“You must find the place inside yourself where nothing is impossible.”
— Deepak Chopra
Tag Archives: Divine
Preserving-American-Liberty
We may learn wisdom!
“By three methods we may learn wisdom: First, by reflection, which is noblest; Second, by imitation, which is easiest; and third by experience, which is the bitterest. ”
— Confucius: was a Chinese thinker and social philosopher
no extra pieces in the universe…
“There are no extra pieces in the universe. Everyone is here because he or she has a place to fill, and every piece must fit itself into the big jigsaw puzzle.”
— Deepak Chopra
Don’t be trapped by dogma
“Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t be trapped by dogma – which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of other’s opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary.”
— Steve Jobs
Wake Up The Spirit!
“Language is surely too small a
vessel to contain these emotions of
mind and body that have somehow
awakened a response in the spirit.”
— Radclyffe Hall
Ghandi’s 7 Dangers to Human Virtue
Ghandi’s 7 Dangers to Human Virtue
1. Wealth without Work
2. Pleasure without Conscience
3. Knowledge without Character
4. Business without Ethics
5. Science without Humanity
6. Religion without Sacrifice
7. Politics without Principle
The movie projector…
Your body is exactly like a movie projector, and the film running through the projector is all of your thoughts and feelings. Everything you see on the screen of your life is what has been projected from within you, and is what you have put into the film.
By choosing higher thoughts and feelings you can change what you see on the screen at any time. You have complete control of what goes into your film!
-Rhonda Byrne
How Heroes Are Made
“Nurture your mind with great thoughts; to believe in the heroic makes heroes.”
— Benjamin Disraeli: Was a British Prime Minister.
America’s Constitution Celebration
This is about a tiny little moment in American history? – that proved to be a monumental moment of courage that changed all our lives – indeed the world.
May 1787, The United States were free, but barely so. They were in crisis. Driven by pride and greed, the States of the union fought amongst themselves, and refused to cooperate. They were a laughingstock abroad. In debt and virtually paralyzed, the treaties of the United States were ignored; our ships pirated and seized. There were those abroad just waiting for the Great American Republic to implode, and then they would gloatingly step in and monarchy would once more bear sway. Even within our own boarders, there were those who yearned for the return of King and Parliament.
Hence, a Convention was called in Philadelphia in May of 1787, for the ostensible purpose of revising America’s constitution of the day, called the Articles of Confederation.
The problem was largely this: You see, today we say, “The United States is…” but then in 1787, the phrase was, “The United States are…” We were at that time a very loose confederation of independent states bound by a league of friendship called the “Articles of Confederation,” and that league of friendship was coming apart.
So, some 74 delegates were appointed to attend this grand convention.” Their instructions were to revise the Articles of Confederation, which was as it were to say, ‘tweak the system;’ solve the problems. But, on the face of it, it could not work. The system and organization created by the Articles of Confederation were flawed on the face and could not address the exigencies of the day. And there were some among the delegates wise enough to see it.
Then, Tuesday May 29, 1787: Governor Edmund Randolph of Virginia took the floor of Independence Hall in Philadelphia, and “opened the main business” of the convention. He enumerated the problems of America that had brought them there and then “preceded to the remedy, the basis of which,” he said, “must be the republican principle.”
Then Governor Randolph presented the Virginia Plan for a new system of government. The first resolution said that the Articles of Confederation ought to be “corrected and enlarged.” However, so bold and revolutionary were the resolutions that followed that the delegates quickly realized they were not revising the Articles of Confederation, they were abolishing them altogether!
Now, notwithstanding the will of the people, and the people’s aversion to strong central government, notwithstanding the instructions given back home by their leaders, and notwithstanding the uncertainty of uncharted waters, “it was resolved…that a national government ought to be established consisting of a supreme legislative, executive, and judiciary.” And then, praise be to God, the resolution carried. The way was opened for a new constitution. And then the convention went on without a blink.
They would form a totally new system of government unheard of in the world in that day, but one that would grow to become over time America’s “greatest export.”
Now, I have thought of that moment in Philadelphia. What if the delegates had been more concerned with what people thought of them than of the future of their nation? What if they were too timid to try something new, to think ‘outside the box?’ What if they cared more about their personal wealth than just principles? What if they had been too cowardly to try? How much different, my friends, would our lives have been? – no constitution, and no United States of America!
From the writings of Glenn Rawson.
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