope or faith if ever called foolish because of believing in the legacy of this Master Teacher of humanity.

If his disciples had trouble understanding what he was doing while on earth. To the point of eleven of them doubting of the women who witnessed his rising. There will always be a negative force of energy creating resistance.

A resistance that could not even take away and effect of the truth of the matter.

Master Jesus actually never left, his energy is stronger than ever representing the Way, the Truth and the Life. The teachings of The Prince of Peace reveals the power of our Supreme Source.

It brings to light His wisdom- even though it seems like foolishness to the World of men.

Keep in mind if cannot understand the who, what, when, where, why and how of the Gospel and all that preceded it, it matters not.

For God through his Son and his Word, has sheltered, indeed is sheltering and will shelter all who have the courage to believe it and share that light.

We remain as our Divine Source’s daughters as sons through the faith on his Son’s Word.

Give yourself the chance to believe in its power, and as we continue to walk with God, his Son, and the Holy Spirit ( we are spirit in a physical body), our lives will become an extraordinary example in the eyes of the non-believers of no other fact than the supernatural power of God, our Divine Supreme Source.

Last but not least;

As Above

So Below

As the Universe, So the Soul

As Without

So Within

This is our Legacy from the Prince of Peace.

Author:

Glenda Lee Santos; Humble Military and Yoga Warrior; RYT-200 hrs; Criminal Justice, BA; Holistic Practitioner with Foundation in Yoga and Ayurveda; CAI; CAHP; CCR; CCHP; CACR; SGC; MRT.